Sentimental Tommy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 427 pages of information about Sentimental Tommy.

Sentimental Tommy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 427 pages of information about Sentimental Tommy.
tears that were all for Elspeth.  She should not have come to the door, but she came, and—­it was such a pitiable sight that Aaron Latta could not look on.  He went hurriedly to his workshop, but not to warp, and even the carter was touched and he said to Tommy, “I tell you what, man, I have to go round by Causeway End smiddy, and you and the crittur have time, if you like, to take the short cut and meet me at the far corner o’ Caddam wood.”

So Tommy and Elspeth, holding each other’s hands, took the short cut and they came to the far end of Caddam, and Elspeth thought they had better say it here before the cart came; but Tommy said he would walk back with her through the wood as far as the Toom Well, and they could say it there.  They tried to say it at the Well, but—­Elspeth was still with him when he returned to the far corner of Caddam, where the cart was now awaiting him.  The carter was sitting on the shaft, and he told them he was in no hurry, and what is more, he had the delicacy to turn his back on them and struck his horse with the reins for looking round at the sorrowful pair.  They should have said it now, but first Tommy walked back a little bit of the way with Elspeth, and then she came back with him, and that was to be the last time, but he could not leave her, and so, there they were in the wood, looking woefully at each other, and it was not said yet.

They had said it now, and all was over; they were several paces apart.  Elspeth smiled, she had promised to smile because Tommy said it would kill him if she was greeting at the very end.  But what a smile it was!  Tommy whistled, he had promised to whistle to show that he was happy as long as Elspeth could smile.  She stood still, but he went on, turning round every few yards to—­to whistle.  “Never forget, day nor night, what I said to you,” he called to her.  “You’re the only one I love, and I care not a hair for Grizel.”

But when he disappeared, shouting to her, “I’ll find a wy, I’ll find a wy,” she screamed and ran after him.  He was already in the cart, and it had started.  He stood up in it and waved his hand to her, and she stood on the dyke and waved to him, and thus they stood waving till a hollow in the road swallowed cart and man and boy.  Then Elspeth put her hands to her eyes and went sobbing homeward.

When she was gone, a girl who had heard all that passed between them rose from among the broom of Caddam and took Elspeth’s place on the dyke, where she stood motionless waiting for the cart to reappear as it climbed the other side of the hollow.  She wore a black frock and a blue bonnet with white strings, but the cart was far away, and Tommy thought she was Elspeth, and springing to his feet again in the cart he waved and waved.  At first she did not respond, for had she not heard him say, “You’re the only one I love, and I care not a hair for Grizel?” And she knew he was mistaking her for Elspeth.  But by and by it struck her that he would be more

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Sentimental Tommy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.