<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER V.</h2>
<p class="p2">When Cradock and Clayton were ten years old,
they witnessed a scene which puzzled them, and
dwelt long in their boyish memories. Job Hogstaff
was going to Ringwood, and they followed
him down the passage towards the entrance–hall,
emphatically repeating the commissions with which
they had charged him. Old Job loved them as if
they were his grandsons, and would do his utmost
to please them, but they could not trust his
memory, or even his capacity.</p>
<p>“Now, Job”, cried little Cradock, pulling at his
coat–lappet, “itʼs no good pretending that you
know all, when you wonʼt even stop to listen. Iʼm
sure youʼll go and make some great mistake, as
you did last Tuesday. Mind you tell Mr. Stride
itʼs for Master Cradock Nowell, and they must be
sure to give you a good one, or I shall send it back.
Now just tell me what I have told you. I ought
to have written it down, but I wasnʼt sure how to
spell ‘groove’”.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Why, Master Crad, Iʼm to say a long spill,
very sharp at the end”.</p>
<p>“Sharp at the <i>point</i>, Job, not blunt at the end
like a new black–lead pencil”.</p>
<p>“And whatever you do, Job, donʼt forget the
catgut for my cross–bow, one size larger than last
time”.</p>
<p>“Hold your jaw, Viley, till Iʼve quite finished;
or heʼll ask for a top made of catgut”.</p>
<p>Both the boys laughed at this; you could hear
them all down the long passage. Any small folly
makes a boy laugh.</p>
<p>“Well, Master Crad, you <i>must</i> think me a
‘muff’, as you call it. And the groove is to go
quite up to the spill; there must be two rings
below the crown of it”.</p>
<p>“Below the crown, indeed! On the fat part, I
said three times. Now, Viley, you know you heard
me”.</p>
<p>“Well, well”, cried Job in despair, “two rings
on the fat part, and no knot at all in the wood,
and at least six inches round, and, and, well—I
think thatʼs all of it, thank the Lord”.</p>
<p>“All of it, indeed! Well, you <i>are</i> a nice fellow!
Didnʼt I tell you so, Viley? Why, youʼve left out
altogether the most important point of all, Job. The
wood must be a clear bright yellow, or else a very rich
gold colour, and Iʼm to pay for it next Tuesday,
because I spent my weekʼs money yesterday, as
soon as ever I got it, and—oh, Viley! canʼt you lend
a fellow sixpence”?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“No, not to save my life, sir. Why, Craddy,
you know I wouldnʼt let you go tick if I could”.</p>
<p>The boys rushed at one another, half in fun and
half in affection, and, seizing each other by the belt
of the light–plaid tunic, away they went dancing
down the hall, while Hogstaff whistled a polka
gently, with his old eyes glistening after them. A
prettier pair, or better matched, never set young
locks afloating. Each put his healthy, clear, bright
face on the shoulder of the other, each flung out
his short–socked legs, and pointed his dainty feet.
You could see their shapely calves jerked up as
they went with double action, and the hollow of
the back curved in, as they threw asunder recklessly,
then clasped one another again, and you
thought they must both reel over. Sir Cradock
Nowell hated trousers, and would not have their
hair cropped, because it was like their motherʼs;
otherwise they would not have looked one quarter
so picturesque.</p>
<p>Before the match was fairly finished—for they
were used to this sort of thing, and the object
always was to see which would give in first—it was
cut short most unexpectedly. While they were
taking a sharp pirouette down at the end of the
hall—and as they whirled round I defy their father
to have known the one from the other—the door of
the stewardʼs room opened suddenly, and a tall
dark woman came out. The twins in full merriment
dashed up against her, and must have fallen
if she had not collared them with strong and bony<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>
arms. Like little gentlemen, as they were, every
atom of them, they turned in a moment to apologise,
and their cheeks were burning red. They
saw a gaunt old woman, wide–shouldered, stern,
and forcible.</p>
<p>“Oo, ah! a bonnie pair yeʼve gat, as I see in all
my life lang. But yeʼll get no luck o’ them. Takʼ
the word o’ threescore year, yeʼll never get no luck
o’ them, you that calls yoursel’ Craydock Nowell”.</p>
<p>She was speaking to Sir Cradock, who had followed
her from the stewardʼs room, and who
seemed as much put out as a proud man of fifty
ever cares to show himself. He made no answer,
and the two poor children fell back against a side–bench.</p>
<p>“Iʼll no talk o’ matters noo. Youʼve a giʼen me
my refoosal, and I tak’ it once for all. But yeʼll
be sorry for the day ye did it, Craydock Nowell”.</p>
<p>To the great amazement of Hogstaff, who was
more taken aback than any one else, Sir Cradock
Nowell, without a word, walked to the wide front
door with ceremony, as if he were leading a peeress
out. He did not offer his arm to the woman, but
neither did he shrink from her; she gathered her
dark face up again from its softening glance at the
children, and without another word or look, but
sweeping her skirt around her, away she walked
down the broad front road, as stiff and as stern as
the oak–trees.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span></p>
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