Читать книгу The Whiteoak Brothers - Mazo de la Roche - Страница 6

CHAPTER 4
A RISE IN STOCKS

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“Poetry and making money,” said Eden, “go extremely well together. I wonder that poets in the past have never tried it.”

His Uncle Ernest was the only member of the family to whom he openly spoke of himself as a poet. Of course they all knew he wrote poetry and, according to their various temperaments, looked on it as a pleasant pastime, a weakness inherited from his mother, or a waste of the valuable hours which he should be devoting to the study of law. All but Ernest. He appreciated the promise shown by the young poet and, when Eden came to his room and read him his latest verses, he was gratified. Their literary gifts were a link between them. He himself had been engaged, for some years, in the preparation of a book on Shakespeare though he had never yet produced a manuscript to show his family, and Nicholas openly doubted the possibility of his ever producing one.

Uncle and nephew had had many an agreeable talk in the comfortable privacy of Ernest’s room where the walls were decorated by water-colour drawings of English scenery he had done in his earlier days. In fact there was at least one of these in every room in the house. But never before had they enjoyed a talk of this nature. In the past their talk of money had concerned the lack of it, on Eden’s part, and how quickly it went, on Ernest’s. But, since the speculation in the Indigo Lake Mine, the subject of money had taken on a new and delightful aspect. To-day they were hilarious.

From the very week of Ernest’s investment the price of Indigo Lake stocks had been rising. Not in a spectacular fashion but steadily, firmly, in a way to give the investor confidence. Mr. Kronk kept Eden informed on the matter each day. Another bright-coloured brochure arrived confirming these reports. Almost every day after his lectures he went to Mr. Kronk’s apartment and, if he were not there, Mrs. Kronk was and always with good news for him. She would give him not tea but a cocktail. Never before had he enjoyed himself in this way. A commission of twenty-five per cent on the investments of his uncles and Piers was paid to him by Mr. Kronk—paid with a smile, just as though he’d earned it. Nicholas, picturing a winter on the Riviera, doubled the amount he had invested. After a month of watching the rise of Indigo Lake, Ernest had more than trebled his. Now he saw a gain so splendid that his fingers fairly itched to write still larger cheques.

He was an agile man, an affectionate one. In the hilarity of the moment he threw an arm about Eden, clasped him in a dancing position, and they waltzed the length of the room. Sasha, his cat, rose from her sleep on the bed to watch them, arching her back, making her legs long and her face a mask of disdain.

“I couldn’t have believed it,” Ernest exclaimed, panting a little at the end of the waltz. “I had become very nervous about speculation since my last misfortunes. But this—my dear boy, it’s wonderful. To think that a chance meeting on the train ...”

“And if you could meet him! He doesn’t look capable of big business enterprises. Just a confiding little man, with a cosy manner. But there’s nothing he doesn’t know about mining. Knows all that north country like the palm of his hand. Apparently taken a real shine to me.”

Ernest squared his shoulders. “I shall invest more. Do you think we ought to bring your Uncle Nicholas into this? It does seem a shame that he should not share in it.”

Eden considered. He felt himself to be getting into a corner. He said, “I think we’d better not. You know he doesn’t like speculation.” Eden now rather wished that there had been no secrecy in the affair. But how was he to know that it would be such a stupendous success?

Nicholas, though waltzing was beyond him, was enormously pleased. He beat the arm of his chair with his clenched fist and exclaimed, “By God, this is the best thing that’s happened to me in many a day!” He did not suggest letting his brother in on the affair but rather took a rise out of how surprised old Ernie would be when he discovered what an astute speculator he was.

