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!Tention Part 33

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"Why, you idgit!" he gasped, "you've lost him again. No, it's all right," he cried, and he started off at a trot in the direction of a short, plump-looking figure in rusty black, who, bent of head and book in hand, was slowly descending a slope away to his right.

CHAPTER TWENTY THREE.

THE USE OF LATIN.

"There! Ahoy!" shouted Punch, and the black figure slowly raised his head and began to look round till he was gazing in quite the opposite direction to where the boy was hurrying towards him, and Punch had a full view of the stranger's back and a ruddy-brown roll of fat flesh which seemed to be supporting a curious old hat, looking like a rusty old stove-pipe, perched horizontally upon the wearer's head.

"Hi! Not that way! Look this!" cried Punch as he closed up. "Here, I say, where's the nearest village?"

The stove-pipe turned slowly round, and Punch found himself face to face with a plump-looking little man who slowly closed the book he carried and tucked it inside his shabby gown.

"Morning!" said Punch.

The little man bowed slowly and with some show of dignity, and then gazed sternly in the boy's face and waited.

"I said good-morning, sir," said the boy; and then to himself, "what a rum-looking little chap!--Can you tell me--"

Punch got no further, for the little stranger shook his head, frowned more sternly, and shrugged his shoulders as he made as if to take out his book again.

"I ain't a beggar, sir," cried the boy. "I only want you to--Oh, he can't understand me!" he groaned. "Look here, can you understand this?"

And he commenced in dumb motions to give the stranger a difficult problem to solve.

But it proved to be not too difficult, for the little man smiled, nodded his head, and imitated Punch's suggestive pantomime of eating and drinking. Then, laying one hand upon the boy's shoulder, he pointed with the other down the slope and tried to guide him in that direction.

"All right," said Punch, nodding, "I understand. That's where you live; but not yet. Come this way." And, catching the little stranger by the arm, Punch pointed towards the forest and tried to draw his companion in that direction.

The plump little man shook his head and suggested that they should go in the other direction.

"Oh, a mercy me!" cried Punch excitedly. "Why, don't you understand?

Look here, sir, I can see what you are. You are a priest. I have seen folks like you more than once. Now, just look here."

The little man shrugged his shoulders again, shook his head, and then looked compa.s.sionately at the boy.

"That's better," said Punch. "Now, sir, do try and understand, there's a good fellow. Just look here!"

The boy tapped him on the shoulder now, and pointed towards the wood.

"Now, look here, sir; it's like this."

Punch made-believe to present a musket, after giving a sharp _click, click_ with his tongue in imitation of the c.o.c.king of the piece, cried _Bang_! and then gave a jump, clapped his hand to his right leg, staggered, threw himself down, and then struggled up into a sitting position, to sit up nursing his leg, which he made-believe to bind up with a bandage. Then, holding out his hand to the little priest, he caught hold of him, dragged himself up, but let himself fall back, rolled over, and lay looking at him helplessly.

"Understand that?" he cried, as he sprang to his feet again. "You must be jolly stupid if you can't. Now then, look here, sir," he continued, pointing and gesticulating with great energy, "my poor comrade is lying over yonder under a tree, wounded and starving. Come and help me to fetch him, there's a good old chap."

The priest looked at him fixedly, and then, taking his cue from the boy, he pointed in the direction Punch had indicated, nodded, clapped the boy on the shoulder, and began to walk by his side.

"There, I thought I could make you understand," cried Punch eagerly.

"But you might say something. Ain't deaf and dumb, are you?"

The little priest shook his head, muttered to himself, and then, bending down, he tapped his own leg, and looking questioningly in his would-be guide's face, he began to limp.

"Yes, yes, yes!" cried Punch excitedly. And, imitating his companion, he bent down, tapped his own leg, then limped as if walking with the greatest of difficulty and made-believe to sink down helplessly.

"Good! I understand," said the little priest in Spanish. "Wounded.

Lead on."

Punch held out his hand, which the little stranger took, and suffered himself to be led in the direction of the great chestnut, shaking his head and looking questioningly more than once at the boy, as Punch hesitated and seemed to be in doubt, and ran here and there trying to make out his bearings, successfully as it happened, for he caught sight at last of the object of his search, hurried back to the little priest's side, to stand panting and faint, pa.s.sing his hand over his dripping face, utterly exhausted.

"Can't help it, sir," he said piteously. "I have been wounded. Just let me get my breath, and then we will go on again. I am sure now. Oh, I do wish I could make you understand better!" added the boy piteously.

"There's my poor comrade yonder, perhaps dying by this time, and me turning like this!"

For just then he reeled and would have fallen if the little priest had not caught him by the arms and lowered him slowly down.

"Thank you, sir," said Punch, with a sob half-choking his utterance.

"It's all on account of my wound, sir. There, I'm better now. Come on."

He tried to struggle up, but the little priest shook his head and pressed him back.

"Thank you, sir. It's very good of you; but I want to get on. He's getting tired of waiting, you know." And Punch pointed excitedly in the direction of the tree.

The journey was continued soon after, with Punch's arm locked in that of his new-found friend; and in due time Punch staggered through the trees to where Pen lay, now meeting his gaze with a wild look of misery and despair.

"It's all right, comrade," cried Punch. "I have found somebody at last.

He must live somewhere near here, but I can't make him understand anything, only that you were lying wounded. Did you think I had forgotten you?"

"No," said Pen faintly, "I never thought that."

"Look here," said Punch, "say something to him in French. Tell him I want to get you to a cottage, and say we are starving."

Pen obeyed, and faintly muttered a few words in French; but the priest shook his head.

"_Frances_?" he said.

"No, no," replied Pen. "_Ingles_."

"Ah, _Ingles_!" said the priest, smiling; and he went down on one knee to softly touch the rough bandage that was about the wounded leg.

Then, to the surprise of both boys, he carefully raised Pen into a sitting position, signed to Punch to hold him up, and then taking off his curiously fas.h.i.+oned hat and hanging it upon a broken branch of the tree, the boys saw that Nature had furnished him with the tonsure of the priest without the barber's aid, and they had the opportunity now of seeing that it was a pleasantly wrinkled rosy face, with a pair of good-humoured-looking eyes that gazed up in theirs.

"What's he going to do?" said Punch in a whisper.

He comprehended the next minute, and eagerly lent his aid, for the little priest, twisting up his gown and securing it round his waist, began to prove himself a worthy descendant of the Good Samaritan, though wanting in the ability to set the wounded traveller upon his own a.s.s.

Going down, though, upon one knee, he took hold of first one hand and then the other, and, with Punch's a.s.sistance to his own natural strength, he got Pen upon his back, hitching him up a little, and then a little more, till he had drawn the wounded lad's arms across his chest.

This done, he knelt there on one knee, panting, before drawing a deep breath prior to rising with his burden. Then he tried to stand up, but without success.

He waited, then tried again; but once more without success, for the weight was greater than he had antic.i.p.ated.

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