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The Railway Children
The Railway Children
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The Railway Children

Peter halted, turned over the brushwood with a well-scarred boot, and said:

‘Here’s the first coal from the St Peter’s Mine. We’ll take it home in the chariot. Punctuality and despatch. All orders carefully attended to. Any shaped lump cut to suit regular customers.’

The chariot was packed full of coal. And when it was packed it had to be unpacked again because it was so heavy that it couldn’t be got up the hill by the three children, not even when Peter harnessed himself to the handle with his braces, and firmly grasping his waistband in one hand pulled while the girls pushed behind.

Three journeys had to be made before the coal from Peter’s mine was added to the heap of Mother’s coal in the cellar.

Afterwards Peter went out alone, and came back very black and mysterious.

‘I’ve been to my coal-mine,’ he said; ‘tomorrow evening we’ll bring home the black diamonds in the chariot.’

It was a week later that Mrs Viney remarked to Mother how well this last lot of coal was holding out.

The children hugged themselves and each other in complicated wriggles of silent laughter as they listened on the stairs. They had all forgotten by now that there had ever been any doubt in Peter’s mind as to whether coal-mining was wrong.

But there came a dreadful night when the Station Master put on a pair of old sand shoes that he had worn at the seaside on his summer holiday, and crept out very quietly to the yard where the Sodom and Gomorrah heap of coal was, with the whitewashed line round it. He crept out there, and he waited like a cat by a mouse-hole. On the top of the heap something small and dark was scrabbling and rattling furtively among the coal.

The Station Master concealed himself in the shadow of a brake-van that had a little tin chimney and was labelled:

G.N. & S.R.

34576

Return at once to

White Heather Sidings,

and in this concealment he lurked till the small thing on the top of the heap ceased to scrabble and rattle, came to the edge of the heap, cautiously let itself down, and lifted something after it. Then the arm of the Station Master was raised, the hand of the Station Master fell on a collar, and there was Peter firmly held by the jacket, with an old carpenter’s bag full of coal in his trembling clutch.

‘So I’ve caught you at last, have I, you young thief?’ said the Station Master.

‘I’m not a thief,’ said Peter, as firmly as he could. ‘I’m a coal-miner.’

‘Tell that to the Marines,’ said the Station Master.

‘It would be just as true whoever I told it to,’ said Peter.

‘You’re right there,’ said the man who held him. ‘Stow your jaw, you young rip, and come along to the station.’

‘Oh, no,’ cried in the darkness an agonized voice that was not Peter’s.

‘Not the police station!’ said another voice from the darkness.

‘Not yet,’ said the Station Master. ‘The Railway Station first. Why, it’s a regular gang. Any more of you?’

‘Only us,’ said Bobbie and Phyllis, coming out of the shadow of another truck labelled Stavely Colliery, and bearing on it the legend in white chalk: ‘Wanted in No. 1 Road.’

‘What do you mean by spying on a fellow like this?’ said Peter, angrily.

‘Time someone did spy on you, I think,’ said the Station Master. ‘Come along to the station.’

‘Oh, don’t!’ said Bobbie. ‘Can’t you decide now what you’ll do to us? It’s our fault just as much as Peter’s. We helped to carry the coal away – and we knew where he got it.’

‘No, you didn’t,’ said Peter.

‘Yes, we did,’ said Bobbie. ‘We knew all the time. We only pretended we didn’t just to humour you.’

Peter’s cup was full. He had mined for coal, he had struck coal, he had been caught, and now he learned that his sisters had ‘humoured’ him.

‘Don’t hold me!’ he said. ‘I won’t run away.’

The Station Master loosed Peter’s collar, struck a match and looked at them by its flickering light.

‘Why,’ said he, ‘you’re the children from the Three Chimneys up yonder. So nicely dressed, too. Tell me now, what made you do such a thing? Haven’t you ever been to church or learned your catechism or anything, not to know it’s wicked to steal?’ He spoke much more gently now, and Peter said:

‘I didn’t think it was stealing. I was almost sure it wasn’t. I thought if I took it from the outside part of the heap, perhaps it would be. But in the middle I thought I could fairly count it only mining. It’ll take thousands of years for you to burn up all that coal and get to the middle parts.’

‘Not quite. But did you do it for a lark or what?’

