William the Fourth (17 page)

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Authors: Richmal Crompton

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Unless – William had a brilliant idea – he hid them under the drawing-room sofa. The drawing-room sofa had a cretonne cover with a frill that reached to the floor, and he had used
this place before as a temporary receptacle for secret treasures. No one would look under it, or think of his putting anything there. He put the tortoise into a box with a lid, and tied Omshafu up
firmly with string in his box, and put them in the large cardboard box with the insects. Then he put the large cardboard box under the sofa and went into lunch with a mind freed from anxiety

The exhibition was not to begin till three, so William wandered out to find Jumble. He found him in the ditch, threw sticks for him, brushed him severely with an old boot brush that he kept in
the outhouse for the rare occasions of Jumble’s toilet, and finally tied round his neck the old, raggy and almost colourless pink ribbon that was his gala attire. Then he came to the
drawing-room for the exhibits. There he received his first shock.

On the drawing-room sofa sat Miss Euphemia Barney, wearing her very highest thought expression. She surveyed William from head to foot silently with a look of slight disgust, then turned away
her head with a shudder. William sought his mother.

‘Wot’s she
doin’
in our house?’ he demanded sternly

‘I’ve lent the drawing-room for a meeting of the Higher Thought, darling,’ said Mrs Brown reverently, ‘because she has the painters in her own drawing-room. You
mustn’t interrupt.’

Mrs Brown was not a Higher Thinker, but she cherished a deep respect for them.

‘But—’ began William indignantly, then stopped. He thought, upon deliberation, that it was better not to betray his hiding-place.

He went back to the drawing-room determined to walk boldly up to the sofa and drag out the exhibits from under the very skirts of Miss Euphemia Barney. But two more Higher Thinkers were now
established upon the sofa, one on each side of the President, and Higher Thinkers were pouring into the room. William’s courage failed him. He sat down upon a chair by the door scowling, his
eyes fixed upon Miss Euphemia’s skirts.

The members looked at him with lofty disapproval. The gathering was complete. The meeting was about to begin. Miss Euphemia Barney was to speak on the Commoner Complexes. But first she turned
upon William, who sat with his eyes fixed forlornly on the hem of her skirts, a devastating glare.

‘Do you want anything, little boy?’ she said.

Before William had time to tell her what he wanted the maid threw open the door and announced Miss Fairlow The Higher Thinkers gasped. Miss Fairlow looked round as Daniel must have looked round
at his lions.

‘I came—’ she said. ‘Oh, dear!’

Miss Euphemia waved her to a seat. It occurred to her that here was a heaven-sent opportunity of impressing Miss Fairlow with a real respect for Higher Thought. Miss Fairlow must learn how much
higher they were in thought than she could ever be. It would be a great triumph to enlist Miss Fairlow as a humble member and searcher after truth under her – Miss Euphemia’s –
leadership.

‘You came to see Mrs Brown, of course,’ she said kindly, ‘and the maid showed you in here thinking you were – ahem – one of us. Mrs Brown has kindly lent us her
drawing-room for a meeting. Pray don’t apologise – perhaps you would like to listen to us for a short time. We were about to discuss the Commoner Complexes. I will begin by reading a
little poem. I spent most of this morning putting the final touches to it,’ she ended proudly.

‘I spent most of this morning on the pursuit of Omshafu,’ said Miss Fairlow gravely

There was a moment’s tense silence. Omshafu? The Higher Thinkers sent glances of desperate appeal to their president. Would she allow them to be humiliated by this upstart?

‘Ah, Omshafu!’ said Miss Euphemia slowly. ‘Of couse it – it
is
very interesting.’

The Higher Thinkers gave a sigh of relief.

‘I could hardly tear myself away this morning,’ replied Miss Fairlow pleasantly. ‘It was so engrossing.’ Engrossing! Some sort of Eastern philosophy, of course. Again
desperate glances were turned upon the embodiment of Higher Thought. Again she rose to the occasion.

‘I felt just the same about it when I – er – when I,’ she risked the expression, ‘took it up.’

She felt that this implied that she had known about Omshafu long before Miss Fairlow, and this conveyed a delicate snub.

Miss Fairlow’s glance rested momentarily on her bandaged finger.

‘It goes very deep,’ she murmured.

Miss Barney was gaining confidence.

‘There I agree with you,’ she said firmly. ‘I think its appeal is entirely superficial.’

William had brightened into attention, at the first mention of Omshafu, but finding the conversation beyond him, had relapsed into a gloomy stare. Now his stare became suddenly fixed; his mouth
opened with horror.

The exhibits were escaping from beneath the hem of Miss Euphemia’s gown. A cockroach was making a slow and stately progress into the middle of the room, several ants were laboriously
climbing up Miss Euphemia’s dress. So far no one else had noticed. William gazed in frozen horror.

‘I hear that Omshafu has bitten most people this year,’ said Miss Fairlow demurely.

Miss Euphemia pursed her lips disapprovingly. She was growing reckless with success. ‘I think there’s something dangerous in it,’ she said.

‘You mean its teeth?’ said Miss Fairlow brightly

There was a moment’s tense silence. A horrible suspicion occurred to Miss Euphemia that she was being trifled with. The Higher Thinkers looked helplessly first at her and then at Miss
Fairlow. Then Miss Euphemia rose from the sofa with a piercing scream.

‘Something’s stung me! It’s bees – bees coming from under the sofa!’

Simultaneously the Treasurer jumped upon a small occasional table.

‘Black beetles!’ she screamed. ‘Help!’

Above the babel rose Miss Fairlow’s clear voice.

‘And there’s Omshafu himself. I can see his dear little pink nose peeping out.’

Babel ceased for one second while the Society for the Encouragement of Higher Thought looked at Omshafu. Then it arose with redoubled violence.

