While the Billy Boils Henry Lawson (best ereader for pc TXT) đ
- Author: Henry Lawson
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âAnd are you still working at Grinder Brothersâ?â
âNo. I got tired of slavinâ there for next to nothing. I got sick of my stepfather waitinâ outside for me on payday, with a dirty, drunken, spieler pal of his waitinâ round the corner for him. There wasnât nothinâ in it. It got to be too rough altogether.â ââ ⊠Blast Grinders!â
âAnd what are you doing now?â
âSellinâ papers. Iâm always tryinâ to get a start in somethinâ else, but I ainât got no luck. I always come back to, sellinâ papers.â
Then, after a thought, he added reflectively: âBlast papers!â
His present ambition was to drive a cart.
âI drove a cart twice, and once I rode a butcherâs horse. A bloke worked me out of one billet, and I worked myself out of the other. I didnât know when I was well off. Then the banks went bust, and my last boss went insolvent, and one of his partners went into Darlinghurst for suicide, and the other went into Gladesville for being mad; and one day the bailiff seized the cart and horse with me in it and a load of timber. So I went home and helped mother and the kids to live on one meal a day for six months, and keep the bum-bailiff out. Another cove had my newsstand.â
Then, after a thought:
âBlast reconstriction!â
âBut you surely canât make a living selling newspapers?â
âNo, thereâs nothinâ in it. Thereâs too many at it. The blessed women spoil it. Thereâs one got a good stand down in George Street, and sheâs got a dozen kids sellinââ âthey canât be all hersâ âand then sheâs got the hide to come up to my stand and sell in front of me.â ââ ⊠What are you thinkinâ about doinâ, Mrs. Aspinall?â
âI donât know,â she wailed. âI really donât know what to do.â
And there still being some distance to go, she plunged into her tale of misery once more, not forgetting the length of time she had dealt with her creditors.
Bill pushed his hat forward and walked along on the edge of the kerb.
âCanât you shift? Ainât you got no people or friends that you can go to for a while?â
âOh, yes; thereâs my sister-in-law; sheâs asked me times without number to come and stay with her till things got better, and sheâs got a hard enough struggle herself, Lord knows. She asked me again only yesterday.â
âWell, that ainât too bad,â reflected Bill. âWhy donât you go?â
âWell, you see, if I did they wouldnât let me take my furniture, and sheâs got next to none.â
âWonât the landlord let you take your furniture?â
âNo, not him! Heâs one of the hardest landlords in Sydneyâ âthe worst I ever had.â
âThatâs red-hot!â ââ ⊠Iâd take it in spite of him. He canât do nothinâ.â
âBut I darenât; and even if I did I havenât got a penny to pay for a van.â
They neared the alley. Bill counted the flagstones, stepping from one to another over the joints. âEighteen-nineteen-twenty-twenty-one!â he counted mentally, and came to the corner kerbing. Then he turned suddenly and faced her.
âIâll tell you what to do,â he said decidedly. âCan you get your things ready by tonight? I know a cove thatâs got a cart.â
âBut I darenât. Iâm afraid of the landlord.â
âThe more fool you,â said Bill. âWell, Iâm not afraid of him. He canât do nothinâ. Iâm not afraid of a landlady, and thatâs worse. I know the law. He canât do nothinâ. You just do as I tell you.â
âIâd want to think over it first, and see my sister-in-law.â
âWhere does your sister-ân-law live?â
âNot far.â
âWell, see her, and think over itâ âyouâve got plenty of time to do it inâ âand get your things ready by dark. Donât be frightened. Iâve shifted mother and an aunt and two married sisters out of worse fixes than yours. Iâll be round after dark, and bring a push to lend a hand. Theyâre decent coves.â
âBut I canât expect your friend to shift me for nothing. I told you I havenât got aâ ââ
âMrs. Aspinall, I ainât that sort of a bloke, neither is my chum, and neither is the other fellowsâ âârelse they wouldnât be friends of mine. Will you promise, Mrs. Aspinall?â
âIâm afraidâ âIâ âIâd like to keep my few things now. Iâve kept them so long. Itâs hard to lose my few bits of thingsâ âI wouldnât care so much if I could keep the ironinâ table.â
âSo you could, by lawâ âitâs necessary to your living, but it would cost moreân the table. Now, donât be soft, Mrs. Aspinall. Youâll have the bailiff in any day, and be turned out in the end without a rag. The law knows no ânecessary.â You want your furniture moreân the landlord does. He canât do nothinâ. You can trust it all to me.â ââ ⊠I knowâd Arvie.â ââ ⊠Will you do it?â
âYes, I will.â
At about eight oâclock that evening there came a mysterious knock at Mrs. Aspinallâs door. She opened, and there stood Bill. His attitude was businesslike, and his manner very impressive. Three other boys stood along by the window, with their backs to the wall, deeply interested in the emptying of burnt cigarette-ends into a piece of newspaper laid in the crown of one of their hats, and a fourth stood a little way along the kerb casually rolling a cigarette, and keeping a quiet eye out for suspicious appearances. They were of different makes and sizes, but there seemed an undefined similarity between them.
âThis is my push, Mrs. Aspinall,â said Bill; âat least,â he added apologetically, âitâs part of âem. Here, you chaps, this is Mrs. Aspinall, what I told you about.â
They elbowed the wall back, rubbed their heads with their hats, shuffled round, and seemed to take a vacant sort of interest in abstract objects, such as the pavement, the gas-lamp, and neighbouring doors and windows.
âGot the things ready?â asked Bill.
âOh, yes.â
âGot âem downstairs?â
âThereâs no upstairs. The rooms above belong to the next house.â
âAnd a nice house it is,â said Bill, âfor rooms to belong to. I
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