Piers, on his part, had never shown such eagerness to help with the work of farm, stables, or orchard. No work was too hard or too tedious. Good farm labourers were scarce and he hired himself to Renny with a zeal for work that amazed his elder. At the same time he showed rather a disconcerting greed as to wages. Whatever he earned he handed over to Eden to invest for him, with childlike trust. Eden had opened a savings account in a city bank and in it he almost religiously deposited all that he earned in commission. Half a dozen times a day he would take the little deposit book from his pocket and examine it, relishing how the amount increased. He kept a map in his desk, and when he had saved enough to pay his passage to Europe, he drew a red line from Montreal to Le Havre and from there to Paris. He calculated what it would cost him to spend a month there, and the day came when he dared print, still in red ink, a month here. He borrowed books about Paris from his uncles. Ernest brought out an old album of photographs and picture postcards of Paris, the French and Italian Rivieras, Florence, Rome, and Sicily, and, as he pored over them with Eden, he read him bits from a journal he had kept on his travels. It required the greatest self-restraint on the part of Ernest and Nicholas to conceal their exhilaration from each other and from the family. They made no attempt to conceal their feeling of well-being and good-humour. Things that in ordinary times irritated them now brought only a tolerant smile to their lips. Wakefield’s noise and naughtiness, their old mother’s irascibility, did not ruffle them. Piers consistently worked, and with equal consistency showed an increasing greed for his pay. All he earned he handed over to Eden to invest for him.

Before the summer had well begun Eden had persuaded his sister to invest in the Indigo Lake Mine. Meg had little of the speculator in her nature and was averse from acknowledging to the family that she had anything more than enough for her barest needs. Yet she was tempted and at last succumbed. When Eden was able to tell her of the rise in the stock of Indigo Lake she was so elated that, if he had not restrained her, she would have hurled all she had into the speculation.

But his young brother, his sister, and his uncles were small catches for Eden. He longed for an investor possessed of substantial means and more and more often his thoughts turned to his grandmother. The great obstacle was her age. Could he make her understand what the proposition was? Would it be possible to accomplish a transaction without the knowledge of her lawyer, Mr. Patton? All the family were aware that her fortune was invested in the most conservative way, and her sons held it regrettable that this was so and that consequently her income was not so large as it might have been. Not that they ever saw more of it than sufficed for her few needs and the occasional present she gave.

Several times Eden went to the door of her bedroom before she was up with the determination to sound her on the subject, but each time his courage failed him. She might give the whole affair away to the family and bring down blame on himself for having suggested such a speculation to her. Of late he’d had quite enough censure over his failure in his exams to last him the rest of his life. Yet—he could not keep his mind off the delightful prospect of landing such a glittering fish as she. And it would be all for her own good! She might indeed be so grateful to him that she would increase the legacy he was sure she had already left him in her will.

This indecision could not continue and it ended one morning when, in passing her room, he saw that the door stood open and she herself was seated in a low chair beside a stool on which stood a basin of water. She was washing the rings which she wore every day—her wedding ring, her engagement ring, and five others, too many to be in good taste for any woman, to say nothing of a woman of her great age. But somehow they suited her, and her family could not picture her shapely old hands without them.

She saw Eden’s reflection in the mirror and called out—“Come in, Eden, come in, and tell me what mischief you’re up to.”

Their eyes met in the mirror. They smiled and he came into the room, closing the door behind him.

Once he was inside that room and the door shut, its atmosphere enfolded him. She had been reared in a less sanitary period than this. She distrusted night air and did not mind having her parrot free in her room, or his seeds or feathers scattered about.

Now, however, it was almost noon, the window stood wide open and the heavy white plumes of the lilac-tree beyond it added their scent to the air.

Eden bent over her and kissed her between the eyes. The hairs of her eyebrows were strong and he was conscious of the fine white ruching on her cap.

“What mischief now?” she demanded.

“No mischief, Gran. Business.”

She appeared not to take this in but applied herself, breathing audibly, to the washing of her rings.

“I like that ruby ring,” he said.

“Aye. It’s a fine stone. A rajah gave it me.”

“I wish I knew all your past, Granny.”

That caught her humour and she chuckled.

“Some day I’ll tell you and you may make a poem about it.”

“An epic, Gran.”

“You’ll not get it out of me by flattery.”

“You’ve a tremendous suds in the basin. Would you like me to wash the rings for you?”

“No, no. I like something to busy myself with. When you get to my age it doesn’t take much to amuse you.... A little soap and water. A few rings to wash.”

