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"So it will, for sure! It's sent as a judgment without doubt," agreed Mr. Pratt, gazing with contemplative interest at the moaning victim, laid temporarily by the roadside.
"I wish they'd think less about warnings and judgments, and be a little quicker with the cart," whispered Githa.
"I'll offer to help them get it ready, that will probably hurry them,"
replied Mr. Cooper. "Country people have no idea of the value of time in these cases, or, indeed, in any matter at all, as I often find to my cost."
After what seemed an incredible waste of precious minutes, the cart was at last brought out, and Bob lifted on to the pile of straw. Sending his man back to feed the hens, Mr. Cooper decided to ride himself with the invalid, while Githa and Gwethyn ran on to warn Mrs. Gartley of what had occurred. They found the poor woman in a state of indescribable muddle, doing some belated was.h.i.+ng. Gwethyn, with a promise of sweets, managed to cajole all the little ones from the cottage, while Githa broke the news as gently as she could to the mother.
"I knew it 'ud come to this some day!" exclaimed Mrs. Gartley, flinging her ap.r.o.n over her head, and collapsing in tears on to a chair. "I've told him fifty times, if I've told him once, there'd no good happen from the way he was carrying on, but he never would listen to I!"
"Have you got everything ready for him?" asked Githa. "He ought to lie on a mattress, not a soft bed, Mr. Cooper says. I can hear the cart coming now. As soon as they've brought him in, we must send a messenger for the doctor."
It was such a limp, moaning burden which was carried upstairs, that Mrs.
Gartley broke into frantic hysterical sobs at the sight, and was no more use than the children, who, scenting the fact that for some reason they were being kept out of the way, evaded Gwethyn's blandishments, and tore back into the cottage. The men, however, made the poor fellow as comfortable as they could, and so many neighbours began to arrive that there was soon far more help than was necessary.
"We may as well go," said Mr. Cooper to the two girls. "We've done all we can, and he'll have to wait now for the doctor."
Bob was lying quite still, with his eyes shut, and his face as white as his pillow, but he evidently heard that, for he roused himself.
"If it hadn't a-been for you, I'd ha' died in the wood," he said. "I shan't forget."
Githa and Gwethyn had gathered not a single mushroom, but they were much too excited even to think about them. They ran up to Aireyholme to tell their news before they walked back to The Gables, and Miss Aubrey promised to go at once to the Gartleys' cottage, to render what aid she could. Mrs. Ledbury also was much concerned when she heard the girls'
report of their morning's adventure, and sent during the afternoon to inquire about the invalid.
"He's a bad lot, that Bob Gartley," said Mr. Ledbury; "I have more than a suspicion that he comes poaching into my woods. I've seen him skulking about once or twice. Still, in the name of humanity, you're bound to help a man, even if you find him with a hare in one pocket and a c.o.c.k pheasant in the other. You can't let him lie with a broken leg. I'm sorry for his wife, poor thing!"
CHAPTER XX
Bob Gartley Explains
The prospects of the Gartley family at present were certainly not of a rosy description. With her husband in bed, Mrs. Gartley could not go out to work, and her household was obliged to subsist as best it could on charity. The parish allowed some outdoor relief, which was supplemented by doles from the Church funds, and neighbours, now that there was the excuse of real sickness, were kind in giving practical help. There was no danger of actual starvation, though luxuries were out of the question.
Laid by the heels, with no exciting expeditions to break the monotony of his days, Mr. Bob Gartley alternately pitied himself and railed at fate.
He was a fractious invalid, and spared his wife neither time nor trouble in attending to his wants.
"He be worse nor a baby!" she complained to her friends. "I've only to get him settled and go downstairs and begin a bit o' was.h.i.+n', when there he is hollerin' for me again, and all about naught. I fair lose my patience sometimes, but he keeps a boot handy under his pillow, ready to fling at I if I crosses him, and he be such a good shot he never misses, duck as I will."
The exactions of her lord and master kept Mrs. Gartley so busy that her family lived more than ever in the road, escaping pa.s.sing motors by a miracle, and receiving chance meals from anybody who had fragments to spare--a practice rather sniffed at by some of the neighbours.
"Not as I've any wish to see 'em go wantin'," remarked Mrs. Blundell, "but I think they're doin' better now than when their father had his health. Hungry? Why, yes--they'd always be ready to eat sweet stuff at any hour of day. That don't prove they be in need. As for Bob Gartley, he must be livin' like a fightin' c.o.c.k with all they basins of broth and pots of jelly. He'll want to break his leg again when times is bad."
Lying in his stuffy little bedroom, Mr. Gartley had leisure to consider his circ.u.mstances and air his views. He carefully compared the various viands that were sent him, with criticisms on the culinary skill of the donors.
"Don't bring me no more broth!" he said to his wife one afternoon; "I'm sick of the very sight of it. Might as well be in hospital. Why can't you get me a sc.r.a.p of liver and bacon?"
"Doctor said we wasn't to give you that on no account," objected Mrs.
Gartley. "I wish they had taken you to hospital while they was about it.
If it had been I, I'd have jumped at goin'."
"Shows how much you knows about it! Why, when I was in the infirmary they washed me all over every day! Yes, it's the truth I'm tellin' you!
And they left windows open all day long, and wouldn't allow me a smoke, or even a chew of 'baccy. No more hospitals, says I! Take that broth away, can't you? Ain't there any jelly in the house?"
"No, the pot's empty."
"Then you've let those brats get at it!"
"I ain't. You've had it all yourself."
"Maybe they'll be sending some more from somewheres."
"Like enough; but you won't get much more from Aireyholme."
"Why not?" asked Mr. Gartley much aggrieved.
"Because the young ladies is going away next week."
"Oh, it's their holidays, is it?"
"Aye; the school's always shut up in holiday time. Miss Aubrey and Mrs.
Franklin goes away too."
The news appeared to make Bob thoughtful, and he pondered over it for a few moments.
"I suppose that young lady'll be takin' that little cupboard with her,"
he remarked at last.
"What little cupboard?"
"Why, you stupid, the one as she put in the picture with Granny Blundell and our Hugh. She'd bought it from Mrs. Stubbs."
"Oh, I remember. Yes, if she's bought it and paid for it, of course she'll be takin' it with her."
"It's hard for a poor man to be tied to his bed as helpless as a log!"
groaned Bob. "Goodness knows what she'll do with it if she takes it away! Sell it again, maybe. Anyways, I shall be off the track of it."
"What do you mean?" queried his wife. "I can't see as you've got aught to do with Miss Marsden's cupboard."
"You never could see farther than your nose, Jane. Some of they young ladies has been very good to a poor man. I'd a-died if they hadn't found me in the wood."
"Why, yes, I know that!" exclaimed Mrs. Gartley, immensely amazed at such an unwonted outburst of grat.i.tude.
"It might be good for a fiver," murmured Bob. "That's little enough, but it would be better than missin' everything. Look here, Jane. Send Mary across to Aireyholme, and tell her to say I'd like to see Miss Hamilton on a bit of special business."
"What's it all about?" asked Mrs. Gartley inquisitively.