Part 8 (1/2)

”Well, if yer says we wants 'em, George, of course we must get 'em; but I've always found my hands dried quick enough by themselves, especially if I gived 'em a rub on my trousers.”

”And then, Bill, you know,” George went on, ”I want to save every penny we can, so as to get some things to furnish two rooms by the time mother comes out.”

”Yes, in course we must,” Bill agreed warmly, though a slight shade pa.s.sed over his face at the thought that they were not to be always alone together. ”Well, yer know, George, I am game for anythink. I can hold on with a penn'orth of bread a day. I have done it over and over, and if yer says the word I am ready to do it again.”

”No, Bill, we needn't do that,” George laughed. ”Still, we must live as cheap as we can. We will stick to bread for breakfast, and bread and cheese for dinner, and bread for supper, with sometimes a rasher as a great treat. At any rate we will try to live on six s.h.i.+llings a week.”

”Oh! we can do that fine,” Bill said confidently; ”and then two s.h.i.+llings for rent, and that will leave us eight s.h.i.+llings a week to put by.”

”Mother said that the doctor didn't think she would be able to come out 'til the spring. We are just at the beginning of November, so if she comes out the first of April, that's five months, say twenty-two weeks. Twenty-two weeks at eight s.h.i.+llings, let me see. That's eight pounds in twenty weeks, eight pounds sixteen altogether, that would furnish two rooms very well, I should think.”

”My eye, I should think so!” Bill exclaimed, for to his mind eight pound sixteen was an almost unheard-of sum, and the fact that his companion had been able to calculate it increased if possible his admiration for him.

It needed but two or three days to reconcile Mrs. Grimstone to her new lodgers.

”I wouldn't have believed,” she said at the end of the week to a neighbor, ”as two boys could have been that quiet. They comes in after work as regular as the master. They rubs their feet on the mat, and you can scarce hear 'em go upstairs, and I don't hear no more of 'em till they goes out agin in the morning. They don't come back here to breakfast or dinner. Eats it, I suppose, standing like.”

”But what do they do with themselves all the evening, Mrs. Grimstone?”

”One of 'em reads to the other. I think I can hear a voice going regular over the kitchen.”

”And how's their room?”

”As clean and tidy as a new pin. They don't lock the door when they goes out, and I looked in yesterday, expecting to find it like a pigsty; but they had made the bed afore starting for work, and set everything in its place, and laid the fire like for when they come back.”

Mrs. Grimstone was right. George had expended six pence in as many old books at a bookstall. One of them was a spelling-book, and he had at once set to work teaching Bill his letters. Bill had at first protested. ”He had done very well without reading, and didn't see much good in it.” However, as George insisted he gave way, as he would have done to any proposition whatever upon which his friend had set his mind. So for an hour every evening after they had finished tea Bill worked at his letters and spelling, and then George read aloud to him from one of the other books.

”You must get on as fast as you can this winter, Bill,” he said; ”because when the summer evenings come we shall want to go for long walks.”

They found that they did very well upon the sum they agreed on. Tea and sugar cost less than George had expected. Mrs. Grimstone took in for them regularly a halfpenny-worth of milk, and for tea they were generally able to afford a bloater between them, or a very thin rasher of bacon. Their enjoyment of their meals was immense. Bill indeed frequently protested that they were spending too much money; but George said as long as they kept within the sum agreed upon, and paid their rent, coal, candles, and what little was.h.i.+ng they required out of the eight s.h.i.+llings a week, they were doing very well.

They had by this time got accustomed to the din of the machinery, and were able to work in comfort. Mr. Penrose had several times come through the room, and had given them a nod. After they had been there a month he spoke to Grimstone.

”How do those boys do their work?”

”Wonderful well, sir; they are the two best boys we have ever had. No skylarking about, and I never have to wait a minute for a plank. They generally comes in a few minutes before time and gets the bench cleared up. They are first-rate boys. They lodge with me, and two quieter and better-behaved chaps in a house there never was.”

”I am glad to hear it,” Mr. Penrose said. ”I am interested in them, and am pleased to hear so good an account.”

That Sat.u.r.day, to their surprise, when they went to get their money they received ten s.h.i.+llings apiece.

”That's two s.h.i.+llings too much,” George said as the money was handed to them.

”That's all right,” the foreman said. ”The governor ordered you both to have a rise.”

”My eye!” Bill said as they went out. ”What do you think of that, George? Four bob a week more to put by regularly. How much more will that make by the time your mother comes?”

”We won't put it all by, Bill. I think the other will be enough. This four s.h.i.+llings a week we will put aside at present for clothes. We want two more s.h.i.+rts apiece, and some more stockings, and we shall want some shoes before long, and another suit of clothes each. We must keep ourselves decent, you know.”

From the time when they began work the boys had gone regularly every Sunday morning to a small iron church near their lodging, and they also went to an evening service once a week. Their talk, too, at home was often on religion, for Bill was extremely anxious to learn, and although his questions and remarks often puzzled George to answer, he was always ready to explain things as far as he could.