'l WOULD GIVE A POUND NOTE TO KNOW WHAT YOU'LL BE TEN YEARS FROM NOW " ' SENTIMENTAL TOMMY BY J. M. BARRIE NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1920 #* Cbpyright, 1896, by CHAJU.M SCWBNER'I SoUf M > TO MY WIFE INTRODUCTION THIS is not in the smallest degree the book I meant it to be. Tommy ran away with the author. When we meet a man who interests us, and is perhaps something of an enigma, we may fall a- wondering what sort of boyhood he had ; and so it is with writers who become inquisitive about their own creations. It was Sentimental Tommy the man that I intended to write of here ; I had thought him out as carefully as was possible to me ; but I suppose I saw the end more clearly than the beginning, for when I sat down to make a start I felt that I could not really know him at one and twenty unless I could picture him at fifteen, and one's character is so fixed at fifteen that I saw I must go farther back for him, and so I journeyed to his childhood. Even then I meant merely to summarize his early days, but I was loth to leave him, or perhaps it was he who was loth to grow up, having a suspicion of what was in store for him. " Let us have one more game in the Den," he cried, and I was a tool in his hands. But though we may put off the evil day as long as we can, come it must in the end. vii CONTENTS PART I PAGE I TOMMY CONTRIVES TO KEEP ONE OUT I II BUT THE OTHER GETS IN .... 16 III SHOWING HOW TOMMY WAS SUD- DENLY TRANSFORMED INTO A YOUNG GENTLEMAN 27 IV THE END OF AN IDYLL 42 V THE GIRL WITH TWO MOTHERS . . 56 VI THE ENCHANTED STREET 66 VII COMIC OVERTURE TO A TRAGEDY . 78 VIII THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS . . 90 IX AULD LANG SYNE 106 X THE FAVOURITE OF THE LADIES . .117 XI AARON LATTA 133 XII A CHILD'S TRAGEDY 148 XIII SHOWS HOW TOMMY TOOK CARE OF ELSPETH 166 XIV THE HANKY SCHOOL 173 XV THE MAN WHO NEVER CAME ... 184 XVI THE PAINTED LADY 197 XVII IN WHICH TOMMY SOLVES THE WO- MAN PROBLEM 207 XVIII THE MUCKLEY 217 XIX CORP IS BROUGHT TO HEEL GRIZEL DEFIANT 232 XX THE SHADOW OF SIR WALTER ... 245 ix CONTENTS PART II PAGI XXI THE LAST JACOBITE RISING ... 261 XXII THE SIEGE OF THRUMS . . ~. . 277 XXIII GRIZEL PAYS THREE VISITS ... 292 XXIV A ROMANCE OF TWO OLD MAIDS AND A STOUT BACHELOR . . 302 XXV A PENNY PASS-BOOK ...... 321 XXVI TOMMY REPENTS, AND IS NONE THE WORSE FOR IT 335 XXVII THE LONGER CATECHISM ... 348 XXVIII BUT IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN MISS KITTY 358 XXIX TOMMY THE SCHOLAR 364 XXX END OF THE JACOBITE RISING . . 378 XXXI A LETTER TO GOD ..'... 391 XXXII AN ELOPEMENT 405 XXXIII THERE IS SOME ONE TO LOVE GRIZEL AT LAST 423 XXXIV WHO TOLD TOMMY TO SPEAK . 438 XXXV THE BRANDING OF TOMMY ... 452 XXXVI OF FOUR MINISTERS WHO AFTER- WARDS BOASTED THAT THEY HAD KNOWN TOMMY SANDYS 470 XXXVII THE END OF A BOYHOOD ... 491 SENTIMENTAL TOMM\ PART I SENTIMENTAL TOMMY THE STORY OF HIS BOYHOOD CHAPTER I TOMMY CONTRIVES TO KEEP ONE OUT HPHE celebrated Tommy first comes into view X on a dirty London stair, and he was in sex- less garments, which were all he had, and he was five, and so though we art looking at him, we must do it sideways, lest he sit down hurriedly to hide them. That inscrutable face, which made the clubmen of his later days uneasy and even puzzled the ladies while he was making love to them, was already his, except when he smiled at one of his pretty thoughts or stopped at an open door to sniff a potful. On his way up and down the stair he often paused to sniff, but he never asked for anything; his mother had warned him against it, and he carried out her injunction with almost unnecessary spirit, declining offers before 1 SENTIMENTAL, TOMMY they were made, as when passing a room, whence came the smell of fried fish, he might call in, " I don't not want none of your fish," or "My mother says I don't not want the littlest bit," or wistfully, "I ain't hungry," or more wistfully still, "My mothei says I ain't hungry." His mother heard of this and was angry, crying that he had let the neighbours know something she was anxious to conceal, but what he had revealed to them Tommy could not make out, and when he questioned her artlessly, she took him with sudden passion to her flat breast, and often after that she looked at him long and wofully and wrung her hands. The only other pleasant smell known to Tommy was when the water-carts passed the mouth of his little street. His street, which ended in a dead wall, was near the river, but on the doleful south side of it, opening off a longer street where the cabs of Waterloo station sometimes found them- selves when they took the wrong turning; his home was at the top of a house of four floors, each with accommodation for at least two families, and here he had lived with his mother since his father's death six months ago. There was oil-cloth on the stair as far as the second floor; there had been oil-cloth between the second floor and the third - Tommy could point out pieces of it still adhering to the wood like remnants of a plaster. This stair was nursery to all the children whose 2 TOMMY KEEPS ONE OUT homes opened on it, not so safe as nurseries in the part of London that is chiefly inhabited by boys in sailor suits, but preferable as a centre of adven- ture, and here on an afternoon sat two. They were very busy boasting, but only the smaller had imagination, and as he used it recklessly, their po- sitions soon changed; sexless garments was now prone on a step, breeches sitting on him. Shovel, a man of seven, had said, " None on your lip. You weren't never at Thrums your- self." Tommy's reply was, "Ain't my mother a Thrums woman ? " Shovel, who had but one eye, and that blood- shot, fixed it on him threateningly. " The Thames is in London," he said. " 'Cos they wouldn't not have it in Thrums," replied Tommy. " 'Amstead 'Eath's in London, I tell yer," Shovel said. " The cemetery is in Thrums," said Tommy. " There ain't no queens in Thrums, anyhow." " There is the Auld Licht minister." " Well, then, if you jest seed Trafalgar Square ! " " If you jest seed the Thrums town-house ! " " St. Paul's ain't in Thrums." " It would like to be." After reflecting, Shovel said in desperation, "' Well, then, my father were once at a hanging/ 3 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY Tommy replied instantly, " It were my father what was hanged." There was no possible answer to this save a knockdown blow, but though Tommy was van- quished in body, his spirit remained staunch; he raised his head and gasped, " You should see how they knock down in Thrums ! " It was then that Shovel sat on him. Such was their position when an odd figure in that house, a gentleman, passed them without a word, so desirous was he to make a breath taken at the foot of the close stair last him to the top. Tommy merely gaped after this fine sight, but Shovel had experience, and " It's a kid or a coffin," he said sharply, knowing that only birth or death brought a doctor here. Watching the doctor's ascent, the two boys strained their necks over the rickety banisters, which had been polished black by trousers of the past, and sometimes they lost him, and then they saw his legs again. " Hello, it's your old woman ! " cried Shovel 44 Is she a deader ? " he asked, brightening, for fun- erals made a pleasant stir on the stair. The question had no meaning for bewildered Tommy, but he saw that if his mother was a ler, whatever that might be, he had grown great in his companion's eye. So he hoped she was a deader. TOMMY KEEPS ONE OUT " If it's only a kid," Shovel began, with such scorn that Tommy at once screamed, " It ain't ! '' and, cross-examined, he swore eagerly that his mother was in bed when he left her in the morn- ing, that she was still in bed at dinner-time, also that the sheet was over her face, also that she was cold. Then she was a deader, and had attained distinc- tion in the only way possible in that street. Shovel did not shake Tommy's hand warmly, the forms of congratulation varying in different parts of London, but he looked his admiration so plainly that Tommy's head waggled proudly. Evidently, whatever his mother had done redounded to his glory as well as to hers, and somehow he had be- come a boy of mark. He said from his elevation that he hoped Shovel would believe his tales about Thrums now, and Shovel, who had often cuffed Tommy for sticking to him so closely, cringed in the most snobbish manner, craving permission to be seen in his company for the next three days. Tommy, the upstart, did not see his way to grant this favor for nothing, and Shovel offered a knife, but did not have it with him; it was his sister Ameliar's knife, and he would take it from her, help his davy. Tommy would wait there till Shovel fetched it. Shovel, baffled, wanted to know what Tommy was putting on hairs for. Tommy smiled, and asked whose mother was a deader. C SENTIMENTAL TOMMY Then Shovel collapsed, and his wind passed into Tommy. The reign of Thomas Sandys, nevertheless, was among the shortest, for with this question was he overthrown : " How did yer know she were cold ? '' "Because," replied Tommy, triumphantly, "she tell me herself." Shovel only looked at him, but one eye can be so much more terrible than two, that plop, plop, plop came the balloon softly down the steps of the throne and at the foot shrank pitifully, as if with Ameliar's knife in it. " It's only a kid arter all ! " screamed Shovel, furiously. Disappointment gave him eloquence, and Tommy cowered under his sneers, not under- standing them, but they seemed to amount to this, that in having a baby he had disgraced the house. " But I think," he said, with diffidence, " I think I were once one." Then all Shovel could say was that he had bet- ter keep it dark on that stair. Tommy squeezed his fist into one e/e, and the tears came out at the other. A good-natured im- pulse was about to make Shovel say that though kids are undoubtedly humiliations, mothers and boys get used to them in time, and go on as brazenly as before, but it was checked by Tom- my's unfortunate question, " Shovel, when will it come ? " 6 TOMMY KEEPS ONE OUT Shovel, speaking from local experience, replied truthfully that they usually came very soon after the doctor, and at times before him. "It ain't ccme before him," Tommy said, con- fidently. " How do yer know ? " " 'Cos it weren't there at dinner-time, and I been here since dinner-time." The words meant that Tommy thought it could only enter by way of the stair, and Shovel quivered with delight. " H'st ! " he cried, dramatically, and to his joy Tommy looked anxiously down the stair, instead of up it. " Did you hear it ? " Tommy whispered. Before he could control himself Shovel blurted out * " Do you think as they come on their feet ? " " How then ? " demanded Tommy ; but Shovel had exhausted his knowledge of the subject. Tommy, who had begun to descend to hold the door, turned and climbed upwards, and his tears were now but the drop left in a cup too hurriedly dried. Where was he off to ? Shovel called after him, and he answered, in a determined whisper; " To shove of it out if it tries to come in at the win- der." This was enough for the more knowing urchin, now so full of good things that with another added he must spill, and away he ran for an audience, which could also help him to bait Tommy, that 7 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY being a game most sportive when there are several to fling at once. At the door he knocked over, and was done with, a laughing little girl who had strayed from a more fashionable street She rose solemnly, and kissing her muff, to reassure it if it had got a fright, toddled in at the first open door to be out of the way of unmannerly boys. Tommy, climbing courageously, heard the door slam, and looking down he saw a strange child. He climbed no higher. It had come. After a long time he was one flight of stairs nearer it. It was making itself at home on the bottom step; resting, doubtless, before it came hopping up. Another dozen steps, and It was beautifully dressed in one piece of yellow and brown that reached almost to its feet, with a bit left at the top to form a hood, out of which its pert face peeped impudently ; oho, so they came in their Sunday clothes. He drew so near that he could hear it cooing: thought itself as good as upstairs, did it ! He bounced upon her sharply, thinking to carry all with a high hand. " Out you go ! " he cried, with the action of one heaving coals. She whisked round, and, " Oo boy or oo girl *? " she inquired, puzzled by his dress. " None of your cheek ! " roared insulted man- hood. ** Oo boy," she said, decisively. 8 TOMMY KEEPS ONE OUT With the effrontery of" them when they are young, she made room for him on her step, but he declined the invitation, knowing that her design was to skip up the stair the moment he was oft' his guard. " You don't needn't think as we'll have you," he announced, firmly. " You had best go away to go to " His imagination failed him. " You had best go back," he said. She did not budge, however, and his next at- tempt was craftier. " My mother," he assured her, " ain't living here now ; " but mother was a new word to the girl, and she asked gleefully, "Oo have mother ? " expecting him to produce it from his pocket. To coax him to give her a sight of it she said plaintively, " Me no have mother." "You won't not get mine," replied Tommy doggedly. She pretended not to understand what was troubling him, and it passed through his head that she had to wait there till the doctor came down for her. He might come at any moment. A boy does not put his hand into his pocket until every other means of gaining his end has failed, but to that extremity had Tommy now come. For months his only splendid possession had been a penny despised by trade because of a large round hole in it, as if (to quote Shovel) some previous owner had cut a farthing out of it. To 9 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY tell the escapades of this penny (there are no ad- venturers like coin of the realm) would be one way of exhibiting Tommy to the curious, but it would be a hard-hearted way. At present the penny was doubly dear to him, having been long lost and lately found. In a noble moment he had dropped it into a charity box hanging forlorn against the wall of a shop, where it lay very lonely by itself, so that when Tommy was that way he could hear it respond if he shook the box, as acquaintances give each other the time of day in passing. Thus at comparatively small outlay did he spread his benevolence over weeks and feel a glow therefrom, until the glow went, when he and Shovel recap- tured the penny with a thread and a bent pin. This treasure he sadly presented to the girl, and she accepted it with glee, putting it on her finger, as if it were a ring, but instead of saying that she would go now she asked him, coolly, "Ooknow tories?" " Stories ! " he exclaimed. " I'll I'll tell you about Thrums," and was about to do it for love, but stopped in time. " This ain't a good stair for stories," he said, cunningly. "I can't not tell stories HI this stair, but I I know a good stair for stories." The ninny of a girl was completely hoodwinked ; and see, there they go, each with a hand in the muff, the one leering, oh, so triumphantly; the 10 TOMMY KEEPS ONE OUT other trusting and gleeful. There was an exu- berance of vitality about her as if she lived too quickly in her gladness, which you may remember in some child who visited the earth for but a little while. How superbly Tommy had done it! It had been another keen brain pitted against his, and at first he was not winning. Then up came Thrums, and But the thing has happened before ; in a word, Bliicher. Nevertheless, Tommy just managed it, for he got the girl out of the street and on to another stair no more than in time to escape a ragged rabble, headed by Shovel, who, finding their quarry gone, turned on their leader viciously, and had gloomy views of life till his cap was kicked down a sewer, which made the world bright again. Of the tales told by Tommy that day in words Scotch and cockney, of Thrums, home of heroes and the arts, where the lamps are lit by a magician called Leerie-leerie-licht-the-lamps (but he is also friendly, and you can fling stones at him), and the merest children are allowed to set the spinning- wheels a-whirling, and dagont is the swear, and the stairs are so fine that the houses wear them outside for show, and you drop a pail at the end of a rope down a hole, and sometimes it comes up full of water, and sometimes full of fairies of these and other wonders, K~ you would know, ask not a dull historian, nor even go to Thrums, but to those ll SENTIMENTAL TOMMY rather who have been boys and girls there and now are exiles. Such a one Tommy knows, an unhappy woman, foolish, not very lovable, flung like a stone out of the red quarry upon a land where it cannot grip, and tearing her heart for a sight of the home she shall see no more. From her Tommy had his pictures, and he colored them rarely. Never before had he such a listener. " Oh, dagont, dagont!" he would cry in ecstasy over these fair scenes, and she, awed or gurgling with mirth according to the nature of the last, de- manded " 'Nother, 'nother ! " whereat he remem- bered who and what she was, and showing her a morsel of the new one, drew her to more distant parts, until they were so far from his street that he thought she would never be able to find the way back. His intention had been, on reaching such a spot, to desert her promptly, but she gave him her hand in the muff so confidingly that against his judg- ment he fell a-pitying the trustful mite who was wandering the world in search of a mother, and so easily diddled on the whole that the chances were against her finding one before morning. Almost unconsciously he began to look, about him for a suitable one. They were now in a street much nearer to his own home than the spurts from , dA THE END OF AN IDYLL ling question from Tommy he replied decisively, " Six months hard." " Next case " was probably called immediately, but Tommy vanished, as if he had been sentenced and removed to the cells. Never again, unless he wanted six months hard, must he go near Reddy's home, and so he now frequently accompanied his mother to the place where she worked. The little room had a funny fireplace called a stove, on which his mother made tea and the girls roasted chestnuts, and it had no other ordinary furniture except a long form. But the walls were mysterious. Three of them were covered with long white cloths, which went to the side when you tugged them, and then you could see on rails dozens of garments that looked like nightgowns. Beneath the form were scores of lit- tle shoes, most of them white or brown. In this house Tommy's mother spent eight hours daily, but not all of them in this room. When she ar- rived the first thing she did \vas to put Elspeth on the floor, because you cannot fall off a floor; then