The Vast Abyss - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"Bit of a touch o' rheumatiz in 'em, sir. Ground's rayther damp.
Good-night, sir. We'll have him yet."
"Good-night," said Tom. "But I say, David, did you have a good nap?"
"Good what, sir? Nap? Me have a nap? Why, you don't think as I went to sleep?"
"No, I don't think so," cried Tom, laughing.
"Don't you say that now, sir; don't you go and say such a word. Come, I do like that: me go to sleep? Why, sir, it was you, and you got dreaming as I slep'. I do like that."
"All right, David. Good-night."
Tom closed the gate, and ten minutes later he was in bed asleep.
CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE.
The church clock was striking six when Tom awoke, sprang out of bed, and looked out of the window, to find a glorious morning, with everything drenched in dew.
Hastily dressing and hurrying down, he felt full of reproach for having overslept himself, his last thought having been of getting up at daybreak to continue the watch with David.
There were the pears hanging in their places, and not a footprint visible upon the beds; and there too were the indentations made by two pairs of knees in the black-currant rows, while the earth was marked by the coa.r.s.e fibre of the sacks.
But the dew lay thickly, and had not been brushed off anywhere, and it suddenly struck Tom that the black-currant bushes would not be a favourable hiding-place when the light was coming, and that David must have selected some other.
"Of course: in those laurels," thought Tom, and he went along the path; but the piece of lawn between him and the shrubs had not been crossed, and after looking about in different directions, Tom began to grin and feel triumphant, for he was, after all, the first to wake.
In fact it was not till half-past seven that the gardener arrived, walking very fast till he caught sight of Tom, when he checked his speed, and came down the garden bent of back and groaning.
"Morning, Master Tom, sir. Oh, my back! Tried so hard to drag myself here just afore daylight."
"Only you didn't wake, David," cried Tom, interrupting him. "Why, you ought to have been up after having such a snooze last night in the garden."
"I won't have you say such a word, sir," cried David angrily. "Snooze!
Me snooze! Why, it was you, sir, and you're a-shoving it on to me, and--"
David stopped short, for he could not stand the clear gaze of Tom's laughing eyes. His face relaxed a little, and a few puckers began to appear, commencing a smile.
"Well, it warn't for many minutes, Master Tom."
"An hour."
"Nay, sir, nay; not a 'our."
"Quite, David; and I wouldn't wake you. I say, don't be a sham. You did oversleep yourself."
"Well, I s'pose I did, sir, just a little."
"And now what would you say if I told you that Pete has been and carried off all the pears?"
"What!" yelled David; and straightening himself he ran off as hard as he could to the Marie Louise pear-tree, but only to come back grinning.
"Nay, they're all right," he said. "But you'll come and have another try to-night?"
"Of course I will," said Tom; and soon after he hurried in to breakfast.
That morning Tom was in the workshop, where for nearly two hours, with rests between, he had been helping the speculum grinding. Uncle Richard had been summoned into the cottage, to see one of the tradesmen about some little matter of business, and finding that the bench did not stand quite so steady as it should, the boy fetched a piece of wood from the corner, and felt in his pocket for his knife, so as to cut a wedge, but the knife was not there, and he looked about him, feeling puzzled.
"When did I have it last?" he thought. "I remember: here, the day before the speculum was broken. I had it to cut a wedge to put under that stool, and left it on the bench."
But there was no knife visible, and he was concluding that he must have had it since, and left it in his other trousers' pocket, when he heard steps, and looking out through the open door, he saw the Vicar coming up the slope from the gate.
"Good-morning, sir," said Tom cheerily.
"Good-morning, Thomas Blount," was the reply, in very grave tones, accompanied by a searching look. "Is your uncle here?"
"No, sir," said Tom wonderingly; "he has just gone indoors. Shall I call him?"
"Yes--no--not yet."
The Vicar coughed to clear his throat, and looked curiously at Tom again, with the result that the lad felt uncomfortable, and flushed a little.
"Will you sit down, sir?" said Tom, taking a pot of rough emery off a stool, and giving the top a rub.
"Thank you, no."
The Vicar coughed again to get rid of an unpleasant huskiness, and then, as if with an effort--
"The fact is, Thomas Blount, I am glad he is not here, for I wish to say a few words to you seriously. I did mean to speak to him, but this is better. It shall be a matter of privacy between us, and I ask you, my boy, to treat me not as your censor but as your friend--one who wishes you well."
"Yes, sir, of course. Thank you, sir, I will," said Tom, who felt puzzled, and grew more and more uncomfortable as he wondered what it could all mean, and finally, as the Vicar remained silent, concluded that it must be something to do with his behaviour in church. Then no, it could not be that, for he could find no cause of offence.
"I know," thought Tom suddenly. "He wants me to go and read with him, Latin and Greek, I suppose, or mathematics."
The Vicar coughed again, and looked so hard at Tom that the boy felt still more uncomfortable, and hurriedly began to pull down his rolled-up s.h.i.+rt-sleeves and to b.u.t.ton his cuffs.
"Don't do that, Thomas Blount," said the Vicar, still more huskily; "there is nothing to be ashamed of in honest manual labour."
"No, sir, of course not," said the lad, still more uncomfortable, for it was very unpleasant to be addressed as "Thomas Blount," in that formal way.
"I often regret," said the Vicar, "that I have so few opportunities for genuine hard muscular work, and admire your uncle for the way in which he plunges into labour of different kinds. For such work is purifying, Thomas Blount, and enn.o.bling."
This was all very strange, and seemed like the beginning of a lecture, but Tom felt better, and he liked the Vicar--at least at other times, but not now.
"Will you be honest with me, my lad?" said the visitor at last.
"Oh yes, sir," was the reply, for "my lad" sounded so much better than formal Thomas Blount.