The Soul of a Child Part 13
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In the lane he found them loading a dray in front of the distillery, and he started across to watch the men straining at the next barrel. He had hardly taken a step in that direction, however, when a loud pop was heard from the black cave forming the entrance to the distillery. It was followed first by a single cry, and then by a hubbub of voices. A second later a young man came running out and threw himself p.r.o.ne into the gutter, where a trickle of water was to be seen.
Keith was too astonished to be frightened at once. He could not understand what made the man act in this way. Then another man came out in a rush and began to beat the legs of the man in the gutter with his hands, and Keith suddenly noticed that little blue flames were dancing up and down the grimy leathern trousers of the first man.
The memory of the night when the church burned leaped into his mind, making him turn instinctively toward the pa.s.sageway and his mother's lap.
At that moment a third man appeared carrying a big tank full of water which he poured over the man in the gutter. The latter got on his feet and limped back into the distillery, supported by his two comrades.
Keith was left behind, trembling a little and gazing curiously at the hanging head of the dray-horse which had not made the slightest movement during the previous excitement.
"He'll have to go to bed," said a sleepy voice at his shoulder just then.
Keith swung around as if touched by an electric shock. Before him he saw another small boy, apparently of his own age, but a little taller, and light-haired like himself.
"What's your name," asked Keith as soon as he caught his breath.
"Johan," answered the other stolidly, but not unfriendly.
"Have you got another name like me?"
"My name is Johan Peter Gustafsson," was the reply given in the tone of a lesson painfully learned.
"Where do you live?"
"Right here."
"Not in our house," Keith protested.
"No, down there," Johan explained, pointing to the little side door leading into the courtyard of one of the corner houses at the Quay.
"What's your father?" Keith continued his cross-examination.
"_Vaktmastare_" said Johan indifferently.
"So is mine," Keith cried eagerly. "Have you got a bank, too?"
Johan shook his head as if unable to grasp what Keith meant.
"My popsey works in the office down there," he said, "and we live beside it, and at night I go with popsey when he carries all the mail to the postoffice."
"Why do you call him popsey," inquired Keith, fascinated by the new word and wondering if he would dare use it to his own father.
"Because that's what he is," Johan declared.
A few minutes later they were playing together as if they had known each other for ever. They had just discovered an unusually large and tempting pin in a crack at the bottom of the gutter, when Keith heard his mother calling from the window above:
"What are you doing, Keith?"
"Oh, just playing," he replied without looking up, forgetful of everything but the pin that would not come out of the crack.
"Who is that with you?"
"That is Johan," Keith shouted back triumphantly, "and his papa is a _vaktmastare_, too."
"Come right up and let me speak to you," was the insistant rejoinder from above.
"Oh, please, mamma," the boy pleaded, his voice breaking a little, "can't I stay just a little longer?"
"You must come at once," his mother commanded.
"Is that your mumsey," Johan asked.
"It is my mamma," Keith retorted, his attention momentarily diverted by Johan's most peculiar way of referring to his parents.
"Then you had better go," advised the new friend sagely, "or she will tell your popsey, and then you know what happens to you."
"I think I can come down again, if you wait for me," cried Keith as he ran into the long dark pa.s.sageway.
At that moment a cry of "Johan" rose from the lower part of the lane, and Keith had to come back once more to look.
"There's my mumsey now," said Johan philosophically, pointing to an open window on the ground floor of the corner house. With that he slouched off in a manner that Keith half envied and half resented.
XXIII
The sudden emergence of Johan had filled Keith's heart with a new hope.
Here was a possible playmate at last. The fact that his father was a _vaktmastare_ like Keith's ought to settle all paternal opposition, the boy thought. But to his great surprise, he found this not to be the case.
A severe cross-examination followed his return home. In the midst of it, Keith made a grievous strategic mistake, lured on by his insatiable curiosity about strange words.
"Why does Johan call his mamma 'mumsey' and his papa 'popsey,'" he asked unexpectedly. "It sounds funny."
"Because he does not know any better," his mother rejoined with unmistakable disapproval. "It doesn't sound nice, and it isn't nice."
"But his papa and mamma don't care," Keith objected.
"That's the worst of it," said the mother. "It shows they are not very nice people, and I wish to talk to your father before you can play with Johan any more."
"I have heard of them," the grandmother piped up, making them both turn towards her, one hopefully and the other doubtfully.
The grandmother never left the kitchen. She walked from the sofa to the big foot-stool, from the foot-stool to the table by the window, and from the table back to the sofa. Sometimes she would not be seen talking to another person for days. And yet she had a miraculous way of surprising the rest of the family with pieces of gossip picked out of the air, one might think. There was apparently not a person in the neighbourhood of whom she had not heard, and about whom she could not give some more or less intimate piece of information. They were all perfect strangers to her, but she followed their lives with as much keenness for minute details as if they had been her nearest kin or dear friends.
"She was a cook in the house of the man whose office Gustafsson works in," the grandmother went on. "He used to do odd jobs for the family, cutting wood and such things, and in that way he met her in the kitchen, and one fine day they decided to get married. She is older than him, and I guess it was her last chance. But the family was crazy about her, and when they heard of it, they gave him the place of attendant in the office downstairs and the two rooms back of the office to live in. He was just a peasant boy, and she reads the Bible all day and goes to prayer-meeting at night."
"How do you know all that," wondered Keith's mother, having learned by this time that the old woman's gossip was generally well founded on truth.
"Oh," the grandmother said with a queer smile particular to such occasions, "a little bird sang it to me."
"I think they must be rather low people," Keith's mother concluded.
The Soul of a Child Part 13
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The Soul of a Child Part 13 summary
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