she went upstairs with a bucket and a broom to a large bare room, where she stayed so long that Tommy nearly forgot what she was like. While his mother was upstairs Tommy would give Elspeth two or three shoes to eat to keep her quiet, and then he played with the others, pretend- ing to be able to count them, arranging them in SENTIMENTAL TOMMY designs, shooting them, swimming among them, saying "bow-wow" at them and then turning sharply to see who had said it. Soon Elspeth dropped her shoes and gazed in admiration at him, but more often than -not she laughed in the wrong place, and then he said ironically : " Oh, in course I can't do nothin' ; jest let's see you doing of it, then, cocky!" By the time the girls began to arrive, singly or in twos and threes, his mother was back in the little room, making tea for herself or sewing bits of them that had been torn as they stepped out of a cab, or helping them to put on the nightgowns, or pretending to listen pleasantly to their chatter and hating them all the time. There was every kind of them, gorgeous ones and shabby ones, old tired ones and dashing young ones, but whether they were the Honorable Mrs. Something or only Jane Anything, they all came to that room for the same purpose : to get a little gown and a pair of shoes. Then they went upstairs and danced to a stout little lady, called the Sylph, who bobbed about like a ball at the end of a piece of elastic. What Tommy never forgot was that while they danced the Sylph kept saying, " One, two, three, four; one, two, three, four," which they did not seem to mind, but when she said, "One, two, three, four, picture!" they all stopped and stood motion- less, though it might be with one foot as high at/ 4 6 THE END OF AN IDYLL their head and their arms stretched out toward the floor, as if they had suddenly seen a halfpenny there. In the waiting-room, how they joked and pirou- etted and gossiped, and hugged and scorned each other, and what slang they spoke and how pretty they often looked next moment, and how they denounced the one that had just gone out as a cat with whom you could not get in a word edge- ways, and oh, how prompt they were to give a slice of their earnings to any " cat '' who was hard up! But still, they said, she had talent, but no genius. How they pitied people without genius. Have you ever tasted an encore or a reception ? Tommy never had his teeth in one, but he heard much about them in that room, and concluded that they were some sort of cake. It was not the girls who danced in groups, but those who danced alone, that spoke of their encores and receptions, and sometimes they had got them last night, sometimes years ago. Two girls met in the room, one of whom had stolen the other's reception, and but it was too dreadful to write about. Most of them carried newspaper cuttings in their purses and read them aloud to the others, who would not listen. Tommy listened, however, and as it was all about how one house had risen at the girls and they had brought another down, he thought they led the most adventurous lives. 47 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY Occasionally they sent him out to buy newspa* pers or chestnuts, and then he had to keep a sharp eye on the police lest they knew about Reddy. It was a point of honour with all the boys he knew to pretend that the policeman was after them. To gull the policeman into thinking all was well they blackened their faces and wore their jackets inside out; their occupation was a con* stant state of readiness to fly from him, and when he tramped out of sight, unconscious of their ex- istence, they emerged from dark places and spoke in exultant whispers. Tommy had been proud to join them, but he now resented their going on in this way ; he felt that he alone had the right to fly from the law. And once at least while he was flying something happened to him that he was to remember better, far better, than his mother's face. What set him running on this occasion (he had been sent out to get one of the girls' shoes soled) was the grandest sight to be seen in London an endless row of policemen walking in single file, all with the right leg in the air at the same time, then the left leg. Seeing at once that they were after him, Tommy ran, ran, ran until in turning a corner he found himself wedged between two legs. He was of just sufficient size to fill the aperture, but after a momentary lock he squeezed through, and they proved to be the gate into an enchanted land THE END OF AN IDYLL The magic began at once. "Dagont, you sacket!" cried some wizard. A policeman's hand on his shoulder could not have taken the wind out of Tommy more quickly. In the act of starting a-running again he brought down his hind foot with a thud and stood stock still. Can any one wonder ? 1 1 was the Thrums tongue, and this the first time he heard it except from his mother. It was a dull day, and all the walls were dripping wet, this being the part of London where the fogs \are kept. Many men and women were passing to and fro, and Tommy, with a wild exultation in his breast, peered up at the face of this one and that ; but no. they were only ordinary people, and he played rub-a-dub with his feet on the pavement, so furious was he with them for moving on as if nothing had happened. Draw up, ye carters ; pe- destrians, stand still; London, silence for a mo- ment, and let Tommy Sandys listen ! Being but a frail plant in the way of a flood, Tommy was rooted up and borne onward, but he did not feel the buffeting. In a passion of grief he dug his fists in his eyes, for the glory had been his for but a moment, It can be compared to nothing save the parcel (attached to a concealed string) which Shovel and he once placed on the stair for Billy Hankey to find, and then whipped away from him just as he had got it under his arm. But so near the crying, Tommy did not cry, for 49 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY even while the tears were rushing to his aid he tripped on the step of a shop, and immediately, as if that had rung the magic bell again, a voice, a woman's voice this time, said shrilly, " Threepence ha'penny, and them jimply as big as a bantam's ! Na, na, but I'll gi'e you five bawbees." Tommy sat down flop on the step, feeling queer in the head. Was it was it was it Thrums ^ He knew he had been running a long time. The woman, or fairy, or whatever you choose to call her, came out of the shop and had to push Tommy aside to get past. Oh, what a sweet foot to be kicked by. At the time, he thought she was dressed not unlike the women of his own stair, but this defect in his vision he mended afterward, as you may hear. Of course, he rose and trotted by her side like a dog, looking up at her as if she were a cathedral ; but she mistook his awe for im- pudence and sent him sprawling, with the words, " Tak' that, you glowering partan ! " Do you think Tommy resented this*? On the contrary, he screamed from where he lay, " Say it again ! say it again ! " She was gone, however, but only, as it were, to let a window open, from which came the cry, " Davit, have you seen my man ? " A male fairy roared back from some invisible pi.ice, " He has gone yont to Petey's wi' the dam- brod." 50 THE END OF AN IDYLL " I'll dambrod him ! " said the female fairy, and the window shut. Tommy was now staggering like one intoxicated, but he had still some sense left him, and he walked up and down in front of this house, as if to take care of it. In the middle of the street some boys were . very busy at a game, carts and lorries passing over them occasionally. They came to the pavement to play marbles, and then Tommy noticed that one of them wore what was probably a glengarry bonnet. Could he be a Thrums boy? At first he played in the stupid London way, but by and by he had to make a new ring, and he did it by whirling round on one foot. Tommy knew from his mother that it is only done in this way in Thrums. Oho ! Oho ! By this time he was prancing round his dis- covery, saying, " I'm one, too so am I da* gont, does yer hear *? dagont ! " which so alarmed the boy that he picked up his marble and fled, Tommy, of course, after him. Alas ! he must have been some mischievous sprite, for he lured his pur- suer back into London and then vanished, and Tommy, searching in vain for the enchanted street, found his own door instead. His mother pooh-poohed his tale, though he described the street exactly as it struck him on reflection, and it bore a curious resemblance to the palace of Aladdin that Reddy had told him about, $1 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY leaving his imagination to fill in the details, which it promptly did, with a square, a town-house, some outside stairs, and an Auld Licht kirk. There was no such street, however, his mother assured him ; he had been dreamingo But if this were so, why was she so anxious to make him promise never to look for the place again *? He did go in search of it again, daily for a time, always keeping a look-out for bow-legs, and the moment he saw them, he dived recklessly between, hoping to come out into fairyland on the other side. For though he had lost the street, he knew that this was the way in. Shovel had never heard of the street, nor had Bob. But Bob gave him something that almost made him forget it for a time. Bob was his favour- ite among the dancing girls, and she or should it be he V The odd thing about these girls was that a number of them were really boys or at least were boys at Christmas-time, which seemed to Tommy to be even stranger than if they had been boys all the year round. A friend of Bob's remarked to her one day, " You are to be a girl next winler, ain't you, Bob ? " and Bob shook her head scornfully. " Do you see any green in my eye, my dear ? " ishe inquired. Her friend did not look, but Tommy looked, and there was none. He assured her of this so 52 THE END OF AN IDYLL earnestly that Bob fell in love with him on the spot, and chucked him under the chin, first with her thumb and then with her toe, which feat was duly reported to Shovel, who could do it by the end of the week. Did Tommy, Bob wanted to know, still think her a mere woman *? No, he withdrew the charge, but but She was wearing her outdoor garments, and he pointed to them. " Why does yer wear them, then ? " he demanded. " For the matter of that," she replied, pointing at his frock, " why do you wear them *? " Where- upon Tommy began to cry. " I ain't not got no right ones," he blubbered. Harum-scarum Bob, who was a trump, had him in her motherly arms immediately, and the upshot of it was that a blue suit she had worn when she was Sam Something changed owqers. Mrs. San- dys " made it up," and that is how Tommy got into trousers. Many contingencies were considered in the mak- ing, but the suit would fit Tommy by and by if he grew, or it shrunk, and they did not pass each other in the night. When proud Tommy first put on his suit the most unexpected shyness over- came him, and having set off vaingloriously he stuck on the stair and wanted to hide. Shovel, who had been having an argument with his old 53 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY girl, came, all boastful bumps, to htm, and Tommy just stood still with a self-conscious simuer on his face. And Shovel, who could have damped him considerably, behaved in a most honorable man- ner, initiating him gravely into the higher life, much as you show the new member round your club. It was very risky to go back to Reddy, whom he had not seen for many weeks ; but in trousers ! He could not help it. He only meant to walk up and down her street, so that she might see him from the window, and know that this splendid thing was he ; but though he went several times into the street, Reddy never came to the window. The reason he had to waif in vain at Reddy's door was that she was dead ; she had been dead for quite a long time when Tommy came back to look for her c You mothers who have lost your babies, I should be a sorry knave were I to ask you to cry now over the death of another woman's child. Reddy had been lent to two people for a very little while, just as your babies were, and when the time was up she blew a kiss to them and ran gleefully back to God. just as your babies did. The gates of heaven are so easily found when we are little, and they are always standing open to let children wander in. But though Reddy was gone away forever, mamma still lived in that house, and on a day she 54 THE END OF AN IDYLL opened the door to come out. Tommy was stand- ing there she saw him there waiting for Reddy. Dry-eyed this sorrowful woman had heard the sen- tence pronounced, dry-eyed she had followed the little coffin to its grave ; tears had not come even when waking from illusive dreams she put out her hand in bed to a child who was not there; but when she saw Tommy waiting at the door for Reddy, who had been dead for a month, her bosom moved and she could cry again. Those tears were sweet to her husband, and it was he who took Tommy on his knee in the room where the books were, and told him that there was no Reddy now. When Tommy knew that Reddy was a deader he cried bitterly, and the man said, very gently 9 " I am glad you were so fond of her." " 'Tain't that," Tommy answered with a knuckle in his eye, " 'tain't that as makes me cry." He looked down at his trousers and in a fresh out- burst of childish grief he wailed, "It's them!" Papa did not understand, but the boy explained. " She can't not never see tt em now," he sobbed, 'and I wants her to see them, and they has pockets ! " It had come to the man unexpectedly. He put Tommy down almost roughly, and raised his hand to his head as if he felt a sudden pain there. But Tommy, you know, was only a little boy. 55 CHAPTER V THE GIRL WITH TWO MOTHERS ELSPETH at last did something to win Tommy's respect ; she fell ill of an ailment called in Thrums the croup. When Tommy first heard his mother call it croup, he thought she was merely humour- ing Elspeth, and that it was nothing more distin- guished than London whooping-cough, but on learning that it was genuine croup, he began to survey the ambitious little creature with a new interest. This was well for Elspeth, as she had now to spend most of the day at home with him, their mother, whose health was failing through frequent attacks of bronchitis, being no longer able to carry her through the streets. Of course Elspeth took to repaying his attentions by loving him, and he soon suspected it, and then gloomily admitted it to himself, but never to Shovel. Being but an Englishman, Shovel saw no reason why relatives should conceal their affection for each other, but he played on this Scottish weakness of Tommy's with cruel enjoyment 56 THE GIRL WITH TWO MOTHERS " She's fond oa yer ! " he would say severely. " You's a liar." " Gar long ! I believe as you're fond on her ! * " You jest take care, Shovel." "Ain't yer?" "Na-o!" "Will yer swear?" " So I will swear." " Let's hear yer." " Dagont ! " So for a time the truth was kept hidden, and Shovel retired, casting aspersions, and offering to eat all the hair on Elspeth's head for a penny. This hair was white at present, which made Tommy uneasy about her future, but on the whole he thought he might make something of her if she was only longer. Sometimes he stretched her on the floor, pulling her legs out straight, for she had a silly way of doubling them up, and then he measured her carefully with his mother's old boots. Her growth proved to be distressingly irregular, as one day she seemed to have grown an inch since last night, and then next day she had shrunk two inches. After her day's work Mrs. Sandys was now so listless that, had not Tommy interfered, Elspeth would have been a backward child. Reddy had been able to walk from the first day, and so of course had he, but this little slow-coach's legs 57 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY wobbled at the joints, like the blade of a knife without a springe The question of questions was How to keep her on end ? Tommy sat on the fender revolving this prob- lem, his head resting on his hand, that favourite position of mighty intellects when about to be photographed. Elspeth lay on her stomach on the floor, gazing earnestly at him, as if she knew she was in his thoughts for some stupendous pur- pose. Thus the apple may have looked at New- ton before it fell. Hankey, the postman, compelled the flowers in his window to stand erect by tying them to sticks, so Tommy took two sticks from a bundle of fire- wood, and splicing Elspeth's legs to them, held her upright against the door with one hand. All he asked of her to-day was to remain in this position after he said " One, two, three, four, picture ! " and withdrew his hand, but down she flopped every time, and he said, with scorn, " You ain't got no genius : you has just talent." But he had her in bed with the scratches nicely covered up before his mother came home. He tried another plan with more success. Lost dogs, it may be remembered, had a habit of fol- lowing Shovel's father, and he not only took the wanderers in, but taugh" '-hem how to beg and shake hands and walk on two legs. Tommy had sometimes been present at these agreeable exer- 58 THE GIRL WITH TWO MOTHERS cises, and being an inventive boy he But as Elspeth was a nice girl, let it suffice to pause here and add shyly, that in time she could walk. He also taught her to speak, and if you need to be told with what luscious word he enticed her into language you are sentenced to re-read the first pages of his life,, "Thrums," he would say persuasively, "Thrums, Thrums. You opens your mouth like this, and shuts it like this, and that's it." Yet when he had coaxed her thus for many days, what does she do but break her long silence with the word " Tommy ! " The recoil knocked her over. Soon afterward she brought down a bigger bird. No Londoner can say "Auld licht," and Tommy had often crowed over Shovel's " Ol likt." When the testing of Elspeth could be deferred no longer, he eyed her with the look a hen gives the green egg on which she has been sitting twenty days, but Elspeth triumphed, saying the words modestly even, as if nothing inside her told her she had that day done something which would have baf- fled Shakespeare, not to speak of most of the gen- tlemen who sit for Scotch constituencies. "Reddy couldn't say it!" Tommy cried ex- ultantly, and from that great hour he had no more fears for ElspetL Next the alphabet knocked for admission ; and entered first M and P, which had prominence in 59 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY the only poster visible from the window. Mrs. Sandys had taught Tommy his letters, but he had got into words by studying posters. Elspeth being able now to make the perilous descent of the stairs, Tommy guided her through the streets (letting go hurriedly if Shovel hove in sight), and here she bagged new letters daily. With Catling's something, which is the best, she got into