<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<p class="p2">Two months of opening spring are past, and the
forest is awaking. Up, all we who love such
things; come and see more glorious doings than of
man or angel. However hearts have been winter–bound
with the nip of avarice, and the iron frost of
selfishness, however minds have checked their sap
in narrowness of ideal, let us all burst bands awhile
before the bright sun, as leaves do. Heavenʼs
young breath is stirring through crinkled bud and
mossy crevice, peaceful spears of pensioned reeds,
and flags all innocent of battle. Lo, where the wind
goes, while we look, playing with and defying us,
chasing the dip of a primrose–bank, and touching
sweet lips with dalliance. Lifting first the shining
tutsan, gently so, and apologizing, then after a
tender whisper to the nodding milkwort, away to
where the soft blue eyes of the periwinkle hesitate.
Last, before he dies away, the sauntering ruffler
looks and steps into a quiet tufted nook, overhung<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span>
with bank, and lintelled with the twisted oak–roots.
Here, as in a niche of Sabbath, dwells the nervous
soft wood–sorrel, feeding upon leaf–mould, quivering
with its long–stalked cloves, pale of hue, and
shunning touch, delicate wood–sorrel, coral–rooted,
shamrock–leafed, loved and understood of few, except
good Fra Angelico.</p>
<p>Tut—we want stronger life than that; and here
we have it overhead, with many a galling boss
and buff, yet, on the whole, worth treeʼs exertion,
and worth manʼs inspection. See the oak–leaves
bursting out, crimped and crannied at their birth,
with little nicks and serrate jags like “painted
lady” chrysalids, or cowries pushing their tongues
out, throwing off the hidesome tuck, and frilled
with pellucid copper. See, as well, the fluted
beech–leaves, started a full moon ago, offering out
of fawn–skin gloves, and glossed with waterproof
copal. Then the ash—but hold, I know not how
the ash comes out, because it gives so little
warning; or rather, it warns a long, long time,
and then does it all of a sudden. Tush—what
man cares now to glance at the yearly manuscript
of God? Let the leaves go; they are not <i>inscripti
nomina regum</i>.</p>
<p>Yet the brook—though time flees faster, who
can grudge one glance at brooklet? Where the
mock–myrtle begins to dip, where the young agrimony
comes up, and the early forget–me–not pushes
its claim upon our remembrance, and the water–lily
floats half–way up, quivering dusk in the clearness,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
like a trout upon the hover. Look how the little
waves dance towards us, glancing and casting over,
drawing a tongue with limpid creases from the
broad pool above, then funnelling into a narrow
neck over a shelf of gravel, and bubbling and babbling
with petulant freaks into corners of calmer
reflection. There an old tree leans solemnly over,
with brows bent, and arms folded, turning the
course of the brook with his feet, and shedding a
crystal darkness.</p>
<p>Below this, the yellow banks break away into a
scoop on either side, where a green lane of the
forest comes down and wades into the water. Here
is a favourite crossing–place for the cattle of the
woodland, and a favourite bower for cows to rest
in, and chew the cud of soft contemplation. And
here is a grey wooden bridge for the footpath,
adding to rather than destroying the solitude of
the scene, because it is plain that a pair of feet
once in a week would astonish it. Yet in the
depth of loneliness, and the quiet repose of shadow,
all is hope, and reassurance, sense of thanks, and
breath of praise. For is not the winter gone by,
and forgotten, the fury and darkness and terror,
the inclination of March to rave, and the April too
given to weeping? Surely the time of sweet
flowers is come, and the glory of summer approaching,
the freedom of revelling in the sun, the vesture
of the magnificent trees, and the singing of birds
among them.</p>
<p>Through the great Huntley Wood, and along<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span>
the banks of the Millaford brook, this fine morning
of the May, wander our Rosalind and Celia, Amy
to wit, and Eoa. It is a long way from Nowelhurst,
but they have brought their lunch, and mean
to make a day of it in the forest, seeking balm for
wounded hearts in good green leaf and buoyant
air. Coming to the old plank–bridge, they sit
upon a bank to watch the rising of the trout, for
the stone–fly is on the water. Eoa has a great idea
that she could catch a trout with a kidney–bean
stick and a fly; but now she has not the heart for
it; and Amy says it would be so cruel, and they
are so pretty.</p>
<p>“What a lovely place!” says Amy; “I could
sit here all day long. How that crab–apple, clothed
with scarlet, seems to rouge the water!”</p>
<p>“It isnʼt scarlet, I tell you, Amy, any more than
you are. Itʼs only a deep, deep pink. You never
can tell colours.”</p>
<p>“Well, never mind. It is very pretty. And so
are you when you are good and not contradictory—ʼcontradictionary,’
as James Pottles calls
Coræbus.”</p>
<p>“Well, it does just as well. Whatʼs the good of
being so particular? I am sure I am none the
better for it; and I have not jumped the brook
ever so long, and have thrown away my gaiters
just because Uncle John said—oh, you are all
alike in England.”</p>
<p>“What did my father say, if you please, that
possessed such odious sameness<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span>?”</p>
<p>“There, there, I am so glad to see you in a
passion, dear; because I thought you never could
be. Uncle John only said that no doubt somebody
would like me better, if I gave up all that, and
stayed in–doors all day. And I have been trying
hard to do it; but he is worse than he was before.
