Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 205/241

"I'm not there, Shock," I said. "I jumped back."

"Then what did yer go and pretend as you was buried in the sand for?"

cried the boy savagely.

I did not reply, and I heard him go as far from me as he could,

muttering and growling to himself, and in spite of my position I could

not help thinking of what a curious and different side I was seeing of

Shock's character. I had always found him so quiet and reserved, and

yet it was evident that he could talk and think like the best of us, and

somehow it seemed as if in spite of the way in which he turned away he

had a sort of liking for me.

This idea influenced me so that I felt a kind of pity for my companion

in misfortune. That was a good deal in the direction of liking him in

return. I felt sorry that I had frightened him, and at last after a

good deal of thinking I said to him: "Shock!"

"Hullo!"

"I'm sorry I made you think I was buried."

"Are yer?"

"Yes. Will you shake hands?"

"What for?"

This staggered me, and I could make no reply, and so we remained silent

for some time.

"Here, let's see," said Shock all at once. "Where's that there candle?"

"Here it is," I said, and as he struck a light I held the scrap of

little more than an inch long to the flame, and it burned up so that we

could examine our position, and we soon found that our prison was

reduced to about half its size.

"It's of no use to try and dig our way out, Shock," I said despairingly,

as I extinguished the candle. "We shall only bring down more sand and

cover ourselves in."

"Like Old Brownsmith's toolips," said Shock, laughing. "I say, should

we come up?"

"Don't talk like that," I said angrily. "Don't you understand that we

are buried alive."

"Course I do," he said. "Well, what on it?"

"What of it?" I said in agony, as the perspiration stood upon my brow.

"Yes, what on it? They'll dig us out like we do the taters out of a

clamp. What's the good o' being in a wax. I wish I'd some more

rabbud."

I drew in a long breath, and sat down as far from the sealed-up opening

as I could get, and listened to the rustling trickling noise made by the

sand every now and then, as more and more seemed to be coming in, and I

knew most thoroughly now that our only course was to wait till Ike

missed us, and came and dug us out.

"And that can't be long," I thought, for we must have been in here two

or three hours.