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CHAPTER VI Part 1 DEATH IN THE FAMILY
ARTHUR MOREL was growing up. He was a quick, careless, impulsive boy, a
good deal like his father.
He hated study, made a great moan if he had to work, and escaped as soon as possible to
his sport again.
In appearance he remained the flower of the family, being well made, graceful, and full
of life.
His dark brown hair and fresh colouring, and his exquisite dark blue eyes shaded
with long lashes, together with his generous manner and fiery temper, made him
a favourite.
But as he grew older his temper became uncertain.
He flew into rages over nothing, seemed unbearably raw and irritable.
His mother, whom he loved, wearied of him sometimes.
He thought only of himself. When he wanted amusement, all that stood in
his way he hated, even if it were she.
When he was in trouble he moaned to her ceaselessly.
"Goodness, boy!" she said, when he groaned about a master who, he said, hated him, "if
you don't like it, alter it, and if you can't alter it, put up with it."
And his father, whom he had loved and who had worshipped him, he came to detest.
As he grew older Morel fell into a slow ruin.
His body, which had been beautiful in movement and in being, shrank, did not seem
to ripen with the years, but to get mean and rather despicable.
There came over him a look of meanness and of paltriness.
And when the mean-looking elderly man bullied or ordered the boy about, Arthur
was furious.
Moreover, Morel's manners got worse and worse, his habits somewhat disgusting.
When the children were growing up and in the crucial stage of adolescence, the
father was like some ugly irritant to their souls.
His manners in the house were the same as he used among the colliers down pit.
"Dirty nuisance!"
Arthur would cry, jumping up and going straight out of the house when his father
disgusted him. And Morel persisted the more because his
children hated it.
He seemed to take a kind of satisfaction in disgusting them, and driving them nearly
mad, while they were so irritably sensitive at the age of fourteen or fifteen.
So that Arthur, who was growing up when his father was degenerate and elderly, hated
him worst of all.
Then, sometimes, the father would seem to feel the contemptuous hatred of his
children. "There's not a man tries harder for his
family!" he would shout.
"He does his best for them, and then gets treated like a dog.
But I'm not going to stand it, I tell you!"
But for the threat and the fact that he did not try so hard as he imagined, they would
have felt sorry.
As it was, the battle now went on nearly all between father and children, he
persisting in his dirty and disgusting ways, just to assert his independence.
They loathed him.
Arthur was so inflamed and irritable at last, that when he won a scholarship for
the Grammar School in Nottingham, his mother decided to let him live in town,
with one of her sisters, and only come home at week-ends.
Annie was still a junior teacher in the Board-school, earning about four shillings
a week.
But soon she would have fifteen shillings, since she had passed her examination, and
there would be financial peace in the house.
Mrs. Morel clung now to Paul.
He was quiet and not brilliant. But still he stuck to his painting, and
still he stuck to his mother. Everything he did was for her.
She waited for his coming home in the evening, and then she unburdened herself of
all she had pondered, or of all that had occurred to her during the day.
He sat and listened with his earnestness.
The two shared lives. William was engaged now to his brunette,
and had bought her an engagement ring that cost eight guineas.
The children gasped at such a fabulous price.
"Eight guineas!" said Morel. "More fool him!
If he'd gen me some on't, it 'ud ha' looked better on 'im."
"Given YOU some of it!" cried Mrs. Morel. "Why give YOU some of it!"
She remembered HE had bought no engagement ring at all, and she preferred William, who
was not mean, if he were foolish.
But now the young man talked only of the dances to which he went with his betrothed,
and the different resplendent clothes she wore; or he told his mother with glee how
they went to the theatre like great swells.
He wanted to bring the girl home. Mrs. Morel said she should come at the
Christmas. This time William arrived with a lady, but
with no presents.
Mrs. Morel had prepared supper. Hearing footsteps, she rose and went to the
door. William entered.
"Hello, mother!"
He kissed her hastily, then stood aside to present a tall, handsome girl, who was
wearing a costume of fine black-and-white check, and furs.
