"Well I never!--why, that"s Mitchel"s d.i.c.k!" cried Jones, peering down in the candle-light. "What"s took _him_?"
"Jones, if you and the girl will rub his hands, I"ll go and get some brandy. We can"t let him lie like this and give him nothing."
Old Jones, liking the word brandy on his own score, knelt down on his fat gouty legs with a groan, and laid hold of one of the hands, the girl taking the other. I went leaping off to Elm Farm.
And went for nothing. Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson being out, the cellar was locked up, and no brandy could be got at. The cook gave me a bottle of gooseberry wine; which she said might do as well if hotted up.
Duffham was stooping over the boy when I got back, his face long, and his cane lying on the ironing-board. Bill Leet had met him half-way, so no time was lost. He was putting something into d.i.c.k"s lips with a teaspoon--perhaps brandy. But it ran the wrong way; out instead of in.
d.i.c.k never stirred, and his eyes were shut. The doctor got up.
"Too late, Johnny," he whispered.
The words startled me. "Mr. Duffham! No?"
He looked into my eyes, and nodded YES. "The exposure to-day has been too much for him. He is going fast."
And just at that moment Hannah Mitchel came in. I have often thought that the extreme poor, whose lives are but one vast hardship from the cradle to the grave, who have to struggle always, do not feel strong emotion. At any rate, they don"t show much. Hannah Mitchel knelt down, and looked quietly at the white, shrunken face.
"d.i.c.ky," she said, putting his hair gently back from his brow; which now had a damp moisture on it. "What"s amiss, d.i.c.ky?"
He opened his eyes at the voice and feebly lifted one hand towards her.
Mrs. Mitchel glanced round at the doctor"s face; and I think she read the truth there. She gathered his poor head into her arms, and let it rest on her bosom. Her old black shawl was on, her bonnet fell backwards and hung from her neck by the strings.
"Oh, d.i.c.ky! d.i.c.ky!"
He lay still, looking at her. She gave one sob and choked the rest down.
"Be he dying, sir?--ain"t there no hope?" she cried to Mr. Duffham, who was standing in the blaze of the fire. And the doctor just moved his head for answer.
There was a still hush in the kitchen. Her tears began to fall down her cheeks slowly and softly.
"d.i.c.ky, wouldn"t you like to say "Our Father"?"
"I--"ve--said--it,--mother."
"You"ve always been a good boy, d.i.c.ky."
Old Jones blew his nose; the stupid girl burst into a sob. Mr. Duffham told them to hush.
d.i.c.k"s eyes were slowly closing. The breath was very faint now, and came at long intervals. Presently Mr. Duffham took him from his mother, and laid him down flat, without the cushion.
Well, he died. Poor little d.i.c.k Mitchel died. And I think, taking the wind and the work into consideration, that he was better off.
Mr. Jacobson got back the next day. He sharply taxed the ploughman with the death, saying he ought to have seen the state the boy was in on that last bitter day, and have sent him home. But Hall declared he never thought anything ailed the boy, except that the cold was cutting him more than ordinary, just as it was cutting everybody else.
The county coroner came over to hold the inquest. The jury, after hearing what Mr. Duffham had to say, brought it in that Richard Mitchel died from exposure to the cold during the recent remarkable severity of the weather, not having sufficient stamina to resist it. Some of the local newspapers took it up, being in want of matter that dreary season.
They attacked the farmers; asking the public whether labourers" children were to be held as of no more value than this, in a free and generous country like England, and why they were made to work so young by such hard and wicked task-masters as the master of Elm Farm. That put the master of Elm Farm on his mettle. He retorted by a letter of sharp good sense; finishing it with a demand to know whether the farmers were expected to club together to provide meat and puddings gratis for the flocks of children that labourers chose to gather about them. The Squire read it aloud to every one, as the soundest letter he"d ever seen written.
"I am afraid their view is the right one--that the children are too thick on the ground, poor things," sighed Mrs. Todhetley. "Any way, Johnny, it is very hard on the young ones to have to work as poor little d.i.c.k did: late and early, wet or dry: and I am glad for his sake that G.o.d has taken him."
X.
A HUNT BY MOONLIGHT.
This is another tale of our school life. It is not much in itself, you may say, but it was to lead to lasting events. Curious enough, it is, to sit down and trace out the beginning of things: when we _can_ trace it; but it is often too remote for us.
Mrs. Frost died, and the summer holidays were prolonged in consequence.
September was not far off when we met again, and gigs and carriages went bowling up with us and our boxes.
Sanker was in the large cla.s.s-room when we got in. He looked up for a minute, and turned his head away. Tod and I went up to him. He did shake hands, and it was as much as you could say. I don"t think he was the sort of fellow to bear malice; but it took time to bring him round if once offended.
Sanker had gone home with us to d.y.k.e Manor when the holidays began. He belonged to a family in Wales (very poor they were now), and was a distant cousin of Mrs. Todhetley"s. Before he had been with us long, a matter occurred that put him out, and he betook himself away from the Manor there and then. But I do not intend to go into that history now.
Things had been queer at school towards the close of the past term.
Petty pilferings took place: articles and money alike disappeared. A thief was amongst us, and no mistake: but we did not know where to look for him. It was to be hoped that the same thing would not occur again.
"My father and Mrs. Todhetley are in the drawing-room," said Tod. "They are asking to see you."
Sanker hesitated; but he went at last. The interview softened things a little, for he was civil to us when he came back again.
"What"s that about the plants?" he asked me.
I told him what. They had been destroyed in some unaccountable manner.
"Whether it was done intentionally, or whether moving them into the hall and back again did it, is not positively decided; I don"t suppose it ever will be. You ought to have come over to that ball, Sanker, after all of us writing to press it."
"Well," he said, coldly. "I don"t care for b.a.l.l.s. Monk was suspected, was he not?"
"Yes. Some of us suspect him still. He was savage at being accused of--But never mind that"--and I pulled myself up in sudden recollection.
"Monk has left, and we have engaged another gardener. Jenkins is not good for much."
"Hallo! What has _he_ come back?"
Ned Sanker was looking towards the door as he spoke. Two of them were coming in, who must have arrived at the same time--Vale and Lacketer.
They were new ones, so to say, both having entered only last Easter.
Vale was a tall, quiet fellow, with a fair, good-looking face and mild blue eyes; his friends lived at Vale Farm, about two miles off. Lacketer had sleek black hair, and a sharp nose; he had only an aunt, and was from Oxfordshire. I didn"t like him. He had a way of cringing to those of us who were born to position in the world; but any poor friendless chap, who had nothing but himself and his work to get on by, he put upon shamefully. As for him, we couldn"t find out that he"d ever had any relations at all, except the aunt.
I looked at Sanker, to see which he alluded to; his eyes were fixed on Vale with a stare. Vale had not been going to leave, that the school knew of.
"Why are you surprised that he has come back, Sanker?"
"Because I--didn"t suppose he _would_," said Sanker, with a pause where I have put it, and an uncommonly strong emphasis on the "would."
It was just as though he had known something about Vale. Flashing across my memory came the mysterious avowal Sanker had made at our house about the discovery of the thief at school; and I now connected the one with the other. They call me a m.u.f.f, I know, but I cannot help my thoughts.