I sat on a bench in the chase last Monday, and he
went by and never noticed me, though I made
quite a noise with my hat on the wood until I was
nearly ashamed of myself. But I need not have
been alarmed, for my lord went by without even
looking.”</p>
<p>“And what do you mean to do about it?”
Amy took the deepest interest in Eoaʼs love–affair.</p>
<p>“Oh, you need not smile, Amy. It is all very
well for you, I dare say; but it makes me dreadfully
angry. Just as if I were nobody! And
after I have told Uncle Cradock of my intentions
to settle.”</p>
<p>“You premature little creature! But my father
was quite right in his advice, as he always is; and
not for that reason only. You belong to a well–known
family, and, for their sake as well as your
own, you are bound to be very nice, dear, and to do
only what is nice, instead of making a tomboy of
yourself.”</p>
<p>“Tomboy, indeed! And nice! Nice things
they did, didnʼt they—shooting one another?”</p>
<p>Almost before she had uttered the words, she
was thoroughly ashamed of herself, for she knew
about Amy and Cradock from the maidenʼs own<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
confession. Amy arose without reply, and, taking
her little basket, turned into the homeward path,
with a little quiet sigh. Eoa thought for a
moment, and then, having conquered herself,
darted after the outraged friend.</p>
<p>“I wish to have no more to do with you. That
is all,” cried Amy, with Eoaʼs strong arms round
her waist.</p>
<p>“But, indeed, you shall. You know what a
brute I am. I canʼt help it; but I will try. I
will bite my tongue off to be forgiven.”</p>
<p>“I simply wish, Miss Nowell, to have nothing
more to do with you.”</p>
<p>“Then you are a great deal worse than I am;
because you are unforgiving. I thought you were
so wonderfully good; and now I am sorry for you,
even more than for myself. I had better go back
to the devilʼs people, if this is the way of Christians.”</p>
<p>“Could you forgive any one in a moment who
had wounded you most savagely?”</p>
<p>“In a moment,—if they were sorry, and asked
me.”</p>
<p>“Are you quite sure of that?”</p>
<p>“Sure, indeed! How could I help it?”</p>
<p>“Then, Eoa, you cannot help being more like
a Christian than I am. I am very persistent, and
steadily bitter to any one who wrongs me. You
are far better than I am, Eoa; because you cannot
hate any one<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>“I donʼt know about being better, Amy; I only
know that I donʼt hate any one—with all my heart
I mean—except Mrs. Nowell Corklemore.”</p>
<p>Here Amy could not help laughing at Eoaʼs
method of proving her rule; and the other took
advantage of it to make her sit down, and kiss her,
and beg her pardon a dozen times, because she was
such a little savage; and then to open her own
lunch–basket, and spread a white cloth, and cover
it with slices of rusk and reindeerʼs tongue, and
hearted lettuce, and lemonade, and a wing of cold
duck at the corner.</p>
<p>“I left it to Hoggy,” she cried in triumph, “and
he has deserved my confidence. Beat that if you
can now, my darling.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I can beat that out and out,” said Amy,
who still was crying, just a drop now and then,
because her emotions were “persistent:” then she
smiled, because she knew so well no old butler could
touch her in catering; but I must not tell what
Amy had, for fear of making people hungry.
Only in justice it should be said that neither
basket went home full; for both the young ladies
were “hearty;” and they kissed one another in
spite of the stuffing.</p>
<p>“Oh, Amy, I do love you so, whenever you
donʼt scold me. I am sure I was meant for a
Christian. Hereʼs that nasty sneakʼs lawn handkerchief.
