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And Tom actually did enter a doorway. But it proved to be the entrance to a large and magnificent confectioner’s shop. Henry followed him timidly.

‘A pound of marrons glaces,’ Tom demanded.

‘What are they?’ Henry whispered up at Tom’s ear.

‘Taste,’ said Tom, boldly taking a sample from the scales while the pound was being weighed out.

‘It’s like chestnuts,’ Harry mumbled through the delicious brown frosted morsel. ‘But nicer.’

‘They are rather like chestnuts, aren’t they?’ said Tom.

The marrons glaces were arranged neatly in a beautiful box; the box was wrapped in paper of one colour, and then further wrapped in paper of another colour, and finally bound in pink ribbon.

‘Golly!’ murmured Henry in amaze, for Tom had put down a large silver coin in payment, and received no change.

They came out, Henry carrying the parcel.

‘But will they do me any harm?’ the boy asked apprehensively.

The two cousins had reached Hyde Park, and were lying on the grass, and Tom had invited Henry to begin the enterprise of eating his birthday present.

‘Harm! I should think not. They are the best things out for the constitution. Not like sweets at all. Doctors often give them to patients when they are getting better. And they’re very good for sea-sickness too.’

So Henry opened the box and feasted. One half of the contents had disappeared within twenty minutes, and Tom had certainly not eaten more than two marrons.

‘They’re none so dusty!’ said Henry, perhaps enigmatically. ‘I could go on eating these all day.’

A pretty girl of eighteen or so wandered past them.

‘Nice little bit of stuff, that!’ Tom remarked reflectively.

‘What say?’

‘That little thing there!’ Tom explained, pointing with his elbow to the girl.

‘Oh!’ Henry grunted. ‘I thought you said a nice little bit of stuff.’

And he bent to his chestnuts again. By slow and still slower degrees they were reduced to one.

‘Have this,’ he invited Tom.

‘No,’ said Tom. ‘Don’t want it. You finish up.’

‘I think I can’t eat any more,’ Henry sighed.

‘Oh yes, you can,’ Tom encouraged him. ‘You’ve shifted about fifty. Surely you can manage fifty-one.’

Henry put the survivor to his lips, but withdrew it.

‘No,’ he said. ‘I tell you what I’ll do: I’ll put it in the box and save it.’

‘But you can’t cart that box about for the sake of one chestnut, my bold buccaneer.’

‘Well, I’ll put it in my pocket.’

And he laid it gently by the side of the watch in his waistcoat pocket.

‘You can find your way home, can’t you?’ said Tom. ‘It’s just occurred to me that I’ve got some business to attend to.’

A hundred yards off the pretty girl was reading on a seat. His business led him in that direction.

CHAPTER VI

A CALAMITY FOR THE SCHOOL

It was a most fortunate thing that there was cold mutton for dinner. The economic principle governing the arrangement of the menu was that the simplicity of the mutton atoned for the extravagance of the birthday pudding, while the extravagance of the birthday pudding excused the simplicity of the mutton. Had the first course been anything richer than cold mutton, Henry could not have pretended even to begin the repast. As it was, he ate a little of the lean, leaving a wasteful margin of lean round the fat, which he was not supposed to eat; he also nibbled at the potatoes, and compressed the large remnant of them into the smallest possible space on the plate; then he unobtrusively laid down his knife and fork.

‘Come, Henry,’ said Aunt Annie, ‘don’t leave a saucy plate.’

Henry had already pondered upon a plausible explanation of his condition.

‘I’m too excited to eat,’ he promptly answered.

‘You aren’t feeling ill, are you?’ his mother asked sharply.

‘No,’ he said. ‘But can I have my birthday pudding for supper, after it’s all over, instead of now?’

Mrs. Knight and Aunt Annie looked at one another. ‘That might be safer,’ said Aunt Annie, and she added: ‘You can have some cold rice pudding now, Henry.’

‘No, thank you, auntie; I don’t want any.’

‘The boy’s ill,’ Mrs. Knight exclaimed. ‘Annie, where’s the Mother Seigel?’

‘The boy’s no such thing,’ said Mr. Knight, pouring calmness and presence of mind over the table like oil. ‘Give him some Seigel by all means, if you think fit; but don’t go and alarm yourself about nothing. The boy’s as well as I am.’

‘I think I should like some Seigel,’ said the boy.

Tom was never present at the mid-day meal; only Mrs. Knight knew that Henry had been out with him; and Mrs. Knight was far too simple a soul to suspect the horrid connection between the morning ramble and this passing malaise of Henry’s. As for Henry, he volunteered nothing.

‘It will pass off soon,’ said Aunt Annie two hours later. The time was then half-past three; the great annual ceremony of Speech Day began at half-past seven. Henry reclined on the sofa, under an antimacassar, and Mrs. Knight was bathing his excited temples with eau de Cologne.

‘Oh yes,’ Mr. Knight agreed confidently; he had looked in from the shop for a moment. ‘Oh yes! It will pass off. Give him a cup of strong tea in a quarter of an hour, and he’ll be as right as a trivet.’

‘Of course you will, won’t you, my dear?’ Mrs. Knight demanded fondly of her son.

Henry nodded weakly.

The interesting and singular fact about the situation is that these three adults, upright, sincere, strictly moral, were all lying, and consciously lying. They knew that Henry’s symptoms differed in no particular from those of his usual attacks, and that his usual attacks had a minimum duration of twelve hours. They knew that he was decidedly worse at half-past three than he had been at half-past two, and they could have prophesied with assurance that he would be still worse at half-past four than he was then. They knew that time would betray them. Yet they persisted in falsehood, because they were incapable of imagining the Speech Day ceremony without Henry in the midst. If any impartial friend had approached at that moment and told them that Henry would spend the evening in bed, and that they might just as well resign themselves first as last, they would have cried him down, and called him unfriendly and unfeeling, and, perhaps, in the secrecy of their hearts thrown rotten eggs at him.

It proved to be the worst dyspeptic visitation that Henry had ever had. It was not a mere ‘attack’—it was a revolution, beginning with slight insurrections, but culminating in universal upheaval, the overthrowing of dynasties, the establishment of committees of public safety, and a reign of terror. As a series of phenomena it was immense, variegated, and splendid, and was remembered for months afterwards.

‘Surely he’ll be better now!’ said Mrs. Knight, agonized.

But no! And so they carried Henry to bed.

At six the martyr uneasily dozed.

‘He may sleep a couple of hours,’ Aunt Annie whispered.

Not one of the three had honestly and openly withdrawn from the position that Henry would be able to go to the prize-giving. They seemed to have silently agreed to bury the futile mendacity of the earlier afternoon in everlasting forgetfulness.

‘Poor little thing!’ observed Mrs. Knight.

His sufferings had reduced him, in her vision, to about half his ordinary size.

At seven Mr. Knight put on his hat.

‘Are you going out, father?’ his wife asked, shocked.

‘It is only fair,’ said Mr. Knight, ‘to warn the school people that Henry will not be able to be present to-night. They will have to alter their programme. Of course I shan’t stay.’

In pitying the misfortune of the school, thus suddenly and at so critical a moment deprived of Henry’s presence and help, Mrs. Knight felt less keenly the pang of her own misfortune and that of her son. Nevertheless, it was a night sufficiently tragic in Oxford Street.