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For a moment they stood in awed silence, gaping at the only person who had ever intimidated them; then Sister, in a blind rage, seized his clay pipe that he had put down on the bench, and threw it with all her force on the stone floor of the porch.
"You let me alone!" she shrieked, as she darted away from him.
"You--you--you old _Billygoat_, you!" It was the sight of his gray beard that finally suggested to her choking wrath a name ugly enough to hurl at him. Then she took to her heels down the gra.s.sy lane, Brud following as fast as possible.
"There's nothing for me to do but follow them," said Mary, starting into the bedroom for her hat and coat, which had been laid away in there.
"I'd feel so responsible if they should get hurt, and there are so many things on a big place like this that they are not used to."
"Now, don't you worry," interrupted old Sammy. "I'll keep _my_ eye on them."
He was quite red in the face with vexation over the loss of his pipe, which lay in several pieces on the floor, and Mrs. Barnaby, knowing him well, prevailed on Mary to come back to her easy-chair.
"You leave them to him," she insisted, in a laughing aside. "He's so mad that he'll watch them like a hawk, just for the pleasure of pouncing down on them again if they cut up any more didoes; but his bark is worse than his bite, and they'll be perfectly safe with him."
So Mary allowed herself to be drawn back to their interrupted conversation, but she could not rid herself of an uneasy feeling that kept obtruding itself into her thoughts, even when she was most interested.
If Brud and Sister had deliberately planned a revenge on the old man who had forced them into exile and temporary obedience, they could not have chosen anything which would have hurt him worse than their next prank.
Their wild chase down the lane had been brought to a sudden stop by the sight of the lordly peac.o.c.k, strutting back and forth in the barn-yard, his beautiful tail spread wide in the sun. They climbed up on the gate to watch it, and, hanging over the top bar, admired it in almost breathless ecstasy for several minutes. The iridescent shimmer of the gorgeous eyes in its tail started a dispute.
"That's why you can't ever catch a peac.o.c.k," Brud a.s.serted, "'cause with all those eyes in its tail it can see you coming up behind it."
"Aw, goosey," contradicted Nancy, "it sees with its two little _head_ eyes. Those feather eyes in its tail can't see."
"They can!"
"They can't!"
The two words were bandied back and forth, the dispute promising to go on indefinitely, till Brud's triumphant, "Ten million times _can_," was answered by Nancy's final, "Million billion times _can't_! So there."
"We'll prove it," was Brud's next taunt. "Try and see if you can catch him."
"All right," was the willing a.s.sent. "And if the feathers come out of his tail as easy as they did out of Mis' Williams' red rooster, won't that old man be mad!"
In the meantime Sammy had gone into the house to hunt among his possessions for a certain corncob pipe, to take the place of the clay one just broken. The mantel-shelf in his room was as crowded as the corner of an old junk shop, so it took some time for him to find what he was searching for. He had taken it down and was slowly filling it, when the sound of a wild commotion in the barn-yard made him hurry to the door. Turkeys, guineas, ducks, hens,--everything that could gobble or flutter or squawk, were doing their utmost to attract someone's attention. And the cause of it all, or, rather, the two causes, were standing by the watering-trough, comparing the spoils of the chase. They had crept up behind the peac.o.c.k, despite his thousand eyes, and caught him by the tail. Each proudly clutched a handful of long, trailing feathers, and the bird, miserably conscious that his glory had been torn from him, had taken refuge under the corn-crib.
"You outrageous little Hitt.i.tes!" roared old Sammy, coming upon them suddenly and seeing the feathers. Then a real chase began.
A little while later, Mary paused in the middle of a sentence to say, "Listen! Didn't that sound like the children crying or calling?"
Mrs. Barnaby, who was slightly deaf, shook her head. "No, I think not.
Anyhow, Sammy is looking after them. He won't let them come to any real harm. What was it we were talking about? Oh, yes! Those heirloom candlesticks."
More than an hour afterward a shadow darkened the doorway for an instant as Sammy strode past it on his way across the porch.
"Mr. Bradford," called Mary. "Do you know where the children are?"
At her call he turned back to the door, holding out a great handful of peac.o.c.k feathers which he was taking sorrowfully to his room.
