Chapter Eleven.Mr Marston’s Narrow Escape.The wintry weather passed away with its storms and continuous rains and floods, which hindered the progress of the great lode or drain, and then came the spring sunshine, with the lads waking up to the fact that here and there the arums were thrusting up their glossy-green spathes, that the celandines were out like yellow stars, and that the rustling reeds left uncut had been snapped off and beaten down, and had rotted in the water, and that from among them the young shoots of the fresh crop were beginning to peep.Bold brisk winds swept over the fen and raised foamy waves in the meres, and the nights were clear and cold, though there had been little frost that year, never enough to well coat the lakes and pools with ice, so that the pattens could be cleaned from their rust and sharpened at Hickathrift’s grindstone ready for the lads at the old Priory and Grimsey to skate in and out for miles. But, in spite of the cold, there was a feeling of spring in the air. The great grey-backed crows were getting scarce, and the short-eared owls, which, a couple of months before, could be flushed from the tufts in the fen, to fly off looking like chubby hawks, were gone, and the flights of ducks and peewits had broken up. The golden plovers were gone; but the green peewits were busy nesting, or rather laying eggs without nests—pear-shaped eggs, small at one end, large at the other, thickly blotched and splashed with dark green, and over which the birds watched, ready to fall as if with broken wing before the intruder, and try to lure him away.Many a tramp over the sodden ground did the lads have with Dave, who generally waited for their coming, leaping-pole in hand, and then took them to the peewits’ haunts to gather a basketful of their eggs.“I don’t know how you do it, Dave,” said Dick. “We go and hunt for hours, and only get a few pie-wipes’ eggs; you always get a basketful.”“It’s a man’s natur,” said Dave.“Well, show us how you know,” said Dick, shouldering his leaping-pole, and pretending to hit his companion’s head.“Nay, lad, theer’s no showing a thing like that,” said Dave mysteriously. “It comes to a man.”“Gammon!” cried Dick. “It’s a dodge you’ve learned.”Dave chuckled and tramped on beside the lads, having enough to do to avoid sinking in.“She’s reyther juicy this spring, eh? They heven’t dree-ernt her yet,” said Dave with a malicious grin. “See there, now, young Tom Tallington,” he cried, stepping past the lad, and, picking up a couple of eggs in spite of the wailing of their owners, as they came napping close by, the cock bird in his glossy-green spring feathers, and a long pendent tuft hanging down from the back of his head.“How stupid!” cried Tom. “I didn’t see them.”“Nay, you wouldn’t,” said Dave, stepping across Dick, who was on his left; “and yow, young squire Dick, didn’t see they two.”“Yes, I did, Dave, I did,” cried Dick. “I was just going to pick them up.”“Pick’ em up then,” cried Dave quietly; “where are they then?” Dick looked sharply round him; but there was not an egg to be seen, and he realised that Dave had cheated him, and drawn him into a declaration that was not true.He was very silent under the laughter of his companions, and felt it all the more.They went on, the lads sometimes finding an egg or two, but nearly all falling to Dave, who, as if by unerring instinct, went straight to the spots where the nests lay, and secured the spoil.Now and then a heron flew up, one with a small eel twining about its bill; and more than once a hare went bounding off from its form among the dry last year’s grass.“We want Hickathrift’s dog here,” cried Dick.“What for, lad? what for?” said Dave, laughing.“To catch the hares.”“Nay, yow want no dog,” said Dave. “Easy enough to catch hares.”“Easy! How?” cried Tom.“Go up to ’em and catch ’em,” said Dave coolly.“Ha, ha, ha!” laughed Dick, and his companion joined in. “I should like to see you catch a hare, Dave.”“Shouldst ta, lad? Very well, wait a bit.”They tramped on, with Dave picking up an egg here, a couple there, in a way that was most exasperating to the boys, whose luck was very bad.“I never saw such eyes,” said Tom. “I can’t see the eggs like he can.”Dave chuckled as if he had a rattlesnake in his throat, and they went on for a while till Dick stopped suddenly, and pointed to the side of one of the fen ponds.“That isn’t a heron,” he said.“No. One o’ them long-legged ones—a crane,” said Dave. “Getting straänge and scarce now. Used to be lots of ’em breed here when my grandfather was a boy. Nay, nay, don’t scar’ him,” he cried, checking Dick, who was about to wave his hands. “Niver disturb the birds wi’out you want ’em to eat or sell. Now, then: yonder’s a hare.”“Where?” cried Tom. “I can’t see it.”“Over yonder among that dry grass.”“There isn’t,” said Dick. “I can’t see any hare.”“Like me to go and catch him, young Tom?”“Here, I’ll soon see if there’s a hare,” cried Dick; but Dave caught him by the shoulder with a grip of iron, and thrust the pole he carried into the soft bog.“I didn’t say I was going to run a hare down,” he said. “Theer’s a hare yonder in her form. Shall I go and catch her?”“Yes,” said Dick, grinning. “Shall I say, ‘Sh!’”“Nay, if thou’rt going to play tricks, lad, I shall howd my hand. I thowt yow wanted to see me ketch a hare.”“Go on, then,” said Dick, laughing; “we won’t move.”Dave chuckled, swung his basket behind him as if hung by a strip of cow-hide over his shoulder, and walked quietly on, in and out among the tufts of heather and moss, for some five-and-twenty yards.“He’s laughing at us,” said Dick.“No, he isn’t. I’ve heard Hickathrift say he can catch hares,” replied Tom. “Look!”For just then they saw Dave go straight up to a tuft of dry grass, stoop down and pick up a hare by its ears, and place it on his left arm.The boys ran up excitedly.“Why, Dave, I didn’t think you could do it!” cried Dick.“Dessay not,” replied the decoy-man, uttering his unpleasant laugh. “Theer, she’s a beauty, isn’t she?”The hare struggled for a moment or two, and then crouched down in the man’s arm, with its heart throbbing and great eyes staring round at its captors.“Kill it, Dave, kill it,” cried Tom.“Kill it! What for? Pretty creatur’,” said Dave, stroking the hare’s brown speckled fur, and laying its long black-tipped sensitive ears smoothly down over its back.“To take home.”“Nay, who kills hares at the end of March, lad? Hares is mad in March.”“Is that why it let you catch it, Dave?”“Mebbe, lad, mebbe, Mester Dick. Theer, hev you done stroking her?”“No. Why?”“Going to let her run?”“Wait a bit,” cried Dick.“Tek her by the ears, lad, and putt thy hand beneath her. That’s the ways.”Dick took the hare in his arms, and the trembling beast submitted without a struggle.“How did you know it was there?” said Tom.“How did I know she was theer! Why, she had her ears cocked-up listening, plain enough to see. Theer, let her go now. She’s got a wife somewheers about.”“She’sgot a wife! Why don’t you sayHe?” cried Dick. “Now, Tom, I’m going to let him go; but he won’t run, he’s a sick one. You’ll see. Anyone could catch a hare like this.”He carefully placed the hare upon the ground, holding tightly by its ears.“There,” he cried; “I told you so! Look how stupid and—Oh!”The hare made one great leap, and then hardly seemed to touch the ground again with its muscular hind-legs; but went off at a tremendous rate, bounding over heath and tuft, till it disappeared in the distance.“There’s a sleepy sick one for you, Mester Dick!” cried Dave. “Now, then, goo and ketch her, lad.”“Well, I never!” cried Dick. “I say, Dave, how do you manage it? Could you catch another?”“Ay, lad, many as I like.”“And rabbits too?”“Nay, I don’t say that. I hev ketched rabbuds that ways, but not often. Rabbud always makes for his hole.”As he spoke he walked back to where he had left his pole standing in the bog earth, and they trudged on again to where a lane of water impeded their further progress.“Too wide for you, lads?” said Dave.“No,” replied Dick, “if it’s good bottom.”“Good bottom a little higher up here,” said Dave, bearing off to the left. “Now, then, over you go!”Dick, pole in hand, took a run without the slightest hesitation, for Dave’s word was law. He said there was good bottom to the lane of water, and he was sure to know, for he had the knowledge of his father and grandfather joined to his own. If it had been bad bottom Dick’s feat would have been impossible, for his pole would have gone down perhaps to its full length in the soft bog; as it was, the end of the pole rested upon gravel in about three feet of water, and the lad went over easily and describing a curve through the air.“Look out!” shouted Tom, following suit, and landing easily upon the other side; while Dave took off his basket of plovers’ eggs by slipping the hide band over his head, then, hanging it to the end of his pole, he held it over the water to the boys, who reached across and took it together on their poles, landing it safely without breaking an egg.The next minute, with the ease of one long practised in such leaps, Dave flew over and resumed his load.Several more long lanes of water were cleared in this way, Dave leading the boys a good round, and taking them at last to his house, pretty well laden with eggs, where he set before them a loaf and butter, and lit a fire.“Theer, you can boil your eggs,” he said, “and mak’ a meal. Mebbe you’re hungry now.”There was no maybe in the matter, judging from the number of slices of bread and butter and hard-boiled plovers’ eggs the lads consumed.Over the meal the question of the draining was discussed sympathetically.“No fish,” said Dick.“No decoy,” said Tom.“No plovers’ eggs,” said Dave.“No rabbiting,” said Dick.“No eeling,” said Tom.“No nothing,” said Dave. “Hey bud it’ll be a sad job when it’s done. But it arn’t done yet, lads, eh?”“No, it isn’t done yet,” said Dick. “I say, where’s John Warren? I haven’t seen him for months.”“I hev,” said Dave. “He’s a breaking his heart, lads, about big drain. Comes over to see me and smoke his pipe. It’ll ’bout kill him if his rabbud-warren is took awaya. Bud dree-ern ar’n’t done yet, lads, eh?”Squire Winthorpe was of a different opinion that night when Dick reached home after seeing Tom well on his way.“They’re going on famously now,” he said to Mrs Winthorpe, who was repairing the damage in one of Dick’s garments.“And was the meeting satisfied?”“Yes, quite,” said the squire. “We had a big meeting with the gentlemen from London who are interested in the business, and they praised young Mr Marston, the engineer, wonderfully fine young fellow too.”Dick pricked up his ears.“I thought Mr Marston was coming to see us a deal, father!” he said.“He’s been away during the bad weather when the men couldn’t work—up in town making plans and things. He’s coming over to-night.”“And do the people about seem as dissatisfied as ever about the work?” said Mrs Winthorpe.“I don’t hear much about it,” said the squire. “They’ll soon settle down to it when they find how things are improved. Well, Dick, plenty of sport to-day?”“Dave got plenty of pie-wipes’ eggs, father. I didn’t find many.”“Got enough to give Mr Marston a few?”“Oh, yes, plenty for that! What time’s he coming?”“About eight, I should think. He’s coming along the river bank after his men have done.”“And going back, father?”“Oh no! he’ll sleep here to-night.”The squire went out to have his customary look round the farmstead before settling down for the night, and Dick followed him. The thrushes were piping; sounds of ducks feeding out in the fen came off the water, and here and there a great shadowy-looking bird could be seen flapping its way over the desolate waste, but everywhere there was the feeling of returning spring in the air, and the light was lingering well in the west, making the planet in the east look pale and wan.Everything seemed to be all right. There was a loud muttering among the fowls at roost. Solomon laid back his ears and twitched the skin of his back as if he meant to kick when Dick went near the lean-to shed supported on posts, thatched with reeds and built up against an old stone wall in which there were the remains of a groined arch.Everything about the Toft was at peace, and down toward the wheelwright’s the labourers’ cottages were so still that it was evident that some of the people had gone to bed.The squire went on down the gravel slope, past the clump of firs, and by the old ivied wall which marked the boundary of the ancient priory, when, after crossing a field or two, they came to the raised bank which kept the sluggish river within bounds.“Looks cold and muddy, father,” said Dick.“Yes, not tempting for a bathe, Dick; but some day I hope to see a river nearly as big as that draining our great fen.”“But don’t you think it will be a pity, father?”“Yes, for idle boys who want to pass their lives fishing, and for men like Dave and John Warren. Depend upon it, Dick, it’s the duty of every man to try and improve what he sees about.”“But natural things look so beautiful, father!”“In moderation, boy. Don’t see any sign of Mr Marston yet, do you?”“No, father,” replied Dick after taking a long look over the desolate level where the river wound between its raised banks toward the sea.“Can’t very well miss his way,” said the squire, half to himself.“Unless he came through the fen,” said Dick.“Oh, he wouldn’t do that! He’d come along by the river wall, my boy; it’s longer, but better walking.”The squire walked back toward the house, turning off so as to approach it by the back, where his men were digging for a great rain-water tank to be made.The men had not progressed far, for their way was through stones and cement, which showed how, at one time, there must have been either a boundary-wall or a building there; and as they stood by the opening the latter was proved to be the case, for Dick stooped down and picked up a piece of ancient roofing lead.“Yes, Dick, this must have been a fine old place at one time,” said the squire. “Let’s get back. Be a bit of a frost to-night, I think.”“I hope not, father.”“And I hope it will, my boy! I like to get the cold now, not when the young trees are budding and blossoming.”They went in, to find the ample supper spread upon its snowy cloth and the empty jug standing ready for the ale to be drawn to flank the pinky ham, yellow butter, and well-browned young fowl.“No, wife, no! Can’t see any sign of him yet,” said the squire. “Dick, get me my pipe. I’ll have just one while we’re waiting. Hope he has not taken the wrong road!”“Do you think he has?” said Mrs Winthorpe anxiously. “It would be very dangerous for him now it is growing dark.”“No, no; nonsense!” said the squire, filling his pipe from the stone tobacco-jar Dick had taken from the high chimney-piece of the cosy, low, oak-panelled room.It was a curious receptacle, having been originally a corbel from the bottom of a groin of the old building, and represented an evil-looking grotesque head. This the squire had had hollowed out and fitted with a leaden lid.“Think we ought to go and meet him, father?” said Dick, after watching the supper-table with the longing eyes of a young boy, and then taking them away to stare at his mother’s glistening needle and the soft grey clouds from his father’s pipe.“No, Dick, we don’t know which way to go. If we knew we would. Perhaps he will not come at all, and I’m too tired to go far to-night.”Dick bent down and stroked Tibb, the great black cat, which began to purr.“Put on a few more turves, Dick, and a bit or two of wood,” said his mother. “Mr Marston may be cold.”Dick laid a few pieces of the resinous pine-root from the fen upon the fire, and built up round it several black squares of well-dried peat where the rest glowed and fell away in a delicate creamy ash. Then the fir-wood began to blaze, and he returned to his seat.“’Tatoes is done!” said a voice at the door, and the red-armed maid stood waiting for orders to bring them in.“Put them in a dish, Sarah, and keep them in the oven with the door open. When Mr Marston comes you can put them in the best wooden bowl, and cover them with a clean napkin before you bring them in,” said Mrs Winthorpe.“Oh, I say, mother, I am so hungry! Mayn’t I have one baked potato?”“Surely you can wait, my boy, till our visitor comes,” said Mrs Winthorpe quietly.Dick stared across at the maid as she was closing the door, and a look of intelligence passed between them, one which asked a question and answered it; and Dick knew that if he went into the great kitchen there would be a mealy potato ready for him by the big open fireplace, with butterad libitum, and pepper and salt.Dick sat stroking the cat for a few minutes and then rose, to go to the long low casement bay-window, draw aside the curtain, and look out over the black fen.“Can’t see him,” he said with a sigh; and then, as no notice was taken of his remark, he went slowly out and across the square stone-paved hall to the kitchen, where, just as he expected, a great potato was waiting for him by the peat-fire, and hot plate, butter, pepper, and salt were ready.“Oh, I say, Sarah, you are a good one!” cried Dick.“I thought you’d come, Mester Dick,” said the maid; and then, with a start, “Gracious! what’s that?”“Sea-bird,” said Dick shortly, and then he dropped the knife and ran back to the parlour, for another cry came from off the fen.“Hear that, father!” cried Dick.“Hear it! yes, my lad. Quick! get your cap. My staff, mother,” he added. “Poor fellow’s got in, p’r’aps.”The squire hurried out after Dick, who had taken the lead, and as they passed out of the great stone porch the lad uttered a hail, which was answered evidently from about a couple of hundred yards away.“He has been coming across the fen path,” said the squire. “Ahoy! don’t stir till we come.”“Shall we want the lantern, father?” cried Dick.“No, no, my lad; we can see. Seems darker first coming out of the light.”A fresh cry came from off the fen, and it was so unmistakably the word “Help!” that the squire and his son increased their pace.“Ahoy, there!” cried a big gruff voice.“Hickathrift?”