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Chapter XIV. The End.
Life at the Three Chimneys was never quite the same again after the
old gentleman came to see his grandson. Although they now knew his
name, the children never spoke of him by it--at any rate, when they
were by themselves. To them he was always the old gentleman, and I
think he had better be the old gentleman to us, too. It wouldn't
make him seem any more real to you, would it, if I were to tell you
that his name was Snooks or Jenkins (which it wasn't)?--and, after
all, I must be allowed to keep one secret. It's the only one; I
have told you everything else, except what I am going to tell you in
this chapter, which is the last. At least, of course, I haven't
told you EVERYTHING. If I were to do that, the book would never
come to an end, and that would be a pity, wouldn't it?
Well, as I was saying, life at Three Chimneys was never quite the
same again. The cook and the housemaid were very nice (I don't mind
telling you their names--they were Clara and Ethelwyn), but they
told Mother they did not seem to want Mrs. Viney, and that she was
an old muddler. So Mrs. Viney came only two days a week to do
washing and ironing. Then Clara and Ethelwyn said they could do the
work all right if they weren't interfered with, and that meant that
the children no longer got the tea and cleared it away and washed up
the tea-things and dusted the rooms.
This would have left quite a blank in their lives, although they had
often pretended to themselves and to each other that they hated
housework. But now that Mother had no writing and no housework to
do, she had time for lessons. And lessons the children had to do.
However nice the person who is teaching you may be, lessons are
lessons all the world over, and at their best are worse fun than
peeling potatoes or lighting a fire.
On the other hand, if Mother now had time for lessons, she also had
time for play, and to make up little rhymes for the children as she
used to do. She had not had much time for rhymes since she came to
Three Chimneys.
There was one very odd thing about these lessons. Whatever the
children were doing, they always wanted to be doing something else.
When Peter was doing his Latin, he thought it would be nice to be
learning History like Bobbie. Bobbie would have preferred
Arithmetic, which was what Phyllis happened to be doing, and Phyllis
of course thought Latin much the most interesting kind of lesson.
And so on.
So, one day, when they sat down to lessons, each of them found a
little rhyme at its place. I put the rhymes in to show you that
their Mother really did understand a little how children feel about
things, and also the kind of words they use, which is the case with
very few grown-up people. I suppose most grown-ups have very bad
memories, and have forgotten how they felt when they were little.
Of course, the verses are supposed to be spoken by the children.
PETER
I once thought Caesar easy pap-- How very soft I must have been! When they
start Caesar with a chap He little know what that will mean. Oh, verbs are silly
stupid things. I'd rather learn the dates of kings!
BOBBIE
The worst of all my lesson things Is learning who succeeded who In all the
rows of queens and kings, With dates to everything they do: With dates enough to
make you sick;-- I wish it was Arithmetic!
PHYLLIS
Such pounds and pounds of apples fill My slate--what is the price you'd
spend? You scratch the figures out until You cry upon the dividend. I'd break
the slate and scream for joy If I did Latin like a boy!
This kind of thing, of course, made lessons much jollier. It is
something to know that the person who is teaching you sees that it
is not all plain sailing for you, and does not think that it is just
your stupidness that makes you not know your lessons till you've
learned them!
Then as Jim's leg got better it was very pleasant to go up and sit
with him and hear tales about his school life and the other boys.
There was one boy, named Parr, of whom Jim seemed to have formed the
lowest possible opinion, and another boy named Wigsby Minor, for
whose views Jim had a great respect. Also there were three brothers
named Paley, and the youngest was called Paley Terts, and was much
given to fighting.
Peter drank in all this with deep joy, and Mother seemed to have
listened with some interest, for one day she gave Jim a sheet of
paper on which she had written a rhyme about Parr, bringing in Paley
and Wigsby by name in a most wonderful way, as well as all the
reasons Jim had for not liking Parr, and Wigsby's wise opinion on
the matter. Jim was immensely pleased. He had never had a rhyme
written expressly for him before. He read it till he knew it by
heart and then he sent it to Wigsby, who liked it almost as much as
Jim did. Perhaps you may like it, too.
THE NEW BOY
His name is Parr: he says that he Is given bread and milk for tea. He says
his father killed a bear. He says his mother cuts his hair.
He wears goloshes when it's wet. I've heard his people call him "Pet"! He has
no proper sense of shame; He told the chaps his Christian name.
He cannot wicket-keep at all, He's frightened of a cricket ball. He reads
indoors for hours and hours. He knows the names of beastly flowers.
