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"'There you are, old gal,' I says, patting her, as I took off one rope, and felt that the other was fast round her. 'Up you go again.' I lifted her up and shouted to 'em to haul, and in half a minute she was gone, and I was alone in the dark, but with the rope made fast round my chest.
"'Are you ready?' shouts the ganger.
"'Ay!' I says. 'Pull steady, for I'm heavier than the dog.'
"They began to haul as I took tight hold of the rope above my head, and up I went slowly with the sand being cut away by the tight line, and coming thundering down on me at an awful rate, just as if some one was shooting cart loads atop of me.
"'Steady!' I yelled; and they pulled away slowly, while I wondered whether the rope would give way. But it held, and I felt my head bang against the sand, and some more fell. Then, as I kicked my legs about, I felt myself dragged more into the hole, and I tried to help myself; but all I did was to send about a ton of sand down from under me. Then very slowly I was hauled past an elbow in the hole, and I was got round towards the other when a lot more sand fell from beneath me, and then, just as I was seeing daylight, there was a sort of heave above me, and the top came down and nipped me fast just about the hips.
"'Haul! my lads, haul!' the ganger shouted, and they hauled till I felt most cut in two, and I had to holler to 'em to stop.
"'I shall want my legs,' I says. 'They ain't much o' ones, but useful!'
"There was nothing for it but to begin digging, for they could see my face now, and they began watching very carefully that the sand didn't get over my head, when, all at once, as they dug, there was a slip, and the sand, and the roots, and stones all dropped down into the hole below, and I was hauled out on to the top safe and sound, 'cept a few scratches, and only a bit of the sleeve of my s.h.i.+rt left.
"There, you know the rest."
CHAPTER THIRTY ONE.
"WHAT'S THE MEANING OF ALL THIS?"
I did know the rest; how Shock and I lay for a fortnight at the little country inn carefully tended before we were declared fit to go back home, for the doctor was not long in bringing us back to our senses; and, save that I used to wake with a start out of my sleep in the dark, fancying I was back in the pit, I was not much the worse. Shock was better, for he looked cleaner and fresher, but he objected a great deal to our nurse brus.h.i.+ng his hair.
I was just back and feeling strong again, when one day Sir Francis came down into the pinery, and stopped and spoke to me. He said he had heard all about my narrow escape, and hoped it would be a warning to me never to trust myself in a sand-pit again.
He was very kind after his manner, which was generally as if he thought all the world were soldiers, and I was going up to my dinner soon, after I had stopped for a bit of a cool down in one of the other houses, when, to my great disgust, I saw Courtenay and Philip back, and I felt a kind of foreboding that there would soon be some more troubles to face.
I was quite right, for during the rest of their stay at home they seemed to have combined to make my life as wretched as they possibly could.
I was often on the point of complaining, but I did not like to do so, for it seemed to be so cowardly, and besides, I argued to myself that I could not expect all suns.h.i.+ne. Old Brownsmith used to have me over to spend Sundays with him, and his brother and Mrs Solomon were very kind.
Ike sometimes went so far as to say "Good-morning" and "good-night,"
and Shock had become so friendly that he would talk, and bring me a good moth or b.u.t.terfly for my case.
I went steadily on collecting, for Mr Solomon said, as long as the work was done well he would rather I did amuse myself in a sensible way.
The consequence was that I often used to go down the garden of a night, and my collection of moths was largely increased.
I noticed about this time that Sir Francis used to talk a good deal to Shock, and by and by I found from Ike that the boy was going regularly to an evening-school, and altering a great deal for the better.
Unfortunately, Ike, with whom he lodged, was not improving, as I had several opportunities of observing, and one day I took him to task about it.
"I know the excuse you have, Ike," I said, "that habit you got into when going backwards and forwards to the market; but when you had settled down here in a gentleman's garden, I should have thought that you would have given it up."
"Ah, yes," he said, as he drove in his spade. "You're a gent, you see, and I'm only a workman."
"I'm going to be a workman too, Ike," I said.
"Ay, but not a digger like me. They don't set me to prune, and thin grapes, and mind chyce flowers. I'm not like you."
"It does not matter what any one is, Ike," I said. "You ought to turn over a new leaf and keep away from the public-house."
"True," he said, smas.h.i.+ng a clod; "and I do turn over a noo leaf, but it will turn itself back."
"Nonsense!" I said. "You are sharp enough on Shock's failings, and you tell me of mine. Why don't you attend to your own?"
"Look here, young gent," he cried sharply, "do you want to quarrel just because I like a drop now and then?"
"Quarrel! No, Ike. I tell you because I don't want to see you discharged."
"Think they would start me if they knowed, lad?"
"I'm sure of it," I said earnestly. "Sir Francis is so particular."
"Then," he said, sc.r.a.ping his spade fiercely, "it won't do. I want to stop here. I'll turn over a noo leaf."
One day in the next autumn, as I was carefully shutting in a pill-box a moth that I had found, a gentleman who was staying at the house caught sight of me and asked to see it.
"Ah, yes!" he said. "Goat-moth, and a nice specimen. Do you sugar?"
"Do I sugar, sir?" I said vacantly. "Yes, I like sugar, sir."
"Bless the lad!" he said, laughing. "I mean sugar the trees. Smear them with thick sugar and water or treacle, and then go round at night with a lantern; that's the way to catch the best moths."
I was delighted with the idea and was not long before I tried it, and as luck would have it, there was an old bull's-eye lantern in the tool-house that Mr Solomon used when he went round to the furnaces of a night.
I remember well one evening, just at leaving-off time, taking my bottle of thick syrup and brush from the tool-house shelf, and slipping down the garden and into the pear-plantation where the choice late fruit was waiting and asking daily to be picked.
Mr Solomon was very proud of his pears, and certainly some of them grew to a magnificent size.
I was noticing how beautiful and tawny and golden some of them were growing to be as I smeared the trunk of one and then of another with my sweet stuff, and as it was a deliciously warm still evening, I was full of expectation of a good take.
I had just finished when all at once I heard a curious noise, which made me think of lying in the dark in the sand-cave listening to Shock's hard breathing; and I gave quite a shudder as I looked round, and then turned hot and angry.
I knew what the noise was, and had not to look far to find Ike lying under a large tree right away from the path fast asleep, and every now and then uttering a few words and giving a snort.
"Ike!" I said, shaking him. "Ike! wake up and go home."
But the more I tried the more stupid he seemed to grow, and I stood at last wondering what I had better do, not liking the idea of Mr Solomon hearing, for it was certain to mean a very severe reprimand. It might mean discharge.
It seemed such a pity, too, and I could not help thinking that this bad habit of Ike's was the reason why he had lived to fifty and never risen above the position of labourer.
I tried again to wake him, but it was of no use, and just then I heard Mr Solomon shout to me that tea was waiting.
I ran up the garden quickly for fear Mr Solomon should come down and see Ike, and as I went I made up my mind that I would get the key of the gate into the lane and come down after dark and smuggle him out without anyone knowing.
"Well, b.u.t.terfly boy," said Mrs Solomon, smiling in her half-serious way, "we've been waiting tea these ten minutes."
I said I was very sorry, and though I felt a little guilty as I sat down I soon forgot all about Ike in my pleasant meal.