I picked her pocket this morning. I
do twice a week for practice. But I wonʼt wipe
your pretty eyes with it, darling, because I do so<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span>
loathe her. Now, if you please, no more crying,
Amy. What a queer thing you are!”</p>
<p>“Most truly may I return the compliment,”
answered Amy, smiling through the sparkle of
her tears. “But you donʼt mean to say that you
keep what you steal?”</p>
<p>“Oh no; it is not worth it. And I hate her
too much to keep anything. Last week I lit the
fire in my dressing–room, on purpose to burn her
purse. You should have seen the money melting.
I took good care, of course, not to leave it in the
ashes, though. I am forming quite a collection of
it; for I donʼt mind keeping it at all, when it has
been through the fire. And you canʼt think how
pretty it is, all strings and dots of white and
yellow.”</p>
<p>“Well! I never heard such a thing. Why, you
might be transported, Eoa!”</p>
<p>“Yes, I know, if they found me out; but they
are much too stupid for that. Besides, it is such
fun; the only fun I have now, since I left off
jumping. You know the old thing is so stingy.”</p>
<p>“Old thing, indeed! Why, she is not five–and–twenty!”</p>
<p>“I donʼt care; she has got a child. She is as
old as Methusalem in her heart, though she is so
deucedly sentimental”—the old Colonelʼs daughter
had not forgotten all her beloved papaʼs expressions—”I
know I shall use what you call in this
country ‘physical force,’ some day, with her. I
must have done it long ago, only for picking her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
pocket. She would be but a baby in my hands,
and she is quite aware of it. Look at my arm;
itʼs no larger than yours, except above the elbow,
and it is nearly as soft and delicate. Yet I could
take you with one hand, Amy, and put you into
the brook. If you like, Iʼll do it.”</p>
<p>“Much obliged, dear; but I am quite content
without the crucial test. I know your wonderful
strength, which none would ever suspect, to look
at you. I suppose it came to you from your
mother.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I believe. At any rate, I have heard my
father say so; and I could hold both his hands
most easily. But oh, she is such a screw, Amy,
that sympathetic Georgie! She never gives any
one sixpence; and it is so pleasant to hear her go
on about her money, and handkerchiefs, and, most
of all, her gloves. She is so proud of her nasty
little velvet paws. She wonʼt get her gloves except
in Southampton, and three toll–gates to pay, and
I steal them as fast as she gets them. She grumbles
about it all dinner–time, and I offered her
eighteenpence for turnpikes—out of her own purse,
of course—because she was so poor, I said. But
she flew into such a rage that I was forced to pick
her pocket again at breakfast–time next morning.
And the lies she told about the amount of money
in her purse! Between eight and nine pounds,
she said the last time, and there was only two
pounds twelve. Uncle Cradock made it good to
her, because he guessed that I had done it, though<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
he was afraid to tell me so. But, thank God, I
stole it again the next day when she went out
walking; and that of course he had nothing to say
to, because it did not occur in his house. Oh
what a rage she was in! She begins to suspect
me now, I think; but she never can catch me
out.”</p>
<p>“You consummate little thief! why, I shall be
afraid to come near you.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I would never do it to any one but her.
And I should not do it to her so much, only she
thinks me a clumsy stupid. Me who was called
‘Never–spot–the–dust!’ But I have got another
thing of hers, and she had better take care, or Iʼll
open it.”</p>
<p>“Something else! Take care, Eoa, or I will
go and tell.”</p>
<p>“No, you know better than that. It is nothing
but a letter she wrote, and was going to post at
Burley. I knew by her tricks and suspicious ways
that there was something in it; and she would not
let it go in the post–bag. So I resolved to have
it; and of course I did. And she has been in
such a fright ever since; but I have not opened it
yet.”</p>
<p>“And I hope you never will. Either confess,
or post it at once, or never call me your friend
any more.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you need not be hot, Amy; you donʼt
understand the circumstances. I know that she
is playing a nasty game; and I need not have any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span>
scruples with her, after what I caught her doing.
