Five Children and It E. Nesbit (uplifting books for women TXT) đ
- Author: E. Nesbit
Book online «Five Children and It E. Nesbit (uplifting books for women TXT) đ». Author E. Nesbit
âWell, there you are, then.â
There was a silence. Cyril went onâ âthere was nothing else for itâ â
âYes, we took this out of your larder, and some chicken and tongue and bread. We were very hungry, and we didnât take the custard or jam. We only took bread and meat and waterâ âand we couldnât help its being the soda kindâ âjust the necessaries of life; and we left half-a-crown to pay for it, and we left a letter. And weâre very sorry. And my father will pay a fine or anything you like, but donât send us to prison. Mother would be so vexed. You know what you said about not being a disgrace. Well, donât you go and do it to usâ âthatâs all! Weâre as sorry as we can be. There!â
âHowever did you get up to the larder window?â said Mrs. Vicar.
âI canât tell you that,â said Cyril firmly.
âIs this the whole truth youâve been telling me?â asked the clergyman.
âNo,â answered Jane suddenly; âitâs all true, but itâs not the whole truth. We canât tell you that. Itâs no good asking. Oh, do forgive us and take us home!â She ran to the Vicarâs wife and threw her arms round her. The Vicarâs wife put her arms round Jane, and the keeper whispered behind his hand to the Vicarâ â
âTheyâre all right, sirâ âI expect itâs a pal theyâre standing by. Someone put âem up to it, and they wonât peach. Game little kids.â
âTell me,â said the Vicar kindly, âare you screening someone else? Had anyone else anything to do with this?â
âYes,â said Anthea, thinking of the Psammead; âbut it wasnât their fault.â
âVery well, my dears,â said the Vicar, âthen letâs say no more about it. Only just tell us why you wrote such an odd letter.â
âI donât know,â said Cyril. âYou see, Anthea wrote it in such a hurry, and it really didnât seem like stealing then. But afterwards, when we found we couldnât get down off the church-tower, it seemed just exactly like it. We are all very sorryâ ââ
âSay no more about it,â said the Vicarâs wife; âbut another time just think before you take other peopleâs tongues. Nowâ âsome cake and milk before you go home?â
When Andrew came to say that the horse was put to, and was he expected to be led alone into the trap that he had plainly seen from the first, he found the children eating cake and drinking milk and laughing at the Vicarâs jokes. Jane was sitting on the Vicarâs wifeâs lap.
So you see they got off better than they deserved.
The gamekeeper, who was the cookâs cousin, asked leave to drive home with them, and Andrew was only too glad to have someone to protect him from that trap he was so certain of.
When the wagonette reached their own house, between the chalk-quarry and the gravel-pit, the children were very sleepy, but they felt that they and the keeper were friends for life.
Andrew dumped the children down at the iron gate without a word.
âYou get along home,â said the Vicarage cookâs cousin, who was a gamekeeper. âIâll get me home on Shanksâ mare.â
So Andrew had to drive off alone, which he did not like at all, and it was the keeper that was cousin to the Vicarage cook who went with the children to the door, and, when they had been swept to bed in a whirlwind of reproaches, remained to explain to Martha and the cook and the housemaid exactly what had happened. He explained so well that Martha was quite amiable the next morning.
After that he often used to come over and see Martha, and in the endâ âbut that is another story, as dear Mr. Kipling says.
Martha was obliged to stick to what she had said the night before about keeping the children indoors the next day for a punishment. But she wasnât at all snarky about it, and agreed to let Robert go out for half an hour to get something he particularly wanted.
This, of course, was the dayâs wish.
Robert rushed to the gravel-pit, found the Psammead, and presently wished forâ â
But that, too, is another story.
VI A Castle and No DinnerThe others were to be kept in as a punishment for the misfortunes of the day before. Of course Martha thought it was naughtiness, and not misfortuneâ âso you must not blame her. She only thought she was doing her duty. You know, grown-up people often say they do not like to punish you, and that they only do it for your own good, and that it hurts them as much as it hurts youâ âand this is really very often the truth.
Martha certainly hated having to punish the children quite as much as they hated to be punished. For one thing, she knew what a noise there would be in the house all day. And she had other reasons.
âI declare,â she said to the cook, âit seems almost a shame keeping of them indoors this lovely day; but they are that audacious, theyâll be walking in with their heads knocked off some of these days, if I donât put my foot down. You make them a cake for tea tomorrow, dear. And weâll have Baby along of us soon as weâve got a bit forrard with our work. Then they can have a good romp with him out of the way. Now, Eliza, come, get on with them beds. Hereâs ten oâclock nearly, and no rabbits caught!â
People say that in Kent when they mean âand no work done.â
So all the others were kept in, but Robert, as I have said, was allowed to go out for half an hour to get something they all wanted. And that,
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