"Here's Gyp!"
Miss Western held out her hand and showed her teeth in a small smile.
"Oh, how do you do, Mrs. Morel!" she exclaimed.
"I am afraid you will be hungry," said Mrs. Morel.
"Oh no, we had dinner in the train. Have you got my gloves, Chubby?"
William Morel, big and raw-***, looked at her quickly.
"How should I?" he said. "Then I've lost them.
Don't be cross with me."
A frown went over his face, but he said nothing.
She glanced round the kitchen.
It was small and curious to her, with its glittering kissing-bunch, its evergreens
behind the pictures, its wooden chairs and little deal table.
At that moment Morel came in.
"Hello, dad!" "Hello, my son!
Tha's let on me!" The two shook hands, and William presented
the lady.
She gave the same smile that showed her teeth.
"How do you do, Mr. Morel?" Morel bowed obsequiously.
"I'm very well, and I hope so are you.
You must make yourself very welcome." "Oh, thank you," she replied, rather
amused. "You will like to go upstairs," said Mrs.
Morel.
"If you don't mind; but not if it is any trouble to you."
"It is no trouble. Annie will take you.
Walter, carry up this box."
"And don't be an hour dressing yourself up," said William to his betrothed.
Annie took a brass candlestick, and, too shy almost to speak, preceded the young
lady to the front bedroom, which Mr. and Mrs. Morel had vacated for her.
It, too, was small and cold by candlelight.
The colliers' wives only lit fires in bedrooms in case of extreme illness.
"Shall I unstrap the box?" asked Annie. "Oh, thank you very much!"
Annie played the part of maid, then went downstairs for hot water.
"I think she's rather tired, mother," said William.
"It's a beastly journey, and we had such a rush."
"Is there anything I can give her?" asked Mrs. Morel.
"Oh no, she'll be all right."
But there was a chill in the atmosphere. After half an hour Miss Western came down,
having put on a purplish-coloured dress, very fine for the collier's kitchen.
"I told you you'd no need to change," said William to her.
"Oh, Chubby!" Then she turned with that sweetish smile to
Mrs. Morel.
"Don't you think he's always grumbling, Mrs. Morel?"
"Is he?" said Mrs. Morel. "That's not very nice of him."
"It isn't, really!"
"You are cold," said the mother. "Won't you come near the fire?"
Morel jumped out of his armchair. "Come and sit you here!" he cried.
"Come and sit you here!"
"No, dad, keep your own chair. Sit on the sofa, Gyp," said William.
"No, no!" cried Morel. "This cheer's warmest.
Come and sit here, Miss Wesson."
"Thank you so much," said the girl, seating herself in the collier's armchair, the
place of honour. She shivered, feeling the warmth of the
kitchen penetrate her.
"Fetch me a hanky, Chubby dear!" she said, putting up her mouth to him, and using the
same intimate tone as if they were alone; which made the rest of the family feel as
if they ought not to be present.
The young lady evidently did not realise them as people: they were creatures to her
for the present. William winced.
In such a household, in Streatham, Miss Western would have been a lady
condescending to her inferiors. These people were to her, certainly
clownish--in short, the working classes.
How was she to adjust herself? "I'll go," said Annie.
Miss Western took no notice, as if a servant had spoken.
But when the girl came downstairs again with the handkerchief, she said: "Oh, thank
you!" in a gracious way.
She sat and talked about the dinner on the train, which had been so poor; about
London, about dances. She was really very nervous, and chattered
from fear.
Morel sat all the time smoking his thick twist tobacco, watching her, and listening
to her glib London speech, as he puffed.
Mrs. Morel, dressed up in her best black silk blouse, answered quietly and rather
briefly. The three children sat round in silence and
admiration.
Miss Western was the princess. Everything of the best was got out for her:
the best cups, the best spoons, the best table cloth, the best coffee-jug.
The children thought she must find it quite grand.
