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Chapter XI. The hound in the red jersey.
Bobbie knew the secret now. A sheet of old newspaper wrapped round
a parcel--just a little chance like that--had given the secret to
her. And she had to go down to tea and pretend that there was
nothing the matter. The pretence was bravely made, but it wasn't
very successful.
For when she came in, everyone looked up from tea and saw her pink-
lidded eyes and her pale face with red tear-blotches on it.
"My darling," cried Mother, jumping up from the tea-tray, "whatever
IS the matter?"
"My head aches, rather," said Bobbie. And indeed it did.
"Has anything gone wrong?" Mother asked.
"I'm all right, really," said Bobbie, and she telegraphed to her
Mother from her swollen eyes this brief, imploring message--"NOT
before the others!"
Tea was not a cheerful meal. Peter was so distressed by the obvious
fact that something horrid had happened to Bobbie that he limited
his speech to repeating, "More bread and butter, please," at
startlingly short intervals. Phyllis stroked her sister's hand
under the table to express sympathy, and knocked her cup over as she
did it. Fetching a cloth and wiping up the spilt milk helped Bobbie
a little. But she thought that tea would never end. Yet at last it
did end, as all things do at last, and when Mother took out the
tray, Bobbie followed her.
"She's gone to own up," said Phyllis to Peter; "I wonder what she's
done."
"Broken something, I suppose," said Peter, "but she needn't be so
silly over it. Mother never rows for accidents. Listen! Yes,
they're going upstairs. She's taking Mother up to show her--the
water-jug with storks on it, I expect it is."
Bobbie, in the kitchen, had caught hold of Mother's hand as she set
down the tea-things.
"What is it?" Mother asked.
But Bobbie only said, "Come upstairs, come up where nobody can hear
us."
When she had got Mother alone in her room she locked the door and
then stood quite still, and quite without words.
All through tea she had been thinking of what to say; she had
decided that "I know all," or "All is known to me," or "The terrible
secret is a secret no longer," would be the proper thing. But now
that she and her Mother and that awful sheet of newspaper were alone
in the room together, she found that she could say nothing.
Suddenly she went to Mother and put her arms round her and began to
cry again. And still she could find no words, only, "Oh, Mammy, oh,
Mammy, oh, Mammy," over and over again.
Mother held her very close and waited.
Suddenly Bobbie broke away from her and went to her bed. From under
her mattress she pulled out the paper she had hidden there, and held
it out, pointing to her Father's name with a finger that shook.
"Oh, Bobbie," Mother cried, when one little quick look had shown her
what it was, "you don't BELIEVE it? You don't believe Daddy did
it?"
"NO," Bobbie almost shouted. She had stopped crying.
"That's all right," said Mother. "It's not true. And they've shut
him up in prison, but he's done nothing wrong. He's good and noble
and honourable, and he belongs to us. We have to think of that, and
be proud of him, and wait."
Again Bobbie clung to her Mother, and again only one word came to
her, but now that word was "Daddy," and "Oh, Daddy, oh, Daddy, oh,
Daddy!" again and again.
"Why didn't you tell me, Mammy?" she asked presently.
"Are you going to tell the others?" Mother asked.
"No."
"Why?"
"Because--"
"Exactly," said Mother; "so you understand why I didn't tell you.
We two must help each other to be brave."
"Yes," said Bobbie; "Mother, will it make you more unhappy if you
tell me all about it? I want to understand."
So then, sitting cuddled up close to her Mother, Bobbie heard "all
about it." She heard how those men, who had asked to see Father on
that remembered last night when the Engine was being mended, had
come to arrest him, charging him with selling State secrets to the
Russians--with being, in fact, a spy and a traitor. She heard about
the trial, and about the evidence--letters, found in Father's desk
at the office, letters that convinced the jury that Father was
guilty.
"Oh, how could they look at him and believe it!" cried Bobbie; "and
how could ANY one do such a thing!"
"SOMEONE did it," said Mother, "and all the evidence was against
Father. Those letters--"
"Yes. How did the letters get into his desk?"
