"Yes, by Wilmet for one! You should have seen the way she was in--as if I hadn"t a right to do what I please with my own money."
"What?"
"My violin! Ferdinand Travis tipped me when he rode over to the Cathedral, and by good luck it was the day before the auction at old Spicer"s. Bill and I went in to see the fun, and by all that is lucky, there was a violin routed out of an old cupboard. n.o.body bid against me but G.o.dwin, the broker, and it was knocked down to me for twenty-two and six. Bill lent me the half-crown; and Poulter, our lay vicar, who is at a music-shop, says "tis a real bargain, he"s mad to have missed it himself, but he showed me how to put my fingers on it, and I can play Mendelssohn"s "Hirtenlied." You shall hear by and by, Robin. Well; Wilmet comes on it when she was unpacking my shirts. I"m sure I wish she"d let me unpack them myself, instead of poking her nose there; and if she wasn"t in a way! Wasting my money, when I ought to be saving it up to buy a watch; and wasting my time and all the rest of it--till one would think "twas old Scratch himself I"d brought home!"
"Oh don"t, Lance. And did she set on Felix?"
"Ay; and then, you know, our new Precentor, Beccles, isn"t one quarter the man Nixon was; and he has been and written a letter to Fee that any schoolmaster in creation should be licked for writing, to go and pison a poor chap"s home--all about those cards."
"What cards?"
"The pack Jones found in the middle of the north transept ten days ago."
"Of the Cathedral! How shocking! But why should he write to Felix?"
"Because the big-wigs make sure some one out of the Bailey must have dropped them, getting into the town through the Cathedral at night"
"But they don"t suspect you?"
"No; but Beccles got into an awful way, and swears--"
"You don"t mean really swears!"
"No, no--stuff--vows--that unless he gets to the bottom of it, not one of us shall have the good-conduct prize. Now I did think I might have had that--though I"m not a church candle like Tina--for I never was had up for anything; and it is precious hard lines! Such a beauty, Robin, the Bishop gives it--all the Cathedral music, bound in red morocco; and this beggar hinders us all this very last chance!
And then, he is dirty enough to write and tell Felix to get out of me who has been getting out through the Cathedral, and dropping the cards."
"Do you know?"
"Hold your tongue; I thought you had a little sense! Felix had that; he saw I could not tell him, and said it must be as I pleased about that; but then he rowed me, as he never did before, for wasting time, and not mugging for the exhibition--as if that was any use."
"Why shouldn"t t you get the exhibition?"
"Put that out of your head," said Lance, angrily; "Harewood is sure of that! A fellow that construes by nature--looks at a sentence, and spots the nominative in a moment--makes verses--rale, superior, iligant articles."
"But I thought he wasn"t always accurate. Can"t you catch him out? O Lance, don"t look so fierce! I only said so because he can"t want the exhibition as much as you. He can go to some other school, or be paid for."
"Not conveniently," said Lance, "they are not at all well off, and Jack helps them. Besides, I wouldn"t get the thing in a sneaking way; and besides, Bill could no more make a mull in construing out of carelessness than I could a false note--it"s against nature. I can"t beat him, except in arithmetic. My birthday comes at such an unlucky time. I should get another year if I"d only been born in July instead of June! I might be second, for Shapcote is only dogged by his father; but that"s no good for the exhibition: and then there"s an end of Cathedral and all!"
"What should you do then, Lance?"
"Whatever costs least! I"d as lief work my way out to Fulbert, if this is to go on."
"Oh, don"t! don"t do that, whatever you do!" cried Robina, clinging to his arm.
"I don"t see why not, if everybody is to be as savage as a bear when one comes home. One always trusted to Felix to see sense, if n.o.body else did; but what with his jawing one about the exhibition, and Wilmet about the tin and every spot on one"s clothes, and Alda growling at whatever one does in the parlour, I"m sure I wish I"d stayed at Bexley."
The boy and girl had never before been tried by want of sympathy, and what seemed to them injustice, when they had thus descended into the perturbed atmosphere of what they were used to regard as a happy home. There was a long mutual communication of grievances--irritable speeches--inattention from their elders--fancies and complaints of Alda"s enforced peremptorily by Wilmet--appeals to Felix either quashed or unheeded; the strange thing was, in how short a time so much had managed to go wrong with them, except that they added the vexations of the last quarter to the present discomfort, real or fancied; and though they were both good children, each had the strong feeling that there was not as much encouragement as usual to goodness, and that it could not have been much worse if they had been seriously to blame. One had expected to be caressed for her endurance in a good cause; the other had not expected to be severely rebuked for what he scarcely viewed as faults. It was the first time this younger half of the family had ever suffered anything approaching to neglect or injustice from their seniors, and the moment was perilous.
