WILLIAM--THE OUTLAW




_By the Same Author_


   (1) JUST WILLIAM
   (2) MORE WILLIAM
   (3) WILLIAM AGAIN
   (4) WILLIAM--THE FOURTH
   (5) STILL WILLIAM
   (6) WILLIAM--THE CONQUEROR
   (7) WILLIAM--THE OUTLAW
   (8) WILLIAM--IN TROUBLE
   (9) WILLIAM--THE GOOD
  (10) WILLIAM
  (11) WILLIAM--THE BAD
  (12) WILLIAM’S HAPPY DAYS
  (13) WILLIAM’S CROWDED HOURS
  (14) WILLIAM--THE PIRATE
  (15) WILLIAM--THE REBEL
  (16) WILLIAM--THE GANGSTER
  (17) WILLIAM--THE DETECTIVE
  (18) SWEET WILLIAM
  (19) WILLIAM--THE SHOWMAN
  (20) WILLIAM--THE DICTATOR
  (21) WILLIAM’S BAD RESOLUTION
  (22) WILLIAM--THE FILM STAR
  (23) WILLIAM DOES HIS BIT
  (24) WILLIAM CARRIES ON
  (25) WILLIAM AND THE BRAINS TRUST
  (26) JUST WILLIAM’S LUCK
  (27) WILLIAM--THE BOLD
  (28) WILLIAM AND THE TRAMP
  (29) WILLIAM AND THE MOON ROCKET
  (30) WILLIAM AND THE SPACE ANIMAL
  (31) WILLIAM’S TELEVISION SHOW  }  _First_
  (32) WILLIAM--THE EXPLORER      } _Editions_
  (33) WILLIAM’S TREASURE TROVE   }




[Illustration: “JUST WHAT I WANTED,” SAID THE ARTIST; “A DIRTY
RAPSCALLIAN OF A BOY WITH A CROOKED TIE AND A GRIMY COLLAR.” (_See page
140_)]




                             WILLIAM--THE
                                OUTLAW


                                  BY
                           RICHMAL CROMPTON


                            ILLUSTRATED BY
                             THOMAS HENRY


                                LONDON
                         GEORGE NEWNES LIMITED
                    TOWER HOUSE, SOUTHAMPTON STREET
                            LONDON, W.C. 2




                    © RICHMAL CROMPTON LAMBURN 1927


            _First Published_                         _1927_
            _Twenty-second Impression_                _1948_
            _Twenty-third Impression_                 _1951_
            _Twenty-fourth Impression_                _1953_
            _Twenty-fifth Impression_                 _1957_
            _Twenty-sixth (Abridged) Impression_      _1963_


                     _Printed in Great Britain by
            Cox & Wyman Ltd., London, Fakenham and Reading_




CONTENTS


  CHAPTER                                 PAGE

    I. WILLIAM--THE OUTLAW                  13

   II. THE TERRIBLE MAGICIAN                29

  III. GEORGIE AND THE OUTLAWS              60

   IV. WILLIAM AND THE WHITE ELEPHANTS      83

    V. THE STOLEN WHISTLE                  109

   VI. WILLIAM FINDS A JOB                 131

  VII. WILLIAM’S BUSY DAY                  157




CHAPTER I

WILLIAM--THE OUTLAW


William and Ginger and Douglas (known as the Outlaws) walked slowly
down the road to school. It was a very fine afternoon--one of those
afternoons which, one feels--certainly the Outlaws felt--it is base
ingratitude to spend indoors. The sun was shining and the birds were
singing in a particularly inviting way.

“G’omtry,” said William with scornful emphasis and repeated bitterly,
“_G’omtry!_”

“Might be worse,” said Douglas, “might be Latin.”

“Might be better,” said Henry, “might be singin’.”

The Outlaws liked singing lessons not because they were musical, but
because it involved no mental effort and because the master who taught
singing was a poor disciplinarian.

“Might be better still,” said Ginger, “might be nothin’.”

The Outlaws slackened their already very slack pace and their eyes
wandered wistfully to the tree-covered hill-tops which lay so
invitingly in the distance.

“Afternoon school’s all _wrong_,” said William suddenly. “Mornin’s bad
enough. But _afternoon_----!”

That morning certainly had been bad enough. It had been the sort of
morning when everything goes wrong that can go wrong. The Outlaws had
incurred the wrath of every master with whom they had come in contact.

“An’ _this_ afternoon!” said Ginger with infinite disgust. “It’ll be
worse even than an ordinary afternoon with me havin’ to stay in writin’
lines for old Face.”

“An’ me havin’ to stay in doin’ stuff all over again for ole Stinks.”

It turned out that each one of the four Outlaws would have to stay in
after afternoon school as the victim of one or other of the masters
whose wrath they had incurred that morning.

William heaved a deep sigh.

“Makes me feel _mad_,” he said. “Miners havin’ Trades Unions an’
Strikes an’ things to stop ’em doin’ too much work an’ _us_ havin’ to
go on an’ on an’ _on_ till we’re wore out. You’d think Parliament’d
stop it. People go on writin’ in the papers about people needin’ fresh
air an’ then ’stead of lettin’ people _have_ fresh air they shut ’em
up in schools all day, mornin’ _an’_ afternoon, till--till they’re all
wore out.”

“Yes,” said Ginger in hearty agreement. “I think that there oughter be
a law stoppin’ afternoon school. I think that we’d be much healthier in
every way if someone made a law stoppin’ afternoon school so’s we could
get a bit of fresh air. I think,” with an air of unctuous virtue, “that
it’s our juty to try’n get a bit of fresh air to keep us healthy so’s
to save our parents havin’ to pay doctor’s bills.”

Ginger ignored the fact that so far no one in all his healthy young
life had ever paid a doctor’s bill for him.

“I’ve a good mind to be a member of Parliament when I grow up,”
threatened Douglas, “jus’ to make all schools have a holiday in the
afternoons.”

“_An’_ the mornin’,” added Henry dreamily.

But, attractive as this idea was, even the Outlaws felt it was going
rather too far.

“No, we’ll _have_ to keep on mornin’ school,” said Douglas earnestly,
“cause of--cause of exams an’ things. An’ school-masters’d all starve
if we didn’t have _any_ school.”

“Do ’em good,” said Ginger bitterly and added, darkly, “I’d jolly well
make some laws about school-masters if I was a member of Parliament.”

“What I think’d be a good idea,” said William, “would be jus’ to have
school on wet mornin’s. Not if it’s fine ’cause of gettin’ a little
fresh air jus’ to keep us healthy.”

This was felt by them all to be an excellent idea.

“The rotten thing about it is,” went on William, “that by the time
we’re in Parliament makin’ the laws we’ll be makin’ it for _other_
people an’ too late to do us any good.”

“An’ it seems hardly worth botherin’ to get into Parliament jus’ to do
things for other people,” said Ginger the egoist.

They were very near the school now and instinctively had slowed down
to a stop. The sun was shining more brightly than ever. The whole
countryside looked more inviting than ever. There was a short silence.
They gazed from the school building (grim and dark and uninviting)
to the sunny hills and woods and fields that surrounded it. At last
William spoke.

“Seems _ridic’lous_ to go in,” he said slowly.

And Ginger said still with his air of unctuous virtue, “Seems sort of
_wrong_ to go when we reely don’t believe that we oughter go. They’re
always tellin’ us not to do things our conscience tells us not to do.
Well, _my_ conscience tells me not to go to school this afternoon. My
conscience tells me that it’s my _juty_ to go out into the fresh air
gettin’ healthy. My conscience----”

Douglas interrupted gloomily: “’S’ all very well talkin’ like that. You
know what’ll happen to us to-morrow morning.”

The soaring spirits of the Outlaws dropped abruptly at this reminder.
The general feeling was that it was rather tactless of Douglas to have
introduced the subject. It was difficult after that to restore the
attitude of reckless daring which had existed a few minutes before.
It was William of course who restored it, swinging well to the other
extreme in order to repair the balance.

“Well, we won’t go to-morrow mornin’ either,” he said. “I’m jolly well
sick of wastin’ my time in a stuffy old school when I might be outside
gettin’ fresh air. Let’s _be_ Outlaws. Let’s be _real_ Outlaws. Let’s
go right away somewhere to a wood where no one’ll find us an’ live on
blackberries an’ roots an’ things an’ if they come out to fetch us
we’ll climb trees an’ hide or run away or shoot at ’em with bows and
arrows. Let’s go’n’ live all the rest of our lives as Outlaws.”

And so infectious was William’s spirit, so hypnotic was William’s
glorious optimism that the Outlaws cheered jubilantly and said, “Yes,
let’s.... _Hurrah!_”

“And never go to school no more,” said Douglas rapturously.

“No, never go to school no more,” chanted the Outlaws.

They decided not to go home for provisions because their unexpected
presence there would be sure to raise comment and question.

And as William said, “We don’t _want_ any food but blackberries an’
mushrooms an’ roots an’ things. People used to live on roots an’ I bet
we’ll soon find some roots to live on. It’ll be quite easy to find
what sort to eat and what sort not to eat. An’ we’ll kill rabbits an’
things an’ make fires an’ cook them. That’s what real Outlaws did, an’
we’re real Outlaws now. An’ we don’t want any clothes but what we’ve
got. When they fall to pieces we’ll make some more out of the skins of
rabbits we’ve killed to eat. That’s what real Outlaws did, I bet.”

“Where’ll we go to?” said Douglas. William considered.

“Well,” he said, “we must be in a wood. Outlaws are always in woods,
’cause of hiding an’ eating the roots and things. And we oughter be on
a hill ’cause of seeing people comin’ when they come tryin’ to catch
us----”

“Ringers’ Hill, then,” said Ginger blithely.

Ringers’ Hill was both high and wooded.

The Outlaws cheered again. They were still drunk with the prospect of
freedom, intoxicated by William’s glorious optimism. They marched down
the road that led away from the school singing lustily. The Outlaws
were very fond of community singing. They liked to sing different songs
simultaneously. William in sheer lightness of heart was singing--very
unsuitably--“Home Sweet Home,” Ginger was singing “We won’t go to
school no more,” to the tune of “It ain’t go’n rain no more,” Douglas
was singing “Shepherd of the Hills,” and Henry was singing “Bye-bye,
Blackbird.”

Suddenly two of their class-mates--Brown and Smith--came round the
corner on their way to school. They looked at the Outlaws in surprise.
Brown was deprived of the power of speech by a twopenny bull’s eye of
giant proportions which he had just purchased at the village shop, but
Smith said, “Hello! You’re going the wrong way.”

“No, we aren’t,” said William, blithely, “we’re going the right way.”

Brown made an inarticulate sound through his bull’s eye, meant to
convey interest and interrogation, and Smith, interpreting it, said,
“Where are you going?”

“To Ringers’ Hill,” said William defiantly and passed on, leaving Brown
and Smith gazing after them amazedly.

“You di’n’ ought to have told them,” said Ginger.

But William was in a mood of joyous defiance.

“I don’t care,” he said, “I don’t care who knows. I don’t care who
comes to fetch us home. We won’t go. We’ll climb trees an’ shoot at ’em
and throw stones at ’em. I bet no one in the whole world’ll be able to
catch us. I’m an Outlaw, I am,” he chanted. “I’m an Outlaw.”

Again his spirit infected his followers. They cheered lustily. “We’re
Outlaws, we are,” they chanted, “we’re Outlaws.”

       *       *       *       *       *

They sat under the largest tree on Ringers’ Hill. They had been
Outlaws now for half an hour and it somehow wasn’t going as well as
they’d thought it would. Douglas, wishing to test the food-producing
properties of the place at once, had eaten so many unripe blackberries
that he could for the time being take little interest in anything but
his own feelings. Ginger had from purely altruistic motives begun to
test the roots and was already regretting it.

“Well, I din’ ask you to go about eatin’ roots,” said William
irritably. William had for the whole half hour been trying to light a
fire and was by this time feeling thoroughly fed up with it. He had
just used the last of a box of matches which he had abstracted from the
lab. that morning.

“I did it for _you_,” said Ginger indignantly, “I did it to find the
sort of roots that people eat, so you’d be able to eat ’em. Well, you
can jolly well find your _own_ roots now and I jolly well hope you find
the one I did--the last one. It’s the sort of taste that goes on for
ever. I don’ s’pose if I go on livin’ for years an’ years, I’ll ever
get the taste of it out of my mouth----”

“_Taste!_” said Douglas bitterly. “I wun’t mind a _taste_ ... it’s
_pain_ I mind--_orful_ pain--gnawin’ at your inside.”

“I wish you’d shut up,” said William yet more irritably, “an’ help me
with this fire. All the wood seems to be damp or somethin’. I can’t get
anythin’ to _happen_.”

“Blow it,” suggested Ginger, taking his mind temporarily from his taste.

Douglas, tearing himself metaphorically speaking from his pain, knelt
down and blew it.

It went out.

William raised his blackened face.

“That’s a nice thing to do,” he said bitterly. “Blowin’ it out. All the
trouble I’ve had lightin’ it an’ then you jus’ go an’ _blow_ it out.
An’ there isn’t another match.”

[Illustration: “ALL THE TROUBLE I’VE HAD LIGHTIN’ IT AN’ THEN YOU JUS’
GO AN’ BLOW IT OUT.”]

“Well, it’d’ve _gone_ out if we hadn’t _blown_ it out,” said Ginger
optimistically, “so it doesn’t matter. Anyway, let’s do somethin’
int’restin’. We’ve not had much fun so far--eatin’ roots an’ things an’
messin’ about with fire. We don’t want a fire yet. It’s warm enough
without a fire. Let’s leave it till to-night when we need a fire, to
sleep by and to keep the wild animals off. We’ll light one with,”
vaguely, “flint an’ steel if we c’n find a bit of flint an’ steel lyin’
about anywhere. But we won’t light another now. We’re all sick of it
and if we go burnin’ up all the firewood in the wood an----”

“All right,” said William, impressed by the sound logic of the
argument, “I don’t mind. I’m jus’ about sick of it. I’ve simply wore
myself out with it an’ you’ve not been much help, I must say.”

“Well, I like _that_,” said Douglas, “an’ me nearly dyin’ of agony from
blackberries.”

“An’ me riskin’ my life testin’ roots,” said Ginger. “I can still taste
it--strong as ever. It seems to be gettin’ stronger ’stead of weaker.
It’s a wonder I’m alive at all. Not many people’d suffer like what I’ve
suffered an’ still go on livin’. If I wasn’t strong I’d be dead of it
now.”

Douglas, stung by Ginger’s self-pity, again rose to the defence of his
own martyrdom.

“A _taste_,” he said. “I could stand any amount of tastes. I----”

At this moment a diversion was caused by the return of Henry. Henry had
been out to catch rabbits to cook over the fire for supper. He looked
hot and cross.

“Couldn’t catch any,” he said shortly. “I saw a lot on the other side
of the hill. I hid behind a tree till they came out an’ then I ran out
after them, and I’m absolutely wore out with runnin’ out after them an’
I’ve not caught one.”

“Let’s go down to the river,” said Ginger, “I’m jus’ about sick of
messin’ about here. There isn’t anything to _do_ here, ’cept eat roots,
an’ I’ve had enough of that.”

“No,” said William firmly, “we’ve gotter stay up here. If we go down
an’ they start comin’ out to fetch us home they’ll overpower us easy.
It’s a--a sort of vantage ground up here. We can see ’em comin’ up here
an’ escape or throw things down on ’em.”

“Well, I’m sick of stayin’ up here,” said Ginger.

“Think of ’em,” said William tactfully, “doin’ _G’omtry_ at school.”

At this the Outlaws’ discontent faded and their spirits rose.

“Hurrah!” said Ginger, who now had completely forgotten his taste,
“and I bet we can easy make up a game to play here an----”

“_Look!_” gasped Douglas suddenly, pointing down into the valley.

The Outlaws looked.

Then they stood motionless as if turned to stone.

There was no doubt about it.

Down in the valley coming along the path that led up to Ringers’ Hill
could be seen the figures of the Head-master and the second master.

For some moments horror and surprise robbed the Outlaws of the power of
speech.

Then William said:

“_Crumbs!_” but no words could describe the tone in which he said it.

“They’re--they’re comin’ after us,” gasped Ginger.

“Smith must have told him where we’d gone,” gasped Henry.

Ginger, recovering something of his self-possession, turned to William.

“I _said_ you din’ oughter’ve _told_ him,” he said with spirit.

“B-but,” gasped William, still paralysed with amazement, “how’d he know
we’re Outlaws an’ never goin’ back?”

“Prob’ly Smith heard us sayin’ it,” said Ginger. “Well, it’s a nice
set-out, isn’t it? What we goin’ to do? Fight him?”

Even William’s proud spirit quailed at the thought of doing that.

“If--if only----” he began.

Then his speech died on his lips. His mouth dropped open again. His
eyes dilated with horror and amazement. Behind the figure of the
head-master and second master came other figures--the mathematical
master, the gym master, three or four prefects.

“They’re all comin’!” gasped William, “they’re comin’ to take us by
force. They--they’re goin’ to surround the hill and take us by force.”

“Crumbs!” said Ginger again. “_Crumbs!_”

“What’ll we do?” gasped Douglas.

They looked at William and into William’s freckled face came a set look
of purpose.

[Illustration: BREATHLESS WITH APPREHENSION THE OUTLAWS CROUCHED UNDER
THE BUSHES AND WATCHED. THEY COULD SEE THE PROCESSION COME UP THE
ROAD--NEARER, NEARER.]

“Well, we’ve gotter do _something_,” he said. He scowled ferociously,
then a light flashed over his face. “I know what we’ll do. Smith must
jus’ simply have told ’em ‘Ringers’ Hill.’ That’s what we told him,
‘Ringers’ Hill.’ Well, you remember the sign post thing at the bottom
of the hill with ‘Ringers’ Hill’ on it?”

Yes, they remembered it--a wobbly, decrepit affair at the bottom of the
hill.

William’s face was now fairly gleaming with his idea.

“Well,” he said, “you remember it was all loose in its hole? I bet if
we pushed hard we could push it right round so’s the ‘Ringers’ Hill’
pointed right on up the other hill. An’ I bet they don’ know this part
’cause they don’t live here an’ they never come here so I bet--well,
let’s try anyway, an’ we’d better be jolly quick.”

[Illustration: THEN--THE HEAD-MASTER PAUSED UNDER THE SIGN-POST. “HERE
WE ARE,” HE CALLED OUT. “HERE’S THE SIGN-POST--RINGER’S HILL--UP
THERE.”]

Behind their leader they scrambled down the hillside to the sign-post.

“Now _push_!” directed William.

The Outlaws pushed.

The sign-post rocked in its hole and--joy!--slowly pivoted round in
obedience to the Outlaws’ straining weight. The solitary arm bearing
the legend “Ringers’ Hill” now pointed to the hill in the opposite
direction.

The Outlaws’ spirits rose.

They gave a cautious muffled cheer.

“Now _quick_, back again to the top!” said William and they scrambled
once more to the hill-top.

The procession led by the head-master was approaching.

“Lie down under the bushes,” hissed William, “so’s they won’t see you.
An’ watch what they do.”

Breathless with apprehension the Outlaws crouched under the bushes
and watched. They could see the procession come up the road--nearer,
nearer. Then--the head-master paused under the sign-post. The Outlaws
held their breath. Did he know the lie of the land or would he be
deceived? Evidently he didn’t know the lie of the land.

“Here we are,” he called out. “Here’s the sign-post--Ringers’ Hill--up
there.”

Slowly the procession passed on up the other hillside.

The Outlaws climbed from out of their bushes. They still looked rather
pale. “That was a _jolly_ narrow shave,” said Ginger.

“What we’d better do now,” said William grimly, “is to look for a
proper hidin’ place case they find out an’ come back.”

       *       *       *       *       *

So intent had they been on looking down at the side of the hill where
the dread procession was wending its way that they had not noticed an
enormous man with bushy eyebrows and a generally ferocious aspect who
was climbing up the hill from the other side. They did not in fact
notice him until he had come up behind them and his gruff voice boomed:

“Well, is this all there is of you?”

The Outlaws turned round with a start.

There was a tense silence.

The Outlaws, having, as they thought, narrowly saved themselves from
destruction on one side of the hill, were quite unprepared for this
attack from the other. It unnerved them. It paralysed them. They had
no reserve of ingenuity and aplomb with which to meet it.

William gulped and blinked and said, “Yes.”

“_All?_” boomed the ferocious man, “well, all I can say is that it’s
hardly worth my while to come all this way for you. I’d understood that
it was quite a different sort of affair altogether. Do you mean to say
that there are only _four_ of you?”

William felt that he had done all that could be expected of him and
nudged Ginger.

“Er-yes,” quaked Ginger.

“Only _four_ of you,” said the ferocious man ferociously, “and how old?”

Douglas and Henry had slunk behind William and Ginger. Ginger nudged
William to intimate that it was his turn.

William swallowed and said feebly, “Eleven--eleven and nearly
three-quarters.”

“Pish!” said the man in a tone of fierce disgust. “Eleven! As I say I’d
never have agreed to come if I’d known it was this sort of an affair.
I naturally imagined--however, now I’m here--and it’s late to start
with----” He looked at them and seemed to relent somewhat, “I gathered
that you know a fair amount about the subject and you must be keen. I
suppose one should be thankful for four keen students even though they
seem so very--however,” his irritability seemed to get the better of
him again, “let’s get to business. We’ll start over here ... quickly,
please,” he snapped, “or we’ll never get through this afternoon----”

Dazedly, as if in a dream, the Outlaws went to where he pointed. They
didn’t know what else to do. The situation seemed to have got entirely
out of hand. It seemed best to follow the line of least resistance
and to give themselves away as little as possible. They stood in a
dejected group in front of the ferocious man and the ferocious man
began to talk. He talked about such things as strata and igneous rock
and neolithic and eolithic and paloælithic and stratigraphical and
Pithecanthropus erectus and other things of which the Outlaws had never
heard before and hoped never to hear again. He asked them questions and
got angry because they didn’t know the answers. He asked them what he’d
said about things and got angry because they’d forgotten. He strode
about the hill-top pointing out rocks with his stick and talking about
them in a loud, ferocious voice. He made them follow him wherever
he went, and got angry because they didn’t follow nimbly enough. So
terrifying was he that they daren’t even try to run away. It was like
a nightmare. It was far worse than Geometry. And it seemed to last for
hours and hours and hours. Actually it lasted an hour. At the end the
man became more angry than ever, said that it was an insult to have
asked him to come over to address four half-witted gutter-snipes and
muttering ferociously stalked off again down the hillside.

The Outlaws sat down weakly on the ground around the little heap of
black twigs and dead leaves which marked the scene of William’s failure
as a fire-maker and held their heads.

“Crumbs!” moaned William, and Ginger mournfully echoed, “Crumbs!”

“Well, anyway, he’s gone,” said Henry trying to look on the bright side.

But it wasn’t really easy to look on the bright side. The Outlaws were
feeling very hungry and there wasn’t anything to eat. Ringers’ Hill had
lost its charm. They’d had a rotten time there--not a bit the sort of
time they’d always imagined Outlaws having. And the sun had suddenly
gone behind a cloud. It was cold and dark. They were hungry and fed up.

“Wonder what time it is,” said Henry casually.

As if in answer the clock of the village church struck in the valley,
One--Two--Three--Four--Five. Five o’clock. Tea-time. Into each mind
flashed a picture of a cheerful dining-room with a table laid for tea.

“Well,” said William with an unconvincing attempt at cheerfulness,
“we’d better be getting something to eat. We might have had a rabbit if
Henry’d caught one. Let’s have a go at the blackberries.”

“There aren’t any ripe ones,” said Douglas, “and the others make you
feel awful inside after you’ve eaten a few.”

Then suddenly to their secret relief Henry rose and said bluntly, “I
want my tea and I’m sick of being an Outlaw. I’m going home.”

       *       *       *       *       *

On the road they met Brown and Smith. Brown and Smith were swinging
happily along the road carrying fishing-rods and jars of minnows.

“I say, we’ve had a _topping_ time,” they called. “Have you? But you
were rotters not to have told us.”

“Told you what?” said the Outlaws.

“That there was going to be a half-holiday.”

“_What?_” said the Outlaws.

“They sent us all away as soon as we got there. Said they’d forgotten
to give it out in the morning. We were jolly surprised to meet you
going away from school, but when we got there we knew why but we
thought you jolly well might have told us.”

“Why was there a half-holiday?” gasped William.

“Oh, some old josser or other coming to give some old jaw or other
to some old society or other,” said Smith vaguely, “but we’ve had a
_topping_ afternoon, have you?”

In bitter silence the Outlaws walked on. They hadn’t had a topping
afternoon. At the end of the road a prefect was putting a letter into a
pillar-box. Another prefect stood by.

“What was it like?” said the one who stood by.

“He never turned up,” said the one who’d just posted the letter. The
Outlaws slowed their pace to listen.

“We’d arranged to meet him on Ringers’ Hill. The Head and everyone
was there. We’d never been to Ringers’ Hill before but there was a
sign post up so we couldn’t have gone wrong. We waited three quarters
of an hour and he never turned up. It’s sickening. I’ve just posted a
letter from the Head telling him that we went there and waited three
quarters of an hour. I suppose he was kept somewhere. He might have let
us know, but some of those professors are beastly absent-minded. We
were looking forward to it awfully, because it was Professor Fremlin,
one of the greatest geologists in England, you know. Ringers’ Hill’s
supposed to be an old volcano crater. It would have been awfully
interesting. He was going to lecture on its formation and show us the
strata and fossils there. We’d been reading it up for weeks so as to
know something about it. A shame when we’ve got such a decent Geologist
Society for the star turn show of the year to fall flat. Perhaps he was
taken ill on the way.” He turned to the Outlaws. “Now then, you kids,
what are you hanging about for? Clear off.”

Blinking dazedly, walking very, very slowly, very very thoughtfully,
the Outlaws cleared off.




CHAPTER II

THE TERRIBLE MAGICIAN


The advent of Mr. Galileo Simpkins to the village would in normal
times have roused little interest in William and his friends. But the
summer holidays had already lasted six weeks and though the Outlaws
were not tired of holidays (it was against the laws of nature for the
Outlaws ever to tire of holidays), still they had run the gamut of
almost every conceivable occupation both lawful and unlawful, and they
were ready for a fresh sensation. They had been Pirates and Smugglers
and Red Indians and Highwaymen _ad nauseam_. They had trespassed till
every farmer in the neighbourhood saw red at the mere sight of them.
They had made with much trouble a motor boat and an aeroplane, both of
which had insisted on obeying the law of gravity rather than fulfilling
the functions of motor boats and aeroplanes. They had made a fire
in Ginger’s backyard and cooked over it a mixture of water from the
stream and blackberries and Worcester Sauce and Turkish delight and
sardines (these being all the edibles they could jointly produce), had
pronounced the resultant concoction to be excellent and had spent the
next day in bed. They had taken Jumble (William’s mongrel) “hunting”
and had watched the ignominious spectacle of Jumble’s being attacked
by a cat half his size and pursued in a state of abject terror all
the length of the village with a bleeding nose. They had discovered a
wasps’ nest and almost simultaneously its inhabitants had discovered
them. They were only just leaving off their bandages. They had essayed
tight-rope walking on Henry’s mother’s clothes line, but Henry’s
mother’s clothes line had proved unexpectedly brittle and William still
limped slightly. They had tried to teach tricks to Etheldrida, Douglas’
aunt’s parrot, and Douglas still bore the marks of her beak in several
places on his face. Altogether they were, as I said, ripe for any fresh
sensation when Mr. Galileo Simpkins dawned upon their horizon.

Mr. Galileo Simpkins had been thus christened by his parents in
the hope that he would take to science. And Mr. Galileo Simpkins,
being by nature ready to follow the line of least resistance, had
obligingly taken to science at their suggestion. Moreover, he quite
enjoyed taking to science. He enjoyed pottering about with test tubes
and he disliked being sociable. A scientist, as everyone knows, is
immune from sociability. A scientist can retire to his lab. as to a
fortress and, if he likes, read detective novels there to his heart’s
content without being disturbed by anyone. Not that Mr. Galileo
Simpkins only read detective novels. He was genuinely interested in
Science as Science (he put it that way) and though as yet he had made
no startling contribution to Science as Science, still he enjoyed
reading in his text-books of experiments that other men had made and
then doing the experiments to see if the same thing happened in his
case. It didn’t always.... Fortunately he was not dependent for his
living on his scientific efforts. He had a nice little income of his
own which enabled him to stage himself as a Scientist to his complete
satisfaction. He took a great interest in the staging of himself as a
Scientist. He liked to have an imposing array of test tubes and bottles
and appliances of every sort--even those whose use he did not quite
understand. He was very proud too of a skeleton which he had bought
third-hand from a medical student and which he thought conferred great
_éclat_ on his position as a Scientist from its stronghold in the
darkest corner. As you will gather from all this, Mr. Galileo Simpkins
was a very simple and inoffensive and well-meaning little man and
before he came to the village where William lived, had not caused a
moment’s uneasiness to anyone since the time when at three years old
he had inadvertently fallen into the rain tub and been fished out half
drowned by his nurse.

He had come to the village because the lease of the house where he had
lived previously had run out and the original owners were returning
to it and he had seen the house in William’s village advertised in
the paper, and it seemed just what he wanted. He liked to live in the
country because he was rather a nervous little man and was afraid of
traffic.

The first sight of Mr. Galileo Simpkins on his way from the station
had not interested the Outlaws much except that as a stranger to
the village he was naturally to be kept under observation and his
possibilities in every direction explored at the earliest opportunity.

“He dun’t look very _int_’restin’,” said Ginger scornfully as, sitting
in a row on a gate, the Outlaws stared in an unblinking manner quite
incompatible with Good Manners at little Mr. Galileo Simpkins driving
by on his way from the station in the village cab. The driver of the
village cab, who knew the Outlaws well, kept a wary eye upon them as
he passed, and had his whip ready. The ancient quadruped who drew the
village cab seemed to know them too, and turned his head to leer at
them sardonically from behind his blinkers. But the attention of the
Outlaws was all for the occupant of the village cab, who alone was
quite unaware of them as the ancient equipage passed on its way. He was
merely thinking what a fine day it was for his arrival at his new home
and hoping that his skeleton (which he had packed most carefully) had
travelled well.

William considered Ginger’s comment for a moment in silence. Then he
said meditatively: “Oh ... dunno. He looks sort of soft and ’s if he
couldn’t run very fast. We c’n try playin’ in his garden sometime. I
bet he couldn’t catch us.”

They then had a stone-throwing competition which lasted till one of
William’s stones went through General Moult’s cucumber-frame.

When General Moult had finally given up the chase, the Outlaws threw
themselves breathlessly (for General Moult, despite his size, was quite
a good runner) on to the grass at the top of the hill and reviewed
the further possibilities of amusement which the world held for them.
They decided after a short discussion not to teach Etheldrida any more
tricks, not so much because they were tired of teaching Etheldrida
tricks as because Etheldrida seemed to be tired of learning them.

Douglas stroked his scars thoughtfully and said:

“Not that I’m _frightened_ of her, but--but, well, let’s try’n think of
somethin’ a bit more _int’restin’_.”

No one had anything very original to suggest (they seemed to have
exhausted the possibilities of the whole universe in those six weeks
of holidays), so they made new bows and arrows and held a match
which William won in that he made the finest long distance shot. He
shot his arrow into the air and unfortunately it came to earth by
way of Miss Miggs’ scullery window. Miss Miggs happened to be in the
scullery at the time and again the Outlaws, bitterly meditating on the
over-population of the countryside, had to flee from the avenging wrath
of an outraged householder. In the shelter of the woods they again drew
breath.