“Ay, mester! Hear that! some un’s in trouble over yonder.”The wheelwright’s big figure loomed up out of the darkness and joined them as they hurried on.“Yes, I heard it. I think it must be Mr Marston missed his way.”“What! the young gent at the dreeaning! Hey, bud he’d no call to be out theer.”“Where are you?” shouted Dick, who was ahead now and hurrying along the track that struck off to the big reed-beds and then away over the fen to the sea-bank.“Here! help!” came faintly.“Tak’ care, Mester Dick!” cried Hickathrift as he and the squire followed. “Why, he is reight off the path!”“I’ll take care!” shouted Dick. “Come on! All right; it isn’t very soft here!”Long usage had made him so familiar with the place that he was able to leave the track in the darkness and pick his way to where, guided by the voice, he found their expected visitor, not, as he expected, up to his middle in the soft peat, but lying prone.“Why, Mr Marston, you’re all right!” cried Dick. “You wouldn’t have hurt if you had come across here.”“Help!” came faintly from the prostrate traveller, and Dick caught his arm, but only to elicit a groan.“Well, he is a coward!” thought Dick. “Here, father! Hicky!”“Rather soft, my boy!” said the squire.“Ay, not meant for men o’ our weight, mester,” said the wheelwright; and they had to flounder in the soft bog a little before they reached the spot where Dick stood holding the young man’s cold hand.“He has fainted with fright, father,” said Dick, who felt amused at anyone being so alarmed out there in the darkness.“Let me tackle him, mester,” said the wheelwright.“No; each take a hand, my lad,” said the squire, “and then let’s move together for the path as quickly as possible.”“Reight!” cried Hickathrift, laconically; and, stooping down, they each took a hand, and half ran half waded through the black boggy mud, till they reached the path from which the young man had strayed.“Poor chap! he were a bit scar’d to find himself in bog.”“Pity he ventured that way,” said the squire.“Here, Mr Marston, you’re all right now,” said Dick. “Can you get up and walk?”There was no answer, but the young man tried to struggle up, and would have sunk down again had not the squire caught him round the waist.“Poor lad! he’s bet out. Not used to our parts,” said Hickathrift. “Here, howd hard, sir. Help me get him o’ my back like a sack, and I’ll run him up to the house i’ no time.”It seemed the best plan; and as the young man uttered a low moan he was half lifted on to Hickathrift’s broad back, and carried toward the house.“Run on, Dick, and tell your mother to mix a good glass of hollands and water,” said the squire.Dick obeyed, and the steaming glass of hot spirits was ready as the wheelwright bore in his load, and the young man was placed in a chair before the glowing kitchen fire.“My arm!” he said faintly.“You wrenched his arm, Hicky,” said Dick, “when you dragged him out.”“Very sorry, Mester Dick.”“Ugh!” cried the lad, who had laid his hand tenderly on their visitor’s shoulder.“What is it?” cried Mrs Winthorpe.“Blood. He has been hurt,” said Dick.“Shot! Here,” said the young man in a whisper; and then his head sank down sidewise, and he fainted dead away.Mr Marston’s faintly-uttered words sent a thrill through all present, but no time was wasted. People who live in out-of-the-way places, far from medical help, learn to be self-reliant, and as soon as Squire Winthorpe realised what was wrong he gave orders for the injured man to be carried to the couch in the dining parlour, where his wet jacket was taken off by the simple process of ripping up the back seam.“Now, mother, the scissors,” said the squire, “and have some bandages ready. You, Dick, if it’s too much for you, go away. If it isn’t: stop. You may want to bind up a wound some day.”Dick felt a peculiar sensation of giddy sickness, but he tried to master it, and stood looking on as the shirt sleeve was cut open, and the young man’s white arm laid bare to the shoulder, displaying an ugly wound in the fleshy part.“Why, it’s gone right through, mother,” whispered the squire, shaking his head as he applied sponge and cold water to the bleeding wounds.“And doctor says there’s veins and artrys, mester,” said Hickathrift, huskily. “One’s bad and t’other’s worse. Which is it, mester?”“I hope and believe there is no artery touched,” said the squire; “but we must run no risk. Hickathrift, my man, the doctor must be fetched. Go and send one of the men.”“Nay, squire, I’ll go mysen,” replied the big wheelwright. “Did’st see his goon, Mester Dick?”“No, I saw no gun.”“Strange pity a man can’t carry a gun like a Chrishtun,” said the wheelwright, “and not go shutin hissen that way.”The wheelwright went off, and the squire busied himself binding up the wounds, padding and tightening, and proving beyond doubt that no artery had been touched, for the blood was soon nearly staunched, while, just as he was finishing, and Mrs Winthorpe was drawing the sleeve on one side so as to secure a bandage with some stitches, something rolled on to the floor, and Dick picked it up.“What’s that, Dick—money?”“No, father; leaden bullet.”“Ha! that’s it; nice thing to go through a man’s arm,” said the squire as he examined the roughly-cast ragged piece of lead. “We must look for his gun to-morrow. What did he expect to get with a bullet at a time like this? Eh? What were you trying to shoot, Marston?” said the squire, as he found that the young man’s eyes were open and staring at him.“I—trying to shoot!”“Yes; of course you didn’t mean to bring yourself down,” said the squire, smiling; “but what in the world, man, were you trying to shoot with bullets out here?”The young engineer did not reply, but looked round from one to the other, and gave Mrs Winthorpe a grateful smile.“Do you recollect where you left your gun?” said Dick eagerly, for the thought of the rust and mischief that would result from a night in the bog troubled him.“Left my gun!” he said.“Never mind now, Mr Marston,” said the squire kindly. “Your things are wet, and we’ll get you to bed. It’s a nasty wound, but it will soon get right again. I’m not a doctor, but I know the bone is not broken.”“I did not understand you at first,” said the young engineer then. “You think I have been carrying a gun, and shot myself?”“Yes, but never mind now,” said Mrs Winthorpe, kindly. “I don’t think you ought to talk.”“No,” was the reply; “I will not say much; but I think Mr Winthorpe ought to know. Some one shot me as I was coming across the fen.”“What!” cried Dick.“Shot you!” said the squire.“Yes. It was quite dark, and I was carefully picking my way, when there was a puff of smoke from a bed of reeds, a loud report, and I seemed to feel a tremendous blow; and I remember no more till I came to, feeling sick and faint, and managed to crawl along till I saw the lights of the farm here, and cried for help.”“Great heavens!” cried the squire.“Didn’t you see any one?” cried Mrs Winthorpe.“No, nothing but the smoke from the reeds. I feel rather faint now—if you will let me rest.”With the help of Dick and his father the young engineer was assisted to his bed, where he seemed to drop at once into a heavy sleep; and, satisfied that there was nothing to fear for some time, the squire returned to the parlour looking very serious, while Dick watched him intently to see what he would say.“This is very dreadful, my dear,” whispered Mrs Winthorpe at last. “Have we some strange robber in the fen?”“Don’t know,” said the squire shortly. “Perhaps some one has a spite against him.”“How dreadful!” said Mrs Winthorpe.“One of his men perhaps.”“Or a robber,” cried Dick excitedly. “Why, father, we might get Dave and John Warren and Hicky and some more, and hunt him down.”“Robbers rob,” said the squire laconically.“Of course, my dear,” said Mrs Winthorpe; “and it would be dreadful to think of. Why, we could never go to our beds in peace.”“But Mr Marston’s watch and money are all right, my dear. Depend upon it he has offended one of the rough drain diggers, and it is an act of revenge.”“But the man ought to be punished.”“Of course, my dear, and we’ll have the constables over from town, and he shall be found. It won’t be very hard to do.”“Why not, father?”“Because many of the men have no guns.”“But they might borrow, father?”“The easier to find out then,” said the squire. “Well, one must eat whether a man’s shot or no. History does not say that everybody went without his supper because King Charles’s head was cut off. Mother, draw the ale. Dick, tell Sarah to bring in those hot potatoes. I’m hungry, and I’ve got to sit up all night.”There proved to be no real need, for the squire’s patient slept soundly, and there was nothing to disturb the silence at the Toft. But morning found the squire still watching, with Mrs Winthorpe busy with her needle in the dining parlour, and Dick lying down on the hearth-rug, and sleeping soundly by the glowing fire. For about four o’clock, after strenuously refusing to go to bed, he had thought he would lie down and rest for a bit, with the result that he was in an instant fast asleep, and breathing heavily.By breakfast-time Farmer Tallington had heard the news, and was over with Tom, each ready to listen to the squire’s and Dick’s account; and before nine o’clock Dave and John Warren, who had come over to Hickathrift’s, to find him from home, came on to the Toft to talk with Dick and Tom, and stare and gape.“Why, theer heven’t been such a thing happen since the big fight wi’ the smugglers and the king’s men,” said Dave.To which John Warren assented, and said it was “amaäzin’.”“And who do you think it weer?” said Dave, as he stood scratching his ear; and upon being told the squire’s opinion, he shook his head, and said there was no knowing.“It’s a bad thing, Mester Dick, bringing straängers into a plaäce. Yow nivver know what characters they’ve got. Why, I do believe—it’s a turruble thing to say—that some of they lads at work at big dree-ern hevven’t got no characters at all.”“Here be Hickathrift a-coming wi’ doctor,” said John Warren.And sure enough there was the doctor on his old cob coming along the fen road, with Hickathrift striding by his side, the man of powder and draught having been from home with a patient miles away when Hickathrift reached the town, and not returning till five o’clock.“He’ll do right enough, squire,” said the doctor. “Young man like he is soon mends a hole in his flesh. You did quite right; but I suppose the bandaging was young Dick’s doing, for of all the clumsy bungling I ever saw it was about the worst.”Dick gave his eye a peculiar twist in the direction of his father, who was giving him a droll look, and then they both laughed.“Very delicately done, doctor,” said the squire. “There, Dick, as he has put it on your shoulders you may as well bear it.”“Ah, let him!” said the doctor. “Now, what are you going to do?” he said aloud; “catch the scoundrel who shot Mr Marston, and get him transported for life?”“That’s what ought to be done to him,” said John Warren solemnly, as he looked straight away over the fen.“Ay,” said Dave. “How do we know but what it may be our turn or Hickathrift’s next? It’s a straänge, bad thing.”“I must talk it over with Mr Marston,” said the squire, “when he gets better, and then we shall see.”
The wintry weather passed away with its storms and continuous rains and floods, which hindered the progress of the great lode or drain, and then came the spring sunshine, with the lads waking up to the fact that here and there the arums were thrusting up their glossy-green spathes, that the celandines were out like yellow stars, and that the rustling reeds left uncut had been snapped off and beaten down, and had rotted in the water, and that from among them the young shoots of the fresh crop were beginning to peep.
Bold brisk winds swept over the fen and raised foamy waves in the meres, and the nights were clear and cold, though there had been little frost that year, never enough to well coat the lakes and pools with ice, so that the pattens could be cleaned from their rust and sharpened at Hickathrift’s grindstone ready for the lads at the old Priory and Grimsey to skate in and out for miles. But, in spite of the cold, there was a feeling of spring in the air. The great grey-backed crows were getting scarce, and the short-eared owls, which, a couple of months before, could be flushed from the tufts in the fen, to fly off looking like chubby hawks, were gone, and the flights of ducks and peewits had broken up. The golden plovers were gone; but the green peewits were busy nesting, or rather laying eggs without nests—pear-shaped eggs, small at one end, large at the other, thickly blotched and splashed with dark green, and over which the birds watched, ready to fall as if with broken wing before the intruder, and try to lure him away.
Many a tramp over the sodden ground did the lads have with Dave, who generally waited for their coming, leaping-pole in hand, and then took them to the peewits’ haunts to gather a basketful of their eggs.
“I don’t know how you do it, Dave,” said Dick. “We go and hunt for hours, and only get a few pie-wipes’ eggs; you always get a basketful.”
“It’s a man’s natur,” said Dave.
“Well, show us how you know,” said Dick, shouldering his leaping-pole, and pretending to hit his companion’s head.
“Nay, lad, theer’s no showing a thing like that,” said Dave mysteriously. “It comes to a man.”
“Gammon!” cried Dick. “It’s a dodge you’ve learned.”
Dave chuckled and tramped on beside the lads, having enough to do to avoid sinking in.
“She’s reyther juicy this spring, eh? They heven’t dree-ernt her yet,” said Dave with a malicious grin. “See there, now, young Tom Tallington,” he cried, stepping past the lad, and, picking up a couple of eggs in spite of the wailing of their owners, as they came napping close by, the cock bird in his glossy-green spring feathers, and a long pendent tuft hanging down from the back of his head.
“How stupid!” cried Tom. “I didn’t see them.”
“Nay, you wouldn’t,” said Dave, stepping across Dick, who was on his left; “and yow, young squire Dick, didn’t see they two.”
“Yes, I did, Dave, I did,” cried Dick. “I was just going to pick them up.”
“Pick’ em up then,” cried Dave quietly; “where are they then?” Dick looked sharply round him; but there was not an egg to be seen, and he realised that Dave had cheated him, and drawn him into a declaration that was not true.
He was very silent under the laughter of his companions, and felt it all the more.
They went on, the lads sometimes finding an egg or two, but nearly all falling to Dave, who, as if by unerring instinct, went straight to the spots where the nests lay, and secured the spoil.
Now and then a heron flew up, one with a small eel twining about its bill; and more than once a hare went bounding off from its form among the dry last year’s grass.
“We want Hickathrift’s dog here,” cried Dick.
“What for, lad? what for?” said Dave, laughing.
“To catch the hares.”
“Nay, yow want no dog,” said Dave. “Easy enough to catch hares.”
“Easy! How?” cried Tom.
“Go up to ’em and catch ’em,” said Dave coolly.
“Ha, ha, ha!” laughed Dick, and his companion joined in. “I should like to see you catch a hare, Dave.”
“Shouldst ta, lad? Very well, wait a bit.”
They tramped on, with Dave picking up an egg here, a couple there, in a way that was most exasperating to the boys, whose luck was very bad.
“I never saw such eyes,” said Tom. “I can’t see the eggs like he can.”
Dave chuckled as if he had a rattlesnake in his throat, and they went on for a while till Dick stopped suddenly, and pointed to the side of one of the fen ponds.
“That isn’t a heron,” he said.
“No. One o’ them long-legged ones—a crane,” said Dave. “Getting straänge and scarce now. Used to be lots of ’em breed here when my grandfather was a boy. Nay, nay, don’t scar’ him,” he cried, checking Dick, who was about to wave his hands. “Niver disturb the birds wi’out you want ’em to eat or sell. Now, then: yonder’s a hare.”
“Where?” cried Tom. “I can’t see it.”
“Over yonder among that dry grass.”
“There isn’t,” said Dick. “I can’t see any hare.”
“Like me to go and catch him, young Tom?”
“Here, I’ll soon see if there’s a hare,” cried Dick; but Dave caught him by the shoulder with a grip of iron, and thrust the pole he carried into the soft bog.
“I didn’t say I was going to run a hare down,” he said. “Theer’s a hare yonder in her form. Shall I go and catch her?”
“Yes,” said Dick, grinning. “Shall I say, ‘Sh!’”
“Nay, if thou’rt going to play tricks, lad, I shall howd my hand. I thowt yow wanted to see me ketch a hare.”
“Go on, then,” said Dick, laughing; “we won’t move.”
Dave chuckled, swung his basket behind him as if hung by a strip of cow-hide over his shoulder, and walked quietly on, in and out among the tufts of heather and moss, for some five-and-twenty yards.
“He’s laughing at us,” said Dick.
“No, he isn’t. I’ve heard Hickathrift say he can catch hares,” replied Tom. “Look!”
For just then they saw Dave go straight up to a tuft of dry grass, stoop down and pick up a hare by its ears, and place it on his left arm.
The boys ran up excitedly.
“Why, Dave, I didn’t think you could do it!” cried Dick.
“Dessay not,” replied the decoy-man, uttering his unpleasant laugh. “Theer, she’s a beauty, isn’t she?”
The hare struggled for a moment or two, and then crouched down in the man’s arm, with its heart throbbing and great eyes staring round at its captors.
“Kill it, Dave, kill it,” cried Tom.
“Kill it! What for? Pretty creatur’,” said Dave, stroking the hare’s brown speckled fur, and laying its long black-tipped sensitive ears smoothly down over its back.
“To take home.”
“Nay, who kills hares at the end of March, lad? Hares is mad in March.”
“Is that why it let you catch it, Dave?”
“Mebbe, lad, mebbe, Mester Dick. Theer, hev you done stroking her?”
“No. Why?”
“Going to let her run?”
“Wait a bit,” cried Dick.
“Tek her by the ears, lad, and putt thy hand beneath her. That’s the ways.”
Dick took the hare in his arms, and the trembling beast submitted without a struggle.
“How did you know it was there?” said Tom.
“How did I know she was theer! Why, she had her ears cocked-up listening, plain enough to see. Theer, let her go now. She’s got a wife somewheers about.”
