Volume I Part 3 (1/2)

Miser Farebrother saw Tom Barley out of the house, and walked away through the shadows, rubbing his hands in satisfaction at having done a good night's work.

CHAPTER III.

THE NEW TENANTS ARRIVE, AND ONE DEPARTS.

At the appointed hour a cart drew up at the gates of Parksides, in which, in addition to the driver, were Miser Farebrother and his wife and child. Tom Barley was waiting for them, and he darted forward to a.s.sist. Miser Farebrother alighted first, and receiving the child from his wife, looked rather helplessly about him, Mrs. Farebrother not being strong enough to alight without help.

”Can you hold a child?” asked Miser Farebrother of Tom Barley.

”Yes, your honour,” replied Tom, eagerly; and he took the child, a little girl scarcely two years old, and cuddled it close to him.

The mother looked anxiously at the lad, and the moment her feet touched the ground she relieved him of the charge. The moonlight shone upon the group, and Tom Barley gazed in wonder at the lady's beautiful face and the pretty babe. Desiring Tom to a.s.sist the driver in the removal of the necessary household articles he had brought with him in the cart, Miser Farebrother led the way into the house, which they entered through the door at the back. As he was lighting a candle, Mrs.

Farebrother sighed and s.h.i.+vered.

”It is very lonely,” she murmured.

”It is very comfortable,” he retorted; ”a palace compared to the place we have left. You will get well and strong here.”

She shook her head, and said, in a tone so low that the words did not reach her husband's ears, ”I shall never get well.”

”What is that you say?” he cried, sharply. She did not reply. ”Instead of grumbling and trying not to make the best of things,” he continued, ”it would be more sensible of you to light the fire and make me a cup of tea. Here's plenty of wood, and here's a fireplace large enough to burn a ton of coals a day. I must see to that. Now bustle about a bit; it will do you good. I am always telling you that you ought to be more energetic and active.”

”Is there no servant in the house?” she asked, wearily. She had taken off her mantle, and having wrapped her child in it and laid her down, was endeavouring to obey her husband's orders. ”You said you had one.”

”So I have, a man-servant. I engaged him expressly for you.”

”The boy at the gate?”

”Yes; and here he is, loaded. That's right, Tom; be sharp and willing, and you'll die a rich man.”

Tom Barley was sharp enough to perceive that Mrs. Farebrother was too weak for the work she was endeavouring to perform, and willing enough to step to her a.s.sistance.

”May I light the fire?” he asked, timidly.

She nodded, and sinking into a chair, lifted her child from the floor and nursed her. Seeing her thus engaged, and Tom busy on his knees, Miser Farebrother ran out, and he and the driver between them carried in the rest of the things, the most important being the miser's desk, which he had conveyed at once to the bedroom above. His mind was easier when he saw that precious depository in a place of safety.

Meanwhile Tom Barley was proving himself a most cheerful and capable servant.

”When his honour told me,” he whispered, ”that he was coming here late at night with you and the baby--a little girl, ain't it?--I thought it would be chilly without a fire, so I cleaned out the fireplace and the chimbley, and got a lot of wood together. There's plenty of it--enough to last a lifetime. Don't you move, now; I can make tea. Used to make mother's. Where's the things? In the basket? Yes; here they are. Here's the kittle, and here's the tea, in a bloo' paper; and here's the teapot; and here's two cups; and here's a bottle of milk and some sugar. It's a blazing fire--ain't it? That's the best of dry wood. The kittle'll bile in a minute--it's biling already!”

From time to time the delicate woman gave him a grateful look, which more than repaid him, and caused him to double his exertions to make her comfortable. By the time the tea was made, Miser Farebrother had completed the removal of the goods, and had settled with the driver, after a good deal of grumbling at the extortionate demand.

”You can go, Tom,” he said to the lad. ”Be up early in the morning and make the fire.”

”Good-night, your honour.”

”Did you hear me tell you to go?” exclaimed Miser Farebrother.

Tom Barley received a kind look from Mrs. Farebrother as he left the room, and he went away perfectly happy.