Eden dropped to his knees and his bright glance sought her. Seeing his face thus close she had a good look at it. She said—“You’re too handsome. You’ll have trouble with women.”

“Renny’s the one they’re after.”

“Him! I hope he’ll make a better husband than did my father that he’s the spit of.”

“I love you when you’re common, Granny.”

She grinned. “Who was it? Longfellow? Who said that about not losing the common touch?”

Hilarious, Eden answered—“Longfellow. The best thing he ever wrote.”

She dried the rings and restored them to her fingers, then spread out her hands to admire.

“Not bad-looking hands for a woman of my age, eh? I’ve had them for near a hundred years.”

“I’ve always admired your hands, Gran.”

She clasped them on her stomach and flung at him suddenly—“This business. What’s it about?”

He’d half made up his mind not to tell her of his scheme. It was too dangerous. She perceived the hesitation on his face. “Come now,” she said, “tell me. I like to hear about business affairs—if they’re sensible.”

“I don’t think this would interest you, Gran.”

“Then why did you shut the door?”

The moment had come. He could not resist it. He took her hand, with the rings still moist and warm on it, in his. He said low—“It’s a gold mine, Granny. Up in the North. A wonderful chance for anyone who has money to invest. It’s just being developed. A wonderful rich vein. Fortunes are being made out of it. I know a man——”

“Gold!” she interrupted with avidity. “Gold, eh?” Had it been silver or any other metal she would not have been interested. But the word “gold” fired her imagination. Gold she could understand.

Her parrot, which had been tossing seeds from his cup in search for his favourites, now cocked his head and rapped out—“Gold! Gold! Gold! Pieces of eight! Pieces of eight!”

Adeline Whiteoak clapped her hands together. “Hark to him! He knows every word we say.”

“It’s a good omen,” laughed Eden, taking her two hands in his. “Listen, Gran.”

“Yes, yes. Tell me all.” She was not only interested but complaisant to hear the whole story of the Indigo Lake Mine. Eden, now becoming a glib promoter, poured it out, embroidering the material recital with colourful and poetic words. She leant closer, drinking it in, her mouth open a little, the strong curling hairs on her chin quivering. The parrot sprang from his perch and alighted on her shoulder screaming—“Gold—gold—pieces of eight—pieces of eight!” in passionate repetition.

Eden showed her the coloured folder, the machinery of the mine pictured against a turquoise-blue sky with Indigo Lake beyond. She made him fetch her magnifying glass from the bureau and she pored over the pictures. She had investments, sound ones, good ones, but nothing in gold. Her imagination, with little to feed it nowadays, was fired. A smouldering resentment she was feeling for her lawyer, Mr. Patton, because of his what she considered overbearing ways made her relish the thought of deceiving him.

“I’ll do it,” she cried, giving a thump to Eden’s knee. “I’ll do it to-day.”

Eden’s heart quickened its beat. “How much, Gran?”

She frowned, then exclaimed—“Fifty thousand. I’ll invest fifty thousand dollars.”

He drew back in horror. “Oh, you can’t do that, Granny. It’s too much.”

She grinned. “I never do things by halves.”

Eden felt panic. He wished he had not spoken. He folded the prospectus. “This is very tiring for you, Granny,” he said. “Better put it out of your mind.”

“Now you talk like your Uncle Ernest. This doesn’t tire me. Does me good.”

“But you mustn’t invest so much.”

“Who says must and mustn’t to me?”

She was taking things out of his hands—and she going on for a hundred!

He said—“Supposing you should lose the money? What then?”

She arched her neck and her voice came harsh and strong. “I never lose. If the gold is there—it’s there. Is it there?”

At the mention of gold Boney reiterated—“Pieces of eight—pieces of eight!” Then added in Hindustani—“Kutni—Kutni—Paji—Shaitan ka khatla!”

Eden said—“Yes. The gold is there all right. It’s a wonderful investment but I do advise you to go slowly at the first. My broker would advise that.”

“A hundred dollars then.”

There was a terrible decline. Eden hesitated, not knowing what to say.

