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Paleface And Redskin: A Comedy-Story For Girls And Boys
by
After all there was some good in girls. Here was one who said exactly the right things, without needing any prompting whatever.
Cecily hunted up Jack and Guy, who were poking about in the house. ‘You’re not to guard the stockade,’ she announced, with ill-concealed triumph.
‘Oh, aren’t we, though?’ said Guy; ‘who says so? Not mother!’
‘No–Clarence; he said I was to tell you to go on duty in the drawing-room.’
‘What bosh!’ said Guy. ‘As if any Indians would come there! I don’t care what Clarence says, I shall go in the stockade!’
‘So shall I! ‘said Jack. ‘Now let’s get that piece of matting, and go down sharp–the evening star’s out already.’
Poor Cecily was in despair; what was to be done when they were so obstinate as this?
‘I know where there’s some beautiful matting,’ she said.
‘Where? Tell us, quick!’
‘Come with me, and I’ll show you.’ She led the way along a corridor to the wing where the billiard-room was. ‘Wait till I see if it’s there still,’ she said, and went into the billiard-room and looked around. ‘Yes, it is there,’ she told them as she came out.
‘I don’t see it, Cecily; where?’ they cried from within.
Cecily shut the door softly, and turned the key (which she had managed to abstract on entering) in the outer lock.
‘It’s on the floor,’ she cried through the keyhole; ‘I didn’t tell a story–and don’t be angry, boys, dear, it’s all for your good!’
Then, without waiting to hear their indignant outcry, she scudded along the corridor and down the staircase, with the sounds of muffled shouts and kicks growing fainter behind her.
‘I don’t mind so much now,’ she thought; ‘they’ll be awfully angry when they come out–but the Indians will have gone by that time!’
Clarence had already retreated to his stronghold when she entered the drawing-room.
Everything seemed as usual; Uncle Lambert, in evening dress, was playing desultory snatches from Ruddigore. Mrs. Jolliffe came down presently, and he took her in to dinner with one of his tiresome jokes. No one seemed at all anxious about poor Tinling, fighting all alone down in the paddock.
She curled herself up on a settee by one of the open windows, and listened, trying to catch the sound of Indian yells. ‘Hazel,’ she said anxiously, ‘do you think the Indians will hurt Tinling?’
Hazel gave a little laugh. ‘I don’t think the army’s in any very great danger, Cis,’ she replied.
‘Hazel doesn’t believe there are any Indians at all,’ explained Hilary.
‘Well,’ said Cecily, softly, ‘I’ve kept the army out of danger, whether there are or not!’
But she felt relieved by her sisters’ evident tranquillity, and by-and-by, when Mrs. Jolliffe came in from the dining-room and settled down with her embroidery as if there were not the least chance of a savage coming whooping in the open window, Cecily almost forgot her fears.
They came back in full force, however, as, a little later on, she heard a quick, light step on the gravel outside, and started with a little scream of terror. ‘Don’t tell them where the army are!’ she cried; and then she saw that her alarm was needless, for it was the gallant General who stepped into the room. Hazel looked up from the album which she was making for a children’s hospital, Hilary threw away her book, Mrs. Jolliffe had ceased to embroider, but that was because she was peacefully dozing.
‘Victory!’ said Clarence, waving his sword.
‘Then they did come?’ cried Cecily, triumphantly.
‘Rather!’ he replied. ‘I couldn’t tell how many there were, but they were overcome with panic at the first discharge. I fancy these Indians had never heard firearms before.’
‘How funny that we shouldn’t have heard any now!’ remarked Hazel, resting her chin on her palms, while her grey eyes had a rather mocking sparkle in them.
‘Not funny at all,’ he said, ‘considering the wind was the other way. I let them come on, and then poured a volley into the thickest part of their ranks–that made them waver, and then I made a sortie, and you should have just seen them scuttle!’