"Those pesky little varmints!" he exclaimed, still wrathful, "They've teetotally ruined that c.o.c.k's looks. Yes, I know where they are. I've had them shut up in the corn-crib till a minute ago."
"Shut up in the corn-crib!" echoed Mary and Mrs. Barnaby in the same breath.
"Yes, as I told 'em, they haven't any more idea of other people's rights than weasels, and it's high time they are being taught."
"Well, do you think they've learned their lesson in one dose, Sammy?"
asked Mr. Barnaby, dryly, coming out from his room in time to hear his cousin's speech.
"That remains to be seen," spluttered Sammy, as he strode on to his room. "They were sniffling and snubbing considerable when I let them out. I don't think they'll chase _my_ peac.o.c.k any more."
The "sniffling and snubbing" changed into out-and-out crying as soon as they reached Mary's side, and that was followed by heart-broken wails and demands to be taken home. Nothing comforted them. Nothing could turn them aside from their belief that they had been abused and must be taken back immediately to mommey.
After nearly half an hour spent in vain attempts to silence them, Mrs.
Barnaby said in sheer desperation, "Well, James, you'll just have to hitch up and take them back, even if it is so early. I hate to have Mary's visit cut short, but they'd spoil it worse if they stayed. If I only felt free to give them a good sound spanking now--"
She did not finish the sentence, but looked over her spectacles so sternly that the children backed away, lest a feeling of liberty might suddenly descend upon her.
As Mary pinned on her hat before the mirror in the bedroom, she turned to her hostess with a hunted look in her eyes.
"Do you ever get desperate over things?" she asked. "That's the way I am now. I'm so tired of those children that the very sound of their voices sets my teeth on edge. If I only could have had this one whole day away from them I might have been able to go on with them to-morrow, but now it seems as if I can't! I just _can't_!"
"I don't wonder, you poor child," was the sympathetic answer.
"The worst of it is, I'm utterly discouraged," confessed Mary, almost tearfully. "I've been pluming myself on the fact that my two weeks' work had amounted to something; that I'd really made an impression, and given them all sorts of good ideas. But you see it isn't worth a row of pins.
They are good only so long as I'm exercising like an acrobat, mind and body, to keep them entertained. The minute I stop they don't pay the slightest attention to my wishes."
"Maybe you've done too much for them," said Mrs. Barnaby, shrewdly guessing the root of the trouble. "You told them it was a surprise school. Let the next surprise be a different sort. Turn them loose and make them hunt their own entertainment."
"As they did to-day," Mary answered, with a shrug. "They'd run home howling and their mother would think I was incapable and give my place to someone else. No, we must have the money, so I'll have to go on and put in my best licks, no matter how I detest it."
When she drew on her gloves she was so near to tears that the little bloodstone ring on her hand looked so dim she could scarcely see it. But it made her glance up with a smile into the benevolent old face above her, and she stripped back the glove from her finger with a dramatic gesture.
"See?" she said, brightly, exhibiting the ring. "By the bloodstone on my finger, I'll keep my oath until the going down of one more sun."
"You're a brave little girl. That's what you are!" said Mrs. Barnaby, stooping to kiss her good-bye. Only that week she had read _The Jester's Sword_, from which Mary was quoting, and she knew what grim determination lay beneath the light tone.
"I guess it will help you the same way it did the poor Jester, to remember that it's only one day at a time you're called on to endure.
And another thing," she added, trying to put as many consoling thoughts into their parting as possible, "If you _do_ succeed in teaching them anything that'll help to s.n.a.t.c.h them as brands from the burning, it will count for a star in your crown just as much as if you'd gone out and converted the heathen on 'India's coral strand.'"
"It's not stars in my crown I'm working for," laughed Mary. "It's for pence in my purse." Nevertheless the suggestion stayed with her all the way home. When conversation flagged, she filled the silences with pleasant s.n.a.t.c.hes of day-dreams, in which she saw herself becoming to these benighted little creatures, asleep on either side of her, the inspiration that Madam Chartley was to everyone who crossed the threshold of Warwick Hall.
"I've just _got_ to do something to make them see themselves as they look to other people," she thought, desperately. "But the question is, _what_?"
A hard problem indeed for one who, in many ways, was still only a child herself.
CHAPTER X