He says his French just like Mossoo-- A beastly stuck-up thing to do-- He
won't keep cave, shirks his turn And says he came to school to learn!
He won't play football, says it hurts; He wouldn't fight with Paley Terts; He
couldn't whistle if he tried, And when we laughed at him he cried!
Now Wigsby Minor says that Parr Is only like all new boys are. I know when
I first came to school I wasn't such a jolly fool!
Jim could never understand how Mother could have been clever enough
to do it. To the others it seemed nice, but natural. You see they
had always been used to having a mother who could write verses just
like the way people talk, even to the shocking expression at the end
of the rhyme, which was Jim's very own.
Jim taught Peter to play chess and draughts and dominoes, and
altogether it was a nice quiet time.
Only Jim's leg got better and better, and a general feeling began to
spring up among Bobbie, Peter, and Phyllis that something ought to
be done to amuse him; not just games, but something really handsome.
But it was extraordinarily difficult to think of anything.
"It's no good," said Peter, when all of them had thought and thought
till their heads felt quite heavy and swollen; "if we can't think of
anything to amuse him, we just can't, and there's an end of it.
Perhaps something will just happen of its own accord that he'll
like."
"Things DO happen by themselves sometimes, without your making
them," said Phyllis, rather as though, usually, everything that
happened in the world was her doing.
"I wish something would happen," said Bobbie, dreamily, "something
wonderful."
And something wonderful did happen exactly four days after she had
said this. I wish I could say it was three days after, because in
fairy tales it is always three days after that things happen. But
this is not a fairy story, and besides, it really was four and not
three, and I am nothing if not strictly truthful.
They seemed to be hardly Railway children at all in those days, and
as the days went on each had an uneasy feeling about this which
Phyllis expressed one day.
"I wonder if the Railway misses us," she said, plaintively. "We
never go to see it now."
"It seems ungrateful," said Bobbie; "we loved it so when we hadn't
anyone else to play with."
"Perks is always coming up to ask after Jim," said Peter, "and the
signalman's little boy is better. He told me so."
"I didn't mean the people," explained Phyllis; "I meant the dear
Railway itself."
"The thing I don't like," said Bobbie, on this fourth day, which was
a Tuesday, "is our having stopped waving to the 9.15 and sending our
love to Father by it."
"Let's begin again," said Phyllis. And they did.
Somehow the change of everything that was made by having servants in
the house and Mother not doing any writing, made the time seem
extremely long since that strange morning at the beginning of
things, when they had got up so early and burnt the bottom out of
the kettle and had apple pie for breakfast and first seen the
Railway.
It was September now, and the turf on the slope to the Railway was
dry and crisp. Little long grass spikes stood up like bits of gold
wire, frail blue harebells trembled on their tough, slender stalks,
Gipsy roses opened wide and flat their lilac-coloured discs, and the
golden stars of St. John's Wort shone at the edges of the pool that
lay halfway to the Railway. Bobbie gathered a generous handful of
the flowers and thought how pretty they would look lying on the
green-and-pink blanket of silk-waste that now covered Jim's poor
broken leg.
"Hurry up," said Peter, "or we shall miss the 9.15!"
"I can't hurry more than I am doing," said Phyllis. "Oh, bother it!
My bootlace has come undone AGAIN!"
"When you're married," said Peter, "your bootlace will come undone
going up the church aisle, and your man that you're going to get
married to will tumble over it and smash his nose in on the
ornamented pavement; and then you'll say you won't marry him, and
you'll have to be an old maid."
"I shan't," said Phyllis. "I'd much rather marry a man with his
nose smashed in than not marry anybody."
"It would be horrid to marry a man with a smashed nose, all the
same," went on Bobbie. "He wouldn't be able to smell the flowers at
the wedding. Wouldn't that be awful!"
"Bother the flowers at the wedding!" cried Peter. "Look! the
signal's down. We must run!"
They ran. And once more they waved their handkerchiefs, without at
all minding whether the handkerchiefs were clean or not, to the
9.15.
"Take our love to Father!" cried Bobbie. And the others, too,
shouted:--
"Take our love to Father!"
The old gentleman waved from his first-class carriage window. Quite
violently he waved. And there was nothing odd in that, for he
always had waved. But what was really remarkable was that from
every window handkerchiefs fluttered, newspapers signalled, hands
waved wildly. The train swept by with a rustle and roar, the little
pebbles jumped and danced under it as it passed, and the children
were left looking at each other.
"Well!" said Peter.