“I say,” said Ginger, “wun’t it be nice to live in the middle of
Central Africa or the North Pole or somewhere where there isn’t any
houses for miles an’ miles an’ _miles_.”

“She runs,” commented Douglas patronisingly, “faster’n what you’d think
to look at her.”

“What’ll we do _now_?” said Henry.

Dusk was falling, and ahead of them loomed the evil hour of bedtime
which they were ever ready to postpone.

“I tell you what,” said William, his freckled face suddenly alight,
“let’s go ’n see how _he’s_ gettin’ on--you know, him what we saw
ridin’ up in the cab. We c’n go an’ watch him through his window. It’s
quite dark.”

       *       *       *       *       *

They watched him in petrified amazement. They watched him as, dressed
in a black dressing-gown and a black skull-cap, he pottered about,
laying out test tubes and pestles and mortars and crucibles and
curious-looking instruments and bottles of strangely coloured liquids.
Eyes and mouths opened still further when little Mr. Galileo Simpkins
brought in his skeleton and set it up with tender care and pride in its
corner.

They crept away through the darkness in a stricken silence and did not
speak till they reached the road. Then: “_Crumbs!_” said William in a
hoarse whisper. “What _is_ he? What’s he _doin’_?”

“I think he’s a sort of Bolsh’vist goin’ to blow up all the world,”
said Douglas with a burst of inspiration.

“An’ a dead body an’ all,” said Ginger, deeply awed by the memory of
what they had seen.

“P’raps he’s just doin’ ordinary chemistry,” suggested Henry mildly.

This suggestion was indignantly scouted by the Outlaws.

“_Course_ it’s not jus’ ordin’ry chemistry,” said William, “not with
all that set-out.”

“Dead bodies an’ all,” murmured Ginger again in a sepulchral voice.

“An’ dressed all funny,” said William, “an’ queer sorts of things all
over the place. ’Sides, what’d he be doin’ ordin’ry chemistry _for_,
anyway? He’s too old to be goin’ in for exams.”

This was felt to be unanswerable.

“What I think _is_----” began William, but he never got as far as what
he thought.

A plaintive voice came through the dusk--the voice of William’s sister
Ethel.

“William! Mother says it’s long past your bedtime and _will_ you come
in and she says----”

The Outlaws crept off through the dusk.

       *       *       *       *       *

The next day Joan came back from a visit to an aunt.

Joan was the only female member of the Outlaws. Though she did not
accompany them on their more dangerous and manly exploits she was their
unfailing confidante and sympathiser and could be always counted on to
side with them against a hostile and unsympathetic world. She was small
and dark and very pretty and she considered William the greatest hero
the world has ever known.

She joined them the first morning of their return and they told her
without any undue modesty of their exploits during her absence--of
their heroic flights from irate farmers, of their miraculous creation
of motor boats and aeroplanes (they omitted any reference to the
over-officious law of gravity), of their glorious culinary operations
(they omitted the sequel), their Herculean contest with the wasps,
their tight-rope walking performance, their (partial) mastery over the
brute creation as represented by Etheldrida, their glorious feats of
stone throwing and arrow shooting.

“An’ no one what’s run after us has caught us--not once,” ended William
proudly and added: “I bet we c’n run faster ’n anybody else in the
world.”

Joan smiled upon him fondly. She firmly believed that William could do
anything in the world better than any one else in it.

“And what are you going to do to-day?” she said with interest.

_That_, the expressions of the Outlaws gave her to understand, was the
question. The Outlaws had no idea what they were going to do to-day.
They were obviously ready for any suggestions from the gentleman who,
moralists inform us, specialises in providing occupation for the
unoccupied.

“Let’s make another motor boat,” said Henry feebly, but this suggestion
was treated with well-deserved contempt. The Outlaws were not in the
habit of repeating their efforts. Moreover, the motor boat experiment
had not been so successful as to warrant its repetition.

Suddenly Ginger’s face lit up.

“I know!” he said, “let’s show Joan _him_ ... you know, him what we saw
last night--with the dead body----”

Joan’s eyes grew round with horror.

“It _wasn’t_ a dead body,” said Douglas impatiently, “it was a
skeleton.”

“That’s the same as a dead body,” said Ginger pugnaciously, “it was a
_body_, wasn’t it? an’ now it’s dead.”

“Yes, but it’s _bones_,” protested Douglas.

“Well, a body’s bones, isn’t it?” said Ginger.

But here Joan interrupted. “Oh, what _is_ it, _where_ is it?” she said,
clasping her hands, “it sounds _awful_.”

Her horror satisfied them completely. With Joan you could always be so
pleasantly sure that your effects would come off.

“Come on,” said William briskly assuming his air of Master of the
Ceremonies, “we’ll show him you. We c’n get through the hole in the
hedge ’n creep up to the window through the bushes without him seein’
us at all.”

       *       *       *       *       *

They got through the hole in the hedge and crept up to the window
through the bushes. William, as Master of the Ceremonies, had an uneasy
suspicion that in the cold morning light both man and room might look
perfectly normal, that the ghostly effect of the night before might
have banished completely. But the suspicions proved to be groundless.
The room looked, if possible, even more uncanny than it had done. And
Mr. Galileo Simpkins still pottered about it happily in his black
dressing gown and skull cap (it was a costume in which he rather
fancied himself). Mr. Galileo Simpkins liked his nice large downstairs
lab. and felt very happy in it. As he stirred an experiment in a little
crucible he sang softly to himself from sheer good spirits. He was
quite unaware of the Outlaws watching his every movement with eager
interest from the bushes outside the window. It was Ginger who saw and
pointed out to the others the shelf at the back of the room on which
stood a row of bottles containing wizened frogs in some sort of liquid.

Aghast, they crept away.

“Well, I’m _cert’n_ that’s what he’s goin’ to do,” said Douglas as soon
as they reached the road, “he’s goin’ to blow up all the world. He’s
jus’ mixin’ up the stuff to do it with.”

“Well, I _still_ think he might be jus’ an ornery sort of man doin’
ornery chemistry,” said Henry.

“What about the dead body, then?” said Ginger.

“An’ what about frogs an’ things shut up in bottles an’ things?” said
William.

Then Joan spoke.

“He’s a wizard,” she said, “of _course_ he’s a wizard.”

William treated this suggestion with derision.

“A wizard,” he said contemptuously, “Soppy fairy-tale stuff! _Course_
he’s not. There _aren’t_ any!”

But Joan was not crushed.

“There _are_, William,” she said solemnly, “I _know_ there are.”

“_How_ d’you know there are!” said William incredulously.

“And what about the dead body?” said Ginger with the air of one
bringing forward an unanswerable objection.

“The skeleton,” corrected Douglas.

“It’s someone he’s _turned_ into a skeleton, of course,” said Joan
firmly.

“Soppy fairy-tale stuff,” commented William again with scorn.
Joan bore his reproof meekly but clung to her point with feminine
pertinacity.

“It’s _not_, William. It’s _true_. I _know_ it’s true.”

There was certainly something convincing about her earnestness though
the Outlaws were determined not to be convinced by it.

“No,” said Douglas very firmly. “He’s a blower up, that’s what he is.
He’s goin’ to blow up all the world.”

“What about the frogs in bottles?” said Henry.

“They’re people he’s _turned_ into frogs,” said Joan.

The frogs certainly seemed to fit into Joan’s theory better than they
fitted into Douglas’s. Joan pursued her advantage. “And didn’t you hear
him sort of singing as he mixed the things? He was making spells over
them.”

The Outlaws were, outwardly, at least, still sceptical.

“Soppy fairy-tale stuff,” said William once more with masculine
superiority. “I tell you there _aren’t_ any.”

But there was a fascination about the sight and they were loth to go
far from it.

“Let’s go back an’ see what he’s doin’ now,” said Ginger, and eagerly
they accepted the proposal. The hole in the hedge was conveniently
large, the bushes by the window afforded a convenient shelter and all
would have gone well had not Mr. Galileo Simpkins been engaged on the
simple task of washing out some test tubes in a cupboard just outside
the Outlaws’ line of vision. This was more than they could endure.

“What’s he _doin’_?” said William in a voice of agonised suspense.

But none of them could see what he was doing.

“I’ll go out,” said Ginger with a heroic air. “I bet he won’t see me.”

So Ginger crept out of the shelter of the bushes and advanced boldly
to the window. Too boldly--for Mr. Galileo Simpkins, turning suddenly,
saw, to his great surprise and indignation, a small boy with an
exceedingly impertinent face standing in his garden and staring rudely
at him through his window. Mr. Galileo Simpkins hated small boys,
especially small boys with impertinent faces. With unexpected agility
he leapt to the window and threw it open. Ginger fled in terror to the
gate. Mr. Galileo Simpkins shook his fist after him.

“All right, you _wait_, my boy, you _wait_!” he called.

By this time he wanted the boy with the impertinent face to understand
that he was going to find out who he was and tell his father. He was
going to put a stop to that sort of thing once and for all. He wasn’t
going to have boys with impertinent faces wandering about his garden
and looking through his windows. He’d frighten them off now--at once.
“You _wait_!” he shouted again with vague but terrible menace in his
voice.

Then he returned to his lab. well pleased with himself.

The Outlaws crept back through the hole in the hedge and met Ginger in
the road. They looked at Ginger as one might look at someone who has
returned from the jaws of death. Ginger, now that the danger was over,
rather enjoyed his position.

“_Well_,” he said with satisfaction, “did you _see_ him an’ _hear_ him.
I bet he’d’ve _killed_ me if he’d caught me.”

“Blown you up,” said Douglas.

“Turned you into something,” said Joan.

“Wonder what he meant by saying ‘Wait’ like that?” said William
meditatively.

“He meant that he was goin’ to put a spell on you,” said Joan
composedly.

Ginger went rather pale.

“Soppy fairy-tale stuff,” said William.

“All right,” said Joan, “just you wait and see.”

So they waited and they saw.

It was, of course, a coincidence that that night Ginger’s mother’s
cook had made trifle for supper and that Ginger ate of this not wisely,
but too well, and was the next morning confined to bed with what the
doctor called “slight gastric trouble.”

The Outlaws called for him the next morning and were curtly informed
by the housemaid (who, like Mr. Galileo Simpkins, hated all boys on
principle) that Ginger was ill in bed and would not be getting up that
day.

They walked away in silence.

“_Well_,” said Joan in triumph, “what do you think about him being a
magician _now_?”

This time William did not say “Soppy fairy-tale stuff.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Ginger returned to them, somewhat pale and wobbly, the next day. Like
them he preferred to lay the blame of his enforced retirement on to Mr.
Galileo Simpkins rather than upon the trifle.

“Yes, that’s what he said,” agreed Ginger earnestly. “He said ‘you
wait,’ an’ then jus’ about an hour after that I began to feel orful
pains. An’ I hadn’t had hardly any of that ole trifle ... well, not
much, anyway; well, not _too_ much ... well, not as much as I often
have of things ... an’ I had most _orful_ pains an’----”

“He must have made a little image of you in wax, Ginger,” said Joan
with an air of deep wisdom, “and stuck pins into it. That’s what they
do.... I expect he thinks you’re dead now. That’s why he said ‘You
wait’!”

They did not scoff at her any longer.

“Well, I was nearly dead yesterday all right,” said Ginger. “I’ve never
had such _orful_ pains. Jus’ _like_ pins running into me.”

“They _were_ pins running into you, Ginger,” said Joan simply. “We’d
better keep _right_ away from him now or he’ll be turning us into
something.”

“Like to turn _him_ into something,” said Ginger who was still feeling
vindictive towards the supposed author of his gastric trouble.

But Joan shook her head. “No,” said Joan, “we must keep _right_ out of
his way. You don’t know what they can do--magicians and people like
that.”

“_I_ do,” groaned Ginger.

So they went for a walk and held races and played Red Indians and
sailed boats on the pond and climbed trees--but there was little zest
in any of these pursuits. Their thoughts were with Mr. Galileo Simpkins
the magician as he stirred his concoctions and uttered his spells and
gazed upon his bottle victims and stuck pins into the waxen images of
his foes.

“Let’s jus’ go’n look at him again,” said William, when they met in the
afternoon. “We won’t go near enough for him to _see_ us but--but let’s
jus’ go’n see what he’s _doin’_!”

“_You_ can,” said Ginger bitterly. “He’s not stuck pins into you an’
given you _orful_ pains. Why, I’m _still_ feelin’ ill with it. We had
trifle again for lunch an’ I can’t eat more’n three helpin’s of it.”

“No, we’d better not go near him again,” said Joan shaking her head,
her eyes wide.

But William did not agree with them.

“I only want jus’ to look at him again an’ see what he’s _doin’_. _I’m_
goin’, anyway.”

So they all went.

       *       *       *       *       *

They had decided to creep down through the field behind the Red House
to the road and thence through the hole in the hedge to the sheltering
cluster of bushes that commanded the magician’s room, but they had
not so far to go before they saw him. It was a fine afternoon and Mr.
Galileo Simpkins had taken his detective novel and gone into the field
just behind his house. And there he was when the Outlaws stopped at
the gate of the field, lying on the bank in the shade, reading. He was
feeling at peace with all the world. He did not see the five faces that
gazed at him over the gate of the field and then disappeared. He went
on dozing happily over his novel. He’d had a very happy morning. Though
none of his experiments had come out still he’d much enjoyed doing
them. He’d thought once of that boy with the impertinent face and felt
glad that he’d frightened him away so successfully. He’d seen no signs
of him since. That was what you had to do with boys--scare them off,
or you got no peace at all.... Very nice warm sun ... very exciting
novel....

Meanwhile the Outlaws crept past the field and were standing talking
excitedly in the road.

“Did you _see_?” gasped Ginger, “jus’ sittin’ an’ readin’ ornery jus’
as if he hadn’t been stickin’ pins into me all last night.”

“Let’s go home,” pleaded Joan. “You--you don’t know _what_ he’ll do.”

“No,” said William, “now he’s all right readin’ in that field let’s go
into his room an’ look at his things.”

There was a murmur of dissent.

“All right,” said William, “you needn’t. _I’m_ jolly well goin’.”

So they all went.

       *       *       *       *       *

It was certainly thrilling to creep through the window and stand in the
terrible room with the knowledge that at any minute the Magician might
return, change them into frogs and cork them up in bottles.

“Wonder if I can find the wax thing of me he was sticking pins into
last night,” said Ginger looking round the bench.

“Let’s make a wax thing of _him_ ’n stick pins into it,” suggested
Henry.

“No, let’s _turn_ him into something,” said Douglas.

Joan clapped her hands.

“Oh _yes_,” she said, “_let’s_! That _would_ be fun! His spells and
things must be all over the place.”

Ginger took up a pestle and mortar.

“This is what he was stirring to-day,” he said, “Wonder what this
changes folks into.”

“Prob’ly depends what sort of a spell you say when you stir it,” said
Joan.

“Well, let’s try it,” said William.

“What’ll we turn him into?” said Ginger.

“A donkey,” suggested William.

“Well, who’ll do it?”

“Let me try,” said Joan who had a certain prestige as originator of the
now generally accepted magician theory.

Ginger handed her the crucible. “I think,” said Joan importantly, “that
I ought to have a circle of chalk drawn round me.”

They couldn’t find any chalk so they made a little circle of test tubes
around her and watched her with interest. Joan shut her eyes, stirred
up the mixture in the crucible and chanted:

  “Turn into a donkey,
  Turn into a donkey,
  Turn into a donkey,
    Mr. Magician.”

Then she opened her eyes.

“It _may_ be all wrong,” she admitted, “I’m only guessing how to do it.
But if it’s a very good spell it _may_ be all right.”

“Well, let’s go and have a look at him,” said William, “and if he’s
still there we’ll come back and try again.”

So they went.

       *       *       *       *       *

And now comes one of those coincidences without which both life and the
art of the novelist would be so barren. Five minutes after the Outlaws
had left Mr. Galileo Simpkins peacefully reading his novel on a bank in
the shade in the field, a boy crossed the field carrying a telegram.
He came from the post office and the telegram was for Mr. Galileo
Simpkins, so, on seeing Mr. Galileo Simpkins in the field, the boy
took it up to him. Mr. Simpkins opened it. It summoned him to the sick
bed of a great-aunt from whom he had expectations. There was a train to
town in ten minutes. Mr. Simpkins had his hat and coat and plenty of
money on him. He decided not to risk missing the train by going back to
the house. He set off at once for the station, meaning to telegraph to
his housekeeper from town (which he quite forgot to do). He left his
book on the bank where he had laid it down on taking the telegram from
the boy’s hand.

Five minutes after he had gone Farmer Jenks, to whom the field
belonged, brought to it a young donkey which he had just purchased, and
departed. The young donkey had been christened “Maria” by Mrs. Jenks.
Maria kicked her heels happily in the field for a few minutes, then
realised that it was rather a hot afternoon. There was only one bit of
shade in the field and that was the bank where but lately Mr. Galileo
Simpkins had reposed and where even now his book lay. Maria went over
to this and lay down in it just by the book. In fact her attitude
suggested that she was engaged in reading the book.

And so when five minutes later the Outlaws cautiously and fearfully
peeped over the hedge, they saw what was apparently Mr. Galileo
Simpkins metamorphosed by their spell into a donkey lying where they
had last seen him still reading his book. No words in the English
language could quite describe the Outlaws’ feelings. Not one of them
had really expected Joan’s spell to take effect. And here was the
incredible spectacle before them--Mr. Galileo Simpkins turned into a
donkey before their very eyes by one of his own spells. They all went
rather pale. William blinked. Ginger’s jaw dropped open. Henry’s eyes
seemed on the point of falling out of his head. Douglas swallowed and
held on to the gate for support and Joan gave a little scream. At the
sound of the scream Maria turned her head and gave them a reproachful
glance.

“_Well!_” said Joan.

“_Crumbs!_” said William.

“_Gosh!_” said Douglas.

“_Crikey!_” said Henry.

And “_Now_ we’ve done it!” said Ginger.

Maria turned away her head and surveyed the distant landscape,
drowsily. “I wonder if he _knows_,” said William awefully, “or if he
thinks he’s still a man.”

[Illustration: “_WELL!_” SAID JOAN. “_NOW_ WE’VE DONE IT!” SAID GINGER.]

“He _must_ know,” said Ginger. “He’s got eyes. He c’n see his legs ’n
tail an’ things.”

“An’ he was reading his book when we first came along,” said Douglas.

“P’raps,” suggested Henry, “he’s forgotten all about bein’ a man an’
only feels like a donkey now.”

“Well, he won’t try stickin’ pins into _me_ again, _anyway_,” said
Ginger.

But a new aspect of the affair had come to William.

“This is Farmer Jenks’ field,” he said; “he’ll be mad findin’ a donkey
in it. He won’t know it’s reely Mr. Simpkins.”

[Illustration: HERE WAS THE INCREDIBLE BEFORE THEM--MR. SIMPKINS,
TURNED INTO A DONKEY BY ONE OF HIS OWN SPELLS!]

“Well, it won’t matter,” said Ginger.

“Yes, I bet it will,” said William. “P’raps it can talk still--the
donkey, I mean--p’raps it’ll tell people about us an’ get us into
trouble. I specks there’s a law against turnin’ people into things like
what there is against murder--an’ he’s got a nasty look in his eye.
Look at him now. I bet he c’n still talk an’ he’ll go tellin’ people
an’ we’ll be put in prison or hanged or somethin’.”

“It’s _your_ fault,” said Ginger, “why did you say a big thing like
a donkey? If you’d said a little thing like a frog or somethin’ we
could’ve put him in a bottle, same as he did other folks, but what can
you do with a big thing like a _donkey_?”

“Well, I never thought he’d _really_ turn into one,” said William with
spirit.

“Well, he _has_ done,” said Ginger, “an’ we’ve gotter _do_ something
about it ’fore anyone comes along and he starts tellin’ them about us.”

At this point Maria uttered a loud “Hee-haw!”

“There, you see,” said Henry relieved, “he can only talk donkey talk.”

“I don’t believe it,” said William doggedly. “He’s jus’ pretendin’. He
was readin’ his book when we came along an’ I bet he can talk. He only
wants to wait till someone comes along an’ then get us into trouble....
Look at him now eatin’ grass.... Well,” virtuously, “he’s got no
_right_ eatin’ that grass. It’s Farmer Jenks’ grass ... an’ what’re we
goin’ to do when they find out that the man’s disappeared an’ there’s
only a donkey left an’--they’ll blame _us_ ... they always blame _us_
for everything.”

“Let’s turn him back now,” said Joan, “we’ve prob’ly taught him a
lesson. Now he knows what it feels like to be turned into something
perhaps he’ll stop turning other people into things.”

“And running pins into ’em,” said Ginger feelingly.

“Well, we’d better get him to his house, anyway,” said William, “then
he can turn himself back with his own things.”

Maria had arisen from the bank and was now munching grass a few yards
away. Somewhat cautiously they approached her. William addressed her
sternly.

“Now,” he said, “we know that you’re a magician an’ that you turned
people into frogs an’ bones an’ run pins into people so we turned you
into a donkey, but we’re goin’ to let you turn yourself back if you
_promise_ never to be a magician any more?”

Maria opened her mouth to its fullest extent and emitted a “hee-haw”
that took William’s breath away.

The Outlaws withdrew and held a hasty conclave.

“I think he meant to promise, William,” said Joan.

“Well, I don’t,” said William, “I don’t. I think he meant he wun’t
promise.”

“Well, let’s get him home, anyway,” said Douglas. “Someone’ll only be
comin’ along and findin’ out all about it if we leave him here.”

Again William approached Maria and fixed her with a stern eye.

“You can come home an’ turn yourself back now,” he said magnanimously,
“if you want to.”

For answer Maria turned her back on them, kicked her heels into the
air, then leapt skittishly away.

It would take too long to describe in detail the struggle by which the
Outlaws finally brought the recalcitrant Maria from the field into
Mr. Simpkins’ garden and from Mr. Simpkins’ garden through the French
window into Mr. Simpkins’ laboratory. Henry retired early from the
contest after a kick on the shin.

“_Now_ you know what he’s like,” said Ginger bitterly, still obsessed
by memories of his gastric trouble.

It was William who had the bright idea of running home for a bunch
of carrots and by means of this they led the frisky Maria into the
garden of Mr. Simpkins’ home. There Maria for a time ran amok. She
broke a pane of glass in the greenhouse, she pranced about the well
rolled lawn, leaving innumerable hoof holes to mark her progress. She
trampled down a bed of heliotrope. She completely demolished a bed of
roses. She bit William. She was finally brought through the French
window into the lab. at the cost of all the glass in the French window.
The housekeeper, as it happened, was lying down and was a very sound
sleeper. A small child belonging to the jobbing gardener, pressing
its nose through the front gate, was the amazed spectator of these
proceedings.

Inside the lab. Maria grew more frisky still. She broke and ground into
the carpet the test tubes that had formed Joan’s magic circle. She
wrecked the bench and everything upon it. She kicked over an entire
shelf of bottles.

“He’s mad,” said William, “he’s mad at bein’ a donkey an’ he doesn’t
know how to turn himself back.”

“Say somethin’ to him,” urged Ginger.

William said something to him.

“If you can’t turn yourself back,” said William, “you’ll have to stay
like you are. We can’t do anything more for you.”

In answer to this Maria kicked over a small cupboard and then put her
head through a large glass beaker.

“Let’s go,” said Ginger, “let’s go home. We’ve brought him back to his
own home. We can’t do anything more. And, anyway, it serves him right,
him and his dead bodies an’ sticking pins into people.”

The Outlaws were just going to take his advice and return home as
unostentatiously as possible, when they discovered that their line of
retreat was cut off. A small band of women headed by the Vicar’s wife
was coming up the drive towards the front door. Like five streaks of
lightning the Outlaws disappeared behind a screen which Maria amid the
general chaos had considerately left standing.

The small band of women headed by the Vicar’s wife were the members of
a local Anti-vivisection Society which had been formed in the village
by the Vicar’s wife a year ago. Up to now there had been little scope
in the village for their activities, though they had all much enjoyed
the monthly meetings at which they had had tea and cakes and discussed
the various village scandals. But now, as the Vicar’s wife said, was
the Time to Act. They had heard of Mr. Galileo Simpkins’ skeleton and
bottled frogs and they thought that the Local Anti-vivisection Society
should approach him and demand from him a guarantee that he would not
in his researches touch the hair of the head of any living animal. Also
they wanted an opportunity of inspecting the mysterious lab. of which
they had heard so much. Things in the village had been rather dull
lately and like the Outlaws they welcomed any fresh diversion....

[Illustration: “HE’S MAD AT BEIN’ A DONKEY,” SAID WILLIAM, “AN’ HE
DOESN’T KNOW HOW TO TURN HIMSELF BACK.”]

They were approaching the front door, meaning to ring and ask to
see Mr. Simpkins in the normal fashion of callers. But to reach the
front door they had to pass the window of the lab. and it proved far
too thrilling to be passed. The Outlaws, neatly hidden behind the
screen, were invisible. Maria stood in the middle of the room, her
head drooping in an utterly deceptive attitude of patient meekness.
All around was wreckage. The visitors stood and gazed at the scene
open-mouthed. Tacitly they abandoned their intention of knocking at the
front door and being admitted as callers. Led by the Vicar’s wife, they
entered by the French windows.

“A _donkey_!” said Mrs. Hopkins, Treasurer of the Anti-vivisection
Society (that is to say, she collected their sixpences and bought the
cakes for tea). “I thought they used monkeys or rabbits.”

“They use different animals for different experiments,” said the
Vicar’s wife with an air of deep knowledge. “I expect that a donkey is
the most suitable animal for some experiments.”

“How _terrible_!” said Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald, covering her face with
her hands. “How truly terrible.... Poor, patient, suffering, dumb
beast.”

Maria laid back her ears and rolled her wicked eyes at them.

Mrs. Hopkins and the Vicar’s wife began to wander about the room.

They stopped simultaneously before the row of bottled frogs.

“Poor creatures!” said Mrs. Hopkins unsteadily. “Poor, patient,
suffering creatures--once so beautiful and lovable and free.”

(It was only the week before that Mrs. Hopkins had screamed for help on
meeting a frog in her larder.)

Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald had by this time discovered the skeleton. She
adjusted her glasses and looked slowly and closely up and down it
several times. Then she pronounced in a sepulchral whisper: “Human
remains!”

The Outlaws held their breath in their retreat, but a resonant
“Hee-haw!” from Maria drew the members of the local Anti-vivisection
Society from any further exploring.

“The patient creature,” said the Vicar’s wife brokenly, “seems to be
asking our help.”

Maria assumed again her attitude of deceptive meekness.

“We certainly must _do_ something,” said Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald, “we
can’t leave our dear dumb friend to torture. Look at the signs of
struggle all around us. Look at its air of suffering. The foul work has
evidently already begun. Let’s--let’s take it away with us.”

“On the other hand,” said the Vicar’s wife slowly, “there are the laws
of private property to be considered. Mr. Simpkins doubtless purchased
this creature and the law will hold it to belong to him.”

“We can _buy_ it from him then,” said Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald brightly.
“That would be a noble work indeed. How much money have we in hand,
Mrs. Hopkins?”

“Only threepence-halfpenny,” said Mrs. Hopkins gloomily, “we’ve been
having iced cakes lately, you know. They’re more expensive.”

“They cost more than that,” said the Vicar’s wife, “donkeys, I mean.
But,” with a flash of inspiration, “we can get up a bazaar for it or a
concert for it.”

Their spirits rose at the prospect.

“Yes,” said Mrs. Hopkins. “Why, it’s nearly a month since we had a
bazaar. And _such_ a good cause. Rescuing the poor dumb suffering
creature from the hands of the torturer.... How sad it looks and yet
grateful as though it understood all that we were going to do for it.”

Maria rolled her eyes again and drooped her head still further.

“I’m going to take it _straight_ home,” said the Vicar’s wife, “and
give it a good meal and nurse it back to health and strength. I’ll go
to the police station and tell them that I have taken it and why. I’ll
just fix up something to lead it home by.”

She took down a picture and divested it of its picture cord, which she
then tied round the neck of the still meekly unprotesting Maria. The
others gazed at her in silent admiration. There was really no one like
the Vicar’s wife in a crisis.

Then, with the air of a general who has now marshalled her forces,
she led out Maria, followed by her faithful band. The Outlaws, weakly
wondering what was going to happen, crept out of their hiding place and
followed at a distance.

“They don’t know it’s _him_,” said Joan in a thrilled whisper.

Maria behaved quite well till they got to the hill. Then her familiar
devil returned to her. She did not kick or bite. She ran. She ran at
top speed up the steep hill, dragging the panting, gasping Vicar’s
wife after her at the end of the cord. Maria’s neck seemed to be made
of iron. The weight of the Vicar’s wife did not seem to trouble it at
all. The picture cord, too, must have been pretty strong. The Vicar’s
wife did not let go. With dogged British determination she clung to her
end of the cord. She lost her footing, her hat came off, she gasped
and panted and gurgled and choked and sputtered. She dropped her bag.
But she did not let go her end of the picture cord. Behind her--far
behind her--ran her little crowd of followers, clucking in dismayed
horror. Mrs. Hopkins picked up the Vicar’s wife’s hat and Mrs. Gerald
Fitzgerald her bag.

At the top of the hill Maria stopped abruptly and reassumed her air
of weary patience. The Vicar’s wife sat down in the dust by her side,
gasping but still undaunted, holding on to the end of the cord. The
others arrived and the Vicar’s wife, still sitting in the road, put on
her hat and wiped the dust out of her eyes.

“What happened?” panted Mrs. Hopkins. “Did it--bolt or something?”

But the Vicar’s wife was past speech.

“Poor creature!” said Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald in an effort to restore
the atmosphere, “poor dumb creature.”

She put out her hand to stroke Maria and Maria very neatly bit her
elbow.

The Vicar’s wife arose from the dust and wearily but determinedly
led Maria through the gate on to the Vicarage lawn. The Outlaws came
cautiously up the hill and watched proceedings through the Vicarage
gate.

The members of the local Anti-vivisection Society stood round Maria and
gazed at her. A close observer might have noticed that their glances
held less affection and pity than they had held a short time before.

“It doesn’t seem at all--er--_cowed_,” said Mrs. Hopkins at last. “It
seems quite--er as--_fresh_.... And it hasn’t any _wounds_ or anything.”

“Sometimes,” said Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald, “they just use them for
diseases. They just inject disease germs into them.”

“Do you mean,” said Mrs. Hopkins, turning pale, “that it may be
infected with a deadly disease?”

“_Quite_ possibly,” said Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald.

They looked at the Vicar’s wife for advice and help. And again the
Vicar’s wife showed her capacities for dealing with a crisis. Though
still dusty and shaken from her inglorious career up the hill at
Maria’s heels she took command of affairs once more.

“One minute,” she said, and disappeared into the house.

The members of the Anti-vivisection Society stood timorously in the
porch, eyes fixed apprehensively upon Maria who stood motionless in the
middle of the lawn looking as if butter would not melt in her mouth.

And the Outlaws still watched proceedings with interest through the
Vicarage gate.

Then the Vicar’s wife came out staggering beneath the weight of a large
pail.

“Disinfectant,” she explained shortly to her audience.

She approached Maria who was still standing in maiden meditation
fancy free on the lawn, and with a sudden swift movement threw over
her the entire pail of carbolic solution, soaking her from head to
foot. Then Maria went mad. She leapt, she kicked, she reared. Dripping
with carbolic she dashed round the lawn. She trampled over the flower
beds. She broke two dozen flower pots and destroyed their contents.
She kicked the greenhouse door in. She put her back hoof through the
Vicar’s study window. She tried to climb an apple tree. She wrecked the
summer-house....

