Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 105/241

"We're all right there. Work away, Shock, and let's finish loading up,

and then we'll have our breakfast. Nice sort o' looking party you are,

to take anywhere to feed," he grumbled, as he glanced at Shock, whose

appearance was certainly not much in his favour.

It was much easier work loading with empty baskets, and besides there

was not a full load, so that it was not very long before Ike had them

all piled up to his satisfaction and the ropes undone and thrown over

and over and laced in and out and hooked and tied and strained to the

sides of the cart.

"That's the way we does it, squire," cried Ike; "haul away, Shock, my

lad. You've worked well. Old Bonyparty's had the best of it; this is

his rest and feeding time. You might leave him there hours; but as soon

as it's time to go home, away he starts, and there's no stopping him.

"That's about it," he said, as he fastened off a rope. "That'll do. We

sha'n't want no more for this lot. Now don't you two leave the cart.

I'm going up to Mr Blackton, our salesman, you know, just to see if

he's anything to say, and then we'll go and have our braxfass. Don't

you chaps leave the cart."

"I sha'n't go," I said, and I glanced at Shock, who climbed up to the

top of the baskets, and lay down flat on his face, so as to be away from

me as it seemed, but I could see him watching me out of one eye from

time to time.

"I wonder whether he will ever be different," I thought to myself, as I

watched the selling of a huge load of beautifully white bunches of

turnips, as regular and clean as could be, when all at once I felt a

blow in my back, and looking sharply round, there were several of the

ragged boys who haunted the market grinning at me.

There was no handy place for me to post myself again so as to stop the

throwing, and I had to content myself with looking at them angrily; but

that did no good, for they separated, getting behind baskets and stacks

of baskets, like so many sharpshooters, and from thence laid siege to

me, firing shots with bits of market refuse, and anything they could

find.

I generally managed to dodge the missiles, but the boys were clever

enough to hit me several times, and with my blood boiling, and fingers

tingling to pull their ears or punch their dirty heads, I had to stand

fast and bear it all.

Barelegged, barefooted, and as active as cats, I felt sure that if I

chased one he would dodge in and out and escape me, and as to throwing

back at them, I was not going to stoop to do that.