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"Well," says Miss Kavanagh, with a sigh, "if you will have it, at least, don't interrupt." She has tried very hard to get rid of him, but, having failed in so signal a fas.h.i.+on, she gives herself up with an admirable resignation to the inevitable.
"What would I do that for?" asks Tommy, rather indignantly.
"I don't know, I'm sure. But I thought I'd warn you," says she, wisely precautious. "Now, sit down there," pointing to the seat beside her; "and when you feel you have had enough of it, say so at once."
"That would be interrupting," says Tommy, the Conscientious.
"Well, I give you leave to interrupt so far," says Joyce, glad to leave him a loop-hole that may insure his departure before Felix comes. "But no further--mind that."
"Oh, I'm minding!" says Tommy, impatiently. "Go on. Why don't you begin?"
Miss Kavanagh, taking up her book once more, opens it at random. All its contents are sweetmeats of the prettiest, so she is not driven to a choice. She commences to read in a firm, soft voice:--
"The wind and the beam loved the rose, And the roses loved one: For who recks the----"
"What's that?" says Tommy.
"What's what?"
"You aren't reading it right, are you?"
"Certainly I am. Why?"
"I don't believe a beam of wood could love anything," says Tommy; "it's too heavy."
"It doesn't mean a beam of wood."
"Doesn't it?" staring up into her face. "What's it mean, then--'The beam that is in thine own eye?'"
He is now examining her own eye with great interest. As usual, Tommy is strong in Bible lore.
"I have no beam in my eye, I hope," says Joyce, laughing; "and, at all events, it doesn't mean that either. The poet who wrote this meant a sunbeam."
"Well, why couldn't he say so?" says Tommy, gruffly.
"I really think you had better bring me one of your own books," says Joyce. "I told you this would----"
"No," obstinately, "I like this. It sounds so nice and smoothly. Go on,"
says Tommy, giving her a nudge.
Joyce, with a sigh, reopens the volume, and gives herself up for lost.
To argue with Tommy is always to know fatigue, and nothing else. One never gains anything by it.
"Well, do be quiet now, and listen," says she, protesting faintly.
"I'm listening like anything," says Tommy. And, indeed, now at last it seems as if he were.
So silent does he grow as his aunt reads on that you might have heard a mouse squeak. But for the low, soft tones of Joyce no smallest sound breaks the sweet silence of the day. Miss Kavanagh is beginning to feel distinctly flattered. If one can captivate the flitting fancies of a child by one's eloquent rendering of charming verse, what may one not aspire to? There must be something in her style if it can reduce a boy of seven to such a state of ecstatic attention, considering the subject is hardly such a one as would suit his tender years.
But Tommy was always thoughtful beyond his age. A dear, clever little fellow! So appreciative! Far, far beyond the average! He----
The mild sweetness of the spring evening and her own thoughts are broken in upon at this instant by the "dear, clever little fellow."
"He has just got to your waist now," says he, with an air of wild if subdued excitement.
"He! Who! What!" shrieks Joyce, springing to her feet. A long acquaintance with Tommy has taught her to dread the worst.
"Oh, there! Of course you've knocked him down, and I did want to see how high he would go. I was tickling his tail to make him hurry up," says Tommy, in an aggrieved tone. "I can't see him anywhere now," peering about on the ground at her feet.
"Oh! What was it, Tommy? Do speak!" cries Joyce, in a frenzy of fear and disgust.
"'Twas an earwig!" says Tommy, lifting a seraphic face to hers. "And such a big one! He was racing up your dress most beautifully, and now you've upset him. Poor thing--I don't believe he'll ever find his way back to you again."
"I should hope not, indeed!" says Miss Kavanagh, hastily.
"He began at the very end of your frock," goes on Tommy, still searching diligently on the ground, as if to find the earwig, with a view to restoring it to its lost hunting ground; "and it wriggled up so nicely.
I don't know where he is now"--sorrowfully--"unless," with a sudden brightening of his expressive face, "he is up your petticoats."
"Tommy! What a horrid, bad boy you are!" cries poor Joyce, wildly. She gives a frantic shake to the petticoats in question. "Find him at once, sir! He must be somewhere down there. I shan't have an instant's peace until I know where he is."
"I can't see him anywhere," says Tommy. "Maybe you'll feel him presently, and then we'll know. He isn't on your leg now, is he?"
"Oh! don't!" cries Joyce, who looks as if she is going, to cry. She gives herself another vigorous shake, and stands away from the spot where Tommy evidently thinks the noxious beast in question may be, with her petticoats held carefully up in both hands. "Oh, Tommy, darling! Do find him. He can't be up my petticoats, can he?"
"He can. There's, nothing they can't do," says Tommy, who is plainly revelling in the storm he has raised. Her open fright is beer and skittles to him. "Why did you stir? He was as good as gold, until then; and there wasn't anything to be afraid of. I was watching him. When he got to your ear I'd have told you. I wouldn't like him to make you deaf, but I wanted to see if he would go to your ear. But you spoiled all my fun, and now--where is he now?" asks Tommy, with an awful suggestion in his tone.
"On the gra.s.s, perhaps," says Joyce, miserably, looking round her everywhere, and even on her shoulder. "I don't feel him anywhere."
"Sometimes they stay quite a long time, and then they crawl!" says Tommy, the most horrible antic.i.p.ation in his tone.
"Really, Tommy," cries his aunt, indignantly, "I do think you are the most abominable boy I ever met in my life. There, go away! I certainly shan't read another line to you--either now--or--ever!"
"What is the matter?" asks a voice at this moment, that sounds close to her elbow. She turns round with a start.
"It is you, Felix!" says she, coloring warmly. "Oh--oh, it's nothing.
Only Tommy. And he said I had an earwig on me. And I was just a little unnerved, you know."
"And no wonder," says her lover, with delightful sympathy. "I can't bear that sort of wild animal myself. Tommy, you ought to be ashamed of yourself. When you saw him why didn't you rise up and slay the destroyer of your aunt's peace? There; run away into the hall. You will find on one of the tables a box of chocolate. I told Mabel it was there; perhaps she----"
Like an arrow from the bow, Tommy departs.
"He has evidently his doubts of Mabel," says Joyce, laughing rather nervously. She is still a little shy with Felix. "He doesn't trust her."
"No." He has seated himself and now draws her down beside him. "You were reading?" he says.
"Yes."
"To Tommy?"