“She’sgot a wife! Why don’t you sayHe?” cried Dick. “Now, Tom, I’m going to let him go; but he won’t run, he’s a sick one. You’ll see. Anyone could catch a hare like this.”
He carefully placed the hare upon the ground, holding tightly by its ears.
“There,” he cried; “I told you so! Look how stupid and—Oh!”
The hare made one great leap, and then hardly seemed to touch the ground again with its muscular hind-legs; but went off at a tremendous rate, bounding over heath and tuft, till it disappeared in the distance.
“There’s a sleepy sick one for you, Mester Dick!” cried Dave. “Now, then, goo and ketch her, lad.”
“Well, I never!” cried Dick. “I say, Dave, how do you manage it? Could you catch another?”
“Ay, lad, many as I like.”
“And rabbits too?”
“Nay, I don’t say that. I hev ketched rabbuds that ways, but not often. Rabbud always makes for his hole.”
As he spoke he walked back to where he had left his pole standing in the bog earth, and they trudged on again to where a lane of water impeded their further progress.
“Too wide for you, lads?” said Dave.
“No,” replied Dick, “if it’s good bottom.”
“Good bottom a little higher up here,” said Dave, bearing off to the left. “Now, then, over you go!”
Dick, pole in hand, took a run without the slightest hesitation, for Dave’s word was law. He said there was good bottom to the lane of water, and he was sure to know, for he had the knowledge of his father and grandfather joined to his own. If it had been bad bottom Dick’s feat would have been impossible, for his pole would have gone down perhaps to its full length in the soft bog; as it was, the end of the pole rested upon gravel in about three feet of water, and the lad went over easily and describing a curve through the air.
“Look out!” shouted Tom, following suit, and landing easily upon the other side; while Dave took off his basket of plovers’ eggs by slipping the hide band over his head, then, hanging it to the end of his pole, he held it over the water to the boys, who reached across and took it together on their poles, landing it safely without breaking an egg.
The next minute, with the ease of one long practised in such leaps, Dave flew over and resumed his load.
Several more long lanes of water were cleared in this way, Dave leading the boys a good round, and taking them at last to his house, pretty well laden with eggs, where he set before them a loaf and butter, and lit a fire.
“Theer, you can boil your eggs,” he said, “and mak’ a meal. Mebbe you’re hungry now.”
There was no maybe in the matter, judging from the number of slices of bread and butter and hard-boiled plovers’ eggs the lads consumed.
Over the meal the question of the draining was discussed sympathetically.
“No fish,” said Dick.
“No decoy,” said Tom.
“No plovers’ eggs,” said Dave.
“No rabbiting,” said Dick.
“No eeling,” said Tom.
“No nothing,” said Dave. “Hey bud it’ll be a sad job when it’s done. But it arn’t done yet, lads, eh?”
“No, it isn’t done yet,” said Dick. “I say, where’s John Warren? I haven’t seen him for months.”
“I hev,” said Dave. “He’s a breaking his heart, lads, about big drain. Comes over to see me and smoke his pipe. It’ll ’bout kill him if his rabbud-warren is took awaya. Bud dree-ern ar’n’t done yet, lads, eh?”
Squire Winthorpe was of a different opinion that night when Dick reached home after seeing Tom well on his way.
“They’re going on famously now,” he said to Mrs Winthorpe, who was repairing the damage in one of Dick’s garments.
“And was the meeting satisfied?”
“Yes, quite,” said the squire. “We had a big meeting with the gentlemen from London who are interested in the business, and they praised young Mr Marston, the engineer, wonderfully fine young fellow too.”
Dick pricked up his ears.
“I thought Mr Marston was coming to see us a deal, father!” he said.
“He’s been away during the bad weather when the men couldn’t work—up in town making plans and things. He’s coming over to-night.”
“And do the people about seem as dissatisfied as ever about the work?” said Mrs Winthorpe.
“I don’t hear much about it,” said the squire. “They’ll soon settle down to it when they find how things are improved. Well, Dick, plenty of sport to-day?”
“Dave got plenty of pie-wipes’ eggs, father. I didn’t find many.”
“Got enough to give Mr Marston a few?”
“Oh, yes, plenty for that! What time’s he coming?”
“About eight, I should think. He’s coming along the river bank after his men have done.”
“And going back, father?”
“Oh no! he’ll sleep here to-night.”
The squire went out to have his customary look round the farmstead before settling down for the night, and Dick followed him. The thrushes were piping; sounds of ducks feeding out in the fen came off the water, and here and there a great shadowy-looking bird could be seen flapping its way over the desolate waste, but everywhere there was the feeling of returning spring in the air, and the light was lingering well in the west, making the planet in the east look pale and wan.
Everything seemed to be all right. There was a loud muttering among the fowls at roost. Solomon laid back his ears and twitched the skin of his back as if he meant to kick when Dick went near the lean-to shed supported on posts, thatched with reeds and built up against an old stone wall in which there were the remains of a groined arch.
Everything about the Toft was at peace, and down toward the wheelwright’s the labourers’ cottages were so still that it was evident that some of the people had gone to bed.
The squire went on down the gravel slope, past the clump of firs, and by the old ivied wall which marked the boundary of the ancient priory, when, after crossing a field or two, they came to the raised bank which kept the sluggish river within bounds.
“Looks cold and muddy, father,” said Dick.
“Yes, not tempting for a bathe, Dick; but some day I hope to see a river nearly as big as that draining our great fen.”
“But don’t you think it will be a pity, father?”
“Yes, for idle boys who want to pass their lives fishing, and for men like Dave and John Warren. Depend upon it, Dick, it’s the duty of every man to try and improve what he sees about.”
“But natural things look so beautiful, father!”
“In moderation, boy. Don’t see any sign of Mr Marston yet, do you?”
“No, father,” replied Dick after taking a long look over the desolate level where the river wound between its raised banks toward the sea.
“Can’t very well miss his way,” said the squire, half to himself.
“Unless he came through the fen,” said Dick.
“Oh, he wouldn’t do that! He’d come along by the river wall, my boy; it’s longer, but better walking.”
The squire walked back toward the house, turning off so as to approach it by the back, where his men were digging for a great rain-water tank to be made.
The men had not progressed far, for their way was through stones and cement, which showed how, at one time, there must have been either a boundary-wall or a building there; and as they stood by the opening the latter was proved to be the case, for Dick stooped down and picked up a piece of ancient roofing lead.
“Yes, Dick, this must have been a fine old place at one time,” said the squire. “Let’s get back. Be a bit of a frost to-night, I think.”
“I hope not, father.”
“And I hope it will, my boy! I like to get the cold now, not when the young trees are budding and blossoming.”
They went in, to find the ample supper spread upon its snowy cloth and the empty jug standing ready for the ale to be drawn to flank the pinky ham, yellow butter, and well-browned young fowl.
“No, wife, no! Can’t see any sign of him yet,” said the squire. “Dick, get me my pipe. I’ll have just one while we’re waiting. Hope he has not taken the wrong road!”
“Do you think he has?” said Mrs Winthorpe anxiously. “It would be very dangerous for him now it is growing dark.”
“No, no; nonsense!” said the squire, filling his pipe from the stone tobacco-jar Dick had taken from the high chimney-piece of the cosy, low, oak-panelled room.
It was a curious receptacle, having been originally a corbel from the bottom of a groin of the old building, and represented an evil-looking grotesque head. This the squire had had hollowed out and fitted with a leaden lid.
“Think we ought to go and meet him, father?” said Dick, after watching the supper-table with the longing eyes of a young boy, and then taking them away to stare at his mother’s glistening needle and the soft grey clouds from his father’s pipe.
“No, Dick, we don’t know which way to go. If we knew we would. Perhaps he will not come at all, and I’m too tired to go far to-night.”
Dick bent down and stroked Tibb, the great black cat, which began to purr.
“Put on a few more turves, Dick, and a bit or two of wood,” said his mother. “Mr Marston may be cold.”
Dick laid a few pieces of the resinous pine-root from the fen upon the fire, and built up round it several black squares of well-dried peat where the rest glowed and fell away in a delicate creamy ash. Then the fir-wood began to blaze, and he returned to his seat.
“’Tatoes is done!” said a voice at the door, and the red-armed maid stood waiting for orders to bring them in.
“Put them in a dish, Sarah, and keep them in the oven with the door open. When Mr Marston comes you can put them in the best wooden bowl, and cover them with a clean napkin before you bring them in,” said Mrs Winthorpe.
“Oh, I say, mother, I am so hungry! Mayn’t I have one baked potato?”
“Surely you can wait, my boy, till our visitor comes,” said Mrs Winthorpe quietly.
Dick stared across at the maid as she was closing the door, and a look of intelligence passed between them, one which asked a question and answered it; and Dick knew that if he went into the great kitchen there would be a mealy potato ready for him by the big open fireplace, with butterad libitum, and pepper and salt.
Dick sat stroking the cat for a few minutes and then rose, to go to the long low casement bay-window, draw aside the curtain, and look out over the black fen.
“Can’t see him,” he said with a sigh; and then, as no notice was taken of his remark, he went slowly out and across the square stone-paved hall to the kitchen, where, just as he expected, a great potato was waiting for him by the peat-fire, and hot plate, butter, pepper, and salt were ready.
“Oh, I say, Sarah, you are a good one!” cried Dick.
“I thought you’d come, Mester Dick,” said the maid; and then, with a start, “Gracious! what’s that?”
“Sea-bird,” said Dick shortly, and then he dropped the knife and ran back to the parlour, for another cry came from off the fen.
“Hear that, father!” cried Dick.
“Hear it! yes, my lad. Quick! get your cap. My staff, mother,” he added. “Poor fellow’s got in, p’r’aps.”
The squire hurried out after Dick, who had taken the lead, and as they passed out of the great stone porch the lad uttered a hail, which was answered evidently from about a couple of hundred yards away.
“He has been coming across the fen path,” said the squire. “Ahoy! don’t stir till we come.”
“Shall we want the lantern, father?” cried Dick.
“No, no, my lad; we can see. Seems darker first coming out of the light.”
A fresh cry came from off the fen, and it was so unmistakably the word “Help!” that the squire and his son increased their pace.
“Ahoy, there!” cried a big gruff voice.
“Hickathrift?”
“Ay, mester! Hear that! some un’s in trouble over yonder.”
The wheelwright’s big figure loomed up out of the darkness and joined them as they hurried on.
“Yes, I heard it. I think it must be Mr Marston missed his way.”
“What! the young gent at the dreeaning! Hey, bud he’d no call to be out theer.”
“Where are you?” shouted Dick, who was ahead now and hurrying along the track that struck off to the big reed-beds and then away over the fen to the sea-bank.
“Here! help!” came faintly.
“Tak’ care, Mester Dick!” cried Hickathrift as he and the squire followed. “Why, he is reight off the path!”
“I’ll take care!” shouted Dick. “Come on! All right; it isn’t very soft here!”
Long usage had made him so familiar with the place that he was able to leave the track in the darkness and pick his way to where, guided by the voice, he found their expected visitor, not, as he expected, up to his middle in the soft peat, but lying prone.
“Why, Mr Marston, you’re all right!” cried Dick. “You wouldn’t have hurt if you had come across here.”
“Help!” came faintly from the prostrate traveller, and Dick caught his arm, but only to elicit a groan.
“Well, he is a coward!” thought Dick. “Here, father! Hicky!”
“Rather soft, my boy!” said the squire.
“Ay, not meant for men o’ our weight, mester,” said the wheelwright; and they had to flounder in the soft bog a little before they reached the spot where Dick stood holding the young man’s cold hand.
“He has fainted with fright, father,” said Dick, who felt amused at anyone being so alarmed out there in the darkness.
“Let me tackle him, mester,” said the wheelwright.
“No; each take a hand, my lad,” said the squire, “and then let’s move together for the path as quickly as possible.”
“Reight!” cried Hickathrift, laconically; and, stooping down, they each took a hand, and half ran half waded through the black boggy mud, till they reached the path from which the young man had strayed.
“Poor chap! he were a bit scar’d to find himself in bog.”
“Pity he ventured that way,” said the squire.
“Here, Mr Marston, you’re all right now,” said Dick. “Can you get up and walk?”
There was no answer, but the young man tried to struggle up, and would have sunk down again had not the squire caught him round the waist.
“Poor lad! he’s bet out. Not used to our parts,” said Hickathrift. “Here, howd hard, sir. Help me get him o’ my back like a sack, and I’ll run him up to the house i’ no time.”
It seemed the best plan; and as the young man uttered a low moan he was half lifted on to Hickathrift’s broad back, and carried toward the house.
“Run on, Dick, and tell your mother to mix a good glass of hollands and water,” said the squire.
Dick obeyed, and the steaming glass of hot spirits was ready as the wheelwright bore in his load, and the young man was placed in a chair before the glowing kitchen fire.
“My arm!” he said faintly.
“You wrenched his arm, Hicky,” said Dick, “when you dragged him out.”
“Very sorry, Mester Dick.”
“Ugh!” cried the lad, who had laid his hand tenderly on their visitor’s shoulder.
“What is it?” cried Mrs Winthorpe.
“Blood. He has been hurt,” said Dick.
“Shot! Here,” said the young man in a whisper; and then his head sank down sidewise, and he fainted dead away.
Mr Marston’s faintly-uttered words sent a thrill through all present, but no time was wasted. People who live in out-of-the-way places, far from medical help, learn to be self-reliant, and as soon as Squire Winthorpe realised what was wrong he gave orders for the injured man to be carried to the couch in the dining parlour, where his wet jacket was taken off by the simple process of ripping up the back seam.
“Now, mother, the scissors,” said the squire, “and have some bandages ready. You, Dick, if it’s too much for you, go away. If it isn’t: stop. You may want to bind up a wound some day.”
Dick felt a peculiar sensation of giddy sickness, but he tried to master it, and stood looking on as the shirt sleeve was cut open, and the young man’s white arm laid bare to the shoulder, displaying an ugly wound in the fleshy part.
“Why, it’s gone right through, mother,” whispered the squire, shaking his head as he applied sponge and cold water to the bleeding wounds.
“And doctor says there’s veins and artrys, mester,” said Hickathrift, huskily. “One’s bad and t’other’s worse. Which is it, mester?”
“I hope and believe there is no artery touched,” said the squire; “but we must run no risk. Hickathrift, my man, the doctor must be fetched. Go and send one of the men.”
“Nay, squire, I’ll go mysen,” replied the big wheelwright. “Did’st see his goon, Mester Dick?”
“No, I saw no gun.”
“Strange pity a man can’t carry a gun like a Chrishtun,” said the wheelwright, “and not go shutin hissen that way.”
The wheelwright went off, and the squire busied himself binding up the wounds, padding and tightening, and proving beyond doubt that no artery had been touched, for the blood was soon nearly staunched, while, just as he was finishing, and Mrs Winthorpe was drawing the sleeve on one side so as to secure a bandage with some stitches, something rolled on to the floor, and Dick picked it up.
“What’s that, Dick—money?”
“No, father; leaden bullet.”
“Ha! that’s it; nice thing to go through a man’s arm,” said the squire as he examined the roughly-cast ragged piece of lead. “We must look for his gun to-morrow. What did he expect to get with a bullet at a time like this? Eh? What were you trying to shoot, Marston?” said the squire, as he found that the young man’s eyes were open and staring at him.
“I—trying to shoot!”
“Yes; of course you didn’t mean to bring yourself down,” said the squire, smiling; “but what in the world, man, were you trying to shoot with bullets out here?”
The young engineer did not reply, but looked round from one to the other, and gave Mrs Winthorpe a grateful smile.
“Do you recollect where you left your gun?” said Dick eagerly, for the thought of the rust and mischief that would result from a night in the bog troubled him.
“Left my gun!” he said.
“Never mind now, Mr Marston,” said the squire kindly. “Your things are wet, and we’ll get you to bed. It’s a nasty wound, but it will soon get right again. I’m not a doctor, but I know the bone is not broken.”
“I did not understand you at first,” said the young engineer then. “You think I have been carrying a gun, and shot myself?”
“Yes, but never mind now,” said Mrs Winthorpe, kindly. “I don’t think you ought to talk.”
“No,” was the reply; “I will not say much; but I think Mr Winthorpe ought to know. Some one shot me as I was coming across the fen.”
“What!” cried Dick.
“Shot you!” said the squire.
“Yes. It was quite dark, and I was carefully picking my way, when there was a puff of smoke from a bed of reeds, a loud report, and I seemed to feel a tremendous blow; and I remember no more till I came to, feeling sick and faint, and managed to crawl along till I saw the lights of the farm here, and cried for help.”
“Great heavens!” cried the squire.
“Didn’t you see any one?” cried Mrs Winthorpe.
