Oswald Bastable and Others. Nesbit Edith

Oswald Bastable and Others - Nesbit Edith


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again.

      Oswald couldn't open it. He ran back to the kitchen window and shouted to the others.

      'Go round to the other door and shove for all you're worth!' he cried in the manly tones that all must obey.

      So they went; but Dicky told me afterwards that the woman didn't shove for anything like all she was worth. In fact, she wouldn't shove at all, till he had to make a sort of battering-ram of her, and then she seemed to awake from a dream, and they got the door open.

      We followed the woman up the stairs and into a bedroom, and there was another woman sitting up in bed trembling, and her mouth opening and shutting.

      'Oh, it's you, Eliza,' she said, falling back against the pillows. 'I thought it were tramps.'

      Eliza did not break things to the sufferer gently, like we should have done, however hurried.

      'Mercy you aren't burnt alive in your bed, Lily!' she merely remarked. 'The place is all ablaze!'

      Then she rolled her sick sufferer in a blanket and took hold of her shoulders, and told us to take her feet.

      But Oswald was too calm to do this suddenly. He said:

      'Where are you going to put her?'

      'Anywheres!' said Eliza wildly – 'anywheres is better than this here.'

      'There's plenty of time,' said Oswald; and he and Dicky rushed into another room, and got a feather-bed and bedclothes, and hunched them down the stairs, and dragged them half a field away, and made a bed in a nice dry ditch. And then we consented to carry the unfortunate bed-woman to it.

      The house was full of smoke by this time, though it hadn't yet caught fire; and I tell you we felt just like heroic firemen as we stumbled down the crookety narrow stairs, back first, bearing the feet of the sick woman. Oswald did so wish he had had a fireman's helmet to put on!

      When we got the fading Lily to her dry ditch, she clutched Oswald's arm and whispered:

      'Save the sticks!'

      'What sticks?' asked Oswald, who thought it was the ragings of delirium.

      'She means the furniture,' said Eliza; 'but I'm afraid its doom is written on high.'

      'Rubbish!' said Oswald kindly; and we flew back, us boys dragging Eliza with us.

      There didn't seem to be much furniture in the house, but when we began to move it, it at once seemed to multiply itself with the rapidity of compound interest. We got all the clothes out first, in drawers and clothes-baskets, and tied up in sheets. Eliza wasn't much use. The only thing she could do was to look for a bed-key to unscrew the iron bedsteads; but Oswald and Dicky toiled on. They carried out chairs and tables and hearthrugs. As Oswald was staggering on under a Windsor armchair, with a tea-tray and an ironing-board under his arms, he ran into a man.

      'What's up?' said he.

      'Fire!' said Oswald.

      'I seed that,' said the man.

      Oswald shoved the chair and other things on to the man.

      'Then lend a hand to get the things away,' he said.

      And more and more people came, and all worked hard; but Oswald and Dicky did most. Eliza never even found that bed-key, because when she saw people beginning to come thicker and thicker across the fields, like ants hurrying home, she went out and told everyone over and over again that Honeysett had got the key.

      Then a woman came along, and Eliza got her into a corner by the stairs and jawed. I heard part of the jaw.

      'An' pore Mrs. Simpkins, her man he's gone to Ashford Market with his beasts and the three other men, and me and my man said we'd have Liz up at my place, her being my sister, so as Honeysett could go off to Romney about the sheep. But she wouldn't come, not though we brought the light cart over for her. So we thought it best Honeysett stayed about his work, and go for the sheep to-morrow.'

      'Then the house would ha' been all empty but for her not being wishful to go along of you?' Oswald heard the other say.

      'Yes,' said Eliza; 'an' so you see – '

      'You keep your mouth shut,' the other woman fiercely said; 'you're Lily's sister, but Tom, he's my brother. If you don't shut your silly mouth you'll be getting of them into trouble. It's insured, ain't it?'

      'I don't see,' said Eliza.

      'You don't never see nothing,' said the other. 'You just don't say a word 'less you're arst, and then only as you come to look after her and found the fire a-raging something crool.'

      'But why – '

      The other woman clawed hold of her and dragged her away, whispering secretly.

      All this time the fire was raging, but there were lots of men now to work the well and the buckets, and the house and the barn had not caught.

      When we had got out all the furniture, some of the men set to work on the barn, and, of course, Oswald and Dicky, though weary, were in this also. They helped to get out all the wool – bundles and bundles and bundles of it; but when it came to sacks of turnip seed and things, they thought they had had enough, and they went to where the things were that had come out of the larder, and they got a jug of milk and some bread and cheese, and took it to the woman who was lying in the dry ditch on the nice bed they had so kindly made for her. She drank some milk, and asked them to have some, and they did, with bread and cheese (Dutch), and jolly glad they were of it.

      Just as we had finished we heard a shout, and there was the fire-engine coming across the field.

      I do like fire-engines. They are so smart and fierce, and look like dragons ready to fight the devouring element.

      It was no use, however, in spite of the beautiful costumes of the firemen, because there was no water, except in the well, and not much left of that.

      The man named Honeysett had ridden off on an old boneshaker of his to fetch the engines. He had left the key in the place where it was always kept, only Eliza had not had the sense to look for it. He had left a letter for her, too, written in red pencil on the back of a bill for a mowing-machine. It said: 'Rix on fir'; going to git fir'-injins.'

      Oswald treasures this letter still as a memento of happier days.

      When Honeysett saw the line of men handing up buckets to throw on the tarry wall, he said:

      'That ain't no manner of use. Wind's changed a hour agone.'

      And so it had. The flames were now reaching out the other way, and two more ricks were on fire. But the tarry walls were quite cool, and very wet, and the men who were throwing the water were very surprised to find that they were standing in a great puddle.

      And now, when everything in the house and the barn was safe, Oswald had time to draw his breath and think, and to remember with despair exactly who it was that had launched a devastating fire-balloon over the peaceful marsh.

      It was getting dusk by this time; but even the splendour of all those burning ricks against the darkening sky was merely wormwood and gall to Oswald's upright heart, and he jolly soon saw that it was the same to Dicky's.

      'I feel pretty sick,' he said. 'Let's go home.'

      'They say the whole eleven ricks are bound to go,' said Dicky, 'with the wind the way it is.'

      'We're bound to go,' said Oswald.

      'Where?' inquired the less thoughtful Dicky.

      'To prison,' said his far-seeing brother, turning away and beginning to walk towards the bicycles.

      'We can't be sure it was our balloon,' said Dicky, following.

      'Pretty average,' said Oswald bitterly.

      'But no one would know it was us if we held our tongues.'

      'We can't hold our tongues,' Oswald said; 'if we do someone else will be blamed, as sure as fate. You didn't hear what that woman said about insurance money.'

      'We might wait and see if anyone does get into trouble, and then come forward,' said Dicky.

      And Oswald owned they


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