**** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE ****

Find this Story

Print, a form you can hold

Wireless download to your Amazon Kindle

Look for a summary or analysis of this Story.

Enjoy this? Share it!

PAGE 8

Merry Garden
by [?]

The reading of it turned her hot and cold. She marched straight to the dairy, where Susannah was busy with the cream-pans, and says she, loosening her bonnet-strings as she dropped upon a bench, “He was but an orphan, after all, Susannah: and now we’ve driven ‘en to desperation!”

“Who’s been driven to desperation?” asked Susannah.

“Why, Nandy,” answered Aunt Barbree, tears brimming her eyes. “Who elst?”

“Piggywig’s tail!” said Susannah. “What new yarn has the cheeld been tellin’?”

“He’s my own nephew, and a Furnace upon his mother’s side,” said Aunt Barbree; “and I’ll trouble you to speak more respectful of your employer’s kin. And he hasn’t been tellin’ it; he’ve written it, here in pen and ink. He’ve cut and run to take the King’s shilling and be a sojer: and if I can’t overtake him before he gets to Plymouth Citadel the deed will he done, and the Frenchies will knock him upon the head and I shall be without a roof to cover me. Get me my shawl and bonnet.”

“You baint goin’ to tell me,” said Susannah, “that you act’lly mean to take and trapse to Plymouth in all this heat?”

“I do,” said Barbree. “Get me my shawl and bonnet.”

“What, on a Saturday afternoon! And me left single-handed to tend the customers!”

“Drat the customers!” said Aunt Barbree. “And drat everything, includin’ the boy, if you like! But fetch to Plymouth I must and will. So, for the third time of askin’, get me my shawl and bonnet.”

It cost a mort of coaxing even to persuade her to a bite of dinner before setting forth. By half-past noon she was dressed and ready, and took the road toward Saltash Ferry. Nandy didn’t see her start. He was lying stretched, just then, under the cliff by the foreshore, getting rid of the effects of his pipe of tobacco.

It left him so exhausted that, when the worst was over, he rolled on his stomach on the warm stones of the foreshore and fell into a doze; by consequence of which he knew nothing more till the tide crept up and wetted his ankles; and with that he heard voices–uproarious voices on the water–and sat up to see a boatload of people pass by him and draw to the landing-stage under Merry-Garden.

Nandy rubbed his eyes, studied the visitors–that is, as well as he could at fifty yards’ distance–and chuckled. He knew that his aunt was a respectable woman, and particular about the folks she admitted to her gardens. But it was too late to interfere–even if he’d wanted to interfere, which he didn’t. So he watched the visitors draw to land and disembark; and sat and waited, still chuckling.

IV.

Susannah, having fitted forth Aunt Barbree and watched her from the gate as she took the road to Saltash, had returned to the house in an unpleasant temper. She was a good servant and would stand any amount of ordering about, but she hated responsibility. To be left alone on a Saturday afternoon in the height of the mazzard season to cope with Heaven-knew-how-many-customers–to lay the tables in the arbours, boil the water, take orders and, worst of all, give change (Susannah had never learnt arithmetic)–was an outlook that fairly daunted her spirit. Her temper, too, for a week past had not been at its best. She, like her mistress, had missed Nandy. In spite of his faults he was a help: and, as for faults, who in this wicked world is without ’em? It’s by means of their faults that you grow accustomed to folks.

The early afternoon was hot and thundery, and the hum of the bees (Aunt Barbree was famous for her honey) came lazy-like through the open window. Susannah prayed to the Lord that this quiet might last–until four o’clock, at any rate. Short of an earthquake in Plymouth (which, being pious, she didn’t dare to pray for) nothing would ward off visitors beyond that hour, but, with luck, Aunt Barbree might be expected back soon after five, when the giving of change would begin. Susannah looked at the clock. The time was close upon half-past two. She might, with any luck, count on another hour.