Twice she has been at my desk, my own new desk
Uncle Cradock gave me, where I put all the letters
and relics that were found on my dear, dear
father.” Here Eoa burst out crying, and Amy
came near again and kissed her.</p>
<p>“Darling, I did not mean to be cross; if the
wretch would do such a thing as that, it justifies
almost anything.”</p>
<p>“And what do you think I did?” said Eoa,
half crying, and half laughing: “I set a fishhook
with a spring to it, so that the moment she lifted
the cover, the barb would go into her hand; and
the next day she had a bad finger, and said that
little Flore bit it by accident while she was feeling
her tooth, which is loose. I should like to have
seen her getting the barb out of her nasty little
velvet paw.”</p>
<p>“I am quite surprised,” cried Amy; “and we
all call you so simple—a mere child of nature!
If so, nature is up to much more than we give
her credit for. And pray, what is your next
device?”</p>
<p>“Oh, nothing at all, till she does something. I
am quits with her now; and I cannot scheme as
she does.”</p>
<p>Suddenly Amy put both her hands on Eoaʼs
graceful shoulders, and poured the quick vigour
of English eyes into the fathomless lustre of
darkly–fringed Oriental orbs.</p>
<p>“You will not tell me a story, dear, if I ask you
very particularly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span>?”</p>
<p>“I never tell stories to any one; you might
know that by this time. At any rate, not to my
friends.”</p>
<p>“No, I donʼt think you would. Now, do you
think that Mrs. Corklemore is at the bottom of
this vile thing?”</p>
<p>“What vile thing? The viler it is, the more
likely she is to have done it.”</p>
<p>“Oh no, she cannot have done it, though she
may have had something to do with it. I mean,
of course, about poor Cradock.”</p>
<p>“What about Cradock? I love Cousin Cradock,
because he is so unlucky; and because you like
him, dear.”</p>
<p>“Donʼt you know it? You must have seen that
I was in very poor spirits. And this made me feel
it so much the more, when you said what you did.
We have heard that an application has been made
in London, at the Home Office, or somewhere,
that a warrant should be issued against Cradock
Nowell, and a reward be offered for him as——Oh,
my Cradock, my Craddy!”</p>
<p>“Put your head in here, darling. What a brute
you must have thought me! Oh, I do so love you.
Donʼt think twice about it, dear. I will take care
that it all comes right. I will go to London to–day,
dearest, and defy them to dare to do it. And
Iʼll open that letter at once. It becomes a duty
now; as that nasty beast always says, when she
wants to do anything wrong.”</p>
<p>“No, no!” sobbed Amy, “you have no right
to open her letter, and you shall not do it, Eoa,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
unless my father says that it is right. Will you
promise me that, dear? Oh, do promise me that.”</p>
<p>“How can I promise that, when I would not have
him know, for a lac of rupees, that I had ever
stolen it? He would never perceive how right it
was; and, though I donʼt know much about
people, I am sure he would never forgive me. He
is such a fidget. But I will promise you one
thing, Amy—not to open it without <i>your</i> leave.”</p>
<p>Amy was obliged at last to be contented with
this; though she said it was worse than nothing,
for it forced the decision upon her; and, scrupulously
honest and candid as she was, she would
feel it right to settle the point against her own
desires.</p>
<p>“Old Biddy knows I have got it,” cried Eoa,
changing her humour: “and she patted me on the
back, and said, ‘Begorra, thin, you be the cliver
one; hould on to that same, me darlint, and weʼll
bate every bit of her, yit; the purtiest feet and
ancles to you, and the best back legs, more than
iver she got, and now you bate her in the stalinʼ.
And plase, Miss, rade yer ould Biddy every consuminʼ
word on it. Mullygaslooce, but weʼve
toorned her, this time, and thank Donats for it.’”</p>
<p>Eoa dramatised Biddy so cleverly, even to the
form of her countenance, and her peculiar manner
of standing, that Amy, with all those griefs upon
her, could not help laughing heartily.</p>
<p>“Come along, I canʼt mope any longer; when
I have jumped the brook nine times, you may say<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span>
something to me. What do you think of a bathe,
Amy? I am up for it, if you are—and our tablecloths
for towels. Nobody comes here once in a
year; and if they did, they would run away again.
