Sam Wigglesworth had finished with school, which is not quite the
same as saying that he had finished his education. A number of
causes had combined to bring this event to pass. First, Sam was
beyond the age of compulsory attendance at the Public School, the
School Register recording him as sixteen years old. Then, Sam's
educational career had been anything but brilliant. Indeed, it
might fairly be described as dull. All his life he had been behind
his class, the biggest boy in his class, which fact might have been
to Sam a constant cause of humiliation had he not held as of the
slightest moment merely academic achievements. One unpleasant
effect which this fact had upon Sam's moral quality was that it
tended to make him a bully. He was physically the superior of all
in his class, and this superiority he exerted for what he deemed
the discipline of younger and weaker boys, who excelled him in
intellectual attainment.
Furthermore, Sam, while quite ready to enforce the code of
discipline which he considered suitable to the smaller and weaker
boys in his class, resented and resisted the attempts of constituted
authority to enforce discipline in his own case, with the result
that Sam's educational career was, after much long suffering,
abruptly terminated by the action of the long-suffering head, Alex
Day.
"With great regret I must report," his letter to the School Board
ran, "that in the case of Samuel Wigglesworth I have somehow failed
to inculcate the elementary principles of obedience to school
regulations and of adherence to truth in speech. I am free to
acknowledge," went on the letter, "that the defect may be in myself
as much as in the boy, but having failed in winning him to
obedience and truth-telling, I feel that while I remain master of
the school I must decline to allow the influence of this youth to
continue in the school. A whole-hearted penitence for his many
offences and an earnest purpose to reform would induce me to give
him a further trial. In the absence of either penitence or purpose
to reform I must regretfully advise expulsion."
Joyfully the School Board, who had for months urged upon the
reluctant head this action, acquiesced in the course suggested, and
Samuel was forthwith expelled, to his own unmitigated relief but to
his father's red and raging indignation at what he termed the
"(h)ignorant persecution of their betters by these (h)insolent
Colonials," for "'is son 'ad 'ad the advantages of schools of the
'ighest standin' in (H)England."
Being expelled from school Sam forthwith was brought by his father
to the office of the mills, where he himself was employed. There
he introduced his son to the notice of Mr. Grant Maitland, with
request for employment.
"Uh?" Sam's mental faculties had been occupied in observing the
activities and guessing the probable fate of a lumber-jack gaily
decked in scarlet sash and blue overalls, who was the central
figure upon a flaming calendar tacked up behind Mr. Maitland's
desk, setting forth the commercial advantages of trading with the
Departmental Stores of Stillwell & Son.
"Wot grade in school, the boss is (h)askin'," said his father
sharply.
"Grade?" enquired Sam, returning to the commonplace of the moment.
"Yes, what grade in the Public School were you in when you left?"
The blue eyes of the boss was "borin' 'oles" through Sam and the
voice pierced like a "bleedin' gimblet," as Wigglesworth, Sr.,
reported to his spouse that afternoon.
Sam hesitated a bare second. "Fourth grade it was," he said with
sullen reluctance.
"'Adn't no chance, Samuel 'adn't. Been a delicate child ever since
'is mother stopped suckin' 'im," explained the father with a
sympathetic shake of his head.
The cold blue eye appraised the boy's hulking mass.
"'E don't look it," continued Mr. Wigglesworth, noting the keen
glance, "but 'e's never been (h)able to bide steady at the school.
(H)It's 'is brain, sir."
"His--ah--brain?" Again the blue eyes appraised the boy, this time
scanning critically his face for indication of undue brain
activity.
"'Is brain, sir," earnestly reiterated the sympathetic parent.
"'Watch that (h)infant's brain,' sez the Doctor to the missus when
she put 'im on the bottle. And you know, we 'ave real doctors in
(H)England, sir. 'Watch 'is brain,' sez 'e, and, my word, the care
'is ma 'as took of that boy's brain is wunnerful, is fair
beautiful, sir." Mr. Wigglesworth's voice grew tremulous at the
remembrance of that maternal solicitude.
"And was that why he left school?" enquired the boss.