‘Not much lark carrying that beastly heavy stuff up the hill,’ said Peter, indignantly.

‘Then why did you?’ The Station Master’s voice was so much kinder now that Peter replied:

‘You know that wet day? Well, Mother said we were too poor to have a fire. We always had fires when it was cold at our other house, and –’

Don’t!’ interrupted Bobbie, in a whisper.

‘Well,’ said the Station Master, rubbing his chin thoughtfully, ‘I’ll tell you what I’ll do. I’ll look over it this once. But you remember, young gentleman, stealing is stealing, and what’s mine isn’t yours, whether you call it mining or whether you don’t. Run along home.’

‘Do you mean you aren’t going to do anything to us? Well, you are a brick,’ said Peter, with enthusiasm.

‘You’re a dear,’ said Bobbie.

‘You’re a darling,’ said Phyllis.

‘That’s all right,’ said the Station Master.

And on this they parted.

‘Don’t speak to me,’ said Peter, as the three went up the hill. ‘You’re spies and traitors – that’s what you are.’

But the girls were too glad to have Peter between them, safe and free, and on the way to Three Chimneys and not to the Police Station, to mind much what he said.

‘We did say it was us as much as you,’ said Bobbie, gently.

‘Well – and it wasn’t.’

‘It would have come to the same thing in Courts with judges,’ said Phyllis. ‘Don’t be snarky, Peter. It isn’t our fault your secrets are so jolly easy to find out.’ She took his arm, and he let her.

‘There’s an awful lot of coal in the cellar, anyhow,’ he went on.

‘Oh, don’t!’ said Bobbie. ‘I don’t think we ought to be glad about that.’

‘I don’t know,’ said Peter, plucking up spirit. ‘I’m not at all sure, even now, that mining is a crime.’

But the girls were quite sure. And they were also quite sure that he was quite sure, however little he cared to own it.

CHAPTER 3

The Old Gentleman

After the adventure of Peter’s coal-mine, it seemed well to the children to keep away from the station – but they did not, they could not, keep away from the railway. They had lived all their lives in a street where cabs and omnibuses rumbled by at all hours, and the carts of butchers and bakers and candlestick makers (I never saw a candlestick maker’s cart; did you?) might occur at any moment. Here in the deep silence of the sleeping country the only things that went by were the trains. They seemed to be all that was left to link the children to the old life that had once been theirs. Straight down the hill in front of Three Chimneys the daily passage of their six feet began to mark a path across the crisp, short turf. They began to know the hours when certain trains passed, and they gave names to them. The 9.15 up was called the Green Dragon. The 10.7 down was the Worm of Wantley. The midnight town express, whose shrieking rush they sometimes woke from their dreams to hear, was the Fearsome Fly-by-night. Peter got up once, in chill starshine, and, peeping at it through his curtains, named it on the spot.

It was by the Green Dragon that the old gentleman travelled. He was a very nice-looking old gentleman, and he looked as if he were nice, too, which is not at all the same thing. He had a fresh-coloured, clean-shaven face and white hair, and he wore rather odd-shaped collars and a top-hat that wasn’t exactly the same kind as other people’s. Of course the children didn’t see all this at first. In fact the first thing they noticed about the old gentleman was his hand.

It was one morning as they sat on the fence waiting for the Green Dragon, which was three and a quarter minutes late by Peter’s Waterbury watch that he had had given him on his last birthday.

‘The Green Dragon’s going where Father is,’ said Phyllis; ‘if it were a really real dragon, we could stop it and ask it to take our love to Father.’

‘Dragons don’t carry people’s love,’ said Peter; ‘they’d be above it.’

‘Yes, they do, if you tame them thoroughly first. They fetch and carry like pet spaniels,’ said Phyllis, ‘and feed out of your hand. I wonder why Father never writes to us.’

‘Mother says he’s been too busy,’ said Bobbie; ‘but he’ll write soon, she says.’

‘I say,’ Phyllis suggested, ‘let’s all wave to the Green Dragon as it goes by. If it’s a magic dragon, it’ll understand and take our loves to Father. And if it isn’t, three waves aren’t much. We shall never miss them.’

So when the Green Dragon tore shrieking out of the mouth of its dark lair, which was the tunnel, all three children stood on the railing and waved their pocket-handkerchiefs without stopping to think whether they were clean handkerchiefs or the reverse. They were, as a matter of fact, very much the reverse.