capital Cs ; ys are found easily when you know where to look for them (they hang on be- hind) ; Xs are never found singly, but often three at a time ; ^ is so aristocratic that even Tommy had only heard of it ; doubtless it was there, but indistinguishable among the masses like a celebrity in a crowd ; on the other hand, big A and little e were so dirt cheap, that these two scholars passed them with something very like a sneer. The printing-press is either the greatest blessing or the greatest curse of modern times, one some- times forgets which. Elspeth's faith in it was ab- solute, and as it only spoke to her from placards 9 here was her religion, at the age of four PRAY WITHOUT CEASING. HAPPY ARE THEY WHO NEEDING KNOW THE PAINLESS POROUS PLASTER. Of religion, Tommy had said many fine things to her, embellishments on the simple doctrine taught him by his mother before the miseries of 60 THE GIRL WITH TWO MOTHERS this world made her indifferent to the next. But the meaning of " Pray without ceasing," Elspeth, who was God's child always, seemed to find out for herself, and it cured all her troubles. She prayed promptly for every one she saw doing wrong, in- cluding Shovel, who occasionally had words with Tommy on the subject, and she not only prayed for her mother, but proposed to Tommy that they should buy her a porous plaster. Mrs. Sandys had been down with bronchitis again. Tommy raised the monetary difficulty. Elspeth knew where there was some money, and it was her very own. Tommy knew where there was money, and it was his very own, Elspeth would not tell how much she had, and it was twopence halfpenny Neither would Tommy tell, and it was two- pence. Tommy would get a surprise on his birthday. So would Elspeth get a surprise on her birth- day. Elspeth would not tell what the surprise was to be, and it was to be a gun Tommy also must remain mute, and it was to be a box of dominoes. Elspeth did not want dominoes. Tommy knew that, but he wanted them / Klspeth discovered that guns cost fourpence, and 61 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY dominoes threepence halfpenny ; it seemed to her, therefore, that Tommy was defrauding her of a halfpenny. Tommy liked her cheek. You got the domi- noes for threepence halfpenny, but the price on the box is fivepence, so that Elspeth would really owe him a penny. This led to an agonizing scene in which Elspetu wept while Tommy told her sternly about Reddy. It had become his custom to tell the tale of Reddy when Elspeth was obstreperous. Then followed a scene in which Tommy called himself a scoundrel for frightening his dear Els- peth, and swore that he loved none but her. Re- sujt : reconciliation, and agreed, that instead of a gun and dominoes, they should buy a porous plaster. You know the shops where the plasters are to be obtained by great coloured bottles in their windows, and, as it was advisable to find the very best shop, Tommy and Elspeth in their wander- ings came under the influence of the bottles, red, yellow, green, and blue, and colour entered into their lives, giving them many delicious thrills. These bottles are the first poem known to the London child*, and you chemists who are beginning to do without them in your windows should be told that it is a shame. In the glamour, then, of the romantic bottles walked Tommy and Elspeth hand in hand, meet 62 THE GIRL WITH TWO MOTHERS ing so many novelties that they might have spared a tear for the unfortunate children who sit in nur- series surrounded by all they ask for, and if the adventures of these two frequently ended in the middle, they had probably begun another while the sailor-suit boy was still holding up his leg to let the nurse put on his little sock. While they wandered, they drew near unwittingly to the en- chanted street, to which the bottles are a coloured way, and at last they were in it, but Tommy rec- ognized it not; he did not even feel that he was near it, for there were no outside stairs, no fairies strolling about, it was a short street as shabby as his own. But someone had shouted " Dinna haver, lassie ; you're blethering ! " Tommy whispered to Eispeth, " Be still ; don't speak," and he gripped her hand tighter and stared at the speaker. He was a boy of ten, dressed like a Londoner, and his companion had disappeared. Tommy never doubting but that he was the sprite of long ago, gripped him by the sleeve. All the savings of Eispeth and himself were in his pocket, and yielding to impulse, as was his way, he thrust the fourpence halfpenny into James GJoag's hand. The new millionaire gaped, but not at His patron, for the why and wherefore of this gift were trifles to James beside the tremendous fact that he had fourpence halfpenny. " Almichty me ! " he cried 63 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY and bolted. Presently he returned, having de- posited his money in a safe place, and his first re- mark was perhaps the meanest on record. He held out his hand and said greedily, " Have you ony mair *? " This, you feel certain, must have been the most important event of that evening, but strange to say, it was not. Before Tommy could answer James's question, a woman in a shawl had pounced upon him and hurried him and Elspeth out of the street. She had been standing at a corner looking wistfully at the window blinds behind which folk from Thrums passed to and fro, hiding her face from people in the street, but gazing eagerly after them. It was Tommy's mother, whose first free act on coming to London had been to find out that street, and many a time since then she had skulked through it or watched it from dark places, never daring to disclose herself, but sometimes rec- ognizing familiar faces, sometimes hearing a few words in the old tongue that is harsh and un- gracious to you, but was so sweet to her, and bear- ing them away with her beneath her shawl as if they were something warm to lay over her cold heart. For a time she upbraided Tommy passionately for not keeping away from this street, but soon her hunger for news of Thrums overcame her prudence, and she consented to let him go back if he prom- 64 THE GIRL WITH TWO MOTHERS ised never to tell that his mother came from Thrums. "And if onybody wants to ken your name, say it's Tommy, but dinna let on that it's Tommy Sandys." "Elspeth," Tommy whispered that night, "I'm near sure there's something queer about my mother and me and you." But he did not trouble himself with wondering what the something queer might be, so engrossed was he in the new and exciting life that had suddenly opened to him. CHAPTER VI THE ENCHANTED STREET IN Thrums Street, as it ought to have been called,, herded at least one-half of the Thrums folk in London, and they formed a colony, of which the grocer at the corner sometimes said wrathfully that not a member would give sixpence for anything except Bibles or whisky. In the streets one could only tell they were not Londoners by their walk, the flagstones having no grip for their feet, or, if they had come south late in life, by their backs, which they carried at the angle on which webs are most easily supported,, When mixing with the world they talked the English tongue, which came out of them as broad as if it had been squeezed through a mangle, but when the day's work was done, it was only a few of the giddier striplings that re- mained Londoners. For the majority there was no raking the streets after diversion, they spent the hour or two before bed-time in reproducing the life of Thrums. Few of them knew much of London except the nearest way between this street and their work, and their most interesting visitor 66 THE ENCHANTED STREET was a Presbyterian minister, most of whose con- gregation lived in much more fashionable parts, but they were almost exclusively servant girls, and when descending area-steps to visit them he had been challenged often and jocularly by policemen, which perhaps was what gave him a subdued and furtive appearance. The rooms were furnished mainly with articles bought in London, but these became as like Thrums dressers and seats as their owners could make them, old Petey, for instance, cutting the back off a chair because he felt most at home on stools. Drawers were used as baking-boards, pails turned into salt-buckets, floors were sanded and hearthstones ca'med, and the popular supper con- sisted of porter, hot water, and soaked bread, after every spoonful of which they groaned pleasantly, and stretched their legs. Sometimes they played at the dambrod, but more often they pulled down the blinds on London and talked of Thrums in their mother tongue. Nevertheless few of them wanted to return to it, and their favourite joke was the case of James Gloag's father, who being home- sick flung up his situation and took train for Thrums, but he was back in London in three weeks. Tommy soon had the entry to these homes, and his first news of the inmates was unexpected. It was that they were always sleeping. In broad 6 7 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY daylight he had seen Thrums men asleep on beds, and he was somewhat ashamed of them until he heard the excuse. A number of the men from Thrums were bakers, the first emigrant of this trade having drawn others after him, and they slept great part of the day to be able to work all night in a cellar, making nice rolls for rich people. Baker Lumsden, who became a friend of Tommy, had got his place in the cellar when his brother died, and the brother had succeeded Matthew Croall when he died. They die very soon, Tommy learned from Lums- den, generally when they are eight and thirty. Lumsden was thirty-six, and when he died his ne- phew was to get the place. The wages are good. Then there were several masons, one of whom, like the first baker, had found work for all the others, and there were men who had drifted into trades strange to their birthplace, and there was usually one at least who had come to London to " better himself" and had not done it as yet. The family Tommy liked best was the Whamonds, and especially he liked old Petey and young Petey Whamond. They were a large family of women and men, all of whom earned their living in other streets, except the old man, who kept house and was a famous knitter of stockings, as probably his father had been before him. He was a great one, too, at telling what they would be doing at that THE ENCHANTED STREET moment in Thrums, every corner of which was as familiar to him as the ins and outs of the family hose. Young Petey got fourteen shillings a week from a hatter, and one of his duties was to carry as many as twenty band-boxes at a time through fashionable streets; it is a matter for elation that dukes and statesmen had often to take the curb- stone, because young Petey was coming. Never- theless young Petey was not satisfied, and never would be (such is the Thrums nature) until he be- came a salesman in the shop to which he acted at present as fetch and carry, and he used to tell Tommy that this position would be his as soon as he could sneer sufficiently at the old hats. When gentlemen come into the shop and buy a new hat, he explained, they put it on, meaning to tell you to send the old one to their address, and the art of being a fashionable hatter lies in this: you must be able to curl your lips so contemptuously at the old hat that they tell you guiltily to keep it, as they have no further use for it. Then they retire ishamed of their want of moral courage and you have made an extra half-guinea. " But I aye snort," young Petey admitted, " and it should be done without a sound." When he graduated, he was to marry Martha Spens, who was waiting for him at Tillyloss. There was a London seamstress whom he preferred, and she was willing, but it is safest to stick to Thrums. 69 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY When Tommy was among his new friends a Scotch word or phrase often escaped his lips, but old Petey and the others thought he had picked it up from them, and would have been content to ac- cept him as a London waif who lived somewhere round the corner. To trick people so simply, however, is not agreeable to an artist, and he told them his name was Tommy Shovel, and that his old girl walloped him, and his father found dogs, all which inventions Thrums Street accepted as true. What is much more noteworthy is that, as he gave them birth, Tommy half believed them also, being already the best kind of actor. Not all the talking was done by Tommy when he came home with news, for he seldom mentioned a Thrums name, of which his mother could not tell him something more. But sometimes she did not choose to tell, as when he announced that a certain Elspeth Lindsay, of the Marywellbrae, was dead. After this she ceased to listen, for old El- speth had been her grandmother, and she had now no kin in Thrums. "Tell me about the Painted Lady," Tommy said to her. " Is it true she's a witch ? " But Mrs. Sandys had never heard of any woman so called ; the Painted Lady must have gone to Thrums after her time. "There ain't no witches now," said Elspeth tremulously; Shovel's mother had told her so. 70 THE ENCHANTED STREET " Not in London," replied Tommy with con* tempt ; and this is all that was said of the Painted Lady then. It is the first mention of her in these pages. The people Mrs. Sandys wanted to hear of chiefly were Aaron Latta and Jean Myles, and soon Tommy brought news of them, but at the same time he had heard of the Den, and he said first : " Oh, mother, I thought as you had told me about all the beauty places in Thrums, and you ain't never told me about the Den." His mother heaved a quick breath. " It's the only place I hinna telled you o'," she said. " Had you forgot it, mother ? " Forgot the Den ? Ah, no, Tommy, your mother had not forgotten the Den. " And, listen, Elspeth, in the Den there's a bonny spring of water called the Cuttle Well. Had you forgot the Cuttle Well, mother ? " No, no ; when Jean Myles forgot the names of her children she would still remember the Cuttle Well. Regardless now of the whispering between Tommy and Elspeth, she sat long over the fire, and it is not difficult to fathom her thoughts. They were of the Den and the Cuttle Well Into the life of every man, and no woman, there comes a moment when he learns suddenly that he is held eligible for marriage. A girl gives him the jag, and it brings out the perspiration Of the, SENTIMENTAL TOMMY issue elsewhere of this stab with a bodkin let others speak ; in Thrums its commonest effect is to make the callant's body take a right angle to his legs, for he has been touched in the fifth button, and he backs away broken-winded. By and by, however, he is at his work among the turnip-shoots, say guffawing and clapping his corduroys, with pauses for uneasy meditation, and there he ripens with the swedes, so that by the back-end of the year he has discovered, and exults to know, that the reward of manhood is neither more nor less than this sensation at the ribs. Soon thereafter, or at worst, sooner or later (for by holding out he only puts the women's dander up), he is led captive to the Cuttle Well. This well has the reputation of being the place where it is most easily said. The wooded ravine called the Den is in Thrums rather than on its western edge, but is so craftily hidden away that when within a stone's throw you may give up the search for it; it is also so deep that larks rise from the bottom and carol overhead, thinking themselves high in the heavens before they are on a level with Nether Drumley's farm- land. In shape it is almost a semicircle, but its size depends on you and the maid. If she be with you, the Den is so large that you must rest heie and there; if you are after her boldly, you can dash to the Cuttle Well, which was the tryst- ing-place, in the time a stout man takes to lace THE ENCHANTED STREET his boots ; if you are of those self-conscious ones who look behind to see whether jeering blades are following, you may crouch and wriggle your way onward and not be with her in half an hour. Old Petey had told Tommy that, on the whole, the greatest pleasure in life on a Saturday evening is to put your back against a stile that leads into the Den and rally the sweethearts as they go by. The lads, when they see you, want to go round by the other stile, but the lasses like it, and often the sport ends spiritedly with their giving you a clout on the head. Through the Den runs a tiny burn, and by its side is a pink path, dyed this pretty colour, per- haps, by the blushes the ladies leave behind them. The burn as it passes the Cuttle Well, which stands higher and just out of sight, leaps in vain to see who is making that cooing noise, and the well, taking the spray for kisses, laughs all day at Romeo, who cannot get up. Well is a name it must have given itself, for it is only a spring in the bottom of a basinful of water, where it makes about as much stir in the world as a minnow jumping at a fly They say that if a boy, by making a bowl of his hands, should suddenly carry off all the water, a quick girl could thread her needle at the spring. But it is a spring that will not wait a moment. Men who have been lads in Thrums sometimes 73 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY go back to it from London or from across the seas, to look again at some battered little house and feel the blasts of their bairnhood playing through the old wynds, and they may take with them a foreign wife. They show her everything, except the Cutt Well; they often go there alone. The well is sacred to the memory of first love. You may walk from the well to the round cemetery in ten minutes. It is a common walk for those who go back. First love is but a boy and girl playing at the Cuttle Well with a bird's egg. They blow it on one summer evening in the long grass, and on the next it is borne away on a coarse laugh, or it breaks beneath the burden of a tear. And yet I once saw an aged woman, a widow of many years, cry softly at mention of the Cuttle Well " John was a good man to you," I said, for John had been her husband. " He was a leal man to me," she answered with wistful eyes, " ay, he was a leal man to me but it wasna John I was thinking o'. You dinna ken what makes me greet so sair/ s she added, presently, and though I thought I knew now I was wrong, " It's because I canna mind his name," she said. So the Cuttle Well has its sad memories and its bright ones, and many of the bright memories have become sad with age, as so often happens to beau tiful things, but the most mournful of all is the 74 THE ENCHANTED STREET story of Aaron Latta and Jean Myles. Beside the well there stood for long a great pink stone, called the Shoaging Stone, because it could be rocked like a cradle, and on it lovers used to cut their names. Often Aaron Latta and Jean Myles sat together on the Shoaging Stone, and then there -;ame a time when it bore these words, cut by Aaron Latta *. HERE LIES THE MANHOOD OF AARQW LATTA, A FOND SON, A FAITHFUL FRIEND