The discussion was forming their discontents into a dangerously avowed state, if it had the beneficial effect of raising their spirits by force of sympathy. At any rate, they were in no gloomy mood when they reached the tidy little villa, with its beds of open- hearted crocuses defying the cold wind, and admitting the sun to the utmost depths of their purple and golden bosoms, as they laughed their cheery greeting.
No less cheerful was the welcome from kind old Mrs. Froggatt, who met them at the door. "Master Lancelot, Miss Robina, this is an unlooked- for pleasure, to be sure! My dear Miss Robina!" as the girl gave her hearty embrace.
They were the prime favourites next to Felix, and were the more gladly hailed that Mr. Froggatt was anxious about the business on which they came, and had been trying to get leave from his wife to peril his rheumatics by coming in to Bexley about it. They must stay to luncheon; and while Mr. Froggatt went off to answer his note, they were made much of over the fire, in the way that had of late become so abhorrent to Bernard, with difficulty avoiding a pre-luncheon or nooning of cake and wine within an hour of the meal of the day.
"And how is Mr. Underwood?" asked Mrs. Froggatt, when Robina had been divested of her wraps, placed close to the fire, screened and footstooled, and when Lance had transferred the big white cat from the arm-chair to his own knee.
"Oh, very well, thank you," said Robina, rather surprised that the lengthy catechism on the family health did not as usual start from "poor dear Miss Geraldine."
"He was looking so thin, and had such a cough, I was quite concerned when he walked out here on Good Friday afternoon," continued Mrs.
Froggatt. "I hope he is taking care."
"Wilmet is always at him about it," said Lance.
"That is right. And I hope he minds to keep the office-door shut. It is such a draughty place! Does he wear flannel, do you know, my dear?"
"I think so," said Robina. "Sister Constance told Wilmet he ought, when he had that long cough after the measles."
"Ay. You know--you"ll excuse me, my dears, a cough is not to be trifled with in your dear family."
"You should write to the clerk of the weather-office, Mrs. Froggatt,"
said Lance, rather gruffly.
And as Mrs. Froggatt was not good at understanding jokes, but was always ready to accept Mr. Lance"s, she thought he meant Admiral Fitzroy; and much explanation and banter followed, which the children made the louder from dread of the subject. Mrs. Froggatt was by no means the cultivated person her husband was; but, being of a good old plain farmer stock, she was quite as una.s.suming, and her manners with the young Underwoods were a good deal like those of a superior old housekeeper, only perhaps less authoritative and familiar; but she was not to be kept away from the subject of her real anxiety. "I wish I could see your sister, and speak to her; he ought to have some advice rather than let it run on in this way. I"m sure Mr. Froggatt would be willing to do anything. It has been a great concern to him to have to leave such a heavy charge to him this spring, and with all the family cares on his head too, at his age. Miss Alda"s wedding put off too--is it? And is the young gentleman here still?"
"No; his leave was over last Monday," said Robina, "a week after I came home."
"I should like to have seen him! Your brother says he is grown up such a fine-looking young man, and quite got over his lameness. A handsome couple they will be! I did see them ride through the place, but Miss Alda didn"t see me."
"You saw his horse?" broke in Lance, who considered Brown Murad as a superior specimen to either of the lovers, and Mrs. Froggatt, whose father had bred horses, and whose son was much more addicted to them than was for his good, was a much more intelligent auditor of the perfections now dilated on than could have been expected.
Yet nothing could keep off the dreaded subject, and even at table, Lance"s disappointing deficiency in schoolboy voracity became the cause of a lamentation over his brother"s small appet.i.te, and an examination of Robina, resulting in her allowing that Felix seldom gave himself time to do more than s.n.a.t.c.h a crust of bread in the middle of the day, and did not always make up for it at tea-time. Mr.
Froggatt shook his head and looked distressed, and his good lady went on discoursing about the basin of soup she always used to keep prepared for him, evidently longing, though not quite daring, to send a lecture to Wilmet on taking care of her brother. But what made more impression on both the children was, that after they had been into Mr. Froggatt"s little conservatory with him, and had received into their charge a basket of camellias, violets, and calycanthus, with a pot of jonquils in the middle for Geraldine, the old gentleman said, as he bade them good-bye, "Tell your sister, that if she thinks a day or two of laying by would be good for your brother, I should be ready and glad to change places with him. A little change might take away his cough; and I don"t like his looks--no, I don t. He ought to be careful;" this to himself, with a long sigh.
Then the children got out into the garden, and with the natural impatience of the evil omen, exclaimed at the same moment--
"Croak, croak, croak, went the frogs,"
and
"Were there ever such a pair of good old coddles?"
But then they walked on for a full quarter of a mile before either said another word; and then it was, "You don"t think Felix looking ill, do you, Lance?"
"I never thought about his looks at all," said Lance.
"No more did I," said Robina, "but he does cough; I hear him through the wall in the morning. Do you think there is anything in it, Lance?"
"How long has it been going on?"