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PAGE 4

Robert Turner’s Revenge
by [?]

He saw himself going to school, carrying her books for her, the envied of all the boys. He remembered how he had fought Tony Josephs because Tony had the presumption to bring her spice apples: he had thrashed him too, so soundly that from that time forth none of the schoolboys presumed to rival him in Lisbeth’s affections–roguish little Lisbeth! who grew prettier and saucier every year.

He recalled the keen competition of the old days when to be “head of the class” seemed the highest honour within mortal reach, and was striven after with might and main. He had seldom attained to it because he would never “go up past” Lisbeth. If she missed a word, he, Robert, missed it too, no matter how well he knew it. It was sweet to be thought a dunce for her dear sake. It was all the reward he asked to see her holding her place at the head of the class, her cheeks flushed pink and her eyes starry with her pride of position. And how sweetly she would lecture him on the way home from school about learning his spellings better, and wind up her sermon with the frank avowal, uttered with deliciously downcast lids, that she liked him better than any of the other boys after all, even if he couldn’t spell as well as they could. Nothing of success that he had won since had ever thrilled him as that admission of little Lisbeth’s!

She had been such a sympathetic little sweetheart too, never weary of listening to his dreams and ambitions, his plans for the future. She had always assured him that she knew he would succeed. Well, he had succeeded–and now one of the uses he was going to make of his success was to turn Lisbeth and her children out of their home by way of squaring matters with a dead man!

Lisbeth had been away from home on a long visit to an aunt when he had left Chiswick. She was growing up and the childish intimacy was fading. Perhaps, under other circumstances, it might have ripened into fruit, but he had gone away and forgotten her; the world had claimed him; he had lost all active remembrance of Lisbeth and, before this late return to Chiswick, he had not even known if she were living. And she was Neil Jameson’s widow!

He was silent for a long time, while the waves purred about the base of the big red sandstone rock and the boy returned to his Crusoe. Finally Robert Turner roused himself from his reverie.

“I used to know your mother long ago when she was a little girl,” he said. “I wonder if she remembers me. Ask her when you go home if she remembers Bobby Turner.”

“Won’t you come up to the house and see her, sir?” asked Paul politely. “Mother is always glad to see her old friends.”

“No, I haven’t time today.” Robert Turner was not going to tell Neil Jameson’s son that he did not care to look for the little Lisbeth of long ago in Neil Jameson’s widow. The name spoiled her for him, just as the Jameson mouth spoiled her son for him. “But you may tell her something else. The mortgage will not be foreclosed. I was the power behind the lawyers, but I did not know that the present owner of the Cove farm was my little playmate, Lisbeth Miller. You and she shall have all the time you want. Tell her Bobby Turner does this in return for what she gave him under the big sweeting apple tree on her sixth birthday. I think she will remember and understand. As for you, Paul, be a good boy and good to your mother. I hope you’ll succeed in your ambition of making the farm pay when you are old enough to take it in hand. At any rate, you’ll not be disturbed in your possession of it.”

“Oh, sir! oh, sir!” stammered Paul in an agony of embarrassed gratitude and delight. “Oh, it seems too good to be true. Do you really mean that we’re not to be sold out? Oh, won’t you come and tell Mother yourself? She’ll be so happy–so grateful. Do come and let her thank you.”

“Not today. I haven’t time. Give her my message, that’s all. There, run; the sooner she gets the news the better.”

Turner watched the boy as he bounded away, until the headland hid him from sight.

“There goes my revenge–and a fine bit of property eminently suited for a summer residence–all for a bit of old, rusty sentiment,” he said with a shrug. “I didn’t suppose I was capable of such a mood. But then–little Lisbeth. There never was a sweeter girl. I’m glad I didn’t go with the boy to see her. She’s an old woman now–and Neil Jameson’s widow. I prefer to keep my old memories of her undisturbed–little Lisbeth of the silvery-golden curls and the roguish blue eyes. Little Lisbeth of the old time! I’m glad to be able to have done you the small service of securing your home to you. It is my thanks to you for the friendship and affection you gave my lonely boyhood–my tribute to the memory of my first sweetheart.”

He walked away with a smile, whose amusement presently softened to an expression that would have amazed his business cronies. Later on he hummed the air of an old love song as he climbed the steep spruce road to Tom’s.