"Someone put them there. And the person who put them there was the
person who was really guilty."
"HE must be feeling pretty awful all this time," said Bobbie,
thoughtfully.
"I don't believe he had any feelings," Mother said hotly; "he
couldn't have done a thing like that if he had."
"Perhaps he just shoved the letters into the desk to hide them when
he thought he was going to be found out. Why don't you tell the
lawyers, or someone, that it must have been that person? There
wasn't anyone that would have hurt Father on purpose, was there?"
"I don't know--I don't know. The man under him who got Daddy's
place when he--when the awful thing happened--he was always jealous
of your Father because Daddy was so clever and everyone thought such
a lot of him. And Daddy never quite trusted that man."
"Couldn't we explain all that to someone?"
"Nobody will listen," said Mother, very bitterly, "nobody at all.
Do you suppose I've not tried everything? No, my dearest, there's
nothing to be done. All we can do, you and I and Daddy, is to be
brave, and patient, and--" she spoke very softly--"to pray, Bobbie,
dear."
"Mother, you've got very thin," said Bobbie, abruptly.
"A little, perhaps."
"And oh," said Bobbie, "I do think you're the bravest person in the
world as well as the nicest!"
"We won't talk of all this any more, will we, dear?" said Mother;
"we must bear it and be brave. And, darling, try not to think of
it. Try to be cheerful, and to amuse yourself and the others. It's
much easier for me if you can be a little bit happy and enjoy
things. Wash your poor little round face, and let's go out into the
garden for a bit."
The other two were very gentle and kind to Bobbie. And they did not
ask her what was the matter. This was Peter's idea, and he had
drilled Phyllis, who would have asked a hundred questions if she had
been left to herself.
A week later Bobbie managed to get away alone. And once more she
wrote a letter. And once more it was to the old gentleman.
"My dear Friend," she said, "you see what is in this paper. It is
not true. Father never did it. Mother says someone put the papers
in Father's desk, and she says the man under him that got Father's
place afterwards was jealous of Father, and Father suspected him a
long time. But nobody listens to a word she says, but you are so
good and clever, and you found out about the Russian gentleman's
wife directly. Can't you find out who did the treason because he
wasn't Father upon my honour; he is an Englishman and uncapable to
do such things, and then they would let Father out of prison. It is
dreadful, and Mother is getting so thin. She told us once to pray
for all prisoners and captives. I see now. Oh, do help me--there
is only just Mother and me know, and we can't do anything. Peter
and Phil don't know. I'll pray for you twice every day as long as I
live if you'll only try--just try to find out. Think if it was YOUR
Daddy, what you would feel. Oh, do, do, DO help me. With love "I remain Your
affectionately little friend "Roberta.
P.S. Mother would send her kind regards if she knew I am writing--
but it is no use telling her I am, in case you can't do anything.
But I know you will. Bobbie with best love."
She cut the account of her Father's trial out of the newspaper with
Mother's big cutting-out scissors, and put it in the envelope with
her letter.
Then she took it down to the station, going out the back way and
round by the road, so that the others should not see her and offer
to come with her, and she gave the letter to the Station Master to
give to the old gentleman next morning.
"Where HAVE you been?" shouted Peter, from the top of the yard wall
where he and Phyllis were.
"To the station, of course," said Bobbie; "give us a hand, Pete."
She set her foot on the lock of the yard door. Peter reached down a
hand.
"What on earth?" she asked as she reached the wall-top--for Phyllis
and Peter were very muddy. A lump of wet clay lay between them on
the wall, they had each a slip of slate in a very dirty hand, and
behind Peter, out of the reach of accidents, were several strange
rounded objects rather like very fat sausages, hollow, but closed up
at one end.
"It's nests," said Peter, "swallows' nests. We're going to dry them
in the oven and hang them up with string under the eaves of the
coach-house."
"Yes," said Phyllis; "and then we're going to save up all the wool
and hair we can get, and in the spring we'll line them, and then how
pleased the swallows will be!"