“No, nothing but the smoke from the reeds. I feel rather faint now—if you will let me rest.”
With the help of Dick and his father the young engineer was assisted to his bed, where he seemed to drop at once into a heavy sleep; and, satisfied that there was nothing to fear for some time, the squire returned to the parlour looking very serious, while Dick watched him intently to see what he would say.
“This is very dreadful, my dear,” whispered Mrs Winthorpe at last. “Have we some strange robber in the fen?”
“Don’t know,” said the squire shortly. “Perhaps some one has a spite against him.”
“How dreadful!” said Mrs Winthorpe.
“One of his men perhaps.”
“Or a robber,” cried Dick excitedly. “Why, father, we might get Dave and John Warren and Hicky and some more, and hunt him down.”
“Robbers rob,” said the squire laconically.
“Of course, my dear,” said Mrs Winthorpe; “and it would be dreadful to think of. Why, we could never go to our beds in peace.”
“But Mr Marston’s watch and money are all right, my dear. Depend upon it he has offended one of the rough drain diggers, and it is an act of revenge.”
“But the man ought to be punished.”
“Of course, my dear, and we’ll have the constables over from town, and he shall be found. It won’t be very hard to do.”
“Why not, father?”
“Because many of the men have no guns.”
“But they might borrow, father?”
“The easier to find out then,” said the squire. “Well, one must eat whether a man’s shot or no. History does not say that everybody went without his supper because King Charles’s head was cut off. Mother, draw the ale. Dick, tell Sarah to bring in those hot potatoes. I’m hungry, and I’ve got to sit up all night.”
There proved to be no real need, for the squire’s patient slept soundly, and there was nothing to disturb the silence at the Toft. But morning found the squire still watching, with Mrs Winthorpe busy with her needle in the dining parlour, and Dick lying down on the hearth-rug, and sleeping soundly by the glowing fire. For about four o’clock, after strenuously refusing to go to bed, he had thought he would lie down and rest for a bit, with the result that he was in an instant fast asleep, and breathing heavily.
By breakfast-time Farmer Tallington had heard the news, and was over with Tom, each ready to listen to the squire’s and Dick’s account; and before nine o’clock Dave and John Warren, who had come over to Hickathrift’s, to find him from home, came on to the Toft to talk with Dick and Tom, and stare and gape.
“Why, theer heven’t been such a thing happen since the big fight wi’ the smugglers and the king’s men,” said Dave.
To which John Warren assented, and said it was “amaäzin’.”
“And who do you think it weer?” said Dave, as he stood scratching his ear; and upon being told the squire’s opinion, he shook his head, and said there was no knowing.
“It’s a bad thing, Mester Dick, bringing straängers into a plaäce. Yow nivver know what characters they’ve got. Why, I do believe—it’s a turruble thing to say—that some of they lads at work at big dree-ern hevven’t got no characters at all.”
“Here be Hickathrift a-coming wi’ doctor,” said John Warren.
And sure enough there was the doctor on his old cob coming along the fen road, with Hickathrift striding by his side, the man of powder and draught having been from home with a patient miles away when Hickathrift reached the town, and not returning till five o’clock.
“He’ll do right enough, squire,” said the doctor. “Young man like he is soon mends a hole in his flesh. You did quite right; but I suppose the bandaging was young Dick’s doing, for of all the clumsy bungling I ever saw it was about the worst.”
Dick gave his eye a peculiar twist in the direction of his father, who was giving him a droll look, and then they both laughed.
“Very delicately done, doctor,” said the squire. “There, Dick, as he has put it on your shoulders you may as well bear it.”
“Ah, let him!” said the doctor. “Now, what are you going to do?” he said aloud; “catch the scoundrel who shot Mr Marston, and get him transported for life?”
“That’s what ought to be done to him,” said John Warren solemnly, as he looked straight away over the fen.
“Ay,” said Dave. “How do we know but what it may be our turn or Hickathrift’s next? It’s a straänge, bad thing.”
“I must talk it over with Mr Marston,” said the squire, “when he gets better, and then we shall see.”
Chapter Twelve.The Patient’s Friends.Mr Marston declared that he had not the most remote idea of having given any of his men offence, and then looked very serious about the question of bringing over the constables from the town to investigate the matter.“It may have been an accident, Mr Winthorpe,” he said; “and if so, I should be sorry to get any poor fellow into trouble.”“Yes, but it may not have been an accident,” said the doctor.This was in the evening, the doctor having ridden over again to see how his patient was getting on.“Heaven forbid, sir,” said Marston warmly, “that I should suspect any man of such a cowardly cruel deed! Impossible, sir! I cannot recall having done any man wrong since I have been here. My lads like me.”“How do you know that?” said the squire dryly. “Men somehow are notveryfond of the master who is over them, and makes them fairly earn their wages.”“Well, sir, I don’t know how to prove it,” said Marston, who was lying on a dimity-covered couch, “but—”“Hallo!” cried the squire, leaping up and going to the window, as a loud and excited buzzing arose, mingled with the trampling of feet, which sounded plainly in the clear cold spring evening.“Anything wrong?” said the doctor.“Why, here’s a crowd of a hundred fellows armed with sticks!” cried the squire. “I believe they’ve got the rascal who fired the shot.”“No!” said the doctor.“Father! Mr Marston!” cried Dick, rushing up stairs and into the visitor’s bed-room; “here are all the drain-men—hundreds of them—Mr Marston’s men.”“Not hundreds, young fellow,” said Marston smiling, “only one, if they are all here. What do they want? Have they caught anyone?”“No, sir. They want to see you. I told them you were too bad; but they say they will see you.”“I’ll go and speak to them and see what they want,” said the squire. “Is it anything about paying their wages?”“Oh dear, no!” said Marston. “They have been paid as usual. Shall I go down to them, doctor?”“If you do I’ll throw up your case,” cried the doctor fiercely. “Bless my soul, no! Do you think I want you in a state of high fever. Stop where you are, sir. Stop where you are.”“I’ll go,” said the squire, “before they pull the house down.”For the men were getting clamorous, and shouting loudly for Mr Marston.The squire descended, and Dick with him, to find the front garden of the old farm-house full of great swarthy black-bearded fellows, everyone armed with a cudgel or a pick-axe handle, some having only the parts of broken shovels.“Well, my lads, what is it?” said the squire, facing them.A tremendous yell broke out, every man seeming to speak at once, and nothing could be understood.“Hullo, Hickathrift! You’re there, are you?” said the squire. “What do they want?”“Well, you see, squire,” began the wheelwright; but his voice was drowned by another furious yell.“Don’t all speak at once!” cried Dick, who had planted himself upon a rough block of stone that had been dug out of the ruins and placed in the front of the house.There was something so droll to the great band of workmen in a mere stripling shouting to them in so commanding a way, that they all burst into a hearty laugh.“Here, let Hicky speak!” cried Dick.“Yes!—Ay!—Ah!—Let big Hickathrift speak!” was shouted out.“Keep quiet, then,” said the wheelwright, “or how can I! You see, squire,” he continued, “the lads came along by my place, and they said some one had put it about that one of them had fired a shot at the young engyneer, and they’re all popped about it, and want to see Mr Marston and tell him it isn’t true.”“You can’t see Mr Marston, my lads,” said the squire.Here there was a fierce yell.“The doctor says it would do him harm,” continued the squire, “and you don’t want to do that.”“Nay, nay, we wean’t do that,” shouted one of the men.“But I may tell you that Mr Marston says that he does not believe there’s a man among you who would do him any harm.”“Hooray!” shouted one of the men, and this was followed by a roar. “We wouldn’t hurt the ganger, and we’re going to pay out him as did.”There was a tremendous yell at this, and the men nourished their weapons in a way that looked serious for the culprit if he should be discovered.“Ay, but yow’ve got to find out first who it was,” said Hickathrift.“Yes, and we’re going to find out too,” cried one rough-looking fellow standing forward. “How do we know as it warn’t you?”“Me!” cried Hickathrift, staring blankly.“Ay, yow,” roared the great rough-looking fellow, a man not far short of the wheelwright’s size. “We’ve heered all on you a going on and pecking about the dree-ern being made. We know yow all hates our being here, so how do we know it warn’t yow?”The man’s fierce address was received with an angry outburst by the men, who had come out on purpose to inflict punishment upon some one, and in their excitement, one object failing, they were ready to snatch at another.It was perhaps an insensate trick; but there was so much of the frank manly British boy in Dick Winthorpe that he forgot everything in the fact that big Hickathrift, the man he had known from a child—the great bluff fellow who had carried him in his arms and hundreds of times made him welcome in that wonderland, his workshop, where he was always ready to leave off lucrative work to fashion him eel-spear or leaping-pole, or to satisfy any other whim that was on the surface—that this old friend was being menaced by a great savage of a stranger nearly as big as himself, and backed by a roaring excited crowd who seemed ready for any outrage.Dick did not hesitate a moment, but with eyes flashing, teeth clenched, and fists doubled, he leaped down from the stone, rushed into the midst of the crowd, closing round the wheelwright, and darting between the great fellow and the man who had raised a pick-handle to strike, seized hold of the stout piece of ash and tried to drag it away.“You great coward!” he roared—“a hundred to one!”It was as if the whole gang had been turned to stone, their self-constituted leader being the most rigid of the crowd, and he stared at Dick Winthorpe as a giant might stare at the pigmy who tried to snatch his weapon away.But the silence and inert state lasted only a few seconds, before the black-bearded fellow’s angry face began to pucker up, his eyes half closed, and, bending down, he burst into a hearty roar of laughter.“See this, lads!” he cried. “See this! Don’t hurt me, mester! Say, lads, I never felt so scared in my life.”The leader’s laugh was contagious, and the crowd took it up in chorus; but the more they laughed, the more angry grew Dick. He could not see the ridiculous side of the matter; for, small as was his body in comparison with that of the man he had assailed, his spirit had swollen out as big as that of anyone present.“I don’t care,” he cried; “I’ll say it again—You’re a set of great cowards; and as for you,” he cried to the fellow whose weapon he had tried to wrest away, “you’re the biggest of the lot.”“Well done, young un—so he is!” cried the nearest man. “Hooray for young ganger!”The men were ready to fight or cheer, and as ready to change their mood as crowds always are. They answered the call with a stentorian roar; and if Dick Winthorpe had imitated Richard the Second just then, and called upon the crowd to accept him as their leader, they would have followed him to the attempt of any mad prank he could have designed.“Thank ye, Mester Dick!” said Hickathrift, placing his great hand upon the lad’s shoulder, as the squire forced his way to their side. “I always knowed we was mates; but we’re bigger mates now than ever we was before.”“Ay, and so ’mI,” said the big drain delver. “Shake hands, young un. You’re English, you are. So ’m I. He’s English, lads; that’s what he is!” he roared as he seized Dick’s hand and pumped it up and down. “So ’m I.”“Hooray!” shouted the crowd; and, seeing how the mood of all was changed, the squire refrained from speaking till the cheering was dying out, when, making signs to the men to hear him, he was about to utter a few words of a peacemaking character, but there was another burst of cheering, which was taken up again and again, the men waving their caps and flourishing their cudgels, and pressing nearer to the house.For the moment Dick was puzzled, but he realised what it all meant directly, for, looking in the same direction as the men, it was to see that the young engineer had disregarded the doctor’s orders, and was standing at the open window, with his face very pale and his arm in a sling.He waved his uninjured arm to command silence, and this being obtained, his voice rang out firm and clear.“My lads,” he cried, “I know why you’ve come, and I thank you; but these people here are my very good friends, and as for the squire’s son and the wheelwright there, they saved my life last night.”“Hooray!” roared the leader of the gang frantically; and as his companions cheered, he caught hold of Hickathrift’s hand, and shook it as earnestly as if they were sworn brothers.“As to my wound,” continued the engineer, “I believe it was an accident; so now I ask you to go back home quietly, and good-night!”“Well said, sir; good-night to you!” roared the leader as the window was closed. “Good-night to everybody! Come on, lads! Good-night, young un! We’re good mates, eh?”“Yes,” said Dick, shortly.“Then shake hands again. We don’t bear no malice, do us? See, lads. We’re mates. I wean’t laugh at you. You’re a good un, that’s what you are, and you’ll grow into a man.”The great fellow gave Dick’s hand another shake that was very vigorous, but by no means pleasant; and then, after three roaring cheers, the whole party went off, striking up a chorus that went rolling over the fen and kept on dying out and rising again as the great sturdy fellows tramped away.“I’m not an inhospitable man, doctor,” said the squire, as the former shook hands to go, after giving orders for his patient to be kept quiet, and assuring the squire that the young fellow would be none the worse for the adventures of the night—“I’m not an inhospitable man, but one has to think twice before asking a hundred such to have a mug of ale. I should have liked to do it, and it was on my lips, but the barrel would have said no, I’m sure. Good-night!”“Now, sir,” said the squire as soon as he was alone with his son, “what have you got to say for yourself?”“Say, father!” replied Dick, staring.“Yes, sir. Don’t you think you did about as mad and absurd a thing as the man who put his head into the lion’s jaws?”“I—I didn’t know, father,” replied Dick, who, after the exultation caused by the cheering, felt quite crestfallen.“No, of course you did not, but it was a very reckless thing to do, and—er—don’t—well, I hope you will never have cause to do it again.”Dick went away, feeling as if his comb had been cut, and of course he did not hear his father’s words that night when he went to bed.“Really, mother, I don’t know whether I felt proud of the boy or vexed when he faced that great human ox.”“I do,” said Mrs Winthorpe smiling, but with the tears in her eyes—“proud.”“Yes, I think I did,” said the squire. “Good-night!”“Don’t you think some one ought to sit up with Mr Marston?”“No: he is sleeping like a top; and after our bad time with him yesternight, I mean to have some sleep.”Five minutes after, the squire’s nose proclaimed that it was the hour of rest, and Dick heard it as he stole from his bed-room, to see how the wounded man was; and this act he repeated at about hourly intervals all through the night, for he could not sleep soundly, his mind was so busy with trouble about the injury to their visitor’s arm, and the wonder which kept working in his brain. Who was it fired that shot?The doctor was right; the wounded man’s arm soon began to mend; but naturally there was a period when he was unable to attend to his duties, and that period was a pleasant one for Dick Winthorpe, inasmuch as it was the commencement of a long friendship.John Marston was for going back to his lodgings near the outfall orgowtas it was termed; but the squire and Mrs Winthorpe would not hear of it, and to the boys’ great delight, he stayed.He was an invalid, but the right kind of invalid to make a pleasant companion, for he loved the open air, and was never happier than when he was out with the boys and Dave or John Warren, somewhere in the fen.“It’s all gammon to call him ill, and for the doctor to keep coming,” said Tom Tallington.“Oh, he is ill!” said Dick; “but you see he’s only ill in one arm.”Dick had only to propose a run out, and John Marston immediately seemed to forget that he was a man, became a boy for the time being, and entered into the spirit of their pursuits.One day it was pike-fishing, with Dave to punt them about here and there among the pools. At another time ordinary tackle would be rigged up, and Dave would take them to some dark hole where fish were known to swarm, and for hours the decoy-man would sit and watch patiently while the three companions pulled up the various denizens of the mere.One bright April morning Dave was seen coming out of the mist, looking gigantic as he stood up in his boat; and his visit was hailed with delight, for the trio had been wondering how they should pass that day.“Morning, Dave!” said Marston as the fen-man landed slowly from his boat, and handed Dick a basket of fresh ducks’ eggs.“Morn’, mester! Tak them up to the missus, Mester Dick. They be all noo-laid uns. Straänge thick haar this morn,” he continued, wiping the condensed mist from his eyelashes. “Re’glar sea-haar.” (sea-fog—mist from the German Ocean.)“Take those eggs up to mother, Tom,” said Dick imperatively.“Sha’n’t. I know! You want to be off without me.”“Hallo, young fellow!” said the squire cheerily. “What have you got there—eggs?”“Yes, mester, fresh uns for the missus.”“I’m going in, and I’ll take them,” said the squire, thus disposing of the difficulty about a messenger. “There’s a canister of powder for you, Dave, when you want some more.”“Thanky kindly, mester. I’ll come and get it when I’m up at house.”The squire nodded and went on, but turned back to ask when Mr Marston was going over to the works, and upon hearing that it was in the afternoon, he said he would accompany him.“And how’s your lame arm, mester?” said Dave as soon as the squire had gone.“Getting better fast, Dave, my man.”“And with two holes in it, mester?”“Yes, with two holes in it.”“But are they both getting better?”“Why, you’ve been told a dozen times over that they are!” cried Dick.“Nay, Mester Dick, I know’d as one hole was getting reight, but Mester Marston here nivver said as both weer. I’m straänge and glad. Heered aught yet ’bout him as did it?”