AND A TRUE LOVER, WHO VIOLATED THE FEELINGS OF SEX ON THIS SPOT, AND is NOW THE SCUNNER OF GOD AND MAW. Tommy's mother now heard these words for the first time, Aaron having cut them on the stone after she left Thrums, and her head sank at each line, as if someone had struck four blows at her. The stone was no longer at the Cuttle Well. As the easiest way of obliterating the words, the minister had ordered it to be broken, and of the pieces another mason had made stands for watches, one of which was now in Thrums Street. ' Aaron Latta ain't a mason now," Tommy rat- tled on : " he is a warper, because he can warp in his own house without looking on mankind or speaking to mankind. Auld Petey said he minded the day when Aaron Latta was a merry loon, and then Andrew McVittie said, 'God behears, to 75 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY think that Aaron Latta was ever a merry man ! ' and Baker Lumsden said, ' Curse her ! * " His mother shrank in her chair, but said noth- ing, and Tommy explained : " It was Jean Myles he was cursing; did you ken her, mother? she ruined Aaron Latta's life." *' Ay, and wha ruined Jean Myles's life ? " his mother cried passionately. Tommy did not know, but he thought that young Petey might know, for young Petey had said : " If I had been Jean Myles I would have spat in Aaron's face rather than marry him." Mrs. Sandys seemed pleased to hear this. " They wouldna tell me what it were she did," Tommy went on ; " they said it was ower ugly a story, but she were a bad one, for they stoned her out of Thrums. I dinna know where she is now, but she were stoned out of Thrums ! " "Noalane?" " There was a man with her, and his name was it was " His mother clasped her hands nervously while Tommy tried to remember the name. " His name was Magerful Tarn," he said at length. " Ay," said his mother, knitting her teeth, " that was his name." " I dinna mind any more/' Tommy concluded. ' Yes, I mind they aye called Aaron Latta * Poor \2iron Latta.' " 76 THE ENCHANTED STREET "Did they? I warrant, though, there wasna one as said 'Poor Jean Myles"?" She began the question in a hard voice, but as she said " Poor Jean Myles," something caught in her throat, and she sobbed, painful dry sobs. " How could they pity her when she were such a bad one ? " Tommy answered briskly. " Is there none to pity bad ones ? " said his sorrowful mother. Elspeth plucked her by the skirt. "There's God, ain't there ? " she said, inquiringly, and get- ting no answer she flopped upon her knees, to say a babyish prayer that would sound comic to any- body except to Him to whom it was addressed. " You ain't praying for a woman as was a dis- grace to Thrums ! " Tommy cried, jealously, and he was about to raise her by force, when his mother stayed his hand. " Let her alane," she said, with a twitching mouth and filmy eyes. " Let her alane. Let my "bairn pray for Jean Myles." 77 CHAPTER Vli COMIC OVERTURE TO A TRAGEDY " JEAN MYLES bides In London " was the next re- markable news brought by Tommy from Thrums Street. " And that ain't all, Magerful Tarn is her man; and that ain't all s she has a laddie called Tommy; and that ain't all, Petey and the rest has never seen her in London, but she writes letters to Thrums folks and they writes to Petey and tells him what she said. That ain't all neither, they canna find out what street she bides in, but it's on the bonny side of London, and it's grand, and she wears silk clothes, and her Tommy has velvet trousers, and they have a servant as calls him * sir/ Oh, I would just like to kick him! They often looks for her in the grand streets, but they're angry at her getting on so well, and Martha Scrymgeout said it were enough to make good women like hei stop going reg'lar to the kirk." " Martha said that ! " exclaimed his mother, highly pleased. " Heard you anything of a woman called Esther Auld ? Her man does the orra work at the Tappit Hen public in Thrums." * 4 He's head man at the Tappit Hen public 7? COMIC OVERTURE TO A TRAGEDY now," answered Tommy; "and she wishes she could find out where Jean Myles bides, so as she could write and tell her that she is grand too, and has six hair-bottomed chairs." " She'll never get the satisfaction," said his mother triumphantly. " Tell me more about her." "She has a laddie called Francie, and he has yellow curls, and she nearly greets because she canna tell Jean Myles that he goes to a school for the children of gentlemen only. She is so mad when she gets a letter from Jean Myles that she takes to her bed." " Yea, yea ! " said Mrs. Sandys cheerily. " But they think Jean Myles has been brought low at last," continued Tommy, "because she hasna wrote for a long time to Thrums, and Esther Auld said that if she knowed for certain as Jean Myles had been brought low, she would put a threepenny bit in the kirk plate." " Pm glad you've telled me that, laddie," said Mrs. Sandys, and next day, unknown to her chil- dren, she wrote another letter. She knew she ran a risk of discovery, yet it was probable that Tommy would only hear her referred to in Thrums Street by her maiden name, which he had never heard from her, and as for her husband he had been Magerful Tarn to everyone. The risk was great, but the pleasure 79 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY Unsuspicious Tommy soon had news of an other letter from Jean Myles, which had sent Esther Auld to bed again. " Instead of being brought low," he announced, " Jean Myles is grander than ever. Her Tommy has a governess." " That would be a doush of water in Esther's face,'- his mother said, smiling. "She wrote to Martha Scrymgeour," said Tommy, " that it ain't no pleasure to her now to boast as her laddie is at a school for gentlemen's children only. But what made her maddest was a bit in Jean Myles's letter about chairs. Jean Myles has give all her hair-bottomed chairs to a poor woman and buyed a new kind, because hair- bottomed ones ain't fashionable now. So Esther Auld can't not bear the sight of her chairs now, though she were windy of them till the letter went to Thrums." " Poor Esther!" said Mrs. Sandys gaily. " Oh, and I forgot this, mother. Jean Myles's reason for not telling where she bides in London is that she's so grand that she thinks if auld Petey and the rest knowed where the place was they would visit her and boast as they was her friends. Auld Petey stamped wi* rage when he heard that, and Martha Scrymgeour said, 'Oh, the pridefu' limmer!'" "Ay, Martha," muttered Mrs. Sandys, "you and Jean Myles is evens now." 80 COMIC OVERTURE TO A TRAGEDY But the passage that had made them all wince the most was one giving Jean's reasons for mak- ing no calls in Thrums Street. " You can break it to Martha Scrymgeour's father and mither," the letter said, " and to Petey Whamond's sisters and the rest as has friends in London, that I have seen no Thrums faces here, the low part where they bide not being for the like of me to file my feet in. Forby that, I could not let my son mix with their bairns for fear they should teach him the vulgar Thrums words and clarty his blue-velvet suit. I'm thinking you have to dress your laddie in corduroy, Esther, but you see that would not do for mine. So no more at present, and we all join in compliments, and my little velvets says he wishes I would send some of his toys to your little corduroys. And so maybe I will, Esther, if you'll tell Aaron Latta how rich and happy I am, and if you're feared to say it to his face, tell it to the roaring farmer of Double Dykes, and he'll pass it on." " Did you ever hear of such a woman?" Tommy said indignantly, when he had repeated as much of this insult to Thrums as he could remember. But it was information his mother wanted. " What said they to that bit ? " she asked. At first, it appears, they limited their comments to "Losh, losh," "keeps a'," "it cows," "my certie," "ay, ay," "sal,tal," "dagont" (the meaning of which 81 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY is obvious). But by and by they recovered their breath, and then Baker Lumsden said wonderingly : "Wha that was at her marriage could have thought it would turn out so weel? It was an eerie marriage that, Petey ! " "Ay, man, you may say so," old Petey an- swered. " I was there ; I was one o' them as went in ahint Aaron Latta, and I'm no' likely to forget it." " I wasna there," said the baker, " but I was Standing at the door, and I saw the hearse drive up." "What did they mean, mother?" Tommy asked, but she shuddered and replied, evasively, " Did Martha Scrymgeour say anything ? " " She said such a lot," he had to confess, " that I dinna mind none on it. But I mind what her father in Thrums wrote to her; he wrote to her that if she saw a carriage go by, she was to keep her eyes on the ground, for likely as not Jean Myles would be in it, and she thought as they was all dirt beneath her feet. But Kirsty Ross who is she ? " " She's Martha's mother. What about her ? " " She wrote at the end of the letter that Martha was to hang on ahint the carriage and find out whe r e Jean Myles bides.' "Laddie, that was like Kirsty! Heard you what the roaring farmer o' Double Dykes said ? " No, Tommy had not heard him mentioned 8? COMIC OVERTURE TO A TRAGEDY And indeed the roaring farmer of Double Dykes had said nothing. He was already lying very quiet on the south side of the cemetery. Tommy's mother's next question cost her a painful effort. "Did you hear," she asked, "whether they telled Aaron Latta about the let- ter?" " Yes, they telled him," Tommy replied, " and he said a queer thing; he said, 'Jean Myles is dead, I was at her coffining.' That's what he aye says when they tell him there's another letter. I wonder what he means, mother ? " " I wonder ! " she echoed, faintly. The only pleasure left her was to raise the envy of those who had hooted her from Thrums, but she paid a price for it. Many a stab she had got from the unwit- ting Tommy as he repeated the gossip of his new friends, and she only won their envy at the cost of their increased ill-will. They thought she was lording it in London, and so they were merciless; had they known how poor she was and how ill, they would have forgotten everything save that she was a Thrummy like themselves, and there were few but would have shared their all with her. But she did not believe this, and therefore you may pity her, for the hour was drawing near, and she knew it, when she must appeal to some one for her children's sake, not for her own. No, not for her own. When Tommy was wan- 83 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY dering the pretty parts of London with James Gloag and other boys from Thrums Street in search of Jean Myles, whom they were to know by her carriage and her silk dress and her son in I blue velvet, his mother was in bed with bron ( chitis in the wretched room we know of, or creep ing to the dancing school, coughing all the way. Some of the fits of coughing were very near being her last, but she wrestled with her trouble, seeming at times to stifle it, and then for weeks she managed to go to her work, which was still hers, because Shovel's old girl did it for her when the bronchitis would not be defied. Shovel's old slattern gave this service unasked and without payment ; if she was thanked it was ungraciously, but she continued to do all she could when there was need ; she smelled of gin, but she continued to do all she could. The wardrobe had been put upon its back on the floor, and so converted into a bed for Tommy and Elspeth, who were sometimes wakened in the night by a loud noise, which alarmed them until they learned that it was only the man in the next room knocking angrily on the wall because their mother's cough kept him from sleeping. Tommy knew what death was now, and El- speth knew its name, and both were vaguely aware that it was looking for their mother; but if she could only hold out till Hogmanay, Tommy said, COMIC OVERTURE TO A TRAGEDY they would fleg it out of the house. Hogmanay is the mighty winter festival of Thrums, and when it came round these two were to give their mother a present that would make her strong. It was not to be a porous plaster. Tommy knew now of , something better than that. "And I knows too!" Elspeth gurgled, "and I has threepence a'ready, I has." " Whisht ! " said Tommy in an agony of dread, " she hears you, and she'll guess. We ain't speak- ing of nothing to give to you at Hogmanay," he said to his mother with great cunning. Then he winked at Elspeth and said, with his hand over his mouth, "I hinna twopence!" and Elspeth, about to cry in fright, "Have you spended it?" saw the joke and crowed instead, " Nor yet has I threepence ! " They smirked together, until Tommy saw a change come over Elspeth's face, which made him run her outside the door. " You was a-going to pray ! " he said, severely. ' 'Cos it was a lie, Tommy. I does have three- pence." " Well, you ain't a-going to get praying about it She would hear yer." " I would do it low. Tommy." " She would see yer." " Oh, Tommy, let me. God is angry with me." Tommy looked down the stair, and no one was 85 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY in sight. " Pll let yer pray here," he whispered, "and you can say I have twopence. But be quick, and do it standing." Perhaps Mrs. Sandys had been thinking that when Hogmanay came her children might have no mother to bring presents to, for on their return to the room her eyes followed them wofully, and a shudder of apprehension shook her torn frame. Tommy gave Elspeth a look that meant " I'm sure there's something queer about her." There was also something queer about himself, which at this time had the strangest gallop. It began one day with a series of morning calls from Shovel, who suddenly popped his head over the top of the door (he was standing on the handle), roared "Roastbeef!" in the manner of a railway porter announcing the name of a station, and then at once withdrew. He returned presently to say that vain must be all attempts to wheedle his secret from him, and yet again to ask irritably why Tommy was not coming out to hear all about it. Then did Tommy desert Elspeth, and on the stair Shovel showed him a yellow card with this printed on it: "S. R. J. C. Supper Ticket ; " and written beneath, in a lady's hand : " Admit Joseph Salt." The letters, Shovel explained, meant Society for the somethink of Juvenile Criminals, and the toffs what ran it got hold of you when you came out of quod. .Then 86 COMIC OVERTURE TO A TRAGEDY if you was willing to repent they wrote down your name and the place what you lived at in a book, and one of them came to see yer and give yer a ticket for the blow-out night. This was blow-out night, and that were Shovel's ticket. He had bought it from Hump Salt for fourpence. What you get at the blow-out was roast beef, plum-duff, and an orange ; but when Hump saw the four- pence he could not wait. A favor was asked of Tommy. Shovel had been told by Hump that it was the custom of the toffs to sit beside you and question you about your crimes, and lacking the imagination that made Tommy such an ornament to the house, the chances were that he would flounder in his answers and be ejected. Hump had pointed this out to him after pocketing the fourpence. Would Tommy, there- fore, make up things for him to say ; reward, the orange. This was a proud moment for Tommy, as Shov- el's knowledge of crime was much more extensive than his own, though they had both studied it in the pictures of a lively newspaper subscribed to by Shovel, senior. He became patronizing at once and rejected the orange as insufficient. Then suppose, after he got- into the hall, Shovel dropped his ticket out at the window; Tommy could pick it up, and then it would admit him also. 8? SENTIMENTAL TOMMY Tommy liked this, but foresaw a danger : the ticket might be taken from Shovel at the door> just as they took them from you at that singing thing in the church he had attended with young Petey. So help Shovel's davy, there was no fear of this. They were superior toffs, what trusted to your honour. Would Shovel swear to this ? He would. But would he swear dagont ? He swore dagont ; and then Tommy had him. As he was so sure of it, he could not object to Tommy's being the one who dropped the ticket out at the window ? Shovel did object for a time, but after a wrangle he gave up the ticket, intending to take it from Tommy when primed with the necessary tale. So they parted until evening, and Tommy returned to Elspeth, secretive but elated. For the rest of the day he was in thought, now waggling his head smugly over some dark, unutterable design and again looking a little scared. In growing alarm she watched his face, and at last she slipped upon her knees, but he had her up at once and said, re- proachfully: " It were me as teached yer to pray, and now yer prays for me ! That's fine treatment ! " Nevertheless, after his mother's return, just be- COMIC OVERTURE TO A TRAGEDY fore he stole out to join Shovel, he took Elspeth aside and whispered to her, nervously: " You can pray for me if you like, for, oh, El- speth, I'm thinking as I'll need it sore ! " And sore he needed it before the night was out. CHAPTER VIII THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS ** I LOVE my dear father and my dear mother and all the dear little kids at 'ome. You are a kind laidy or gentleman. I love yer. I will never do it again, so help me bob. Amen." This was what Shovel muttered to himself again and again as the two boys made their way across the lamplit Hungerford Bridge, and Tommy asked him what it meant. " My old gal learned me that ; she's deep," Shovel said, wiping the words off his mouth with his sleeve. " But you got no kids at 'ome ! " remonstrated Tommy. (Ameliar was now in service.) Shovel turned on him with the fury of a mother protecting her young. " Don't you try for to knock none on it out," he cried, and again fell a-mumblmg. Said Tommy, scornfully " If you says it all out at one bang you'll be done at the start." Shovel sighed. "And you should blubber when yer says it," added Tommy, who could laugh or cry merely THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS because other people were laughing or crying, or even with less reason, and so naturally that he found it more difficult to stop than to begin, Shovel was the taller by half a head, and irresis- tible with his fists, but to-night Tommy was master. " You jest stick to me, Shovel," he said airily. " Keep a grip on my hand, same as if yer was El- speth." " But what was we copped for, Tommy ? " en- treated humble Shovel. Tommy asked him if he knew what a butler was, and Shovel remembered, confusedly, that there had been a portrait of a butler in his father's news-sheet. "Well, then," said Tommy, inspired by this same source, " there's a room a butler has, and it is a pantry, so you and me crawled through the winder and we opened the door to the gang. You and me was copped. They catched you below the table