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"Is that you, Sam Slater? Who's that you've got with you?"
"A friend of mine, and that's enough for you."
With this brief response, the stranger, whose name appeared to be Sam Slater, led the way up the flight of stairs.
"Anybody here?" he asked, when he reached the landing.
"Not at present there ain't; I expect they're all at the fair."
"All the better," said Sam.
He followed the lady through a door which faced the landing, pausing for a moment to see that Bertie followed too. Something in Bertie's appearance struck the lady's eye.
"What's the matter with your friend,--ain't he well?" she asked.
"Well, he's not exactly well," responded Sam, favouring Bertie with a curious glance from the corner of his eye.
A man who was seated by a roaring fire, although the night was warm and bright, got up and joined the party. He was in his shirt-sleeves, and he also was stout, and he puffed industriously at a short black clay pipe. He stood in front of Bertie, and inspected him from head to foot.
"He don't look exactly well, not by any means he don't."
The stout man grinned. Bertie staggered. The sudden change from the sweet, fresh air to the hot, close room gave him a sudden qualm. If the stout man had not caught him he would have fallen to the floor.
"Steady! Where do you think you're coming to? You're a nice young chap, you are! If I was you I'd turn teetotal."
Sam Slater interfered.
"You don't know anything at all about it; he's not been drinking; he's been got at, and some one's cleared him of his cash."
"You leave him to me, Jenkins," said the stout lady.
For Bertie had swooned. As easily as though he had been a baby, instead of being the great lad that he was, she lifted him and carried him to another room. When he opened his eyes again he found that he was lying on a brilliantly counterpaned bed. Sam was seated on the edge, the lady was standing by the side, and Mr. Jenkins, a steaming tumbler in his hand, was leaning over the rail at his head.
"Better?" inquired the lady, perceiving that his eyes were open.
For answer Bertie sat up and looked about him. It was a little room, smaller than the other, and cooler, owing to the absence of a fire.
"Take a swig of this; that'll do you good."
Mr. Jenkins held the steaming tumbler towards him. Bertie shrank away.
"It's only peppermint, made with my own hands, so I can guarantee it's good. A barrel of it wouldn't do you harm. Drink up, sonny!"
Thus urged by the lady, he took the gla.s.s and drank. It certainly revived him, making him feel less dull and heavy; but a curious sense of excitement came instead. In the state in which he was even peppermint had a tendency to fly to his head. Perceiving his altered looks the lady went on,--
"Didn't I tell you it would do you good? Now you feel another man."
Then she continued, in a tone which Bertie, if he had the senses about him, would have called wheedling--
"Anybody can see that you're a gentleman, and not used to such a place as this. You are a little gentleman, ain't you now?"
Bertie took another drink before he replied. The steaming hot peppermint was restoring him to his former heroic state of mind.
"I should think I am a gentleman; I should like to see anybody say I wasn't."
Either this remark, or the manner of its delivery, made Mr. Jenkins laugh.
"Oh lor!" he said, "here's a three-foot-sixer!"
"Never mind him, my dear," observed the lady, "he knows no better. I knows a gentleman when I sees one, and directly I set eyes on you I says, 'he's a gentleman he is.' And did they rob you of your money?"
"Some one's robbed me of five pounds."
This was not said in quite such a heroic tone as the former remark.
The memory of that five pounds haunted him.
"Poor, dear, young gentleman, think of that now. And was the money your own, my dear?"
"Whose do you think it was? Do you think I stole it?"
Under the influence of the peppermint, or hara.s.sed by the memory of his loss, Bertie positively scowled at the lady.
"Dear no, young gentlemen never steals. Five pounds! and all his own; and lost it too! What thieves this world has got! Dear, dear, now."
The lady paused, possibly overcome by her sympathy with the lad's misfortune. Behind his back she interchanged a glance with Mr.
Jenkins. Mr. Jenkins, apparently wishing to say something, but not being able to find the words to say it with, put his hand to his mouth and coughed. Sam Slater stared at Bertie with a look of undisguised contempt.
"You must be a green hand to let 'em turn you inside out like that. If I had five pounds--which I ain't never likely to have! more's the pity--I'd look 'em up and down just once or twice before I'd let 'em walk off with it like that. I wonder if your mother knows you're out."
"My mother doesn't know anything at all about it; I've run away from school."
Under ordinary circ.u.mstances Bertie would have confined that fact within his own bosom; now, with some vague idea of impressing his dignity upon the contemptuous Sam, he blurted it out. Directly the words were spoken a significant look pa.s.sed from each of his hearers to the other.
"Dear, now," said the lady. "Run away from school, have you now?
There's a brave young gentleman; and that there Sam knows nothing at all about it. It's more than he dare do."
"Never had a school to run away from," murmured Sam.
"Did they use you very bad, my dear?"
"It wasn't because of that; I wouldn't have minded how they used me. I ran away because I wanted to find the Land of Golden Dreams."
Mr. Jenkins put his hand to his mouth as if to choke what sounded very like a laugh; Sam stared with a look of the most profound amazement on his face; a faint smile even flitted across the lady's face.
"The Land of Golden Dreams," said Sam. "Never heard tell of such a place."
"You never heard tell of nothing," declared the lady. "You ain't a scholar like this young gentleman. And what's the name of the school, my dear?"