Fighting the Flames by R. M. Ballantyne (reading cloud ebooks .txt) š
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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Ziza smiled faintly, as she extended her hand to Willie, who took it and pressed it gently.
Willie felt a wonderfully strong sensation within his heart as he looked into the suffererās large liquid eyes; and for a few seconds he could not speak. Suddenly he exclaimed, āWell, you aināt one bit like what I expected to see. Youāre more like a angel than a fairy.ā
Ziza smiled again, and said she didnāt feel like either the one or the other.
āMy poor lamb,ā said the clown, sitting down on the bed, and parting the dark hair on Zizaās forehead, with a hand as gentle as that of a mother, āweāre goinā now. Timeās up. Shall I ask Mrs Smith to stay with you again, till we come back?ā
āOh, no, no!ā cried the child hurriedly, and squeezing her fingers into her eyes, as if to shut out some disagreeable object. āNot Mrs Smith. Iād rather be alone.ā
āI wish I could stay with you, Ziza,ā said Jim earnestly.
āItās of no use wishinā, Jim,ā said his father, āyou canāt get off a single night. If you was to fail āem youād lose your engagement, and we canāt afford that just at this time, you know; but Iāll try to get Mrs James to come. Sheās a good woman, I know, andāā
āMister Cattley,ā interrupted Willie, āif youāll allow a particālarly humble individual to make a observation, I would say thereās nothinā in life to prevent me from keeping this āere fairy company till you come back. Iāve nothinā particular to do as I knows on, anā Iām raither fond of lonely meditation; so if the fairy wants to go to sleep, itāll make no odds to me, so longās it pleases her.ā
āThankee, lad,ā said the clown; ābut youāll git wearied, I fear, for we wonāt be home till mornināāā
āAh!ā interrupted Willie, ātill daylight does appear. But thatās no odds, neitherāācause Iām not married yet, so thereās nobody awaitinā for meāandā (he winked to Jim at this point) āmy mother knows Iām out.ā
The clown grinned at this. āYouād make one of us, youngster,ā said he, āif ye can jump. Howsever, Iām obliged by your offer, so you can stay if Ziza would like it.ā
Ziza said she would like it with such goodwill, that Willie adored her from that moment, and vowed in his heart he would nurse her till sheāhe did not like to finish the sentence; yet, somehow, the little that he had heard and seen of the child led him irresistibly to the conclusion that she was dying.
This having been satisfactorily arranged, the Cattleys, senior and junior, threw cloaks round them, exchanged their wigs for caps; and, regardless of the absurd appearance of their faces, hurried out to one of the minor theatres, with heavy hearts because of the little fairy left so ill and comfortless at home.
In a few minutes they were tumbling on the stage, cracking their jokes, and convulsing the house with laughter.
Left alone with the fairy, Willie Willders began his duties as sick-nurse, a sphere of action into which he had never thought of being introduced, even in his wildest dreams.
He began by asking the fairy if she was all right and comfortable, to which she replied that she was not; upon which he explained that he meant, was she as right and comfortable as could be expected in the circumstances; could he do anything for her, in fact, or get her anything that would make her more comfortable than she wasābut the fairy shook her poor head and said, āNo.ā
āCome now, wonāt you have somethinā to eat? What had you for dinner?ā said Willie, in a cheery voice, looking round the room, but not discovering any symptoms of food beyond a few empty plates and cups (the latter without handles), and a tea-pot with half a spout.
āI had a little bread and butter,ā said the fairy.
āNo tipple?ā inquired the nurse.
āNo, except water.ā
āAināt there none in the house?ā
āNo.ā
āDāye git nothinā better at other times?ā inquired Willie in surprise.
āNot often. Father is very poor. He was ill for a long time, too, and if it hadnāt been for your kind master I think we should all have starved. Heās better now, but he needs pretty good living to keep him up to his workāfor thereās a deal of training to be done, and it wears him out if he donāt get meat. But the pantomimes began and we were getting on better, when the fire came and burnt everything we had almost, so we canāt afford much meat or beer, and I donāt like beer, so Iāve got them persuaded to let me live on bread and butter and water. I would like tea better, because itās hot, but we canāt afford that.ā
Here was a revelation! The fairy lived upon bread and butter and water! Willie thought that, but for the interpolation of the butter, it would have borne marvellous resemblance to prison fare.
āWhen had you dinner?ā inquired Willie suddenly.
āI think about four oāclock.ā
āAnā canāt you eat nothinā now?ā
Again the fairy shook her head.
āNor drink?ā
āLook if thereās anything in the tea-pot,ā said the fairy.
Willie looked, shook his head, and said, āNot a drop.ā
āAny leaves?ā
āWhy, yāyes,ā he brought the pot nearer to the candle; āthere are a few used-up ones.ā
āOh, do pour some hot water into it; but I fear the water is cold, and the fireās too low to boil it, and I know the coals are done; but father gets paid his salary to-morrow, and heāll give me some tea then. Heās very kind to me, father is, and so is Jim.ā
She sighed as she spoke, and shut her eyes.