She perceived this and said, with sudden sweetness—“You tell me then.”

He could not stop himself. He heard himself saying—“What about ten thousand?”

“Just the right amount,” she agreed, and he felt that she could no longer differentiate between one sum of money and another, though she loved all gain. What troubled him still more was, now that she had agreed to invest in the mine, how to put through the transaction. He knew nothing of business, and dared not enquire of his uncles or Renny.

Over and over he made her promise to divulge nothing of the scheme to the family. She was becoming very tired and docilely nodded her head, on which the lace of her cap trembled, in agreement. He himself felt tired and wiped his moist brow with his hand when he had closed the door behind him. He was torn between exhilaration and anxiety. Then the image of Mr. Kronk rose before him. There was the man who would know just what to do. He would go to see him that very day.

He did go to the city, taking the opportunity of driving in with Renny. As he sat beside his elder, bumping over the rough bits in the old car, his eyes slid every now and again toward that hard profile he knew so well. Certainly it was an arresting profile—the nose handsome, with its proud nostrils, so like his grandmother’s. Now the mouth and eyes expressed contemptuous concentration, for he disliked motoring and distrusted the car, having rather the attitude toward it of one of his own horses.

In the city he asked—“Where shall I drop you?”

Eden hesitated, then said—“Oh, anywhere.”

“Anywhere? But where do you want to go?”

“Which way are you going? Anywhere will suit me.”

Renny gave him a quick look. “What did you come in for then? Just to have a look round?”

“Well, actually I came in to see another student about some books.”

“Do you mean he’s going to lend you books? I hope he is, for your books cost like the devil.”

“He might, if he has what I want. He lives in the Norfolk Apartments.”

“Good. I can easily drop you there. You’d better go home by train.”

It was in the Norfolk Apartments that the Kronks lived. Eden found the husband away and the wife at home. Eden was conscious of how glad she was to see him. She used more lipstick than was usual in those days and he saw a touch of eye-shadow beneath her clear light eyes. She was as tall as he, so that their eyes met on a level. She wore one of the long-waisted short-skirted dresses of the time and when they sat down and she crossed her legs Eden noticed how shapely they were. Her silk stockings were more sheer and lighter in colour than any he had seen. She saw the glance he gave them and exclaimed:

“Since you were last here I’ve been down to New York. I did some shopping. I hope you don’t think these too sheer.” She stretched out her legs side by side, close together, the high-heeled shoes looking ridiculously small for her height.

“I think they’re very pretty,” Eden said rather nervously, for she was a type new to him. Then he added—“I suppose New York is wonderful. I’ve never been.”

“Ah, wonderful! I did something else besides shop. Haven’t you noticed?”

He looked her over but could discover nothing different about her. He murmured—“You always look so well-dressed.”

“It’s not clothes. Look!” She bent her head and he saw that her hair was cut short.

“You’ve had your hair bobbed,” he exclaimed.

“Not bobbed, it’s shingled. Do tell me you like it. My husband hates it. He liked my hair but it was such a nuisance.”

“I think this looks very nice.”

She straightened herself and gave him that confidential smile of hers. “I’m so glad,” she said. “I couldn’t have borne your not liking it.”

“But I do. I like it awfully well.” His colour rose. He did not quite know what she expected of him and he had but one desire and that was to talk business.

With sudden matter-of-factness she said—“I’m going to get you a drink.” She went into the dining-room, which was separated by only an archway from the living-room, and began to busy herself at the sideboard. He stood, rather shyly, watching her from this distance. But while they were drinking their Scotch, he began:

“I suppose Mr. Kronk was in New York on business.”

She gave a little chuckle. “He certainly was. Nothing but. My, how those New Yorkers gobbled up the Indigo Lake shares.” She finished her drink with an audible smack of the lips.

Compared to this his news seemed insignificant. He said—“My grandmother has money she’d like to invest but....”

Instantly Mrs. Kronk gave him the full attention of her clear light eyes. “Your grandmother? Aren’t you lucky to have so many affluent relations!”

