FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215   216   217   218   219   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   228   >>  
ve done ye no harm as yet, just keep quiet and they will do ye none whatever. Ye are no Stennis. The Stennises are a' weel-faured!" "But I want to help--I want to get in! De'il tak' ye, Rob, let me in!" I think even the vicar, good Churchman as he is (though not in Mr. Ablethorpe's sense) would have forgiven me the strength of the last expression--considering the provocation, that is. As also the fact that, living so near Scotland, where there are so many "Presbies" about, the very best Churchman is sometimes seduced into their rough, but picturesque, habit of speech. "Here, Joe!" said Rob, after a while, taking pity on me. He opened a little wicket--just one pane of his iron-barred window, for my father had had everything about the place strengthened at the first scare about Riddick of Langbarns and the other lost farmers and drovers; "here, lad, tak' haud o' this! There's a barrel that had sugar intil't doon by the weighing machine. Creep into that. And mind--dinna shoot onybody. Use the pistol only in self-defence. There's nae law again' that!" The next moment I had a revolver in one hand and a pouch of cartridges in the other--yellow bag, waist belt and all! I tell you I felt the citizen of no mean city as I buckled them on. I would not have changed places with the Prince of Wales going to open an Aquarium. For, you see, I had never been allowed to go near the little room where my father kept the firearms for sale, the sporting ammunition, and the other touch-and-go truck, which interested me more than anything in the place. Of course, when father was lost for so long, I could have gone and helped myself. But, though you mayn't think it, I had a sort of pride about that. I wasn't going to do when he was away what I durstn't do when he was stamping about the yard and stores. So I didn't. But to have a real, _real_ revolver given me, with proper cartridges--and me outside and all the others inside--why, it was just the primest thing that ever happened to me in all my life. When I reached the outer gate (that by which Dapple had entered, Mad Jeremy, no doubt, riding her to the door) Rob McKinstrey shouted that if I looked sharp he would let me in and have the yard door shut again before ever one of the Paddies could get his nose inside. But I knew better than that--oh, ever so much better. Not many fellows get a chance to die nobly, like a young hero, in front of his own father's house
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215   216   217   218   219   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   228   >>  



Top keywords:
father
 

inside

 

revolver

 
cartridges
 

Churchman

 
helped
 

Prince

 

places

 

changed

 

citizen


buckled

 
Aquarium
 

sporting

 

ammunition

 

firearms

 

allowed

 

interested

 

Paddies

 

looked

 
riding

McKinstrey

 

shouted

 
fellows
 

chance

 

Jeremy

 

stores

 

proper

 
stamping
 

durstn

 
reached

Dapple

 

entered

 

primest

 

happened

 
weighing
 

living

 

Scotland

 
Presbies
 

expression

 

provocation


speech

 
picturesque
 

seduced

 

strength

 

forgiven

 

Stennis

 

Stennises

 

Ablethorpe

 

faured

 

onybody