The members of the local Anti-vivisection Society withdrew into the
Vicarage and bolted all the doors. Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald, after
explaining that she wasn’t used to this sort of thing, went into
hysterics that rivalled Maria’s outburst in intensity.

And still the Outlaws watched spellbound through the gate.

It was the Outlaws who first saw Mr. Simpkins’ housekeeper coming up
the hill. She entered the Vicarage gate without looking at them. To
her they were merely four inoffensive small boys and one inoffensive
small girl looking through a gate. She little knew that they held the
key to a situation that was becoming more complicated every minute.
Mr. Simpkins’ housekeeper looked upset. She rang at the Vicarage
front door and demanded to see the Vicar. The Vicar was out, but the
Vicar’s wife, looking very pale and keeping well within the doorway and
casting apprehensive glances round the garden, where Maria, temporarily
breathless and exhausted, was standing motionless--the picture of mute
patience--on the lawn, interviewed her. From within the house came
the unmelodious strains of Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald’s hysterics. Mr.
Simpkins’ housekeeper said that Mr. Simpkins had vanished. He was
nowhere to be found. The book he had been reading had been discovered
in the field near the garden and his lab. was in such a state as to
suggest a violent struggle, and Mr. Simpkins’ housekeeper suspected
foul play of which Mr. Simpkins was the victim.

The Vicar’s wife, who was a woman of one idea, only pointed sternly to
Maria and said:

“What do you know about _that_, my good woman?”

Her good woman looked, saw a mournful-looking and very wet donkey and
shook her head.

“Nothing ’m,” she said primly. “But what I want to know is, where is
Mr. Simpkins? I thought the Vicar might advise me what to do, but as
he’s not in, ’m, p’raps I’d better go to the police straight.”

The Outlaws, who felt that with the advent of Mr. Simpkins’ housekeeper
the plot was thickening, and who were consumed with curiosity as to why
Mr. Simpkins’ housekeeper had followed the metamorphosed Mr. Simpkins,
crept up to the Vicarage door and listened. The mention of “police”
made them rather uncomfortable. The Vicar’s wife saw them and frowned.

The Vicar’s wife was a good Christian woman, but she could never learn
to like the Outlaws.

“Go away, little boys,” she said tartly, “how dare you come up to the
door listening to conversation that is not meant for you? Go away at
once. Or, wait one minute.... Have any of you seen Mr. Simpkins this
afternoon?”

It was Joan who answered. She pointed across the lawn to Maria who was
now placidly nibbling the Vicar’s hedge and said:

“That’s Mr. Simpkins.”

       *       *       *       *       *

There was a moment’s tense silence. Then the Vicar’s wife said sternly:

“Do you imagine that to be funny, you impertinent little girl?”

“No,” said Joan.

[Illustration: “PERHAPS,” SAID THE VICAR’S WIFE, “YOU ARE
SHORT-SIGHTED, LITTLE GIRL. THAT IS A DONKEY.”

“IT’S MR. SIMPKINS, REALLY,” SAID JOAN EARNESTLY.]

There was an innocence in Joan’s face that convinced even the Vicar’s
wife.

“Perhaps,” she said more kindly, “you are short-sighted, little girl.
That,” pointing to Maria, “is a donkey.”

“It’s Mr. Simpkins really,” said Joan earnestly, “we turned him into a
donkey and we can’t turn him back.”

The Vicar’s wife gasped, Mr. Simpkins’ housekeeper gasped, the other
members of the Anti-vivisection Society came out to see what it was
all about and all gasped. Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald for the time being
abandoned her hysterics to gasp with them.

“_What?_” said the Vicar’s wife.

“_What?_” said all the rest of them.

“It’s true,” affirmed William, “we’ve turned him into a donkey and we
can’t turn him back again.”

At that moment there was a sound of great commotion outside and in at
the gate rushed Mr. Simpkins, followed by Farmer Jenks.

       *       *       *       *       *

Farmer Jenks was not pursuing Mr. Simpkins. Farmer Jenks and Mr.
Simpkins were coming on independent missions. Farmer Jenks had come
to his field for Maria and found Maria gone. The jobbing gardener’s
youngest child had told him that four boys and a girl had taken the
donkey out of the field. It took only few words to make Farmer Jenks
recognise his old enemies, the Outlaws, as the invaders of his domain
and thieves of his donkey, and Farmer Jenks saw red. He had traced the
donkey to the Vicarage garden. He didn’t know how it had got there, but
he knew how it had got out of his field, and he was out for his donkey
and vengeance on the Outlaws....

Mr. Simpkins had reached town, to be met at the station by a telegram
telling him that his great-aunt was better, so with feelings of deep
disgust with life in general and great-aunts in particular, he had
returned to his rural retreat--to find his housekeeper vanished and his
laboratory wrecked. Again the jobbing gardener’s youngest child had
brightly come forward with all the information it could produce. It
had seen four boys and a girl turn a donkey into his lab. through the
window and then let the donkey break things. Then more people had come
and then they’d all gone up to the Vicarage. So Mr. Galileo Simpkins
had gone up to the Vicarage in search of more light on the situation,
and in search of the Outlaws.

       *       *       *       *       *

He and Farmer Jenks caught sight of the Outlaws simultaneously
and neither could resist the temptation to make the most of the
opportunity. Both flung themselves upon the Outlaws. The Outlaws fled
round the lawn, pursued by Farmer Jenks and Mr. Galileo Simpkins.
Mrs. Gerald Fitzgerald went back to the drawing-room to have a few
more hysterics, the Vicar’s wife dashed into the hall for the fire
extinguisher and Maria watched proceedings with interest as she
meditatively chewed the Vicar’s hedge.

Farmer Jenks caught hold of William, lost his balance and fell with him
to the ground. Mr. Galileo Simpkins fell over Farmer Jenks and caught
hold of Maria’s tail as he fell. Maria, annoyed at this familiarity,
went mad again. The Vicar’s wife, with vague ideas of pouring oil
on troubled waters, turned the fire extinguisher on to them all.
Mrs. Hopkins ran into the road shouting “Murder” and Mr. Simpkins’
housekeeper went to fetch the police.

       *       *       *       *       *

“I’ve got to draw the line somewhere,” said William’s father to
William’s mother the next evening. “I suppose I’ve got to pay my share
for all the damage the quadruped did in the laboratory, but I don’t see
that I need re-stock the vicar’s garden. As far as I can make out his
own wife took the creature there. Well, I’ve taken everything I can
think of from William and done everything I can think of to him--it’s
against the law to drown him or I’d do that and be done with it----”

“Poor William,” murmured his wife, “he _means_ well--and such a lot of
people say he’s like you.”

“He _isn’t_,” said his father indignantly, “I’m more or less sane, and
he’s a raving lunatic. He can’t possibly be like me. Do I go about
turning donkeys into labs. and for no reason at all? Do I--Nonsense!”

“Never mind, dear. He goes to school to-morrow,” said his wife
soothingly.

“Thank heaven!” said Mr. Brown quite reverently.

       *       *       *       *       *

Outside in the summer-house sat the Outlaws.

“It’s simply no _use_ explainin’ to them,” William was saying. “They
sort of won’t listen to you. They go on as if we’d _meant_ to break all
of his ole glass things. Well, how were we to _know_ his aunt was ill?
I said that to them but they wun’t take any notice. ’S almost funny,”
he ended bitterly, “the way they blame us for _everything_--took my bow
an’ arrow an’ airgun an’ money an’ _everythin’_ off me just as if we
hadn’t been tryin’ to do _good_ all the time. An’ no one does anythin’
to that old _donkey_. Oh, no! It was all its fault but no one does
anything to it. Oh, no.”

“An’ we go to school to-morrow,” added Ginger, gloomily.

“Never mind,” said William with rising spirits, “we’ve done all the
sorts of things you can do in holidays an’--an’ after all, there’s
quite a lot of excitin’ things you can do in school.”




CHAPTER III

GEORGIE AND THE OUTLAWS


It seemed to the Outlaws that before George Murdoch came to live at
the Laurels they had led comparatively peaceful lives. They had not
at any rate been subjected to relentless and unceasing persecution as
they were now. It was not Georgie who persecuted them. It was their
own parents. But I will explain the connection between the advent of
Georgie Murdoch and the persecution of the Outlaws. Before Georgie came
to the Laurels the Outlaws’ parents had realised that the Outlaws were
characterised chiefly by roughness, untidiness, unpunctuality, lack of
cleanliness and various kindred vices. They mentioned these faults to
their possessors in a manner expressive of a resigned disgust several
times a day. But they always said to each other, “Well, boys will be
boys,” or, “They’re all as bad as each other,” or, “I’ve never known a
boy who wasn’t like that.” They were in fact consoled by the reflection
that the Perfect Boy did not exist.

And then George Murdoch came to live at the Laurels and Georgie Murdoch
was the Perfect Boy.

The effect upon the Outlaws’ parents was dynamic.

No longer did they view their offspring with resigned disgust and
tell themselves and each other that boys would be boys, for was not
Georgie Murdoch a walking refutation of the theory. Georgie Murdoch’s
whole existence proved conclusively that boys needn’t be boys. So with
renewed vigour and a perseverance that was worthy of a better cause
the Outlaws’ parents set to work to uproot those vices of roughness,
untidiness, unpunctuality and lack of cleanliness that hitherto they
had treated, not indeed with encouragement, but with a certain
resignation. Day after day the Outlaws heard the never-ceasing refrain,
“George Murdoch doesn’t behave like that,” “You never see Georgie
Murdoch looking like that,” “Nonsense, Georgie Murdoch can make his
hair stay tidy and his face stay clean, so why can’t you?” or, “watch
the way Georgie Murdoch eats.”...

But the time was come to describe George Murdoch in more detail.
Georgie Murdoch was ten years of age. He was neat and tidy and
methodical and clean and only spoke when he was spoken to and always
did what he was told. He hated messy things like mud and water and clay
and sand and he disliked rough games. He had very beautiful manners and
was much in request at afternoon teas. He never forgot to say, “How
do you do?” and “Yes, please,” and “No, thank you,” and “how _very_
kind of you,” and he never had been known to drop a cup or knock over
a cake stand. In summer he always dressed in white and could make one
suit do for three days. That gives you a pretty good idea of Georgie
Murdoch’s personal habits. It is hardly necessary to add that he loved
his lessons and thought that the holidays were far too long.

When first the Murdochs came to live in the village, the Outlaws were
prepared to receive Georgie with friendliness. His fame as the World’s
Most Perfect Boy had not preceded him. All they knew was that he was
about their own age and of their sex and they were ready to make the
best of him.

Mrs. Brown met him first when she went to call on his mother.

“He’s _such_ a nice little boy, William,” was her verdict on her
return, “I’ve asked him to come to tea to-morrow because I’d like
you to make friends with him. He’s just about your age, and _so_
well-mannered.”

This description was not encouraging, and whatever enthusiasm William
may previously have felt for the new-comer waned.

“Can I have some of the others to tea as well, mother?” he asked
with an air of engaging innocence. But unfortunately William’s mother
remembered the last occasion when “the others” had been asked to help
William entertain a little stranger. William and “the others,” after
a short test of the little stranger’s capacities which the little
stranger had failed to pass with credit, had gone off for the afternoon
on their own devices, leaving the little stranger to his. After
wandering round the garden once and finding in it few possibilities
of amusement the little stranger had returned home--just half an
hour after he had left it. Mrs. Brown wasn’t going to have any more
_contretemps_ like that. So she said very firmly, “_No_, William.”

“All right,” acquiesced William with an air of weary patience, “I was
only thinkin’ of _him_. I was only thinkin’ that p’raps he’d sort of
enjoy it better if there was more of us to play with.”

But Mrs. Brown again said, “_No_, William,” meaningly, and William,
who had a suspicion that she remembered their entertaining of the
last little stranger, forebore to press the point. So William was the
solitary host when George arrived. The prospect of being the solitary
host had depressed him all morning, and the sight of Georgie’s trim
little figure in its spotless white sailor suit threw him into a state
of despair that was almost homicidal in its intensity. He’d had a
horrible suspicion all along that Georgie would be like that. And a
whole afternoon with him ... a _whole_ afternoon!

Mrs. Brown, however, gave Georgie a kindly smile of welcome as she
received him.

“How _nice_ to see you, dear,” she said, “I’m so glad you could come.
This is my little boy, William. He’s been _so_ much looking forward to
your visit. I hope you’re going to be great friends. How nice you look,
dear. I wish William could only keep as clean and tidy as that. He gets
so untidy.”

Georgie moved so as to get a better view of William. He looked him up
and down and finally said:

“Yes, he _does_ look untidy, doesn’t he?” To which momentous
announcement he added complacently, “I hardly ever seem to get untidy.”

“Well,” said Mrs. Brown, temporarily taken aback “will you play with
William till tea time, dear?... nothing _rough_, mind, William.”

“No,” agreed Georgie, “I don’t like rough games.”

William, who by this time hated Georgie with a hatred which was the
more bitter because Georgie was robbing him of a whole afternoon which
might have been spent with his beloved Outlaws, led Georgie into the
garden. They walked down to the bottom of the garden. Then William said
distantly:

“What would you like to play at?”

“Don’t mind,” said Georgie.

“Hide an’ Seek?” said William.

This puerile suggestion was intended as a subtle insult, but Georgie
took it seriously. He considered it in silence and at last said, “No,
thank you. Hide and Seek generally ends in getting so rough.”

For a moment William had not believed his ears, but Georgie added
calmly:

“It generally ends by being a _very_ nasty rough game.”

William swallowed and gazed at him helplessly. Then he suggested, more
out of curiosity than from any other reason:

“Like to play Red Indians?”

“Red Indians?” queried that astounding child as if he had not heard of
the game before.

“Yes,” said William, almost speechless with amazement. “Scoutin’ each
other through the bushes an’ makin’ a fire, an’----”

But an expression of horror had overspread Georgie’s smug countenance.

“Oh, _no_,” he said firmly, “I don’t want to get my suit dirty.”

William recovered with an effort.

“Well,” he said at last, “what _would_ you like to do?”

“Let’s go for a nice quiet walk, shall we?” said Georgie brightly.

So they went for a nice quiet walk--straight along the road to the
village. William at first made an effort to fulfil his duties as host
by pointing out the objects of interest of the neighbourhood.

“There’s a robin’s nest in that hedge,” he said.

“I know,” said Georgie.

“That’s Bunker’s Hill over there.”

“I know,” said Georgie.

“That was a Clouded Yellow,” as a butterfly flitted past.

“I know.”

“They’ve got sort of scent bags on their wings.”

“I know.”

“What sort of a bird is that flying over there?” challenged William.

“Well, what sort is it?”

“A starling.”

“I knew it was.”

William then tired of the conversation and began to while away the
tedium of the journey as best he could by more active measures.
Georgie, however, refused to take part in them. Georgie refused to
jump over the ditch with William because he said he might fall in.
He refused to walk on the fence with William because he said that he
might fall off. He refused to swing on the gate with William because
he said it might dirty his suit. He refused to climb a tree for the
same reason. He refused to race William to the end of the road because,
he said, it was rough. William was only deterred by his position as
host and by Georgie’s protective one year’s minority from forcibly
making Georgie acquainted with the contents of the ditch as the inner
prompting of his heart bade him to. Instead he leapt to and fro across
the ditch (falling in only twice), swung on the gate, walked on the
fence (over-balancing once) and trailed his toes in the dust in
solitary glory, ignoring his companion entirely.

“What _will_ your mother say?” said his companion once disapprovingly.

William received the remark with scornful silence.

When they returned to the Brown homestead Georgie was as immaculate as
when he had set out, while William bore many and visible marks of his
fallings into the ditch and on to the road and swinging on gates and
climbing trees.

“_William!_” said Mrs. Brown, “you look _awful_ ... and look at
Georgie--how clean and neat he is still.”

“Yes,” said Georgie looking at William with marked distaste, “I _told_
him not to. I _said_ you wouldn’t like it, but he wouldn’t take any
notice of me.”

       *       *       *       *       *

The next day William met the Outlaws by appointment and gloomily told
them the worst.

“And he’s come to _live_ here,” he ended with passionate disgust, “him
and his white suits.”

“And we shall _all_ have to have him to tea,” said Ginger.

“And our mothers’ll _never_ stop talkin’ about him,” said Douglas.

“And he’ll prob’ly get worse the more we know him,” said Henry.

“Him an’ his white suits!” repeated William morosely.

All these fears proved to be well founded.

As Ginger had predicted, they all had to have him to tea, and on each
occasion Georgie remained clean and tidy and immaculate in his white
suit and said at the end to his host’s mother, “Yes, I told him not to.
I _said_ you wouldn’t like it.” And when the guest had departed the
host’s mother said to the host:

“How I _wish_ that you were a little more like Georgie Murdoch.”

Henry’s prediction was also fulfilled. For Georgie did get worse the
more they knew him. In addition to the vices of personal cleanliness
and exquisite manners he possessed that of tale-bearing. He was a
frequent visitor at the Outlaws’ houses. He would gaze at William’s
mother with a wistful smile and say, “Please, Mrs. Brown, I’m so sorry
to disturb you but I think I ought to tell you that William is paddling
in the stream after you told him not to,” or, “Please, Mrs. Flowerdew,
I’m so sorry to disturb you, but Ginger ’n’ Henry’s throwing mud at
each other down the road an’ getting in _such_ a mess. I thought you
ought to know.”

And the Outlaws couldn’t get their own back. Georgie would never fight
because it might dirty his suit, and any personal attacks upon Georgie
(however mild) were faithfully reported by the attacked in person to
the parent of the attacker.

“Please, Mrs. Brown, William’s just pushed me over and hurt me.”
“Please, Mrs. Flowerdew, Ginger’s just banged into me and made quite
a bruise on my arm.” Moreover the Outlaws seemed to have a strong
fascination for Georgie. He followed them around, watching their
pursuits from a safe and cleanly distance, generally eating chocolate
creams which he never offered to the Outlaws, and which never seemed
to leave any traces on his face. Whenever any elders were in hearing
Georgie would raise his voice and say in a tone of horror, “Oh, you
_naughty_ boy! What _will_ your mother say?” and having attracted the
elder’s attention and interference he would say sorrowfully, “I told
him not to. I _knew_ you wouldn’t like it.”

Yet such was the power of his white suit, his clean face, his sweet
smile, his beautiful manners that Georgie was always referred to by the
grown-ups of the neighbourhood as “_Such_ a dear little boy.”

The Outlaws bore it as long as they could, and then they held a meeting
to decide what could be done about it. It was not on the whole a
very successful meeting. William kept muttering, “We’ve gotter _do_
something ... him and his white suits.”

But not one of the Outlaws, usually so prolific in ideas of every sort,
could think of any sort of plan to meet the case.

“S’no good doin’ anythin’ to _him_,” said Ginger bitterly, “’f you
just _touch_ him he goes an’ tells your mother.”

“Oh, you naughty boys!” mimicked Henry shrilly. “What will your mothers
say? I told him not to, I said you wouldn’t like it.”

As an imitation it was rather good, but the Outlaws were not in a mood
to be entertained by imitations of Georgie.

“Oh, shut up!” said William. “S’ bad enough hearin’ _him_ sayin’ it.”

“Well, let’s think of something to _do_,” said Ginger again.

“I wish you wun’t keep sayin’ that,” said William irritably.

“Well I’ll stop when you’ve _thought_ of something,” said Ginger.

“Think of somethin’ yourself,” snapped William.

As you will gather from this conversation the perfect little gentleman
was having a wearing effect upon the Outlaws’ nerves. Henry, with a
sudden gleam of inspiration, suggested haunting the Murdoch homestead
by night, robed in a sheet, till the Murdochs should depart in terror
to some other part of England, taking the perfect little gentleman with
them, but it was decided, after a brief and acrimonious discussion,
that this was not feasible. It was more likely that the Murdochs would
investigate the alleged ghost and discover the concealed Outlaw, and
also it might prove difficult to gain egress from the parental home and
ingress into the Murdoch home at the rather awkward hours suitable for
“haunting.”

The only other suggestion came from Douglas who had got full marks for
Scripture the week before.

“I think Joseph must have been a bit like Georgie,” he said. “I--I
s’pose we couldn’t take him right away somewhere and leave him in a pit
same as what they did, an’ take his coat home an’ say a wild animal ate
him?”

The Outlaws considered this alluring suggestion, but feared that it
would be impracticable.

“There aren’t any pits or wild animals like that in England in these
days,” said William mournfully.

The Outlaws sighed, thinking--not for the first time--that the vaunted
benefits of civilisation were more than nullified by its hampering
elements.

“Well, we aren’t any nearer _doin’_ anythin’,” said Ginger.

“There dun’t seem anythin’ to do,” said William, whose gloom had been
deepened by the thought of the simplicity of Joseph’s brethren’s
problem compared with theirs.

“An’ he’s gettin’ worse an’ _worse_,” groaned Douglas.

“They’re havin’ a garden party next week,” contributed Henry, “an’
we’ll all have to go.”

“An’ watch him in his white suit,” put in William bitterly.

“Handin’ cakes an’ telling tales,” put in Ginger to complete the
picture.

“What do they want goin’ havin’ _garden_ parties for?” said William
fiercely.

Henry, who was rather “up” in the Murdoch news owing to the fact that
Mrs. Murdoch had been to tea with his mother the day before, answered
him.

“Well, they’ve got a sort of cousin what’s famous comin’ to stay with
them an’ they want to sort of show him off,” he said, translating
freely from the conversation he had overheard the day before, “so
they’re goin’ to ask everyone to meet him at a garden party.”

“How’d he get famous?” said William with mournful interest.

“Writin’ plays,” said Henry.

William groaned.

“He’ll be worse than ever,” he said, referring not to the writer of
plays but to the perfect little gentleman.

The meeting broke up without having arrived at any satisfactory plan,
though Henry still cherished the haunting idea and Douglas still
considered that something might be done in the pit and wild beast line.

The next day the famous cousin arrived at the Murdoch’s and was proudly
paraded through the village by Georgie resplendent in a new white
suit and a smile that was more smug and complacent than ever. Close
observers might have noticed that the famous cousin looked bored.

The next few days, however, were--outside their homes--days of respite
for the Outlaws. For Georgie was too busy with the famous cousin to be
able to spare any time for the Outlaws, and the Outlaws could wallow in
the mud, climb trees, and turn somersaults in the road to their heart’s
content without hearing the shrill little refrain, “Oh, you _naughty_
boys! what _will_ your mothers say ... I _told_ them not to do it ... I
_said_ you wouldn’t like it.”

I said “outside their homes.” For inside their homes things were if
possible worse. For the interest of the whole village was, thanks to
the visit of the famous cousin, now concentrated upon the Murdochs.

“I met little Georgie Murdoch out with his cousin to-day. He introduced
me _so_ nicely. I only wish that I thought _you’d_ ever be half so
polite,” or, “I met little Georgie Murdoch in the village this morning.
He’d gone to post a letter for his cousin. He looked _so_ nice and
clean. How I wish _you_ could keep like that.”

As the days of the garden party approached the gloom of the Outlaws
deepened.

But they knew that no excuses would avail them. They would have to go
there and watch Georgie being “more sick’nin’ than ever,” as Henry put
it, parading his famous cousin, showing off his beautiful manners and
basking in the admiration of all the guests.... And after that he’d be
more unbearable even than he had been before.

Fate seemed to be on the side of the Murdochs. The day of the garden
party was warm and sunny and cloudless so that the garden party
(contrary to its English custom) really could be a garden party and
little Georgie could wear one of his white suits.

William set off to the festivity with his mother, engulfed in gloom
and his Sunday suit and looking more as if bound for a funeral than a
garden party.

They found a large crowd already assembled and in the middle of it was
Georgie wearing his newest and whitest suit and smiling his smuggest
smile, and with his golden curls glinting in the sunshine....

“Isn’t he a dear little boy?” heard William on all sides, and “He’s
_such_ a little gentleman,” and then from his mother the inevitable, “I
wish _you_ could behave like that, William.”

William looked about him and soon picked out Ginger and Henry
and Douglas all in similar plight. Their mothers too were gazing
rapturously at Georgie and telling their sons how they wished that they
could ever behave like that or ever look like that or ever speak like
that or ever keep as clean and tidy as that. And the Outlaws (who were
quite used to it by this time) bore it in scornful silence.

Then William noticed the famous cousin. He was standing in the
background watching Georgie, not with the radiant pleasure with which
the mothers watched him, but with an expression more akin to that with
which the Outlaws watched him. This caused William a passing interest
which however he soon forgot in his deep passionate loathing of the
perfect little gentleman.

Gradually the Outlaws eluded the maternal escorts and foregathered on
the outskirts of the throng.

“Let’s get out of this,” said Ginger gloomily.

They wandered down a small path that led off from the lawn and finally
reached the rather muddy pond which the Murdochs dignified by the name
of “lake.” The Outlaws gazed at it gloomily. In ordinary circumstances
it would have suggested a dozen enthralling games, but the Outlaws,
encased in Sunday suits, and more or less clean and tidy, felt that
any straying from the paths of strict decorum upon this occasion would
be simply playing into the hands of the enemy. They wandered morosely
into a small summer-house that stood near the banks of the pond, and
there they held a further consultation. Feeling against William was
running high. What after all was the use of a leader who could not cope
with an emergency like this...?

“’Straordinary,” said Ginger aloofly, “’Straordinary that you can’t
think of anythin’ to _do_.”

William glared at Ginger. He couldn’t for the moment even fight old
Ginger, which would have been something of a relief to his feelings. So
he merely retorted coldly, “’Straordinary you can’t think of anythin’
to do yourself.”

And Henry said gloomily, “And he gets sickniner an’ sickniner.”

“He certainly does,” said a strange voice.

The Outlaws looked up to see the famous cousin lolling negligently
against the side of the doorway of the summer-house.

“You are referring, I presume,” he said, “to our little host, Georgie
the Terrible.”

“Yes, we are,” said William belligerently, “an’----an’ I don’t care if
you _tellem_.”

“Oh, I shan’t tell them,” said the famous cousin carelessly. “I’ve
thought far worse things about Georgie than you could ever put into
words.”

“Uh?” said William, surprised.

“You only see him occasionally. For this week I’ve seen him every day.”

“Uh?” said William again.

“I’ve suffered,” went on the famous cousin, “more deeply than you
can ever have suffered. Georgie is, as it were, branded into my very
soul. I have often wondered why--My hands, of course, are tied. I
am the guest of Georgie’s parents. Battery and assault upon Georgie
would therefore ill become me. But _you_----” he looked at them
scornfully--“that one--two--three--four boys your size can continue to
allow Georgie to exist as he is passes my comprehension.”

“’S’all very well talkin’ like that,” said William indignantly, “but
he’s such a little _sneak_! We can’t do anythin’ to him that he doesn’t
go an’ tell our mothers an’ then we get into trouble an’ he gets more
sickenin’ than ever.”

“Sickniner an’ _sickniner_,” murmured Henry again dejectedly.

“I see,” said the stranger judicially, “I fully appreciate the
difficulty.... Er--may I join the conference?”

He entered the summer-house and sat down next William.

“Have you,” he said, “discussed any plan of action?”

“Lots,” said William. “Douglas wanted to put him in a pit an’ say wild
beasts had eaten him.”

“Same as they did Joseph in the Bible,” explained Douglas.

“Ingenious,” commented the stranger, “but impracticable.... Now we want
to approach the matter in a scientific frame of mind. Before fixing on
a plan of action you should always study the enemy’s weaknesses. Has
the egregious Georgie any weaknesses?”

“_Has_ he?” said William bitterly, “he tells tales an’ won’t play games
an’----”

The famous cousin raised his hand.

“Pardon me,” he said, “those are vices, not weaknesses. In my sojourn
with Georgie I have noticed two weaknesses. He will never own to
ignorance even on the most abstruse subjects, and he is passionately
fond of chocolate creams. Did you know that?”

“Y--yes. S’pose so,” said William, “but I don’t see how it will help.”

“Ah ... you must somehow _make_ it help. A good general always utilises
his enemy’s weak points.... I can’t of course suggest or connive at
any plan of action, but I’ll help you. I’ll tell you what I’ll do.
I’ll offer a two pound box of chocolate creams as a prize for some
competition. That brings in one weakness. I leave it to your ingenuity
to make good use of the other. Georgie would, I believe, do anything
for chocolate creams--I wish you good luck. Good day.”

The famous cousin disappeared leaving the Outlaws gaping and mystified.
But his visit had heartened them. The knowledge that one grown up at
least saw Georgie the Perfect Little Gentleman as he really was gave
them a fresh confidence in the righteousness of their cause. Their
despondency dropped from them.

“Let’s go back to the others,” said William briskly, “an’ see what he’s
goin’ to say about the chocolate creams.”

They emerged on the lawn and made their way to the group around Mrs.
Murdoch. Beside Mrs. Murdoch stood Georgie still immaculately clean and
smugly smiling, with curls that glinted in the sun.

“Isn’t it _too_ kind of my cousin,” Mrs. Murdoch was saying. “Yes,
he loves children. He’s _passionately_ attached to Georgie. He wants
the children to do a little _scene_--he’s passionately interested in
literature, of course, being one himself--a little scene from English
history--any part of English history--my cousin’s _passionately_ fond
of English history--and he’s offered a two pound box of chocolate
creams as a prize to the child who acts the best.... Collect your
little friends, Georgie, darling.” Georgie’s eyes were still gleaming
from the mention of chocolate creams, “and you might go down to the
summer-house to talk things over and then come back and act your little
scene to us here.”

Georgie, the Outlaws and a few odds and ends of children who do not
really come into the story, drifted down to the summer-house. The
Outlaws looked at Georgie. Georgie’s eyes still gleamed. Then they
looked at William, and with a great relief at their hearts they read in
William’s sphinx-like face that at last he was justifying his position
as leader. He had a plan.

[Illustration: THE OUTLAWS EMERGED ON THE LAWN AND MADE THEIR WAY
DISGUSTEDLY TOWARDS THE GROUP AROUND MRS. MURDOCH.]

[Illustration: “MY COUSIN’S OFFERED A BOX OF CHOCOLATE CREAMS AS A
PRIZE TO THE ONE WHO ACTS BEST,” MRS. MURDOCH WAS SAYING. GEORGIE’S
EYES GLEAMED.]

First of all William kindly but firmly gathered together the odds and
ends and despatched them to the kitchen garden.

“There’s too many of us for one scene,” he explained, “so we’ll do one
scene and you do another scene. An’ we’d better get right away from
each other so’s not to disturb each other ... so you just go’n make
up your scene in the kitchen garden where nobody’ll disturb you an’
we’ll stay an’ make up ours here. Georgie’ll show you the way to the
kitchen garden.”

And while Georgie was showing them the way to the kitchen garden
William unfolded his plan to the Outlaws. The odds and ends had fully
intended to discuss the scenes from English history in the kitchen
garden, but they discovered a bed of ripe strawberries, and considering
a strawberry in the hand worth two scenes from English history in the
bush, decided to leave the Past to its peaceful sleep and concentrate
wholly upon the Present.... So they don’t come into the story any more.

Georgie returned to the Outlaws in the summer-house. Upon his face was
a resolute determination to win that box of chocolate creams at all
costs.

“What’ll we act?” he said eagerly.

“Well,” said William thoughtfully, “he was down here talkin’ to us
a few minutes ago an’ he said that his favourite period in English
history was King John.”

“We’ll do King John then,” said Georgie firmly.

“He said that his favourite part of King John was where he came back
from losing his things in the Wash.”

“We’ll do that then,” said Georgie hastily.

“Who’ll be King John?” said William.

