The Understudy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 17 pages of information about The Understudy.

The Understudy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 17 pages of information about The Understudy.

The three of ’em came round next evening to see it, and they was so afraid of its being lost that when they stood me a pint at the Bull’s Head we ’ad to take it with us.  Ginger was going to buy a sausage-roll for it, but, arter Sam ’ad pointed out that they was paying me fourpence a day for its keep, he didn’t.  And Sam ’ad the cheek to tell me that it liked a nice bit o’ fried steak as well as anything.

A lot o’ people admired that dog.  I remember, on the fourth night I think it was, the barge Dauntless came alongside, and arter she was made fast the skipper came ashore and took a little notice of it.

“Where did you get ’im?” he ses.

I told ’im ’ow it was, and he stood there for some time patting the dog on the ’ead and whistling under ’is breath.

“It’s much the same size as my dog,” he ses; “that’s a black retriever, too.”

I ses “Oh!”

“I’m afraid I shall ’ave to get rid of it,” he ses.  “It’s on the barge now.  My missis won’t ’ave it in the ’ouse any more cos it bit the baby.  And o’ course it was no good p’inting out to ’er that it was its first bite.  Even the law allows one bite, but it’s no good talking about the law to wimmen.”

“Except when it’s on their side,” I ses.

He patted the dog’s ’ead agin and whistled, and a big black dog came up out of the cabin and sprang ashore.  It went up and put its nose to Sam’s dog, and they both growled like thunderstorms.

“Might be brothers,” ses the skipper, “on’y your dog’s got a better ’eead and a better coat.  It’s a good dog.”

“They’re all alike to me,” I ses.  “I couldn’t tell ’em apart, not if you paid me.”

The skipper stood there a moment, and then he ses:  “I wish you’d let me see ’ow my dog looks in your dog’s collar,” he ses.

“Whaffor?” I ses.

“On’y fancy,” he ses.  “Oh, Bill!”

“Yes,” I ses.

“It ain’t Christmas,” he ses, taking my arm and walking up and down a bit, “but it will be soon, and then I mightn’t see you.  You’ve done me one or two good turns, and I should like to make you a Christmas-box of three ’arf-dollars.”

I let ’im give ’em to me, and then, just to please ’im, I let ’im try the collar on ’is dog, while I swept up a bit.

“It looked beautiful on ’im,” he ses, when I’d finished; “but I’ve put it back agin.  Come on, Bruno.  Good-night, Bill.”

He got ‘is dog on the barge agin arter a bit o’ trouble, and arter making sure ’that my dog ’ad got its own collar on I went on with my work.

The dog didn’t seem to be quite ’imself next day, and he was so fierce in the yard that my missis was afraid to go near ’im.  I was going to ask the skipper about it, as ’e seemed to know more about dogs than I did, but when I got to the wharf the barge had sailed.

It was just getting dark when there came a ring at the gate-bell, and afore I could answer it arf-a-dozen more, as fast as the bell could go.  And when I opened the wicket Sam Small and Ginger and Peter Russet all tried to get in at once.

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Project Gutenberg
The Understudy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.