And out of a first-class carriage a hand waved back. A quite clean hand. It held a newspaper. It was the old gentleman’s hand.

After this it became the custom for waves to be exchanged between the children and the 9.15.

And the children, especially the girls, liked to think that perhaps the old gentleman knew Father, and would meet him ‘in business’, wherever that shady retreat might be, and tell him how his three children stood on a rail far away in the green country and waved their love to him every morning, wet or fine.

For they were now able to go out in all sorts of weather such as they would never have been allowed to go out in when they lived in their villa house. This was Aunt Emma’s doing, and the children felt more and more that they had not been quite fair to this unattractive aunt, when they found how useful were the long gaiters and waterproof coats that they had laughed at her for buying for them.

Mother, all this time, was very busy with her writing. She used to send off a good many long blue envelopes with stories in them – and large envelopes of different sizes and colours used to come to her. Sometimes she would sigh when she opened them and say:

‘Another story come home to roost. Oh, dear! Oh, dear!’ and then the children would be very sorry.

But sometimes she would wave the envelope in the air and say:

‘Hooray, hooray. Here’s a sensible Editor. He’s taken my story and this is the proof of it.’

At first the children thought ‘the proof’ meant the letter the sensible Editor had written, but they presently got to know that the proof was long slips of paper with the story printed on them.

Whenever an Editor was sensible there were buns for tea.

One day Peter was going down to the village to get buns to celebrate the sensibleness of the Editor of the Children’s Globe, when he met the Station Master.

Peter felt very uncomfortable, for he had now had time to think over the affair of the coal-mine. He did not like to say ‘Good morning’ to the Station Master, as you usually do to anyone you meet on a lonely road, because he had a hot feeling, which spread even to his ears, that the Station Master might not care to speak to a person who had stolen coals. ‘Stolen’ is a nasty word, but Peter felt it was the right one. So he looked down, and said nothing.

It was the Station Master who said ‘Good morning’ as he passed by. And Peter answered, ‘Good morning.’ Then he thought:

‘Perhaps he doesn’t know who I am by daylight, or he wouldn’t be so polite.’

And he did not like the feeling which thinking this gave him. And then before he knew what he was going to do he ran after the Station Master, who stopped when he heard Peter’s hasty boots crunching the road, and coming up with him very breathless and with his ears now quite magenta-coloured, he said:

‘I don’t want you to be polite to me if you don’t know me when you see me.’

‘Eh?’ said the Station Master.

‘I thought perhaps you didn’t know it was me that took the coals,’ Peter went on, ‘when you said “Good morning”. But it was, and I’m sorry. There.’

‘Why,’ said the Station Master, ‘I wasn’t thinking anything at all about the precious coals. Let bygones be bygones. And where were you off to in such a hurry?’

‘I’m going to buy buns for tea,’ said Peter.

‘I thought you were all so poor,’ said the Station Master.

‘So we are,’ said Peter, confidentially, ‘but we always have three-pennyworth of halfpennies for tea whenever Mother sells a story or a poem or anything.’

‘Oh,’ said the Station Master, ‘so your Mother writes stories, does she?’

‘The beautifulest you ever read,’ said Peter.

‘You ought to be very proud to have such a clever Mother.’

‘Yes,’ said Peter, ‘but she used to play with us more before she had to be so clever.’

‘Well,’ said the Station Master, ‘I must be getting along. You give us a look in at the Station whenever you feel so inclined. And as to coals, it’s a word that – well – oh, no, we never mention it, eh?’

‘Thank you,’ said Peter. ‘I’m very glad it’s all straightened out between us.’ And he went on across the canal bridge to the village to get the buns, feeling more comfortable in his mind than he had felt since the hand of the Station Master had fastened on his collar that night among the coals.

Next day when they had sent the threefold wave of greeting to Father by the Green Dragon, and the old gentleman had waved back as usual, Peter proudly led the way to the station.

‘But ought we?’ said Bobbie.

‘After the coals, she means,’ Phyllis explained.

‘I met the Station Master yesterday,’ said Peter, in an off-hand way, and he pretended not to hear what Phyllis had said; ‘he expressly invited us to go down any time we liked.’

‘After the coals?’ repeated Phyllis. ‘Stop a minute – my bootlace is undone again.’

