Part 29 (1/2)

”I'm afraid I told you wrong, ma'am,” returned Clare. ”I'm afraid I _am_ a tramp after all; only _I_'m looking for work, and most tramps ain't, I fancy.”

”They all _say_ they are,” answered the woman. ”That's your story, and that's theirs!”

”I've got elevenpence, ma'am; and could, I dare say, buy a pot of beer, though I don't know the price of one; but I don't see where I'm going to get any more money, and what we have must serve Abdiel and me till we do.”

”What right have _you_ to a dog, when you ain't fit to pay your penny for a half-pint o' beer?”

”Don't be hard on the young 'un, mis'ess; he don't look a bad sort!”

said a man who stood by with a pewter pot in his hand.

Clare wondered why he had his cord-trousers pulled up a few inches and tied under his knees with a string, which made little bags of them there. He had to think for a mile after they left the public-house before he discovered that it was to keep them from tightening on his knees when he stooped, and so incommoding him at his work.

”Thank you, sir,” he said. ”I'm not a bad sort. I didn't know it was any harm to ask for water. It ain't begging, is it, sir?”

”Not as I knows on,” replied the man. ”Here, take the lot!”

He offered Clare his nearly emptied pewter.

”No, thank you, sir,” answered Clara ”I am thirsty--but not so thirsty as to take your drink from you. I can get on to the next pump. Perhaps that won't be chained up like a bull!”

”Here, mis'ess!” cried the man. ”This is a mate as knows a neighbour when he sees him. I'll stand him a half-pint. There's yer money!”

Without a word the woman flung the man's penny in the till, and drew Clare a half-pint of porter. Clare took it eagerly, turned to the man, said, ”I thank you, sir, and wish your good health,” and drained the pewter mug. He had never before tasted beer, or indeed any drink stronger than tea, and he did not like it. But he thanked his benefactor again, and went back to the trough.

”Dogs don't drink beer,” he said to himself. ”They know better!” and lifting Abdiel he held him over the trough. Abdiel was not so fastidious as his master, and lapped eagerly. Then they pursued their uncertain way.

Ready to do anything, he thought the shabbiness of his clothes would be a greater bar to indoor than to outdoor work, and applied therefore at every farm they came to. But he did not look so able as he was, and boys were not much wanted. He never pitied himself, and never entreated: to beg for work was beggary, and to beggary he would not descend until driven by approaching death. But now and then some tender-hearted woman, oftener one of ripe years, struck with his look--its endurance, perhaps, or its weariness mingled with hope--would perceive the necessity of the boy, and offer him the food he did not ask--nor like him the less that, never doubting what came to one was for both, he gave the first share of it to Abdiel.

Chapter XL.

Maly.

Travelling on in vague hope, meeting with kindness enough to keep him alive, but getting no employment, sleeping in what shelter he could find, and never missing the shelter he could not find, for the weather was exceptionally warm for the warm season, he came one day to a village where the strangest and hardest experience he ever encountered awaited him. What part of the country he was in, or what was the name of the village, he did not know. He seldom asked a question, seldom uttered word beyond a polite greeting, but kept trudging on and on, as if the goal of his expectation were ever drawing nigher. He felt no curiosity as to the names of the places he pa.s.sed through. Why should the names of towns and villages strung on a road to nowhere in particular, interest him? He did, however, long afterward, come to know the name of this village, and its topographical relations: the place itself was branded on his brain.

He entered it in the glow of a hot noon, and had walked nearly through it without meeting any one, for it was the dinner-hour, and savoury odours filled the air, when a little girl came from a neat house, and ran farther down the street. He was very tired, very dusty, had eaten nothing that day, had begun to despair of work, and was wis.h.i.+ng himself clear of the houses that he might throw himself down. But something in the look of the child made him quicken his weary step as he followed her. He overtook her, pa.s.sed her, and saw her face.

Heavens! it was Maly, grown wonderfully bigger! He turned and caught her up in his arms. She gave a screech of terror, and he set her down in keenest dismay. Finding that he was not going to run away with her, she did not run farther from him than to safe parleying distance.

”You bad boy!” she cried; ”you're not to touch me! I will tell mamma!”

”Why, Maly! don't you know me?”

”No, I don't You are a dirty boy!”

”But, Maly!--”

”My name is not Maly; it's Mary; and I don't know you.”