The Coxswain's Bride; also, Jack Frost and Sons; and, A Double Rescue by Ballantyne (best free e reader .TXT) đ
- Author: Ballantyne
Book online «The Coxswain's Bride; also, Jack Frost and Sons; and, A Double Rescue by Ballantyne (best free e reader .TXT) đ». Author Ballantyne
âMother,â he said, with tearful eyes, as he clung closer to her side, âI would kill Mr Block if I could!â
âHush, dear boy! You know that would be wrong and could do no good. It is sinful even to feel such a desire.â
âHow can I help it, mother!â returned Jack indignantly. Then he asked, âWhat are we going to do now, mother?â
For some time the poor widow did not reply; then she spoke in a low tone, as if murmuring to herself, âThe last sixpence gone; the cupboard empty; nothingânothing left to pawnââ
She stopped short, and glanced hastily at her marriage ring.
âMother,â said Jack, âhave you not often told me that God will not forsake us? Does it not seem as if He had forsaken us now?â
âIt only seems like it, darling,â returned the widow hurriedly. âWe donât understand His ways. âThough He slay me, yet will I trust Him!ââ
It seemed as if God were about to test the faith of His servant, for at that moment a cab drove furiously round the corner of a street and knocked her down. Jack was overturned at the same time. Recovering himself, instantly, he found his mother in a state of unconsciousness, with blood flowing from a deep cut in her forehead. In a state of semi-bewilderment the poor boy followed the stretcher on which Mrs Matterby was carried to the nearest hospital, where he waited while his motherâs injuries were examined.
âMy boy,â said a young surgeon, returning to the waiting room, and patting Jackâs head, âyour mother has been rather badly hurt. We must keep her here to look after her. I daresay we shall soon make her well. Meanwhile you had better run home, and tell your fatherâif, that isâyour father is at home, I suppose?â
âNo, sir; fatherâs dead.â
âWell then your sister or auntâI suppose thereâs some relative at home older than yourself?â
âNo, sir; none but mother anâ me,â whispered Jack.
âNo relations of any kind at all in London?â
âNone, sir. We know nobodyâat least not many, and theyâre all strangers.â
âA sad case,â murmured the surgeon. âYour mother is poor, I suppose?â
âVery poor, sir.â
âBut of course you have a home of some sort, somewhere?â
âYes, itâs not far from here.â
âWell, them, youâd better go home just now, for you canât see your mother to-night. We dare not let her speak, but come back early to-morrow, and you shall hear about herâperhaps see her. Here, put that in your pocket.â
Poor Jack took the shilling which the sympathetic surgeon thrust into his hand, and ran home in a state bordering on distraction; but it was not till he entered the shabby little room which he had begun to consider âhomeâ that he realised the full weight of the calamity that had befallen him. No motherâs voice to welcome him; no bit of fire in the grate to warm; no singing kettle to cheer, or light of candle to dispel the gloom of rapidly approaching night.
It was Christmas Day too. In the morning he had gone forth with his motherâshe in the sanguine hope of renewing an engagement in a clothierâs shop, which terminated that day; he in the expectation of getting a few jobs of some sortâmessages to run or horses to hold. Such were the circumstances to which they had been reduced in twelve months, Jack had arranged to call for his mother and walk home with her. On the way they were to invest a very small part of the widowâs earnings in âsomething niceâ for their Christmas supper, and spend the evening together, chatting about the old home in Blackby, and father, and Natty Grove, and Nellie, and old Nell, in the happy days gone by.
âAnd now!â thought Jack, seating himself on his little bed and glancing at that of his mother, which stood empty in the opposite cornerâânow!ââ
But Jack could think no more. A tremendous agony rent his breast, and a sharp cry escaped from him as he flung himself on his bed and burst into a passion of tears.
Child-like, he sobbed himself to sleep, and did not awake till the sun was high next morning. It was some time before he could recall what had occurred. When he did so he began to weep afresh. Leaping up, he was about to rush out of the house and make for the hospital, when he was checked at the door by the landlordâa hard, grinding, heartless man, who grew rich in oppressing the poor.
âYou seem to be in a hurry, youngster,â he said, dragging the boy back by the collar, and looking hurriedly round the room. âIâve come for the rent. Whereâs your mother?â
In a sobbing voice Jack told him about the accident.
âWell, I donât really believe you,â said the man, with an angry frown; âbut Iâll soon find out if youâre telling lies. Iâll go to the hospital and inquire for myself. Dâee know anything about your motherâs affairs?â
âNo, sir,â said Jack, meekly, for he began to entertain a vague terror of the man.
âNo; I thought not. Well, Iâll enlighten you. Your mother owes me three weeksâ rent of this here room, and has got nothing to pay it with, as far as I knows, except these sticks oâ furniture. Now, if your mother is really in hospital, Iâll come back here and bundle you out, anâ sell the furniture to pay my rent. I ainât a-goinâ to be done out oâ my money because your mother chooses to git runâd over.â
The landlord did not wait for a reply, but went out and slammed the door.