“No, my man, and don’t want to.”“Hark at that, Mester Dick! Why, if any one had shot at me, and hot me as they did him, I’d have found him out somehow afore now. Mebbe I shall find this out mysen.”“Why, you’re not trying, Dave.”“Not trying, lad! Nay, but I am, and I shall find him yet some day. Look here, boys. If you want to find out anything like that, you mustn’t go splashing about among the reeds, or tug-slugging through the bog-holes, or he hears you coming, and goos and hides. You must sit down among the bushes, and wait and wait quiet, like a man does when he wants to get the ducks, and by-and-by him as did it comes along. Dessay I shall catch him one of these days, and if I do, and I’ve got my pole with me, I’ll throost him under water and half-drownd him.”“Never mind about all that, Dave. What are you going to do to-day?” cried Dick.“Me, lad! Oh, nowt! I’ve brote a few eggs for the missus, and I shall tak’ that can o’ powder back wi’ me, and then set down and go on makkin soom new coy-nets.”“That’s his gammon, Mr Marston,” cried Dick.“Nay, nay, mester, it’s solemn truth.”“’Tisn’t; it’s gammon. Isn’t it, Tom?”“Every bit of it. He’s come on purpose to ask us to go out with him.”“Nay, nay, nay, lads,” said Dave in an ill-used tone. “I did think o’ asking if Mester Marston here would like to try for some eels up in the long shallows by Popley Watter, for they be theer as thick as herrin’, bubblin’ up and slithering in the mud.”“Let’s go, then, Mr Marston. Eel-spearing,” cried Dick.“But I could not use an eel-spear,” said the young engineer, smiling.“But Tom and I could do the spearing, and you could put the eels in the basket.”“When you caught them,” said Marston, laughing.“Oh, we should be sure to catch some! Shouldn’t we, Dave?”“Ay, theer’s plenty of ’em, mester.”“Let’s go, then,” cried Dick excitedly; “and if we get a whole lot, we’ll take them over to your men, Mr Marston. Come on!”“Nay, but yow weant,” said Dave, with a dry chuckle.“Why not?”“Mester Hickathrift has got the stong-gad to mend. One of the tines is off, and it wants a noo ash pole.”“Here, stop a moment,” said Marston, laughingly interrupting a groan of disgust uttered by the boys; “what, pray, is a stong-gad?”“Ha—ha—ha!” laughed Tom. “Don’t know what a stong-gad is!”“Hold your tongue, stupid!” cried Dick indignantly, taking the part of his father’s guest. “You don’t know everything. What’s a dumpy leveller? There, you don’t know, and Mr Marston does.”“But what is a stong-gad?” said Marston.“Eel-spear,” said Dick. “How long would it take Hicky to mend it?”“’Bout two hours—mebbe only one. I could mak’ a new pole while he forged the tine.”“Come along, then. Hicky will leave anything to do it for me.”“Nay, he’s gone to market,” said Dave.“Yes; I saw him pass our house,” said Tom.“What a shame!” cried Dick. “Here, I say, what’s that basket for in the punt?” he added eagerly.“Why, he’s got a net, too, and some poles,” cried Tom. “Yah! he meant to do something.”“Why, of course he did,” cried Dick, running down to the boat. “Now, then, Dave, what’s it to be?”“Oh, nowt, Mester Dick! I thought to put a net in, and a pole or two, and ask if you’d care to go and get a few fish, but Mester Marston’s too fine a gentleman to care for ought o’ the sort.”“Oh, no, I’m not!” said Marston. “I should enjoy it, boys, above all things.”“There, Dave, now then! What is it—a drag-net?”“Nay, Mester Dick, on’y a bit of a new.”“But where are you going?”“I thowt o’ the strip ’tween Long Patch and Bootherboomp’s Roostens.”“Here, stop a moment,” cried the engineer. “I’ve heard that name before. Who was Mr Bootherboomp?”“Hi—hi—hi! hecker—hecker—hecker. Heigh!”That does not express the sounds uttered by Dave, for they were more like an accident in a wooden clock, when the wheels run down and finish with a jerk which breaks the cogs. But that was Dave’s way of laughing, and it ended with a horrible distortion of his features.“I say: don’t, Dave. What an old nut-cracker you are! You laugh like the old watchman’s rattle in the garret. Be quiet, Tom!”“But Mr Bootherboomp!” roared Tom, bursting into a second fit of laughter.“It’s butterbump, Mr Marston. It’s what they call those tall brown birds something like herons. What do you call them in London?” said Dick.“Oh, bitterns!”“Yes, that’s it. Come on!”“Nay,” said Dave; “I don’t think you gentlemen would care for such poor sport. On’y a few fish’.”“You never mind about that! Jump in, Mr Marston. Who’s going to pole?”“Nay, I’ll pole,” said Dave. “If yow mean to go we may as well get theer i’ good time; but I don’t think it’s worth the trouble.”“Get out! It’s rare good fun, Mr Marston; sometimes we get lots of fish.”“I’m all expectation,” said Marston as Dave smiled the tight smile, which made his mouth look like a healed-up cut; and, taking the pole, began to send the punt over the clear dark water. “Shall we find any of those curious fish my men caught in the river the other day?”“What curious fish were they?” asked Dick.“Well, to me they seemed as if so many young eels had grown ashamed of being so long and thin, and they had been feeding themselves up and squeezing themselves short, so as to look as like tench as possible.”“Oh, I know what you mean!” cried Tom. “Eel-pouts! they’re just about half-way between eels and tench.”“Nay, yow wean’t catch them here,” said Dave oracularly. “They lives in muddy watter in rivers. Our watter here’s clean and clear.”It was a bright pleasant journey over the mere, in and out of the lanes of water to pool after pool, till Dave suddenly halted at a canal-like spot, where the water ran in between two great beds of tender-growing reeds, which waved and undulated in the soft breeze. Here he thrust down his pole and steadied the punt, while he shook out his light net with its even meshes, securing one end to a pole and then letting the leaden sinkers carry it to the bottom before thrusting the punt over to the other side of the natural canal, to which he made fast the second end of the net in a similar way, so that the water was sealed with a light fence of network, whose lower edge was close to the black ooze of the bottom, held there by the leaden sinkers of the foot line, the top line being kept to the surface by a series of tightly-bound little bundles of dry rushes.“Theer,” said Dave as soon as he had done, his proceedings having been carefully watched; “that un do!”“Will the fish go into that net?” said Marston.“Nay, not unless we mak ’em, mester,” said Dave, smiling. “Will they, Mester Dick?”“Not they,” cried Dick. “Wait a minute, Mr Marston; you’ll see.”Dave took his pole and, leaving the net behind, coasted along by the shore of the little island formed by the canal or strait, which ran in, zigzagging about like a vein in a piece of marble; and after about a quarter of an hour’s hard work he forced the punt round to the other side of the island, and abreast of a similar opening to that which they had left, in fact the other end of the natural canal or lane, here about twelve or fourteen feet broad.“Oh, I see!” said the engineer. “You mean to go in here, and drive the fish to the net at the other end.”“That’s the way, Mr Marston,” said Tom Tallington. “Wait a bit, and you’ll see such a haul.”“Perhaps of an empty net, Mr Marston,” said Dick with a grin. “Perhaps there are none here.”“You set astarn, mester,” said Dave. “I’ll put her along, and you tak’ one side, Mester Dick; and you t’other, young Tom Tallington.”The boys had already taken up two long light poles that lay in the boat, and standing up as Dave sent the boat along slowly and making a great deal of disturbance with his pole, they beat and splashed and stabbed the water on both sides of the boat, so as to scare any fish which might happen to be there, and send them flying along the lane toward the net.This was a comparatively easy task, for the coming of the boat was sufficient as a rule to startle the timid fish, which in turn scared those in front, the beating with the poles at either side sending forward any which might be disposed to slip back.There was more labour than excitement in the task; but the course along the lane of water was not entirely uneventful, for a moor-hen was startled from her nest in a half-liquid patch of bog, above which rose quite a tuft of coarse herbage; and farther on, just as Dick thrust in his pole to give it a good wriggle and splash, there was a tremendous swirl, and a huge pike literally shot out of the water, describing an arc, and after rising fully four feet from the surface dropped head-first among the tangled water-weeds and reedy growth, through which it could be seen to wriggle and force its way farther and farther, the waving reeds and bubbling water between showing the direction in which it had gone.“Hooray, Dave! a forty-pounder!” cried Dick. “Push the punt in and we can easily catch him.”“Not you,” said Dave stolidly; “he’ll get through that faster than we could.”“But, look, look! I can see where he is.”“Nay, he’ll go all through theer and get deeper and deeper, and it’s more wattery farther on. He’ll go right through theer, and come out the other side.”“But he was such a big one, Dave—wasn’t he, Mr Marston?—quite forty pounds!”“Nay, not half, lad,” said Dave stolidly, as he thrust the boat on. “Beat away. We’ll come and set a bait for him some day. That’s the way to catch him.”Dick uttered an angry ejaculation as he looked back towards where he could still see the water plants waving; and in his vexation he raised his pole, and went on with the splashing so vigorously, and, as legal folks say, with so muchmalice prepense, that he sent the water flying over Dave as he stood up in the bows of the punt.Tom chuckled and followed suit, sending another shower over the puntsman. Then Dick began again, the amber water flying and sparkling in the sunshine; but Dave took no notice till the splashing became too pronounced, when he stopped short, gave his head a shake, and turned slowly round.“Want to turn back and give up?” he said slowly.Dick knew the man too well to continue, and in penitent tones exclaimed:“No, no, go on, Dave, we won’t splash any more.”“Because if there’s any more of it—”“I won’t splash any more, Dave,” cried Dick, laughing, “It was Tom.”“Oh, what a shame!”“So you did splash. Didn’t he, Mr Marston?”“I don’t want to hear no more about it, Mester Dick. I know,” growled Dave. “I only says, Is it to be fishing or games?”“Fishing, Dave. It’s all right; go on, Tom; splash away gently.”“Because if—”“No, no, go on, Dave. There, we won’t send any more over you.”Dave uttered a grunt, and forced the boat along once more, while Marston sat in the stern an amused spectator of the boys’ antics.Everything now went on orderly enough, till they had proceeded a long way on, in and out, for a quarter of a mile, when at a word from Dave the splashing and stabbing of the water grew more vigorous, the punt being now pretty close to the net, the irregular row of bundles of rushes showing plainly.And now Dave executed a fresh evolution, changing the position of the punt, for instead of its approaching end on, he turned it abreast, so that it pretty well touched the reedy sides of the canal, and with the poles now being plied on one side, the boat was made to approach more slowly.“Now, mester, you’d better stand up,” said Dave.“Yes, Mr Marston, stand up,” cried Dick. “Look!”Marston rose to his feet, and as he looked toward the entrance where the net was spread there was a wave-like swell upon the surface, which might have been caused by the movement of the boat or by fish.There was no doubt about its being caused by fish, for all at once, close by the row of rush bundles, there was a splash. Then, as they approached, another and another.“They’re feeling the net,” cried Dick excitedly.“Ay, keep it oop, lads, or they’ll come back,” cried Dave, making the water swirl with his pole, which he worked about vigorously.Even as he spoke there came another splash, and this time the sun flashed upon the glittering sides of the fish which darted out and fell over the other side of the top line of the net.“There goes one,” shouted Tom.“Ay, and theer goes another,” said Dave with a chuckle as he forced the boat along slowly.And now, as Marston watched, he saw that the irregular line of rush bundles which stretched across the mouth of the canal was changing its shape, and he needed no telling that the regular semicircular form it assumed was caused by the pressure of a shoal of fish seeking to escape into the open mere, but of course checked by the fragile wall of net.“There must be a lot, Tom,” cried Dick excitedly. “Look, Mr Marston! There goes another. Oh, Dave, we shall lose them all!”This was consequent upon another good-sized fish flying out of the water, falling heavily upon one of the rush floats, and then darting away.“Nay, we sha’n’t lose ’em all,” said Dave coolly. “Some on ’em’s safe to go. Now, then, splash away. Reach over your end, young Tom Tallington, or some on ’em ’ll go round that way.”Tom changed his place a little, to stand now on what had been the front of their advance, and thrusting in his pole he splashed and beat the narrow space between him and the dense boggy side, where the sphagnum came down into the water.Dick followed suit at the other end, and Dave swept his pole sidewise as if he were mowing weeds below the surface.“Oh!” cried Dick, as he overbalanced himself, and nearly went in from the stern. He would have gone headlong had not Mr Marston made a bound, and caught him as he vainly strove to recover his balance.The effort was well timed, and saved him, but of course the consequences of jumping about in a boat are well-known. The punt gave such a lurch that Dave almost went out, while, as for Tom, he was literally jerked up as from a spring-board, and, dropping his pole, he seemed to be taking a voluntary dive, describing a semicircle, and going down head-first, not into the narrow slit between him and the boggy shore, but right into the semi-fluid mass of sphagnum, water, and ooze, where he disappeared to his knees.Tom’s dive sent the boat, as he impelled it with his feet, a couple of yards away; and for a moment or two those who were in it seemed half paralysed, till a roar of laughter from Dick, who did not realise the danger, roused Dave to action.For the dense mass, while fluid enough to allow Tom to dive in, was not sufficiently loose to let him rise; and there he stuck, head downwards, and with his legs kicking furiously.“Now if we was to leave him,” said Dave sententiously, “he wouldn’t never be no more trouble to his father; but I suppose we must pull him out.”“Pull him out, man? Quick, use your pole!”“Ay, I’m going to, mester,” said Dave coolly. “Theer we are,” he continued, as he sent the end of the punt back to where poor Tom’s legs went on performing a series of kicks which were sometimes like those made by a swimming frog, and at others as if he were trying to walk upside down along an imaginary flight of aerial stairs.The time seemed long, but probably it was not half a minute from the time Tom dived into the bog till the young engineer seized him by the legs and dragged him into the boat, to sit upon the bottom, gasping, spitting, and rubbing the ooze from his eyes. But it was a good two minutes before he was sufficiently recovered to look round angrily, and in a highly-pitched quavering voice exclaimed:“Look here: who was it did that?”“Nobody,” roared Dick. “Oh, I say, Tom, what a game! Are your feet wet?”Tom turned upon him savagely, but everyone in the boat was laughing, and his countenance relaxed, and he rose up and leaned over the side of the boat to wash his face, which a splash or two relieved from the pieces of bog and dead vegetation which adhered.“I don’t mind,” he said. “Only you wouldn’t have found it a game if you’d been there.”“Let’s get back quickly,” said Mr Marston, “or the boy will catch cold.”“Oh, it won’t hurt me!” cried Tom. “Let’s catch the fish first. They never get cold.”“Yes: let’s haul the net out first,” said Dick. “Tom won’t mind a ducking.”“Ay, we’re going to hev out the net,” said Dave. “Splash away, my lad. That’ll keep away the cold.”Poor Tom’s feet had not been wet, but as he stood up with the water trickling from him, a couple of streams soon made their way down the legs of his trousers into his boots. This was, however, soon forgotten in the excitement of the hauling.For, after a fresh amount of splashing, though Dave declared the fish had all come back, the punt was run pretty close up to one side, the lines and pole taken on board, and the punt thrust toward the other side.Before they reached it the bobbing of the rush floats and the semicircular shape of the top line showed plainly enough that there were a good many fish there; and when Dave had secured the lines at the other end, removed the poles, and by ingenious manipulation drawn on the bottom line so as to raise the cord, it was not long before the net began to assume the shape of a huge bag, and one that was pretty heavy.Every now and then a swirl in the water and a splash showed where some large fish was trying to escape, while sometimes one did leap out and get away. Then the surface would be necked with silvery arrows as swarms of small-fry appeared flashing into sight and disappearing, these little bits of excitement growing less frequent as the small fish found their way over the top of the net, or discovered that the meshes were wide enough to allow them to pass through.“How is it, Dave, that all the little fish like to keep to the top of the water, and the big ones out of sight down at the bottom?” said Dick.Dave chuckled, or rather made a noise something like a bray.“S’pose you was a fish, young mester, wouldn’t you, if you was a little one, keep nigh the top if you found going down to the bottom among the big uns meant being swallowed up?”“Oh, of course!” cried Dick. “I forgot that they eat one another. Look, Mr Marston, that was a pike.”He pointed excitedly to a large fish which rose to the surface, just showing its dark olive-green back as it curved over and disappeared again, making the water eddy.“They do not seem to have all gone, Dave,” said Mr Marston.“Nay, theer’s a few on ’em left, mester,” replied Dave. “Now, my lads, all together. That’s the way.”The lines were drawn, and the weight of the great bag of meshes proved that after all a good fair haul had been made, the net being drawn close to the boat and the bag seeming to shrink in size till there was a mass of struggling, splashing fish alongside, apparently enough to far more than fill a bushel basket.“What are you going to do?” asked Mr Marston, who was as excited now as the boys, while Dave worked away stolidly, as if it was all one of the most commonplace matters for him.“Haul the net into the boat,” cried Tom.