New Treasure Seekers; Or, The Bastable Children in Search of a Fortune. Эдит Несбит

New Treasure Seekers; Or, The Bastable Children in Search of a Fortune - Эдит Несбит


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and threw rice and slippers. Mrs. Ashleigh and some other old ladies cried.

      And then every one said, "What a pretty wedding!" and began to go. And when our waggonette came round we all began to get in. And suddenly Father said—

      "Where's H.O.?" And we looked round. He was in absence.

      "Fetch him along sharp—some of you," Father said; "I don't want to keep the horses standing here in the cold all day."

      So Oswald and Dicky went to fetch him along. We thought he might have wandered back to what was left of the lunch—for he is young and he does not always know better. But he was not there, and Oswald did not even take a crystallised fruit in passing. He might easily have done this, and no one would have minded, so it would not have been wrong. But it would have been ungentlemanly. Dicky did not either. H.O. was not there.

      We went into the other rooms, even the one the old ladies were crying in, but of course we begged their pardons. And at last into the kitchen, where the servants were smart with white bows and just sitting down to their dinner, and Dicky said—

      "I say, cookie love, have you seen H.O.?"

      "Don't come here with your imperence!" the cook said, but she was pleased with Dicky's unmeaning compliment all the same.

      "I see him," said the housemaid. "He was colloguing with the butcher in the yard a bit since. He'd got a brown-paper parcel. Perhaps he got a lift home."

      So we went and told Father, and about the white present in the parcel.

      "I expect he was ashamed to give it after all," Oswald said, "so he hooked off home with it."

      And we got into the wagonette.

      "It wasn't a present, though," Dora said; "it was a different kind of surprise—but it really is a secret."

      Our good Father did not command her to betray her young brother.

      But when we got home H.O. wasn't there. Mrs. Pettigrew hadn't seen him, and he was nowhere about. Father biked back to the Cedars to see if he'd turned up. No. Then all the gentlemen turned out to look for him through the length and breadth of the land.

      "He's too old to be stolen by gipsies," Alice said.

      "And too ugly," said Dicky.

      "Oh don't!" said both the girls; "and now when he's lost, too!"

      We had looked for a long time before Mrs. Pettigrew came in with a parcel she said the butcher had left. It was not addressed, but we knew it was H.O.'s, because of the label on the paper from the shop where Father gets his shirts. Father opened it at once.

      Inside the parcel we found H.O.'s boots and braces, his best hat and his chest-protector. And Oswald felt as if we had found his skeleton.

      "Any row with any of you?" Father asked. But there hadn't been any.

      "Was he worried about anything? Done anything wrong, and afraid to own up?"

      We turned cold, for we knew what he meant. That parcel was so horribly like the lady's hat and gloves that she takes off on the seashore and leaves with a letter saying it has come to this.

      "No, no, no, NO!" we all said. "He was perfectly jolly all the morning."

      Then suddenly Dicky leaned on the table and one of H.O.'s boots toppled over, and there was something white inside. It was a letter. H.O. must have written it before we left home. It said—

      "Dear Father and Every One,—I am going to be a Clown. When I am rich and reveared I will come back rolling.

"Your affectionate son,"Horace Octavius Bastable."

      "Rolling?" Father said.

      "He means rolling in money," Alice said. Oswald noticed that every one round the table where H.O.'s boots were dignifiedly respected as they lay, was a horrid pale colour, like when the salt is thrown into snapdragons.

      "Oh dear!" Dora cried, "that was it. He asked me to make him a clown's dress and keep it deeply secret. He said he wanted to surprise Aunt Margaret and Albert's uncle. And I didn't think it was wrong," said Dora, screwing up her face; she then added, "Oh dear, oh dear, oh, oh!" and with these concluding remarks she began to howl.

      Father thumped her on the back in an absent yet kind way.

      "But where's he gone?" he said, not to any one in particular. "I saw the butcher; he said H.O. asked him to take a parcel home and went back round the Cedars."

      Here Dicky coughed and said—

      "I didn't think he meant anything, but the day after Noël was talking about singing ballads in Rome, and getting poet's lyres given him, H.O. did say if Noël had been really keen on the Roman lyres and things he could easily have been a stowaway, and gone unknown."

      "A stowaway!" said my Father, sitting down suddenly and hard.

      "In Aunt Margaret's big dress basket—the one she let him hide in when we had hide-and-seek there. He talked a lot about it after Noël had said that about the lyres—and the Italians being so poetical, you know. You remember that day we had toffee."

      My Father is prompt and decisive in action, so is his eldest son.

      "I'm off to the Cedars," he said.

      "Do let me come, Father," said the decisive son. "You may want to send a message."

      So in a moment Father was on his bike and Oswald on the step—a dangerous but delightful spot—and off to the Cedars.

      "Have your teas; and don't any more of you get lost, and don't sit up if we're late," Father howled to them as we rushed away. How glad then the thoughtful Oswald was that he was the eldest. It was very cold in the dusk on the bicycle, but Oswald did not complain.

      At the Cedars my father explained in a few manly but well-chosen words, and the apartment of the dear departed bride was searched.

      "Because," said my father, "if H.O. really was little ass enough to get into that basket, he must have turned out something to make room for himself."

      Sure enough, when they came to look, there was a great bundle rolled in a sheet under the bed—all lace things and petticoats and ribbons and dressing-gowns and ladies' flummery.

      "If you will put the things in something else, I'll catch the express to Dover and take it with me," Father said to Mrs. Ashleigh; and while she packed the things he explained to some of the crying old ladies who had been unable to leave off, how sorry he was that a son of his—but you know the sort of thing.

      Oswald said: "Father, I wish you'd let me come too. I won't be a bit of trouble."

      Perhaps it was partly because my Father didn't want to let me walk home in the dark, and he didn't want to worry the Ashleighs any more by asking them to send me home. He said this was why, but I hope it was his loving wish to have his prompt son, so like himself in his decisiveness, with him.

      We went.

      It was an anxious journey. We knew how far from pleased the bride would be to find no dressing-gowns and ribbons, but only H.O. crying and cross and dirty, as likely as not, when she opened the basket at the hotel at Dover.

      Father smoked to pass the time, but Oswald had not so much as a peppermint or a bit of Spanish liquorice to help him through the journey. Yet he bore up.

      When we got out at Dover there were Mr. and Mrs. Albert's uncle on the platform.

      "Hullo," said Albert's uncle. "What's up? Nothing wrong at home, I hope."

      "We've only lost H.O.," said my father. "You don't happen to have him with you?"

      "No; but you're joking," said the bride. "We've lost a dress-basket."

      Lost a dress-basket! The words struck us dumb, but my father recovered speech and explained. The bride was very glad when we said we had brought her ribbons and things, but we stood in anxious gloom, for now H.O. was indeed lost. The dress-basket might be on its way to Liverpool, or rocking on the Channel, and H.O. might never be found again. Oswald did not say these things. It is best to hold your jaw when you want to see a thing out,


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