āZiza,ā said Willie in a careless tone, āyou wonāt object to my leavinā you for a few minutes; only a few; I want to get a little fresh air, anā see what sort of a night it is; I wonāt be long gone.ā
Ziza, so far from objecting, said that she was used to being left alone for long, long hours at a time, and wouldnāt mind it. So Willie put the candle nearer to her bedside, placed a tea-cup of water within reach, went out, shut the door softly behind him, groped his way through the passage and up the stair, and got into the street.
That day his eccentric employer had paid him his first monthās wage, a sovereign, with many complimentary remarks as to his usefulness. The golden coin lay in his pocket. It was the first he had ever earned. He had intended to go straight home and lay the shining piece in his motherās lap, for Willie was a peculiar boy, and had some strange notions in regard to the destination of āfirst-fruits.ā Where he had got them nobody could tell. Perhaps his mother knew, but nobody ever questioned her upon the point.
Taking this gold piece from his pocket, he ran into the nearest respectable street, and selected there the most respectable grocerās shop, into which he entered, and demanded a pound of the shopmanās best tea, a pound of his best sugar, a pound of his best butter, a cut of his best bacon, and one of his best wax-candles. Willie knew nothing about relative proportion in regard to such things; he only knew that they were usually bought and consumed together.
The shopman looked at the little purchaser in surprise, but as Willie emphatically repeated his demands he gave him the required articles. On receiving the sovereign he looked twice at Willie, rung the piece of money three times on the counter, and then returned the change.
Gathering the packages in his arms, and putting the candle between his vest and bosom, he went into a bakerās shop, purchased a loaf, and returned to the āsubterraneous grottoā laden like the bee. To say that the fairy was surprised when he displayed these things, would be a feeble use of language. She opened her large eyes until Willie begged her in alarm not to open them wider for fear they should come out, at which sally she laughed, and then, being weak, she cried.
After that she fell in with her nurseās humour, and the two proceeded to āhave a night of it.ā Ziza said sheād be a real fairy and tell him what to do, and Willie said heād be a gnome or a he-fairy and do it.
At the outset Willie discovered that he had forgotten coals, but this was rectified by another five minutesā airing, and a rousing fire was quickly roaring in the chimney, while the kettle sang and spluttered on it like a sympathetic thing, as no doubt it was. Willie cleared the small table that stood at the invalidās bed side, and arranged upon it the loaf, the tea-pot, two cracked tea-cups, the butter and sugar, and the wax-candleāwhich latter was stuck into a quart bottle in default of a better candle-stick.
āNow, aināt that jolly?ā said the nurse, sitting down and rubbing his hands.
āVery!ā replied the patient, her eyes sparkling with delight.
āItās so like a scene in a play,ā continued Willie.
āOnly much more real,ā suggested the fairy.
āNow, then, Ziza, have a cup oā tea, fresh from the market oā Chiny, as your dad would say, if he was sellinā it by auction. Heās a knowinā codger your dad is, Ziza. There. I knowed I forgot somethinā elseāthe cream!ā
āI donāt mind it, indeed I donāt,ā said Ziza earnestly.
Willie had started up to run out and rectify this omission, but on being assured that the fairy liked tea almost as well without as with cream, and that there was no cream to be got near at hand, he sat down again and continued to do the honours of the table. First he made the fairy sit up in bed, and commented sadly on her poor thin neck as she did it, observing that she was nothing better than a skeleton in a skin. Then he took off his own jacket and put it on her shoulders, tying the arms round her neck. Next he placed a piece of board in front of her, saying that it was a capital tray, and on this he arranged the viands neatly.
āNow, then, go at it, Ziza,ā he said, when all was arranged.
Ziza, who received his attentions with looks that were wonderfully gleeful for one in her weak state of health, went at it with such vigour that the bread was eaten and the tea drunk in a few minutes, and the supply had to be renewed. When she was in the middle of her second round of buttered toast (for Willie had toasted the bread), she stopped suddenly.
āWhy donāt you go on?ā asked Willie.
āBecause you have not eaten or drunk one mouthful yet.ā
āBut Iām lookinā at you, and aināt that better? Howsever, if ye wonāt go on, Iāll not keep you back,ā and with that Willie set to work, and, being uncommonly hungry, did what he styled āterrible execution among the wittles.ā
For some time the nurse and patient ate in comparative silence, but by degrees they began to talk, and as they became more confidential their talk became more personal.
āDāyou like beinā a fairy?ā said Willie, after a lull in the conversation.
āNo, I donāt,ā replied Ziza.
āWhy not?ā
āBecauseābecauseāI donāt like the kind of things we have to do, andāandāin short, I donāt like it at all, and I often pray God to deliver me from it.ā
āThatās strange, now,ā said Willie, āI would have thought it great fun to be a fairy. Iād rather be a little clown or a he-fairy myself, now, than anything else I know of, except a fireman.ā
āA fireman, Willie?ā
āYes, a fireman. My brother, BlazāaāFrank, I mean, is one, and he saved the lives
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