time by the forelock, my Imp, and call me Uncle Dick.”

Whatever Lisbeth might or might not have said was checked by the patter of footsteps, and a little girl tripped into view, with a small, fluffy kitten cuddled in her arms.

“Oh, Auntie Lisbeth,”she began, but stopped to stare at me over the back of the fluffy kitten. “Hallo, Dorothy!” cried the imp; “this is Uncle Dick. You can come an’ shake hands with him if you like.”

“I didn’t know I had an Uncle Dick,” said Dorothy, hesitating.

“Oh, yes; it’s all right,” answered the Imp reassuringly. “I found him, you know, an’ he likes worms, too!”

“How do you do, Uncle Dick?” she said in a quaint, old-fashioned way. “Reginald is always finding things, you know, an’ he likes worms, too!” Dorothy gave me her hand demurely.

>From somewhere near by there came the silvery chime of a bell.

“Why, there’s the tea-bell!” exclaimed Lisbeth; “and, Reginald, you have to change those muddy clothes. Say good-bye to Mr. Brent, children, and come along.”

“Imp,” I whispered as the others turned away, “where did you hide those stockings?” And I slipped the half crown into his ready palm.

“Along the river there’s a tree - very big an’ awfull’ fat, you know, with a lot of stickie-out branches, an’ a hole in its stomach - they’re in there.”

“Reginald!” called Lisbeth.

“Up stream or down?”

“That way,” he answered, pointing vaguely down stream; and with a nod that brought the yellow curls over his eyes he scampered off.

“Along the river,” I repeated, “in a big, fat tree with a lot of stickie-out branches!” It sounded a trifle indefinite, I thought - still I could but try. So having packed up my rod I set out upon the search.

It was strange, perhaps, but nearly every tree I saw seemed to be either “big” or “fat” - and all of them had “stickie-out” branches.

Thus the sun was already low in the west, and I was lighting my fifth pipe when I at length observed the tree in question.

A great pollard oak it was, standing upon the very edge of the stream, easily distinguishable by its unusual size and the fact that at some time or another it had been riven by lightning. After all, the Imp’s description had been in the main correct; it was “fat,” immensely fat: and I hurried joyfully forward.

I was still some way off when I saw the distant flutter of a white skirt, and - yes, sure enough, there was Lisbeth, walking quickly too, and she was a great deal nearer the tree than I.

Prompted by a sudden conviction, I dropped my rod and began to run. Immediately Lisbeth began running, too. I threw away my creel and sprinted for all I was worth. I had earned some small fame at this sort of thing in my university days, yet I arrived at the tree with only a very few yards to spare. Throwing myself upon my knees, I commenced a feverish search, and presently - more by good fortune than any thing else - my random fingers encountered a soft, silken bundle. When Lisbeth came up, flushed and panting, I held them in my hands.

“Give them to me!” she cried.

“I’m sorry - “

“Please,” she begged.

“I’m very sorry - “

“Mr. Brent.” said Lisbeth, drawing her self up, “I’ll trouble you for my - them.”

“Pardon me, Lisbeth,” I answered, “but if I remember anything of the law of ‘treasure-trove’ one of these should go to the Crown, and one belongs to me.

Lisbeth grew quite angry - one of her few bad traits.

“You will give them up at once - immediately?

“On the contrary,” I said very gently, “seeing the Crown can have no use for one, I shall keep them both to dream over when the nights are long and lonely.”

Lisbeth actually stamped her foot at me, and I tucked “them” into my pocket.

“How did you know they - they were here?” she inquired after a pause.

“I was directed to a tree with ‘stickie-out’ branches,” I answered.

“Oh, that Imp!” she exclaimed, and stamped her foot again.

“Do you know, I’ve grown quite attached to that nephew of mine already?” I said.

“He’s not a nephew of yours,” cried Lisbeth quite hotly.

“Not legally, perhaps; that is where you might be of such assistance to us Lisbeth. A boy with only an aunt here and there is unbalanced, so to speak; be requires the stronger influence of an uncle. Not,” I continued hastily, “that I would depreciate aunts - by the way, he has but one, I believe?” Lisbeth nodded coldly.

“Of course,” I nodded; “and very lucky in that one - extremely fortunate. Now, years ago, when I was a boy, I had three, and all of them blanks, so to speak. I mean none of them ever read to me out of the history book, or helped me to sail boats, or paddled and lost their - No, mine used to lecture me about my hair and nails, I remember, and glare at me over the big tea urn until I choked into my teacup. A truly desolate childhood mine. I had no big-fisted uncle to thump me persuasively when I needed it; had fortune granted me one I might have been a very different man, Lisbeth. You behold in me a horrible example of what one may become whose boyhood has been denuded of uncles.”

Вы читаете My Lady Caprice
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×