‘It always is undone again,’ said Peter, ‘and the Station Master was more of a gentleman than you’ll ever be, Phil – throwing coal at a chap’s head like that.’

Phyllis did up her bootlace and went on in silence, but her shoulders shook, and presently a fat tear fell off her nose and splashed on the metal of the railway line. Bobbie saw it.

‘Why, what’s the matter, darling?’ she said, stopping short and putting her arm round the heaving shoulders.

‘He called me un – un – ungentlemanly,’ sobbed Phyllis. ‘I didn’t never call him unladylike, not even when he tied my Clorinda to the firewood bundle and burned her at the stake for a martyr.’

Peter had indeed perpetrated this outrage a year or two before.

‘Well, you began, you know,’ said Bobbie, honestly, ‘about coals and all that. Don’t you think you’d better both unsay everything since the wave, and let honour be satisfied?’

‘I will if Peter will,’ said Phyllis, sniffling.

‘All right,’ said Peter; ‘honour is satisfied. Here, use my hankie, Phil, for goodness’ sake, if you’ve lost yours as usual. I wonder what you do with them.’

‘You had my last one,’ said Phyllis, indignantly, ‘to tie up the rabbit-hutch door with. But you’re very ungrateful. It’s quite right what it says in the poetry-book about sharper than a serpent it is to have a toothless child – but it means ungrateful when its says toothless. Miss Lowe told me so.’

‘All right,’ said Peter, impatiently, ‘I’m sorry, There! Now will you come on?’

They reached the station and spent a joyous two hours with the Porter. He was a worthy man and seemed never tired of answering the questions that began with ‘Why –’ which many people in higher ranks of life often seem weary of.

He told them many things that they had not known before – as, for instance, that the things that hook carriages together are called couplings, and that the pipes like great serpents that hang over the couplings are meant to stop the train with.

‘If you could get a holt of one o’ them when the train is going and pull ’em apart,’ said he, ‘she’d stop dead off with a jerk.’

‘Who’s she?’ said Phyllis.

‘The train, of course,’ said the Porter. After that the train was never again ‘It’ to the children.

‘And you know the thing in the carriages where it says on it, “Five pounds’ fine for improper use.” If you was to improperly use that, the train ’ud stop.’

‘And if you used it properly?’ said Roberta.

‘It ’ud stop just the same, I suppose,’ said he, ‘but it isn’t proper use unless you’re being murdered. There was an old lady once – someone kidded her on it was a refreshment-room bell, and she used it improper, not being in danger of her life, though hungry, and when the train stopped and the guard came along expecting to find someone weltering in their last moments, she says, “Oh, please, Mister, I’ll take a glass of stout and a bath bun,” she says. And the train was seven minutes behind her time as it was.’

‘What did the guard say to the old lady?’

I dunno,’ replied the Porter, ‘but I lay she didn’t forget it in a hurry, whatever it was.’

In such delightful conversation the time went by all too quickly.

The Station Master came out once or twice from that sacred inner temple behind the place where the hole is that they sell you tickets through, and was most jolly with them all.

‘Just as if coal had never been discovered,’ Phyllis whispered to her sister.

He gave them each an orange, and promised to take them up into the signal-box one of these days, when he wasn’t so busy.

Several trains went through the station, and Peter noticed for the first time that engines have numbers on them, like cabs.

‘Yes,’ said the Porter, ‘I knowed a young gent as used to take down the numbers of every single one he seed; in a green leather note-book with silver corners it was, owing to his father being very well-to-do in the wholesale stationery.’

Peter felt that he could take down numbers, too, even if he was not the son of a wholesale stationer. As he did not happen to have a green leather note-book with silver corners, the Porter gave him a yellow envelope and on it he noted:

379

663

and felt that this was the beginning of what would be a most interesting collection.

That night at tea he asked Mother if she had a green leather note-book with silver corners. She had not; but when she heard what he wanted it for she gave him a little black one.

‘It has a few pages torn out,’ said she; ‘but it will hold quite a lot of numbers, and when it’s full I’ll give you another. I’m so glad you like the railway. Only, please, you mustn’t walk on the line.’

‘Not if we face the way the train’s coming?’ asked Peter, after a gloomy pause, in which glances of despair were exchanged.

‘No – really not,’ said Mother.