"WELL!" said Bobbie.
"WELL!" said Phyllis.
"Whatever on earth does that mean?" asked Peter, but he did not
expect any answer.
"I don't know," said Bobbie. "Perhaps the old gentleman told the
people at his station to look out for us and wave. He knew we
should like it!"
Now, curiously enough, this was just what had happened. The old
gentleman, who was very well known and respected at his particular
station, had got there early that morning, and he had waited at the
door where the young man stands holding the interesting machine that
clips the tickets, and he had said something to every single
passenger who passed through that door. And after nodding to what
the old gentleman had said--and the nods expressed every shade of
surprise, interest, doubt, cheerful pleasure, and grumpy agreement--
each passenger had gone on to the platform and read one certain part
of his newspaper. And when the passengers got into the train, they
had told the other passengers who were already there what the old
gentleman had said, and then the other passengers had also looked at
their newspapers and seemed very astonished and, mostly, pleased.
Then, when the train passed the fence where the three children were,
newspapers and hands and handkerchiefs were waved madly, till all
that side of the train was fluttery with white like the pictures of
the King's Coronation in the biograph at Maskelyne and Cook's. To
the children it almost seemed as though the train itself was alive,
and was at last responding to the love that they had given it so
freely and so long.
"It is most extraordinarily rum!" said Peter.
"Most stronery!" echoed Phyllis.
But Bobbie said, "Don't you think the old gentleman's waves seemed
more significating than usual?"
"No," said the others.
"I do," said Bobbie. "I thought he was trying to explain something
to us with his newspaper."
"Explain what?" asked Peter, not unnaturally.
"I don't know," Bobbie answered, "but I do feel most awfully
funny. I feel just exactly as if something was going to happen."
"What is going to happen," said Peter, "is that Phyllis's stocking
is going to come down."
This was but too true. The suspender had given way in the agitation
of the waves to the 9.15. Bobbie's handkerchief served as first aid
to the injured, and they all went home.
Lessons were more than usually difficult to Bobbie that day.
Indeed, she disgraced herself so deeply over a quite simple sum
about the division of 48 pounds of meat and 36 pounds of bread among
144 hungry children that Mother looked at her anxiously.
"Don't you feel quite well, dear?" she asked.
"I don't know," was Bobbie's unexpected answer. "I don't know how I
feel. It isn't that I'm lazy. Mother, will you let me off lessons
to-day? I feel as if I wanted to be quite alone by myself."
"Yes, of course I'll let you off," said Mother; "but--"
Bobbie dropped her slate. It cracked just across the little green
mark that is so useful for drawing patterns round, and it was never
the same slate again. Without waiting to pick it up she bolted.
Mother caught her in the hall feeling blindly among the waterproofs
and umbrellas for her garden hat.
"What is it, my sweetheart?" said Mother. "You don't feel ill, do
you?"
"I DON'T know," Bobbie answered, a little breathlessly, "but I want
to be by myself and see if my head really IS all silly and my inside
all squirmy-twisty."
"Hadn't you better lie down?" Mother said, stroking her hair back
from her forehead.
"I'd be more alive in the garden, I think," said Bobbie.
But she could not stay in the garden. The hollyhocks and the asters
and the late roses all seemed to be waiting for something to happen.
It was one of those still, shiny autumn days, when everything does
seem to be waiting.
Bobbie could not wait.
"I'll go down to the station," she said, "and talk to Perks and ask
about the signalman's little boy."
So she went down. On the way she passed the old lady from the Post-
office, who gave her a kiss and a hug, but, rather to Bobbie's
surprise, no words except:--
"God bless you, love--" and, after a pause, "run along--do."
The draper's boy, who had sometimes been a little less than civil
and a little more than contemptuous, now touched his cap, and
uttered the remarkable words:--
"'Morning, Miss, I'm sure--"
The blacksmith, coming along with an open newspaper in his hand, was
even more strange in his manner. He grinned broadly, though, as a
rule, he was a man not given to smiles, and waved the newspaper long
before he came up to her. And as he passed her, he said, in answer
to her "Good morning":--
"Good morning to you, Missie, and many of them! I wish you joy,
that I do!"
"Oh!" said Bobbie to herself, and her heart quickened its beats,
"something IS going to happen! I know it is--everyone is so odd,
like people are in dreams."
The Station Master wrung her hand warmly. In fact he worked it up
and down like a pump-handle. But he gave her no reason for this
unusually enthusiastic greeting. He only said:--
"The 11.54's a bit late, Miss--the extra luggage this holiday time,"
and went away very quickly into that inner Temple of his into which
even Bobbie dared not follow him.