He did not quite like this. He said, a little stiffly—“The difficulty is that she doesn’t know, nor do I, how to go about selling government bonds and reinvesting. You see, she can’t go to her bank. She’s rather old.”

“About eighty or more?”

“More. Considerably.”

“Couldn’t those uncles of yours arrange it for her?”

“She’d rather they didn’t know. They’d be all for caution where she’s concerned.”

“Well, then, all you need is a power of attorney. I have the forms right here. Just get her to sign them.”

It was all so simple. When Eden left the apartment house, with the forms in his pocket, his exhilaration was such that he had walked some distance before he noticed rain coming down. By the time he had boarded a street car big glittering drops were bouncing on the pavement and the bottoms of his trousers were soaked. On the way to the railway station the street lights came on and by their light he saw at the corner the ten-year-old family car and at the wheel his brother. There was no time in which to buy tickets. Eden thrust his fare to the conductor and pushed his way through the closing door just in time. Through the downpour he reached the running-board of the car, rapped on the pane, and was inside just before the jolt with which the master of Jalna invariably started the car threw him on to the seat.

Renny said—“Well, that was neatly done.”

“I was mighty glad to see you.”

“Did you get the books?”

“The books?”

“Your friend was going to lend you.”

“Oh, those! Unfortunately no. The ones he has aren’t of any use to me.”

His brother threw him the glance of suspicion that seemed always ready beneath his mobile brows, and asked: “Who is this fellow?”

Eden thought: “Once you’ve been into trouble everyone’s so ready to suspect you—especially old Redhead.” His brain was so excited by the interview with Mrs. Kronk, by the thought of the power of attorney in his pocket, that he was less agile in self-defence than usual. He stammered—“Oh, he’s a fellow by the name of—” before he could stop himself he said—“Kronk.”

“Kronk,” repeated Renny and put the most sinister implications into that syllable. “Who is he?”

“Oh, you wouldn’t know. He comes from Saskatchewan.”

“Studying law?”

“Yes.”

“What’s he doing here in the holidays?”

“He’s got a job.”

“How can he afford to live in such an expensive apartment house?”

“Well—you see—his father’s a very rich man.”

“Rancher?”

“Yes—that’s it.”

“Then why doesn’t this fellow go home to the ranch when he might be of some use instead of taking a job in the city?”

“Well, you see, he’s had words with his father and doesn’t want to go home.”

“H’m.” Renny apparently thought none the better of young Kronk for that. His expression was grim as he took out an old cloth and wiped the steam from the streaming wind-shield.

Eden asked pleasantly—“When do you think of buying a new car?” Instantly he realised that this was about the last question he should have asked. There was a taciturn silence before his brother returned—“I never think of it.”

“Never! Good Lord.”

“There are other things I need much more.”

The traffic was dense at this point, or so it seemed to them who could not realise what later it would become.

“In 1903,” said Renny, “there were one hundred and seventy-eight motor vehicles on the road in Ontario. Now, twenty years later, there are two hundred and seventy-eight thousand, seven hundred and fifty-two.”

Eden stared in wonder. “How on earth do you remember those figures?”

“Because I’m interested. I dislike ’em so.” He gave a savage grin at the driver of a large new car who had tried to cut in on them.

Eden said, letting out his breath—“Whew, that was a close call.”

“He needed a lesson.”

There was silence till they had left the city and the road was almost deserted. On one hand lay wet summer fields, the heavy heads of the grain drooping under the rain, woodlands where coming night was already welcomed, and on the other the grey expanse of the lake. Renny stopped the car, lighted a cigarette and offered one to Eden who asked: “Did you buy the filly you’ve been speaking of?”

“No. Worse luck. A man from Pittsburg got in ahead of me. Bought her yesterday.”

Eden made a sound of sympathy.

Renny continued—“I should have made a lot of money out of that filly. She’s a beauty. But that is what comes of being short of cash.” He sighed, wiped the wind-shield and started the car.

“That was quite a bump,” Eden said, recovering himself.

“She always starts like that,” returned his elder laconically.

“Like me to drive?”

“No, thanks.”