"Well, sir, not (h)exackly," said Mr. Wigglesworth, momentarily
taken aback, "though w'en I comes to think on it that must a been
at the bottom of it. You see, w'en Samuel went at 'is books of a
night 'e'd no more than begin at a sum an' 'e'd say to 'is ma, 'My
brain's a-whirlin', ma', just like that, and 'is ma would 'ave to
pull 'is book away, just drag it away, you might say. Oh, 'e's 'ad
a 'ard time, 'as Samuel." At this point the boss received a
distinct shock, for, as his eyes were resting upon Samuel's face
meditatively while he listened somewhat apathetically, it must be
confessed, to the father's moving tale, the eye of the boy remote
from the father closed in a slow but significant wink.
The boss sat up, galvanised into alert attention. "Eh? What?" he
exclaimed.
"Yes, sir, 'e's caused 'is ma many a (h)anxious hour, 'as Samuel."
Again the eye closed in a slow and solemn wink. "And we thought,
'is ma and me, that we would like to get Samuel into some easy
job--"
"But his brain, you say, would not let him study his books."
"Oh, it was them sums, sir, an' the Jography and the 'Istory an'
the Composition, an', an'--wot else, Samuel? You see, these 'ere
schools ain't a bit like the schools at 'ome, sir. They're so
confusing with their subjecks. Wot I say is, why not stick to real
(h)eddication, without the fiddle faddles?"
"So you want an easy job for your son, eh?" enquired Mr. Maitland.
"Boy," he said sharply to Samuel, whose eyes had again become fixed
upon the gay and daring lumber-jack. Samuel recalled himself with
visible effort. "Why did you leave school? The truth, mind." The
"borin'" eyes were at their work.
"That will do, Wigglesworth," said Mr. Maitland, holding up his
hand. "Sam, you come and see me tomorrow here at eight. Do you
understand?"
Sam nodded. After they had departed there came through the closed
office door the sound of Mr. Wigglesworth's voice lifted in violent
declamation, but from Sam no answering sound could be heard.
The school suffered no noticeable loss in the intellectual quality
of its activities by the removal of the whirling brain and
incidentally its physical integument of Samuel Wigglesworth. To
the smaller boys the absence of Sam brought unbounded joy, more
especially during the hours of recess from study and on their
homeward way from school after dismissal.
More than any other, little Steve Wickes rejoiced in Sam's
departure from school. Owing to some mysterious arrangement of
Sam's brain cells he seemed to possess an abnormal interest in
observing the sufferings of any animal. The squirming of an
unfortunate fly upon a pin fascinated him, the sight of a wretched
dog driven mad with terror rushing frantically down a street, with
a tin can dangling to its tail, convulsed him with shrieking
delight. The more highly organised the suffering animal, the
keener was Sam's joy. A child, for instance, flying in a paroxysm
of fear from Sam's hideously contorted face furnished acute
satisfaction. It fell naturally enough that little Steve Wickes,
the timid, shrinking, humpbacked son of the dead soldier, Stephen
Wickes, afforded Sam many opportunities of rare pleasure. It was
Sam that coined and, with the aid of his sycophantic following
never wanting to a bully, fastened to the child the nickname of
"Humpy Wicksy," working thereby writhing agony in the lad's highly
sensitive soul. But Sam did not stay his hand at the infliction of
merely mental anguish. It was one of his favorite forms of sport
to seize the child by the collar and breeches and, swinging him
high over head, hold him there in an anguish of suspense, awaiting
the threatened drop. It is to be confessed that Sam was not
entirely without provocation at the hands of little Steve, for the
lad had a truly uncanny cunning hidden in his pencil, by means of
which Sam was held up in caricature to the surreptitious joy of his
schoolmates. Sam's departure from school deprived him of the full
opportunity he formerly enjoyed of indulging himself in his
favourite sport. On this account he took the more eager advantage
of any opportunity that offered still to gratify his taste in this
direction.
Sauntering sullenly homeward from his interview with the boss and
with his temper rasped to a raw edge by his father's wrathful
comments upon his "dommed waggin' tongue," he welcomed with quite
unusual eagerness the opportunity for indulging himself in his
pastime of baiting Humpy Wicksy whom he overtook on his way home
from school during the noon intermission.
Like a frightened rabbit Steve scurried down a lane, Sam whooping
after him.