and me stabbing the butler." " It was me what stabbed the butler," Shovel interposed, jealously. " How could you do it, Shovel ? " " With a knife, I tell yer ! " " Why, you did n't have no knife," said Tommy, impatiently. This crushed Shovel, but he growled sulkily : " Well, I bit him in the leg." ** Not you," said selfish Tommy. " You for- 9* SENTIMENTAL TOMMY gets about repenting, and if I let yer bite him, you would brag about it. It's safer without, Shovel." Perhaps it was. " How long did I get in quod, then, Tommy?" " Fourteen days." " So did you ? " Shovel said, with quick anxiety " I got a month," replied Tommy, firmly. Shovel roared a word that would never have ad- mitted him to the hall. Then, " I'm as game as you, and gamer," he whined. " But I'm better at repenting. I tell yer, I'll cry when I'm repenting." Tommy's face lit up, and Shovel could not help saying, with a curious look at it : " You you ain't like any other cove I knows," to which Tommy replied, also in an awestruck voice : " I'm so queer, Shovel, that when I thinks 'bout myself I'm I'm sometimes near feared." " What makes your face for to shine like that *? Is it thinking about the blow-out ? " No, it was hardly that, but Tommy could not tell what it was. He and the saying about art for art's sake were in the streets that night, looking for each other. The splendour of the brightly lighted hall, which was situated in one of the meanest streets of per- haps the most densely populated quarter in Lon- don, broke upon the two boys suddenly and hit 92 THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS each in his vital part, tapping an invitation on Tommy's brain-pan and taking Shovel coquettishly in the stomach. Now was the moment when Shovel meant to strip Tommy of the ticket, but the spectacle in front dazed him, and he stopped to tell a vegetable barrow how he loved his dear father and his dear mother, and all the dear kids at home. Then Tommy darted forward and was im- mediately lost in the crowd surging round the steps of the hall. Several gentlemen in evening dress stood framed in the lighted doorway, shouting : " Have your tickets in your hands and give them up as you pass in." They were fine fellows, helping in a splendid work, and their society did much good, though it was not so well organized as others that have followed in its steps ; but Shovel, you may believe, was in no mood to attend to them. He had but one thought : that the traitor Tommy was doubtless at that moment boring his way toward them, underground, as it were, and " holding his ticket in his hand." Shovel dived into the rabble and was flung back upside down. Falling with his arms round a full-grown man, he immediately ran up him as if he had been a lamp-post, and was aloft just sufficiently long to see Tommy give up the ticket and saunter into the hall. The crowd tried at intervals to rush the door. It was mainly composed of ragged boys, but here 93 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY and there were men, women, and girls, who came into view for a moment under the lights as the mob heaved and went round and round like a boiling potful. Two policemen joined the ticket- collectors, and though it was a good-humoured gathering, the air was thick with such cries as these : " I lorst my ticket, ain't I telling yer ? Gar on, guv'nor, lemme in!" " Oh, crumpets, look at Jimmy ! Jimmy never done nothink, your honour; he's a himposter." " I'm the boy what kicked the peeler. Hie, you toff with the choker, ain't I to step up ? " " Tell yer, I'm a genooine criminal, I am. If yer don't lemme in I'll have the lawr on you." "Let a poor cove in as his father drownded hisself for his country." "What air yer torking about? Warn't I in larst year, and the cuss as runs the show, he says to me, ' Allers welcome,' he says. None on your sarse, Bobby. I demands to see the cuss what runs- " Jest keeping on me out 'cos I ain't done nothin'. Ho, this is a encouragement to honesty, I don't think." Mighty in tongue and knee and elbow was an unknown knight, ever conspicuous; it might be but by a leg waving for one brief moment in the ait. He did not want to go in, would not go in 94 THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS though they went on their blooming knees to him ; he was after a viper of the name of Tommy. Half an hour had not tired him, and he was lead- ing another assault, when a magnificent lady, such as you see in wax-works, appeared in the vestibule and made some remark to a policeman, who then shouted : " If so there be hany lad here called Shovel, he can step forrard." A dozen lads stepped forward at once, but a flail drove them right and left, and the unknown knight had mounted the parapet amid a shower of exe- crations. " If you are the real Shovel," the lady said to him, " you can tell me how this proceeds, ' I love my dear father and my dear mother Go on." Shovel obeyed, tremblingly. " And all the dear little kids at 'ome. You are a kind laidy or gen- tleman. I love yer. I will never do it again, so help me bob. Amen." " Charming ! " chirped the lady, and down pleasantly-smelling aisles she led him, pausing to drop an observation about Tommy to a clergy- man : " So glad I came ; I have discovered the most delightful little monster called Tommy." The clergyman looked after her half in sadness, half sarcastically; he was thinking that he had discovered a monster also. At present the body of the hall was empty, but SENTIMENTAL TOMMY its sides were lively with gorging boys, among whom ladies moved, carrying platefuls of good things. Most of them were sweet women, fight- ing bravely for these boys, and not at all like Shovel's patroness, who had come for a sensation. Tommy falling into her hands, she got it. Tommy, who had a corner to himself, was loll- ing in it like a little king, and he not only or dered roast-beef for the awe-struck Shovel, but sent the lady back for salt. Then he whispered, exult* antly: " Quick, Shovel, feel my pocket" (it bulged with two oranges), "now the inside pocket" (plum- duff), " now my waistcoat pocket " (threepence) ; " look in my mouth " (chocolates). When Shovel found speech he began excitedly: " I love my dear father and my dear " " Gach ! " said Tommy, interrupting him con- temptuously. "Repenting ain't no go, Shovel. Look at them other coves ; none of them has got no money, nor full pockets, and I tell you, it's 'cos they has repented." " Gar on ! " " It's true, I tells you. That lady as is my one, she's called her ladyship, and she don't care a cuss for boys as has repented," which of course was a libel, her ladyship being celebrated wherever para- graphs penetrate for having knitted a pair of stock- ings for the deserving poor. "When I saw that," Tommy continued bra- 96 THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS zenly, " I bragged 'stead of repenting, and the wuss I says I am, she jest says, 'You little monster,' and gives me another orange." "Then I'm done for," Shovel moaned, "for I rolled off that 'bout loving my dear father and my dear mother, blast 'em, soon as I seen her." He need not let that depress him. Tommy had told her he would say it, but it was all flam. Shovel thought the ideal arrangement would be for him to eat and leave the torking to Tommy, Tommy noddedo " I'm full, at any rate," he said, struggling with his waistcoat. " Oh, Shovel, I am full ! " Her ladyship returned, and the boys held by their contract, but of the dark character Tommy seems to have been, let not these pages bear the record. Do you wonder that her ladyship be- lieved him ? On this point we must fight for our Tommy. You would have believed him. Even Shovel, who knew, between the bites, that it was all whoppers, listened as to his father reading aloud. This was because another boy present half believed it for the moment also. When he described the eerie darkness of the butler's pantry, he shivered involuntarily, and he shut his eyes once ugh! that was because he saw the blood spouting out of the butler. He was turning up his trousers to show the mark of the butler's boot on his leg when the lady was called away, and Q7 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY then Shovel shook him, saying : " Darn yer, doesn't yer know as it's all your eye ? " which brought Tommy to his senses with a jerk, "Sure's death, Shovel," he whispered, in awe, " I was thinking I done it, every bit ! " Had her ladyship come back she would have found him a different boy. He remembered now that Elspeth, for whom he had filled his pockets, was praying for him; he could see her on her knees, saying, "Oh, God, I'se praying for Tommy," and remorse took hold of him and shook him on his seat. He broke into one hysterical laugh and then immediately began to sob. This was the moment when Shovel should have got him quietly out of the hall. Members of the society discussing him after- wards with bated breath said that never till they died could they forget her ladyship's face while he did it. " But did you notice the boy's own face *? It was positively angelic." "Angelic, indeed; the little horror was intoxicated." No, there was a doctor present, and according to him it was the meal that had gone to the boy's head ; he looked half starved. As for the clergyman, he only said : " We shall lose her subscription ; I am glad of it." Yes, Tommy was intoxicated, but with a bever- age not recognized by the faculty. What hap- pened was this: Supper being finished, the time had come for what Shovel called the jawing, and 9 8 THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS the boys were now mustered in the body of the hall. The limited audience had gone to the gal- lery, and unluckily all eyes except Shovel's were turned to the platform. Shovel was apprehensive about Tommy, who was not exactly sobbing now ; but strange, uncontrollable sounds not unlike the winding up of a clock proceeded from his throat ; his face had flushed ; there was a purposeful look in his usually unreadable eye ; his fingers were fidgeting on the board in front of him, and he seemed to keep his seat with difficulty. The personage who was to address the boys sat on the platform with clergymen, members of committee, and some ladies, one of them Tom- my's patroness. Her ladyship saw Tommy and smiled to him, but obtained no response. She had taken a front seat, a choice that she must have regretted presently. The chairman rose and announced that the Rev. Mr. - - would open the proceedings with prayer. The Rev. Mr. rose to pray in a loud voice for the waifs in the body of the hall. At the same moment rose Tommy, and began to pray in a squeaky voice for the people on the platform. He had many Biblical phrases, mostly picked up in Thrums Street, and what he said was dis- tinctly heard in the stillness, the clergyman being suddenly bereft of speech. " Oh," he cried, " look down on them ones there, for, oh, they are unworthy 9Q SENTIMENTAL TOMMY of Thy mercy, and, oh, the worst sinner is her la- dyship, her sitting there so brazen in the black frock with yellow stripes, and the worse I said I were the better pleased were she. Oh, make her think shame for tempting of a poor boy, forgetting suffer little children, oh, why curnbereth she the ground, oh " He was in full swing before anyone could act. Shovel having failed to hold him in his seat, had done what was, perhaps, the next best thing, got beneath it himself. The arm of the petrified clergyman was still extended, as if blessing his brother's remarks; the chairman seemed to be trying to fling his right hand at the culprit; but her ladyship, after the first stab, never moved a muscle. Thus for nearly half a minute, when the officials woke up, and squeezing past many knees, seized Tommy by the neck and ran him out of the building. All down the aisle he prayed hys- terically, and for some time afterwards, to Shovel, who had been cast forth along with him. At an hour of that night when their mother was asleep, and it is to be hoped they were the only two children awake in London, Tommy sat up softly in the wardrobe to discover whether Elspeth was still praying for him. He knew that she was on the floor in a nightgown some twelve sizes too large for her, but the room was as silent JOO THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS and black as the world he had just left, by taking his fingers from his ears and the blankets off his face. " I see you," he said mendaciously, and in a guarded voice, so as not to waken his mother, from #hom he had kept his escapade. This had not the desired effect of drawing a reply from Elspeth, and he tried bluster. " You needna think as I'll repent, you brat, so there! What? " I wish I hadna told you about it ! " Indeed, he had endeavoured not to do so, but pride in his achievement had eventually conquered prudence. " Reddy would have laughed, she would, and said as I was a wonder. Reddy was the kind I like. What? " You ate up the oranges quick, and the plum- duff too, so you should pray for yoursel' as well as for me. It's easy to say as you didn^ know how I got them till after you eated them, but you should have found out. What ? " Do you think it was for my own self as I done it? I jest done it to get the oranges and plum- duff to you. I did, and the threepence, too. Eh ? Speak, you little besom. " I tell you as I did repent in the hall. I was greeting, and I never knowed I put up that prayer till Shovel told me on it. We was sitting in the street by that time." This was true. On leaving the hall Tommy 101 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY had soon dropped to the cold ground and squatted there till he came to, when he remembered nothing of what had led to his expulsion. Like a stream that has run into a pond and only finds itself again when it gets out, he was but a continuation of the boy who when last conscious of himself was in the corner crying remorsefully over his misdeed ; and in this humility he would have returned to Elspeth had no one told him of his prayer. Shovel, how- ever, was at hand, not only to tell him all about it, but to applaud, and home strutted Tommy chuckling. " I am sleeping," he next said to Elspeth, "so you may as well come to your bed." He imitated the breathing of a sleeper, but it was the only sound to be heard in London, and he desisted fearfully. " Come away, Elspeth," he said, coaxingly, for he was very fond of her and could not sleep while she was cold and miserable. Still getting no response he pulled his body inch by inch out of the bedclothes, and holding his breath, found the floor with his feet stealthily, as if to cheat the wardrobe into thinking that he was still in it. But his reason was to discover whether Elspeth had fallen asleep on her knees without her learning that he cared to know. Almost noise- lessly he worked himself along the floor, but when he stopped to bring his face nearer hers, there was iuch a creaking of his joints that if Elspeth. did 102 THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS not hear it she she must be dead ! His knees played whack on the floor. Elspeth only gasped once, but he heard, and re- mained beside her for a minute, so that she might hug him if such was her desire ; and she put out her hand in the darkness so that his should not have far to travel alone if it chanced to be on the way to her. Thus they sat on their knees, each aghast at the hard-heartedness of the other. Tommy put the blankets over the kneeling figure, and presently announced from the wardrobe that if he died of cold before repenting the blame of keeping him out of heaven would be Elspeth's. But the last word was muffled, for the blankets were tucked about him as he spoke, and two motherly little arms gave him the embrace they wanted to withhold. Foiled again, he kicked off the bedclothes and said : " I tell yer I wants to die ! " This terrified both of them, and he added, quickly : " Oh, God, if I was sure I were to die to-night I would repent at once." It is the commonest prayer in all languages, but down on her knees slipped Elspeth again, and Tommy, who felt that it had done him good, said indignantly : " Surely that is religion. What ? " He lay on his face until he was frightened by a noise louder than thunder in the daytime the 103 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY scraping of his eyelashes on the pillow. Then he sat up in the wardrobe and fired his three last shots. " Elspeth Sandys, I'm done with yer forever, I am. I'll take care on yer, but I'll never kiss yer no more. " When yer boasts as I'm your brother I'll say you ain't. I'll tell my mother about Reddy the mom, and syne she'll put you to the door smart. " When you are a grown woman I'll buy a house to yer, but you'll have jest to bide in it by your lonely self, and I'll come once a year to speir how you are, but I won't come in, I won't Til jest cry up the stair." The effect of this was even greater than he had expected, for now two were in tears instead of one, and Tommy's grief was the more heartrending, he was so much better at everything than Elspeth. He jumped out of the wardrobe and ran to her, calling her name, and he put his arms round her cold body, and the dear mite, forgetting how cruelly he had used her, cried, " Oh, tighter, Tommy, tighter ; you didn't not mean it, did yer ? Oh, you is terrible fond on me, ain't yer? And you won't not tell my mother 'bout Reddy, will yer, and you is no done wi' me forever, is yer? and you won't not put me in a house by myself, will yer? Oh, Tommy, is that the tightest you can do ? " 104 THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS And Tommy made it tighter, vowing, " I nevei meant it; I was a bad im to say it. If Reddy were to come back wanting for to squeeze you out, I would send her packing quick, I would. I tell yer what, I'll kiss you with folk looking on, I will, and no be ashamed to do it, and if Shovel is one of them what sees me, and he puts his finger to his nose, I'll blood the mouth of him, I will, dagont ! " Then he prayed for forgiveness, and he could always pray more beautifully than Elspeth. Even she was satisfied with the way he did it, and so, alack, was he. " But you forgot to tell," she said fondly, when once more they were in the wardrobe together " you forgot to tell as you filled your pockets wif things to me." " I didn't forget," Tommy replied modestly. " I missed it out on purpose, I did, 'cos I was sure God knows on it without my telling him, and I thought he would be pleased if I didn't let on as I knowed it was good of me." " Oh, Tommy," cried Elspeth, worshipping him, " I couldn't have doned that, I couldn't ! " She* was barely six, and easily taken in, but she would save him from himself if she could. IOC CHAPTER IX AULD LANG SYNE WHAT to do with her ladyship's threepence? Tommy finally decided to drop it into the charity- box that had once contained his penny. They held it over the slit together, Elspeth almost in tears because it was such a large sum to give