Eden had a sudden feeling of pity for him. Here he was in need of money, and there was money to be made, and so easily made, in the Indigo Lake enterprise. He had a mind to tell Renny then and there. Indeed it would be unfair, even heartless not to tell him. He need not let him know that any others of the family had invested in the stock. He said:

“A chap I was talking to this afternoon has been making quite a lot of money out of stocks.”

“Oh, what stocks?”

“Mining. A gold mine.”

“He can have them. Eventually he’ll lose. I’d not put a dollar into mining stocks. There are enough suckers without me. Now I’ll tell you what does interest me. There’s a sale of livestock near Stead next week. Like to come with me?”

Well, thought Eden, there is no use in trying to do anything for Renny. He simply won’t be helped. But how he’ll regret it when he finds what he’s missed. A thrill ran through his nerves when he thought of the power of attorney in his pocket. The rain continued steady and the wind from the lake was cool. When they passed through the tiny village into the road which led to Jalna only the lights from windows twinkled through the darkness and they passed or met no one. The massive pines, two hundred years old, that still lined this road were embracing their final decade and beneath their arch it was black night. In their own driveway they splashed through puddles between hemlock and spruce and passed the house brightly lighted. Eden would have liked to get out here but they were chatting amiably and he would not interrupt their good-fellowship.

A dim light came from the stable. Wright, the cheerful head stableman, opened the door to them.

“Heard you coming, sir. What a night it’s turning out to be!”

“How’s everything, Wright?”

“Fine, sir. May I ask if you got the filly?”

“No. She was sold yesterday.”

“Too bad. She was a promising one.”

“Yes.”

There were fifteen horses in the stable—show horses, polo ponies which were bred and schooled here, and the farm horses. They had been fed, watered, and bedded down for the night. Some had lain down to rest but others stood watching out of lustrous eyes the approach of the three men. Renny moved past stalls and loose boxes speaking to each, putting out a hand to caress a pet. The mare Cora, his favourite saddle horse, got up with a clatter of hooves when she heard the loved voice and uttered a deep-throated whinny. Renny went into the loose box to put an arm about her and she swung her carven head to nuzzle him.

Eden, with the smell of clean straw, the smell of well-cared-for beasts in his nostrils, studied the picture made by man and horse in the loose box. He found in them a curious resemblance. It was in the bold naked lines of the head, in the look of wariness, of sensitivity to the physical world. As Renny talked with Wright Eden saw how the two recovered from their disappointment. Renny was cheerful when he said good-night to Wright and went out into the rain with Eden.

The air was full of heady scents from the earth. The house, all lighted, looked larger than it really was. As they passed into the porch the wet leaves of the Virginia creeper, shaken by a gust, sent down a small deluge on their heads.

“Oh, boys, I’m so glad you’re back,” their sister exclaimed, as they appeared at the door of the drawing-room. “What a night it’s turning out to be!”

“And cool for the time of year,” added Ernest.

“Quite a relief after the heat,” said Nicholas. He was seated at the piano and had been playing one of Mendelssohn’s Songs without Words. Young Finch sat on the window-seat his head bent, listening. Piers came to meet Renny, asking—“Did you get the filly?”

“No. She was gone.”

“Oh, hell.”

His grandmother peered at him round the wing of her chair. “Hell?” she repeated, with relish as it were. “Hell. Is that what I heard you say?”

Piers grunted assent.

“Well, I won’t have it. I won’t have you bring your swearing and cursing into the house. Too much of it here. I heard someone else use bad language not five minutes ago. Who was it?”

“Boney,” grinned Piers.

“He swears in Hindustani. That’s different.”

Renny bent and kissed her. “Have you had a good day?” he asked, playing with the ribbon rosette on her cap.

“Yes. Very good, thank you. But I’m hungry. Why doesn’t Wragge sound the gong?”

“Because it’s not quite time for it.”

She stretched out a hand to Eden who brought the beaded ottoman and sat himself by her knee. She stroked his hair, exclaiming that it was moist.

“I was out in the rain, Gran.”

“What wouldn’t many a girl give for your hair that keeps its wave in the wet!”