"Come back, you little beast. Do you hear me? I'll learn you to
come when you're called," he shouted, catching the terrified lad
and heaving him aloft in his usual double-handed grip.
"Let me down, you! Leave me alone now," shrieked the boy,
squirming, scratching, biting like an infuriated cat.
"Bite, would you?" said Sam, flinging the boy down. "Now then,"
catching him by the legs and turning him over on his stomach,
"we'll make a wheelbarrow of you. Gee up, Buck! Want a ride,
boys?" he shouted to his admiring gallery of toadies. "All
aboard!"
While the unhappy Steve, shrieking prayers and curses, was
struggling vainly to extricate himself from the hands gripping his
ankles, Annette Perrotte, stepping smartly along the street on her
way from the box factory, came past the entrance to the lane. By
her side strode a broad-shouldered, upstanding youth. Arrested by
Steve's outcries and curses she paused.
"What are those boys at, I wonder?" she said. "There's that big
lout of a Wigglesworth boy. He's up to no good, I bet you."
"Oh, a kids' row of some kind or ither, a doot," said the youth.
"Come along."
"He's hurting someone," said Annette, starting down the lane.
"What? I believe it's that poor child, Steve Wickes." Like a
wrathful fury she dashed in upon Sam and his company of tormentors
and, knocking the little ones right and left, she sprang upon Sam
with a fierce cry.
"You great brute!" She seized him by his thatch of thick red hair
and with one mighty swing she hurled him clear of Steve and dashed
him head on against the lane fence. Sheer surprise held Sam silent
for a few seconds, but as he felt the trickle of warm blood run
down his face and saw it red upon his hand, his surprise gave place
to terror.
"Ouw! Ouw!" he bellowed. "I'm killed, I'm dying. Ouw! Ouw!"
"I hope so," said Annette, holding Steve in her arms and seeking to
quiet his sobbing. But as she saw the streaming blood her face
paled.
"For the love of Mike, Mack, see if he's hurt," she said in a low
voice to her companion.
"Not he! He's makin' too much noise," said the young man. "Here,
you young bull, wait till I see what's wrang wi' ye," he continued,
stooping over Sam.
"Get away from me, I tell you. Ouw! Ouw! I'm dying, and they'll
hang her. Ouw! Ouw! I'm killed, and I'm just glad I am, for
she'll be hung to death." Here Sam broke into a vigorous stream of
profanity.
"Ay, he's improvin' A doot," said Mack. "Let us be going."
"'Ello! Wot's (h)up?" cried a voice. It was Mr. Wigglesworth on
his way home from the mill. "Why, bless my living lights, if it
bean't Samuel. Who's been a beatin' of you, Sammy?" His eye swept
the crowd. "'Ave you been at my lad?" he asked, stepping toward
the young man, whom Annette named Mack.
"Aw, steady up, man. There's naethin' much wrang wi' the lad--a
wee scratch on the heid frae fa'in' against the fence yonder."
"Who 'it 'im, I say?" shouted Mr. Wigglesworth. "Was it you?" he
added, squaring up to the young man.
"No, it wasn't, Mr. Wigglesworth. It was me." Mr. Wigglesworth
turned on Annette who, now that Sam's bellowing had much abated
with the appearance of his father upon the scene, had somewhat
regained her nerve.
"You?" gasped Mr. Wigglesworth. "You? My Samuel? It's a lie," he
cried.
"Hey, mon, guairrd y're tongue a bit," said Mack. "Mind ye're
speakin' to a leddy."
"A lidy! A lidy!" Mr. Wigglesworth's voice was eloquent of scorn.
"Aye, a leddy!" said Mack. "An' mind what ye say aboot her tae.
Mind y're manners, man."
"My manners, hey? An' 'oo may you be, to learn me manners, you
bloomin' (h)ignorant Scotch (h)ass. You give me (h)any of your
(h)imperance an' I'll knock y're bloomin' block (h)off, I will."
And Mr. Wigglesworth, throwing himself into the approved pugilistic
attitude, began dancing about the young Scot.
"Hoot, mon, awa' hame wi' ye. Tak' yon young tyke wi' ye an' gie
him a bit wash, he's needin' it," said Mack, smiling pleasantly at
the excited and belligerent Mr. Wigglesworth.
