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should have gone down and broken some of the geraniums, but they escaped, and I leaped to my feet and faced them angrily. "Here, what's your name?" said Courtenay haughtily. I swallowed my annoyance, and answered: "Grant." "What a name for a boy!" said Courtenay. "I say, Phil, isn't his hair cut short. He ought to have his ears trimmed too. Here, where are your father and mother?" I felt a catch in my throat as I tried to answer steadily: "Dead." "There, I told you so," cried Philip. "He hasn't got any father or mother. Didn't you come out of the workhouse, pauper?" "No," I said steadily, as my fingers itched to strike him. "Here, what was your father?" said Courtenay. I did not answer. "Do you hear? And say `sir' when you speak," cried Courtenay with a brutal insolent manner that seemed to fit with his dark thin face. "I say, do you hear, boy?" "Yes," I replied. "Yes, _sir_, you beggar," cried Courtenay. "What was your father?" "He don't know," cried Philip grinning. "Pauper boys don't know. They're all mixed up together, and they call 'em Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, or names of streets or places, anything. He doesn't know what his father was. He was mixed up with a lot more." "I'll make him answer," said Courtenay. "Here, what was your father?" "An officer and a gentleman," I said proudly. "Ha! ha! ha!" laughed Philip, dancing about with delight, and hanging on to his brother, who laughed too. "Here's a game--a gardener's boy a gentleman! Oh my!" I was sorry I had said those words, but they slipped out, and I stood there angry and mortified before my tormentors. "I say, Court, don't he look like a gentleman? Look at the knees of his trousers, and his fists." "Never mind," said Courtenay, "I want to bat. Look here, you, sir, can you play cricket?" "Yes," I said, "a little." "Yes, _sir_, you beggar; how many more times am I to tell you! Come out in the field. You've got to bowl for us. Here, catch!" He threw a cricket-ball he had in his hand at me with all his might, and in a nasty spiteful way, but I caught it, and in a jeering way Philip shouted: "Well fielded. Here, come on, Court. We'll make the beggar run." I hesitated, for I wanted to go on with my work, but these were my master's sons, and I felt that I ought to obey. "What are you standing staring like that for, pauper?" cried Philip. "Didn't you hear Mr Courtenay say you were to come
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