“Nay, my net would break,” said Dave. “There’s a lot of owd rushes and roots, and rotten weeds in it.”“I don’t believe there are, Dave,” said Dick. “It’s all solid fish.”“Nay, lad, but net’ll break. Let’s hev out some of the big uns first.”“Look! there’s a fine one,” cried Dick, making a dash at a large fish which rose out of the writhing mass, but it glided through his hands.“Howd hard!” said Dave. “You lads go th’other side o’ the punt or we shall capsize. Let me and the London gentleman get them in.”“Oh!” groaned Tom.“No, I’ve only one hand to work with,” said Marston, who saw the reasonableness of the old fen-man’s remark, for the side of the boat had gone down very low once or twice, and the effect of dragging a portion of the laden net on board might have been sufficient to admit the water. “I’ll give way, and act as ballast.”“No, no!” cried Dick. “You help, Mr Marston.”But the young engineer remained steadfast to his proposal, and seated himself on the other side.“Better let me lade out a few o’ the big uns, Mester Dick,” said Dave, “while you lads hold on.”The boys hardly approved of the proposal, but they gave way; and each taking a good grip of the wet net, they separated toward the head and stern, while Dave stayed in the middle, and taking off his jacket, rolled up his sleeves close to the shoulder, and then plunging his arms in among the swarm of fish he brought out a good-sized pike of six or seven pounds.This was thrown into the basket, to flap furiously and nearly leap out, renewing its efforts as another of its kind was thrown in to keep it company.“Is there a very big one, Dave?” cried Dick.“Nay; nought very big,” was the reply. “Draw her up, my lads. That’s reight.”As Dave spoke he kept on plunging his hands into the splashing and struggling mass of fish, and sometimes brought out one, sometimes missed. But he kept on vigorously till, feeling satisfied that the net would bear the rest, he drew the loaded line well over into the boat, and, giving the boys a hint to tighten the line, he plunged in his arms once more, got well hold, and the next minute, by a dexterous lift, raised the bag, so that its contents came pouring over the edge of the punt in a silvery, glittering cataract of fish, leaping, gliding, and flapping all over the bottom about his feet.Then a few fish, which were hanging by their gills, their heads being thrust through the meshes, were shaken out, the net bundled up together and thrown into the fore part of the boat, and the little party came together to gloat over their capture.“Theer, lads,” said Dave, coolly resuming his jacket, “you can pitch ’em all into the baskets, all the sizable ones, and put all the little ones back into the watter. I’ll throost the punt back, so as young Tom Tallington can get some dry clothes.”These latter were the last things in Tom’s mind, for just then, as Dave resumed the pole, and began sending the boat quickly through the water, the boy was trying to grasp an eel, which had found the meshes one size too small for his well-fed body, and was now in regular serpentine fashion trying to discover a retreat into which he could plunge, and so escape the inevitable frying-pan or pot.Irrespective of the fact that a large eel can bite sharply, it is, as everyone knows, one of the most awkward things to hold, for the moment a good grip of its slimy body is made, the result seems to be that it helps the elongated fish to go forward or slip back. And this Tom found as he grasped the eel again and again, only for it to make a few muscular contortions and escape.Then Dick tried, with no better effect, the pursuit lasting till the active fish made its way in among the meshes of the net, when its capture became easy, and it was swept into the great basket, to set the pike flapping and leaping once more.Then the sorting commenced, all the small fish being thrown back to increase in size, while the rest of the slimy captives went into the basket.There was no larger pike than the one first taken out of the net by Dave, but plenty of small ones, all extremely dark in colour, as if affected by living in the amber-tinted water, and nearly all these were thrown back, in company with dozens of silvery roach and orange-finned, brightly gilded rudd, all thicker and broader than their relatives the roach.Many scores of fish were thrown overboard, some to turn up and float for a few minutes before they recovered their breath, as Tom called it, but for the most part they dived down at once, uninjured by what they had gone through, while their largeness fortunate friends were tossed into the basket—gilded side-striped perch, with now and then a fat-looking, small-eyed, small-scaled tench, brightly brazen at the sides, and looking as if cast in a soft kind of bronze. Then there were a couple of large-scaled brilliantly golden carp; but the majority of the fish were good-sized, broad, dingy-looking bream, whose slimy emanations made the bottom of the punt literally ask for a cleansing when the basket was nearly filled.By that time the party were well on their way to the Toft, and as they neared the shore, it was to find the squire waiting to speak to the engineer, while John Warren was close behind with his dog, ready to join Dave, in whose company he went off after the latter had been up to the house and had a good feast of bread and cheese and ale.That evening the squire and Mr Marston went over to the works to see how matters were progressing, to find all satisfactory, and the night passed quietly enough; but at breakfast the next morning, when some of the best of the tench appeared fried in butter, a messenger came over to see the engineer on his way to the town for the doctor, to announce that Hez Bargle, the big delver, who had been leader of the party who came over so fiercely about the attack upon Mr Marston, had been found that morning lying in the rough hovel where he slept alone, nearly dead.The man was sharply examined by the engineer, a fresh messenger in the shape of Hickathrift being found to carry on the demand for the doctor. But there was very little to learn. Bargle had not come up to his work, and the foreman of the next gang went to see why his fellow-ganger had not joined him, and found him lying on the floor of the peat-built hut quite insensible, with the marks of savage blows about the head, as if he had been suddenly attacked and beaten with a club, for there was no sign of any struggle.Mr Marston went over at once with the squire, Dick obtaining permission to accompany them; and upon their arrival it was to find all the work at a stand-still, the men being grouped about with their sleeves rolled-up, and smoking, and staring silently at the rough peat hovel where their fellow-worker lay.The engineer entered the shelter—it did not deserve the title of cottage—and the squire and Dick followed, to find the man nearly insensible, and quite unable to give any account of how the affair had happened.The men were questioned, but knew nothing beyond the fact that they had parted from him as usual to go to their own quarters, Bargle being the only one who lodged alone. There had been no quarrel as far as Mr Marston could make out, everyone he spoke to declaring that the work had gone on the previous day in the smoothest way possible; and at last there seemed to be nothing to do but wait until the great, rough fellow could give an account of the case for himself.The doctor came at last, and formed his opinion.“He is such a great, strong fellow that unless he was attacked by two or three together, I should say someone came upon him as he lay asleep and stunned him with a blow on the head.”“The result of some quarrel or offence given to one of the men under him, I’m afraid,” said the engineer with a look of intense vexation in his eyes. “These men are very brutal sometimes to their fellows, especially when they are placed in authority. Will he be long before he is better?”“No,” replied the doctor. “The blows would have killed an ordinary man, but he has a skull like an ox. He’ll be at work again in a fortnight if he’ll behave sensibly, and carry out my instructions.”A couple of days later Bargle was sitting up smoking, when the engineer entered the reed-thatched hut, in company with Dick.“Hallo, youngster!” growled the great fellow, with a smile slowly spreading over his rugged face, and growing into a grin, which accorded ill with his bandaged head; “shak’ hands!”Dick obeyed heartily enough, the great fellow retaining the lad’s hand in his, and slowly pumping it up and down.“We’re mates, that’s what we two are,” he growled. “You ar’n’t half a bad un, you ar’n’t. Ah, mester, how are you? Arm better?”“Mending fast, my lad; and how are you?”“Tidy, mester, tidy! Going to handle a spade again to-morrow.”“Nonsense, man! you’re too weak yet.”“Weak! Who says so? I don’t, and the doctor had better not.”“Never mind that. I want you to tell me how all this happened.”“He ar’n’t half a bad un, mester,” said the injured man, ignoring the remark, as he held on to the boy’s hand. “We’re mates, that’s what we are. See him stand up again me that day? It were fine.”“Yes; but you must tell me how this occurred. I want to take some steps about it.”“Hey! and you needn’t take no steps again it, mester. I shall lay hold on him some day, and when I do—Hah!”He stretched out a huge fist in a menacing way that promised ill to his assailant.“But do you know who it was?” said the engineer.“It warn’t him,” growled Bargle, smiling at Dick. “He wouldn’t come and hit a man when he’s asleep. Would you, mate?”“I wouldn’t be such a coward,” cried Dick.“Theer! Hear that, mester! I knowed he wouldn’t. He’d hev come up to me and hit me a doubler right in the chest fair and square, and said, ‘now, then, come on!’”“Then someone did strike you when you were asleep, Bargle, eh?”“Dunno, mester; I s’pose so. Looks like it, don’t it?”“Yes, my man, very much so. Then you were woke out of your sleep by a blow, eh?”“Weer I? I don’t know.”“Tell me who have you had a quarrel with lately?”“Quarrel?”“Well, row, then.”“Wi’ him,” said the big fellow, pointing at Dick.“Oh, but he would not have come to you in the night!”“Who said he would, mester?” growled Bargle menacingly. “Not he. He’d come up square and give a man a doubler in the chest and—”“Yes, yes,” said the engineer impatiently; “but I want to know who it was made this attack upon you—this cowardly attack. You say it was while you slept.”“Yes, I s’pose so; but don’t you trouble about that, mester. I’m big enough to fight my bit. I shall drop on to him one of these days, and when I do—why, he’ll find it okkard.”Mr Marston questioned and cross-questioned the man, but there was no more to be got from him. He s’posed some un come in at that theer door and give it him; but he was so much taken up with Dick’s visit that he could hardly think of self, and when they came away Mr Marston had learned comparatively nothing, the big fellow shouting after Dick:“I’ve got a tush for you, lad, when I get down to the dreern again—one I digged out, and you shall hev it.”Dick said, “Thank you,” for the promised “tush,” and walked away.“I don’t like it,” said Mr Marston. “Someone shooting at me; someone striking down this man. I’m afraid it’s due to ill-will towards me, Dick. But,” he added, laughing, “I will not suspect you, as Bargle lets you off.”
Mr Marston declared that he had not the most remote idea of having given any of his men offence, and then looked very serious about the question of bringing over the constables from the town to investigate the matter.
“It may have been an accident, Mr Winthorpe,” he said; “and if so, I should be sorry to get any poor fellow into trouble.”
“Yes, but it may not have been an accident,” said the doctor.
This was in the evening, the doctor having ridden over again to see how his patient was getting on.
“Heaven forbid, sir,” said Marston warmly, “that I should suspect any man of such a cowardly cruel deed! Impossible, sir! I cannot recall having done any man wrong since I have been here. My lads like me.”
“How do you know that?” said the squire dryly. “Men somehow are notveryfond of the master who is over them, and makes them fairly earn their wages.”
“Well, sir, I don’t know how to prove it,” said Marston, who was lying on a dimity-covered couch, “but—”
“Hallo!” cried the squire, leaping up and going to the window, as a loud and excited buzzing arose, mingled with the trampling of feet, which sounded plainly in the clear cold spring evening.
“Anything wrong?” said the doctor.
“Why, here’s a crowd of a hundred fellows armed with sticks!” cried the squire. “I believe they’ve got the rascal who fired the shot.”
“No!” said the doctor.
“Father! Mr Marston!” cried Dick, rushing up stairs and into the visitor’s bed-room; “here are all the drain-men—hundreds of them—Mr Marston’s men.”
“Not hundreds, young fellow,” said Marston smiling, “only one, if they are all here. What do they want? Have they caught anyone?”
“No, sir. They want to see you. I told them you were too bad; but they say they will see you.”
“I’ll go and speak to them and see what they want,” said the squire. “Is it anything about paying their wages?”
“Oh dear, no!” said Marston. “They have been paid as usual. Shall I go down to them, doctor?”
“If you do I’ll throw up your case,” cried the doctor fiercely. “Bless my soul, no! Do you think I want you in a state of high fever. Stop where you are, sir. Stop where you are.”
“I’ll go,” said the squire, “before they pull the house down.”
For the men were getting clamorous, and shouting loudly for Mr Marston.
The squire descended, and Dick with him, to find the front garden of the old farm-house full of great swarthy black-bearded fellows, everyone armed with a cudgel or a pick-axe handle, some having only the parts of broken shovels.
“Well, my lads, what is it?” said the squire, facing them.
A tremendous yell broke out, every man seeming to speak at once, and nothing could be understood.
“Hullo, Hickathrift! You’re there, are you?” said the squire. “What do they want?”
“Well, you see, squire,” began the wheelwright; but his voice was drowned by another furious yell.
“Don’t all speak at once!” cried Dick, who had planted himself upon a rough block of stone that had been dug out of the ruins and placed in the front of the house.
There was something so droll to the great band of workmen in a mere stripling shouting to them in so commanding a way, that they all burst into a hearty laugh.
“Here, let Hicky speak!” cried Dick.
“Yes!—Ay!—Ah!—Let big Hickathrift speak!” was shouted out.
“Keep quiet, then,” said the wheelwright, “or how can I! You see, squire,” he continued, “the lads came along by my place, and they said some one had put it about that one of them had fired a shot at the young engyneer, and they’re all popped about it, and want to see Mr Marston and tell him it isn’t true.”
“You can’t see Mr Marston, my lads,” said the squire.
Here there was a fierce yell.
“The doctor says it would do him harm,” continued the squire, “and you don’t want to do that.”
“Nay, nay, we wean’t do that,” shouted one of the men.
“But I may tell you that Mr Marston says that he does not believe there’s a man among you who would do him any harm.”
“Hooray!” shouted one of the men, and this was followed by a roar. “We wouldn’t hurt the ganger, and we’re going to pay out him as did.”
There was a tremendous yell at this, and the men nourished their weapons in a way that looked serious for the culprit if he should be discovered.
“Ay, but yow’ve got to find out first who it was,” said Hickathrift.
“Yes, and we’re going to find out too,” cried one rough-looking fellow standing forward. “How do we know as it warn’t you?”
“Me!” cried Hickathrift, staring blankly.
“Ay, yow,” roared the great rough-looking fellow, a man not far short of the wheelwright’s size. “We’ve heered all on you a going on and pecking about the dree-ern being made. We know yow all hates our being here, so how do we know it warn’t yow?”
The man’s fierce address was received with an angry outburst by the men, who had come out on purpose to inflict punishment upon some one, and in their excitement, one object failing, they were ready to snatch at another.
It was perhaps an insensate trick; but there was so much of the frank manly British boy in Dick Winthorpe that he forgot everything in the fact that big Hickathrift, the man he had known from a child—the great bluff fellow who had carried him in his arms and hundreds of times made him welcome in that wonderland, his workshop, where he was always ready to leave off lucrative work to fashion him eel-spear or leaping-pole, or to satisfy any other whim that was on the surface—that this old friend was being menaced by a great savage of a stranger nearly as big as himself, and backed by a roaring excited crowd who seemed ready for any outrage.
Dick did not hesitate a moment, but with eyes flashing, teeth clenched, and fists doubled, he leaped down from the stone, rushed into the midst of the crowd, closing round the wheelwright, and darting between the great fellow and the man who had raised a pick-handle to strike, seized hold of the stout piece of ash and tried to drag it away.
“You great coward!” he roared—“a hundred to one!”
It was as if the whole gang had been turned to stone, their self-constituted leader being the most rigid of the crowd, and he stared at Dick Winthorpe as a giant might stare at the pigmy who tried to snatch his weapon away.
But the silence and inert state lasted only a few seconds, before the black-bearded fellow’s angry face began to pucker up, his eyes half closed, and, bending down, he burst into a hearty roar of laughter.
“See this, lads!” he cried. “See this! Don’t hurt me, mester! Say, lads, I never felt so scared in my life.”
The leader’s laugh was contagious, and the crowd took it up in chorus; but the more they laughed, the more angry grew Dick. He could not see the ridiculous side of the matter; for, small as was his body in comparison with that of the man he had assailed, his spirit had swollen out as big as that of anyone present.
“I don’t care,” he cried; “I’ll say it again—You’re a set of great cowards; and as for you,” he cried to the fellow whose weapon he had tried to wrest away, “you’re the biggest of the lot.”
“Well done, young un—so he is!” cried the nearest man. “Hooray for young ganger!”
The men were ready to fight or cheer, and as ready to change their mood as crowds always are. They answered the call with a stentorian roar; and if Dick Winthorpe had imitated Richard the Second just then, and called upon the crowd to accept him as their leader, they would have followed him to the attempt of any mad prank he could have designed.
“Thank ye, Mester Dick!” said Hickathrift, placing his great hand upon the lad’s shoulder, as the squire forced his way to their side. “I always knowed we was mates; but we’re bigger mates now than ever we was before.”