away, but Tommy looking noble he was so proud of himself; and when he said " Three ! " they let go- There followed days of excitement centred round their money-box. Shovel introduced Tommy to a boy what said as after a bit you forget how much money was in your box, and then when you opened it, oh, Lor' ! there is more than you thought, so he and Elspeth gave this plan a week's trial, affecting not to know how much they had gathered, but when they unlocked it, the sum was still only eightpence ; so then Tommy told the liar to come on, and they fought while the horrified Elspeth prayed, and Tommy licked him, a result due to one of the famous Thrums left- 106 AULD LANG SYNE banders then on exhibition in that street for the first time, as taught the victor by Petey Wha- mond the younger, late of Tillyloss. The money did come in, once in spate (two pence from Bob in twenty-four hours), but usu- ally so slowly that they saw it resting on the way, and then, when they listened intently, they could hear the thud of Hogmanay. The last halfpenny was a special aggravation, strolling about, just out of reach, with all the swagger of sixpence, but at last Elspeth had it, and after that, the sooner Hogmanay came the better. They concealed their excitement under too many wrappings, but their mother suspected no- thing. When she was dressing on the morning of Hogmanay,, her stockings happened to be at the other side of the room, and they were such a long way off that she rested on the way to them. At the meagre breakfast she said what a heavy tea- pot that was, and Tommy thought this funny, but the salt had gone from the joke when he remem- bered it afterwards. And when she was ready to go off to her work she hesitated at the door, look- ing at her bed and from it to her children as if in two minds, and then went quietly downstairs. The distance seems greater than ever to-day, poor woman, and you stop longer at the corners, where rude men jeer at you. Scarcely can you push open the door of the dancing-school or lift 107 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY the pail ; the fire has gone out, you must again go on your knees before it, and again the smoke makes you cough. Gaunt slattern, fighting to bring up the phlegm, was it really you for whom another woman gave her life, and thought it a rich reward to get dressing you once in your long clothes, when she called you her beautiful, and smiled, and smiling, died ? Well, well ; but take courage, Jean Myles. The long road still lies straight up hill, but your climbing is near an end. Shrink from the rude men no more, they are soon to forget you, so soon! It is a heavy door, but soon you will have pushed it open for the last time. The girls will babble still, but not to you, not of you. Cheer up, the work is nearly done. Her beautiful! Come, beautiful, strength for a few more days, and then you can leave the key of the leaden door behind you, and on your way home you may kiss your hand joyously to the weary streets, for you are going to die. Tommy and Elspeth had been to the foot of the stair many times to look for her before their mother came back that evening, yet when she re- entered her home, behold, they were sitting calmly on the fender as if this were a day like yesterday or to-morrow, as if Tommy had not been on a business visit to Thrums Street, as if the hump on the bed did not mean that a glorious something 108 AULD LANG SYNE was hidden under the coverlet. True, Elspeth would look at Tommy imploringly every few minutes, meaning that she could not keep it in much longer, and then Tommy would mutter the one word " Bell " to remind her that it was against the rules to begin before the Thrums eight-o'clock bell rang. They also wiled away the time of wait- ing by inviting each other to conferences at the window where these whispers passed " She ain't got a notion, Tommy." " Dinna look so often at the bed." " If I could jest get one more peep at it!" "No, no; but you can put your hand on the top of it as you go by." The artfulness of Tommy lured his unsuspect- ing mother into telling how they would be holding Hogmanay in Thrums to-night, how cartloads of kebbock cheeses had been rolling into the town all the livelong day ("Do you hear them, El- speth ?"), and in dark closes the children were al- ready gathering, with smeared faces and in eccentric dress, to sally forth as guisers at the clap of eight, when the ringing of a bell lets Hogmanay loose. (" You see, Elspeth ? ") Inside the houses men and women were preparing (though not by fast- ing, which would have been such a good way that it is surprising no one ever thought of it) for a series of visits, at every one of which thev would 109 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY be offered a dram and kebbock and bannock, and in the grander houses " bridles," which are a sub- lime kind of pie. Tommy had the audacity to ask what bridies were like. And he could not dress up and be a guiser, could he, mother, for the guisers sang a song, and he did not know the words'? What a pity they could not get bridies to buy in London, and learn the song and sing it. But of course they could not ! (" Elspeth, if you tumble off the fender again, she'll guess.") Such is a sample of Tommy, but Elspeth was sly also, if in a smaller way, and it was she who said: "There ain't nothin' in the bed, is there, Tommy ! " This duplicity made her uneasy, and she added, behind her teeth, " Maybe there is," and then, " O God, I knows as there is." But as the great moment drew near there were no more questions ; two children were staring at the clock and listening intently for the peal of a bell nearly five hundred miles away. The clock struck. " Whisht ! It's time, El- speth ! They've begun ! Come on ! " A few minutes afterwards Mrs. Sandys was roused by a knock at the door, followed by the entrance of two mysterious figures. The female wore a boy's jacket turned outside in, the male a woman's bonnet and a shawl, and to make his dis- guise the more impenetrable he carried a poker in no AULD LANG SYNE his right hand. They stopped in the middle of the floor and began to recite, rather tremulously, Get up, good wife, and binna sweir, And deal your bread to them that's here, For the time will come when you'll be dead, And then you'll need neither ale nor bread. Mrs. Sandys had started, and then turned pite- ously from them; but when they were done she tried to smile, and said, with forced gaiety, that she saw they were guisers, and it was a fine night, and would they take a chair. The male stranger did so at once, but the female said, rather anxiously: " You are sure as you don't know who we is ? " Their hostess shook her head, and then he of the poker offered her three guesses, a daring thing to do, but all went well, for her first guess was Shovel and his old girl ; second guess, Before and After ; third guess, Napoleon Buonaparte and the Auld Licht minister. At each guess the smaller of the intruders clapped her hands gleefully, but when, with the ftrird, she was unmuzzled, she putted with her head at Mrs. Sandys and hugged her, scream- ing, " It ain't none on them ; it's jest me, mother, it's Elspeth ! " and even while their astounded hostess was asking could it be true, the male con- spirator dropped his poker noisily (to draw atten- tion to himself) and stood revealed as Thomas Sandys. ill SENTIMENTAL TOMMY Wasn't it just like Thrums, wasn't it just the very, very same ? Ah, it was wonderful, their mother said, but, alas there was one thing want- ing: she had no Hogmanay to give the guisers. Had she not ? What a pity, Elspeth ! What a pity, Tommy ! What might that be in the bed t Elspeth ? It couldn't not be their Hogmanay, could it, Tommy ? If Tommy was his mother he would look and see. If Elspeth was her mothei she would took and see. Her curiosity thus cunningly aroused, Mrs. Sandys raised the coverlet of the bed and there were three bridies, an oatmeal cake, and a hunk of kebbock. " And they corned from Thrums ! " cried Elspeth, while Tommy cried, 6t Petey and the others got a lot sent from Thrums, and I bought the bridies from them, and they gave rne the ban- nock and the kebbock for nuthin' ! " Their mothei did not utter the cry of rapture which Tommy ex- pected so confidently that he could have done it for her ; instead, she pulled her two children toward her, and the great moment was like to be a tearful rathei than an ecstatic one, for Elspeth had begun to whimper, and even Tommy but by a supreme effort he shouldered reality to the door. m " Is this my Hogmanay, guidwife 1 " he asked rn the nick of time, and the situation thus being saved, the luscious feast was partaken o the guisers listening solemnly as each bite went down. 112 AULD LANG SYNE They also took care to address their hostess as " guidwife " or " mistress," affecting not to have met her lately, and inquiring genially after the health of herself and family. " How many have you?" was Tommy's masterpiece, and she an- swered in the proper spirit, but all the time she was hiding great part of her bridie beneath her apron, Hogmanay having come too late for her. Everything was to be done exactly as they were doing it in Thrums Street, and so presently Tommy made a speech ; it was the speech of old Petey, who had rehearsed it several times before him. " Here's a toast," said Tommy, standing up and waving his arms, ** here's a toast that we'll drink in silence, one that maun have sad thoughts at the back o't to some of us, but one, my friends, that keeps the hearts of Thrums folk green and ties us all the- gither, like as it were wi' twine. It's to all them, wherever they may be the night, wha* have sat as lads and lasses at the Cuttle Well" To one of the listeners it was such an unex- pected ending that a faint cry broke from her, which startled the children, and they sat in silence looking at her She had turned her face from them, but her arm was extended as if entreating Tommy to stop. " That was the end," he said, at length, in a tone of expostulation ; " it's auld Petey's speech," "Are you sure," his mother asked wistfully. SENTIMENTAL TOMMY " that Petey was to say all them as have sat at the Cuttle Well 2 He made no exception, did he ? " Tommy did not know what exception was, but he assured her that he had repeated the speech, word for word. For the remainder of th. evening she sat apart by the fire, while her children gam- bled for crack-nuts, young Petey having made a teetotum for Tommy and taught him what the letters on it meant. Their mirth rang faintly in her ear, and they scarcely heard her fits of cough- ing; she was as much engrossed in her own thoughts as they in theirs, but hers were sad and theirs were jocund Hogmanay, like all festivals, being but a bank from which we can only draw what we put in. So an hour or more passed, after which Tommy whispered to Elspeth : " Now's the time ; they're at it now," and each took a hand of their mother, and she woke from her reverie to find that they had pulled her from her chair and were jumping up and down, shouting, excitedly, " For Auld Lang Syne, my dear, for Auld Lang Syne, Auld Lang Syne, my dear, Auld Lang Syne." She tried to sing the words with her children, tried to dance round with them, tried to smile, but It was Tommy who dropped her hand first. " Mother," he cried, " your face is wet, you're greeting sair, and you said you had forgot the way." " I mind it now, man, I mind it now," she said, standing helplessly in the middle of the room. 114 AULD LANG SYNE Elspeth nestled against her, crying, " My mother was thinking about Thrums, wasn't she, Tommy*? " " I was thinking about the part o't I'm most awid to be in," the poor woman said, sinking back into her chair. " It's the Den," Tommy told Elspeth. 44 It's the Square," Elspeth told Tommy. "No, it's Moneypenny." 44 No, it's the Commonty." But it was none of these places. " It's the ceme- tery," the woman said, 44 it's the hamely, quiet cemetery on the hillside. Oh, there's mony a bonny place in my nain bonny toon, but there's nain so hamely like as the cemetery." She sat shaking in the chair, and they thought she was to say no more, but presently she rose excitedly, and with a vehemence that made them shrink from her she cried : " I winna lie in London ! tell Aaron Latta that ; I winna lie in London ! " For a few more days she trudged to her work, and after that she seldom left her bed She had no longer strength to coax up the phlegm, and a doctor brought in by Shovel's mother warned her that her days were near an end. Then she wrote her last letter to Thrums, Tommy and Elspeth standing by to pick up the pen when it fell from her feeble hand, and in the intervals she told them that she was Jean Myles. 44 And if I die and Aaron hasna come," she said, lie SENTIMENTAL TOMMY 44 you maun just gang to auld Petey and tell him wha you are." "But how can you be Jean Myles?" asked astounded Tommy. "You ain't a grand lady and " His mother looked at Elspeth. "No' afore her," she besought him ; but before he set off to post the letter she said: "Come canny into my bed the night, when Elspeth's sleeping, and syne Pll tell you all there is to tell about Jean Myles." "Tell me now whether the letter is to Aaron Latta?" "It's for him," she said, "but it's no' to him, I'm feared he might burn it without opening it if he saw my write on the cover, so I've wrote it to a friend of his wha will read it to him." " And what's inside, mother *? " the boy begged, inquisitively. " It must be queer things if they'll bring Aaron Latta all the way from Thrums." " There's but little in it, man," she said, pressing her hand hard upon her chest. " It's no muckle mail than * Auld Lang Syne, my dear, for Auld Lang Syne.' " 116 CHAPTER X TKB FAVOURITE OF THB LADIES THAT night the excited boy was wakened by a tap-tap, as of someone knocking for admittance, and stealing to his mother's side, he cried, " Aaron Latta has come ; hearken to him chapping at the door!" It was only the man through the wall, but Mrs. Sandys took Tommy into bed with her, and while Elspeth slept, told him the story of her life. She coughed feebly now, but the panting of the dying is a sound that no walls can cage, and the man continued to remonstrate at intervals. Tommy never recalled his mothers story without seeming, through the darkness in which it was told, to hear Elspeth's peaceful breathing and the angry tap* tap on the wall " I'm sweer to tell it to you," she began, "but tell I maun, for though it's just a warning to you and Elspeth no' to be like them that brought you into the world, it's all I have to leave you. Ay, and there's another reason; you may soon be among folk wha ken but half the story, and put a waur face on it than I deserve." 117 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY. She had spoken calmly, but her next words were passionate. "They thought I was fond o' him," she cried; " oh, they were blind, blind ! Frae the first I could never thole the sight o' him. " Maybe that's no true," she had to add. " I aye kent he was a black, but yet I couldna put him out o' my head ; he took sudden grips o' me like an evil thought. I aye ran frae him, and yet I sair doubt that I went looking for him too." " Was it Aaron Latta ? " Tommy asked. " No, it was your father. The first I ever saw of him was at Cullew, four lang miles frae Thrums. There was a ball after the market, and Esther Auld and me went to it. We went in a cart, and I was wearing a pink print, wi' a white bonnet, and blue ribbons that tied aneath the chin. I had a shawl abune, no to file them. There wasna a more in- nocent lassie in Thrums, man, no, nor a happier one ; for Aaron Latta Aaron came half the way wi' us, and he was hauding my hand aneath the shawl. He hadna speired me at that time, but I just kent. It was an auld custom to choose a queen of beauty at the ball, but that night the men couldna J gree wha should be judge, and in the tail-end they went out thegither to look for one, determined to mak' judge o' the first man they met, though they should have to tear him off a horse and bring him 118 THE FAVOURITE OF THE LADIES in by force. You wouldna believe to look at me now, man, that I could have had any thait o' being made queen, but I was fell bonny, and I was as keen as the rest. How simple we were, all pre- tending to one another that we didna want to be chosen ! Esther Auld said she would hod ahint the tent till a queen was picked, and at the very time she said it, she was in a palsy, through no being able to decide whether she looked better in her shell necklace or wanting it. She put it on in the end, and syne when we heard the tramp o' the men, her mind misgave her, and she cried : ' For the love o' mercy, keep them out till I get it off again!' So we were a' laughing when they came in. " Laddie, it was your father and Elspeth's that they brought wi' them, and he was a stranger to us, though we kent something about him afore the night was out. He was finely put on, wi' a gold chain, and a free w'y of looking at women, and if you mind o' him ava, you ken that he was fair and buirdly, wi' a full face, and aye a laugh ahint it. I tell ye, man, that when our een met, and I saw that triumphing laugh ahint his face, I took a fear of him, as if I had guessed the end. " For years and years after that night I dreamed it ower again, and aye I heard mysel' crying to God to keep that man awa' frae me. But I doubt I put up no sic prayer at the time ; his masterful look fleid me, and yet it drew me against my will, SENTIMENTAL TOMM\ and I was trembling wi' pride as well as feai when he made me queen. We danced thegither and fought thegither a' through the ball, and my will was no match for his f and the worst o't was I had a kind o* secret pleasure in being mastered. " Man, he kissed me. Lads had kissed me afore that night, but never since first I went wi' Aaron Latta to the Cuttle Well. Aaron hadna done it, but I was never to let none do it again except him, So when your father did it I struck him, but ahint the redness that came ewer his face, I saw his triumphing laugh, and he whispered that he liked me for the blow. He said, *I prefe* the sweer anes, and the more you struggle, my beauty, the better pleased I'll be n ' Almost ins inmost words to me was, ' I've been hearing of you* Aaron, and that pleases me too ! ' I tired up at that and telJed him what I thought of him, bvt ta said, ' If you canna abide me. wh,it made yon dance wi' me so often ^ ' and, oh, laddie, that's a question that has sung in my head since syne, " I've telled you that we found out -what he was, and 'deed he made no secret ward defiantly until she reached Monypenny, where she tossed the letter in at the smithy door and immediately returned home. It was the let- ter that had been sent to her mother, now sent back, because it was meant for the dead farmer after all. The smith read Jean Myles's last letter, with a face of growing gravity. " Dear Double Dykes," it said, " I send you these