What a lovely deep pool! I can swim like a duck;
and you like a stone, I suppose.”</p>
<p>Amy, of course, would not hear of it, and her
lively friend, having paddled with her naked feet
in the water, and found it colder—oh, ever so
much—than the tributaries of the Ganges, was not
so very sorry (self–willed though being) to keep
upon the dry land, only she must go to Queenʼs
Mead, and Amy must come with her, and run the
entire distance, to get away from trouble.</p>
<p>Amy was light enough of foot, when her heart
was light; but Eoa could “run round her,” as the
sporting phrase is, and she gave herself the rein
at will that lovely afternoon; as a high–mettled
filly does, when she gets out of Piccadilly. And
she chatted as fast as she walked all the time,
hoping so to divert her friend from this new
distress.</p>
<p>“I should not be one bit surprised, if we saw
that—Bob, here somewhere. We are getting near
one of his favourite places—not that I know anything
about it; and he is always away now in
Mark Ash Wood, or Puckpits, looking out for the
arrival of honey–buzzards, or for a merlinʼs nest.
Oh, of course we shall not see him.”</p>
<p>“Now, you know you will,” replied Amy, laughing
at Eoaʼs clumsiness; “and you have brought<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
me all this way for that very reason. Now, if we
meet him, just leave him to me, and stay out of
hearing. I will manage him so that he shall soon
think you the best and the prettiest girl in the
world.”</p>
<p>“Well, I wish he would,” said Eoa, blushing
beautifully; “wouldnʼt I torment him then?”</p>
<p>“No doubt you would, and yourself as well.
Now where do you think he will be?”</p>
<p>“Oh, Amy, how can I possibly guess? But if
I did guess at all, I should say there was just an
atom of a chance of his being not far from the
Queenʼs Mead.”</p>
<p>“Suppose him to be there. What would bring
him there? Not to see you, I should hope?”</p>
<p>“As if he would go a yard for that! Oh no,
he is come to look for—at least, perhaps he might,
just possibly, I mean——”</p>
<p>“Come to look for whom?” Amy was very
angry, for she thought that it was herself, under
Eoaʼs strategy.</p>
<p>“A horrid little white mole.”</p>
<p>“A white mole! Why, I had no idea that there
was such a thing.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, there is: but it is very rare; and he
has set his heart upon catching this one.”</p>
<p>“That he shanʼt. Oh, I see exactly what to do.
Come quickly, for fear he should catch it before
we get there. Oh, I do hate such cruelty. Ah,
there, I see him! Now, you keep out of sight<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>In a sunny break of tufted sward, embayed
among long waves of wood, young Bob Garnet
sat, more happy than the king of all the world of
fairies. At his side lay several implements of his
own devising, and on his lap a favourite book with
his open watch upon it. From time to time he
glanced away at a chain of little hillocks about
twenty yards in front of him, and among which
he had stuck seven or eight stout hazel rods, and
brought them down as benders. He was trying not
only to catch his mole, but also to add another to
his many observations as to the periods of molar
exertion. Whether nature does enforce upon those
clever miners any Three Hour Act, as the popular
opinion is; or whether they are free to work and
rest, at their own sweet will, as seems a world
more natural.</p>
<p>Amy walked into the midst of the benders, in
her self–willed, characteristic manner, as if they
were nothing at all. She made believe to see
nought of Bob, who, on the other side of the path
was fluttering and blushing, with a mixture of
emotions. “Some very cruel person,” she exclaimed,
in loud self–commune, “probably a cruel
boy, has been setting mole–traps here, I see. And
papa says the moles do more good than harm, except
perhaps in my flower–beds. Now Iʼll let them
all off very quietly. The boy will think he has
caught a dozen; and then how the moles will laugh
at him. He will think itʼs a witch, and leave off,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
very likely, for all cruel boys are ignorant. My
pretty little darlings; so glossy, and so clever!”</p>
<p>“Oh, please not to do that,” cried Bob, having
tried in vain to contain himself, and now leaping
up in agony; “I have taken so much trouble, and
they are set so beautifully.”</p>
<p>“What, Master Robert Garnet! Oh, have you
seen my companion, Miss Nowell, about here?”</p>
<p>“Look there, you have spoiled another! And
theyʼll never set so well again. Oh, you canʼt
know what they are, and the trouble I have had
with them.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, Master Garnet, I know what they are;
clumsy and cruel contrivances to catch my innocent
moles.”</p>
<p>“<i>Your</i> moles!” cried Bob, with great wrath
arising, as she coolly destroyed two more traps;
“why are they <i>your</i> moles, I should like to know?