At this point Captain Jack, slowly motoring by the lane mouth,
turned his machine to the curb and leaped out.
"What's the row here?" he asked, making his way through the
considerable crowd that had gathered. "What's the trouble,
Wigglesworth?"
"They're knockin' my boy abaht, so they be," exclaimed Mr.
Wigglesworth. "But," with growing and righteous wrath, "they'll
find (h)out that, wotsomever they do to a kid, w'en they come (h)up
agin Joe Wigglesworth they've struck somethin' 'ard--'ard, d'ye
'ear? 'Ard!" And Mr. Wigglesworth made a pass at the young Scot.
"Hold on, Wigglesworth," said Captain Jack quietly, catching his
arm. "Were you beating up this kid?" he asked, turning to the
young man.
"Nae buddie's beatin' up the lad," said Mack quietly.
"It was me," said the girl, turning a defiant face to Captain Jack.
"You? Why! great Scot! Blest if it isn't Annette."
"Yes, it's me," said the girl, her face a flame of colour.
"By Jove, you've grown up, haven't you? And it was you that--"
"He was, and I pitched him into the fence. He hit his head and cut
it, I guess. I didn't mean--"
"Served him right enough, too, I fancy," said Captain Jack.
"I'll 'ave the law on the lot o' ye, I will. I'm a poor workin'
man, but I've got my rights, an' if there's a justice in this Gawd
forsaken country I'll 'ave protection for my family." And Mr.
Wigglesworth, working up a fury, backed off down the lane.
"Don't fear, Wigglesworth, you'll get all the justice you want.
Perhaps Sam will tell us--Hello! Where is Sam?"
But Sam had vanished. He had no mind for an investigation in the
presence of Captain Jack.
"Well, well, he can't be much injured, I guess. Meantime, can I
give you a lift, Annette?"
"No, thank you," said the girl, the colour in her cheeks matching
the crimson ribbon at her throat. "I'm just going home. It's only
a little way. I don't--"
"The young leddy is with me, sir," said the young Scotchman
quietly.
"Oh, she is, eh?" said Captain Jack, looking him over. "Ah, well,
then--Good-bye, Annette, for the present." He held out his hand.
"We must renew our old acquaintance, eh?"
"'Sir?' Rot! You aren't going to 'sir' me, Annette, after all the
fun and the fights we had in the old days. Not much. We're going
to be good chums again, eh? What do you say?"
"I don't know," said Annette, flashing a swift glance into Captain
Jack's admiring eyes. "It depends on--"
"Don't really know," said Jack carelessly. "Probably."
The crowd had meantime faded away with Captain Jack's going.
"Did na know the Captain was a friend of yours, Annette," said
Mack, falling into step beside her.
"No--yes--I don't know. We went to Public School together before
the war. I was a kid then." Her manner was abstracted and her
eyes were far away. Mack walked gloomily by her on one side,
little Steve on the other.
"Huh! He's no your sort, A doot," he said sullenly.
"What do you say?" cried Annette, returning from her abstraction.
"What do you mean, 'my sort'?" Her head went high and her eyes
flashed.
Annette stopped in her tracks, a burning red on her cheeks and a
dangerous light in her black eyes.
"Mr. McNish, that's your road," she said, pointing over his
shoulder.
"A'll tak it tae," said McNish, wheeling on his heel, "an' ye can
hae your Captain for me."
With never a look at him Annette took her way home.
"Good-bye, Steve," she said, stooping and kissing the boy. "This
is your corner."
"Annette," he said, with a quick, shy look up into her face, "I
like Captain Jack, don't you?"
"No," she said hurriedly. "I mean yes, of course."
"And I like you too," said the boy, with an adoring look in his
deep eyes, "better'n anyone in the world."
"Do you, Steve? I'm glad." Again she stooped swiftly and kissed
him. "Now run home."
She hurried home, passed into her room without a word to anyone.
Slowly she removed her hat, then turning to her glass she gazed at
her flushed face for a few moments. A little smile curved her
lips. "He did look at me anyway," she whispered to the face that
looked out at her, "he did, he did," she repeated. Then swiftly
she covered her eyes. When she looked again she saw a face white
and drawn. "He would na look at ye." The words smote her with a
chill. Drearily she turned away and went out.