"I've often thought people don't do nearly enough for dumb animals,"
said Peter with an air of virtue. "I do think people might have
thought of making nests for poor little swallows before this."
"Oh," said Bobbie, vaguely, "if everybody thought of everything,
there'd be nothing left for anybody else to think about."
"Look at the nests--aren't they pretty?" said Phyllis, reaching
across Peter to grasp a nest.
"Look out, Phil, you goat," said her brother. But it was too late;
her strong little fingers had crushed the nest.
"There now," said Peter.
"Never mind," said Bobbie.
"It IS one of my own," said Phyllis, "so you needn't jaw, Peter.
Yes, we've put our initial names on the ones we've done, so that the
swallows will know who they've got to be so grateful to and fond
of."
"Swallows can't read, silly," said Peter.
"Silly yourself," retorted Phyllis; "how do you know?"
"Who thought of making the nests, anyhow?" shouted Peter.
"I did," screamed Phyllis.
"Nya," rejoined Peter, "you only thought of making hay ones and
sticking them in the ivy for the sparrows, and they'd have been
sopping LONG before egg-laying time. It was me said clay and
swallows."
"I don't care what you said."
"Look," said Bobbie, "I've made the nest all right again. Give me
the bit of stick to mark your initial name on it. But how can you?
Your letter and Peter's are the same. P. for Peter, P. for
Phyllis."
"I put F. for Phyllis," said the child of that name. "That's how it
sounds. The swallows wouldn't spell Phyllis with a P., I'm certain-
sure."
"They can't spell at all," Peter was still insisting.
"Then why do you see them always on Christmas cards and valentines
with letters round their necks? How would they know where to go if
they couldn't read?"
"That's only in pictures. You never saw one really with letters
round its neck."
"Well, I have a pigeon, then; at least Daddy told me they did. Only
it was under their wings and not round their necks, but it comes to
the same thing, and--"
"I say," interrupted Bobbie, "there's to be a paperchase to-morrow."
"Who?" Peter asked.
"Grammar School. Perks thinks the hare will go along by the line at
first. We might go along the cutting. You can see a long way from
there."
The paperchase was found to be a more amusing subject of
conversation than the reading powers of swallows. Bobbie had hoped
it might be. And next morning Mother let them take their lunch and
go out for the day to see the paperchase.
"If we go to the cutting," said Peter, "we shall see the workmen,
even if we miss the paperchase."
Of course it had taken some time to get the line clear from the
rocks and earth and trees that had fallen on it when the great
landslip happened. That was the occasion, you will remember, when
the three children saved the train from being wrecked by waving six
little red-flannel-petticoat flags. It is always interesting to
watch people working, especially when they work with such
interesting things as spades and picks and shovels and planks and
barrows, when they have cindery red fires in iron pots with round
holes in them, and red lamps hanging near the works at night. Of
course the children were never out at night; but once, at dusk, when
Peter had got out of his bedroom skylight on to the roof, he had
seen the red lamp shining far away at the edge of the cutting. The
children had often been down to watch the work, and this day the
interest of picks and spades, and barrows being wheeled along
planks, completely put the paperchase out of their heads, so that
they quite jumped when a voice just behind them panted, "Let me
pass, please." It was the hare--a big-boned, loose-limbed boy, with
dark hair lying flat on a very damp forehead. The bag of torn paper
under his arm was fastened across one shoulder by a strap. The
children stood back. The hare ran along the line, and the workmen
leaned on their picks to watch him. He ran on steadily and
disappeared into the mouth of the tunnel.
"That's against the by-laws," said the foreman.
"Why worry?" said the oldest workman; "live and let live's what I
always say. Ain't you never been young yourself, Mr. Bates?"
"I ought to report him," said the foreman.
"Why spoil sport's what I always say."
"Passengers are forbidden to cross the line on any pretence,"
murmured the foreman, doubtfully.
"He ain't no passenger," said one of the workmen.
"Nor 'e ain't crossed the line, not where we could see 'im do it,"
said another.
"Nor yet 'e ain't made no pretences," said a third.
