The Dark House eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 357 pages of information about The Dark House.

The Dark House eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 357 pages of information about The Dark House.

“Yes—­I—­I think I would.”

She had called the other children and they had come at once and stood round her, gazing wide-eyed at him, not critically or unkindly, but like puppies considering a new companion.  The girl in the green serge frock had taken him by the hand.

“This is a friend of mine, Robert Stonehouse.  He’s going to play with us.  Tag—­Robert!”

And she had tapped him on the arm and was off like a young deer.

All his awkwardness and shyness had dropped from him like a disguise.  No one knew that he was a strange little boy or that his father owed money to all the tradespeople.  He was just like anyone else.  And he had run faster than the fastest of them.  He had wanted to show her that he was not just a cry baby.  And whenever he had come near her he had been all warm with happiness.

In three days the nice children had become the Brothers Banditti with Robert Stonehouse as their chief.  Having admitted the stranger into their midst he had gone straight to their heads like wine.  He was a rebel and an outlaw who had suddenly come into power.  At heart he was older than any of them.  He knew things about reversions and bailiffs and life generally that none of them had ever heard of in their well-ordered homes.  He was strong and knew how to fight.  The nice children had never fought but they found they liked it.  Once, like an avenging Attila, he had led them across the hill and fallen upon his ancient enemies with such awful effect that they never raised their heads again.  And the Banditti had returned home whooping and drunk with victory and the newly discovered joy of battle.  His hand was naturally against all authority.  He led them in dark plottings against their governesses and nursemaids, and even against the Law itself as personified by an elderly, somewhat pompous policeman whose beat included their territory.  On foggy afternoons they pealed the doorbells of such as had complaint against them, and from concealment gloated over the indignant maids who had been lured down several flights of stairs to answer their summons.  And no longer were they nice children who returned home clean and punctual to the bosom of their families.

Very rarely had the Banditti showed signs of revolt against Robert’s despotism, and each time he had won them back with ease which sowed the first seeds of cynicism in his mind.  It happened to be another of the elder Stonehouse’s theories—­which he had been known to expound eloquently to his creditors—­that children should be taught the use of money, and at such times as the Stonehouse family prospered Robert’s pocket bulged with sums that staggered the very imagination of his followers.  He appeared among them like a prince—­lavish, reckless, distributing chocolates of superior lineage with a haughty magnificence that brought the disaffected cringing to his feet.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Dark House from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.