I donʼt believe you have ever even heard of them
before.”</p>
<p>“Suppose I have not?” answered Amy, screwing
up her lips, as she always did when resolved to
have her own way.</p>
<p>“Then how can they be your moles? Oh, if
you havenʼt spoiled another!”</p>
<p>“Well, Godʼs moles, if you prefer it, Master
Garnet. At any rate, you have no right to catch
them.”</p>
<p>“But I only want to catch one, Amy; a white
one, oh, such a beauty! I have heard of him since<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
he was born, and had my eye on him down all the
galleries; and now he must be full–grown, for he
was born quite early in August.”</p>
<p>“I hope heʼll live to be a hundred. And I will
thank you, Master Garnet, to speak to <i>me</i> with
proper respect.”</p>
<p>Up went another riser. There was only one left
now, and that a most especial trap, which had cost
a whole weekʼs cogitation.</p>
<p>“I declare you are a most dreadful girl. You
donʼt like anything I do. And I have thought so
much of you.”</p>
<p>“Then, once for all, I beg you never more to
do so. I have often wished to speak with you upon
that very subject.”</p>
<p>“What—what subject, Miss Rosedew? I have
no idea what you mean.”</p>
<p>“That is altogether false. But I will tell you
now. I mean the silly, ungentlemanly, and very
childish manner, excusable only in such a boy, in
which I have several times observed you loitering
about in the forest.”</p>
<p>Bob knew what she meant right well, although
she would not more plainly express it—his tracking
of her footsteps. He turned as red as meadow–sorrel,
and stammered out what he could.</p>
<p>“I am—very—very sorry. But I did not mean
it. I mean—I could not help it.”</p>
<p>“You will be kind enough to help it now, for
once and for all. Otherwise, my father, who has<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span>
not heard of it yet, shall speak to yours about it.
Insufferable impudence in a boy just come from
school!”</p>
<p>Amy was obliged to turn away, for fear he
should look up again, and see the laughter in her
eyes. For all her wrath was feigned, inasmuch
as to her Bob Garnet was far too silly a butterfly–boy
to awake any real anger. But of late he
had been intrusive, and it seemed high time to
stop it.</p>
<p>“If I have done anything wrong, Miss Rosedew,
anything in any way unbecoming a gentleman——”</p>
<p>“Yes, try to be a good boy again,” said Amy,
very graciously; at the same time giving the
stroke of grace to his masterpiece of mechanism,
designed to catch the white mole alive; “now
take up your playthings and go, if you please;
for I expect a young lady here directly; and your
little tools for cockchafer–spinning would barbarize
the foreground of our sketch, besides being very
ugly.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” cried Bob, with a sudden access of his
fathers readiness—”you spin a fellow worse than
any cockchafer, and you do it in the name of
humanity!”</p>
<p>“Then think me no more a divinity,” answered
Amy; because she must have the last word; and
even Bob, young as he was, knew better than to
paragogize the feminine termination. Utterly discomfited,
as a boy is by a woman—and Amyʼs trouble<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span>
had advanced her almost to that proud claim—Bob
gathered up his traps and scuttled cleverly out of
sight. She, on the other hand (laughing all the
while at herself for her simple piece of acting, and
doubting whether she had been right in doing
even a little thing so much against her nature),
there she sat, with her sketching–block ready, and
hoped that Eoa would have the wit to come and
meet her beloved Bob, now labouring under his
fierce rebuff.</p>
<p>But Eoa could not do it. She had wit enough,
but too much heart. She had heard every word of
Amyʼs insolence, and was very indignant at it. Was
Bob to be talked to in that way? As if he knew
nothing of science! As if he really had an atom
of any sort of cruelty in him! Was Amy so very
ignorant as not to know that all Bob did was done
with the kindest consideration, and for the interest
of the species, though the pins through the backs
were unpleasant, perhaps? But that was over in a
moment, and he always carried ether; and it was
nothing to the Fakirs, or the martyrs of Christianity.</p>
<p>Therefore Eoa crouched away, behind a tuft of
thicket, because her maidenhood forbade her to
come out and comfort him, to take advantage of
his wrong, and let him know how she felt it.
Therefore, too, she was very sharp with Amy all
the homeward road; vindicating Bob, and snapping
at all proffered softness; truth being that she
had suspected his boyish whim for Amy, and now<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span>
was sorry for him about it, and very angry with
both of them.</p>
<p>From that little touch of womanʼs nature she
learned more dignity, more pride, more reservation,
and self–respect, than she could have won
from a score of governesses, or six seasons of
“society.”</p>
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