“_I’ll_ be King John,” said Georgie.

“All right,” said William with unexpected amenity, “an’ shall Ginger
an’ me be your two heralds an’ Douglas and Henry your servants or
somethin’?”

“Yes,” said Georgie, and added, “You needn’t _do_ anythin’ but jus’
stand there--any of you. I’ll do the actin’.”

“All right,” agreed William, still with disarming humility. “You know
all about the story, don’t you?”

“Yes, of course I do.”

“About how King John went into the Wash tryin’ to find his things----”

“Yes, I know all that.”

“An’ the Wash was a kind of a bog----”

“Yes, I know.”

“An’ he came out all muddy but couldn’t find his things ’cause they’d
sunk in the mud.”

“Yes, I know.”

“An’ he came to his two servants called Dam an’ Blarst----”

“Called----?”

“_Fancy_ you not knowin’ about King John’s servants bein’ called Dam
an’ Blarst!”

“I _did_ know,” said Georgie, “I’ve known it for _ever_ so long....
What did you say they were called?”

“Dam and Blarst.”

“Dam and Blarst. Of _course_ I knew.”

“Well, let’s get you ready for bein’ King John.... S’no good goin’ on
as King John lookin’ like that when you’re s’posed to’ve just come out
of a bog looking for your things ... no one’d give anyone a prize for
_that_.”

“I’m not going to get myself all muddy, so there!”

“All right,” said William, “_I_’ll be King John. I don’t care.”

“No, I’m going to be King John,” persisted Georgie.

“Well, you can’t be King John,” said William firmly, “if you don’t get
yourself a bit muddy like what he was when he come back from losin’ his
things in the Wash. It’ll easy come off afterwards. Jus’ take off your
shoes an’ stockings an’ paddle about a bit at the edge of the pond. You
needn’t mess up anythin’ but jus’ your feet.”

There was a silence in which Georgie’s love of chocolate creams fought
with his instincts of cleanliness and put them to flight.

“All right,” he said, “I don’t mind muddying my feet just a _bit_.”

He took off his shoes and stockings. William and Ginger took off theirs
too.

“Just to help you Georgie,” they said, “and to stop you fallin’ in or
anythin’.”

They held him firmly on either side, and walked him down to the pond.
“Jus’ because we wun’t like you to fall an’ mess up your suit,” said
William.

“Be careful, Georgie,” said Ginger, “don’ go too far.”

“Be careful, Georgie,” said William, “mind you don’t fall.”

At last they returned to the bank.

“Nice sort of _help_ you were,” said Georgie indignantly, “why, you
made me go in _lots_ further than I meant to and, look, you’ve got mud
all over my trousers.”

“Sorry, Georgie,” said William meekly, “that was where I splashed you
by mistake, wasn’t it? Shall I be King John if you don’t like it?”

“No, I’m goin’ to be King John,” said Georgie. “Well, shall we go and
do it now?”

William looked at him doubtfully. Georgie was gloriously muddy as far
as his lower regions were concerned but his face and blouse were still
spotlessly clean and his curls still glinted in the sun.

“It’s not _quite_ right yet, Georgie,” he said gently. “Don’ you
remember how in History King John _dived_ into the Wash after his
things?”

“Yes, I know,” said Georgie, “I know all about that.”

“Well, s’no good you goin’ actin’ King John an’ not lookin’ as if you’d
jus’ dived into a bog,” said William.

“I tell you,” said Georgie indignantly, “I’m not goin’ to put any more
nasty mud on me.”

“All right,” said William kindly, “let Ginger be King John ... _he_
won’t mind.”

“No, _I’m_ goin’ to be King John,” said Georgie.

“We’ll jus’ put a bit of mud on your hair then,” said William
persuasively, “it’ll soon wash off an’ it would be awfully nice if you
got the prize, Georgie.”

“All right,” said Georgie relenting, “but only a _little_, mind.”

“Oh, yes, Georgie,” said William, “only a _little_....”

[Illustration: “YOU’RE ONLY PUTTING A _LITTLE_ ON, AREN’T YOU?” GEORGIE
ASKED ANXIOUSLY.

“OH, YES, GEORGIE,” WILLIAM REASSURED HIM--“ONLY A LITTLE.”]

They plastered his head and face with mud from the pond and dropped a
goodly portion of it upon his blouse. Fortunately Georgie could not
see his upper half very well.

“You’re only putting a _little_ on, aren’t you?” he asked anxiously.

“Oh, yes, Georgie,” William reassured him, “only a little. Now you
look _lovely_. You look jus’ like King John after he’d been tryin’ to
find his things in the Wash--divin’ in for ’em an’ all....”

Certainly the perfect little gentleman was unrecognisable. His suit was
covered with mud, his hair was caked with mud, his face was streaked
with mud. He had waded in mud. His smile, though still there, was
almost invisible. No longer did his curls glint in the sun.

“Now let’s start, shall we?” said William, his spirits rising as he
gazed at his handiwork. “First of all I’ll go on with Ginger--we’re
your heralds you know--and we’ll say you’re coming; ‘Make way for King
John’ or somethin’ like that. Then you come on with Henry and Douglas
and you speak to ’em. You know what King John said to ’em in History,
don’t you?”

“Yes, of course I do,” said Georgie. “What did he say?”

“He just looked at ’em an’ said, ‘Oh Dam and Blarst (their names, you
know) I cannot find my things.’”

“Of course I knew he said that.”

“Well, you jus’ say that to ’em and----shall we start? I say, Georgie,
you do make a _fine_ King John.”

“Oh, I bet I’ll win the prize all right,” said Georgie complacently
from beneath his mud.

The grown-ups sat in an expectant semicircle, smiling indulgently.

“I do so _love_ to see little children acting,” said one. “They’re
always so sweet and natural.”

“I wish you’d seen Georgie last Christmas,” murmured Georgie’s mother,
“as Prince Charming in a little children’s pantomime we got up. I had
his photograph taken. I’ll show it to you afterwards.”

Just then William and Ginger appeared. They had replaced their
stockings and shoes and looked for William and Ginger unusually neat
and tidy.

“Well, dears,” said Mrs. Murdoch smiling, “have you chosen your little
scene yet?”

“No,” said William, “we can’t get on with it with Georgie messin’ about
the pond all the time.”

At that moment Georgie, imagining that William and Ginger had heralded
his approach with all ceremony, came proudly into view from behind
the bushes, followed by Douglas and Henry. The mud from the pond was
a peculiarly concentrated kind of mud and Georgie had wallowed in it
from head to foot. One could only guess at his white suit and glinting
curls. But through it shone Georgie’s eyes in rapturous anticipation of
a two pound box of chocolate creams.

William and Ginger gazed at him in well simulated horror.

“Oh, Georgie, you _naughty_ boy!” said William.

“What _will_ your mother say?” said Ginger.

Douglas and Henry stepped forward.

“We _told_ him not to,” said Douglas.

“We _knew_ you wouldn’t like it,” said Henry to the speechless Mrs.
Murdoch.

Georgie felt that something had gone wrong somewhere but he was
determined to do his part at any rate to win those chocolate creams.

He looked at Henry and Douglas. “Oh, Dam and Blarst----” he began, but
the uproar drowned the rest.

With a scream of horror audible a mile away Mrs. Murdoch seized the
perfect little gentleman by the arm and hurried him indoors.

       *       *       *       *       *

Georgie explained as best he could. He explained that he was meant to
be King John returning from the Wash and that Dam and Blarst were his
two servants. But explanations were unavailing. No explanation could
wipe out from the memories of those present that astounding picture of
Georgie Murdoch standing in the middle of the lawn caked with black mud
from head to foot and saying, “Oh, damn and blast!”

The party broke up after that. No festive atmosphere could have
survived that shock. The Outlaws, clean and neat and sphinx-like and
silent, accompanied their parents home.

“_Well_,” said the parents, “I’d never have believed _that_ of Georgie
Murdoch!”

“_Caked_ with mud!”

“And such _language_!”

“It shows that you never can _tell_.”

A close observer might have gathered that at heart the Outlaws’ parents
were almost as jubilant over Georgie’s downfall as were the Outlaws
themselves.

The famous cousin, who was by the gate as William took his leave,
managed to press a ten-shilling note into William’s hand.

“To be divided amongst your accomplices,” he murmured. “You
surpassed my highest expectation. As artist to artist I tend you my
congratulations.”

That, of course, is quite a good place to stop, but, there remains more
to be said.

The next day Georgie appeared once more, cleaner and neater than
ever and clad in a new white suit, walking decorously down the
village street and smiling complacently. But it was no use. Georgie’s
reputation was gone. It had so to speak vanished in a night. Georgie
might have paraded his clean white-clad figure and smug smile and
golden curls before the eyes of the village for a hundred years and yet
never wiped out the memory of that mud-caked little horror uttering
horrible oaths before the assembled aristocrats of the village.

At the end of the month the Murdochs sold their house and removed. They
told their new neighbours that there hadn’t been a boy in the place fit
for Georgie to associate with.

History does not relate what happened to the chocolate creams.

Perhaps the famous cousin ate them.




CHAPTER IV

WILLIAM AND THE WHITE ELEPHANTS


“William,” said Mrs. Brown to her younger son, “as Robert will be away,
I think it would be rather nice if you helped me at my stall at the
Fête.”

William’s father at the head of the table groaned aloud.

“_Another_ Fête,” he said.

“My dear, it’s _centuries_ ... _weeks_ since we had one last,” said his
wife, “and this is the Conservative Fête--and quite different from all
the others.”

“What sort ’f a stall you goin’ to have?” said William, who had
received her invitation to help without enthusiasm.

“A White Elephant stall,” said Mrs. Brown.

William showed signs of animation.

“And where you goin’ to gettem?” he said with interest.

“Oh, people will give them,” said Mrs. Brown vaguely.

“_Crumbs!_” said William, impressed.

“You must be very careful with them, William,” said his father gravely,
“they’re delicate animals and must be given only the very best buns.
Don’t allow the people to feed them indiscriminately.”

“Oh, no,” said William with a swagger, “I bet I’ll stop ’em doin’ it
that way if _I’m_ lookin’ after em.”

“And be very careful when you’re in charge of them. They’re difficult
beasts to handle.”

“Oh, I’m not scared of any ole elephant,” boasted William, then
wonderingly after a minute’s deep thought, “_white_ uns’ did you say?”

“Don’t tease him, dear,” said Mrs. Brown, to her husband, and to
William, “white elephants, dear, are things you don’t need.”

“I know,” said William, “I know I don’t need ’em but I s’pose some
people do or you wun’t be sellin’ ’em.”

With that he left the room.

       *       *       *       *       *

He joined his friends the Outlaws in the old barn.

“There’s goin’ to be white elephants at the Fête,” he announced
carelessly, “an’ I’m goin’ to be lookin’ after them.”

“_White elephants!_” said Ginger, impressed, “an’ what they goin’ to
do?”

“Oh, walk about an’ give people rides same as in the Zoo an’ eat buns
an’ that sort of thing. I’ve gotter feed ’em.”

“Never seen _white_ ’uns before,” said Henry.

“Haven’t you,” said William airily, “they’re--they’re same as black
uns’ cept that they’re white. They come from cold places--same as polar
bears. That’s what turns ’em white--roamin’ about in snow an’ ice same
as polar bears.”

The Outlaws were impressed.

“When are they comin’?” they demanded.

William hesitated. His pride would not allow him to admit that he did
not know.

“Oh ... comin’ by train jus’ a bit before the Sale of Work begins. I’m
goin’ to meet ’em an’ bring ’em to the Sale of Work. They’re s’posed to
be savage but I bet they won’t try on bein’ savage with _me_,” he added
meaningly. “I bet I c’n manage any ole _elephant_.”

They gazed at him with a deep respect.

“You’ll let me _help_ with ’em a bit, won’t you?”

“William, can I help _feed_ ’em?”

“William, can I have a ride free?”

“Well, I’ll see,” promised William largely, and with odious imitation
of grown-up phraseology, “I’ll see when the time comes.”

The subsequent discovery of the real meaning of the term White Elephant
filled William with such disgust that he announced that nothing would
now induce him to attend the Fête in any capacity whatsoever. The
unconcern with which this announcement was received by his family
further increased his disgust. The disappointment of the Outlaws at
the disappearance of that glorious vision of William and themselves in
sole charge of a herd of snowy mammals caused them to sympathise with
William rather than jeer at him.

“If there isn’t no white elephants,” said William bitterly, “then why
did they say there was goin’ to be some?”

Ginger kindly attempted to explain.

“You see that’s the point, William--there _isn’t_ white elephants.”

“Then why did they say there was?” persisted William. “Fancy callin’
_rubbish_ white elephants. If you’re going to have a stall of rubbish
why don’t they _say_ they’re goin’ to have a stall of rubbish ’stead of
callin’ it White Elephants? Where’s the _sense_ of it? White elephants!
An’ all the time it’s broken old pots an’ dull ole books an’ stuff like
that. What’s the _sense_ of it ... callin’ it white elephants!”

Ginger still tried to explain.

“You see there _isn’t_ any white elephants, William,” he said.

“Well, why do they say there is?” said William finally. “Well I’m jus’
payin’ ’em out by _not_ helpin’--that’s all.”

But when the day of the Fête arrived William had relented. After all
there was something thrilling about serving at a stall. He could
pretend that it was his shop. He could feel gloriously important for
the time being at any rate, taking in money and handing out change....

“I don’t _mind_ helpin’ you a bit this afternoon, mother,” he said at
breakfast with the air of one who confers a great favour.

His mother considered.

“I almost think we have enough helpers, thank you, William,” she said,
“we don’t want too many.”

“Oh, do let William feed the white elephants and take them out for a
walk,” pleaded his father.

William glowered at him furiously.

“Of course,” said his mother, “it’s always useful to have someone to
send on messages, so if you’ll just _be_ there, William, in case I need
you ... I daresay there’ll be a few little odd jobs you could do.”

“I’ll sell the things for you if you like,” said William graciously.

“Oh no,” said his mother hastily, “I--I don’t think you need do _that_,
William, thank you.”

William emitted a meaning “Huh!”--a mixture of contempt and mystery and
superiority and sardonic amusement.

His father rose and folded up his newspaper.

“Take plenty of buns, William, and mind they don’t bite you,” he said
kindly.

       *       *       *       *       *

The White Elephant stall contained the usual medley of battered
household goods, unwanted Christmas presents, old clothes and derelict
sports apparatus.

Mrs. Brown stood, placid and serene, behind it. William stood at the
side of it surveying it scornfully.

The other Outlaws who had no official positions were watching him from
a distance. He had an uncomfortable suspicion that they were jeering at
him, that they were comparing his insignificant and servile position as
potential errand-goer at the corner of a stall of uninspiring oddments
with his glorious dream of tending a flock of snow-white elephants.
Pretending not to notice them he moved more to the centre of the stall,
and placing one hand on his hip assumed an attitude of proprietorship
and importance.... They came nearer. Still pretending not to notice
them he began to make a pretence of arranging the things on the
stall....

His mother turned to him and said, “I won’t be a second away, William,
just keep an eye on things,” and departed.

That was splendid. Beneath the (he hoped) admiring gaze of his friends
he moved right to the centre of the stall and seemed almost visibly to
swell to larger proportions.

A woman came up to the stall and examined a black coat lying across the
corner of it.

“You can have that for a shilling,” said William generously.

He looked at the Outlaws from the corner of his eye hoping that they
noticed him left thus in sole charge, fixing prices, selling goods
and generally directing affairs. The woman handed him a shilling and
disappeared with the coat into the crowd.

William again struck the attitude of sole proprietor of the White
Elephant stall.

Soon his mother returned and he moved to the side of the stall shedding
something of his air of importance.

Then the Vicar’s wife came up. She looked about the stall anxiously,
then said to William’s mother:

“I thought I’d put my coat down just here for a few minutes, dear. You
haven’t seen it, have you? I put it just here.”

William’s mother joined in the search.

Over William’s face stole a look of blank horror.

“It----it can’t have been _sold_, dear, can it?” said the Vicar’s wife
with a nervous laugh.

“Oh no,” said Mrs. Brown, “we’ve sold nothing. The sale’s not really
been opened yet.... What sort of a coat was it?”

“A black one.”

“Perhaps someone’s just carried it in for you.”

“I’ll go and see,” said the Vicar’s wife.

William very quietly joined Ginger, Henry and Douglas who had watched
the _dénouement_ open-mouthed.

“Well!” said Ginger, “_now_ you’ve been an’ gone an’ done it.”

“Sellin’ her _coat_,” said Henry in a tone of shocked horror.

“An’ she’ll probab’ly wear it to church on Sunday an’ she’ll see it,”
said Douglas.

“Oh, shut up about it,” said William who was feeling uneasy.

“Well I should think you oughter _do_ something about it,” said Henry
virtuously.

“Well, what c’n I do?” said William irritably.

“You won’t half catch it,” contributed Douglas cheerfully, “they’ll be
sure to find out who did it. You won’t half catch it.”

“Tell you what,” said Ginger, “let’s go an’ get it back.” William
brightened.

[Illustration: “IT--IT CAN’T HAVE BEEN SOLD, CAN IT?” SAID THE VICAR’S
WIFE.]

“How?” he said.

“Oh ... sort of find out where she’s took it an’ get it back,”
said Ginger vaguely, his spirits rising at the thought of possible
adventure; “ought to be quite easy ... heaps more fun than hangin’
round here anyway.”

[Illustration: “OH, NO,” SAID MRS. BROWN. “THE SALE’S NOT REALLY OPENED
YET. WHAT SORT OF A COAT WAS IT?”]

A cursory examination of the crowd who thronged the Vicarage garden
revealed no black coat to the anxious Outlaws. William had been so
intent upon asserting his own importance and upon impressing his
watching friends that he had not noticed his customer at all. She had
merely been a woman and he had an uneasy feeling that he would not
recognise her again even if he were to meet her.

“I bet she’s not here,” said Ginger, “course she’s not here. She’ll’ve
taken her coat home jolly quick I bet. She’d be afraid of someone
comin’ an’ sayin’ it was a mistake. I bet she’ll be clearin’ off home
pretty quick now--coat an’ all.”

The Outlaws went to the gate and looked up and down the road. The rest
of the company were clustered round the lawn where the member, who was
opening the Fête, had just got to the point where he was congratulating
the stall holders on the beautiful and artistic appearance of the
stalls, and wincing involuntarily whenever his gaze fell upon the
bilious expanse of green and mauve bunting.

“_There_ she is,” said Ginger suddenly, “_there_ she is--walkin’ down
the road in it--_cheek_!”

The figure of a woman wearing a black coat could be seen a few hundred
yards down the road. The Outlaws wasted no further time in conversation
but set off in pursuit. It was only when they were practically upon her
that they realised the difficulty of confronting her and demanding the
return of the coat which she had, after all, acquired by the right of
purchase.

They slowed down.

“We--we’d better think out a plan,” said William.

“We can watch where she lives anyway,” said Ginger.

They followed their quarry more cautiously.

She went in at the gate of a small house.

The Outlaws clustered round the gate gazing at the front door as it
closed behind her.

“Well, we’ve got to get it back _some_ way,” said William with an air
of fierce determination.

“Let’s jus’ try askin’ for it,” said Ginger hopefully.

“All right,” agreed William and added generously, “_you_ can do it.”

“No,” said Ginger firmly, “I’ve done my part _s’gestin’_ it. Someone
else’s gotter _do_ it.”

“Henry can do it,” said William, still with his air of lavish
generosity.

“No,” said that young gentleman firmly, even pugnaciously, “I’m jolly
well _not_ goin’ to do it. You went an’ sold it an’ you can jolly well
go an’ ask for it back.”

William considered this in silence. They seemed quite firm on the
point. He foresaw that argument with them would be useless.

He gave a scornful laugh.

“Huh!” he said, “Afraid! _That’s_ what you are. _Afraid._ Huh.... Well,
I c’n tell you _one_ person what’s not afraid of an’ ole woman in an
ole black coat an’ that’s me.”

With that he swaggered up the path to the front door and rang the bell
violently. After that his courage failed, and but for the critical and
admiring audience clustered round the gate he would certainly have
turned to flee while yet there was time.... A maid opened the door.
William cleared his throat nervously and tried to express by his back
and shoulders (visible to the Outlaws) a proud and imperious defiance
and by his face (visible to the maid) an ingratiating humility.

“Scuse me,” he said with a politeness that was rather over done, “Scuse
me ... if it’s not troublin’ you too much----”

“Now, then,” said the girl sharply, “none of your sauce.”

William in his nervousness redoubled his already exaggerated courtesy.
He bared his teeth in a smile.

“Scuse me,” he said, “but a lady’s jus’ come into this house wearin’ a
white elephant----”

He was outraged to receive a sudden box on the ear accompanied by a
“Get out, you saucy little ’ound,” and the slamming of the front door
in his face.

William rejoined his giggling friends, nursing his boxed ear. He felt
an annoyance which was divided impartially between the girl who had
boxed his ears and the Outlaws who had giggled at it.

“Oh yes,” he said aggrievedly, “S’easy to laugh, in’t it. S’nice an’
easy to _laugh_ ... an’ all of you afraid to go an’ then _laughin’_
at the only one what’s brave enough. You’d laugh if it was _you_,
wun’t you? Oh yes?” He uttered his famous snort of bitter sarcasm and
contempt. “Oh yes ... you’d laugh _then_, wun’t you? You’d laugh if
it was _your_ ear what she’d nearly knocked off, _wun’t_ you? Lots of
people ’ve _died_ for less than that an’ then I bet you’d get hung
for murderers. Your brain’s in the middle of your head joined on to
your ear, an’ she’s nearly killed me shakin’ my brain up like what she
did.... Oh yes, s’easy to _laugh_ an’ me nearly dead an’ my brains all
shook up.”

“Did she hurt you _awful_, William?” said Ginger.

The sympathy in Ginger’s voice mollified William.

“I sh’d jus’ _think_ so,” he said. “Not that I _minded_,” he added
hastily, “I don’t mind a little pain like that ... I mean, I c’n stand
any _amount_ of pain--pain what would _kill_ most folks ... but,” he
looked again towards the house and uttered again his short sarcastic
laugh, “p’raps she thinks she’s got rid of me. Huh! P’raps she thinks
they can go on stickin’ to the ole black coat what they’ve stole. Well,
they’re not ... let me kin’ly tell them ... they’re jolly well _not_
... I--I bet I’m goin’ right into the house to get it off them, so
_there_!”

The physical attack perpetrated on William by the housemaid had
stirred his blood and inspired him with a lust for revenge. He glared
ferociously at the closed front door.

“I’ll go’n have a try, shall I?” said Ginger, who shared with William a
love of danger and a dislike of any sort of monotony.

“All right,” said William, torn by a desire to see Ginger also fiercely
assailed by the housemaid and a reluctance to having his glory as
martyr shared by anyone else. “What’ll you say to ’em?”

“Oh, I’ve got an idea,” said Ginger with what William considered undue
optimism and self-assurance, “well, if she bought it for a shillin’ I
bet she’ll be glad to sell if for _more’n_ a shillin’ won’t she? Stands
to reason, dun’t it?”

Ginger, imitating William’s swagger (for Ginger, despite almost daily
conflicts with him, secretly admired William immensely), walked up to
the front door and knocked with an imperious bravado, also copied from
William. The haughty housemaid opened the door.

“G’d afternoon,” said Ginger with a courteous smile, “Scuse me, but
will you kin’ly tell the lady what’s jus’ come in here wearin’ a black
coat that I’ll give her one an’ six for it an’----”

Ginger also received a box on the ear that sent him rolling half way
down the drive, and the door was slammed in his face. It was opened
again immediately and the red angry face of the housemaid again glared
out.

“Any more of it, you saucy little ’ounds,” she said, “an’ I’ll send for
the police.”

Ginger rejoined the others nursing his ear and making what William
thought was an altogether ridiculous fuss about it.

“She didn’t hit you _half_’s hard’s what she hit me,” said William.

“She did,” said the aggrieved Ginger, “she hit harder ... a jolly sight
harder. She’d nachurally hit harder the second time. She’d be more in
practice.”

“No, she wun’t,” argued William, “she’d be more tired the second time.
She’d used up all her strength on me.”

“Well, anyway I saw yours an’ I felt mine an’ could _tell_ that mine
was harder. Well, gettem to look at our ears. I bet mine’s redder than
what yours is.”

“P’raps it is,” said William, “it nachurally would be because of mine
bein’ done first an’ havin’ time to get wore off. I bet mine’s redder
now than what yours will be when yours had had the same time to get
wore off in as what mine has ... an’ let me kin’ly tell you I saw yours
an’ I felt mine an’ I know that mine was a _jolly_ sight harder ’n
yours.”

After a spirited quarrel which culminated in a scuffle which culminated
in an involuntary descent of both of them into the ditch, the matter
was allowed to rest. Ginger had in secret been somewhat relieved at the
housemaid’s reception of his offer as he did not possess one-and-six
and would have been at a loss had it been accepted.

An informal meeting was then held to consider their next step.

“I votes,” said Douglas who was the one of the Outlaws least addicted
to dangerous exploits, “I votes that we jus’ go back to the Fête. We’ve
done our best,” he added unctuously, “an’ if the ole coat’s sold, well,
it’s just sold. P’raps she’ll be able to get it back by goin’ to a
lawyer or to Parliament or somethin’ like that.”

But William, having once formed a purpose, did not lightly relinquish
it.

“_You_ can go back,” he said scornfully. “I’m jolly well not goin’ back
without that ole coat.”

“All right,” said Douglas in a resigned tone of voice, “I’ll stay an’
help.”

To Douglas’ credit be it said that having uttered his exhortation to
caution he was always content to follow the other Outlaws on their
paths of lawlessness and hazard.

“Tell you what I’m goin’ to do,” said William suddenly, “I’ve _asked_
for it polite an’ if they won’t give it me then it’s _their_ fault,
in’t it? Well I’ve _asked_ for it polite an’ they wun’t give it me so
now I’m jolly well goin’ to _take_ it.”

“I’ll go with you, William,” volunteered Ginger.

“I think,” said William frowning and assuming his Commander-in-Chief
air, “I’d better go on alone. But you jus’ stay near an’ then if I’m
in _reel_ danger--sort of danger of life or death--I’ll shout an’ you
come in an’ rescue me.”

This was such a situation as the Outlaws loved. They had by this time
quite lost sight of what they were rescuing and why they were rescuing
it. The thrill of the rescue itself filled their entire horizon....

They went round to the side gate where they crouched in the bushes
watching the redoubtable William as he crept Indian fashion with
elaborate “registration” of cunning and secrecy across a small lawn up
to a small open window. Breathlessly they watched him hoist himself up
and swing his legs over the window sill. They saw his freckled face
still wearing its frown of determination as he disappeared inside the
room.

He had meant to make his way through the room to the hall where he
hoped to find the black coat hanging and to be able to abstract it
without interference and return at once to his waiting comrades. But
things are seldom as simple as we hope they are going to be. No sooner
had he found himself in the room than he heard voices approaching the
door and with admirable presence of mind dived beneath the round table
in the middle of the room, whose cloth just--but only just--concealed
him from view.

The lady whom the Outlaws had followed down the road--now divested of
the fateful black coat--entered the room followed by another gayer and
more highly-coloured lady.

“A _black_ coat, did you say?” said the first lady.

William, beneath the table, pricked up his ears.

“Yes, if you _can_, dear,” said the highly-coloured lady, “if you’d be
so good, dear. I only want it for to-morrow for the funeral. I think
I told you, didn’t I, dear? A removed cousin whom I hardly knew--a
_very_ removed cousin--but they’ve invited me and one likes to show
oneself appreciative of these little attentions--not that I think he’ll
have left me a penny in his will and it certainly isn’t worth while
_buying_ black but I _have_ a black dress and if you _wouldn’t_ mind
lending me a black coat.”

“Certainly,” said the first lady. “I can let you have one with
pleasure. It’s in the hall. It’s one I’ve only just bought....”

William ground his teeth.... So it _was_ in the hall! If he’d only been
a few minutes earlier....

They went into the hall and William gathered that the black coat was
being displayed.

“Quite a bargain, wasn’t it?” he heard the first lady say.

It was all he could do to repress a bitter and scornful “Huh!”

They returned--evidently with the coat.

“Thank you so much, dear,” said the highly-coloured lady, “it’s just
what I wanted and _so_ smart. What was it like at the Fête...?” she was
trying on the coat and examining herself smilingly in the overmantel
mirror. “I must say it _does_ suit me.”

“Oh, very dull,” said the first lady. “I really came away before it
was actually opened. Just got what I wanted and then came away. It all
looked as if it was going to be _most_ dull.”

The highly-coloured lady sniffed and her complacency gave way to
aggrievement. “I must say that I was a bit _hurt_ that they didn’t ask
me to give an entertainment. I can’t help feeling that it was a bit of
a _slight_. People have so often told me that no function about here
is complete without one of my entertainments and then not to ask me
to entertain at the Conservative fête ... well, I call it _pointed_,
and it points to one thing and one thing only in my eyes. It points
to jealousy, and intrigue, and spitefulness, and underhandedness, and
cunning, and deceit on the part of some person or persons unknown--but,
believe _me_, Mrs. Bute, quite easily guessed at!”

The highly-coloured lady was evidently in the state known as “working
herself up.” Suddenly William knew who she was. She must be Miss
Poll. He remembered now hearing his mother say only yesterday, “That
dreadful Poll woman wants to give an entertainment at the Fête and
we’re _determined_ not to have her. She’s so _vulgar_. She’d cheapen
the whole thing....”

He peeped at her anxiously from behind his concealing table-cloth, then
hastily withdrew.

“Of course,” said Mrs Bute, who sounded bored and as if she’d heard it
many times before, “of course, dear, but ... the coat will do, will it
?”

“Very nicely, thank you,” said Miss Poll rather stiffly because she
thought that Mrs. Bute really ought to have been more sympathetic.
“_Good_ afternoon, dear.”

“I’ll wrap it up for you,” said Mrs. Bute.

There was silence while she wrapped it up, then Miss Poll said, “_Good_
afternoon, dear,” again and went into the hall and there followed the
sound of the closing of the front door, then sounds as of the mistress
of the house going upstairs. William retreated through his open window
and rejoined Douglas and Henry at the gate. Ginger had vanished.

“Quick,” he said, “_she’s_ got it.”

The figure of Miss Poll carrying a large paper parcel could be seen
walking down the road. “We’ve gotter follow _her_. She’s got it now.”

At this minute Ginger reappeared.

“She’s got it,” William explained to him.

“Yes, but there’s another,” said Ginger, pointing, “there’s _another_
black coat hangin’ up in the hall. I’ve been round an’ looked through a
little window an’ _seen_ it ... it’s _there_.”

William was for a moment nonplussed. Then he said: “Well, I bet the one
she’s took’s the one, ’cause I heard her say wasn’t it a bargain, an it
_was_ a bargain too. Huh! I’m goin’ after her.”

“Well, I’m _not_,” said Ginger. “I’m goin’ to stop here an’ get the
other one.”

“All right,” said William, “you an’ Douglas stay here an’ Henry ’n
me’ll go after the other an’ I _bet_ you ours is the right one.”

So quite amicably the Outlaws divided forces. Ginger and Douglas
remained concealed in the bushes by the gate of Mrs. Bute’s house,
warily eyeing the windows, while William and Henry set off down the
road after Miss Poll’s rapidly vanishing figure.

       *       *       *       *       *

William and Henry stood at Miss Poll’s gate and held a hasty
consultation. Their previous experience did not encourage them to go
boldly to the front door and demand the black coat.

“Let’s jus’ go in an’ steal it,” said Henry cheerfully. “’S not hers
really.”

But William seemed averse to this.

“No,” he said, “I bet that it wouldn’t come off. I bet she’s the sort
of woman that’s always poppin’ up jus’ when you don’ want her. No, I
guess we’ve gotter think out a _plan_.”

He thought deeply for a few minutes, then his face cleared and over it
broke a light that betokened inspiration.

“I _know_ what we’ll do. It’s a _jolly_ good idea. I bet ... well,
anyway, you come in with me an’ see.”

Boldly William walked up to the front door and rang the bell.
Apprehensively Henry followed him.

Miss Poll, wearing the black coat (for she had been trying it on and
fancied herself in it so much that she had not been able to bring
herself to take it off to answer the bell), opened the door.

William, his face devoid of any expression whatever, repeated
monotonously as though it were a lesson:

“G’afternoon, Miss Poll, please will you come to the Fête to give an
entertainment.”

Miss Poll went rather red and for one terrible minute William thought
that she was going to attack him as the maid had done--but the moment
passed. Miss Poll was simpering coyly.

“You--you’ve been sent on a message, I suppose, little boy?” then,
relieving William’s conscience of the difficult task of answering this
question, she went on, “I _thought_ there must be some mistake.... Of
course,” she simpered again, then pouted, “_really_ I’d be quite within
my rights to refuse to go. It’s most discourteous of them to send for
me like this at such short notice but,” she gave a triumphant little
giggle, “I _knew_ that _really_ they couldn’t get on without me. They
didn’t send a note by you, I suppose?”

“No,” said William quite truthfully.

She pouted again.

“Well, _that_ I think is rather rude, don’t you? However,” the pout
merged again into the simper, “I wouldn’t be so _cruel_ as to punish
them for that by staying away. I _knew_ they’d want me in the end. But
these things are always so shamefully organised, don’t you think so?”

William cleared his throat and said that he did. Henry, in response to
a violent nudge from William, cleared his throat and said that he did
too. Miss Poll encouraged by their sympathy, warmed to her subject.

“Instead of writing to engage me _months_ ago they send a message like
this at the last minute.... What would they have done if I’d been out?”

Again William said he didn’t know and again Henry, in response to a
nudge from William, said he didn’t know either.

“Well, I mustn’t keep the poor dears waiting,” said Miss Poll brightly.
“I’ll be ready in a second I’ve only to put my hat on.”

Then Miss Poll underwent a short inward struggle which William watched
breathlessly. Would she keep on the black coat or would she change
it for another? Wild plans floated through William’s head. He’d say
would she please go in something black because the Vicar had died
quite suddenly that morning or--or the Member had just been murdered
or something like that.... It was obvious that Miss Poll was torn
between the joy of wearing a coat in which she considered herself to
look “smarter” than in anything else she possessed and the impropriety
of wearing for a festal occasion a garment borrowed for the obsequies
of the very removed cousin. To William’s relief the coat won the day
and after buttoning up the collar to give it an even smarter appearance
than it had before and putting on a smart hat with a very red feather,
she joined them at the door.

“Now I’m ready, children,” she said, at which William scowled
ferociously and Henry winced, “they didn’t say which of my repertoire”
(Miss Poll pronounced it reppertwaw) “I was to bring with me, did they?”

And again William said “no” with a face devoid of expression and with
perfect truth. And Henry said “No,” too.

“As it’s such short notice,” she went on, “they really can’t expect
_anything_ in the way of--well, of make-up or dress, can they?”

William said that they couldn’t and Henry, being nudged again by
William, confirmed the opinion....

“Though I wish you children could see me in my charwoman skit. I’m an
artist in make-up.... Now, can you imagine me looking _really_ old and
ugly?”

Henry quite innocently said “Yes,” and on being nudged by William,
changed it to “yes, please.” Miss Poll looked at Henry as if she quite
definitely disliked him and turned her attentions to William.

“You know, dear ... I can make myself to look _really_ old. You’d never
believe it, would you? Now guess how old I am, really?”

Henry, not wishing to be left out of it, said with perfect good faith,
“fifty” and William, with a vague idea of being tactful, said “forty.”
Miss Poll who looked, as a matter of fact, about forty-five, laughed
shrilly.

“You children _will_ have your joke,” she said, “now I wonder what I’d
better do for them to start with? You know, what makes me so _unique_
as an entertainer, children--and if I’d wanted to be I’d be _famous_
now on the London stage--is that I’m _entirely_ independent of such
artificial aids as mechanical musical instruments and books of words
and such things. I depend upon the unaided efforts of my voice--and
I’ve a perfect voice for humorous songs, you know, children--and my
facial expression. Of course I’ve a _magnetic_ personality ... that’s
the secret of the whole thing....”

William was tense and stern and scowling. He wasn’t thinking of Miss
Poll’s magnetic personality. He was thinking of Miss Poll’s coat. The
first step had been to lure Miss Poll to the Fête; the second and,
he began to think, the harder, would be to detach the coat from Miss
Poll’s person.

“It’s--it’s sort of gettin’ hot, i’n’t it?” he said huskily.

“Yes, isn’t it?” said Miss Poll pleasantly.

William’s heart lightened. “Wun’t you like to take your coat off?” he
said persuasively. “I’ll carry it for you.”

But Miss Poll who considered, quite erroneously, that the coat made her
look startlingly youthful and pretty, shook her head and clutched the
coat tightly at her neck.

“No, certainly not,” she said firmly.

William pondered his next line of argument.

“I thought,” he suggested at last meekly, “I thought p’raps you _sing_
better without your coat.”

Henry, who felt that he was supporting William rather inadequately,
said: “Yes, you sort of look as if you’d sing better without a coat.”

“What nonsense!” said Miss Poll rather sharply, “I sing _perfectly_
well in a coat.”

Then William had an idea. He remembered an incident which had taken
place about a month ago which had completely mystified him at the time,
but which he had stored up for possible future use. Ethel had come
home from a garden party in a state bordering on hysterics and had
passionately destroyed a perfectly good hat which she had been wearing.
The reason she gave for this extraordinary behaviour had been that Miss
Weston had been wearing a hat _exactly_ like it at the garden party
(“_exactly_ like it ... I could have killed her and myself,” Ethel had
said hysterically). The reason had seemed to William wholly inadequate.
He met boys every day of his life wearing headgear which was exactly
identical with his and the sight failed to rouse him to hysterical
fury. It was one of the many mysteries in which the behaviour of
grown-up sisters was shrouded--not to be understood but possible to be
utilised. Now he looked Miss Poll up and down and said ruminatingly,
“Funny!”

“What’s funny?” said Miss Poll sharply.

“Oh, nothin’,” said William apologetically, knowing full well that Miss
Poll would now know no peace till she’d discovered the reason for his
ejaculation and steady contemplation of her.

“Nonsense!” she said sharply, “you wouldn’t say ‘funny’ like that
unless there was some reason for it, I suppose. If I’ve got a smut on
my nose or my hat’s on crooked _say_ so and don’t stand there _looking_
at me.”

William’s steady gaze was evidently getting upon Miss Poll’s nerves.

“Nothin’,” said William again vaguely, “only I’ve just remembered
somethin’.”

“_What_ have you remembered?” snapped Miss Poll.

“Nothin’ much,” said William, “only I’ve jus’ remembered that I saw
someone at the Fête jus’ before I came out to you, in a coat _exactly_
like that one what you’ve got on.”

There was a long silence, and finally Miss Poll said: “It is a little
hot, dear. You were quite right. If you would be so kind as to carry my
coat----”

[Illustration: “I’VE JUS’ REMEMBERED,” SAID WILLIAM, “THAT I SAW
SOMEONE AT THE FÊTE IN A COAT EXACTLY LIKE THAT ONE WHAT YOU’VE GOT
ON.”]

She took it off, revealing a dress that was very short and very
diaphanous and very, very pink, folded up the coat so as to show only
the lining and handed it to William. William, though retaining his
sphinx-like expression, heaved a sigh of relief, and Henry dropped
behind Miss Poll to turn a cart wheel expressive of triumph in the
middle of the road. They had reached the gate of the Vicarage now. They
were only just in time....

William meant to thrust the coat into the arms of the Vicar’s wife
and escape as quickly as he could, leaving Miss Poll (for whom he had
already conceived a deep dislike) to her fate.

It had happened that the Member’s agent had with difficulty and with
the help of great persuasive power and a megaphone, collected the
majority of the attendants at the Fête into a large tent where the
Member was to “say a few words” on the political situation. Many of
those who had had experience of the Member’s “few words” on other
occasions had tried to escape but the agent was a very determined
young man with an Oxford manner and an eagle eye, and in the end he
had hounded them all in. The Member was just buying a raffle ticket
for a nightdress case and being particularly nice to the raffle ticket
seller partly because she was pretty and partly because she might have
a vote (one could never tell what age girls were nowadays). The agent
was hovering in the background ready to tell him that his audience
was awaiting him as soon as he’d finished being nice to the pretty
girl, and at the same time keeping a wary eye on the door of the tent
to see that no one escaped.... And then the _contretemps_ happened.
Miss Poll tripped airily up to the door of the tent in her pink, pink
frock, peeped in, saw the serried ranks of an audience with a vacant
place in front of them, presumably for the entertainer, and skipping
lightly in with a “_So_ sorry to have kept you all waiting,” leapt at
once into her first item--an imitation of a tipsy landlady, an item
that Miss Poll herself considered the cream of her repertoire. The
audience (a very heavy and respectable audience) gaped at her, dismayed
and astounded. And when a few minutes later the Member, calm and
dignified and full to overflowing of eloquence and statistics, having
exchanged the smile he had assumed while being nice to the pretty
raffle ticket seller for a look of responsibility and capability, and
having exchanged his raffle ticket for a neat little sheaf of notes
(typed and clipped together by the ubiquitous agent), appeared at the
door of the tent he found Miss Gertie Poll prancing to and fro before
his amazed audience, her pink, pink skirts held very high, announcing
that she was Gilbert the filbert, the colonel of the nuts. The agent,
looking over his shoulder, grew pale and loose-jawed. The Member turned
to him with dignity and a certain amount of restraint.

“What’s all this?” he demanded sternly.

The agent mopped his brow with an orange silk handkerchief.

“I--I--I’ve no idea, sir,” he gasped weakly.

“Please put a stop to it,” said the Member and added hastily,
remembering that the tent was packed full of votes, “without any
unpleasantness, of course.”

I have said that the agent was a capable young man with an Oxford
manner, but it would have taken more than a dozen capable young
men with Oxford manners to stop Miss Gertie Poll in the full flow
of her repertoire. She went on for over an hour. She merely smiled
bewitchingly at the agent whenever he tried to stop her without any
unpleasantness, and when the Member himself appeared like a _deux ex
machina_ to take command of the situation, she blew him a kiss and he
hastily retired.

Meanwhile William, triumphantly bearing the black coat, made his way up
to the Vicar’s wife. He met Ginger and Douglas, also carrying a black
coat and on the same mission.

“Bet you tuppence mine’s the one,” said Ginger.

“Bet you tuppence mine is,” said William; “where’d you get yours?”

“We got it out of her hall,” said Douglas cheerfully, “we jus’ walked
in an’ got it an’ no one saw us.... I bet _ours_ is the one.”

“Well, come on an’ see,” said William, pushing his way up to the stall
presided over by the Vicar’s wife.

“Here’s your coat, Mrs. Marks,” he said handing it to her, “it was sold
by mistake off the rubbish stall but we’ve got it back for you--me an’
Henry.”

Before the Vicar’s wife could answer, a frantic messenger came up to
her.

“What _shall_ we do?” she moaned. “Miss Poll’s entertaining the tent
and the Member can’t speak.”

“Miss _Poll_!” gasped the Vicar’s wife, “we never asked her.”

“No, but she’s _come_ and she’s singing all her _awful_ songs and no
one can stop her and the Member can’t speak.”

The Vicar’s wife, still absently nursing the coat that William had
thrust into her arm, stared in front of her.

“But--but how awful!” she murmured, “how _awful_?”

Then Ginger came up and thrust the second coat into her protesting arms.

“Your coat, Mrs. Marks,” he said politely, “what we sold by mistake off
the rubbish stall. Me an’ Douglas ’v got it back for you.”

He made a grimace at William which William returned with interest.

They waited breathlessly to see which coat the Vicar’s wife should
claim as her own.

She looked down at her armful of coats as if she saw them for the first
time.

“B-but,” she said faintly, “I got that coat back. The woman who bought
it thought there must be some mistake and brought it to me. These
aren’t my coats.... I don’t know anything about these coats.”

Shrill strains of some strident music hall ditty came from the tent. A
second messenger came up.

“She won’t stop,” she sobbed, “and the Member’s foaming at the mouth.”

“Oh, dear,” said the Vicar’s wife, clutching her bundle of coats still
more tightly to her. “Oh, dear, oh, _dear_!”

At that moment a woman pushed her way through the crowds up to the
Vicar’s wife. It was Mrs. Bute.

“Brought it here, they did,” she panted. “Where is it? _Thieves!_ Came
into my hall bold as brass an’ _took_ it!... _There_ it is!” she glared
suspiciously at the Vicar’s wife, “what’ve _you_ got it for ... _my_
coat ... I’d like to know. I’d----” She tore it out of her arms and the
other coat too fell to the ground. “My _other_ coat!” she screamed,
“_both_ my coats! _Thieves_--that’s what you all are! _Thieves!_”

“Where are those boys?” said the Vicar’s wife very faintly. But “those
boys” had gone. William, resisting the strong temptation to go and
enjoy the spectacle of the Member foaming at the mouth, had hastily
withdrawn his little band to a safe distance.

       *       *       *       *       *

They were found, of course, and brought back. They were forced to give
explanations. They were forced to apologise to all concerned, even
to Miss Poll (who forgave them because she’d had such a perfectly
_ripping_ afternoon and her little show gone off so _sweetly_ and
everyone been so _adorable_). They were sent home in disgrace....
William was despatched to bed on dry bread and water, but being quite
tired by the day’s events and the bread happening to be new and
unlimited in quantity, William’s manly spirit survived the indignity.

And William’s mother said the next day: “I _knew_ what would happen.”
(William’s mother always said that she knew it would happen after it
had safely--or dangerously--happened.) “I _knew_ that if I let William
come and help everything would go wrong. It always does. Selling
people’s coats and stealing people’s coats and getting that awful
woman to come that we’d _sworn_ we’d never have again and stopping
the Member speaking when he’d taken _ages_ over preparing his speech,
and upsetting the whole thing--well, if anyone had told me beforehand
that one boy William’s size could upset a whole afternoon like that I
simply shouldn’t have believed them.”

And William’s father said: “Well, I warned you, William. I told you
they were difficult beasts to manage. Of course, if you lose control
of a whole herd of white elephants like that they’re bound to do some
damage.”

And William said disgustedly: “I’m just _sick_ of white elephants and
black coats. I’m going out to play Red Indians.”




CHAPTER V

THE STOLEN WHISTLE


William had been to watch the sheep dog trials at a neighbouring
Agricultural Show and had been much thrilled by the spectacle. It
had seemed, moreover, perfectly simple. Just a dog and some sheep
and anyone could do it. He had a dog, of course--Jumble, his beloved
mongrel who had filled many and various rôles since he had joined
William’s _ménage_. He had been a walking dog and a dancing dog and
a talking dog. He had even on one occasion represented a crowd in a
play organised by William. It cannot be claimed that Jumble brought
any great brilliance to bear on the fulfilment of these rôles. He
was essentially passive, rather than active, in his representation
of them. He walked and danced perforce, because William on these
occasions held his front paws and he could do nothing else. His
“talking” was his natural reaction of excitement to William’s softly
whispered “rats!” It did not really represent that almost superhuman
intelligence that William claimed for it. Jumble himself took no pride
in his accomplishments. When he heard the word “trick” he slunk off as
quickly as he could, but if escape were impossible he yielded to the
inevitable, and suffered the humiliation of walking or dancing with an
air of supercilious boredom.

After breakfast on the morning after the sheep trials, William
walked slowly and thoughtfully into the garden. There he was greeted
effusively by Jumble who tried to convey to him by barks and leaps
and whirlwind rushes that it was just the morning for a walk in the
wood, where perhaps--perhaps--with luck one might meet a rabbit or two.
But William was not in a rabbit mood. He was in a sheep dog mood. He
had definitely decided to train Jumble to be a sheep dog. It might be
objected that with truth Jumble was not a sheep dog, to which objection
it might with equal truth be replied that Jumble was as much a sheep
dog as he was any other sort of dog. The sorts of dog in Jumble were so
thoroughly mixed that there was no sort of dog you could definitely say
he wasn’t. William had decided to use a whistle for giving his signals
to Jumble chiefly because his newest and dearest treasure happened to
be a whistle. It had been sent to him for his last birthday, by an
uncle who, as William’s father bitterly remarked, ought to have known
better. It was not an ordinary whistle. It was the Platonic ideal of a
whistle. It was very large and very ornate and emitted a sound rivalled
only by a factory siren. William to the relief and surprise of his
family had made little use of this since his reception of it. He had
kept it in a box in a drawer in his bedroom. His family fondly imagined
that he had forgotten about it and never allowed the conversation even
remotely to approach the subject of musical instruments in general or
whistles in particular, lest it should remind him of it. They could
not know, of course, that William’s whistle was his secret pride and
joy and dearest treasure and that he did not use it simply because he
considered it too precious to use till some great and worthy occasion
presented itself. And here the great and worthy occasion had presented
itself--the training of Jumble to be a sheep dog. With Jumble bounding
about in innocent glee and all unaware of his coming ordeal, he entered
his bedroom and reverently took the whistle from its bed of cotton wool
in the box in which he had received it. Then he placed it in his pocket
and with Jumble still leaping exuberantly about him went out into the
road. He had now a dog and a whistle. The only thing that remained
was to find some sheep. He swung down the road, one hand fingering
lovingly the whistle that reposed in his pocket, his eyes fixed proudly
on Jumble. Jumble, who fondly imagined that his hint about the walk
in a rabbity wood had been taken, leapt ecstatically into the air at
every passing fly or butterfly and as often as not overbalanced in the
process. The very word “trick” would have sent him slinking homeward,
his tail between his legs, but no one uttered the fateful word so
Jumble leapt and bounded in light-hearted glee with no thought in his
mind but of scurrying white-tailed rabbits.

William was now walking along without paying much attention to his pet.
His mind was set on other things. He was looking for sheep. Suddenly he
saw them--a whole fieldful of sheep with no guardian or owner in sight.
He brightened. The training of Jumble as a sheep dog could begin. With
Jumble still at his heels he entered the field.

“Now, Jumble,” he said sternly, “when I blow one blow on this whistle
you drive ’em to the end of the field an’ when I blow two you drive
’em back again.” Jumble gave a short sharp bark, which William, ever
optimistic, took to be one of complete understanding.

William drew in his breath then blew a piercing blast on his whistle.
The nightmare sound rent the air. A sheep who was cropping grass
turned and gazed at him reproachfully. The others took no notice.
Jumble continued to chase butterflies. William sighed and repeated his
instructions.

“When I blow once on this whistle, Jumble, you drive ’em over there
and when I blow twice you drive ’em back.” Jumble wagged his tail and
William thought he’d really tumbled to it at last.

He blew again--a mighty piercing blast. The sheep who had looked at
him reproachfully turned and looked at him still more reproachfully.
Jumble, upon whose mind the conviction was slowly forcing itself that
something was being expected of him, sat up and begged.

William sighed.

“No, Jumble,” he said, “jus’ listen--when I blow _once_----”

He stopped. Jumble was off after another butterfly. It was simply no
use talking to Jumble with all those butterflies about. He must make
him understand by some other means. He pointed to the sheep.

“Hi, Jumble!” he urged, “at ’em! Rats!”

Jumble looked from William to the sheep, head on one side, ears cocked.
His master evidently wanted him to attack those big white things that
inhabited the field. But why? They were doing no harm and there was a
vein of caution in Jumble that objected to the unnecessary attacking of
things three times his size. Still, he didn’t mind showing willing and
he needn’t go too near.

With elaborate ostentation of ferocity he began to bark at the nearest
sheep, making little leaps and rushes as if to attack it--but keeping
all the time a respectful distance.

“Good old Jumble!” encouraged William, “go on at them. Rats!” Jumble,
glad to learn from the tone of William’s voice that he was doing the
right thing, redoubled his pretence of fury and attack. The nearest
sheep with a scared look on its face rose and moved farther away.
Jumble’s delight knew no bounds. He had frightened the thing. That
big white animal three times his size was afraid of him. Some of his
caution deserted him. He advanced again upon the sheep, his sound
and fury redoubled. The sheep began to run. In a state of frenzied
intoxication Jumble flung himself to the pursuit. Panic broke out among
the flock. They rushed hither and thither bleating wildly, with Jumble,
who imagined himself a Great Dane at least, pursuing them, barking
loudly. William felt gratified. Things were getting a move on at last.
Jumble was turning out a really fine sheep dog. Then he blew twice on
his whistle.

“Now bring ’em back, Jumble,” he ordered.

But Jumble was deaf and blind to everything but the ecstasy of chasing
these large foolish white creatures who did not seem to realise their
size who--joy of joys, miracle of miracles!--were afraid of him--of
_him_! The field was a medley of scurrying bleating sheep and leaping,
barking, exulting, pursuing, ecstatic Jumble.

“Hi, Jumble!” called William again, “stop it--bring ’em back now.”

But the sheep had found a way of escape and were streaming in a
jostling panic-stricken crowd through the gate inadvertently left open
by William on to the road where some streamed off in one direction,
some in another, still bleating wildly.

Jumble surveyed the empty field. He’d cleared them out, which was
evidently what William meant him to do. The place belonged to him and
William now. He swaggered up to William and sat down sideways head in
the air, mouth open panting.

He fairly radiated conceit. He couldn’t get over it--hundreds and
hundreds of big white things each three times as big as himself flying
in panic before him--before _him_--what a dog! _What_ a dog! He gave
William a glance that said:

“Well, what do you think of me, _now_?”

William could have told him quite adequately and eloquently what he
thought of him but already sounds of commotion and shouting came from
the direction of the farm whence the errant sheep had been sighted.
Already men were running down the road to deal with the crisis.
William, not wishing to be dealt with as part of the crisis, hastily
picked up Jumble, scrambled through the hedge into a further field and
thence by devious routes to the road and back to his home.

His first lesson to Jumble on sheep dogging had not been altogether
successful but William was not a boy lightly to abandon anything he
had undertaken. Only he thought that perhaps it had been a mistake
to begin on sheep. It would be best probably to work up to sheep
gradually. Sitting on an upturned plant pot in his back yard, his
chin on his hands, he frowningly considered the situation, while
Jumble sat by him, leaning against the plant pot wearing a complacent
simper, still seeing himself, alone and unaided, putting to flight vast
hordes of large white animals. Yes, thought William, that had been the
mistake--beginning with sheep instead of working up to them gradually.
If he could begin on something small they could work up to sheep by
degrees. His white mice--the very thing! He turned and gave Jumble a
long and patient detailed account of what he wanted him to do.

“When I blow once, Jumble,” he said, “you run ’em over to the end of
the lawn and when I blow twice run ’em back to me again an’ mind you
don’t let any of them escape.”

Jumble looked at him foolishly, obviously not even trying to understand
and taking for granted that William was singing his praises, telling
him that he could hardly believe his eyes when he saw him scattering
them far and near. William went to fetch his white mice, leaving Jumble
still simpering. He returned and knelt down with the box.

“Now run ’em _gentle_, Jumble,” he ordered as he released the flock.

But Jumble was in no mood for gentleness. Either he considered it an
insult to try to make him a mouse dog instead of a sheep dog or he
wished to show William that this was mere child’s play after his late
exploit. He’d killed two before William could rescue them. He listened
to William’s remarks with polite boredom and watched the subsequent
obsequies with alert interest as though marking the spot for future
investigation. He then watched the remnants of the flock being carried
indoors with an air of wistfulness. He’d have quite liked to have
gone on with them. William was not really disheartened. He was sorry
of course to lose two of his white mice, but his white mice themselves
were capable of filling any gaps in their numbers with such speed and
thoroughness that the shortage would not be of long duration. And he
was still determined to teach Jumble to be a sheep dog. He ignored
Jumble’s attempts to suggest to him again the walk in the rabbity
wood (Jumble felt that he’d have simply loved to have a go at rabbits
now--he was just in the mood) and sat down again on the upturned plant
pot to consider the matter. Perhaps the best thing to do was to train
Jumble to be a sheep dog by himself without anything to represent the
sheep, and then when Jumble was an expert sheep dog gradually introduce
sheep for him to work upon. He’d teach Jumble to go to the other end of
the lawn when he blew once and return when he blew twice.

He did this by throwing a stone to the other end of the lawn for Jumble
to fetch and blowing once when he threw it and twice when Jumble was
ready to bring it back. He hoped that if he did this often enough,
Jumble would begin to associate his departure and return with the
whistle instead of the stone. When he’d been doing it for about half
an hour his father came out wearing an expression of mingled agony and
fury.

“If I hear one more sound from that beastly instrument of torture,” he
said, “I’ll take it from you and throw it into the fire. Do you know
I’ve been trying to sleep this last half hour? What the dickens are you
doing sitting there and blowing the thing like that, to all eternity?
Are you trying to play a tune?”

William did not explain that he was trying to teach Jumble to be a
sheep dog. He withdrew himself and Jumble and the whistle out of harm’s
way as quickly as possible.

He knew that it would be useless to continue the training of Jumble
within earshot of his father. It would be safer to withdraw to the
other end of the village where there was no possibility of his father
hearing it. It was particularly annoying because he’d thought that just
before his father came out Jumble really had begun to understand what
he wanted him to do. He slipped the whistle into his pocket and set off
down the road, Jumble following merrily at his heels. Jumble evidently
thought that the walk through the rabbity wood was going to come off at
last.

Right at the end of the village was a large brown house with a field
behind it. The field was empty and well hidden from the road. Here
William decided to complete the training of Jumble. Armed with a little
pile of stones and his whistle he patiently threw stones and whistled
his one blast then his two as Jumble departed and returned. Jumble was
fetching the stones in a perfunctory fashion as one who does it merely
to oblige. His considered opinion was that as a game it was going on a
bit too long. It was in any case rather a puerile amusement for a dog
who alone and unaided could put to flight great hordes of large white
animals. And he wanted to have a go at those rabbits.

William really thought that Jumble knew what was expected of him at
last. He decided to try without the stones. It was a great moment. He
blew a single blast on his whistle and then waited to see if Jumble
would fly at the note of command to the other end of the field. William
never knew whether Jumble would have flown at the note of command to
the other end of the field; it is a question that must remain to all
eternity unanswered. For no sooner had William emitted the note of
command than a furious tornado dressed in a mauve suit tore down upon
him, resolving itself as it became calmer into an elderly gentleman who
lived in the brown house.

“You wretched little mongrel,” he said addressing William not Jumble,
“you inhuman young torturer--you--you infant Nero! Do you know, I ask
you, sir, that I’ve been trying to rest--to _rest_ with this infernal
row going on? What do you mean by it, you young scoundrel? What do you
think you’re doing with it?--blowing it on and on and on like that. Are
you trying to drive me _mad_?”

Before William could resist he had snatched the precious whistle from
William and thrust it into his pocket. “Now I’ve got it, my boy, and
I’ll _keep_ it. And I’ll take any other infernal instrument of torture
you come around here with--and get out!”

Jumble growled and made ineffective darts toward the old gentleman but
finding that the old gentleman did not obligingly turn and flee with
bleats of terror like the sheep, he changed his tactics and wagged his
tail propitiatingly. William, aghast and infuriated, tried to gather
breath for a reply but before it came the old gentleman’s roseate hue
deepened to purple and he roared again:

“Get--OUT!”

William with one glance at the purple face threw dignity to the winds
and got out, closely followed by the incipient sheep dog. He was ablaze
with righteous indignation. He felt that he’d rather have had anything
stolen from him than the precious whistle, his glorious insignia as
sheep dog trainer. Stolen--yes, that was it, stolen--_his_ whistle
_stolen_. The man in the mauve suit ought to be in prison--a robber,
that was what he was--just an ordinary robber. He--he’d go and tell
someone about it so that the man in the mauve suit could be put in
prison.

He told his father first and his father said: “Thank Heaven!”

Then he told the village policeman and the village policeman slapped
his thigh and uttered a guffaw that sent Jumble flying down the road in
panic.

After much silent cogitation William decided to approach the robber
himself. He waylaid him on the road later in the day and said
unctuously:

“Please, can I have my whistle back?”

The robber uttered a loud “ha!” and then said very firmly, “No! you
can_not_ have your whistle back! On _no_ account can you have your
whistle back. You can _never_ have your whistle back. Wild horses
couldn’t make me give your whistle back. You may look upon that
whistle, my boy, as lost to you for ever and likewise every other
fiendish contrivance you use to drive away my sleep. Ha!”

With that he passed on still snorting.

William stood motionless in the road gazing after him. Well, he’d tried
every lawful means. He’d appealed to his father who ought to have
protected his own son from these outrages. He’d appealed to the strong
arm of the law who should have taken drastic steps against such lawless
extortion of property, he’d appealed to the criminal’s own better
feelings--all to no avail.

The only thing that remained was to take matters into his own hands.
For William felt that never could he hold up his head again while this
blot upon his honour remained unavenged.

       *       *       *       *       *

With no very clear plan of action in his mind, William progressed
furtively up the drive of the big brown house. He had seen the old
gentleman in the mauve suit drive down towards the station that morning
in a cab with a suit-case, so that bold advance into the enemy’s
country was less heroic than at first it sounds.

For safety’s sake William had left Jumble at home. Jumble was well
meaning but could never understand the need for secrecy. Idly William
thought that he’d train Jumble to be a police dog when he’d finished
training him to be a sheep dog. He’d train him to hunt down robbers and
bite them hard.

But he couldn’t continue the sheep dog training till he’d recovered
his whistle--_his_ whistle. Had you offered William then a hundred
golden whistles set with gems in exchange for _his_ whistle, he would
have refused them with scorn. It was _his_ whistle and he was going
to have it or know the reason why. He wandered round the front of the
house with an elaborate display of secrecy that would have attracted
anyone’s attention from miles away had anyone been there to see. The
front downstairs rooms were all empty with windows securely locked. The
front and side doors also were locked. William dared not go round to
the kitchen regions. He had a wholesome awe of inhabitants of kitchen
regions. They had such effective weapons to hand in the way of rolling
pins and saucepans. Even had the doors and windows been open it would
have been difficult to know where to begin looking for his whistle.
There was moreover a horrible possibility that the man in the mauve
suit might have taken it with him. His voyage of investigation round
the house, though fruitless, gave him a certain amount of satisfaction
by its vague element of heroism and danger. Having finished it he
decided to go home and think out some more definite plan of campaign.

He set off still with a melodramatically conspiratorial air down the
drive and suddenly when he’d almost reached the gates he heard the
sound of a motor car in the road outside. It was coming in. He looked
about wildly for some place of hiding. There was none. With admirable
presence of mind he stretched himself out by the edge of the drive and
lay there with closed eyes. The car turned in at the gate--passed him,
stopped, backed.

“Good heavens!” said a girl’s voice, “it’s a boy.”

“Is he dead?” said another.

Without opening his eyes William perceived that four people were
getting out of the car. He remained motionless with closed eyes. He
felt that as long as he remained in that position no one could call
upon him to account for his presence in their private ground.

“See if he’s breathing,” said someone.

A firm hand was laid on his chest. William was very ticklish and it
needed all his self-control not to wriggle. But he remained stark and
motionless.