She felt strange, not able to realise the people, not knowing how to treat them.
William joked, and was slightly uncomfortable.
At about ten o'clock he said to her: "Aren't you tired, Gyp?"
"Rather, Chubby," she answered, at once in the intimate tones and putting her head
slightly on one side. "I'll light her the candle, mother," he
said.
"Very well," replied the mother. Miss Western stood up, held out her hand to
Mrs. Morel. "Good-night, Mrs. Morel," she said.
Paul sat at the boiler, letting the water run from the tap into a stone beer-bottle.
Annie swathed the bottle in an old flannel pit-singlet, and kissed her mother good-
night.
She was to share the room with the lady, because the house was full.
"You wait a minute," said Mrs. Morel to Annie.
And Annie sat nursing the hot-water bottle.
Miss Western shook hands all round, to everybody's discomfort, and took her
departure, preceded by William. In five minutes he was downstairs again.
His heart was rather sore; he did not know why.
He talked very little till everybody had gone to bed, but himself and his mother.
Then he stood with his legs apart, in his old attitude on the hearthrug, and said
hesitatingly: "Well, mother?"
"Well, my son?"
She sat in the rocking-chair, feeling somehow hurt and humiliated, for his sake.
"Do you like her?" "Yes," came the slow answer.
"She's shy yet, mother.
She's not used to it. It's different from her aunt's house, you
know." "Of course it is, my boy; and she must find
it difficult."
"She does." Then he frowned swiftly.
"If only she wouldn't put on her BLESSED airs!"
"It's only her first awkwardness, my boy.
She'll be all right." "That's it, mother," he replied gratefully.
But his brow was gloomy. "You know, she's not like you, mother.
She's not serious, and she can't think."
"She's young, my boy." "Yes; and she's had no sort of show.
Her mother died when she was a child. Since then she's lived with her aunt, whom
she can't bear.
And her father was a rake. She's had no love."
"No! Well, you must make up to her." "And so--you have to forgive her a lot of
things."
"WHAT do you have to forgive her, my boy?" "I dunno.
When she seems shallow, you have to remember she's never had anybody to bring
her deeper side out.
And she's FEARFULLY fond of me." "Anybody can see that."
"But you know, mother--she's--she's different from us.
Those sort of people, like those she lives amongst, they don't seem to have the same
principles." "You mustn't judge too hastily," said Mrs.
Morel.
But he seemed uneasy within himself. In the morning, however, he was up singing
and larking round the house. "Hello!" he called, sitting on the stairs.
"Are you getting up?"
"Yes," her voice called faintly. "Merry Christmas!" he shouted to her.
Her laugh, pretty and tinkling, was heard in the bedroom.
She did not come down in half an hour.
"Was she REALLY getting up when she said she was?" he asked of Annie.
"Yes, she was," replied Annie. He waited a while, then went to the stairs
again.
"Happy New Year," he called. "Thank you, Chubby dear!" came the laughing
voice, far away. "Buck up!" he implored.
It was nearly an hour, and still he was waiting for her.
Morel, who always rose before six, looked at the clock.
"Well, it's a winder!" he exclaimed.
The family had breakfasted, all but William.
He went to the foot of the stairs. "Shall I have to send you an Easter egg up
there?" he called, rather crossly.
She only laughed. The family expected, after that time of
preparation, something like magic. At last she came, looking very nice in a
blouse and skirt.
"Have you REALLY been all this time getting ready?" he asked.
"Chubby dear! That question is not permitted, is it, Mrs.
Morel?"
She played the grand lady at first.
When she went with William to chapel, he in his frock-coat and silk hat, she in her
furs and London-made costume, Paul and Arthur and Annie expected everybody to bow
to the ground in admiration.
And Morel, standing in his Sunday suit at the end of the road, watching the gallant
pair go, felt he was the father of princes and princesses.
And yet she was not so grand.
For a year now she had been a sort of secretary or clerk in a London office.
But while she was with the Morels she queened it.
