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The Yew-Lane Ghosts
by
The lesson had been so interesting–the clever young gentleman, standing (without his eye-glass) by the blackboard, had been so strict and yet so entertaining, was so obviously competent, and so pleasantly kind, that Bill, who liked arithmetic, and (like all intelligent children) appreciated good teaching, had had no time to think of the Yew-lane Ghost till the lesson was ended. It was not till the hymn began (they always ended the night-school with singing), then he remembered it. Then, while he was shouting with all his might Bishop Ken’s glorious old lines–
“Keep me, oh keep me, King of kings,”
he caught Mr. Lindsay’s eyes fixed on him, and back came the thoughts of his terrible fright, with a little shame too at his own timidity. Which of us trusts as we should do in the “defence of the Most High?”
Bill lingered as he had done the last time, and went out with the “grown-ups.” It had been raining, and the ground was wet and sludgy, though it was fair overhead. The wind was cold, too, and Mr. Lindsay began to cough so violently, that Bill felt rather ashamed of taking him so far out of his way, through the damp chilly lane, and began to wonder whether he could not summon up courage to go alone. The result was, that with some effort he said–
“Please, Mr. Lindsay, Sir, I think you won’t like to come so far this cold night. I’ll try and manage, if you like.”
Mr. Lindsay laid one hand on Bill’s shoulder, and said quietly–
“No, thank you, my boy, we’ll come with you, Thank you, all the same.”
“Nevertheless, Bartram,” said Master Arthur, “I wish you could keep that cough of yours quiet–it will spoil everything. A boy was eating peppermints in the shade of his copy-book this very night. I did box his ears; but I wish I had seized the goodies, they might have kept you quiet.”
“Thank you,” was the reply, “I abhor peppermint; but I have got some lozenges, if that will satisfy you. And when I smell ghosts, I can smother myself in my pocket-handkerchief.”
Master Arthur laughed boisterously.
“We shall smell one if brimstone will do it. I hope he won’t set himself on fire, or the scenic effect will be stronger than we bargained for.”
This was the beginning of a desultory conversation carried on at intervals between the two young gentlemen, of which, though Bill heard every sentence, he couldn’t understand one. He made one effort to discover what Master Arthur was alluding to, but with no satisfactory result, as we shall see.
“Please, Master Arthur,” he said desperately, “you don’t think there’ll be two ghosts, do you, Sir?”
“I should say,” said Master Arthur, so slowly and with such gravity that Bill felt sure he was making fun of him, “I should say, Bill, that if a place is haunted at all there is no limit to the number of ghosts–fifty quite as likely as one. What do you say, Bartram?”
“Quite so,” said Bartram.
Bill made no further attempts to understand the mystery. He listened, but only grew more and more bewildered at the dark hints he heard, and never understood what it all meant until the end came; when (as is not uncommon) he wondered how he could have been so stupid, and why he had not seen it all from the very first.
They had now reached the turning-point, and as they passed into the dark lane, where the wind was shuddering and shivering among the trees, Bill shuddered and shivered too, and felt very glad that the young gentlemen were with him, after all.
Mr. Lindsay pulled out his watch.
“Well?” said his friend.
“Ten minutes to nine.”
Then they walked on in silence, Master Arthur with one arm through his friend’s, and the one-legged donkey under the other; and Mr. Lindsay with his hand on Bill’s shoulder.
“I should like a pipe!” said Master Arthur presently; “it’s so abominably damp.”