Part 22 (1/2)
She turned away, calling over her shoulder to Cissy, ”Can I tell your fortune, pretty lady?”
Quick as a flash, Cissy's answer came back.
”No, but I can tell yours!”
The girl stopped, surprised that a maid of the Gentiles should tell fortunes without gla.s.s b.a.l.l.s, cards, or even looking at the lines of the hand.
”Tell it then,” she said defiantly.
”You will live to marry Billy!” she said.
Then Lep.r.o.nia Lovell laughed a short laugh, and said, ”Never while there's a daycent scarecrow in the world will I set up a tent-stick along with the likes of Billy Blythe!”
But all the same she walked away very thoughtful, her basketful of tinware clattering at her back.
After the fox-terrier had been examined, commented upon, and duly dressed, Billy Blythe walked with them part of the way homeward, and Hugh John opened out to him his troubles. He told him of the feud against the town boys, and related all the manifold misdeeds of the Smoutchies. All the while Billy said nothing, but the twitching of his hands and a peculiarly covert look about his dusky face told that he was listening intently. Scarcely had Hugh John come to the end of his tale when, with the blood mounting darkly to his cheeks, Billy turned about to see if he were observed. There was no one near.
”We are the lads to help ye to turn out Nipper Donnan and all his crew,” he said. ”Him and his would soon make short work of us gipsies if they had the rights of castle and common. Why, Nipper's father is what they call a bailie of their burgh court, and he fined my father for leaving his horses out on the roadside, while he went for a doctor when my mother was took ill a year past last November.”
Hugh John had found his ally.
”There's a round dozen and more of us lads,” continued Billy, ”that 'ud make small potatoes and mince meat of every one of them, if they was all Nipper Donnans--which they ain't, not by a long sight. I know them. A fig for them and their flag! We'll take their castle, and we'll take it too in a way they won't forget till their dying day.”
The gipsy lad was so earnest that Hugh John, though as much as ever bent upon conquering the enemy, began to be a little alarmed.
”Of course it's part pretending,” he said, ”for my father could put them out if we were to tell on them. But then we won't tell, and we want just to drive them out ourselves, and thrash them for stealing our pet lamb as well!”
”Right!” said Billy, ”don't be afraid; we won't do more than just give them a blazing good hiding. Tell 'ee what, they'll be main sore from top to toe before we get through with 'em!”
CHAPTER XXIX.
TOADY LION'S LITTLE WAYS.
Thus it was finally arranged. The castle was to be attacked by the combined forces of Windy Standard and the gipsy camp the following Sat.u.r.day afternoon, which would give them the enemy in their fullest numbers. Notice would be sent, so that they could not say afterwards that they had been taken by surprise. General Napoleon Smith was to write the letter himself, but to say nothing in it about his new allies. That, as Cissy put it, ”would be as good as a sixpenny surprise-packet to them.”
So full was Hugh John of his new plan and the hope, now almost the certainty, of success, that when he went home he could not help confiding in Prissy--who, like a model housewife, was seated mending her doll's stockings, while Janet Sheepshanks attended to those of the elder members of the household.
She listened with quick-coming breath and rising colour, till Hugh John thought that his own military enthusiasm had kindled hers.
”Isn't it prime?--we'll beat them till they can't speak,” said Hugh John triumphantly. ”They'll never come back to our castle again after we finish with them.”
But Priscilla was silent, and deep dejection gnawed dully at her heart.
”Poor things,” she said thoughtfully; ”perhaps they never had fathers to teach them, nor G.o.dfathers and G.o.dmothers to see that they learned their Catechism.”
”Precious lot mine ever did for me--only one old silver mug!” snorted Hugh John.
Just then Toady Lion came in.