PAGE 6
The Wouldbegoods
by
And when they were all gathered round him he spoke.
“Fellow-countrymen,” he said, “we’re going to have a rousing good time.”
“It’s nothing naughty, is it,” Daisy asked, “like the last time you had that was rousingly good?”
Alice said “Shish,” and Oswald pretended not to hear.
“A precious treasure,” he said, “has inadvertently been laid low in the moat by one of us.”
“The rotten thing tumbled in by itself,” Dicky said.
Oswald waved his hand and said, “Anyhow, it’s there. It’s our duty to restore it to its sorrowing owners. I say, look here–we’re going to drag the moat.”
Every one brightened up at this. It was our duty and it was interesting too. This is very uncommon.
So we went out to where the orchard is, at the other side of the moat. There were gooseberries and things on the bushes, but we did not take any till we had asked if we might. Alice went and asked. Mrs. Pettigrew said, “Law! I suppose so; you’d eat ’em anyhow, leave or no leave.”
She little knows the honorable nature of the house of Bastable. But she has much to learn.
The orchard slopes gently down to the dark waters of the moat. We sat there in the sun and talked about dragging the moat, till Denny said, “How do you drag moats?”
And we were speechless, because, though we had read many times about a moat being dragged for missing heirs and lost wills, we really had never thought about exactly how it was done.
“Grappling-irons are right, I believe,” Denny said, “but I don’t suppose they’d have any at the farm.”
And we asked, and found they had never even heard of them. I think myself he meant some other word, but he was quite positive.
So then we got a sheet off Oswald’s bed, and we all took our shoes and stockings off, and we tried to see if the sheet would drag the bottom of the moat, which is shallow at that end. But it would keep floating on the top of the water, and when we tried sewing stones into one end of it, it stuck on something in the bottom, and when we got it up it was torn. We were very sorry, and the sheet was in an awful mess; but the girls said they were sure they could wash it in the basin in their room, and we thought as we had torn it any way, we might as well go on. That washing never came off.
“No human being,” Noel said, “knows half the treasures hidden in this dark tarn.”
And we decided we would drag a bit more at that end, and work gradually round to under the dairy window where the milk-pan was. We could not see that part very well, because of the bushes that grow between the cracks of the stones where the house goes down into the moat. And opposite the dairy window the barn goes straight down into the moat too. It is like pictures of Venice; but you cannot get opposite the dairy window anyhow.
We got the sheet down again when we had tied the torn parts together in a bunch with string, and Oswald was just saying:
“Now then, my hearties, pull together, pull with a will! One, two, three,” when suddenly Dora dropped her bit of the sheet with a piercing shriek and cried out:
“Oh! it’s all wormy at the bottom. I felt them wriggle.” And she was out of the water almost before the words were out of her mouth. The other girls all scuttled out too, and they let the sheet go in such a hurry that we had no time to steady ourselves, and one of us went right in, and the rest got wet up to our waistbands. The one who went right in was only H. O.; but Dora made an awful fuss and said it was our fault. We told her what we thought, and it ended in the girls going in with H. O. to change his things. We had some more gooseberries while they were gone. Dora was in an awful wax when she went away, but she is not of a sullen disposition though some times hasty, and when they all came back we saw it was all right, so we said: