et's pull all together."
"Just what I want," said Smith.
"Well," said Philpot, "I propose we lock them up in the big schoolroom."
"Wouldn't it be better," said Flanagan, "to lock the Henniker up in her
own room, and let Ladislaw and Hashford have the parlour? It will be
more comfortable for them. There's a sofa there and a carpet. Besides,
the window's a worse one to get out of."
"How about feeding them?" some one asked.
"That'll be easy enough," said Smith. "There's a ventilator over all
the doors, you know. We can hand the things in there."
"I vote the old Hen gets precious little," interposed Rathbone. "I
wouldn't give her any."
This idea was scouted, and it was resolved that all the prisoners should
have a sufficient, though, at the same time, a limited amount of
provisions. That being arranged, the next question was, when should we
begin? We had to take a good many things into account in fixing the
important date. To-day was Friday. The butcher, some one said, always
brought the meat for the week on Monday; but the baker never came till
the Wednesday. So if we began operations on Monday we should have a
good supply of meat but very little bread to start with; and it was
possible, of course, the baker might smell a rat, and get up a rescue.
It would be better, on that account, to defer action till after the
baker's visit on Wednesday. But then the washerwoman generally came on
the Thursday. We all voted the washerwoman a nuisance. We must either
take her a prisoner and keep her in the house, or run the risk of her
finding out that something was wrong and going back to the village and
telling of us.
"If we could only keep it up a week," said Smith, "I think we could
bring them to terms."
"Suppose we drop a line to the washerwoman the day before not to call,"
suggested I.
The motion met with universal applause, and I was deputed to carry it
out at the proper time. The good lady's address I knew was on a slate
in Miss Henniker's pantry.
"And I tell you what," said Smith, starting up with the brilliancy of
the suggestion; "let's hide away all the bread we can find, except just
what will last over to-morrow. Then most likely she'll tell the baker
to call on Monday, and we can begin then!"
It was a brilliant suggestion. Two of the company departed forthwith to
the larder, and unobserved hid away a few loaves in one of the empty
trunks in the box-room.
Our plans were ripening
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