She sat and let Annie or Paul wait on her as if they were her servants.
She treated Mrs. Morel with a certain glibness and Morel with patronage.
But after a day or so she began to change her tune.
William always wanted Paul or Annie to go along with them on their walks.
It was so much more interesting.
And Paul really DID admire "Gipsy" wholeheartedly; in fact, his mother
scarcely forgave the boy for the adulation with which he treated the girl.
On the second day, when Lily said: "Oh, Annie, do you know where I left my ***?"
William replied: "You know it is in your bedroom.
Why do you ask Annie?"
And Lily went upstairs with a cross, shut mouth.
But it angered the young man that she made a servant of his sister.
On the third evening William and Lily were sitting together in the parlour by the fire
in the dark. At a quarter to eleven Mrs. Morel was heard
raking the fire.
William came out to the kitchen, followed by his beloved.
"Is it as late as that, mother?" he said. She had been sitting alone.
"It is not LATE, my boy, but it is as late as I usually sit up."
"Won't you go to bed, then?" he asked. "And leave you two?
No, my boy, I don't believe in it."
"Can't you trust us, mother?" "Whether I can or not, I won't do it.
You can stay till eleven if you like, and I can read."
"Go to bed, Gyp," he said to his girl.
"We won't keep mater waiting." "Annie has left the candle burning, Lily,"
said Mrs. Morel; "I think you will see." "Yes, thank you.
Good-night, Mrs. Morel."
William kissed his sweetheart at the foot of the stairs, and she went.
He returned to the kitchen. "Can't you trust us, mother?" he repeated,
rather offended.
"My boy, I tell you I don't BELIEVE in leaving two young things like you alone
downstairs when everyone else is in bed." And he was forced to take this answer.
He kissed his mother good-night.
At Easter he came over alone. And then he discussed his sweetheart
endlessly with his mother. "You know, mother, when I'm away from her I
don't care for her a bit.
I shouldn't care if I never saw her again. But, then, when I'm with her in the
evenings I am awfully fond of her."
"It's a *** sort of love to marry on," said Mrs. Morel, "if she holds you no more
than that!" "It IS funny!" he exclaimed.
It worried and perplexed him.
"But yet--there's so much between us now I couldn't give her up."
"You know best," said Mrs. Morel.
"But if it is as you say, I wouldn't call it LOVE--at any rate, it doesn't look much
like it." "Oh, I don't know, mother.
She's an orphan, and--"
They never came to any sort of conclusion. He seemed puzzled and rather fretted.
She was rather reserved. All his strength and money went in keeping
this girl.
He could scarcely afford to take his mother to Nottingham when he came over.
Paul's wages had been raised at Christmas to ten shillings, to his great joy.
He was quite happy at Jordan's, but his health suffered from the long hours and the
confinement. His mother, to whom he became more and more
significant, thought how to help.
His half-day holiday was on Monday afternoon.
On a Monday morning in May, as the two sat alone at breakfast, she said:
"I think it will be a fine day."
He looked up in surprise. This meant something.
"You know Mr. Leivers has gone to live on a new farm.
Well, he asked me last week if I wouldn't go and see Mrs. Leivers, and I promised to
bring you on Monday if it's fine. Shall we go?"
"I say, little woman, how lovely!" he cried.
"And we'll go this afternoon?" Paul hurried off to the station jubilant.
Down Derby Road was a cherry-tree that glistened.
The old brick wall by the Statutes ground burned scarlet, spring was a very flame of
green.
And the steep swoop of highroad lay, in its cool morning dust, splendid with patterns
of sunshine and shadow, perfectly still.
The trees sloped their great green shoulders proudly; and inside the warehouse
all the morning, the boy had a vision of spring outside.
When he came home at dinner-time his mother was rather excited.
"Are we going?" he asked. "When I'm ready," she replied.
Presently he got up.
"Go and get dressed while I wash up," he said.
She did so. He washed the pots, straightened, and then
took her boots.