few scrapes to say I am dying, and you and Aaron Latta was seldom sin- dry, so I charge you to go to him and say to him * Aaron Latta, it's all lies Jean Myles wrote to Thrums about her grandeur, and her man died mony year back, and it was the only kindness he ever did her, and if she doesna die quick, her and her starving bairns will be flung out into the streets.' If that doesna move him, say, ' Aaron Latta, do you mind yon day at Inverquharity and the cushie doos?' likewise, ' Aaron Latta, do you mind yon day at the Kaims of Airlie*? ' likewise, 4 Aaron Latta, do you mind that Jean Myles was ower heavy for you to lift ? Oh, Aaron, you could lift me so pitiful easy now.' And syne says you 140 AARON LATTA solemnly throe times, * Aaron Latta, Jean Myks is lying dying all alone in a foreign land; Aaron Latta, Jean Myles is lying dying all alone in a foreign land; Aaron Latta, Jean Myles is lying dying all alone in a foreign land.' And if he's sweer to come, just say, 'Oh, Aaron, man, you micht; oh, Aaron, oh, Aaron, are you coming?'" The smith had often denounced this woman^ but he never said a word against her again. He stood long reflecting, and then took the letter to Blinder and read it to him. " She doesna say, * Oh, Aaron Latta, do you mind the Cuttle Well?'" was the blind man's first comment. " She was thinking about it," said Auchterlonie. " Ay, and he's thinking about it," said Blinder, "night and day, night and day. What a toun there'll be about that letter, smith ! " " There will. But I'm to take it to Aaron afore the news spreads. He'll never gang to London though." " I think he will, smith." " I ken him well." " Maybe I ken him better." "You canna see the ugly mark it left on his brow." " I can see the uglier marks it has left in his breast." " Well, I'll take the letter; I can do no more." 141 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY When the smith opened the door of Aaron's house, he let out a draught of hot air that was glad to be gone from the warper's restless home. The usual hallan, or passage, divided the but from the ben, and in the ben a great revolving thing, the warping-rnill, half filled the room. Between it and a pile of webs that obscured the light a little silent man was sitting on a box turning a handle. His shoulders were almost as high as his ears, as if he had been caught forever in a storm, and though he was basdy five and thirty, he had the tattered, dis- honoured beatd of black and white that comes to none, till the glory of life has gone. Suddenly the smith appeared round the webs. '* Aaion," he said, awkwardly, " do you mind Jean Myles?" The warper did not for a moment take his eyes off a, contiivance with pirns in it that was climbing up and down the whirring mill 44 She's dead," he answered. * She's dying," said the smith A thread bioke,and Aaron had to rise to mend it. 41 Stop the mill and listen," Auchterlonie begged 'am, bat. .he warper returned to his seat ?^d the D '1 :g]i.n revolved* " This is her dying words to you," coritiixaed the smith. " Did you speak ? " " I didna, but I wish you would take your arm off the bait" 142 AARON T.ATTA " She's loath to die without seeing you. Do you hear, man ? You shall listen to me, I tell you." " I am listening, smith," the warper replied, with- out rancour. " It's but right that you should come here to take your pleasure on a shamed man." His calmness gave him a kind of dignity " Did I ever say you was a shamed man, Aaron 1" " Am I not ? " the warper asked quietly ; and Auchterlonie hung his head. Aaron continued, still turning the handle, " You're truthful, and you canna deny it. Nor will you deny that I shamed you and every other mother's son that night You try to hod it out o' pity, smith, but even as you look at me now, does the man in you no rise up against me ? " " If so," the smith answered reluctantly, " if so, it's against my will." " It is so," said Aaron, in the same measured voice, " and it's right that it should be so. A man may thieve or debauch or murder, and yet. no be so very different frae his fellow-men, but there's on** thing he shall. not do without their wanting to spit him out o' their mouths, and that is, violate the feelings of sex." The strange words in which the warper described his fall had always an uncomfortable effect on those who heard him use them, and Auchterlonie could only answer in distress, " Maybe that 's what it is." H3 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY '" That's what it is. I have had twal lang years sitting on this box to think it out. I blame none but mysel'." "Then you'll have pity on Jean in her sair need," said the smith. He read slowly the first )jrt of the letter, but Aaron made no comment, md the mill had not stopped for a moment "She says," the smith pioceeded, doggedly "she says to say to you, 'Aaron Latta, do you mind yon day at Inveiquharity and the cushie doos?'" Only the monotonous whirr of the mill replied. 44 She says, * Aaron Latta, do you mind that Jean Myles was ower heavy for you to lift? Oh, Aaron, you could lift me so pitiful easy now.' " Another thread broke and the warper rose with sudden fury. "Now that you've eased your conscience, .smith," he said, fiercely, "make your feet your friend." " I'll do so," Auchterlonie answered, laying the letter on the webs, " but I leave this ahint me." " Wap it in the fire." " If that's to be done, you do it yoursel'. Aaron, she treated you ill, but " " There's the door, smith." The smith walked away, and had onyl gone a few steps when he heard the whirr of the mill again. He went back to the door. 144 AARON LATTA " She's dying, man ! " he cried. " Let her die ! " answered Aaron. In an hour the sensational news was through half of Thrums, of which Monypenny may be re- garded as a broken piece, left behind, like the dot of quicksilver in the tube, to show how high the town once rose. Some could only rejoice at first in the down-come of Jean Myles, but most blamed the smith (and himself among them) for not tak- ing note of her address, so that Thrums Street could be informed of it and sent to her relief. For Blinder alone believed that Aaron would be soft* ened. " It was twa threads the smith saw him break," the blind man said, "and Aaron's good at his work. He'll go to London, I tell you." "You forget, Blinders, that he was warping afore I was a dozen steps frae the door," "Ay, and that just proves he hadna burned the letter, for he hadna time. If he didna do it at the first impulse, he'll no do it now." Every little while the boys were sent along the r 3>ad to look in at Aaron's end window and report At seven in the evening Aaron had not left his box, and the blind man's reputation for seeing farther than those with eyes was fallen low. " It's a good sign," he insisted, nevertheless. "It shows his mind's troubled, for he usually louses at SENTIMENTAL TOMMY By eight the news was that Aaron had left his mill and was sitting staring at his kitchen fire. " He's thinking o' Inverquharity and the cushie doos," said Blinder. * 4 More likely," said Dite Deuchars, " he's think- ing o' the Cuttle WelL' : Corp Shiach clattered along the road about nine to say that Aaron Latta was putting on his blacks as if for a journey. At once the blind man's reputation rose on stilts. It fell flat, however, betore the ten-o'clock bell rang, when three of the Auchterlonie children, each pulling the others back that he might arrive first, announced that Aaron had put on his cordu- roys again, and was back at the mill. "That settles it," was everyone's good-night to Blinder, but he only answered thoughtfully, 44 There's a fierce fight going on, my billies." Next morning when his niece was shaving the blind man. the razor had to travel over a triumph- ant smirk which would not explain itself to woman- kind. Blinder being a man whc could bide his time. The time came wh^n the smith looked in to say, 4t Should I gang yont to Aaron's and see if he'll give me the puii woman's addiess^" *'No, I wouldna advise that," answered Blinder, cl.evtily concealing his elation, "for Aaron Latta's awa' to London," ** What ! How can you ken ? * 146 AARON LATTA " I heaid him go by in the night*" 44 It's no possible ! " * 4 1 kent his foot." "You're sure it was Aaion?* 1 Blinder did not consider the question worth answering, his sharpness at recognizing friends by rheir tread being picved. Sometimes he may have carried his pretensions too far. Many granted that he could tell when, a doctor went by, when a lawyer, when a thatcher, when a herd, and this is conceivable, for all callings have their walk. But he was regarded as uncanny when he claimed not only to know ministers in this way, but to be able to distinguish between the steps of the different denominations. He had made no mistake about the warper, however. Aaron was gone, and ten days elapsed before he was again seen in Thrums. H7 CHAPTER XII A CHILD'S TRAGEDY No one in Thrums ever got a word from Aaron Latta about how he spent those ten days, and Tommy and Elspeth, whom he brought back with him, also tried to be reticent, but some of the women were too clever for them. Jean and Aaron did not meet again. Her first intimation that he had come she got from Shovel, who said that a little high-shouldered man in black had been ia- quiring if she was dead, and was now walking up and down the street, like one waiting. She sent her children out to him, but he would not come up. He had answered Tommy roughly, but when Elspeth slipped her hand into his, he let it stay there, and he instructed her to tell Jean Myles that he would bury her in the Thrums cemetery and bring up her bairns. Jean managed once to go to the window and look down at him, and by and by he looked up and saw her. They looked long at each other, and then he turned away his head and began to walk up and down again. At Tilliedrum the coffin was put into a hearse 148 A CHILD'S TRAGEDY And thus conveyed to Monypenny, Aaron and the two children sitting on the box-seat. Someone said, "Jean Myles boasted that when she came back to Thrums it would be in her carriage and pair, and she has kept her word," and the saying is still preserved in that Bible for week-days of which all little places have their unwritten copy, one of the wisest of books, but nearly every text in it has cost a life. About a score of men put on their blacks and followed the hearse from the warper's house to the grave. Elspeth wanted to accompany Tommy, but Aaron held her back, saying, quietly, " In this part, it's only men that go to burials, so you and me maun bide at hame," and then she cried, no one understood why, except Tommy. It was be- cause he would see Thrums first ; but he whispered to her, " I promise to keep my eyes shut and no look once," and so faithfully did he keep his prom- ise on the whole that the smith held him by the hand most of the way, under the impression that he was blind But he had opened his eyes at the grave, when a cord was put into his hand, and then he wept passionately, and on his way back to Monypenny, whether his eyes were open or shut, what he saw was his mother being shut up in a black hole and trying for ever and ever to get out. He ran to Elspeth for comfort, but in the meantime she had 149 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY learned from Blinder's niece that graves are dark and cold, and so he found her sobbing even like himself. Tommy could never bear to see Elspeth crying, and he revealed his true self in his way of drying her tears. " It will be so cold in that hole," she sobbed, " No," he said, " it's warm." " It will be dark." "No, it's clear.". " She would like to get out" " No, she was terrible pleased to get in." It was characteristic of him that he soon had Elspeth happy by arguments not one of which he believed himself; characteristic also that his own grief was soothed by the sound of them. Aaron, who was in the garret preparing their bed, had told the children that they must remain indoors to-day out of respect to their mother's memory (to-morrow morning they could explore Thrums) ; but there were many things in that kitchen for them to look at and exult over. It had no commonplace ceil- ing, the couples, or rafters, being covered with the loose flooring of a romantic garret, and in the rafters were several great hooks, from one oi which hung a ham, and Tommy remembered, with a thrill which he communicated to Elspeth, that it is the right of Thrums children to snip off the ham as much as they can remove with their finger-nails and roast it on the ribs of the fire. The chief 150 A CHILDS TRAGEDY pieces of furniture were a dresser, a corner cup board with diamond panes, two tables, one of which stood beneath the other, but would have to come out if Aaron tried to bake, and a bed with a door. These two did not know it, but the room was full of memories of Jean Myles. The corner cupboard had been bought by Aaron at a roup because she said she would like to have one ; it was she who had chosen the six cups and saucers with the blue spots on them. A razor-strop, now hard as iron, hung on a nail on the wall ; it had not been used since the last time Aaron strutted through the Den with his sweetheart One day later he had opened the door of the bird-cage, which still stood in the window, and let the yellow yite go. Many things were where no woman would have left them : clothes on the floor with the nail they had torn from the wall : on a chair a tin basin, soapy watei and a flannel rag in it ; horn spoons with whistles at the end of them were anywhere on the man- telpiece, beneath the bed; there were drawers that could not be opened because their handles were inside. Perhaps the windows were closed hope- lessly also, but this must be left doubtful ; no one had ever tried to open them. The garret where Tommy and Elspeth were tc sleep was reached by a ladder from the hallan ; when you were near the top of the ladder youi head hit a trap-door and pushed it open. At one SENTIMENTAL TOMMY end of the garret was the bed, and at the othei end were piled sticks for firewood and curious dark-coloured slabs whose smell the children dis- liked until Tommy said, excitedly, " Peat ! " and then they sniffed reverently. It was Tommy, too, who discovered the tree- tops of the Den, and Elspeth seeing him gazing in a transport out at the window cried, " What is it, Tommy? Quick!" u Promise no to scream," he replied, warningly. " Well, then, Elspeth Sandys, that's where the Den is!" Elspeth blinked with awe, and anon said, wist- fully, " Tommy, do you see that there ? That's where the Den is ! " " It were me what told you," cried Tommy, jealously. 44 But let me tell you, Tommy ! w 44 Well, then, you can tell me." "That there is the Den, Tommy!" 44 Dagont ! " Oh, that to-morrow were here ! Oh, that Sho\e could see these two to-morrow ! Here is another splendid game, T. Sandys, in ventor. The girl goes into the bed, the boy shuts the door on her, and imitates the sound of a train in motion. He opens the door and cries, * Tickets, please." The girl says, " What is the name of this place ? " The boy replies, 4t It's Thrums ! " 152 A CHILD'S TRAGEDY There is more to follow, but the only two who have played the game always roared so joyously at this point that they could get no farther. " Oh, to-morrow, come quick, quick ! " "Oh, poor Shovel!" To-morrow came, and with it two eager little figures rose and gulped their porridge, and set off to see Thrums. They were dressed in the black clothes Aaron Latta had bought for them in Lon- don, and they had agreed just to walk, but when they reached the door and saw the tree-tops of the Den they they ran. Would you not like to hold them back ? It is a child's tragedy. They went first into the Den, and the rocks were dripping wet, all the trees, save the firs, were bare, and the mud round a tiny spring pulled off one of Elspeth's boots. "Tommy," she cried, quaking, "that narsty puddle can't not be the Cuttle Well, can it?" 44 No, it ain't," said Tommy, quickly, but he feared it was. 44 It's c-c-colder here than London," Elspeth said, shivering, and Tommy was shivering too, but he answered, 44 I'm I'm I'm warm." The Den was strangely small, and soon they were on a shabby brae where women in short gowns came to their doors and men in night-caps sat down on the shafts of their barrows to look at Jean Myles's bairns. SENTIMENTAL TOMMY "What does yer think?" Elspeth whispered* very doubtfully. "They're beauties/' Tommy answered, deter- minedly. Presently Elspeth cried, '* Oh, Tommy, what a ugly stair ! Where is the beauty stairs as is wore outside for show?" This was one of them and Tommy knew it. " Wait till you see the west town end," he said bravely ; " it's grand." But when they were in the west town end, and he had to admit it, " Wait till you see the squaie," he said, and when they were in the square, "Wait," he said, huskily, "till you see the town-house." Alas, this was the town-house facing them, and when they knew it, he said hurriedly, " Wait till you see the Auld Licht Kirk." They stood long in front of the Auld Licht Kirk, which he had sworn was bigger and lovelier than St. Paul's, but well, it is a different style of architecture, and had Elspeth not been there with t^ars in waiting, Tommy would have blubbered. " It's it's littler than I thoaght," he said desper- ately, " but the minister, oh, what a wonderful big man he is ! " " Are you sure ? " Elspeth squeaked. " I swear he is." The church door opened and a gentleman came out, a little man, boyish in the back, with the A CHILD'S TRAGEDY eager face of those who live too quickly. But it was not at him that Tommy pointed reassur- ingly ; it was at the monster church key, half of which protruded from his tail pocket and waggled like the hilt of a sword. Speaking like an old residenter, Tommy ex- plained that he had brought his sister to see the church, "She's ta'en aback," he said, picking out Scotch words carefully, " because it's littler than the London kirks, but I telled her I telled her that the preaching is better." This seemed to please the stranger, for he pat- ted Tommy on the head while inquiring, " How do you know that the preaching is better ? " " Tell him, Elspeth," replied Tommy modestly. "There ain't nuthin' as Tommy don't know,* 1 Elspeth explained. " He knows what the ministei is like too." ** He's a noble sight," said Tommy. " He can get anything from God he likes," said Elspeth. " He's a terrible big man," said Tommy. This seemed to please the little gentleman less. ** Big ! " he exclaimed, irritably ; " why should he be big?" " He is big," Elspeth almost screamed, for the minister was her last hope. w Nonsense ! " said the little gentleman. * He is well, I am the minister." 155 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY " You ! " roared Tommy, wrathfully. 