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"Bread-and-cheese!" he echoed. "It is not a question of only bread-and-cheese. We must get our beds made and the knives cleaned."
It seemed rather a blue look-out. Tod said he would go up again to the Whistling Wind, and tell Mother Jones she must find us some one. Picking a rose as he went down the path, he met a cleanly-looking elderly woman who was entering. She wore a dark ap.r.o.n, and old-fas.h.i.+oned white cap, and said she had come after the place.
"What can you do?" began Tod. "Cook?"
"Cook and clean too, sir," she answered. And I liked the woman the moment I saw her.
"Oh, I don't know that there's much cleaning to do, beyond the knives,"
remarked Tod. "We want our dinners cooked, you know, and the beds made.
That's about all."
The woman smiled at that, as if she thought he knew little about it. "I have been living at the grocer's, up yonder, sir, and they can give me a good character, though I say it. I'm not afraid of doing all you can want done, and of giving satisfaction, if you'd please to try me."
"You'll do," said Tod, after glancing at me. "Can you come in at once?"
"As soon as you like, sir. When would you please to go for my character?"
"Oh, bother that!" said he. "I've no doubt you are all right. Can you make pigeon pies?"
"That I can, sir."
"You'll do then. What is your name?"
"Elizabeth Ho----"
"Elizabeth?" he interrupted, not giving her time to finish. "Why, the one just gone was Elizabeth. A grenadier, six feet high."
"I've been mostly called Betty, sir."
"Then we'll call you Betty too."
She went away, saying that she'd come back with her ap.r.o.ns. Tod looked after her.
"You like her, don't you, Johnny?"
"That I do. She's a good sort; honest as can be. You did not ask her about wages."
"Oh, time enough for that," said he.
And Betty turned out to be good as gold. Her history was a curious one; she told it to me one evening in the kitchen; in her small way she had been somewhat of a martyr. But G.o.d had been with her always, she said; through more trouble than the world knew of.
We had a letter from Mrs. Todhetley, redirected on from Sanbury. The chief piece of news it contained was, that the Squire and old Jacobson had gone off to Great Yarmouth for a fortnight.
"That's good," said Tod. "Johnny lad, you may write home now."
"And tell about Rose Lodge?"
"Tell all you like. I don't mind madam. She'll have leisure to digest it against the pater returns."
I wrote a long letter, and told everything, going into the minute details that she liked to hear, about the servants, and all else. Rose Lodge was the most wonderful bargain, I said, and we were both as happy as the days were long.
The church was a little primitive edifice near the sands. We went to service on Sunday morning; and upon getting home afterwards, found the cloth not laid. Tod had ordered dinner to be on the table. He sent me to the kitchen to blow up Betty.
"It is quite ready and waiting to be served; but I can't find a clean tablecloth," said Betty.
"Why, I told you where the tablecloths were," shouted Tod, who heard the answer. "In the cupboard at the top of the stairs."
"But there are no tablecloths there, sir," cried she. "Nor anything else either, except a towel or two."
Tod went upstairs in a pa.s.sion, bidding her follow him, and flung the cupboard door open. He thought she had looked in the wrong place.
But Betty was right. With the exception of two or three old towels and some stacks of newspapers, the cupboard was empty.
"By Jove!" cried Tod. "Johnny, that grenadier must have walked off with all the linen!"
Whether she had, or had not, none to speak of could be found now. Tod talked of sending the police after her, and wrote an account of her delinquencies to Captain Copperas, addressing the letter to the captain's brokers in Liverpool.
"But," I debated, not quite making matters out to my own satisfaction, "the grenadier wanted us to examine her boxes, you know."
"All for a blind, Johnny."
It was the morning following this day, Monday, that, upon looking from my window, something struck me as being the matter with the garden. What was it? Why, all the roses were gone! Down I rushed, half dressed, burst out at the back-door, and gazed about me.
It was a scene of desolation. The rose-trees had been stripped; every individual rose was clipped neatly off from every tree. Two or three trees were left untouched before the front window; all the rest were rifled.
"What the mischief is the matter, Johnny?" called out Tod, as I was hastily questioning Betty. "You are making enough noise for ten, lad."
"We have had robbers here, Tod. Thieves. All the roses are stolen."
He made a worse noise than I did. Down he came, full rush, and stamped about the garden like any one wild. Old Druff and his wife heard him, and came up to the palings. Betty, busy in her kitchen, had not noticed the disaster.
"I see Tasker's people here betimes this morning," observed Druff. "A lot of 'em came. 'Twas a pity, I thought, to slice off all them nice big blows."
"Saw who?--saw what?" roared Tod, turning his anger upon Druff. "You mean to confess to me that you saw these rose-trees rifled, and did not stop it?"
"Nay, master," said Druff, "how could I interfere with Tasker's people?
Their business ain't mine."
"Who are Tasker's people?" foamed Tod. "Who is Tasker?"
"Tasker? Oh, Tasker's that there man at the white cottage on t'other side the village. Got a big garden round it."
"Is he a poacher? Is he a robber?"
"Bless ye, master, Tasker's no robber."
"And yet you saw him take my roses?"