They were quite clean. Mrs. Morel was one of those naturally
exquisite people who can walk in mud without dirtying their shoes.
But Paul had to clean them for her.
They were kid boots at eight shillings a pair.
He, however, thought them the most dainty boots in the world, and he cleaned them
with as much reverence as if they had been flowers.
Suddenly she appeared in the inner doorway rather shyly.
She had got a new cotton blouse on. Paul jumped up and went forward.
"Oh, my stars!" he exclaimed.
"What a bobby-dazzler!" She sniffed in a little haughty way, and
put her head up. "It's not a bobby-dazzler at all!" she
replied.
"It's very quiet." She walked forward, whilst he hovered round
her.
"Well," she asked, quite shy, but pretending to be high and mighty, "do you
like it?" "Awfully!
You ARE a fine little woman to go jaunting out with!"
He went and surveyed her from the back.
"Well," he said, "if I was walking down the street behind you, I should say: 'Doesn't
THAT little person fancy herself!"' "Well, she doesn't," replied Mrs. Morel.
"She's not sure it suits her."
"Oh no! she wants to be in dirty black, looking as if she was wrapped in burnt
paper. It DOES suit you, and I say you look nice."
She sniffed in her little way, pleased, but pretending to know better.
"Well," she said, "it's cost me just three shillings.
You couldn't have got it ready-made for that price, could you?"
"I should think you couldn't," he replied. "And, you know, it's good stuff."
"Awfully pretty," he said.
The blouse was white, with a little sprig of heliotrope and black.
"Too young for me, though, I'm afraid," she said.
"Too young for you!" he exclaimed in disgust.
"Why don't you buy some false white hair and stick it on your head."
"I s'll soon have no need," she replied.
"I'm going white fast enough." "Well, you've no business to," he said.
"What do I want with a white-haired mother?"
"I'm afraid you'll have to put up with one, my lad," she said rather strangely.
They set off in great style, she carrying the umbrella William had given her, because
of the sun.
Paul was considerably taller than she, though he was not big.
He fancied himself. On the fallow land the young wheat shone
silkily.
Minton pit waved its plumes of white steam, coughed, and rattled hoarsely.
"Now look at that!" said Mrs. Morel. Mother and son stood on the road to watch.
Along the ridge of the great pit-hill crawled a little group in silhouette
against the sky, a horse, a small truck, and a man.
They climbed the incline against the heavens.
At the end the man tipped the wagon. There was an undue rattle as the waste fell
down the sheer slope of the enormous bank.
"You sit a minute, mother," he said, and she took a seat on a bank, whilst he
sketched rapidly.
She was silent whilst he worked, looking round at the afternoon, the red cottages
shining among their greenness. "The world is a wonderful place," she said,
"and wonderfully beautiful."
"And so's the pit," he said. "Look how it heaps together, like something
alive almost--a big creature that you don't know."
"Yes," she said.
"Perhaps!" "And all the trucks standing waiting, like
a string of beasts to be fed," he said.
"And very thankful I am they ARE standing," she said, "for that means they'll turn
middling time this week." "But I like the feel of MEN on things,
while they're alive.
There's a feel of men about trucks, because they've been handled with men's hands, all
of them." "Yes," said Mrs. Morel.
They went along under the trees of the highroad.
He was constantly informing her, but she was interested.
They passed the end of Nethermere, that was tossing its sunshine like petals lightly in
its lap. Then they turned on a private road, and in
some trepidation approached a big farm.
A dog barked furiously. A woman came out to see.
"Is this the way to Willey Farm?" Mrs. Morel asked.
Paul hung behind in terror of being sent back.
But the woman was amiable, and directed them.
The mother and son went through the wheat and oats, over a little bridge into a wild
meadow.
Peewits, with their white *** glistening, wheeled and screamed about
them. The lake was still and blue.
High overhead a heron floated.
Opposite, the wood heaped on the hill, green and still.
"It's a wild road, mother," said Paul. "Just like Canada."
"Isn't it beautiful!" said Mrs. Morel, looking round.
"See that heron--see--see her legs?" He directed his mother, what she must see
and what not.
And she was quite content. "But now," she said, "which way?
He told me through the wood." The wood, fenced and dark, lay on their
left.
"I can feel a bit of a path this road," said Paul.
"You've got town feet, somehow or other, you have."
They found a little gate, and soon were in a broad green alley of the wood, with a new
thicket of fir and pine on one hand, an old oak glade dipping down on the other.
And among the oaks the bluebells stood in pools of azure, under the new green hazels,
upon a pale fawn floor of oak-leaves. He found flowers for her.
"Here's a bit of new-mown hay," he said; then, again, he brought her forget-me-nots.
And, again, his heart hurt with love, seeing her hand, used with work, holding
the little bunch of flowers he gave her.
She was perfectly happy. But at the end of the riding was a fence to
climb. Paul was over in a second.
"Come," he said, "let me help you."
"No, go away. I will do it in my own way."
He stood below with his hands up ready to help her.
She climbed cautiously.
"What a way to climb!" he exclaimed scornfully, when she was safely to earth
again. "Hateful stiles!" she cried.
"Duffer of a little woman," he replied, "who can't get over 'em."
In front, along the edge of the wood, was a cluster of low red farm buildings.
The two hastened forward.
Flush with the wood was the apple orchard, where blossom was falling on the
grindstone. The pond was deep under a hedge and
overhanging oak trees.
Some cows stood in the shade. The farm and buildings, three sides of a
quadrangle, embraced the sunshine towards the wood.
It was very still.
Mother and son went into the small railed garden, where was a scent of red gillivers.
By the open door were some floury loaves, put out to cool.
A hen was just coming to peck them.
Then, in the doorway suddenly appeared a girl in a dirty apron.
She was about fourteen years old, had a rosy dark face, a bunch of short black
curls, very fine and free, and dark eyes; shy, questioning, a little resentful of the
strangers, she disappeared.
In a minute another figure appeared, a small, frail woman, rosy, with great dark
brown eyes. "Oh!" she exclaimed, smiling with a little
glow, "you've come, then.
I AM glad to see you." Her voice was intimate and rather sad.
The two women shook hands. "Now are you sure we're not a bother to
you?" said Mrs. Morel.
"I know what a farming life is." "Oh no!
We're only too thankful to see a new face, it's so lost up here."
"I suppose so," said Mrs. Morel.
They were taken through into the parlour--a long, low room, with a great bunch of
guelder-roses in the fireplace. There the women talked, whilst Paul went
out to survey the land.
He was in the garden smelling the gillivers and looking at the plants, when the girl
came out quickly to the heap of coal which stood by the fence.
"I suppose these are cabbage-roses?" he said to her, pointing to the bushes along
the fence. She looked at him with startled, big brown
eyes.
"I suppose they are cabbage-roses when they come out?" he said.
"I don't know," she faltered. "They're white with pink middles."
"Then they're maiden-blush."
Miriam flushed. She had a beautiful warm colouring.
"I don't know," she said. "You don't have MUCH in your garden," he
"This is our first year here," she answered, in a distant, rather superior
way, drawing back and going indoors. He did not notice, but went his round of
exploration.
Presently his mother came out, and they went through the buildings.
Paul was hugely delighted.
"And I suppose you have the fowls and calves and pigs to look after?" said Mrs.
Morel to Mrs. Leivers. "No," replied the little woman.
"I can't find time to look after cattle, and I'm not used to it.
It's as much as I can do to keep going in the house."
"Well, I suppose it is," said Mrs. Morel.
Presently the girl came out. "Tea is ready, mother," she said in a
musical, quiet voice. "Oh, thank you, Miriam, then we'll come,"
replied her mother, almost ingratiatingly.
"Would you CARE to have tea now, Mrs. Morel?"
"Of course," said Mrs. Morel. "Whenever it's ready."
Paul and his mother and Mrs. Leivers had tea together.