Perks was not to be seen, and Bobbie shared the solitude of the
platform with the Station Cat. This tortoiseshell lady, usually of
a retiring disposition, came to-day to rub herself against the brown
stockings of Bobbie with arched back, waving tail, and reverberating
purrs.
"Dear me!" said Bobbie, stooping to stroke her, "how very kind
everybody is to-day--even you, Pussy!"
Perks did not appear until the 11.54 was signalled, and then he,
like everybody else that morning, had a newspaper in his hand.
"Hullo!" he said, "'ere you are. Well, if THIS is the train, it'll
be smart work! Well, God bless you, my dear! I see it in the
paper, and I don't think I was ever so glad of anything in all my
born days!" He looked at Bobbie a moment, then said, "One I must
have, Miss, and no offence, I know, on a day like this 'ere!" and
with that he kissed her, first on one cheek and then on the other.
"You ain't offended, are you?" he asked anxiously. "I ain't took
too great a liberty? On a day like this, you know--"
"No, no," said Bobbie, "of course it's not a liberty, dear Mr.
Perks; we love you quite as much as if you were an uncle of ours--
but--on a day like WHAT?"
"Like this 'ere!" said Perks. "Don't I tell you I see it in the
paper?"
"Saw WHAT in the paper?" asked Bobbie, but already the 11.54 was
steaming into the station and the Station Master was looking at all
the places where Perks was not and ought to have been.
Bobbie was left standing alone, the Station Cat watching her from
under the bench with friendly golden eyes.
Of course you know already exactly what was going to happen. Bobbie
was not so clever. She had the vague, confused, expectant feeling
that comes to one's heart in dreams. What her heart expected I
can't tell--perhaps the very thing that you and I know was going to
happen--but her mind expected nothing; it was almost blank, and felt
nothing but tiredness and stupidness and an empty feeling, like your
body has when you have been a long walk and it is very far indeed
past your proper dinner-time.
Only three people got out of the 11.54. The first was a countryman
with two baskety boxes full of live chickens who stuck their russet
heads out anxiously through the wicker bars; the second was Miss
Peckitt, the grocer's wife's cousin, with a tin box and three brown-
paper parcels; and the third--
"Oh! my Daddy, my Daddy!" That scream went like a knife into the
heart of everyone in the train, and people put their heads out of
the windows to see a tall pale man with lips set in a thin close
line, and a little girl clinging to him with arms and legs, while
his arms went tightly round her.
* * * * * *
"I knew something wonderful was going to happen," said Bobbie, as
they went up the road, "but I didn't think it was going to be this.
Oh, my Daddy, my Daddy!"
"Then didn't Mother get my letter?" Father asked.
"There weren't any letters this morning. Oh! Daddy! it IS really
you, isn't it?"
The clasp of a hand she had not forgotten assured her that it was.
"You must go in by yourself, Bobbie, and tell Mother quite quietly
that it's all right. They've caught the man who did it. Everyone
knows now that it wasn't your Daddy."
"I always knew it wasn't," said Bobbie. "Me and Mother and our
old gentleman."
"Yes," he said, "it's all his doing. Mother wrote and told me you
had found out. And she told me what you'd been to her. My own
little girl!" They stopped a minute then.
And now I see them crossing the field. Bobbie goes into the house,
trying to keep her eyes from speaking before her lips have found the
right words to "tell Mother quite quietly" that the sorrow and the
struggle and the parting are over and done, and that Father has come
home.
I see Father walking in the garden, waiting--waiting. He is looking
at the flowers, and each flower is a miracle to eyes that all these
months of Spring and Summer have seen only flagstones and gravel and
a little grudging grass. But his eyes keep turning towards the
house. And presently he leaves the garden and goes to stand outside
the nearest door. It is the back door, and across the yard the
swallows are circling. They are getting ready to fly away from cold
winds and keen frost to the land where it is always summer. They
are the same swallows that the children built the little clay nests
for.
Now the house door opens. Bobbie's voice calls:--
"Come in, Daddy; come in!"
He goes in and the door is shut. I think we will not open the door
or follow him. I think that just now we are not wanted there. I
think it will be best for us to go quickly and quietly away. At the
end of the field, among the thin gold spikes of grass and the
harebells and Gipsy roses and St. John's Wort, we may just take one
last look, over our shoulders, at the white house where neither we
nor anyone else is wanted now.
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