"And," said the oldest workman, "'e's outer sight now. What the eye
don't see the 'art needn't take no notice of's what I always say."
And now, following the track of the hare by the little white blots
of scattered paper, came the hounds. There were thirty of them, and
they all came down the steep, ladder-like steps by ones and twos and
threes and sixes and sevens. Bobbie and Phyllis and Peter counted
them as they passed. The foremost ones hesitated a moment at the
foot of the ladder, then their eyes caught the gleam of scattered
whiteness along the line and they turned towards the tunnel, and, by
ones and twos and threes and sixes and sevens, disappeared in the
dark mouth of it. The last one, in a red jersey, seemed to be
extinguished by the darkness like a candle that is blown out.
"They don't know what they're in for," said the foreman; "it isn't
so easy running in the dark. The tunnel takes two or three turns."
"They'll take a long time to get through, you think?" Peter asked.
"An hour or more, I shouldn't wonder."
"Then let's cut across the top and see them come out at the other
end," said Peter; "we shall get there long before they do."
The counsel seemed good, and they went.
They climbed the steep steps from which they had picked the wild
cherry blossom for the grave of the little wild rabbit, and reaching
the top of the cutting, set their faces towards the hill through
which the tunnel was cut. It was stiff work.
"It's like Alps," said Bobbie, breathlessly.
"Or Andes," said Peter.
"It's like Himmy what's its names?" gasped Phyllis. "Mount
Everlasting. Do let's stop."
"Stick to it," panted Peter; "you'll get your second wind in a
minute."
Phyllis consented to stick to it--and on they went, running when the
turf was smooth and the slope easy, climbing over stones, helping
themselves up rocks by the branches of trees, creeping through
narrow openings between tree trunks and rocks, and so on and on, up
and up, till at last they stood on the very top of the hill where
they had so often wished to be.
"Halt!" cried Peter, and threw himself flat on the grass. For the
very top of the hill was a smooth, turfed table-land, dotted with
mossy rocks and little mountain-ash trees.
The girls also threw themselves down flat.
"Plenty of time," Peter panted; "the rest's all down hill."
When they were rested enough to sit up and look round them, Bobbie
cried:--
"Oh, look!"
"What at?" said Phyllis.
"The view," said Bobbie.
"I hate views," said Phyllis, "don't you, Peter?"
"Let's get on," said Peter.
"But this isn't like a view they take you to in carriages when
you're at the seaside, all sea and sand and bare hills. It's like
the 'coloured counties' in one of Mother's poetry books."
"It's not so dusty," said Peter; "look at the Aqueduct straddling
slap across the valley like a giant centipede, and then the towns
sticking their church spires up out of the trees like pens out of an
inkstand. I think it's more like
"There could he see the banners Of twelve fair cities shine."
"I love it," said Bobbie; "it's worth the climb."
"The paperchase is worth the climb," said Phyllis, "if we don't lose
it. Let's get on. It's all down hill now."
"I said that ten minutes ago," said Peter.
"Well, I'VE said it now," said Phyllis; "come on."
"Loads of time," said Peter. And there was. For when they had got
down to a level with the top of the tunnel's mouth--they were a
couple of hundred yards out of their reckoning and had to creep
along the face of the hill--there was no sign of the hare or the
hounds.
"They've gone long ago, of course," said Phyllis, as they leaned on
the brick parapet above the tunnel.
"I don't think so," said Bobbie, "but even if they had, it's ripping
here, and we shall see the trains come out of the tunnel like
dragons out of lairs. We've never seen that from the top side
before."
"No more we have," said Phyllis, partially appeased.
It was really a most exciting place to be in. The top of the tunnel
seemed ever so much farther from the line than they had expected,
and it was like being on a bridge, but a bridge overgrown with
bushes and creepers and grass and wild-flowers.
"I KNOW the paperchase has gone long ago," said Phyllis every two
minutes, and she hardly knew whether she was pleased or disappointed
when Peter, leaning over the parapet, suddenly cried:--
"Look out. Here he comes!"