Jack followed him in silent horror. He watched him while he inquired at the gate of the hospital, and, after he had gone, went up timidly, rang the bell, and asked for his mother.
âMrs Matterby?â repeated the porter. âCome in; Iâll make inquiry.â
The report which he brought back fell like the blow of a sledge-hammer on the poor boyâs heart. His mother, they told him, was dead. She had died suddenly in the night.
There are times of affliction, when the human soul fails to find relief in tears or cries. Poor Jack Matterby stood for some time motionless, as if paralysed, with glaring eyes and a face not unlike to that of death. They sought to rouse him, but he could not speak. Suddenly, observing the front door open, he darted out into the street and ran straight home, where he flung himself on his motherâs bed, and burst into an uncontrollable flood of tears. By degrees the passion subsided, leaving only a stunned feeling behind, under the influence of which he lay perfectly still.
The first thing that roused him was the sound of a heavy foot on the stair. The memory of the landlord flashed into his mind and filled him with indescribable dreadâdread caused partly by the manâs savage aspect and nature, but much more by the brutal way in which he had spoken about his mother. The only way in which to avoid a meeting was to rush past the man on the stair. Fear and loathing made the poor boy forget, for the moment, his crushing sorrow. He leaped up, opened the door, and, dashing downstairs, almost overturned the man who was coming up. Once in the street, he ran straight on without thought, until he felt that he was safe from pursuit. Then he stopped, and sat down on a door-stepâto think what he should do; for, having been told that the furniture of his old home was to be sold, and himself turned out, he felt that returning there would be useless, and would only expose him to the risk of meeting the awful landlord. While he was yet buried in thought, one of those sprightly creatures of the great city known as street arabs accosted him in a grave and friendly tone.
âMy sweet little toolip,â he said, âcan I do anythink for you?â
Despite his grief Jack could scarcely forbear smiling at the absurdity of the question.
âNo, thank you,â he replied.
âWell now, look âere, my toolip,â returned the arab in a confidential tone, âIâve took quite a fancy to you; youâve got such a look, someâow, of my poor old grandmother. Now, if youâve no objection, Iâd like to give you your breakfast. Youâre âungry, I suppose?â
Jack admitted that he was, and, after a momentâs hesitation, accepted this surprisingly kind and liberal offer. Taking him promptly by the arm his new friend hurried him to a pastry-cookâs shop, and bade him âsmell that,â referring to the odours that ascended through a grating.
âAinât it âeavenly?â he asked, with sparkling eyes.
Jack admitted that it was very nice.
âSo green, anâ yet so fair!â murmured the arab, casting a look of admiration on his companion. âNow I means to go into that there shop,â he added, returning to the confidential tone, âanâ buy breakfast for youâfor both on us. But I couldnât go in, you know, with this âere shabby coat on, âcause they wouldnât give me such good wittles if I did. Just change coats with me for a few minutes. What! You doubt me? No one ever doubted Bob Snobbins withoutâwithout a-âurtinâ of his feelinâs.â
Whatever might have caused Jack to hesitate, the injured look on young Snobbinsâ countenance and the hurt tone were too much for him. He exchanged coats with the young rascal, who, suddenly directing Jackâs attention to some imaginary object of interest at one end of the street, made off at full speed towards the other end. Our hero was, however, a famous runner. He gave chase, caught the arab in a retired alley, and gave him an indignant punch in the head.
But although Jack had plenty of courage and a good deal of strength, he was no match for a street warrior like Bob Snobbins, who turned about promptly, blackened both his opponentâs eyes, bled his nose, swelled his lips, and finally knocked him into a pool of dirty water, after which he fled, just as a policeman came on the scene.
The constable was a kindly man. He asked Jack a few questions, which, however, the latter was too miserable to answer.
âWell, well, my boy,â said the constable gently, âyouâd as well give up fightinâ. It donât pay, you see, in the long run. Besides, you donât seem fit for it. Cut away home now, and get your mother to clean you.â
This last remark caused Jack to run away fast enough with a bursting heart. All day he wandered about the crowded streets, and no one took any notice of him, save a very few among the thousands, who cast on him a passing glance of pity. But what could these do to help him? Were not the streets swarming with such boys?
And in truth Jack Matterby was a very pitiable object, at least according to the report of shop-mirrors, which told him that his face was discoloured and bloody, his coat indescribably dirty and ragged, besides being out of harmony with his trousers, and that his person generally was bedaubed with mud. Hunger at last induced him to overcome his feelings of shame so far that he entered a bakerâs shop, but he was promptly ordered to be off. Later in the day he entered another shop, the owner of which seemed to be of a better disposition. Changing his shilling, he purchased a penny roll, with which he retired to a dark passage and dined.
When night came on he expended another penny and supped, after which he sought for some place of shelter in which to sleep. But wherever he went he found the guardians of the public requiring him to âmove on.â Several street arabs sought to make his acquaintance, but, with the memory of Bob Snobbins
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