Then they went out into the wood that was flooded with bluebells, while fumy forget-
me-nots were in the paths.
The mother and son were in ecstasy together.
When they got back to the house, Mr. Leivers and Edgar, the eldest son, were in
the kitchen.
Edgar was about eighteen. Then Geoffrey and Maurice, big lads of
twelve and thirteen, were in from school.
Mr. Leivers was a good-looking man in the prime of life, with a golden-brown
moustache, and blue eyes screwed up against the weather.
The boys were condescending, but Paul scarcely observed it.
They went round for eggs, scrambling into all sorts of places.
As they were feeding the fowls Miriam came out.
The boys took no notice of her. One hen, with her yellow chickens, was in a
coop.
Maurice took his hand full of corn and let the hen peck from it.
"Durst you do it?" he asked of Paul. "Let's see," said Paul.
He had a small hand, warm, and rather capable-looking.
Miriam watched. He held the corn to the hen.
The bird eyed it with her hard, bright eye, and suddenly made a peck into his hand.
He started, and laughed. "Rap, rap, rap!" went the bird's beak in
his palm.
He laughed again, and the other boys joined.
"She knocks you, and nips you, but she never hurts," said Paul, when the last corn
had gone.
"Now, Miriam," said Maurice, "you come an 'ave a go."
"No," she cried, shrinking back. "Ha! baby.
The mardy-kid!" said her brothers.
"It doesn't hurt a bit," said Paul. "It only just nips rather nicely."
"No," she still cried, shaking her black curls and shrinking.
"She dursn't," said Geoffrey.
"She niver durst do anything except recite poitry."
"Dursn't jump off a gate, dursn't tweedle, dursn't go on a slide, dursn't stop a girl
hittin' her.
She can do nowt but go about thinkin' herself somebody.
'The Lady of the Lake.' Yah!" cried Maurice.
Miriam was crimson with shame and misery.
"I dare do more than you," she cried. "You're never anything but cowards and
bullies." "Oh, cowards and bullies!" they repeated
mincingly, mocking her speech.
"Not such a clown shall anger me, A boor is answered silently," he quoted against her,
shouting with laughter. She went indoors.
Paul went with the boys into the orchard, where they had rigged up a parallel bar.
They did feats of strength. He was more agile than strong, but it
served.
He fingered a piece of apple-blossom that hung low on a swinging bough.
"I wouldn't get the apple-blossom," said Edgar, the eldest brother.
"There'll be no apples next year."
"I wasn't going to get it," replied Paul, going away.
The boys felt hostile to him; they were more interested in their own pursuits.
He wandered back to the house to look for his mother.
As he went round the back, he saw Miriam kneeling in front of the hen-coop, some
maize in her hand, biting her lip, and crouching in an intense attitude.
The hen was eyeing her wickedly.
Very gingerly she put forward her hand. The hen bobbed for her.
She drew back quickly with a cry, half of fear, half of chagrin.
"It won't hurt you," said Paul.
She flushed crimson and started up. "I only wanted to try," she said in a low
voice.
"See, it doesn't hurt," he said, and, putting only two corns in his palm, he let
the hen peck, peck, peck at his bare hand. "It only makes you laugh," he said.
She put her hand forward and dragged it away, tried again, and started back with a
cry. He frowned.
"Why, I'd let her take corn from my face," said Paul, "only she bumps a bit.
She's ever so neat. If she wasn't, look how much ground she'd
peck up every day."
He waited grimly, and watched. At last Miriam let the bird peck from her
hand. She gave a little cry--fear, and pain
because of fear--rather pathetic.
But she had done it, and she did it again. "There, you see," said the boy.
"It doesn't hurt, does it?" She looked at him with dilated dark eyes.
"No," she laughed, trembling.
Then she rose and went indoors. She seemed to be in some way resentful of
the boy.
"He thinks I'm only a common girl," she thought, and she wanted to prove she was a
grand person like the "Lady of the Lake".