William departed with his exhibits. He had recaptured most of them. Omshafu had been taken from the ample silk sash of the Treasurer in a fold of which he had taken refuge.
William had left his mother and Miss Fairlow pouring water on the hysterical Treasurer.

William was late as it was. Behind him trotted Jumble, the chewed-up remains of his gala attire hanging from his mouth.

‘William.’

Miss Fairlow was just behind, carrying a cardboard box.

‘Oh, William,’ she said, ‘I was really bringing this to you when they showed me into the wrong room and I couldn’t resist having a game with them. I found it this morning
after you’d gone – in an old drawer I was tidying, and I thought you might like it.’

William opened it. It was a case of butterflies – butterflies of every kind, all neatly labelled.

‘I think it used to belong to my brother,’ said Miss Fairlow carelessly. ‘Would you like it?’

‘Oh,
crumbs
!’ gasped William.
‘Thanks.’

‘THERE’S OMSHAFU HIMSELF,’ SAID MISS FARLOW IN HER CLEAR VOICE. ‘I CAN SEE HIS DEAR LITTLE PINK NOSE PEEPING OUT.’

MISS EUPHEMIA JUMPED UP WITH A PIERCING SCREAM. ‘SOMETHING STUNG ME!’ SHE CRIED. ‘IT’S BEES COMING FROM UNDER THE SOFA!’

‘And I’ve had the loveliest time this afternoon that I’ve had for ages,’ said Miss Fairlow dreamily. ‘Thank you so much.’

William hastened to the old barn in which the Exhibition was to be held. Ginger, Douglas and Henry and the audience were already there.

‘Well, you’re early, aren’t you?’ said Douglas sarcastically.

‘D’you think,
’ said William sternly, ‘that anyone wot has had all the hard work I’ve had getting together this c’lection could be here
earlier?

The half-dozen little boys who formed the audience grasped their halfpennies firmly and looked at William suspiciously

‘They won’t give up their halfpennies,’ said Henry in deep disgust.

‘No,’ said the audience, ‘not till we’ve seen if it’s
worth
a halfpenny’

William assumed his best showman air.

‘This, ladies and gentlemen,’ he began, ignoring the fact that his audience consisted entirely of males, ‘is the only tortoise like this in the world.’

‘Seen a tortoise.’ ‘Got a tortoise at home,’ said his audience unimpressed.

‘Perhaps,’
said William crushingly ‘But have you ever seen a tortoise with white stripes like wot this one has?’

‘No, but I could if I got an ole tin of paint and striped our one.’

William passed on to the next box.

He took out Omshafu.

‘This,’
he said, ‘is the only rat inseck of the speeshees of Omshafu—’

‘If you think,’ said the audience, ‘that we’re goin’ to pay a halfpenny to see that ole rat wot we’ve seen hundreds of times before, and wot’s bit us,
too – well, we’re
not.’

Despair began to settle down upon Ginger’s face.

William passed on to the third box.

‘Here, ladies and gentlemen,’ he said impressively, ‘is thirty sep’rate
an’
distinct speeshees of insecks. I only ask you to look at them.
I—’

‘They’re jus’ the same sort of insecks as crawl about our garden at home,’ said the audience coldly.

‘But have you ever seen ’em c’lected
together
before?’ said William earnestly. ‘Have you ever seen ’em
clected?
Think of the trouble an’
time wot I took c’lecting ’em. Why, the time alone I took’s worth more’n a halfpenny. I should
think
that’s worth a halfpenny. I should think it’s worth
more’n a halfpenny. I should think—’

‘Well, we wun’t,’ said the audience. ‘We’d as soon see ’em crawling about a garden for nothin’ as crawlin’ about a box for a halfpenny. So
there.’

Ginger, Douglas and Henry looked at William gloomily.

‘They aren’t
worth
getting a c’lection for,’ said Ginger.

‘They deserve to have their halfpennies
took
off ’em!’ said Douglas.

But William slowly and majestically brought out his fourth box and opened it, revealing rows of gorgeous butterflies, then closed it quickly

The audience gasped.

‘When you’ve given in your halfpennies,’ said William firmly, ‘then you can see this wonderfu’ an’ unique c’lection of twenty sep’rate
an’
distinct speeshees of butterflies all c’lected together.’

Eagerly the halfpennies were given to William. He handed them to Douglas, triumphantly. ‘Go an’ buy the marbles, quick,’ he said in a hoarse whisper, ‘case they want
’em back.’

Then he turned to his audience, smoothed back his hair, and reassumed his showman manner.

In Mrs Brown’s drawing-room the members of the Society for the Encouragement of Higher Thought were recovering from various stages of hysterics.

‘We shall have to dissolve the society,’ said Miss Euphemia Barney. ‘She’ll tell everyone. It’s a wicked name for a rat, anyway – almost blasphemous –
I’m sure it comes in the Bible. How was one to know? But people will never forget it.’

‘We might form ourselves again a little later under a different name,’ suggested the Secretary.

‘People will always remember,’ said Miss Euphemia. ‘They’re so uncharitable. It’s a most unfortunate occurrence. And,’ setting her lips grimly, ‘as is
the case with most of the unfortunate occurrences in this village, the direct cause is that terrible boy, William Brown.’

At that moment the direct cause of most of the unfortunate occurrences in the village, with his friends around him, his precious box of butterflies by his side, and happiness in his heart, was
just beginning the hard-won, long-deferred game of marbles.

 

CHAPTER 11

WILLIAM’S EXTRA DAY

W
hat’s Leap Year?’ asked William.

‘It’s a year that leaps,’ said his elder brother, Robert.

‘It’s Leap Year this year,’ said William.

‘Who told you?’ inquired Robert sarcastically.

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