Then Phyllis said, ‘Mother, didn’t you ever walk on the railway lines when you were little?’

Mother was an honest and honourable Mother, so she had to say, ‘Yes.’

‘Well, then,’ said Phyllis.

‘But, darlings, you don’t know how fond I am of you. What should I do if you got hurt?’

‘Are you fonder of us than Granny was of you when you were little?’ Phyllis asked. Bobbie made signs to her to stop, but Phyllis never did see signs, no matter how plain they might be.

Mother did not answer for a minute. She got up to put more water in the teapot.

‘No one,’ she said at last, ‘ever loved anyone more than my mother loved me.’

Then she was quiet again, and Bobbie kicked Phyllis hard under the table, because Bobbie understood a little bit the thoughts that were making Mother so quiet – the thoughts of the time when Mother was a little girl and was all the world to her mother. It seems so easy and natural to run to Mother when one is in trouble. Bobbie understood a little how people do not leave off running to their mothers when they are in trouble even when they are grown up, and she thought she knew a little what it must be to be sad, and have no mother to run to any more.

So she kicked Phyllis, who said:

‘What are you kicking me like that for, Bob?’

And then Mother laughed a little and sighed and said:

‘Very well, then. Only let me be sure you do know which way the trains come – and don’t walk on the line near the tunnel or near corners.’

‘Trains keep to the left like carriages,’ said Peter, ‘so if we keep to the right, we’re bound to see them coming.’

‘Very well,’ said Mother, and I dare say you think that she ought not to have said it. But she remembered about when she was a little girl herself, and she did say it – and neither her own children nor you nor any other children in the world could ever understand exactly what it cost her to do it. Only some few of you, like Bobbie, may understand a very little bit.

It was the very next day that Mother had to stay in bed because her head ached so. Her hands were burning hot, and she would not eat anything, and her throat was very sore.

‘If I was you, Mum,’ said Mrs Viney, ‘I should take and send for the doctor. There’s a lot of catchy complaints a-going about just now. My sister’s eldest – she took a chill and it went to her inside, two year ago come Christmas, and she’s never been the same gell since.’

Mother wouldn’t at first, but in the evening she felt so much worse that Peter was sent to the house in the village that had three laburnum trees by the gate, and on the gate a brass plate with W. W. Forrest, M.D., on it.

W. W. Forrest, M.D., came at once. He talked to Peter on the way back. He seemed a most charming and sensible man, interested in railways, and rabbits, and really important things.

When he had seen Mother, he said it was influenza.

‘Now, Lady Grave-airs,’ he said in the hall to Bobbie, ‘I suppose you’ll want to be head-nurse.’

‘Of course,’ said she.

‘Well, then, I’ll send down some medicine. Keep up a good fire. Have some strong beef tea made ready to give her as soon as the fever goes down. She can have grapes now, and beef essence – and soda-water and milk, and you’d better get in a bottle of brandy. The best brandy. Cheap brandy is worse than poison.’

She asked him to write it all down, and he did.

When Bobbie showed Mother the list he had written, Mother laughed. It was a laugh, Bobbie decided, though it was rather cold and feeble.

‘Nonsense,’ said Mother, lying in bed with eyes as bright as beads. ‘I can’t afford all that rubbish. Tell Mrs Viney to boil two pounds of scrag-end of the neck for your dinners tomorrow, and I can have some of the broth. Yes, I should like some more water now, love. And will you get a basin and sponge my hands?’

Roberta obeyed. When she had done everything she could to make Mother less uncomfortable, she went down to the others. Her cheeks were very red, her lips set tight, and her eyes shone as bright as Mother’s.

She told them what the Doctor had said, and what Mother had said.

‘And now,’ said she, when she had told all, ‘there’s no one but us to do anything, and we’ve got to do it. I’ve got the shilling for the mutton.’

‘We can do without the beastly mutton,’ said Peter; ‘bread and butter will support life. People have lived on less on desert islands many a time.’

‘Of course,’ said his sister. And Mrs Viney was sent to the village to get as much brandy and soda-water and beef tea as she could buy for a shilling.

‘But even if we never have anything to eat at all,’ said Phyllis, ‘you can’t get all those other things with our dinner money.’

‘No,’ said Bobbie, frowning, ‘we must find out some other way. Now think, everybody, just as hard as ever you can.’