The Obstacle Race eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 416 pages of information about The Obstacle Race.

The Obstacle Race eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 416 pages of information about The Obstacle Race.

She faced him, and the last of her fear departed.  Though he was so terribly deformed that he looked like some dreadful beast reared on its hind legs there was that about the face, sullen though it was, that stirred her deepest feelings.

She did her best to conceal the fact, however.  “Tell me why you threw those stones!” she said.

“Because I wanted to hit you,” he returned with disconcerting promptitude.

She looked at him steadily.  “How very unkind of you!” she said.

His eyes gleamed with a smouldering resentment.  “No, it wasn’t.  I didn’t want you there.  Dicky is coming soon, and he likes it best when there is no one there.”

She noticed that though there was scant courtesy in his speech, it was by no means the rough talk of the fisher-folk.  It fired her curiosity.  “And who is Dicky?” she said.

“Who are you?” he retorted rudely.

She smiled again.  “You are not very polite, are you?  But I don’t mind telling you if you want to know.  My name is Juliet Moore.  Now tell me yours!”

He looked at her doubtfully.  “Juliet is a name out of a book,” he said.

She laughed, a low, soft laugh that woke an answering glimmer of amusement in his sullen face.  “How clever of you to know that!” she said.

“No, I’m not clever.”  Tersely he contradicted her.  “Old Swag at The Three Tuns says I’m the village idiot.”

“What a horrid old man!” she exclaimed almost involuntarily.

He nodded his heavy head.  “Yes, I knocked him down the other day, and kicked him for it.  Dicky caned me afterwards,—­I’m not supposed to go to The Three Tuns—­but I was glad I’d done it all the same.”

“Well, who is Dicky?” she asked again.  Her interest was growing.

He glared at her with sudden suspicion.  “What do you want to know for?”

“Because I think he must be rather a brave man,” she said.

The suspicion vanished.  His eyes shown.  “Oh, Dicky isn’t afraid of anything,” he declared with pride.  “He’s my brother.  He knows—­heaps of things.  He’s a man.”

“You are fond of him,” said Juliet, with her friendly smile.

The boy’s face lighted up.  “He’s the only person I love in the world,” he said, “except Mrs. Rickett’s baby.”

“Mrs. Rickett’s baby!” She checked a quick desire to laugh that caught her unawares.  “You are fond of babies then?”

“No, I’m not.  I like dogs.  I don’t like babies—­except Mrs. Rickett’s and he’s such a jolly little cuss.”  He smiled over the words, and again she felt a deep compassion.  Somehow his face seemed almost sadder when he smiled.

“I am staying with Mrs. Rickett,” she said.  “But I only came yesterday, and I haven’t made the baby’s acquaintance yet.  I must get myself introduced.  You haven’t told me your name yet, you know.  Mayn’t I hear what it is?  I’ve told you mine.”

He looked at her with renewed suspicion.  “Hasn’t anybody told you about Me yet?” he said.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Obstacle Race from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.