They all leaned over the sun-warmed brick wall in time to see the
hare, going very slowly, come out from the shadow of the tunnel.
"There, now," said Peter, "what did I tell you? Now for the
hounds!"
Very soon came the hounds--by ones and twos and threes and sixes and
sevens--and they also were going slowly and seemed very tired. Two
or three who lagged far behind came out long after the others.
"There," said Bobbie, "that's all--now what shall we do?"
"Go along into the tulgy wood over there and have lunch," said
Phyllis; "we can see them for miles from up here."
"Not yet," said Peter. "That's not the last. There's the one in
the red jersey to come yet. Let's see the last of them come out."
But though they waited and waited and waited, the boy in the red
jersey did not appear.
"Oh, let's have lunch," said Phyllis; "I've got a pain in my front
with being so hungry. You must have missed seeing the red-jerseyed
one when he came out with the others--"
But Bobbie and Peter agreed that he had not come out with the
others.
"Let's get down to the tunnel mouth," said Peter; "then perhaps we
shall see him coming along from the inside. I expect he felt spun-
chuck, and rested in one of the manholes. You stay up here and
watch, Bob, and when I signal from below, you come down. We might
miss seeing him on the way down, with all these trees."
So the others climbed down and Bobbie waited till they signalled to
her from the line below. And then she, too, scrambled down the
roundabout slippery path among roots and moss till she stepped out
between two dogwood trees and joined the others on the line. And
still there was no sign of the hound with the red jersey.
"Oh, do, DO let's have something to eat," wailed Phyllis. "I shall
die if you don't, and then you'll be sorry."
"Give her the sandwiches, for goodness' sake, and stop her silly
mouth," said Peter, not quite unkindly. "Look here," he added,
turning to Bobbie, "perhaps we'd better have one each, too. We may
need all our strength. Not more than one, though. There's no
time."
"What?" asked Bobbie, her mouth already full, for she was just as
hungry as Phyllis.
"Don't you see," replied Peter, impressively, "that red-jerseyed
hound has had an accident--that's what it is. Perhaps even as we
speak he's lying with his head on the metals, an unresisting prey to
any passing express--"
"Oh, don't try to talk like a book," cried Bobbie, bolting what was
left of her sandwich; "come on. Phil, keep close behind me, and if
a train comes, stand flat against the tunnel wall and hold your
petticoats close to you."
"Give me one more sandwich," pleaded Phyllis, "and I will."
"I'm going first," said Peter; "it was my idea," and he went.
Of course you know what going into a tunnel is like? The engine
gives a scream and then suddenly the noise of the running, rattling
train changes and grows different and much louder. Grown-up people
pull up the windows and hold them by the strap. The railway
carriage suddenly grows like night--with lamps, of course, unless
you are in a slow local train, in which case lamps are not always
provided. Then by and by the darkness outside the carriage window
is touched by puffs of cloudy whiteness, then you see a blue light
on the walls of the tunnel, then the sound of the moving train
changes once more, and you are out in the good open air again, and
grown-ups let the straps go. The windows, all dim with the yellow
breath of the tunnel, rattle down into their places, and you see
once more the dip and catch of the telegraph wires beside the line,
and the straight-cut hawthorn hedges with the tiny baby trees
growing up out of them every thirty yards.
All this, of course, is what a tunnel means when you are in a train.
But everything is quite different when you walk into a tunnel on
your own feet, and tread on shifting, sliding stones and gravel on a
path that curves downwards from the shining metals to the wall.
Then you see slimy, oozy trickles of water running down the inside
of the tunnel, and you notice that the bricks are not red or brown,
as they are at the tunnel's mouth, but dull, sticky, sickly green.
Your voice, when you speak, is quite changed from what it was out in
the sunshine, and it is a long time before the tunnel is quite dark.
It was not yet quite dark in the tunnel when Phyllis caught at
Bobbie's skirt, ripping out half a yard of gathers, but no one
noticed this at the time.
"I want to go back," she said, "I don't like it. It'll be pitch
dark in a minute. I WON'T go on in the dark. I don't care what you
say, I WON'T."
