Part 1 (1/2)
Sappers and Miners.
by George Manville Fenn.
CHAPTER ONE.
Ba.s.s FOR BREAKFAST.
”Have some more ba.s.s, Gwyn?”
”Please, father.”
”You should not speak with your mouth full, my dear,” said Mrs Pendarve, quietly.
”No, mother; but I didn't like to keep father waiting.”
”And between the two stools you came to the ground, eh?” said Colonel Pendarve, smiling. ”Never mind; hold your plate. Lucky for us, my dear, that we have only one boy. This fellow eats enough for three.”
”Well, but, father, we were down by the boat at daybreak, and the sea air makes one so hungry.”
”Say ravenous or wolfish, my boy. But go on. It certainly is a delicious fish, and Dolly has cooked it to a turn. They were rising fairly, then?”
”Yes, father; we rowed right out to the race, off the point, and for ever so long we didn't see a fish and sat there with our rods ready.”
Gwyn talked away, but with his mouth rather full of fried ba.s.s and freshly-baked bread all the same.
”And of course it was of no use to try till a shoal began to feed.”
”Not a bit, father,--and Joe said we might as well come back; but when the sun rose they were breaking all round us, and for half-an-hour we kept hooking them at nearly every throw. Come and see the rest of my catch; they're such beauties, as bright as salmon.”
”That's right, but don't let any of them be wasted. Keep what you want, mamma, dear, and give the others away. What did you use--a big fly?”
”No, father, those tiny spoon-baits. They come at them with a rush.
Then they left off biting all at once, and--some more coffee, please, mother--and we rowed back home, and met Captain Hardock on the pier.”
”Ah, did you?”
”Yes, father; and we gave him two pairs of fine ones, and he said they looked as bright as newly-run tin.”
”Humph! Yes, that man thinks of nothing else but tin.”
”And he began about it again this morning, father,” said Gwyn, eagerly.
”Indeed!” said Colonel Pendarve; and Gwyn's mother looked up inquiringly from behind the silver coffee-urn.
”Yes, father,” said Gwyn, helping himself to more fresh, yellow Cornish b.u.t.ter and honey. ”He said what a pity it was that you did not adventure over the old Ydoll mine and make yourself a rich man, instead of letting it lie wasting on your estate.”
”My estate!” said the Colonel, smiling at his wife--”a few score acres of moorland and rock on the Cornish coast!”
”But he says, father, he is sure that the old mine is very rich.”