“Yes, he’s alive,” said the voice with a note of relief in it, “he’s
breathing.”

“Let’s take him into the house,” said someone else, “and Freddie can
see what’s the matter with him.”

A youth’s voice spoke.

“Well,” it said rather uncertainly, “I’ve only been doing medicine a
month, you know.”

“But, my dear, surely you can diagnose a little thing like this when
you’ve been doing it a whole _month_,” said the voice.

“Oh yes,” said Freddie, “I--I daresay I can. It’s--it’s probably
something quite simple.”

William, who was beginning to enjoy the situation, felt himself lifted
up and placed in a car, taken up to the front door of the brown house,
lifted out, carried in and laid upon a sofa.

“What is it, Freddie?” said a girl’s voice, “what’s the matter with
him? Perhaps he’s been run over. He’s breathing. See--put your hand
over his heart, you’ll feel its beating.”

But at this point, partly because he could contain his curiosity no
longer and partly because his ticklishness could not endure the thought
of a hand being placed again upon his chest, William opened his eyes
and sat up. He saw three girls, one with red hair, one with black hair,
one with fair hair and a very young man. The very young man looked
relieved by William’s return to consciousness.

“Better, dear?” said the girl with red hair.

“Yes, thank you,” said William.

“What do you think it was, Freddie?” said the girl with dark hair.

“Oh--er--just a slight--er--vertigo,” said Freddie.

“Well, you’d better stay there and rest a little, dear, hadn’t you?”
said the girl, “just till you feel well enough to go home.”

[Illustration: WILLIAM OPENED HIS EYES AND SAT UP. “BETTER, DEAR?” SAID
THE GIRL WITH RED HAIR.]

“Yes,” said William speaking faintly and trying to assume the
expression of one suffering from vertigo, whatever vertigo might be.
He was much interested by his present position and did not want to
abandon it. Moreover, he was within the building that presumably held
his precious whistle and he hoped that Fate might yet deliver it into
his hands. The girl with fair hair put a cushion under his head and
the girl with dark hair went to fetch the motor rug and spread it over
him, and Freddie held his wrist and took out his watch hoping that
the action would add to his medical prestige and that no one would
notice that the watch was not going. The others gazed at him in an awed
silence.

“Is he--all right now?” said one of them.

“Oh yes,” said Freddie putting away his watch, “he ought to rest a
little before he goes out, though.”

“Shut your eyes, dear,” said the girl with the red hair, “and try to
get a little sleep before you go home. Count sheep going through a
gate.” William closed his eyes obediently, forbearing to remark that
he’d had quite enough of sheep going through gates.

Then they all sat down in the window alcove and began to talk.

“It’s really quite a jolly place, isn’t it?” said the girl with the
dark hair. “Awfully decent of Uncle Charles to say we could come out
here to picnic whenever we like.”

“Only while he’s away,” said the girl with fair hair.

“I know. He’s not exactly sociable but we can have some quite jolly
times driving down here from town while he’s away. I think it would
be an awfully good plan to have the dress rehearsal here on Thursday,
don’t you? All come down in cars and picnic and then have dinner here.
He’s got an angelic cook and he said we could feed here whenever we
like and then drive back to Town by moonlight.”

“Don’t you think we ought to mention it to him--the rehearsal, I mean?”

“Well, we might if it were anyone else but you know what he is. If
it were any other play, too, we might, but a play about the Russian
Revolution--well, it’s like a red rag to a bull to him. He’s scared
stiff of a revolution, you know. It’s a regular bee in his bonnet.”

“He said to me only last week that he never went away from home without
being quite prepared to find the communists in possession of his home
when he returned. So the poor old thing wouldn’t be able to sleep o’
nights if he thought we were rehearsing a play like that in his house.
He won’t be back till the day after so he won’t know. In any case he
doesn’t know any of the people who’re acting except us so it’s just as
well the old boy shouldn’t know anything about it.”

“Right! And it would be fun to come down here and make a real excursion
of it. This room is a bit too small, isn’t it? Freddie, go and see
whether the library would be better.”

Freddie departed and they turned to William again.

“Better, dear?” they said again.

“Yes, thank you,” said William.

“What is this vert whatever it is that Freddie says he’s got?” said the
dark-haired girl to the red-haired girl.

“Something to do with the backbone, I think,” said the red-haired girl
vaguely. “You know they call things that haven’t any backbone invert
something or other.”

“I suppose,” said the fair-haired girl to William, “that you were
walking down the road and the attack came on suddenly and you came in
here for help and succumbed before you could get help.”

“Well,” said William with a burst of inspiration, “I was coming in here
for my whistle when this vert thing came over me sudden and I fell
down.”

“For your whistle, dear?” said the fair-haired girl in a puzzled voice.

“Yes,” said William brazenly, “Mr. what’s his name? The man what lives
here?”

“Oh, Uncle Charles, Mr. Morgan.”

“Yes--well, this Mr. Morgan came out to me the other day to borrow my
whistle an’ he said he’d give it me back if I called for it to-day. He
asked if I’d just lend it him till to-day and said that it would be
all ready for me to take back to-day if I called for it.”

“But--why did he want to borrow your whistle?” said the fair-haired
girl, still puzzled.

“Jus’ to blow on. He liked it,” said William casually.

They looked at each other meaningly.

“Poor Uncle Charles,” said the dark-haired girl, “I’m afraid
he’s--well, it _sounds_ as if he were getting a little childish.”

“An’ please,” said William firmly, “I’d like to take it home now.”

“But, where is it? Did he say where it would be?”

“No, he didn’t,” said William and added hopefully, “but I s’peck it’s
somewhere about.”

“Well, we’ll try to find it for you,” said the dark-haired girl
doubtfully, “but--don’t lend him anything else, will you?”

“No,” said William fervently.

Making a complete and rapid recovery from his recent attack of vertigo,
William arose from his couch and joined in the search. They looked
round drawing-room, dining-room and library without finding the whistle.

“Well, we’ll remind him the very first time we see him,” said the
red-haired girl obligingly.

“Thanks,” said William without enthusiasm.

“And now you feel well enough to go home, don’t you? This gentleman who
is a doctor--well, _almost_ a doctor, will drive you home in the car
and explain to your mother exactly what’s wrong with you.”

But William and Freddie seemed equally anxious to avoid this
anti-climax so they finally yielded to William’s assertion that he
felt _quite_ all right now and would _much_ rather walk home, and to
Freddie’s assertion that probably the family already had a doctor,
and it would be against medical etiquette for him to go butting into
someone else’s patient and it would do the kid good to walk--get the
circulation going again after the vertigo. So Freddie returned to the
library and the three girls walked down to the gate with William and
watched him depart down the road.

“Poor little child,” said the fair-haired girl with a sigh.

“He doesn’t _look_ as if he had a diseased backbone,” said the
red-haired girl.

“No,” said the dark-haired girl, “but some of these internal things
don’t show.”

William walked jauntily. He hadn’t got his whistle, but he’d had quite
an interesting morning.

       *       *       *       *       *

It was Thursday evening. William crept up the drive again and walked
round to the brown house.

The windows of library and drawing-room were lit up. The drawing-room
was apparently being used as a green room. Actors in various stages
sat on chairs or sofa, or “made up” in front of the Venetian mirror.
In the library the play was just beginning. An inhuman-looking bearded
gentleman of obviously Communist persuasions, his face deeply--perhaps
too deeply--scored by lines of cruelty and ill-temper, was sitting on
the armchair, his boots on the table. A large red flag was planted
beside him and the table was covered with a red flag. Brutal-looking
soldiers held a shrinking prisoner in front of him. Other
brutal-looking soldiers lounged about the room. The play was evidently
just beginning. Neither Freddie nor any of the three girls were in this
scene. William who had only a faint hope of recovering his whistle,
but a very real curiosity as to the dress rehearsal, stood outside in
the darkness, flattening his nose against the window. The brutal man
in the chair was overacting--banging the table and shaking his fist
and snarling and shouting--but this made it all the more thrilling
to William. Then suddenly he heard the sound of wheels coming up the
drive. Still impelled by curiosity, he crept round the house to see who
it was. Then he stood amazed. It was the man in the mauve suit. He was
descending from a taxi with his suit-case, and preparing to enter his
front door. Then a glorious inspiration came to William. The taxi drove
off but, before the owner of the house could enter his door, a small
boy whom he could not see distinctly in the darkness darted forward and
seized his arm.

“Don’t go in,” he whispered, “there’s danger.”

Mr. Morgan’s jaw dropped.

“What?” he gasped.

“I say there’s _danger_,” said the boy again rather irritably, “if you
go in that house you’ll never come out alive.”

“B--but it’s _my_ house,” said Mr. Morgan, “I’ve _often_ been in and
come out alive.”

“Come here and I’ll show you,” whispered William. “Come round here.”

[Illustration: “THERE!” SAID WILLIAM. “LOOK AT THAT!” MR. MORGAN LOOKED
AT IT, WHILE HIS MOUTH AND EYES SLOWLY OPENED AND HIS CHEEKS GREW PALE.]

He led the amazed but unprotesting householder round to the lighted
window of the library.

“There!” he said, “look at that.”

[Illustration: THERE IN MR. MORGAN’S LIBRARY, WITH HIS FEET ON THE
WRITING TABLE, SAT A BRUTAL COMMUNIST COMMANDER, WITH A PRISONER
TREMBLING BEFORE HIM IN THE HANDS OF BRUTAL COMMUNIST SOLDIERS.]

Mr. Morgan looked at it while his mouth and eyes slowly opened to an
almost incredible extent and his cheeks grew paler and paler. There in
his library, with feet on his writing table, sat a brutal communist
commander beneath the red flag. Brutal communist soldiers lounged in
all his best chairs and some poor unhappy prisoner stood trembling
before the brutal communist commander.

“W--what is it?” he gasped.

“It’s broke out,” said William succinctly, “the revolution--it’s broke
out.”

“B--but I heard nothing on the way,” gasped the poor man again, drops
of perspiration standing out on his brow.

“No, it’s been very sudden,” explained William unabashed, “quite a lot
of people don’t know anything about it yet.”

“What I always said would happen,” groaned Mr. Morgan. “On us before
we know where we are! The first blaze kindled in this very village and
my home--my _own_ house--taken for headquarters. I’ve always feared
it--always.”

“They’re having the people from the village in one by one,” said
William cheerfully. “They’ve got ’em all locked in the cellars. They’re
killin’ most of them.”

“And--and all my valuables there,” groaned Mr. Morgan, “all my money
and everything. If only I could collect some of it I could make good my
escape.”

He shuddered as the brutal communist commander within shook his fist
with a particularly brutal gesture in the shrinking prisoner’s face.

“Well,” said William slowly. “When first I started watchin’ through
this window it was open an’ they were alone--it was before they started
havin’ in the prisoner--an’ I heard them saying that they were afraid
the reg’lar army’d soon be upon them an’ the signal that the reg’lar
army was comin’ upon ’em was three blows on a whistle from the road
so as soon as they heard three blows on a whistle from the road it’d
mean that the reg’lar army was comin’ upon ’em an’ they’d have to clear
out quick--so if we could give three blows on a whistle from the road
they’d clear out jolly quick an’ you could nip in an’ get your stuff
before they come back. But--but, I’ve not got a whistle, have you?”

There was a tense silence during which William held his breath.

“I have, as it happens,” said the old gentleman excitedly, “by a
curious chance, one came into my possession the other day--but it’s in
my bedroom. How am I to get at it?”

“Where’s your bedroom?” said William shortly.

“Just above us. The window, I see, is open.”

“Where’s the whistle?” said William trying not to sound too eager.

“In the right-hand small drawer in my dressing-table. What are you
doing?”

For William with a speed and agility worthy of one of his remotest
forbears was shinning up the tree, and swinging himself from the tree
to the window sill of the room just above. He disappeared into the
room. Soon he reappeared, swung himself on to the tree and came back as
quickly as he had gone.

In his hand he held his beloved long-lost whistle.

“Brave boy!” said the old gentleman fervently, “now go down to the road
and blow three times.”

William crept away into the darkness with the whistle. He could not
refrain from chuckling as he reached the road. The old gentleman waited
and waited, but no blast came from the darkness into which William had
disappeared.

William was creeping back. He knew that it was a dangerous proceeding,
but curiosity triumphed over caution. He wanted to know what had
happened to the old gentleman and the brutal communist commander
and--everyone. Cautiously he approached the library window. The old
gentleman was sitting in his chair and the brutal communist, the
prisoner and a lot more people were sitting on other chairs and on the
floor drinking lemonade and eating sandwiches. Some one had opened the
window and William could hear what they were saying. The three girls
and Freddie were there.

“You gave me quite a fright, uncle,” the red-haired girl was saying,
“when I saw you out there in the dark. Whatever were you doing?”

“Oh--er--nothing much,” said Mr. Morgan, who had evidently not given
himself away, “just having a look round,--er--just having a look round
at the garden before I came in.”

“We thought you weren’t coming back till to-morrow.”

“I hadn’t meant to.”

“You don’t mind us having had the rehearsal here, do you?”

“Not a bit, my dear. Not a bit.”

“The real reason we didn’t tell you was that we knew you were just a
bit nervous of communists and things like that. I told the others so
that day we arranged it--the day that boy was here.”

“What boy?” said Mr. Morgan sharply.

“Oh, a poor boy we picked up on the road unconscious and nearly dead,
and Freddie examined him and found that he was suffering from some
terrible disease of the spine.”

Mr. Morgan’s sniff expressed no great respect for Freddie’s diagnosis.

“The poor child had come for his whistle.”

“What whistle?” said Mr. Morgan still more sharply.

“He said you’d borrowed a whistle from him and promised to give it back
that day. We looked all over the place for it, but couldn’t find it so
he had to go away without.... What’s the matter, Uncle?”

Mr. Morgan was staring into space, his complexion changing from pink to
a dull red. He’d _thought_ there was something familiar about that boy
though he hadn’t been able to see him plainly in the darkness. There
came to him memories of that curious snigger he’d heard as the boy
disappeared in the darkness with the whistle. The red deepened to an
apoplectic purple.

He gave a sudden furious bellow of rage.

William, chuckling to himself, crept away again through the night....




CHAPTER VI

WILLIAM FINDS A JOB


Probably if she hadn’t been so pretty the Outlaws would not have
noticed her at all. But as it was they not only noticed her but
noticed also that she was crying. She was sitting on the doorstep of
a small house and her hair was a mass of auburn curls, and her eyes
were blue and her mouth--well, the Outlaws were not poetic but they
dimly realised that her mouth was rather nice. They looked at her and
passed on sheepishly, then they hesitated, and, still more sheepishly,
returned. William was the spokesman.

“What’s the matter?” he said gruffly.

She raised blue, tear-filled eyes.

“Wot?” she said.

“What’s the matter?” repeated William still more gruffly.

She wiped away a tear with the corner of a pinafore.

“Wot?” she said again.

“Anyone been hurtin’ you?” said William still gruffly, but with the
light of battle in his eye. She looked up at him.

“No,” she said, and returned to the corner of her pinafore.

The light of battle died away from William’s eye. He looked
disappointed.

“Lost anythin’?” he then asked, assuming the expression of one who is
willing to search every corner of the globe for whatever she had lost.
She looked up at him again.

“No,” she said listlessly.

“Well, what’s the _matter_?” persisted William.

“My daddy’s out of work,” said the little girl.

This nonplussed the Outlaws. They’d have fought anyone who’d hurt her,
they’d have found anything she’d lost, but this seemed outside their
sphere.

“What d’you mean?” said Douglas, “d’you mean he’s got nothin’ to do?”

“Yes,” said the little girl, “nobody’ll give ’im any work to do, an’
he’s got to stop at home all day.”

“Coo!” said Ginger feelingly, “I wish I was him.”

“Well,” said William, “don’ you worry, that’s all. Don’ you worry.
We’ll get him some work,” and added as an afterthought, “What can he
do?”

“He can do anythin’,” said the little girl peeping at him from behind
the corner of her pinafore. “Wot can you do?”

Then someone called her in and the Outlaws found themselves standing
around in a semicircle gazing with ardent sympathy and admiration at a
closed door. They hastily assumed their normal manly expressions and
went on down the road.

       *       *       *       *       *

“Well,” said Ginger the optimist, “he can do anythin’, so it ought to
be pretty easy to get him a job.”

“Yes,” said William, “we’d better start on it at once, ’cause we want
to go out shootin’ to-morrow.”

“My bow’s broke,” said Henry sadly.

“Lend you my pea-shooter,” said Douglas.

“Let’s think of the things he could be,” said William, “there’s lots of
’em.”

“A doctor or a lawyer or a clergyman,” said Henry dreamily. “Let’s make
him a clergyman.”

“No, he couldn’t be any of those,” said William irritably, “those are
special sorts of people. They start turnin’ into those before they
leave school. But he could be a gardener or a butler or--or a motor car
driver----”

“Shuvver,” put in Ginger with an air of superiority.

“Motor car driver,” repeated William firmly, “or--or a sort of man
nurse. I read in a book once about a man what once had a sort of
man nurse--he sort of went queer in his head--the man, not the man
nurse--an’ the man nurse looked after him--or he could be a sort of man
what looks after people’s clothes----”

“A valley,” put in Ginger.

“A man what looks after people’s clothes,” repeated William firmly,
“or--or a fireman, or a policeman, or a postman, or servin’ in a shop.
Why,” with growing cheerfulness, “we’ll be able to find hundreds an’
_hundreds_ of things for him to do.”

“He only wants one,” said Douglas mildly.

“What’ll we start on?” said Ginger.

William assumed his frown of generalship and mentally surveyed the
field of operation.

“Well,” he said at last, “I’ll try’n get him a job as a man what drives
a motor car, an’ Ginger try’n get him one as a gardener, an’ Henry
try’n get him as a man what looks after people’s clothes, an’ Douglas
as a man what looks after people what aren’t quite right in their head,
an’ we’ll have a meetin’ in the ole barn after tea an’ tell how we’ve
got on ... an’ if we’ve _all_ got him work, of course,” he added with
his unfailing optimism, “we’ll let him choose.”

       *       *       *       *       *

William began to make tentative efforts at lunch.

“When are we goin’ to have a car?” he demanded innocently.

“Not while I’m alive,” answered his father.

William considered this in silence for some minutes, then asked:

“How soon after you’re dead?”

His father glared at him and William cautiously withdrew into silence.
A few minutes later, however, he emerged from it.

“Seems sort of funny to me,” he remarked meditatively, to no one in
particular, “that we don’t have one. Neely everyone else I know’s got
a car. They’re an awful savin’ in bus tickets an’ shoes an’ things.
Seems to me sort of wrong to keep spendin’ money on bus tickets an’
shoes when we could save it so easy by buyin’ a car.”

No one was taking any notice of him. They were discussing an artist
who had taken The Limes furnished for a month. Robert, William’s
nineteen-year-old brother, was saying, “One daughter, I know, I saw her
at the window.” William continued undaunted:

“We’d jus’ want a man to look after it that’s all an’ I could easy get
that for you. I know a man what’s good at lookin’ after ’em an’ I could
get him for you. An’ they’re cheap enough. Why, someone told me about
someone what knew someone what got one for jus’ a few pounds--an ole
one, of course, but they’re jus’ as good as new ones--only a bit older,
of course. The ones what were made when first they was invented must be
goin’ quite cheap now an’ one of them’d do quite all right for us--jus’
to save us ’bus tickets an’ shoes--with a man to look after it. Ginger
an’ me’d paint it up an’ it would be as good as new. Shouldn’t be
surprised,” with rising cheerfulness, “if you could get an ole one--a
really ole one--for jus’ a few shillin’s an’ Ginger’n me’d paint it for
you and this man’d mend it up for you an’ drive it for you an----”

There was a sudden lull in the general conversation and his mother said:

“Do get on with your lunch, William. What _are_ you talking about?”

“About this car,” said William doggedly.

“What car?”

“This car of ours. Well, this man----”

“_What_ man?”

“This man what’s goin’ to drive it for us----”

But this touched Robert on a tender spot.

“Any car belonging to the house will be driven by _me_,” he said firmly.

William was nonplussed for a minute. Then he said gently, “I don’ think
Robert ought to tire himself out drivin’ cars. I think Robert ought to
be keepin’ himself fresh for his exams an’ things, not tire himself out
drivin’ cars. This man’d drive it an’ save Robert the trouble of tirin’
himself out drivin’ cars because Robert’s got his exams an’ things
to keep fresh for. An’ besides all these girls what Robert likes to
take out with him--he wun’t talk to ’em prop’ly if he had to be tirin’
himself out drivin’ the car all the time----”

“Shut up,” ordered Robert angrily.

Temporarily William shut up.

“Are you taking Gladys Oldham on the river this afternoon?” said his
mother.

“Gladys Oldham?” said Robert coldly. “Whatever made you think I’d be
taking a girl like Gladys Oldham anywhere?”

His mother looked bewildered.

“My dear ... only last week you said----”

Robert spoke with dignity and a certain embarrassment.

“Last week?” he said frowning, as if he had a difficulty in carrying
his mind back as far as that ... “well, I remember I did once think her
an entirely different sort of person to what she turned out to be....
He’s called Groves, isn’t he, mother?”

“Who, dear?” said his mother mildly.

“The artist who’s taken The Limes.”

“I believe so, dear.”

“I’ve seen the daughter--she’s--she’s----”

He stopped confusedly trying to hide his blushes.

“She’s the most beautiful girl you’ve ever seen in your life,” put in
his father sardonically.

“How did you know?” asked Robert. “Have you seen her?”

“No, I didn’t know.... I guessed,” said his father.

Robert seemed about to launch into a fuller description of Miss Groves,
then stopped, glancing suspiciously at William. But William was intent
upon his own thoughts. Noticing a slight lull in the conversation he
rose again hopefully to the attack.

“This man,” he said, “you’d find him awful useful----”

“_What_ man, William?” groaned his mother.

“This man what I keep tellin’ you about,” said William patiently. “It
seems to me sort of silly to wait till you get a car to get a man to
drive it. I think the best thing is to get this man at once an’ then
when we get the car there he is all ready to drive it for us at once
’stead of havin’ to waste the car while we start lookin’ round for a
man to drive it and----”

“The lunatic asylums of the country,” remarked Mr. Brown, “must be full
of men who’ve had sons like William.”

William looked at him hopefully.

“If you do feel like that, father,” he said, “I know that this man----”

“Oh, shut up,” said Robert again.

“Yes,” said William bitterly, “what I’d like to know is why you can go
on talkin’ an’ talkin’ an’ talkin’ an’ _talkin’_ about girls an’ the
minute I start talkin’ about this man----”

“What man?”

“This man I’ve been tellin’ you about ever since I started talkin’ only
no one listens to me. What I say is that this man----”

“William,” said his mother, “if you say one word more about that man
whoever he is----”

“All right,” said William resignedly, and turned his whole attention to
his pudding.

       *       *       *       *       *

He renewed the attack, however, after lunch. The car prospects didn’t
seem very hopeful but it might be worth while to explore other avenues.
He stood at the drawing-room window looking out at the garden where
Jenkins, the gardener, was weeding the bed on the lawn.

“Poor ole man,” said William compassionately, “I think he’d do with
someone to help him, don’t you, mother?”

His mother looked up from the sock she was darning.

“I think that’s a very kind thought, dear,” she said, “and I’m sure
he’d appreciate it. Take one of the kneeling mats out because the grass
is rather damp.”

William’s face fell but after a moment’s hesitation he took a kneeling
mat and went out to help weed the bed. He returned a few minutes later
pursued by an indignant Jenkins after having unwittingly uprooted all
his pet seedlings.

“Finished, dear?” said his mother. “You’ve not been long.”

“No,” said William, “I kind of worked hard an’ got it finished
quick.... Mother, don’t you kind of think you’d like another gardener
’stead of Jenkins?”

“Why ever?” said his mother in surprise.

“Well, he always seems so sort of disagreeable an’ this man----”

“What man?”

“This man I keep tellin’ you about,” said William patiently, “he’s an
abs’lutely _wonderful_ man. He can do anythin’. He can drive a car ...
he’s the one what’s goin’ to drive our car ... an’--an’ there’s nothin’
he _can’t_ do, look after clothes an’ people what are queer in the head
an’--an’--she was ever so nice an’ cryin’.”

“William, dear,” said Mrs. Brown, “I really don’t know what you’re
talking about, but before you do anything else go and wash your hands
and brush your hair.”

William sighed as he went to obey. His family seemed to have no souls
above hands and hair and that sort of thing.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Outlaws met the next afternoon to report progress.

“I did all I could,” said William, “I tried to make ’em get a car so’s
we could have him to drive it an’ they just wun’t. I tried makin’ ’em
have him as a gardener an’ they wun’t do that either.”

Ginger, looking melancholy, related his experiences.

“I thought we might have him as a gardener, too,” he said, “an’ so I
tied a string across the doorway of the greenhouse ’cause I thought
that if ours fell an’ sprained his ankle I could tell ’em about this
new one an’ then they’d get him. I din’t think it would do ours any
harm to sprain his ankle--jus’ give him a nice rest for one thing
an--an’ he’s a such a crabby ole thing. It might make him kinder same
as what they say sufferin’ does in books.”

“Did he fall?” said the Outlaws with interest.

“No,” said Ginger sadly, “he saw me doin’ it an’ went an’ told my
father.”

“Was he mad?” said the Outlaws with interest.

“Yes,” said Ginger still more sadly, “he was awful mad. Simply wouldn’t
listen to me tellin’ him I’d tied it there to practise skippin’.”

The Outlaws murmured sympathy and then Henry spoke.

“Well, I tried to get ’em to have him as a man what looks after
clothes----”

“Valley,” murmured Ginger.

“An’ I kep’ tellin’ my father an’ my brother that their clothes looked
to me’s if they wanted brushin’ or cleanin’ or pressin’ or somethin’
an’ I was goin’ to tell ’em about this man what’s come an’ do it for
them but,” mournfully, “they din’t give me a chance to get’s far as
that. Seems to me that it’s very funny that one can’t try’n help a poor
man what’s out of work without bein’ treated like that about it.”

Again the Outlaws murmured sympathy, then Douglas spoke up.

“I thought I’d try’n get him as a sort of man nurse so I acted like I
was goin’ queer in my head.”

“What did they do?” said William.

An expression of agony passed over Douglas’ face.

“Gave me Gregory powder,” he said, “an’ I couldn’t sort of seem to make
’em understand I was actin’ queer in the head. They seemed to think
I was actin’ ordin’ry. Anyway when they got reely mad I had to stop
it ’cause I was afraid they’d start on me with more Gregory powder,
an’ it’s a wonder I’m not poisoned dead with the first lot. It’s more
diff’cult than you’d think,” he ended meditatively, “to make folks
think you’re queer in the head.”

“So nobody’s got nothing,” William summed up the situation sadly and
ungrammatically.

But Ginger was more cheerful.

“Well, there’s lots other houses in the village ’sides ours,” he said,
“an’ there’s lots other fam’lies in the village ’sides ours. I votes we
start on them. Seems to me that people outside your own fam’ly always
give you more ’f a chance to explain what you mean than people in your
fam’ly. They don’t start bein’ mad at you before you’ve reely got to
what you want to say like people in your own fam’ly do.”

The Outlaws considered the suggestion in silence. Then William pointed
out its obvious disadvantage.

“Yes, but most of the people round here,” he said simply, “know us, an’
so it wun’t be much use.”

“There’s someone new come to The Limes,” said Henry, “I heard my mother
talkin’ about them.”

“So did I mine,” said Douglas, “he’s an artist.”

“Oh, yes,” said William, “so did I mine. An’ he’s got a daughter what’s
the most beautiful girl what Robert’s ever seen.”

“Well, let’s try him,” said Ginger, “he oughter want someone to look
after his clothes or drive his car or nurse him when he’s queer in the
head or something. Who’ll try him? I votes William does first.”

“All right,” said William who was always ready for any fresh adventure.
“I’ll go straight off now ’fore he gets anyone else.”

William entered the garden gate of The Limes and looked cautiously
around him. There was no one in sight. The building was a long, low one
with French windows opening straight on to the garden.

William was furtively exploring this in order to see how the land lay
before venturing up to the front door when a voice called out:

“Boy! Hi! Come here!”

A man had suddenly appeared at one of the downstair windows and was
beckoning to him.

Warily William approached. The man had a pointed beard, and very bushy
eyebrows.

“Boy!” he called again.

“Uh-huh?” said William non-committally, coming up to the window. The
room inside was evidently a studio. Several easels stood about and the
table was littered with tubes of paint and palettes.

“Just what I wanted,” said the man, “a boy--a real human boy--of the
ruffian type, too. Splendid! My boy, I’ve been longing for you all
morning. I’ve tried to materialise you. You are probably at this moment
nothing but the creature of my brain. I wished for a boy and a boy
appeared. I was just thinking that I must go out into the highways and
byways to search for one when lo! the boy my thoughts had conjured up
stood before us. I’m a superman, a magician. I always had a suspicion
that I might be. Come in, boy.”

Distrustfully William entered the studio. The man gazed at him
rapturously.

“Just what I wanted,” he said, “a dirty rapscallion of a boy with a
crooked tie and a grimy collar.”

This insult stung William to retaliation. He gazed coldly at the artist
who had a smear of yellow paint down one side of his face, and said:

“Bet I’m as clean as you are ... an’ as to _ties_----” his gaze
wandered down to the artist’s flowing bow and stayed there meaningly.

“Spirited withal!” commented the artist, “better and better.... Come
in.”

William came in.

“Sit down.”

William sat down.

“Now I’m going to draw you,” went on the artist. “I’m a genius
whose immortal masterpieces are but inadequately recognised by
his generation, therefore perforce I eke out a modest livelihood
illustrating magazine stories, and some idiot here,” he touched a
manuscript, “has written one about a boy. Fancy writing a story about a
boy. Now where shall I find a boy? thought I. I wish I had a boy, and
lo! a boy appears.... Keep still, boy. Stand just so ... look here ...
and keep quite still.”

William, his brain working quickly, stood just so, looked there and
kept quite still.

The artist sketched in silence, putting William into various postures.
At the end he passed him the sketches for his inspection. William gazed
at them coldly.

“Not much like me,” he commented.

“Think not?” said the artist, “probably you have an idealised
conception of your appearance.”

William looked at him suspiciously.

“I’ve not got anythin’ like what you said,” he remarked, “never even
heard of it so I can’t have. Would you like a man to drive your
motor-car?”

“I’ve not got a motor-car,” said the artist, busily engaged in putting
finishing touches into his sketch.

“Well,” said William, “what about someone to brush your clothes?”

“I prefer my clothes unbrushed,” said the artist; “dust protects the
material.”

William considered this point of view with interest, storing it up for
future use, then returned to the point at issue.

“Wun’t you like someone to look after you when you’re queer in the
head?”

“No,” said the artist, “it’s more fun not having anyone to look after
you when you’re queer in the head.”

He put the sketches on to one side and took up a manuscript from the
table.

“Good Lord,” he groaned as he glanced through it, “Charles I’s time.
Why the dickens do they write stories about Charles I’s time? Where the
deuce am I to get anyone to sit for me in the costume of Charles I’s
time? Tell me that.”

William told him.

“I know a man what’d come to sit to you,” he said, promptly, “he’d want
payin’.”

“Oh, he would, would he?... All right, I’ll pay him. But the question
is, has he got a costume of Charles I’s time?”

“I don’t----” began William, then stopped. “Oh, yes, I expect so....
Oh, yes, he’s sure to have. Oh, yes, we’ll get him one anyway.”

“A protégé?” said the artist.

“Uh-huh?” said William. “No. He’s as nice as what you are. Nicer.”