"Don't be a silly cuckoo," said Peter; "I've got a candle end and
matches, and--what's that?"
"That" was a low, humming sound on the railway line, a trembling of
the wires beside it, a buzzing, humming sound that grew louder and
louder as they listened.
"It's a train," said Bobbie.
"Which line?"
"Let me go back," cried Phyllis, struggling to get away from the
hand by which Bobbie held her.
"Don't be a coward," said Bobbie; "it's quite safe. Stand back."
"Come on," shouted Peter, who was a few yards ahead. "Quick!
Manhole!"
The roar of the advancing train was now louder than the noise you
hear when your head is under water in the bath and both taps are
running, and you are kicking with your heels against the bath's tin
sides. But Peter had shouted for all he was worth, and Bobbie heard
him. She dragged Phyllis along to the manhole. Phyllis, of course,
stumbled over the wires and grazed both her legs. But they dragged
her in, and all three stood in the dark, damp, arched recess while
the train roared louder and louder. It seemed as if it would deafen
them. And, in the distance, they could see its eyes of fire growing
bigger and brighter every instant.
"It IS a dragon--I always knew it was--it takes its own shape in
here, in the dark," shouted Phyllis. But nobody heard her. You see
the train was shouting, too, and its voice was bigger than hers.
And now, with a rush and a roar and a rattle and a long dazzling
flash of lighted carriage windows, a smell of smoke, and blast of
hot air, the train hurtled by, clanging and jangling and echoing in
the vaulted roof of the tunnel. Phyllis and Bobbie clung to each
other. Even Peter caught hold of Bobbie's arm, "in case she should
be frightened," as he explained afterwards.
And now, slowly and gradually, the tail-lights grew smaller and
smaller, and so did the noise, till with one last WHIZ the train got
itself out of the tunnel, and silence settled again on its damp
walls and dripping roof.
"OH!" said the children, all together in a whisper.
Peter was lighting the candle end with a hand that trembled.
"Come on," he said; but he had to clear his throat before he could
speak in his natural voice.
"Oh," said Phyllis, "if the red-jerseyed one was in the way of the
train!"
"We've got to go and see," said Peter.
"Couldn't we go and send someone from the station?" said Phyllis.
"Would you rather wait here for us?" asked Bobbie, severely, and of
course that settled the question.
So the three went on into the deeper darkness of the tunnel. Peter
led, holding his candle end high to light the way. The grease ran
down his fingers, and some of it right up his sleeve. He found a
long streak from wrist to elbow when he went to bed that night.
It was not more than a hundred and fifty yards from the spot where
they had stood while the train went by that Peter stood still,
shouted "Hullo," and then went on much quicker than before. When
the others caught him up, he stopped. And he stopped within a yard
of what they had come into the tunnel to look for. Phyllis saw a
gleam of red, and shut her eyes tight. There, by the curved, pebbly
down line, was the red-jerseyed hound. His back was against the
wall, his arms hung limply by his sides, and his eyes were shut.
"Was the red, blood? Is he all killed?" asked Phyllis, screwing her
eyelids more tightly together.
"Killed? Nonsense!" said Peter. "There's nothing red about him
except his jersey. He's only fainted. What on earth are we to do?"
"Can we move him?" asked Bobbie.
"I don't know; he's a big chap."
"Suppose we bathe his forehead with water. No, I know we haven't
any, but milk's just as wet. There's a whole bottle."
"Yes," said Peter, "and they rub people's hands, I believe."
"They burn feathers, I know," said Phyllis.
"What's the good of saying that when we haven't any feathers?"
"As it happens," said Phyllis, in a tone of exasperated triumph,
"I've got a shuttlecock in my pocket. So there!"
And now Peter rubbed the hands of the red-jerseyed one. Bobbie
burned the feathers of the shuttlecock one by one under his nose,
Phyllis splashed warmish milk on his forehead, and all three kept on
saying as fast and as earnestly as they could:--
"Oh, look up, speak to me! For my sake, speak!"
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