“Ay, and so ’mI,” said the big drain delver. “Shake hands, young un. You’re English, you are. So ’m I. He’s English, lads; that’s what he is!” he roared as he seized Dick’s hand and pumped it up and down. “So ’m I.”
“Hooray!” shouted the crowd; and, seeing how the mood of all was changed, the squire refrained from speaking till the cheering was dying out, when, making signs to the men to hear him, he was about to utter a few words of a peacemaking character, but there was another burst of cheering, which was taken up again and again, the men waving their caps and flourishing their cudgels, and pressing nearer to the house.
For the moment Dick was puzzled, but he realised what it all meant directly, for, looking in the same direction as the men, it was to see that the young engineer had disregarded the doctor’s orders, and was standing at the open window, with his face very pale and his arm in a sling.
He waved his uninjured arm to command silence, and this being obtained, his voice rang out firm and clear.
“My lads,” he cried, “I know why you’ve come, and I thank you; but these people here are my very good friends, and as for the squire’s son and the wheelwright there, they saved my life last night.”
“Hooray!” roared the leader of the gang frantically; and as his companions cheered, he caught hold of Hickathrift’s hand, and shook it as earnestly as if they were sworn brothers.
“As to my wound,” continued the engineer, “I believe it was an accident; so now I ask you to go back home quietly, and good-night!”
“Well said, sir; good-night to you!” roared the leader as the window was closed. “Good-night to everybody! Come on, lads! Good-night, young un! We’re good mates, eh?”
“Yes,” said Dick, shortly.
“Then shake hands again. We don’t bear no malice, do us? See, lads. We’re mates. I wean’t laugh at you. You’re a good un, that’s what you are, and you’ll grow into a man.”
The great fellow gave Dick’s hand another shake that was very vigorous, but by no means pleasant; and then, after three roaring cheers, the whole party went off, striking up a chorus that went rolling over the fen and kept on dying out and rising again as the great sturdy fellows tramped away.
“I’m not an inhospitable man, doctor,” said the squire, as the former shook hands to go, after giving orders for his patient to be kept quiet, and assuring the squire that the young fellow would be none the worse for the adventures of the night—“I’m not an inhospitable man, but one has to think twice before asking a hundred such to have a mug of ale. I should have liked to do it, and it was on my lips, but the barrel would have said no, I’m sure. Good-night!”
“Now, sir,” said the squire as soon as he was alone with his son, “what have you got to say for yourself?”
“Say, father!” replied Dick, staring.
“Yes, sir. Don’t you think you did about as mad and absurd a thing as the man who put his head into the lion’s jaws?”
“I—I didn’t know, father,” replied Dick, who, after the exultation caused by the cheering, felt quite crestfallen.
“No, of course you did not, but it was a very reckless thing to do, and—er—don’t—well, I hope you will never have cause to do it again.”
Dick went away, feeling as if his comb had been cut, and of course he did not hear his father’s words that night when he went to bed.
“Really, mother, I don’t know whether I felt proud of the boy or vexed when he faced that great human ox.”
“I do,” said Mrs Winthorpe smiling, but with the tears in her eyes—“proud.”
“Yes, I think I did,” said the squire. “Good-night!”
“Don’t you think some one ought to sit up with Mr Marston?”
“No: he is sleeping like a top; and after our bad time with him yesternight, I mean to have some sleep.”
Five minutes after, the squire’s nose proclaimed that it was the hour of rest, and Dick heard it as he stole from his bed-room, to see how the wounded man was; and this act he repeated at about hourly intervals all through the night, for he could not sleep soundly, his mind was so busy with trouble about the injury to their visitor’s arm, and the wonder which kept working in his brain. Who was it fired that shot?
The doctor was right; the wounded man’s arm soon began to mend; but naturally there was a period when he was unable to attend to his duties, and that period was a pleasant one for Dick Winthorpe, inasmuch as it was the commencement of a long friendship.
John Marston was for going back to his lodgings near the outfall orgowtas it was termed; but the squire and Mrs Winthorpe would not hear of it, and to the boys’ great delight, he stayed.
He was an invalid, but the right kind of invalid to make a pleasant companion, for he loved the open air, and was never happier than when he was out with the boys and Dave or John Warren, somewhere in the fen.
“It’s all gammon to call him ill, and for the doctor to keep coming,” said Tom Tallington.
“Oh, he is ill!” said Dick; “but you see he’s only ill in one arm.”
Dick had only to propose a run out, and John Marston immediately seemed to forget that he was a man, became a boy for the time being, and entered into the spirit of their pursuits.
One day it was pike-fishing, with Dave to punt them about here and there among the pools. At another time ordinary tackle would be rigged up, and Dave would take them to some dark hole where fish were known to swarm, and for hours the decoy-man would sit and watch patiently while the three companions pulled up the various denizens of the mere.
One bright April morning Dave was seen coming out of the mist, looking gigantic as he stood up in his boat; and his visit was hailed with delight, for the trio had been wondering how they should pass that day.
“Morning, Dave!” said Marston as the fen-man landed slowly from his boat, and handed Dick a basket of fresh ducks’ eggs.
“Morn’, mester! Tak them up to the missus, Mester Dick. They be all noo-laid uns. Straänge thick haar this morn,” he continued, wiping the condensed mist from his eyelashes. “Re’glar sea-haar.” (sea-fog—mist from the German Ocean.)
“Take those eggs up to mother, Tom,” said Dick imperatively.
“Sha’n’t. I know! You want to be off without me.”
“Hallo, young fellow!” said the squire cheerily. “What have you got there—eggs?”
“Yes, mester, fresh uns for the missus.”
“I’m going in, and I’ll take them,” said the squire, thus disposing of the difficulty about a messenger. “There’s a canister of powder for you, Dave, when you want some more.”
“Thanky kindly, mester. I’ll come and get it when I’m up at house.”
The squire nodded and went on, but turned back to ask when Mr Marston was going over to the works, and upon hearing that it was in the afternoon, he said he would accompany him.
“And how’s your lame arm, mester?” said Dave as soon as the squire had gone.
“Getting better fast, Dave, my man.”
“And with two holes in it, mester?”
“Yes, with two holes in it.”
“But are they both getting better?”
“Why, you’ve been told a dozen times over that they are!” cried Dick.
“Nay, Mester Dick, I know’d as one hole was getting reight, but Mester Marston here nivver said as both weer. I’m straänge and glad. Heered aught yet ’bout him as did it?”
“No, my man, and don’t want to.”
“Hark at that, Mester Dick! Why, if any one had shot at me, and hot me as they did him, I’d have found him out somehow afore now. Mebbe I shall find this out mysen.”
“Why, you’re not trying, Dave.”
“Not trying, lad! Nay, but I am, and I shall find him yet some day. Look here, boys. If you want to find out anything like that, you mustn’t go splashing about among the reeds, or tug-slugging through the bog-holes, or he hears you coming, and goos and hides. You must sit down among the bushes, and wait and wait quiet, like a man does when he wants to get the ducks, and by-and-by him as did it comes along. Dessay I shall catch him one of these days, and if I do, and I’ve got my pole with me, I’ll throost him under water and half-drownd him.”
“Never mind about all that, Dave. What are you going to do to-day?” cried Dick.
“Me, lad! Oh, nowt! I’ve brote a few eggs for the missus, and I shall tak’ that can o’ powder back wi’ me, and then set down and go on makkin soom new coy-nets.”
“That’s his gammon, Mr Marston,” cried Dick.
“Nay, nay, mester, it’s solemn truth.”
“’Tisn’t; it’s gammon. Isn’t it, Tom?”
“Every bit of it. He’s come on purpose to ask us to go out with him.”
“Nay, nay, nay, lads,” said Dave in an ill-used tone. “I did think o’ asking if Mester Marston here would like to try for some eels up in the long shallows by Popley Watter, for they be theer as thick as herrin’, bubblin’ up and slithering in the mud.”
“Let’s go, then, Mr Marston. Eel-spearing,” cried Dick.
“But I could not use an eel-spear,” said the young engineer, smiling.
“But Tom and I could do the spearing, and you could put the eels in the basket.”
“When you caught them,” said Marston, laughing.
“Oh, we should be sure to catch some! Shouldn’t we, Dave?”
“Ay, theer’s plenty of ’em, mester.”
“Let’s go, then,” cried Dick excitedly; “and if we get a whole lot, we’ll take them over to your men, Mr Marston. Come on!”
“Nay, but yow weant,” said Dave, with a dry chuckle.
“Why not?”
“Mester Hickathrift has got the stong-gad to mend. One of the tines is off, and it wants a noo ash pole.”
“Here, stop a moment,” said Marston, laughingly interrupting a groan of disgust uttered by the boys; “what, pray, is a stong-gad?”
“Ha—ha—ha!” laughed Tom. “Don’t know what a stong-gad is!”
“Hold your tongue, stupid!” cried Dick indignantly, taking the part of his father’s guest. “You don’t know everything. What’s a dumpy leveller? There, you don’t know, and Mr Marston does.”
“But what is a stong-gad?” said Marston.
“Eel-spear,” said Dick. “How long would it take Hicky to mend it?”
“’Bout two hours—mebbe only one. I could mak’ a new pole while he forged the tine.”
“Come along, then. Hicky will leave anything to do it for me.”
“Nay, he’s gone to market,” said Dave.
“Yes; I saw him pass our house,” said Tom.
“What a shame!” cried Dick. “Here, I say, what’s that basket for in the punt?” he added eagerly.
“Why, he’s got a net, too, and some poles,” cried Tom. “Yah! he meant to do something.”
“Why, of course he did,” cried Dick, running down to the boat. “Now, then, Dave, what’s it to be?”
“Oh, nowt, Mester Dick! I thought to put a net in, and a pole or two, and ask if you’d care to go and get a few fish, but Mester Marston’s too fine a gentleman to care for ought o’ the sort.”
“Oh, no, I’m not!” said Marston. “I should enjoy it, boys, above all things.”
“There, Dave, now then! What is it—a drag-net?”
“Nay, Mester Dick, on’y a bit of a new.”
“But where are you going?”
“I thowt o’ the strip ’tween Long Patch and Bootherboomp’s Roostens.”
“Here, stop a moment,” cried the engineer. “I’ve heard that name before. Who was Mr Bootherboomp?”
“Hi—hi—hi! hecker—hecker—hecker. Heigh!”
That does not express the sounds uttered by Dave, for they were more like an accident in a wooden clock, when the wheels run down and finish with a jerk which breaks the cogs. But that was Dave’s way of laughing, and it ended with a horrible distortion of his features.
“I say: don’t, Dave. What an old nut-cracker you are! You laugh like the old watchman’s rattle in the garret. Be quiet, Tom!”
“But Mr Bootherboomp!” roared Tom, bursting into a second fit of laughter.
“It’s butterbump, Mr Marston. It’s what they call those tall brown birds something like herons. What do you call them in London?” said Dick.
“Oh, bitterns!”
“Yes, that’s it. Come on!”
“Nay,” said Dave; “I don’t think you gentlemen would care for such poor sport. On’y a few fish’.”
“You never mind about that! Jump in, Mr Marston. Who’s going to pole?”
“Nay, I’ll pole,” said Dave. “If yow mean to go we may as well get theer i’ good time; but I don’t think it’s worth the trouble.”
“Get out! It’s rare good fun, Mr Marston; sometimes we get lots of fish.”
“I’m all expectation,” said Marston as Dave smiled the tight smile, which made his mouth look like a healed-up cut; and, taking the pole, began to send the punt over the clear dark water. “Shall we find any of those curious fish my men caught in the river the other day?”
“What curious fish were they?” asked Dick.
“Well, to me they seemed as if so many young eels had grown ashamed of being so long and thin, and they had been feeding themselves up and squeezing themselves short, so as to look as like tench as possible.”
“Oh, I know what you mean!” cried Tom. “Eel-pouts! they’re just about half-way between eels and tench.”
“Nay, yow wean’t catch them here,” said Dave oracularly. “They lives in muddy watter in rivers. Our watter here’s clean and clear.”
It was a bright pleasant journey over the mere, in and out of the lanes of water to pool after pool, till Dave suddenly halted at a canal-like spot, where the water ran in between two great beds of tender-growing reeds, which waved and undulated in the soft breeze. Here he thrust down his pole and steadied the punt, while he shook out his light net with its even meshes, securing one end to a pole and then letting the leaden sinkers carry it to the bottom before thrusting the punt over to the other side of the natural canal, to which he made fast the second end of the net in a similar way, so that the water was sealed with a light fence of network, whose lower edge was close to the black ooze of the bottom, held there by the leaden sinkers of the foot line, the top line being kept to the surface by a series of tightly-bound little bundles of dry rushes.
“Theer,” said Dave as soon as he had done, his proceedings having been carefully watched; “that un do!”
“Will the fish go into that net?” said Marston.
“Nay, not unless we mak ’em, mester,” said Dave, smiling. “Will they, Mester Dick?”
“Not they,” cried Dick. “Wait a minute, Mr Marston; you’ll see.”
Dave took his pole and, leaving the net behind, coasted along by the shore of the little island formed by the canal or strait, which ran in, zigzagging about like a vein in a piece of marble; and after about a quarter of an hour’s hard work he forced the punt round to the other side of the island, and abreast of a similar opening to that which they had left, in fact the other end of the natural canal or lane, here about twelve or fourteen feet broad.
“Oh, I see!” said the engineer. “You mean to go in here, and drive the fish to the net at the other end.”
“That’s the way, Mr Marston,” said Tom Tallington. “Wait a bit, and you’ll see such a haul.”
“Perhaps of an empty net, Mr Marston,” said Dick with a grin. “Perhaps there are none here.”
“You set astarn, mester,” said Dave. “I’ll put her along, and you tak’ one side, Mester Dick; and you t’other, young Tom Tallington.”
The boys had already taken up two long light poles that lay in the boat, and standing up as Dave sent the boat along slowly and making a great deal of disturbance with his pole, they beat and splashed and stabbed the water on both sides of the boat, so as to scare any fish which might happen to be there, and send them flying along the lane toward the net.
This was a comparatively easy task, for the coming of the boat was sufficient as a rule to startle the timid fish, which in turn scared those in front, the beating with the poles at either side sending forward any which might be disposed to slip back.
There was more labour than excitement in the task; but the course along the lane of water was not entirely uneventful, for a moor-hen was startled from her nest in a half-liquid patch of bog, above which rose quite a tuft of coarse herbage; and farther on, just as Dick thrust in his pole to give it a good wriggle and splash, there was a tremendous swirl, and a huge pike literally shot out of the water, describing an arc, and after rising fully four feet from the surface dropped head-first among the tangled water-weeds and reedy growth, through which it could be seen to wriggle and force its way farther and farther, the waving reeds and bubbling water between showing the direction in which it had gone.
“Hooray, Dave! a forty-pounder!” cried Dick. “Push the punt in and we can easily catch him.”
“Not you,” said Dave stolidly; “he’ll get through that faster than we could.”
“But, look, look! I can see where he is.”
“Nay, he’ll go all through theer and get deeper and deeper, and it’s more wattery farther on. He’ll go right through theer, and come out the other side.”
“But he was such a big one, Dave—wasn’t he, Mr Marston?—quite forty pounds!”
“Nay, not half, lad,” said Dave stolidly, as he thrust the boat on. “Beat away. We’ll come and set a bait for him some day. That’s the way to catch him.”
Dick uttered an angry ejaculation as he looked back towards where he could still see the water plants waving; and in his vexation he raised his pole, and went on with the splashing so vigorously, and, as legal folks say, with so muchmalice prepense, that he sent the water flying over Dave as he stood up in the bows of the punt.
Tom chuckled and followed suit, sending another shower over the puntsman. Then Dick began again, the amber water flying and sparkling in the sunshine; but Dave took no notice till the splashing became too pronounced, when he stopped short, gave his head a shake, and turned slowly round.
“Want to turn back and give up?” he said slowly.
Dick knew the man too well to continue, and in penitent tones exclaimed:
“No, no, go on, Dave, we won’t splash any more.”
“Because if there’s any more of it—”
“I won’t splash any more, Dave,” cried Dick, laughing, “It was Tom.”
“Oh, what a shame!”
“So you did splash. Didn’t he, Mr Marston?”
“I don’t want to hear no more about it, Mester Dick. I know,” growled Dave. “I only says, Is it to be fishing or games?”
“Fishing, Dave. It’s all right; go on, Tom; splash away gently.”
“Because if—”
“No, no, go on, Dave. There, we won’t send any more over you.”
Dave uttered a grunt, and forced the boat along once more, while Marston sat in the stern an amused spectator of the boys’ antics.
Everything now went on orderly enough, till they had proceeded a long way on, in and out, for a quarter of a mile, when at a word from Dave the splashing and stabbing of the water grew more vigorous, the punt being now pretty close to the net, the irregular row of bundles of rushes showing plainly.