Renny asked—“Where is Wake?”

Meg came quickly to his side. She took his sleeve in her fingers and said in a low ominous tone:

“I must speak to you about him. I told him I should.”

“The little rascal bit her,” the grandmother exclaimed, suddenly full of energy. “He must be flogged.”

Ernest remarked that this sort of viciousness should be nipped in the bud, and Nicholas, either at the thought of the deed or the prospect of its punishment, gave a sardonic chuckle and put down the loud pedal.

Meg led Renny into the hall, where the two spaniels and the sheep-dog had come up from the basement to seek him and now crowded each other for his attention. Patting them, he demanded—“Why did he bite you? Where did he bite you?”

She closed the door behind them and, with a nod toward the closed door of the library, said—“Speak low—he’s in there. He’s been terrible all day—just as naughty and disobedient as could be. I was trying to put him some place—I forget where—and he kept saying—‘I won’t—I won’t—I won’t’—and then he bit me.”

“Why didn’t you punish him on the spot?”

“It was too serious. I said I would tell you.” A frown of exasperation dented his brow.

“Show me the place.”

“Oh ... I scarcely can.”

He grinned. “Nonsense.”

She drew up her skirt, her petticoat, her knickers, and scanned her plump white thigh.

“It’s faded a good deal,” she said. “It looked terrible at first.”

“Hmph.” He bent to look at the almost invisible marks. “Did he draw blood?”

“Well—not exactly. But that is not the point. The point is that he bit me.” She let down her skirt.

Renny opened the door of the library and looked in.

It was dark in there except for the line of brightness which showed where were the folding doors that led into the dining-room. But now the light from the hall discovered a small figure sitting on his hands in an armchair beside the clean, swept fireplace in which flourished a large fern which it was Meg’s habit to keep there in the summer.

“Wake,” ordered Renny sternly. “Come here.”

Wakefield at once slid from the chair and came into the hall. His long-lashed brown eyes blinked in the light.

“I hear that you’ve bitten your sister.”

Wakefield hung his head. “Yes.”

“Very well. Come with me.” He held out his hand and the small supple one was meekly put into it.

The two mounted the stairs while Meg looked after them, already half-regretting what she had done.

“This is a bad business,” observed Renny, when the two were inside his bedroom and the door shut against the dogs.

“Yes.”

How small and weak he looked!

“You know what we think of a horse that bites?”

“Yes.”

“And a dog?”

“Yes.”

“You know what happens to a dog that bites?”

“He’s allowed two bites before they kill him. I’ve only had one.”

“But you know you must be punished?”

“Yes.” His lower lip began to tremble and tears filled his eyes.

Renny had unbuttoned his own jacket and was taking off his belt.

“Ever hear of a whipping-boy?” he asked cheerfully.

“No.” Apprehension of this strange new procedure transfixed the culprit.

Renny gave a flick of the leather belt toward the nearest bed-post. “Well, that’s one. That’s your whipping-boy.”

“No! Renny, please!”

“Yes. It’s going to take your whipping for you. Like this.” He struck the bedpost a sharp blow. “It takes the licking for you and you do the yelling for it—see?” He grinned down at Wakefield. “You understand?”

“You mean you hit the bedpost and I scream?”

“Just that.”

“Really loud?”

“Certainly. So they’ll hear it downstairs.”

“What fun! Wait till I get my breath.”

“Six whacks. Six yells.”

“Go!” Wake jumped up and down in his relief.

Six times Renny struck the bedpost and six times Wakefield rent the air with a shrill scream. At the sixth they heard Meg thumping up the stairs. The dogs were barking loudly. Wakefield tottered towards his sister as she flung open the door. “Meggie!” he bleated.

With a glance of terrible reproach at Renny she gathered her small brother into her arms, clasped him to her breast, and lugged him along the passage to her own room, followed by the dogs.

Half an hour later she sought out Renny with a bewildered air.

“After all that, he hadn’t one little mark on him.”

“They’ve faded,” he said mildly. “Like the marks on your leg.”

The Whiteoak Brothers

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