“_Touché_,” said the artist. “Well, bring him along in his Charles I’s
costume and I’ll pay him half a crown an hour.”

The remuneration seemed princely to William.

“A’ right,” he said, impressed. “A’ right. I’ll bring him along. An’ if
you find out you want any other sort of man he’ll be that, too. He can
do anythin’.”

With that he departed and joined the Outlaws who were still waiting for
him in the road.

“Well, you _have_ been a time,” said Ginger.

“Gottim a job,” swaggered William.

“What as?”

“Bein’ drawed. He’s got to have special clothes. Any of you gotta
Charles I dress? He’s got to have one.”

“Crumbs, no!” said the Outlaws.

“Well,” said William, “we’ve got to get him one. I’ve got him the job
an’ the rest of you got to get him the dress.”

“He might have one already,” said Ginger the optimist. “He might’ve
been to a fancy dress dance in one.”

The other Outlaws looked doubtful.

“No harm goin’ to see anyway,” said William.

So they went to see.

The little girl with blue eyes and auburn curls was sitting on the
doorstep. She looked prettier than ever. And she was still crying.

“Cheer up,” said William, “we’ve got your father a job.”

She continued to cry.

“Has he got a Charles the First dress?” asked William. “If he has he
can come to the job straight away.”

“He can’t come to no job at all,” said the little girl mopping her blue
eyes languidly with the corner of her pinafore, “he’s ill.”

The Outlaws stared at her.

“Crumbs!” said William appalled.

She stared at the Outlaws.

“Go away,” she said, “I don’t like you.”

The Outlaws went away, but despite her professed dislike of them it
never occurred to them to relax their efforts on her behalf.

“We’ll jus’ have to get a Charles the First dress an’ do it for her an’
take him the money,” said William.

“How’ll we get a Charles the First dress?” said Douglas.

“Oh, we will somehow,” said William, cheerfully, “somehow we will. See
if we don’t.”

With this they separated and went to their respective homes for tea.

William was rather silent at tea. He was silent because he was thinking
about the Charles I costume. He was rather vague as to what a Charles
I costume was like, but he had a well-founded suspicion that the only
fancy costume he possessed--a much-worn Red Indian costume--would not
pass muster in its stead. He wondered whether they could transform
it in some way to a Charles I costume by adding an old lace curtain
for instance, or wearing a waste-paper basket as a headdress instead
of the feathered band.... His sister, he knew, had a fairy queen
dress. Mentally he considered the picture of the fairy queen dress
superimposed upon the Red Indian costume. It would look sort of queer
and after all historical dresses had to look sort of queer--that was
the most important thing about them--so it might do. Robert seemed to
be talking a good deal. William began to listen idly.

“I’ve seen her again,” Robert was saying, “she was looking out of a
window upstairs. I heard him call to her. She’s called Gloria....
Haven’t you really seen her, mother?”

“No,” said Mrs. Brown mildly, “I’ve not seen either of them.”

A glorious blush overspread Robert’s face.

“She’s wonderful,” he said, “marvellous. I simply can’t describe her.
But it seems so strange that one never sees her in the village. One
just catches accidental glimpses of her as one passes the house by
chance.... It seems so strange that one doesn’t see her about....
Gloria, that’s her name. I heard him call her that. I think it’s such a
beautiful name, don’t you?”

“Perhaps,” agreed Mrs. Brown doubtfully; “somehow it suggests to me the
name of a gas cooker or a furniture polish, but I daresay that it is
beautiful really.”

“She’s beautiful anyway,” said Robert hotly.

William was listening intently. Mrs. Brown, perceiving this, hastily
changed the conversation. She was aware that William took an active and
not always a kindly interest in his brother’s frequently changing love
affairs.

“You’re going to the fancy dress dance to-night, aren’t you, dear?” she
said to Robert.

“Yes,” said Robert.

“Did you decide on the pierrot’s costume, after all?”

“Oh, no,” said Robert, “didn’t I tell you? Victor’s going to lend me
his Charles I costume. He’d meant to go in it but his cold’s so bad
that he can’t go at all, so he’s sending it over to me.”

“How kind,” said Mrs. Brown, “William, dear, do stop staring at your
brother and get on with your tea.”

William obligingly began to demolish a slice of cake in a way that
argued a rhinoceros’ capacity of mouth and an ostrich’s capacity of
digestion. Having assuaged the pangs of hunger for the time being, he
turned to Robert.

“You got that costume upstairs, Robert?” he said guilelessly.

“Perhaps I have and perhaps I haven’t,” said Robert.

Thoughtfully William demolished another piece of cake.

Then he said, still thoughtfully, and to no one in particular:

“I’d sort of like to see a Charles the First dress. I sort of think it
might be good for my history. I think,” with a burst of inspiration,
“that I’d sort of learn the dates of him better if I’d seen his
clothes. It’s history, an’ my report said I din’t take enough int’rest
in history. Well, I’d sort’ve take a better int’rest in it if I’d seen
his clothes. It’d sort of make it more int’resting. I bet I’d get an
ever so much better hist’ry report next term if I could only see the
Charles the First dress what Robert’s got.”

“Well, you can’t,” said Robert firmly.

“And you’ve had quite enough cake, dear,” said his mother.

William turned to the buns, picked out the largest he could see and
returned to the attack.

“I’m not doin’ anythin’ particular this evenin’, Robert,” he said,
“I’ll help you dress if you like.”

“Thanks, I don’t,” said Robert.

“And don’t talk with your mouth full, William,” said his mother.

William finished the bun in silence, then returned yet again to the
attack.

“I bet I could show you how to put it on, Robert. They’re awful hard
to put on are Charles the First dresses. I don’t s’pose you could do
it alone. I’d be able to show you the way the things went on. Prob’ly
you’ll have ’em all laughin’ at you if you try to put ’em on alone.
I’ll go up now if you like an’ put them out ready for you the way they
ought to go on.”

“Well, I don’t like,” said Robert, “and you can shut up.”

William took another very large bun for consolation. Robert looked at
him dispassionately.

“To watch him eating,” he remarked, “you’d think he was something out
of the Zoo.”

That remark destroyed any compunction that William might otherwise have
had on Robert’s behalf in the events that followed.

Robert, fully attired in his Charles the First costume discreetly
covered by an overcoat, came downstairs. He wore a look of pleasure and
triumph.

The pleasure was caused by his appearance which he imagined to be
slightly more romantic than it really was. The triumph was triumph over
William. He knew that William had been anxious to see the costume, from
what Robert took to be motives of idle curiosity with a not improbable
view to jeering at him afterwards. Robert, who considered that he owed
William a good deal for one thing and another (notably for a watch
which William had dismembered in the interests of Science the week
before), had determined to frustrate that object. Directly after tea
he had locked his bedroom door and pocketed the key, and a few minutes
later he had had the satisfaction of seeing William furtively trying
the handle. William, however, was not about the hall as he descended
the stairs. The costume had proved satisfactorily magnificent, but the
drawback to the whole affair was that SHE would not be there to see it.
At that moment he would have given almost anything in exchange for the
certainty that SHE could see him in his glory. For Robert considered
that the costume made him look very handsome indeed. He did not see how
any girl could look at him in it and remain completely heart whole....
If only SHE were to be there....

He took down his hat, bade farewell to his mother and set off down
the drive. A small boy whom he could not see, but who, he satisfied
himself, was not William (it was Henry) stepped out of the bushes,
handed him a note and disappeared. He went down to the end of the
drive and, standing beneath the lamp-post in the road, read it. It was
type-written.

 “Dear Mr. Brown,” it read,

 “I have seen you in the road passing by our house, and because you
 look good and kind, I turn to you for help. Will you please rescue
 me from my father? He keeps me a prisoner here. He is mad, but not
 mad enough to put in an asylum. He thinks he’s living in the reign
 of Charles the First and he won’t let anyone into the house unless
 they’re dressed in Charles the First clothes, so I don’t know how
 you’ll get in. If you can get in please humour him and let him draw
 you because he thinks that he is an artist, and when once he’s drawn
 you he’ll probably let you do what you like. Then please rescue me and
 take me to my aunt in Scotland and she will reward you.

 “GLORIA GROVES.”

The letter was the result of arduous toil on the part of the Outlaws.
Every word had been laboriously looked up in the dictionary and then
laboriously typed in secret by Henry on his father’s typewriter.

Robert stood reading it, his face paling, his mouth and eyes opening
wide with astonishment. He looked down at the costume which was visible
beneath his coat.

“Charles the First costume,” he gasped. “_Well_.... By Jove ... of all
the _coincidences_!”

Then, with an air of courage and daring, he set off towards The Limes.

       *       *       *       *       *

William entered the studio unannounced. The artist looked up from his
easel.

“Hello,” he said, “you back?”

“Yes,” said William, “that man I told you about’s comin’.”

“Costume and all?” said the man.

“Yes,” said William, “but I’d better explain to you a bit about him
first. He’s queer in the head.”

“In other words you’re bringing me the village idiot.”

“Yes,” said William relieved at having the matter put so succinctly.

“It’s sort of like that. He’s not dangerous, but he dresses up in
Charles the First costume (that’s why I thought he’d do for you) an’
he thinks it _is_ Charles the First time an’ so you’ve got to talk to
him as if it was Charles the First time jus’ to keep him quiet. He’ll
get mad if you don’t. He’ll be drawed all right ’cause he likes bein’
drawed but the minute he sees any girls he always wants to start to
rescuin’ them an’ takin’ them up to their aunts in Scotland.”

“Why Scotland?” said the artist mildly.

“’Cause that’s part of his madness,” explained William.

“Well, there’s only one girl on the premises,” said the artist, “and
that’s my daughter ... been in quarantine for mumps ... just out of it
to-day ... and I don’t suppose he’ll see her ... so that’s all right.”

“You’ll give me the money, won’t you?” said William. “’Cause--’cause I
keep his money for him.... See?”

“We’ll talk about that later,” said the man, “if he comes and when he
comes. Are you his keeper, by the way?”

“Well,” said William guardedly, “I sort of am and I’m sort of not.”

But just then he heard the sound of the opening of the front gate and
discreetly retired again through the open window.

       *       *       *       *       *

Robert walked up the garden path, his face stern and set with resolve.
Robert was a voracious reader of romantic fiction and had often longed
for something like this to happen to him. It’s only drawback in his eye
was that he hadn’t enough money to take the heroine of the drama to
Scotland, but he could not imagine the hero of a story being baffled by
a little thing like that. They always seemed to have enough money to
take the heroine anywhere. But the first thing to do was to rescue her.
Then he’d pawn something or other, pawn his Charles the First costume
perhaps ... but then he’d have nothing to go to Scotland in ... though
in any case one couldn’t travel to Scotland wearing a Charles the First
costume. It was all very baffling ... but the first thing to do was to
rescue her. She might have some jewels or heirlooms that they could
pawn. Heroines in books always had jewels and heirlooms....

“Oh, there you are.... Come in.”

The voice came from one of the open French windows. It was the madman
standing at one end of the room at an easel. He evidently thought he
was an artist just as the girl had warned him. Hastily Robert flung his
overcoat over a garden seat and entered in all the glory of his Charles
the First costume.

“Good evening,” said the artist. “You’ve come to sit for me?”

Robert assumed the simpering expression of one who humours a madman.

“Oh, yes,” he said, “I’ve come to sit for you.”

Certainly the effect of the simper superimposed upon the stern set
expression of resolve would have justified anyone regarding Robert in
his bizarre costume as mentally though not dangerously deranged. The
artist posed him appropriately and then proceeded to test the sanity or
insanity of his sitter.

“Well,” he said, “how’s Charles the First to-day?”

Robert went paler and gathered his forces together. At all costs he
must humour him.

“His Majesty,” he said solemnly, “seems of a truth well to-day.”

Rather good that, he thought.

The artist looked at him keenly ... but the pallid earnestness of
Robert’s expression beneath the humouring simper convinced him ... it
was true ... he _was_ potty. Well, he must just humour him ... he _had_
to get those sketches off to-day ... and he didn’t look dangerous.

“I’m glad to hear that,” he said, and added with a burst of
inspiration, “gadzooks.”

For a minute or two he worked in silence. Then--he found the pose he
had chosen rather difficult, and for a few seconds he stood frowning
at Robert meditatively. The artist’s bushy eyebrows made him look very
ferocious when he frowned. Robert began to tremble. The man might fly
at him or something. He must say something about Charles the First to
soothe him ... at once.... What a pity he knew so little about Charles
the First ... except that he was executed ... or was he executed?...
Better avoid that part of it perhaps, especially as presumably he was
supposed to be still alive.... He didn’t even know whom Charles the
First had married. He might, of course, have been a bachelor.... He
must say something quickly.... The man’s stare was growing positively
murderous.... With a ghastly smile he said:

“King Charles’--er--wife--was looking well this morning.”

The man’s ferocious stare vanished. Robert heaved a sigh of relief and
furtively wiped his brow.

“Er--yes, wasn’t she?” said the artist, who’d moved a little to one
side and so got a better view of his sitter, “do you mind turning
a little more this way?” and added as an afterthought, “prithee,
gadzooks!”

Robert obediently turned a little that way and for a few minutes all
was well. The artist sketched in silence. Robert was beginning to
feel a little less nervous. He gazed round the studio.... Where was
SHE, he wondered?... Perhaps already preparing to fly with him to her
aunt’s in Scotland.... He hoped that she’d remember to bring along a
few heirlooms to pawn, but then he thought with dismay that he’d never
pawned anything in his life and didn’t know how one set about it. That
was awful. He couldn’t help admitting that he seemed rather inadequate
for the glorious rôle which Fate had thrust upon him. Then he comforted
himself by the thought that every hero had to start, had to do the
thing for the first time. It would probably be all right. The artist
became suddenly doubtful about the pose again. He didn’t think it was
quite natural. Once more he gazed frowningly at the sitter and once
more the perspiration stood out on Robert’s brow. He must say something
else about Charles the First at once. He searched feverishly in his
mind for something else to say about Charles the First. He wished he’d
tried harder with his history when he was at school. It was awful
knowing nothing, nothing about Charles the First. He couldn’t even
remember what he looked like though he knew that there’d been pictures
of all the kings and queens in his history book. By Jove, that was an
idea.

“King Charles,” he said, “had his picture painted ... the one in the
history b----I mean just had his picture painted. It turned out quite a
good likeness, I believe.”

“Did it?” said the artist, “could you move your head a bit to the
right?” and added, “grammercy. You a friend of His Majesty’s, I
suppose?”

Robert grew yet paler. It was a most awkward question. If he said he
was it might arouse this madman to frenzy, and if he said that he
wasn’t it might equally rouse this madman to frenzy.... The whole thing
was terrible, being alone with a madman like this.... He almost wished
he’d never come ... not quite, of course ... he still remembered the
vision of beauty he’d seen at the upstairs window.... He coughed again
and said, “Well--er--are you?”

[Illustration: ROBERT BLUSHED AND MADE SIGNS INTENDED TO CONVEY TO HER
THAT HE HAD GOT HER LETTER AND WOULD RESCUE HER.]

“I?” said the artist, “I’m one of his most intimate friends. We
were discussing you only the other day. Ods bodkin--or is that
Elizabethan?--you’ve got a difficult profile--grammercy.”

[Illustration: “WHAT AN EXTRAORDINARY PERSON, DADDY,” WHISPERED THE
GIRL.]

He seemed harmless enough, poor fellow, thought the artist--you could
see at a glance that the poor chap was a bit wanting--gaping and
staring like that all the time ... quite young, too ... very sad ...
poor fellow ... and quite harmless.

Robert was just going to make some reply when the door opened and the
artist’s daughter entered.

Robert blushed to a dull beetroot shade and made signs intended to
convey to her that he had got her letter and would rescue her from her
father at once and take her to her aunt in Scotland. Then the artist
turned round. The artist’s daughter was staring at her would-be rescuer
in amazement. She had to, of course, thought Robert, with her father
watching. He’d better be a bit more careful, too.

“You’ve got a sitter, Daddy?” she said.

“Yes, dear,” he said, “a gentleman of Charles the First’s court.”

She went to her father’s easel and looked at the sketch, whispering:

“What an extraordinary person, Daddy.”

“Yes, dear,” whispered her father, “a bit potty, but absolutely
harmless. I’m a bit vague as to where he comes from. He was brought
here by a boy and will, I suppose, be fetched. He imagines that he’s
living in Charles the First’s time. That’s why he’s dressed like that
... they have to humour him ... but harmless ... quite harmless. I’ve
not quite finished with him, but I want some more paper. Don’t let him
go till I come back, will you ... humour him ... he’s quite harmless.”

He vanished into the next room.

Robert spoke in a hoarse whisper.

“You sent me that note, didn’t you?”

She began the process of humouring him.

“Er--yes,” she replied fearfully.

“I’ll rescue you,” he hissed, “be ready.... As soon as he’s finished
drawing me.... We’ll be at your aunt’s in Scotland before morning.”

“One minute,” she said fearfully and joined her father in the inner
room.

“Daddy,” she said, “he’s _absolutely_ mad. He says that he’s going to
rescue me and take me to my aunt’s in Scotland.”

“Oh, yes, I remember,” said the artist, “that’s one of his obsessions.
They told me that. But he’s harmless. Humour him. I simply must get
that Charles I costume in four poses.”

She returned to the studio.

“You’re ready to come?” said Robert.

“Er--yes,” she said.

“How shall we escape?”

“Oh--er--quite easily,” she said, watching him guardedly and backing
towards the door.

“You trust me?” said Robert ardently.

“Er--yes,” she said.

The artist returned.

“One more,” he said, “sitting there, please, and holding out one
arm--thus--gadzooks--prithee----”

He opened a door in his bureau and stood stooping over it, his back to
Robert. The opportunity of thus catching the oppressor of his beloved
bending was too much for Robert. He leapt upon his back calling out to
the girl:

“Get your things on--quick.... I’ll tie him up.”

“Good heavens!” said the artist, “the blighter’s turned dangerous.”

The artist was stronger than he looked and he soon had Robert neatly
trussed. Then he turned to Gloria.

“A boy brought him,” he said, “go and see if you can find him outside.”

But there were no boys outside.

The Outlaws, who had watched events through the French window till now,
were hurrying homewards to establish alibis.

       *       *       *       *       *

Yet on the way they called at the house of the little girl with the
auburn curls. They had undertaken a responsibility to her and they
meant to see it through. She was not sitting on the doorstep so,
summoning courage by degrees, they knocked at the door. A woman opened
it. Inside the kitchen sat a man eating a pork-pie at a table. The
little girl was nursing a doll by the fire.

The Outlaws entered sheepishly. William was spokesman.

“This your father?” he said to the little girl.

“Yes,” said the little girl.

“Well, we’ve sort of got him work,” said William, “what I mean to say
is that someone went to be drawed for him in these things an’ we’re
goin’ to try jolly hard to get the money from the man what drawed it
to-morrow, an’--we’ll give it him an----”

The man laid down his knife and fork, swallowed a large mouthful of
pork unmasticated, and said:

“Wot cher mean?”

“Well,” explained William, “she told us ’bout you bein’ out of work----”

“_Me_ out of work,” said the man indignantly.

“Oh, they are such _stupid_ boys,” burst out the little girl. “I was
havin’ a nice little game all to myself pretendin’ to be a little girl
in a book wiv a daddy out of work an’ they came interferin’--an’ then I
was pretendin’ to be a little girl in a book wiv a daddy what was ill
an’ they came again _interferin’_----”

“Weren’t you ill?” stammered William.

“Me?” roared the man, “never been ill in me life.”

“W--weren’t you out of work?” said William.

“_Me!_” roared the man again, “never been out of work in my life.”

“They kept _interferin’_ with my games----” said the little girl.

“You interfere with ’er games again----” said the man threateningly,
“an’ I’ll----”

Bewildered, the Outlaws crept away.




CHAPTER VII

WILLIAM’S BUSY DAY


William and the Outlaws strode along the road engaged in a lusty but
inharmonious outburst of Community singing. It was the first real
day of Spring. The buds were bursting, the birds were singing (more
harmoniously than the Outlaws) and there was a fresh invigorating
breeze. The Outlaws were going fishing. They held over their shoulders
their home-made rods and they carried jam-jars with string handles.
They were going to fish the stream in the valley. The jam-jars were to
receive the minnows and other small water creatures which they might
catch; but the Outlaws, despite all the lessons of experience, were
still hopeful of catching one day a trout or even a salmon in the
stream. They were quite certain, though they had never seen any, that
mighty water beasts haunted the place.

“Under the big stones,” said William, “why, I bet there’s all sorts of
things. There’s room for great big fish right under the stones.”

“Well, once we turned ’em over an’ there weren’t any,” Douglas the
literal reminded him.

William’s faith, however, was not to be lightly shaken.

“Oh, they sort of dart about,” he explained vaguely, “by the time
you’ve turned up one stone to see if they’re there they’ve darted off
to the next an’ when you turn over the next they’ve darted back to the
first without you seein’ ’em, but they’re there all the time really.
I bet they are. An’ I bet I catch a great big whopper--a salmon or
somethin’--this afternoon.”

“Huh!” said Ginger, “I’ll give you sixpence if you catch a salmon.”

“A’ right,” said William hopefully, “an’ don’t you forget. Don’t start
pretendin’ you said tuppence same as you did about me seein’ the water
rat.”

This started a heated argument which lasted till they reached what was
known locally as the cave.

The cave lay just outside the village and was believed by some people
to be natural and by others to be part of old excavations.

The Outlaws believed it to be the present haunt of smugglers. They
believed that smugglers held nightly meetings there. The fact of its
distance from the sea did not shake their faith in this theory. As
William said, “I bet they have their meetin’s here ’cause folk won’t
suspect ’em of bein’ here. Folks keep on the look out for ’em by the
sea an’ they trick ’em by comin’ out here an’ havin’ their meetin’s
here where nobody’s on the look out for ’em.”

For the hundredth time they explored the cave, hoping to find some
proofs of the smugglers’ visits in the shape of a forgotten bottle of
rum or one of the lurid handkerchiefs which they knew to be the correct
smuggler’s headgear, or even a piece of paper containing a note of the
smugglers’ latest exploit or a map of the district. For the hundredth
time they searched in vain and ended by gazing up at a small slit in
the rock just above their heads. They had noticed it before but had not
given it serious consideration. Now William gazed at it frowningly and
said, “I bet I could get through that and I bet that it leads down a
passage an’ that,” his imagination as ever running away with him, “an’
that at the end of a passage there’s a big place where they hold their
meetin’s an’ I bet they’re there now--_all_ of ’em--holdin’ a meetin’.”

He stood on tiptoe and put his ear to the aperture. “Yes,” he said, “I
b’lieve I can hear ’em talkin’.”

“Oh, come on,” said Douglas, who was not of an imaginative turn of
mind. “I want to catch some minnows an’ I bet there aren’t any
smugglers there, anyway.”

William was annoyed by this interruption, but arguing strenuously,
proving the presence of smugglers in the cave to his own entire
satisfaction, he led his band out of the cave and on to the high road
again.

The subject of smugglers soon languished. They were passing a large
barrack-like house which had been in the process of building for the
best part of a year. It was finished at last. Curtains now hung at the
windows and there were signs of habitation--a line of clothes flapping
in the breeze in the back garden and the fleeting glimpse of a woman at
one of the windows. A very high wall surrounded the garden.

“Wonder what it is,” said Henry speculatively, “looks to me like a
prison.”

“P’raps it’s a lunatic asylum,” said Ginger, “why’s it got a high wall
round it like that if it’s not a lunatic asylum?”

Discussing the matter animatedly they wandered on to the stream.

“Now catch your salmon,” challenged Ginger.

“All right. I bet I will,” said William doggedly.

For a short time they fished in silence.

Then William gave a cry of triumph. His hook had caught something
beneath one of the big stones.

“There!” he said, “I’ve got one. I _told_ you so.”

“Bet it’s not a salmon,” said Ginger but with a certain excitement in
his voice.

“I bet it is,” said William, “if it’s not a salmon I--I----” with a
sudden burst of inspiration, “I’ll go through that hole in the cave--so
there!”

He tugged harder.

His “catch” came out.

It was an old boot.

       *       *       *       *       *

They escorted him back to the cave. The hole looked far too small
for one of William’s solid bulk. They stood below and stared at it
speculatively.

“You’ve _got_ to,” said Ginger, “you said you would.”

“Oh, all right,” said William with a swagger which was far from
expressing his real feelings, “I bet I can easy get through that little
hole an’ I bet I’ll find a big place full of smugglers or smuggled
stuff inside. Give me a shove ... that’s it.... _Oo_,” irritably,
“don’t shove so _hard_.... You nearly pushed my head off my neck....
Go on--go on.... Oo, I say, I’m getting through quite easy ... it’s
all dark ... it’s a sort of passage....” William had miraculously
scraped himself through the small aperture. Two large boots was all of
him which was now visible to the Outlaws. Those, too, disappeared, as
William began to crawl down the passage. It was mercifully a little
wider after the actual opening. His voice reached them faintly.

“It’s all dark ... it’s like a little tunnel.... I’m going right to the
end to see what’s there ... well, anyway if that wasn’t a salmon I bet
there _are_ salmons there and I bet I’ll catch one too one of these
days, and----”

His voice died away in the distance. They waited rather anxiously....
They heard nothing and saw nothing more. William seemed to have been
completely swallowed up by the rock.

       *       *       *       *       *

William slowly and painfully (for the aperture was so small that
occasionally it grazed his back and head) travelled along what was
little more than a fissure in the rock. The spirit of adventure was
high in him. He was longing to come upon a cave full of swarthy men
with coloured handkerchiefs tied round their heads and gold ear-rings,
quaffing goblets of smuggled rum or unloading bales of smuggled silk.
Occasionally he stopped and listened for the sound of deep-throated
oaths or whispers or smugglers’ songs. Once or twice he was almost
sure he heard them. He crawled on and on and on and into a curtain of
undergrowth and out into a field. He stopped and looked around him. He
was in the field behind the cave. The curtain of undergrowth completely
concealed the little hole from which he had emerged. He was partly
relieved and partly disappointed. It was rather nice to be out in the
open air again (the tunnel had had a very earthy taste); on the other
hand he had hoped for more adventures than it had afforded. But he
consoled himself by telling himself that they might still exist. He’d
explore that passage more thoroughly some other time--there might be
a passage opening off it leading to the smugglers’ cave--and meantime
it had given him quite a satisfactory thrill. He’d never really
thought he could get through that little hole. And it had given him a
secret. The knowledge that that little tunnel led out into the field
was very thrilling. He looked around him again. Within a few yards
from him was the wall surrounding the house about which they had just
been making surmises. Was it a prison, or an asylum or--possibly--a
Bolshevist headquarters? William looked at it curiously. He longed
to know. He noticed a small door in the wall standing open. He went
up to it and peeped inside. It gave on to a paved yard which was
empty. The temptation was too strong for William. Very cautiously he
entered. Still he couldn’t see anyone about. A door--a kitchen door
apparently--stood open. Still very cautiously William approached. He
decided to say that he’d lost his way should anyone accost him. He was
dimly aware that his appearance after his passage through the bowels of
the earth was not such as to inspire confidence. Yet his curiosity and
the suggestion of adventure which their surmises had thrown over the
house was an irresistible magnet. Within the open door was a kitchen
where a boy, about William’s size and height and not unlike William,
stood at a table wearing blue overalls and polishing silver.

They stared at each other. Then William said, “Hello.”

The boy was evidently ready to be friendly. He replied “Hello.”

Again they stared at each other in silence. This time it was the boy
who broke the silence.

“What’ve you come for?” he said in a tone of weary boredom. “You the
butcher’s boy or the baker’s boy or somethin’? Only came in this
mornin’ so I don’ know who’s what yet. P’raps you’re the milk boy?”

“No, I’m not,” said William.

“Beggin’?” said the boy.

“No,” said William.

But the boy’s tone was friendly so William cautiously entered the
kitchen and began to watch him. The boy was cleaning silver with a
paste which he made by the highly interesting process of spitting into
a powder. William watched, absorbed. He longed to assist.

“You live here?” he said ingratiatingly to the boy.

“Naw,” said the boy laconically. “House boy. Only came to-day,” and
added dispassionately. “Rotten place.”

“Is it a prison?” said William with interest.

The boy seemed to resent the question.

“Prison yourself,” he said with spirit.

“A lunatic asylum, then?” said William.

This seemed to sting the boy yet further.

“Garn,” he said pugnaciously, “Oo’re yer callin’ a lunatic asylum?”

“I din’ mean _you_,” said William pacifically. “P’raps it’s a place
where they make plots.”

The boy relapsed into boredom. “I dunno what they make,” he said. “Only
came this mornin’. _They’ve_ gorn off to ’is _aunt_ but the other
one--_she’s_ still here, you bet, a-ringin’ an’ a-ringin’ an’ a-ringin’
at her bell, an’ givin’ no one peace nowheres.” He warmed to his theme.
“I wouldn’ve come if I’d knowed. House-maid went off yesterday wivout
notice. _She’d_ ’ad as much as she wanted an’ only the ole cook--well
_I’m_, not used to places wiv only a ole cook ’sides meself an’ _her_
upstairs a-ringin’ an’ a-ringin’ at her bell an’ givin’ no one no peace
nowheres an’ the other two off to their aunt’s. No place fit to call a
place _I_ don’t call it.” He spat viciously into his powder. “Yus, an’
anyone can have my job.”

“Can I?” said William eagerly.

During the last few minutes a longing to make paste by spitting into
a powder and then to clean silver with it had grown in William’s soul
till it was a consuming passion.

The boy looked at him in surprise and suspicion, not sure whether the
question was intended as an insult.

“What _you_ doin’ an’ where _you_ come from?” he demanded aggressively.

“Been fishin’,” said William, “an’ I jolly nearly caught a salmon.”

The boy looked out of the window. It was still the first real day of
Spring.

“Crumbs!” he said enviously, “_fishin’_.” He gazed with distaste at his
work, “an me muckin’ about with this ’ere.”

“Well,” suggested William simply, “you go out an’ fish an’ I’ll go on
muckin’ about with that.”

The boy stared at him again first in pure amazement and finally with
speculation.

“Yus,” he said at last, “an’ you pinch my screw. Not _much_!”

“No, I won’t,” said William with great emphasis. “I won’t. Honest I
won’t. I’ll give it you. I don’t want it. I only want,” again he gazed
enviously at the boy’s engaging pastime, “I only want to clean silver
same as you’re doin’.”

“Then there’s the car to clean with the ’ose-pipe.”

William’s eyes gleamed.

“I bet I can do that,” he said, “an’ what after that?”

“Dunno,” said the boy, “that’s all they told me. The ole cook’ll tell
you what to do next. I specks,” optimistically, “she won’t notice you
not bein’ me with me only comin’ this mornin’ an’ her run off her feet
what with _her_ ringin’ her bell all the time an’ givin’ no one no
peace an’ _them_ bein’ away. Anyway,” he ended defiantly, “I don’t care
if she does. It ain’t the sort of place _I’ve_ bin used to an’ for two
pins I’d tell ’em so.”

He took a length of string from his pocket, a pin from a pincushion
which hung by the fire-place, a jam jar from a cupboard, then looked
uncertainly at William.

“I c’n find a stick down there by the stream,” he said, “an’ I won’t
stay long. I bet I’ll be back before that ole cook comes down from
_her_ an’--well, you put these here on an’ try’n look like me an’--I
won’t be long.”

He slipped off his overalls and disappeared into the sunshine. William
heard him run across the paved yard and close the door cautiously
behind him. Then evidently he felt safe. There came the sound of his
whistling as he ran across the field.