And now Dave executed a fresh evolution, changing the position of the punt, for instead of its approaching end on, he turned it abreast, so that it pretty well touched the reedy sides of the canal, and with the poles now being plied on one side, the boat was made to approach more slowly.
“Now, mester, you’d better stand up,” said Dave.
“Yes, Mr Marston, stand up,” cried Dick. “Look!”
Marston rose to his feet, and as he looked toward the entrance where the net was spread there was a wave-like swell upon the surface, which might have been caused by the movement of the boat or by fish.
There was no doubt about its being caused by fish, for all at once, close by the row of rush bundles, there was a splash. Then, as they approached, another and another.
“They’re feeling the net,” cried Dick excitedly.
“Ay, keep it oop, lads, or they’ll come back,” cried Dave, making the water swirl with his pole, which he worked about vigorously.
Even as he spoke there came another splash, and this time the sun flashed upon the glittering sides of the fish which darted out and fell over the other side of the top line of the net.
“There goes one,” shouted Tom.
“Ay, and theer goes another,” said Dave with a chuckle as he forced the boat along slowly.
And now, as Marston watched, he saw that the irregular line of rush bundles which stretched across the mouth of the canal was changing its shape, and he needed no telling that the regular semicircular form it assumed was caused by the pressure of a shoal of fish seeking to escape into the open mere, but of course checked by the fragile wall of net.
“There must be a lot, Tom,” cried Dick excitedly. “Look, Mr Marston! There goes another. Oh, Dave, we shall lose them all!”
This was consequent upon another good-sized fish flying out of the water, falling heavily upon one of the rush floats, and then darting away.
“Nay, we sha’n’t lose ’em all,” said Dave coolly. “Some on ’em’s safe to go. Now, then, splash away. Reach over your end, young Tom Tallington, or some on ’em ’ll go round that way.”
Tom changed his place a little, to stand now on what had been the front of their advance, and thrusting in his pole he splashed and beat the narrow space between him and the dense boggy side, where the sphagnum came down into the water.
Dick followed suit at the other end, and Dave swept his pole sidewise as if he were mowing weeds below the surface.
“Oh!” cried Dick, as he overbalanced himself, and nearly went in from the stern. He would have gone headlong had not Mr Marston made a bound, and caught him as he vainly strove to recover his balance.
The effort was well timed, and saved him, but of course the consequences of jumping about in a boat are well-known. The punt gave such a lurch that Dave almost went out, while, as for Tom, he was literally jerked up as from a spring-board, and, dropping his pole, he seemed to be taking a voluntary dive, describing a semicircle, and going down head-first, not into the narrow slit between him and the boggy shore, but right into the semi-fluid mass of sphagnum, water, and ooze, where he disappeared to his knees.
Tom’s dive sent the boat, as he impelled it with his feet, a couple of yards away; and for a moment or two those who were in it seemed half paralysed, till a roar of laughter from Dick, who did not realise the danger, roused Dave to action.
For the dense mass, while fluid enough to allow Tom to dive in, was not sufficiently loose to let him rise; and there he stuck, head downwards, and with his legs kicking furiously.
“Now if we was to leave him,” said Dave sententiously, “he wouldn’t never be no more trouble to his father; but I suppose we must pull him out.”
“Pull him out, man? Quick, use your pole!”
“Ay, I’m going to, mester,” said Dave coolly. “Theer we are,” he continued, as he sent the end of the punt back to where poor Tom’s legs went on performing a series of kicks which were sometimes like those made by a swimming frog, and at others as if he were trying to walk upside down along an imaginary flight of aerial stairs.
The time seemed long, but probably it was not half a minute from the time Tom dived into the bog till the young engineer seized him by the legs and dragged him into the boat, to sit upon the bottom, gasping, spitting, and rubbing the ooze from his eyes. But it was a good two minutes before he was sufficiently recovered to look round angrily, and in a highly-pitched quavering voice exclaimed:
“Look here: who was it did that?”
“Nobody,” roared Dick. “Oh, I say, Tom, what a game! Are your feet wet?”
Tom turned upon him savagely, but everyone in the boat was laughing, and his countenance relaxed, and he rose up and leaned over the side of the boat to wash his face, which a splash or two relieved from the pieces of bog and dead vegetation which adhered.
“I don’t mind,” he said. “Only you wouldn’t have found it a game if you’d been there.”
“Let’s get back quickly,” said Mr Marston, “or the boy will catch cold.”
“Oh, it won’t hurt me!” cried Tom. “Let’s catch the fish first. They never get cold.”
“Yes: let’s haul the net out first,” said Dick. “Tom won’t mind a ducking.”
“Ay, we’re going to hev out the net,” said Dave. “Splash away, my lad. That’ll keep away the cold.”
Poor Tom’s feet had not been wet, but as he stood up with the water trickling from him, a couple of streams soon made their way down the legs of his trousers into his boots. This was, however, soon forgotten in the excitement of the hauling.
For, after a fresh amount of splashing, though Dave declared the fish had all come back, the punt was run pretty close up to one side, the lines and pole taken on board, and the punt thrust toward the other side.
Before they reached it the bobbing of the rush floats and the semicircular shape of the top line showed plainly enough that there were a good many fish there; and when Dave had secured the lines at the other end, removed the poles, and by ingenious manipulation drawn on the bottom line so as to raise the cord, it was not long before the net began to assume the shape of a huge bag, and one that was pretty heavy.
Every now and then a swirl in the water and a splash showed where some large fish was trying to escape, while sometimes one did leap out and get away. Then the surface would be necked with silvery arrows as swarms of small-fry appeared flashing into sight and disappearing, these little bits of excitement growing less frequent as the small fish found their way over the top of the net, or discovered that the meshes were wide enough to allow them to pass through.
“How is it, Dave, that all the little fish like to keep to the top of the water, and the big ones out of sight down at the bottom?” said Dick.
Dave chuckled, or rather made a noise something like a bray.
“S’pose you was a fish, young mester, wouldn’t you, if you was a little one, keep nigh the top if you found going down to the bottom among the big uns meant being swallowed up?”
“Oh, of course!” cried Dick. “I forgot that they eat one another. Look, Mr Marston, that was a pike.”
He pointed excitedly to a large fish which rose to the surface, just showing its dark olive-green back as it curved over and disappeared again, making the water eddy.
“They do not seem to have all gone, Dave,” said Mr Marston.
“Nay, theer’s a few on ’em left, mester,” replied Dave. “Now, my lads, all together. That’s the way.”
The lines were drawn, and the weight of the great bag of meshes proved that after all a good fair haul had been made, the net being drawn close to the boat and the bag seeming to shrink in size till there was a mass of struggling, splashing fish alongside, apparently enough to far more than fill a bushel basket.
“What are you going to do?” asked Mr Marston, who was as excited now as the boys, while Dave worked away stolidly, as if it was all one of the most commonplace matters for him.
“Haul the net into the boat,” cried Tom.
“Nay, my net would break,” said Dave. “There’s a lot of owd rushes and roots, and rotten weeds in it.”
“I don’t believe there are, Dave,” said Dick. “It’s all solid fish.”
“Nay, lad, but net’ll break. Let’s hev out some of the big uns first.”
“Look! there’s a fine one,” cried Dick, making a dash at a large fish which rose out of the writhing mass, but it glided through his hands.
“Howd hard!” said Dave. “You lads go th’other side o’ the punt or we shall capsize. Let me and the London gentleman get them in.”
“Oh!” groaned Tom.
“No, I’ve only one hand to work with,” said Marston, who saw the reasonableness of the old fen-man’s remark, for the side of the boat had gone down very low once or twice, and the effect of dragging a portion of the laden net on board might have been sufficient to admit the water. “I’ll give way, and act as ballast.”
“No, no!” cried Dick. “You help, Mr Marston.”
But the young engineer remained steadfast to his proposal, and seated himself on the other side.
“Better let me lade out a few o’ the big uns, Mester Dick,” said Dave, “while you lads hold on.”
The boys hardly approved of the proposal, but they gave way; and each taking a good grip of the wet net, they separated toward the head and stern, while Dave stayed in the middle, and taking off his jacket, rolled up his sleeves close to the shoulder, and then plunging his arms in among the swarm of fish he brought out a good-sized pike of six or seven pounds.
This was thrown into the basket, to flap furiously and nearly leap out, renewing its efforts as another of its kind was thrown in to keep it company.
“Is there a very big one, Dave?” cried Dick.
“Nay; nought very big,” was the reply. “Draw her up, my lads. That’s reight.”
As Dave spoke he kept on plunging his hands into the splashing and struggling mass of fish, and sometimes brought out one, sometimes missed. But he kept on vigorously till, feeling satisfied that the net would bear the rest, he drew the loaded line well over into the boat, and, giving the boys a hint to tighten the line, he plunged in his arms once more, got well hold, and the next minute, by a dexterous lift, raised the bag, so that its contents came pouring over the edge of the punt in a silvery, glittering cataract of fish, leaping, gliding, and flapping all over the bottom about his feet.
Then a few fish, which were hanging by their gills, their heads being thrust through the meshes, were shaken out, the net bundled up together and thrown into the fore part of the boat, and the little party came together to gloat over their capture.
“Theer, lads,” said Dave, coolly resuming his jacket, “you can pitch ’em all into the baskets, all the sizable ones, and put all the little ones back into the watter. I’ll throost the punt back, so as young Tom Tallington can get some dry clothes.”
These latter were the last things in Tom’s mind, for just then, as Dave resumed the pole, and began sending the boat quickly through the water, the boy was trying to grasp an eel, which had found the meshes one size too small for his well-fed body, and was now in regular serpentine fashion trying to discover a retreat into which he could plunge, and so escape the inevitable frying-pan or pot.
Irrespective of the fact that a large eel can bite sharply, it is, as everyone knows, one of the most awkward things to hold, for the moment a good grip of its slimy body is made, the result seems to be that it helps the elongated fish to go forward or slip back. And this Tom found as he grasped the eel again and again, only for it to make a few muscular contortions and escape.
Then Dick tried, with no better effect, the pursuit lasting till the active fish made its way in among the meshes of the net, when its capture became easy, and it was swept into the great basket, to set the pike flapping and leaping once more.
Then the sorting commenced, all the small fish being thrown back to increase in size, while the rest of the slimy captives went into the basket.
There was no larger pike than the one first taken out of the net by Dave, but plenty of small ones, all extremely dark in colour, as if affected by living in the amber-tinted water, and nearly all these were thrown back, in company with dozens of silvery roach and orange-finned, brightly gilded rudd, all thicker and broader than their relatives the roach.
Many scores of fish were thrown overboard, some to turn up and float for a few minutes before they recovered their breath, as Tom called it, but for the most part they dived down at once, uninjured by what they had gone through, while their largeness fortunate friends were tossed into the basket—gilded side-striped perch, with now and then a fat-looking, small-eyed, small-scaled tench, brightly brazen at the sides, and looking as if cast in a soft kind of bronze. Then there were a couple of large-scaled brilliantly golden carp; but the majority of the fish were good-sized, broad, dingy-looking bream, whose slimy emanations made the bottom of the punt literally ask for a cleansing when the basket was nearly filled.
By that time the party were well on their way to the Toft, and as they neared the shore, it was to find the squire waiting to speak to the engineer, while John Warren was close behind with his dog, ready to join Dave, in whose company he went off after the latter had been up to the house and had a good feast of bread and cheese and ale.
That evening the squire and Mr Marston went over to the works to see how matters were progressing, to find all satisfactory, and the night passed quietly enough; but at breakfast the next morning, when some of the best of the tench appeared fried in butter, a messenger came over to see the engineer on his way to the town for the doctor, to announce that Hez Bargle, the big delver, who had been leader of the party who came over so fiercely about the attack upon Mr Marston, had been found that morning lying in the rough hovel where he slept alone, nearly dead.
The man was sharply examined by the engineer, a fresh messenger in the shape of Hickathrift being found to carry on the demand for the doctor. But there was very little to learn. Bargle had not come up to his work, and the foreman of the next gang went to see why his fellow-ganger had not joined him, and found him lying on the floor of the peat-built hut quite insensible, with the marks of savage blows about the head, as if he had been suddenly attacked and beaten with a club, for there was no sign of any struggle.
Mr Marston went over at once with the squire, Dick obtaining permission to accompany them; and upon their arrival it was to find all the work at a stand-still, the men being grouped about with their sleeves rolled-up, and smoking, and staring silently at the rough peat hovel where their fellow-worker lay.
The engineer entered the shelter—it did not deserve the title of cottage—and the squire and Dick followed, to find the man nearly insensible, and quite unable to give any account of how the affair had happened.
The men were questioned, but knew nothing beyond the fact that they had parted from him as usual to go to their own quarters, Bargle being the only one who lodged alone. There had been no quarrel as far as Mr Marston could make out, everyone he spoke to declaring that the work had gone on the previous day in the smoothest way possible; and at last there seemed to be nothing to do but wait until the great, rough fellow could give an account of the case for himself.
The doctor came at last, and formed his opinion.
“He is such a great, strong fellow that unless he was attacked by two or three together, I should say someone came upon him as he lay asleep and stunned him with a blow on the head.”
“The result of some quarrel or offence given to one of the men under him, I’m afraid,” said the engineer with a look of intense vexation in his eyes. “These men are very brutal sometimes to their fellows, especially when they are placed in authority. Will he be long before he is better?”
“No,” replied the doctor. “The blows would have killed an ordinary man, but he has a skull like an ox. He’ll be at work again in a fortnight if he’ll behave sensibly, and carry out my instructions.”
A couple of days later Bargle was sitting up smoking, when the engineer entered the reed-thatched hut, in company with Dick.
“Hallo, youngster!” growled the great fellow, with a smile slowly spreading over his rugged face, and growing into a grin, which accorded ill with his bandaged head; “shak’ hands!”
Dick obeyed heartily enough, the great fellow retaining the lad’s hand in his, and slowly pumping it up and down.
“We’re mates, that’s what we two are,” he growled. “You ar’n’t half a bad un, you ar’n’t. Ah, mester, how are you? Arm better?”
“Mending fast, my lad; and how are you?”
“Tidy, mester, tidy! Going to handle a spade again to-morrow.”
“Nonsense, man! you’re too weak yet.”
“Weak! Who says so? I don’t, and the doctor had better not.”
“Never mind that. I want you to tell me how all this happened.”
“He ar’n’t half a bad un, mester,” said the injured man, ignoring the remark, as he held on to the boy’s hand. “We’re mates, that’s what we are. See him stand up again me that day? It were fine.”
“Yes; but you must tell me how this occurred. I want to take some steps about it.”
“Hey! and you needn’t take no steps again it, mester. I shall lay hold on him some day, and when I do—Hah!”
He stretched out a huge fist in a menacing way that promised ill to his assailant.
“But do you know who it was?” said the engineer.
“It warn’t him,” growled Bargle, smiling at Dick. “He wouldn’t come and hit a man when he’s asleep. Would you, mate?”
“I wouldn’t be such a coward,” cried Dick.
“Theer! Hear that, mester! I knowed he wouldn’t. He’d hev come up to me and hit me a doubler right in the chest fair and square, and said, ‘now, then, come on!’”
“Then someone did strike you when you were asleep, Bargle, eh?”
“Dunno, mester; I s’pose so. Looks like it, don’t it?”
“Yes, my man, very much so. Then you were woke out of your sleep by a blow, eh?”
“Weer I? I don’t know.”
“Tell me who have you had a quarrel with lately?”
“Quarrel?”
“Well, row, then.”
“Wi’ him,” said the big fellow, pointing at Dick.
“Oh, but he would not have come to you in the night!”
“Who said he would, mester?” growled Bargle menacingly. “Not he. He’d come up square and give a man a doubler in the chest and—”
“Yes, yes,” said the engineer impatiently; “but I want to know who it was made this attack upon you—this cowardly attack. You say it was while you slept.”
“Yes, I s’pose so; but don’t you trouble about that, mester. I’m big enough to fight my bit. I shall drop on to him one of these days, and when I do—why, he’ll find it okkard.”
Mr Marston questioned and cross-questioned the man, but there was no more to be got from him. He s’posed some un come in at that theer door and give it him; but he was so much taken up with Dick’s visit that he could hardly think of self, and when they came away Mr Marston had learned comparatively nothing, the big fellow shouting after Dick:
“I’ve got a tush for you, lad, when I get down to the dreern again—one I digged out, and you shall hev it.”
Dick said, “Thank you,” for the promised “tush,” and walked away.
“I don’t like it,” said Mr Marston. “Someone shooting at me; someone striking down this man. I’m afraid it’s due to ill-will towards me, Dick. But,” he added, laughing, “I will not suspect you, as Bargle lets you off.”