Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 174/241

"Shake yourself, dog!" cried Courtenay, roaring with laughter.

"Fetch him a towel," cried Philip. "A towel for the clean pauper. Give

him another ducking, Courtenay."

He ran at me, but in those moments I had forgotten everything in my

thirst to be revenged on my cowardly persecutors.

Philip only seemed to be something in my way as I made at his brother,

and throwing out one fist, he went down amongst the willows, while the

next minute I was striking at Courtenay with all my might.

He was a bigger boy than I. Taller and older, and he had had many a

good fight at school no doubt; but my onslaught staggered him, and I

drove him before me, striking at him as he reached the handles of my

water-barrow, and he fell over them heavily.

This only enraged him, and he sprang up and received my next blow right

in the face, to be staggered for the moment.

Then I don't know what happened, only that my arms were going like

windmills, that I was battering Courtenay, and that he was battering me;

that we were down, and then up, and then down again, over and over, and

fighting fiercely as a couple of dogs.

I think I was getting the best of it, when I began to feel weak, and

that my adversary was hitting me back and front at once.

Then I realised that Philip had attacked me too, and that I was getting

very much the worst of it in a sort of thunderstorm which rained blows.

Then the blows only came from one side, for there was a hoarse panting

and the sound of heavy blows and scuffling away from me, while I was

hitting out again with all my might at one boy instead of two.

All at once there was a crash and the rattle of an iron handle, and

Courtenay went down. He had caught against the pail and fallen.

This gave me time to glance round and see in a half-blinded way that

Philip was fighting with some other boy, who closed with him, and down

they went together.

"Yah! yah! Cowards! cowards!" cried a voice that I well knew; and I saw

giddily that Courtenay and Philip were running up the path, and that

Shock was standing beside me.

"Well done!" cried another voice. "What a licking you two give 'em!"

Shock started, and ran, darting among the bushes, while I sat down on a

barrow-handle, feeling rather thick and dizzy.

"I was coming to stop it. Two to one's too bad; but that ragged chap

come out at young Phil, and my word, he did give it him well. Are you

much hurt, my lad?"

"No, not much, Mr Bunce," I said, staring at him in rather a confused

way.