Part 15 (1/2)

The next morning, too, had its surprises. To begin with, Sir Harry announced at breakfast that he must go and buy a horse. He might be an hour or two over the business, and meanwhile the boys had better go out into the town and enjoy themselves. Perhaps a sovereign apiece might help them.

Taffy, who had never in his life possessed more than a s.h.i.+lling, was staring at the gold piece in his hand, when the door opened, and Sir Harry's horse-racing friend came in to breakfast and nodded ”Good-morning.”

”Pity you're leaving to-day,” he said, as he took his seat at a table hard by them.

”My revenge must wait,” Sir Harry answered.

It seemed a cold-blooded thing to be said so carelessly.

Taffy wondered if Sir Harry's search for a horse had anything to do with this revenge, and the notion haunted him in the intervals of his morning's shopping.

But how to lay out his sovereign? That was the first question.

George, who within ten minutes had settled his own problem by purchasing a doubtful fox-terrier of the Boots of the hotel, saw no difficulty. The Boots had another pup for sale--one of the same litter.

”But I want something for mother, and the others--and Honoria.”

”Botheration! I'd forgotten Honoria, and now the money's gone!

Never mind; she can have my pup.”

”Oh!” said Taffy ruefully. ”Then she won't think much of my present.”

”Yes, she will. Suppose you buy a collar for him--you can get one for five s.h.i.+llings.”

They found a saddler's and chose the dog-collar which came to four s.h.i.+llings; and for eighteenpence the shopman agreed to have ”_Honoria from Taffy_,” engraved on it within an hour. Humility's present was chosen with surprising ease--a large, framed photograph of the Bishop of Exeter; price, six s.h.i.+llings.

”I don't suppose,” objected George, ”your mother cares much for the Bishop of Exeter.”

”Oh, yes, she does,” said Taffy; ”he's coming to confirm us next spring. Besides,” he added, with one of those flashes of wisdom which surely he derived from her, ”mother won't care what it is, so long as she's remembered. And it costs more than the collar.”

This left him with eight-and-sixpence; and for three-and-sixpence he bought a work-box for his grandmother, with a view of Plymouth Hoe on the lid. But now came the crux. What should he get for his father?

”It must be a book,” George suggested.

”But what kind of a book? He has so many.”

”Something in Latin.”

The bookseller's window was filled with yellow-backed novels and toy-books, which obviously would not do. So they marched in and demanded a book suitable for a clergyman who had a good many books already--”a middle-aged clergyman,” George added.

”You can't go far wrong with this,” suggested the bookseller, producing Crockford's ”Clerical Directory” for the current year.

But this was too expensive; ”and,” said Taffy, ”I think he would rather have something in Latin.” The bookseller rubbed his chin, went to his shelves, and took down a small _De Imitatione Christi_, bound in limp calf. ”You can't go far wrong with this, either,” he a.s.sured them. So Taffy paid down his money.

Just as the boys reached the hotel, Sir Harry drove up in a cab; and five minutes later they were all rattling off to the railway station.

Taffy eyed the cab-horse curiously, never doubting it to be Sir Harry's new purchase; and was extremely surprised when the cabman whipped it up and trotted off--after receiving his money, too.

But in the bustle there was no time to ask questions.

It was about three in the afternoon, and the sun already low in the south-west, when they came in sight of the cross-roads and Sir Harry pulled up his bays. And there, on the green by the sign-post, stood Mrs. Raymond. She caught Taffy in her arms and hugged him till he felt ashamed, and glanced around to see if the others were looking; but the phaeton was bowling away down the road.

”But why are _you_ here, mother?”