William put on the overalls and gave himself up to his enthralling
task. It was every bit as thrilling as he’d thought it would be. He
spat and mixed and rubbed and spat and mixed and rubbed in blissful
absorption.... He got the powder all over his face and hair and hands
and overalls. Then he heard the sound of someone coming downstairs. He
bent his head low over his work. Out of the corner of his eye he saw a
large hot-looking woman enter, wearing an apron and a print dress.

“Gosh!” she exclaimed as though in despair. “Gosh! of all the _places_!”

At that minute a bell rang loudly and with a groan she turned and went
from the room again. William went on with his task of cleaning the
silver. The novelty of the process was wearing off and he was beginning
to feel rather tired of it. He amused himself by tracing patterns upon
the surface of the silver with the paste he had manufactured. He took
a lot of trouble making a funny face upon the teapot which fortunately
had a plain surface.

Then the large woman came down again. She entered the kitchen groaning
and saying “Oh, lor!” and she was summoned upstairs again at once by an
imperious peal of the bell. After a few minutes she came down again,
still groaning and saying, “Oh, lor!... First she wants hot milk an’
then she wants cold milk an’ then she wants beef tea an’ then the Lord
only knows what she wants ... first one thing an’ then another.... I’ve
fair had enough of it an’ _them_ goin’ off to their aunt’s an’ that
Ellen ’oppin’ it an’ _you_ not much help to a body, are you?” she asked
sarcastically. Then she looked at his face and screamed. “My Gosh!...
What’s ’appened to you?”

“Me?” said William blankly.

“Yes. Your face as gone an’ changed since jus’ a few minutes ago.
What’s ’appened to it?”

“Nothin’,” said William.

“Well, it’s my nerves, then,” she said shrilly. “I’m startin’ seein’
things wrong. An’ no wonder.... Well, I’ve ’ad enough of it, I ’ave
an’ I’m goin’ ’ome ... _now_ ... first that Ellen ’oppin’ it an’ then
_them_ goin’ off an’ then _’er_ badgerin’ the life out of me. An’ then
your face changin’ before me very eyes. Me nervous system’s wore out,
that’s what it is, an’ I’ve ’ad enough of it. When people’s faces start
changin’ under me very eyes it shows I needs a change an’ I’m goin’ to
’ave one. That Ellen ain’t the only one what can ’op it. _’Er_ an’ ’er
bell-ringing--an’--an’ _you_ an’ your face-changin’! ’Taint no place
for a respectable woman. _You_ can ’ave a taste of waitin’ on ’er an’
you can tell _them_ I’ve gone an’ why--you an’ your face!”

During this tirade she had divested herself of her apron and clothed
herself in her coat and hat. She stood now and looked at William for a
minute in scornful silence. Then her glance wandered to his operations.

“Ugh!” she said in disgust, “you nasty little messer, you! Call
yourself a house boy--changin’ your face every minute. What d’you think
you are? A blinkin’ cornelian? An’ messin’ about like that. What d’you
think you’re doin’? Distemperin’ the silver or cleanin’ it?”

At this moment came another irascible peal at the bell.

“Listen!” said the fat woman. “’Ark at ’er! Well, I’m orf. I’m fair
finished, I am. An’ you can go or stay _has_ you please! Serve ’em
right to come ’ome an’ find us _hall_ gone. Serve _’er_ right if you
went up to _’er_ an’ did a bit of face changin’ at ’er just to scare
’er same as you did me. Do ’er good. Drat ’er--an’ all of you.”

She went out of the kitchen and slammed the back door. Then she went
out of the paved yard and slammed the door. Then she went across the
field and out of the field into the road and slammed the gate.

William stood and looked about him. A bell rang again with vicious
intensity and he realised with mingled excitement and apprehension that
he and the mysterious ringer were the only occupants of the house. The
ringing went on and on and on.

William stood beneath the bell-dial and watched the blue disc waggle
with dispassionate interest. The little blue disc was labelled “Miss
Pilliter.” Then he bethought himself of his next duty. It was cleaning
the car with the hose. His spirits rose at the prospect.

The bell was still ringing wildly, furiously, hysterically, but its
ringing did not trouble William. He went out into the yard to find the
car. It was in the garage and just near it was a hose pipe.

William, much thrilled by this discovery, began to experiment with
the hose pipe. He found a tap by which it could be turned off and
on, by which it could be made to play fiercely or languidly. William
experimented with this for some time. It was even more fascinating
than the silver cleaning. There was a small leak near the nozzle which
formed a little fountain. William cleaned the car by playing on to it
wildly and at random, making enthralling water snakes and serpents by
writhing the pipe to and fro. He deluged the car for about a quarter of
an hour in a state of pure ecstasy.... The bell could still be heard
ringing in the house, but William heeded it not. He was engrossed heart
and mind and soul in his manipulation of the hose pipe. At the end of
the quarter of the hour he laid down the pipe and went to examine the
car. He had performed his task rather too thoroughly. Not only was the
car dripping outside; it was also dripping inside. There were pools of
water on the floor at the back and on the front. There were pools on
all the seats. Too late William realised that he should have tempered
thoroughness with discretion. Still, he thought optimistically, it
would dry in time. His gaze wandered round. It might be a good plan to
clean the walls of the garage while he was about it. They looked pretty
dirty.

He turned the hose on to them. That was almost more fascinating
than cleaning the car. The water bounced back at you from the wall
unexpectedly and delightfully. He could sluice it round and round the
wall in patterns. He could make a mammoth fountain of it by pointing
it straight at the ceiling. After some minutes of this enthralling
occupation he turned his attention to the tap which regulated the
flow and began to experiment with that. Laying the hose pipe flat on
the floor he turned the tap in one direction till the flow was a mere
trickle, then turned it in the other till it was a torrent. The torrent
was more thrilling than the trickle but it was also more unmanageable.
So he tried to turn the tap down again and found that he couldn’t. It
had stuck. He wrestled with it, but in vain. The torrent continued to
discharge itself with unabated violence.

William was slightly dismayed by the discovery. He looked round for a
hammer or some other implement to apply to the recalcitrant tap, but
saw none. He decided to go back to the kitchen and look for one there.
He dripped his way across to the kitchen and there looked about him.
The bell was still ringing violently. The blue disc was still wobbling
hysterically. It occurred to William suddenly that as sole staff of the
house it was perhaps his duty to answer the bell. So he dripped his way
upstairs. The blue disc had been marked 6. Outside the door marked six
he stopped a minute, then opened the door and entered. A woman wearing
an expression of suffering and a very purple dress lay moaning on the
sofa. The continued ringing of the bell was explained by a large book
which she had propped up against it in such a way as to keep the button
pressed.

She opened her eyes and looked balefully at William.

“I’ve been ringing that bell,” she said viciously, “for a whole hour
without anyone coming to answer it. I’ve had three separate fits of
hysterics. I feel so ill that I can’t speak. I shall claim damages
from Dr. Morlan. Never, _never_, NEVER have I been treated like this
before. Here I come--a quivering victim of nerves, _riddled_ by
neurasthenia--come here to be nursed back to health and strength by
Dr. Morlan, and first of all off he goes to some aunt or other, then
off goes the housemaid. And I shall report that cook to Dr. Morlan the
minute he returns, the _minute_ he returns. I’ll sue her for damages.
I’ll sue the whole lot of you for damages; I’m going to have hysterics
again.”

She had them, and William watched with calm interest and enjoyment. It
was even more diverting than the silver cleaning and the hose pipe.
When she’d finished she sat up and wiped her eyes.

“Why don’t you _do_ something?” she said irritably to William.

“All right--what?” said William obligingly, but rather sorry that the
entertainment had come to an end.

“Fetch the cook,” snapped the lady, “ask her how she _dare_ ignore my
bell for hours and _hours_ and HOURS. Tell her I’m going to sue her for
damages. Tell her----”

“She’s gone,” said William.

“_Gone!_” screamed the lady. “Gone where?”

“Gone off,” said William; “she said she was fair finished an’ went off.”

“When’s she coming back? I’m in a most critical state of health. All
this neglect and confusion will be. the _death_ of my nervous system.
When’s she coming back?”

“Never,” said William. “She’s gone off for good. She said _her_ nervous
system was wore out an’ went off--for good.”

“Her nervous system indeed,” said the lady, stung by the cook’s
presumption in having a nervous system. “What’s anyone’s nervous system
compared with mine? Who’s in charge of the staff, then?”

“Me,” said William simply. “I’m all there is left of it.”

He was rewarded by an even finer display of hysterics than the one
before. He sat and watched this one, too, with critical enjoyment as
one might watch a firework display or an exhibition of conjuring. His
attitude seemed to irate her. She recovered suddenly and launched into
another tirade.

“Here I come,” she said, “as paying guest to be nursed back to health
and strength from a state of neurasthenic prostration, and find myself
left to the mercies of a common house-boy, a nasty, common, low, little
rapscallion like you--find myself literally _murdered_ by neglect, but
I’ll sue you for damages, the whole _lot_ of you--the doctor and the
housemaid and the cook and you--you nasty little--_monkey_ ... and I’ll
have you all hung for murder.”

She burst into tears again and William continued to watch her, not
at all stung by her reflections on his personal appearance and social
standing. He was hoping that the sobbing would lead to another fit of
hysterics. It didn’t, however. She dried her tears suddenly and sat up.

“It’s more than an hour and a half,” she said pathetically, “since I
had any nourishment at all. The effect on my nervous system will be
serious. My nerves are in such a condition that I must have nourishment
every hour, every hour at least. Go and get me a glass of milk at once,
boy.”

William obligingly went downstairs and looked for some milk. He
couldn’t find any. At last he came upon a bowl of some milky-looking
liquid. Much relieved he filled a glass with it and took it upstairs
to the golden-haired lady. She received it with a suffering expression
and closing her eyes took a dainty sip. Then her suffering expression
changed to one of fury and she flung the glass of liquid at William’s
head. It missed William’s head and emptied itself over a Venus de Milo
by the door, the glass, miraculously unbroken, encaging the beauty’s
head and shoulders. William watched this phenomenon with delight.

“You little fiend!” screamed the lady, “it’s _starch_!”

“Starch,” said William. “Fancy! An’ it looked jus’ like milk. But I
say, it’s funny about that glass stayin’ on the stachoo like that. I
bet you couldn’t have done that if you’d tried!”

The lady had returned to her expression of patient suffering. She spoke
with closed eyes and in a voice so faint that William could hardly hear
it.

“I must have some nourishment at once. I’ve had
nothing--_nothing_--since my breakfast at nine and now it’s nearly
eleven. And for my breakfast I only had a few eggs. Go and make me some
cocoa at once ... at once.”

William went downstairs again and looked for some cocoa. He found a
cupboard with various tins and in one tin he found a brown powder
which might quite well be cocoa, though there was no label on it.
Ever hopeful, he mixed some with water in a cup and took it up to the
lady. Again she assumed her suffering expression, closed her eyes and
sipped it daintily. Again her suffering expression changed to one of
fury, again she flung the cup at William and again she missed him. This
time the cup hit a bust of William Shakespeare. Though the impact broke
the cup the bottom of it rested hat-wise at a rakish angle upon the
immortal bard’s head, giving him a rather debauched appearance while
the dark liquid streamed down his smug countenance.

“It’s knife powder,” screamed the lady hysterically. “Oh, you murderous
little _brute_. It’s knife powder! This will be the death of me. I’ll
never get over this as long as I live--never, _never_, NEVER!”

William stood expectant awaiting the inevitable attack of hysterics.
But it did not come. The lady’s eyes had wandered to the window and
there they stayed, growing wider and wider and rounder and rounder and
wider, while her mouth slowly opened to its fullest extent. She pointed
with a trembling hand.

“Look!” she said. “The river’s flooding.”

William looked. The part of the garden which could be seen from the
window was completely under water. Then--and not till then--did William
remember the hose pipe which he had left playing at full force in the
back yard. He gazed in silent horror.

“I always _said_ so,” panted the lady hysterically, “I _said_ so. I
said so to Dr. Morlan. I said ‘I couldn’t live in a house in a valley.
There’d be floods and my nerves couldn’t stand them,’ and he said that
the river couldn’t possibly flood this house and it can and I might
have known he was lying and oh my poor nerves, what shall I do, what
_shall_ I do?”

William gazed around the room as if in search of inspiration. He met
the gaze of Venus de Milo soaked in starch and leering through her
enclosing glass; he met the gaze of William Shakespeare soaked in
water and knife powder and wearing his broken cup jauntily. Neither
afforded him inspiration.

“It rises as I watch it--inch by inch,” shrilled the lady, “_inch_ by
_inch_! It’s terrible ... we’re marooned.... Oh, it’s horrible. There
isn’t even a life belt in the house.”

William was conscious of a great relief at her explanation of the
spreading sheet of water. It would for the present at any rate divert
guilt from him.

“Yes,” he agreed looking out with her upon the water-covered garden.
“That’s what I bet it is--it’s the river rising.”

“Why didn’t you _tell_ me?” she screamed, “you must have known. Why,
now I come to think of it, you were dripping wet when you first came
into the room.”

“Well,” said William with a burst of inspiration, “I din’ want to give
you a sudden shock--what I thought it might give you tellin’ you you
was macarooned----”

“Oh, don’t _talk_,” she said. “Go down at once and see if you can find
any hope of rescue.”

William went downstairs again. He waded out to the hose pipe and
wrestled again with the tap beneath the gushing water. In vain. He
waded into a neighbouring shed and found three of four panic-stricken
hens. He captured two and took them up to the lady’s room, flinging
them in carelessly.

“Rescued ’em,” he said with quiet pride, and then went down for the
others. The mingled sounds of the squeaking and terrified flight of
hens and the lady’s screams pursued him down the stairs. He caught the
other two hens and brought them up, too, carelessly flinging them in
to join the chaos. Then he went down for further investigations. In
another shed he found a puppy who had climbed into a box to escape the
water and there was engaged in trying to catch a spider on the wall.
William rescued the puppy, and took it upstairs to join the lady’s
menagerie.

“Rescued this, too,” he said as he deposited it inside.

It promptly began to chase the hens. There ensued a scene of wild
confusion as the hens, with piercing squawks, flew over chairs and
tables, pursued by the puppy.

Even the lady seemed to feel that hysterics would have no chance
of competing with this uproar, so she began to chase the puppy.
William returned to the deluge in which he was beginning to find an
irresistible fascination. He had read a story not long ago in which
a flood figured largely and in which the hero had rescued children
and animals from the passing torrent and had taken them to a place of
safety at the top of a house. In William’s mind the law of association
was a strong one. As he gazed upon the surging stream he became the
rescuer hero of the story and began to look round for something else
to rescue. There appeared to be no more live stock to be rescued from
the sheds. He waded down to the road, which also was now partially
under water, and looked up and down. A small pig had wandered out of a
neighbouring farm and was standing contemplating the flooded road with
interest and surprise. The hero rescuer of William’s story had rescued
a pig. Without a moment’s hesitation William waded up to the pig,
seized it firmly round the middle before it could escape, and staggered
through the deluge with it and into the house. Though small it showed
more resistance than William had expected. It wriggled and squeaked and
kicked in all directions. Panting, William staggered upstairs with it.
He flung open the door and deposited the pig on the threshold.

“Here’s somethin’ else I’ve rescued,” he said proudly.

The lady was showing unexpected capabilities in dealing with the
situation. She had taken the china out of the china cabinet and had put
the hens into it. They were staring through the glass doors in stupid
amazement and one of them had just complicated matters by laying an
egg.

The lady was just disputing the possession of a table runner with the
spirited puppy who thought she was having a game with it. The puppy
had already completely dismembered a hassock, a mat and two cushions.
Traces of them lay about the room. Venus and Shakespeare, still wearing
their rakish head adornments, were gazing at the scene through runnels
of starch and liquid knife-powder. Miss Polliter received the new
refugee in a business-like fashion. She had evidently finally decided
that this was no occasion for the display of nervous systems. She
seemed, in fact, exhilarated and stimulated.

[Illustration: “HERE’S SOMETHIN’ ELSE I’VE RESCUED,” SAID WILLIAM,
PROUDLY.]

“Put him down here,” she said. “That’s quite right, my boy. Go and
rescue anything else you can. This is a noble work, indeed.”

The puppy charged the pig and the pig charged the china cabinet. There
came the sound of the breaking of glass. The egg rolled out and the
puppy fell upon it with wild delight. The hens began to fly about the
room in panic again.

[Illustration: “PUT HIM DOWN HERE,” MISS POLLITER SAID. “THIS IS A
NOBLE WORK, INDEED.”]

William hastily shut the door and went downstairs to continue his work
of rescuing. He had by this time almost persuaded himself that the
flood was of natural origin and that he was performing heroic deeds
of valour in rescuing its victims. Again he looked up and down the
road. He felt that he had done his duty by the animal creation and
he would have welcomed a rescuable human being. Suddenly he saw two
infants from the Infant School coming hand in hand down the road. They
stared in amazement at the flood that barred their progress. Then
with a touching faith in their power over the forces of nature and an
innate love of paddling, they walked serenely into the midst of the
stream. When they reached the middle, however, panic overcame them. The
smaller one sat down and roared and the larger one stood on tip-toe
and screamed. William at once plunged into the stream and “rescued”
them. They were stalwart infants but he managed to get one tucked
under each arm and carried them roaring lustily and dripping copiously
up to Miss Polliter’s room. Again Miss Polliter had restored as if
by magic a certain amount of order. She had cooped up the hens by an
ingenious arrangement of the fireguard and she had put the pig in the
coal-scuttle, leaving him an air-hole through which he was determinedly
squeezing his snout as if in the hope of ultimately squeezing the rest
of him. The puppy had dealt thoroughly with the table runner while Miss
Polliter was engaged on the hens and pig, and was now seeing whether he
could pull down window curtains or not.

William deposited his dripping, roaring infants.

“Some more I’ve rescued,” he said succinctly.

Miss Polliter turned to him a face which was bright with interest and
enterprise.

“Splendid, dear boy,” she said happily, “splendid.... I’ll soon have
them warmed and dried--or wait--is the flood rising?”

William said it was.

“Well, then, the best thing would be to go to the very top of the house
where we shall be safer than here!”

Determinedly she picked up the infants, went out on to the landing
and mounted the attic stairs. William followed holding the puppy who
managed during the journey to tear off and (presumably--as they were
never seen again) swallow his pocket flap and three buttons from his
coat. Then Miss Polliter returned for the pig and William followed with
a hen. The pig was very recalcitrant and Miss Polliter said “Naughty,”
to him quite sternly once or twice. Then they returned for the other
hens. One hen escaped and in the intoxication of sudden liberty flew
squawking loudly out of a skylight.

In the attic bedroom where Miss Polliter now assembled her little
company of refugees she lit the gas fire and started her great task of
organisation.

“I’ll dry these dear children first,” she said. “Now go down, dear boy,
and see if there is anyone else in need of your aid.”

William went downstairs slowly. Something of his rapture and excitement
was leaving him. Cold reality was placing its icy grip upon his heart.
He began to wonder what would happen to him when they discovered the
nature and cause of his “flood,” and whether the state to which the
refugees were reducing the house would also be laid to his charge. He
waded out to the hose pipe and had another fruitless struggle with the
tap. Then he looked despondently up and down the road. The “flood” was
spreading visibly, but there was no one in sight. He returned slowly
and thoughtfully to Miss Polliter. Miss Polliter looked brisk and
happy. She had apparently forgotten both her nervous system and its
need of perpetual nourishment. She was having a game with the infants
who were now partially dried and crowing with delight. She had managed
to drive the hens into a corner of the room and had secured them there
by a chest of drawers. She had tied the pig by a piece of string to the
washhand-stand and it was now lying down quite placidly, engaged in
eating the carpet. One hen had escaped from its “coop” and was running
round a table pursued by or pursuing (it was impossible to say which)
the puppy. Miss Polliter was playing pat-a-cake with the drying infants
and seemed to be enjoying it as much as the infants. She greeted
William gaily.

“Don’t look so sad, dear boy,” she said. “I think that even though the
river continues to rise all night we shall be safe here--quite safe
here--and I daresay you can find something for these dear children to
eat when they get hungry. I don’t need anything. I’m quite all right.
I can easily go without anything till morning. Now do one more thing
for me, dear boy. Go down to my room on the lower floor and see the
time. Dr. Morlan said that he would be home by six.”

Still more slowly, still more thoughtfully, William descended to her
room on the lower floor and saw the time. It was five minutes to
six. Dr. Morlan might arrive then at any minute. William considered
the situation from every angle. To depart now as unostentatiously
as possible seemed to him a far, far better thing than to wait and
face Dr. Morlan’s wrath. The hose pipe was damaged, the garden was
flooded, Miss Polliter’s room was like a battlefield after a battle,
strange infants and a pig were disporting themselves about the house, a
destructive puppy had wreaked its will upon every cushion and curtain
and chair within reach (it had found that it could pull down window
curtains).

William very quietly slipped out of the front door and crept down the
drive. The flood seemed to be concentrating itself upon the back of the
house. The front was still more or less dry. William crept across the
field to the stile that led to the main road. Here his progress was
barred by a group of three who stood talking by the stile. There was a
tall pompous-looking man with a beard, a small woman and an elderly man.

“Oh, yes, we’ve quite settled in now,” the tall, pompous-looking man
was saying. “We’ve got a resident patient with us--a Miss Polliter who
is a chronic nervous case. We are rather uneasy at having to leave
her all to-day with only the cook and house-boy. Unfortunately our
housemaid left us suddenly yesterday but we trust that things will have
gone all right. An aunt of mine was reported to be seriously ill and
we had to hurry to her to be in time but unfortunately--ahem--I mean
fortunately--we found that she had taken a turn for the better so we
returned as soon as we could.”

“Of course,” said the woman, “we’d have been back _ever_ so much
earlier if it hadn’t been for that affair at the cave.”

“Oh, yes,” said the doctor, “very tragic affair, very tragic indeed.
Some poor boy ... there were a lot of people there trying to recover
the body and they wanted to have a doctor in the unlikely case of the
boy being alive when they got him out. I assured them that it was very
unlikely that he would be alive and that I had to get back to my own
patient ... and it would only be a matter of a few minutes to send for
me.... The poor mother was distraught.”

“What had happened?” said the other man.

“Some rash child had crawled into an opening in the rock and had not
come out. He must have been suffocated. His friends waited for over an
hour before they notified the parents and I am afraid that it is too
late now. They have repeatedly called to him but there is no response.
As I told them, there are frequently poisonous gases in the fissures
of the rock and the poor child must have succumbed to them. So far all
attempts to recover the body have been unsuccessful. They have just
sent for men with pickaxes.”

William’s heart was sinking lower and lower. Crumbs! He’d quite
forgotten the cave part of it. Crumbs! he’d quite forgotten that he’d
left the Outlaws in the cave waiting for him. The house-boy and the
cook and the silver cleaning and the hose-pipe and the flood and Miss
Polliter and the hens and the pig and the puppy and the infants had
completely driven the cave and the Outlaws out of his head. Crumbs,
wouldn’t everybody be mad!

For William had learnt by experience that with a strange perversity
parents who had mourned their children as lost or dead are generally
for some reason best known to themselves intensely irritated to find
that they have been alive and well and near them all the time. William
had little hopes of being received by his parents with the joy and
affection that should be given to one miraculously restored to them
from the fissures of the rock. And just as he stood pondering his next
step the doctor turned and saw him. He stared at him for a few minutes,
then said, “Do you want me, my boy? Anything wrong? You’re the new
house-boy, aren’t you?”

William realised that he was still wearing the overalls which the
house-boy had given him. He gaped at the doctor and blinked nervously,
wondering whether it wouldn’t be wiser to be the new house-boy as the
doctor evidently thought he was. The doctor turned to his wife.

“Er--it is the new house-boy, dear, isn’t it?” he said.

“I _think_ so,” said his wife doubtfully. “He only came this morning,
you know, and Cook engaged him, and I hardly had time to look at him,
but I think he is.... Yes, he’s wearing our overalls. What’s your name,
boy?”

William was on the point of saying “William Brown,” then stopped
himself. He mustn’t be William Brown. William Brown was presumably lost
in the bowels of the earth. And he didn’t know the house-boy’s name. So
he gaped again and said:

“I don’t know.”

There came a gleam into the doctor’s eye.

“What do you mean, my boy,” he said. “Do you mean that you’ve lost your
memory?”

“Yes,” said William, relieved at the simplicity of the explanation, and
the fact that it relieved him of all further responsibility. “Yes, I’ve
lost my memory.”

“Do you mean you don’t remember anything?” said the doctor sharply.

“Yes,” said William happily, “I don’ remember anythin’.”

“Not where you live or anything?”

“No,” said William very firmly, “not where I live nor anything.”

The other man, feeling evidently that he could contribute little
illumination to the problem, moved on, leaving the doctor and his wife
staring at William. They held a whispered consultation. Then the doctor
turned to William and said suddenly:

“Frank Simpkins ... does that suggest anything to you?”

“No,” said William with perfect truth.

“Doesn’t know his own name,” whispered the doctor, then again sharply:

“Acacia Cottage ... does that convey anything to you?”

“No,” said William again with perfect truth.

The doctor turned to his wife.

“No memory of his name or home,” he commented. “I’ve always wanted to
study a case of this sort at close quarters. Now, my good boy, come
back home with me.”

But William didn’t want to go back home with him. He didn’t want to
return to the house which still bore traces of his recent habitation
and where his “flood” presumably still raged. He was just contemplating
precipitate flight when a woman came hurrying along the road. The
doctor’s wife seemed to recognise her. She whispered to the doctor. The
doctor turned to William.

“You know this woman, my boy, don’t you?”

“No,” said William, “I’ve never seen her before.”

The doctor looked pleased. “Doesn’t remember his own mother,” he said
to his wife: “quite an interesting case.”

The woman approached them aggressively. The doctor stepped in front of
William.

“Come after my boy,” she said, “Sayin’ ’is hours ended at five an’ then
keepin’ ’im till now! I’ll ’ave the lor on you, I will. Where is ’e?”

“Prepare yourself, my good woman,” said the doctor, “for a slight
shock. Your son has temporarily--only temporarily, we trust--lost his
memory.”

She screamed.

[Illustration: “HERE IS YOUR SON,” SAID THE DOCTOR POMPOUSLY.]

[Illustration: “’IM?” SHRIEKED THE WOMAN. “NEVER SEED ’IM BEFORE.”]

“What’ve you bin doin’ of to ’im?” she said indignantly, “’e ’adn’t
lorst it when ’e left ’ome this mornin’. Where is ’e, anyway?”

Silently the doctor stepped on to one side, revealing William.

“Here he is,” he said pompously.

“’Im?” she shrilled. “Never seed ’im before.”

“She’s lost hers too,” said William without flinching.

They stared at each other for some seconds in silence. Then William
saw the real house boy coming along the road and spoke with the
hopelessness of one who surrenders himself to fate to do its worst with.

“Here he is.”

The real original house boy was stepping blithely down the road, an
extemporised rod over his shoulders, swinging precariously a jar full
of minnows. He was evidently ignorant of the flight of time. He saw
William first and called out cheerfully:

“I say, I’ve not been long, have I? Is it all right?”

Then he saw the others and the smile dropped from his face. His mother
darted to him protectively.

“Oh, my pore, blessed child,” she said, “what have they bin a-doin’ to
you--keepin’ you hours an’ hours after your time an’ losin’ your pore
memory an’ you your pore widowed mother’s only child.... Come home with
your mother, then, an’ she’ll take care of you and we’ll have the lor
on them, we will.”

The boy looked from one to another bewildered, then realising from his
mother’s tones that he had been badly treated he burst into tears and
was led away by his consoling parent.

The doctor and his wife turned to William for an explanation. Their
expressions showed considerably less friendliness than they had shown
before. William looked about him desperately. Even escape seemed
impossible. He felt that he would have welcomed any interruption. When,
however, he saw Miss Polliter running towards them down the field he
felt that he would have chosen some other interruption than that.

“Oh, there you are!” panted Miss Polliter. “Such _dreadful_ things have
happened. Oh, there’s the dear boy. I don’t know what we should have
done without him ... rescuing children and animals at the risk, I’m
sure, of his own dear life. I must give you just a little present.” She
handed him a half crown which William pocketed gratefully.

“But, my dear Miss Polliter,” said the doctor, deeply concerned, “you
should be resting in your room. You should never run like that in your
state of nervous exhaustion ... never.”

“Oh, I’m quite well now,” said Miss Polliter.

“Well?” said the doctor amazed and horrified at the idea.

“Oh, yes,” said Miss Polliter, “I feel ever so well. The flood’s cured
me.”

“The flood?” said the doctor still more amazed and still more horrified.

“Oh yes. The river’s risen and the whole place is flooded out,”
said Miss Polliter excitedly. “It’s a most stimulating experience
altogether. We’ve saved a lot of animals and two children.”

The doctor was holding his head.

“Good Heavens!” he said. “Good Heavens! Good Heavens!”

At that moment two more women descended upon the group. They were the
mothers of the infants. They had searched through the village for
their missing offspring and at last an eye-witness had described their
deliberate kidnapping and imprisonment in the doctor’s house. They were
demanding the return of their children. They were threatening legal
proceedings. They were calling the doctor a murderer and a kidnapper, a
vivisectioner, a Hun and a Bolshevist.

The doctor and the doctor’s wife and Miss Polliter and the two mothers
all began to talk at once. William, seizing his opportunity, crept
away. He crept down the road towards the cave.

At the bend in the road he turned. The doctor and the doctor’s wife
and the two mothers and Miss Polliter, still all talking excitedly
at the same time, began to make their way slowly up the hill to the
doctor’s house.

He looked in the other direction. There was just a large crowd
surrounding the cave; men were just coming along the road from the
other direction with pickaxes to dig his dead body from the rock.

He went forward very reluctantly and slowly.

He went forward because he had a horrible suspicion that the doctor
would soon have discovered the extent and the cause of the “flood” and
would soon be pursuing him lusting for vengeance.

He went forward reluctantly and slowly because he did not foresee an
enthusiastic welcome from his bereaved parents.

Ginger saw him first. Ginger gave a piercing yell and pointed down the
road towards William’s reluctant form.

“There--he _is_!” he shouted. “He’s not dead.”

They all turned and gaped at him open-mouthed.

William presented a strange figure. He seemed at first sight chiefly
compounded of the two elements, earth and water.

He turned as if to flee but the figure of the doctor could be seen
running down the road from his house after him; following the doctor
were the doctor’s wife, the infants’ mothers with the infants and Miss
Polliter. Even at that distance he could see that the doctor’s face was
purple with fury. Miss Polliter still looked bright and stimulated.

So William advanced slowly towards his gaping rescuers. “Here I am,” he
said. “I--I’ve got out all right.”

He fingered the half-crown in his pocket as if it were an amulet
against disaster.

He felt that he would soon need an amulet against disaster.

“Oh, where have you been?” sobbed his mother, “where _have_ you been?”

“I got in a flood,” said William, “an’ then I lost my memory.” He
looked round at the doctor who was running towards them and added with
a mixture of fatalistic resignation and bitterness, “Oh, well, he’ll
tell you about it. I bet you’ll b’lieve him sooner than me an’ I bet
he’ll make a different tale of it to what I would.”

And he did.

       *       *       *       *       *

But Miss Polliter (who left the doctor’s charge, cured, to his great
disgust, the next day) persisted to her dying day that the river had
flooded and that the hose-pipe had nothing to do with it.

And she sent William a pound note the next week in an envelope marked
“For a brave boy.”

And, as William remarked bitterly, he jolly well deserved it....




  Transcriber's Notes:

  Italics are shown thus: _sloping_.

  Variations in spelling and hyphenation are retained.

  Perceived typographical errors have been changed.