44 Oh, oh, oh ! " sobbed Elspeth. For a moment the Rev. Mr. Dishart looked as if he would like to knock two little heads together, but he walked away without doing it " Never mind," Tommy whispered hoarsely to Elspeth. ' Never mind, Elspeth, you have me yet." This consolation seldom failed to gladden her, but her disappointment was so sharp to-day that she would not even look up. "Come away to the cemetery, it's grand," he said ; but still she would not be comforted. "And I'll let you hold my hand as soon as we're past the houses," he added. " Pll let you hold it now," he said eventually ; but even then Elspeth cried dismally, and her sobs were hurting him more than her. He knew all the ways of getting round Elspeth, and when next he spoke it was with a sorrowful dignity. " I didna think," he said, " as yer wanted me never to be able to speak again: no, I didna think it, Elspeth." She took her hands from her face and looked at him inquiringly. *' One of the stories mamma telled me and Reddy," he said, " were about a man what saw such a beauty thing that he was struck dumb with admiration. Struck dumb is never to be able to A CHILD'S TRAGEDY speak again, and I wish I had been struck dumb when you wanted it." " But I didn't want it ! M Elspeth cried. "If Thrums had been one little bit beautief than it is," he went on solemnly, " it would have struck me dumb. It would have hurt me sore, but what about that, if it pleased you ! " Then did Elspeth see what a wicked girl she had been, and when next the two were observed by the curious (it was on the cemetery road), they were once more looking cheerful. At the small- est provocation they exchanged notes of admira- tion, such as, " Oh, Tommy, what a bonny barrel ! " or "Oh, Elspeth, I tell yer that's a dyke, and there's just walls in London," but sometimes El- speth would stoop hastily, pretending that she wanted to tie her bootlace, but really to brush away a tear, and there were moments when Tommy hung very limp. Each was trying to deceive the other for the other's sake, and one of them was never good at deception. They saw through each other, yet kept up the chilly game, because they could think of nothing better, and perhaps the game was worth playing, for love invented it. They sat down on their mother's grave. No stone was ever erected to the memory of Jean Myles, but it is enough for her that she lies at home. That comfort will last her to the Judg- ment Day. SENTIMENTAL TOMMY The man who had dug the grave sent them away, and they wandered to the hill, and thence down the Roods, where there were so many out- side stairs not put there for show that it was well Elspeth remembered how susceptible Tommy was to being struck dumb. For her sake he said, "They're bonny," and for his sake she replied, " I'm glad they ain't bonnier." When within one turn of Monypenny they came suddenly upon some boys playing at capey- dykey, a game with marbles that is only known in Thrums. There are thirty-five ways of playing marbles, but this is the best way, and Elspeth knew that Tommy was hungering to look on, but without her, lest he should be accused of sweet- hearting. So she offered to remain in the back- ground. Was she sure she shouldn't mind ? She said falteringly that of course she would mind a little, but Then Tommy was irritated, and said he knew she would mind, but if she just pretended she didn't mind, he could leave her without feeling that he was mean. So Elspeth affected not to mind, and then he deserted her, conscience at rest, which was his na- ture. But he should have remained with her. The players only gave him the side of their eye. and a horrid fear grew on him that they did not 158 A CHILD'S TRAGEDY know he was a Thrums boy " Dagont ? " ht cried to put them right on that point, but though they paused in their game, it was only to laugh at him uproariously. Let the historian use an oath for once ; dagont, Tommy had said the swear in the wrong place ! How fond he had been of that word ! Many a time he had fired it in the face of Londoners, and the flash had often blinded them and always him. Now he had brought it home, and Thrums would have none of it ; it was as if these boys were jeer- ing at their own flag He tottered away from them until he came to a trance, or passage, where he put his face to the wall and forgot even Elspeth. He had not noticed a girl pass the mouth of the trance, trying not very successfully to conceal a brandy-bottle beneath her pinafore, but presently he heard shouts, and looking out he saw Grizel, the Painted Lady's child, in the hands of her tor- mentors. She was unknown to him, of course, but she hit back so courageously that he watched her with interest, until until suddenly he retreated farther into the trance. He had seen Elspeth go on her knees, obviously to ask God to stay the hands and tongues of these cruel boys. Elspeth had disgraced him, he felt. He was done with her forever. If they struck her, serve her right. Struck her! Struck little Elspeth ! His imagina SENTIMENTAL TOMMY tion painted the picture with one sweep of its brush. Take care, you boys, Tommy is scudding back. They had not molested Elspeth as yet. When they saw and heard her praying, they had bent for* ward, agape, as if struck suddenly in the stomach Then one of them, Francie Crabb, the golden- haired son of Esther Auld, recovered and began to knead Grizel's back with his fists, less in vicious- ness than to show that the prayer was futile. Into this scene sprang Tommy, and he thought that Elspeth was the kneaded one. Had he taken time to reflect he would probably have used the Thrums feint, and then in with a left-hander, which is not very efficacious in its own country; but being in a hurry he let out with Shovel's favourite, and down went Francie Crabb. " Would you ! " said Tommy, threatening, when Francie attempted to rise. He saw now that Elspeth was untouched, that he had rescued an unknown girl, and it cannot be pretended of him that he was the boy to squire all ladies in distress. In ordinary circumstances he might have left Grizel to her fate, but having struck for her, he felt that he would like to go on striking. He had also the day's disappointments to avenge. It is startling to reflect that the little minister's height, for instance, put an extra kick in him. So he stood stridelegs over Francie, who whim 160 A CHILD'S TRAGEDY pered, " I wouldna have struck this one if that one hadna prayed for me. It wasna likely I would stand that" " You shall stand it," replied Tommy, and turn- ing to Elspeth, who had risen from her knees, he said : " Pray away, Elspeth." Elspeth refused, feeling that there would be something wrong in praying from triumph, and Tommy, about to be very angry with her, had a glorious inspiration. *' Pray for yourself," he said to Francie, " and do it out loud." The other boys saw that a novelty promised, and now Francie need expect no aid from them. At first he refused to pray, but he succumbed when Tommy had explained the consequences, and il- lustrated them. Tommy dictated: "Oh, God, I am a sinner. Go on." Francie not only said it, but looked it " And I pray to you to repent me, though I ain't worthy," continued Tommy. "And I pray to you to repent me. though I ain't worthy," growled Francie. (It was the arrival of ain't in Thrums.) Tommy considered, and then: "I thank Thee, O God," he said, " for telling this girl this lassie - to pray for me." Two gentle taps helped to knock this out of Francie. 161 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY Being an artist. Tommy had kept his best for the end (and made it up first). " And lastly," he said, ** I thank this boy for thrashing me I mean this here laddie. Oh, may he allus be near to thrash me when I strike this other lassie again. Amen." When it was all over Tommy looked around triumphantly, and though he liked the expression on several faces, Grizel's pleased him best. " It ain't no wonder you would like to be me, lassie ! " he said, in an ecstasy. " I don't want to be you, you conceited boy," retorted the Painted Lady's child hotly, and her heat was the greater because the clever little wretch had read her thoughts aright But it was her sweet voice that surprised him. " You're English ! " he cried. * So are you," broke in a boy offensively, and then Tommy said to Grizel loftily, " Run away ; I'll not let none on them touch you." 44 1 am not afraid of them," she rejoined, with scorn, " and I shall not let you help me, and I won't run." And run she did not ; she walked off leisurely with her head in the air, and her dignity was beautiful, except once when she made the mistake of turning round to put out her tongue. But, alas! in the end someone ran. Tf only they had not called him " English." In vain he fired a volley of Scotch; they pretended not to understand it. Then he screamed that he and 162 A CHILD'S TRAGEDY Shovel could fight the lot of them. Who was Shovel? they asked derisively. He replied that Shovel was a bloke who could lick any two of them and with one hand tied behind his back. No sooner had he made this proud boast than he went white, and soon two disgraceful tears rolled down his cheeks. The boys saw that for some reason unknown his courage was gone, and even Francie Crabb began to turn up his sleeves and spit upon his hands. Elspeth was as bewildered as the others, but she slipped her hand into his and away they ran ingloriously, the foe too much astounded to jeer. She sought to comfort him by saying (and it brought her a step nearer womanhood), " You wasn't feared for yourself, you wasn't; you was just feared they would hurt me." But Tommy sobbed in reply, "That ain't it I bounced so much about the Thrums folk to Shovel, and now the first day Pm here I heard myself bouncing about Shovel to Thrums folk, and it were that what made me cry. Oh, Elspeth, it's it's not the same what I thought it would be!" Nor was it the same to Elspeth, so they sat down by the roadside and cried with their arms round each other, and any passer-by could look who had the heart But when night came, and they were in their garret bed, Tommy was once more seeking to comfort Elspeth with arguments he disbelieved, '63 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY and again he succeeded. As usual, too, the make believe made him happy also. "Have you forgot," he whispered, "that my mother said as she would come and see us every night in our bed ? If yer cries, she'll see as we're * terrible unhappy, and that will make her unhappy too." " Oh, Tommy, is she here now? " " Whisht ! She's here, but they don't like living ones to let on as they knows it." Elspeth kept closer to Tommy, and with their heads beneath the blankets, so as to stifle the sound, he explained to her how they could cheat their mother. When she understood, he took the blankets off their faces and said in the darkness in a loud voice : " It's a grand place, Thrums ! " Elspeth replied in a similar voice, "Ain't the town-house just big! " Said Tommy, almost chuckling, "Oh, the bonny, bonny Auld Licht Kirk ! " Said Elspeth, "Oh, the beauty outside stairs!" Said Tommy, "The minister is so long!" Said Elspeth, "The folk is so kind!" Said Tommy, " Especially the laddies ! " " Oh, I is so happy ! " cried Elspeth. " Me too ! " cried Tommy. " My mother would be so chirpy if she jest see us!" Elspeth said, quite aichly. 164 A CHILD'S TRAGEDY " But she canna ! " replied Tommy, slyly pinch- ing Elspeth in the rib. Then they dived beneath the blankets, and the whispering was resumed 44 Did she hear, does yer think ? " asked Elspeth* "Every word," Tommy replied. " Elspeth, we've done bet!" CHAPTER XIII SHOWS HOW TOMMY TOOK CARE OF ELSPETB THUS the first day passed, and others followed in which women, who had known Jean Myles, did her children kindnesses, but could not do all they would have done, for Aaron forbade them to enter his home except on business though it was begging for a housewife all day. Had Elspeth at the age of six now settled down to domestic duties she would not have been the youngest housekeeper ever known in Thrums, but she was never very good at doing things, only at loving and being loved, and the observant neighbours thought her a backward girl ; they forgot, like most people, that service is not necessarily a handicraft Tommy discovered what they were saying, and to shield Elspeth he took to housewifery with the blind down ; but Aaron, entering the kitchen unexpect- edly, took the besom from him, saying : "It's an ill thing for men folk to ken owei muckle about women's work." " You do it yourseP," Tommy argued. ** I said men folk/' replied Aaron, quietly. 166 TOMMY TOOK CARE OF ELSPETH The children knew that remarks of this sort had reference to their mother, of whom he never spoke more directly; indeed he seldom spoke to them at all, and save when he was cooking or giving the kitchen a slovenly cleaning they saw little of him. Monypenny had predicted that their pres- ence must make a new man of him, but he was still unsociable and morose and sat as long as ever at the warping-mill, of which he seemed to have become the silent wheel. Tommy and Elspeth always dropped their voices when they spoke of him, and sometimes when his mill stopped he heard one of them say to the other. " Whisht, he's coming!" Though he seldom spoke sharply to them, his face did not lose its loneliness at sight of them. Elspeth was his favourite (somewhat to the indignation of both) ; they found this out without his telling them or even showing it markedly, and vvhen they wanted to ask anything of him she was deputed to do it, but she did it quavering, and after drawing farther away from him instead of going nearer, A dreary life would have lain before them had they not been sent to school. There were at this time three schools in Thrums, the chief of them ruled over by the terrible Cathro (called Knuckly when you were a street away from him). It was a famous school, from which a band of three or four or even six marched every autumn to the universities as determined after bur- 167 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY saries as ever were Highlandmen to lift cattle, and for the same reason, that they could not do with- out. A very different kind of dominie was Cursing Ballingall, who had been dropped at Thrums by a travelling circus, and first became familiar to the town as, carrying two carpet shoes, two books, a pillow, and a saucepan, which were all his belong- ings, he wandered from manse to manse offering to write sermons for the ministers at circus prices. That scheme failing, he was next seen looking in at windows in search of a canny calling, and eventually he cut one of his braces into a pair of tawse, thus with a single stroke of the knife making himself a schoolmaster and lop-sided for life. His fee was but a penny a week, "with a bit o' the swine when your father kills," and sometimes there were so many pupils on a form that they could only rise as one. During the first half of the scholastic day Ballingall's shouts and pounces were for parents to listen to, but after his dinner of crowdy, which is raw meal and hot water, served in a cogie, or wooden bowl, languor overcame him and he would sleep, having first given out a sum in arithmetic and announced " The one as finds out the answer first, I'll give him his licks." Last comes the Hanky School, which was for the genteel and for the common who contemplated 168 TOMMY TOOK CARE OF ELSPETH souring. You were not admitted to it in cordu loys or barefooted, nor did you pay weekly; no, your father called four times a year with the money in an envelope. He was shown into the blue-and-white room, and there, after business had been transacted, very nervously on Miss Ailie's part, she offered him his choice between ginger wine and what she falteringly called wh-wh- whiskey. He partook in the polite national man ner, which is thus : 44 You will take something, Mr. Cortachy ? " 44 No, I thank you, ma'am." 44 A little ginger wine ? " 4 * It agrees ill with me." 44 Then a little wh-wh-whiskey ? " " You are ower kind." 44 Then may I?" 44 1 am not heeding." 44 Perhaps, though, you don't take $ M " I can take it or want it," u Is that enough ? " 44 It will do perfectly." 44 Shall I fill it up ?" "As you please, ma'am." Miss Ailie's relationship to the magerful man may be remembered; she shuddered to think of it herself, for in middie-age she retained the rnind of a young girl, but when duty seemed to call, this schoolmistress could be brave, and she offered 169 SENTIMENTAL TOMMY to give Elspeth her schooling free of charge. Like the other two hers was a u mixed " school, but she did not want Tommy, because she had seen him in the square one day, and there was a leer on his face that reminded her of his father. Another woman was less particular. This was Mrs. Crabb, of the Tappit Hen, the Esther Auld whom Jean Myles's letters had so frequently sent to bed. Her Francie was still a pupil of Miss Ailie, and still he wore the golden hair, which, de- spite all advice, she would not crop. It was so beautiful that no common boys could see it with- out wanting to give it a tug in passing, and partly to prevent this, partly to show how high she had risen in the social scale, Esther usually sent him to school under the charge of her servant lass. She now proposed to Aaron that this duty should devolve on Tommy, and for the service she would pay his fees at the Hanky School. " We maun all lend a hand to poor Jean's bairns/' she said, with a gleam in her eye. " It would have been well for her, Aaron, if she had married you." "Is that all you have to say?" asked the warper, who had let her enter no farther than the hallan " I would expect him to lift Francie ower the pools in wet weather ; and it might be as well if he called him Master Francie." 170 TOMMY TOOK CARE OF ELSPETH "Is that all?" "Ay, I ask no more, for we maun all help Jean's bairns. If she could only look down Aaron, and see her little velvets, as she called him, lifting my little corduroys ower the pools ! " Aaron flung open the door. " Munt ! " he said, and he looked so dangerous that she retired at once. He sent Tommy to Ballingall's, and ac- cepted Miss Ailie's offer for Elspeth, but this was an impossible arrangement, for it was known to the two persons primarily concerned that Elspeth would die if she was not where Tommy was. The few boys he had already begun to know were at Cathro's or Ballingall's, and as they called Miss Ailie's a lassie school he had no desire to attend it, but where he was there also must Elspeth be. Daily he escaped from Ballingall's and hid near the Dovecot, as Miss Ailie's house was called, and every little while he gave vent to Shovel's whistle, so that Elspeth might know of his proximity and be cheered. Thrice was he carried back, kicking, to BallingalPs by urchins sent in pursuit, stern ministers of justice on the first two occasions; but on the third they made him an offer? if he would hide in Couthie's hen-house they were willing to look for him everywhere else for two hours. Tommy's behaviour seemed beautiful to the im- pressionable Miss Ailie, but it infuriated Aaron, and on the fourth day h