Yussuf the Guide; Or, the Mountain Bandits. George Manville Fenn

Yussuf the Guide; Or, the Mountain Bandits - George Manville Fenn


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thought it was the doctor come back,” continued the lad. “I say, Mr. Preston—you are my guardian, you know—is there any need for him to come? I am so tired of cod-liver oil.”

      “Yah!” ejaculated the lawyer; “it would tire anybody but a lamp.”

      He snorted this out, and then blew another blast upon his nose, which made some ornament upon the chimney-piece rattle.

      “Doctor?” said the professor rather dreamily, as he sat down beside the patient. “I suppose he knows best. I did not know you were so ill, my boy.”

      “I’m not ill, sir.”

      “But they say you are, my lad. I was going abroad; but I heard that you were not so well, and—and I came up.”

      “I am very glad,” said the lad, “for it is very dull lying here. Old Dunny is very good to me, only she will bother me so to take more medicine, and things that she says will do me good, and I do get so tired of everything. How is the book getting on, sir?”

      “Oh, very slowly, my lad,” said the professor, with more animation. “I was going abroad to travel and study the places about which I am writing, but—”

      “When do you go?” cried the lad eagerly.

      “I was going within a few days, but—”

      “Whereto?”

      “Smyrna first, and then to the south coast of Asia Minor, and from thence up into the mountains.”

      “Is it a beautiful country, Mr. Preston?”

      “Yes; a very wild and lovely country, I believe.”

      “With mountains and valleys and flowers?”

      “Oh, yes, a glorious place.”

      “And when are you going?”

      “I was going within a few days, my boy,” said the professor kindly; “but—”

      “Is it warm and sunshiny there, sir?”

      “Very.”

      “In winter?”

      “Oh, yes, in the valleys; in the mountains there is eternal snow.”

      “But it is warm in the winter?”

      “Oh, yes; the climate is glorious, my lad.”

      “And here, before long, the leaves will fall from that plane-tree in the corner of the square, that one whose top you can just see; and it will get colder, and the nights long, and the gas always burning in the lamps, and shining dimly through the blinds; and then the fog will fill the streets, and creep in through the cracks of the window; and the blacks will fall and come in upon my book, and it will be so bitterly cold, and that dreadful cough will begin again. Oh, dear!”

      There was silence in the room as the lad finished with a weary sigh; and though it was a bright morning in September, each of the elder personages seemed to conjure up the scenes the invalid portrayed, and thought of him lying back there in the desolate London winter, miserable in spirit, and ill at ease from his complaint.

      Then three of the four present started, for the lawyer blew a challenge on his trumpet.

      “There is no better climate anywhere, sir,” he said, addressing the professor, “and no more healthy spot than London.”

      “Bless the man!” ejaculated Mrs. Dunn.

      “I beg to differ from you, sir,” said the professor in a loud voice, as if he were addressing a class. “By the reports of the meteorological society—”

      “Hang the meteorological society, sir!” cried the lawyer, “I go by my own knowledge.”

      “Pray, gentlemen!” cried Mrs. Dunn, “you forget how weak the patient is.”

      “Hush, Mrs. Dunn,” said the lad eagerly; “let them talk. I like to hear.”

      “I beg pardon,” said the professor; “and we are forgetting the object of our visit. Lawrence, my boy, would you like to go to Brighton or Hastings, or the Isle of Wight?”

      “No,” said the lad sadly, “it is too much bother.”

      “To Devonshire, then—to Torquay?”

      “No, sir. I went there last winter, and I believe it made me worse. I don’t want to be always seeing sick people in invalid chairs, and be always hearing them talk about their doctors. How long shall you be gone, sir?”

      “How long? I don’t know, my lad. Why?”

      The boy was silent, and lay back gazing out of the window in a dreamy way for some moments before he spoke again, and then his hearers were startled by his words.

      “I feel,” he said, speaking as if to himself, “as if I should soon get better if I could go to a land where the sun shone, and the sea was blue, and the sweet soft cool breezes blew down from the mountains that tower up into the clear sky—where there were fresh things to see, and there would be none of this dreadful winter fog.”

      The professor and the lawyer exchanged glances, and the latter took a great pinch of snuff out of his box, and held it half-way up towards his nose.

      Then he started, and let it fall upon the carpet—so much brown dust, for the boy suddenly changed his tone, and in a quick excited manner exclaimed, as he started forward:

      “Oh! Mr. Preston, pray—pray—take me with you when you go.”

      “But, my dear boy,” faltered the professor, “I am not going now. I have altered my plans.”

      “Then I must stop here,” cried the boy in a passionate wailing tone—“stop here and die.”

      There was a dead silence once more as the lad covered his face with his thin hands, only broken by Mrs. Dunn’s sobs as she laid her head upon the back of the chair and wept aloud, while directly after Mr. Burne took out his yellow handkerchief, prepared for a blow, and finally delivered himself of a mild and gentle sniff.

      “Lawrence!”

      It was the deep low utterance of a strong man who was deeply moved, and as the boy let fall his thin white fingers from before his eyes he saw that the professor was kneeling by his chair ready to take one of his hands and hold it between his broad palms.

      “Lawrence, my boy,” he said; “your poor father and I were great friends, and he was to me as a brother; your mother as a sister. He left me as it were the care and charge of you, and it seems to me that in my selfish studies I have neglected my trust; but, Heaven helping me, my boy, I will try and make up for the past. You shall so with me, my dear lad, and we will search till we find a place that shall restore you to health and strength.”

      “You will take me with you?” cried the boy with a joyous light in his eyes.

      “That I will,” cried the professor.

      “And when?”

      “As soon as you can be moved.”

      “But,” sighed the lad wearily, “it will cost so much.”

      “Well?” said the professor, “What of that? I am not a poor man. I never spend my money.”

      “Oh! if it came to that,” said the lawyer, taking some more snuff and snapping his fingers, “young Lawrence here has a pretty good balance lying idle.”

      “Mr. Burne, for shame!” cried Mrs. Dunn; “here have I been waiting to hear you speak, and you encourage the wild idea, instead of stamping upon it like a black beadle.”

      “Wild idea, ma’am?” cried the lawyer, blowing a defiant blast.

      “Yes, sir; to talk about taking that poor weak sickly


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