Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 210/241

"And the bread and meat?" cried Shock. "Oh, give us a bit; I am so

bad."

"No," I said despairingly.

"What! yer won't give me a bit?" he cried fiercely.

"It isn't here," I said. "It was in my pocket, but it's gone. Stop!"

I cried; "it was a big packet and it must have come out."

I plunged my arms into the soft sand again, and worked away for long,

though I was ready to give up again and again, and my fingers were

getting painfully sore, but I worked on, and at last, to my great

delight, as I dug down something slipped slowly down on to the back of

my hands--I had dug down past it, and the sand had brought it out of the

side down to me.

"Here it is!" I cried, standing up and shaking the sand away from the

paper as I tore it open.

Shock uttered a cry like a hungry dog as he heard the paper rustle, and

then I divided the sandwiches in two parts and wrapped one back in the

paper.

"What yer doin'?" cried Shock.

"Saving half for next time," I said. "We mustn't eat all now."

Shock growled, but I paid no heed, and gave him half of what I had in my

hands, and then putting the parcel with the rest right at the end where

the sand did not fall, I sat down and we ate our gritty but welcome

meal.

We tried round the place again and again, using up the candle till the

wick fell over and dropped in the sand; and then first one match and

then another was burned till we were compelled to give up all hope of

escaping by our own efforts.

Refreshed and strengthened by the food, Shock expressed himself ready

for a new trial at digging his way out.

"I can do it," he said. "I'll soon get through."

Soon after he was clinging to me, hot, panting, and trembling in every

limb, after narrowly escaping suffocation, and when I wanted to take up

the task where he had left off, he clung to me more tightly and would

not let me go from his side.

"Yer can't do it," he said hoarsely. "Sand comes down and smothers yer.

Faster yer works, faster it comes. Let Ike bring the shovels."

There was no other chance. I felt that, and sat down beside Shock and

talked and tried to cheer him up; and when I broke down he roused up and

tried to cheer me. Then I talked to him about stories I had read, where

people had been buried alive, and where they were always dug out at

last, and when I was weary he took his turn, showing me that in his

rough way he could talk quickly and in an interesting way about catching

birds and rats. How at times he had caught rats with his hands, and had

been bitten by them.