Brotherly Love | Page 7

Mary Martha Sherwood
and they will take care of him, no doubt. So bring him, by all
means, if that is the only hindrance; but still, I say, you would do better
to leave him at home with the servants; however, that's your business,
not mine. I reckon on you to-morrow, about eleven o'clock--to stay all
night, next day, and the night following, if you like; so good bye, till
then. I have half the country to ride over to beat up my recruits;" and
without waiting another word from his friend, Edward ran across the
meadow, snatched up his hat from where the faithful dog was carefully
guarding it, sprang upon his pony, and then once again leaping the
ditch, he cantered off at a pace so rapid, he was soon lost to Marten's
sight.
How pleased was Reuben to shew his brother that he had caught the
doves, and Marten was also pleased: for any how he need not distress
himself about them, as they were secured, but he thought it advisable to
take them under his own charge, as he considered he could hold them
firmer than the little one. And now the boys ran home as quickly as
they could, and the pretty birds were shut up in their aviary, and Marten

hastened to the kitchen to find the house-maid, who was called nurse,
as she had been Reuben's nurse before she had changed her occupation
in the family, the child no longer requiring a personal attendant. In the
kitchen Marten learnt that she was gone out into the garden to gather
some herbs for the cook, and thither he followed her to tell her that his
friend Edward Jameson had been with him, and what had been the
purport of his visit.
"Nurse," said Marten, when he found her, "I am come to ask you to get
mine and Reuben's things ready to-night, for I am going to take him
with me to spend a couple of days at Mr. Jameson's; and there will be
company there in the evenings, so we must have our best things, nurse,
and will you be so kind as to see after the doves, and tell Thomas to
loosen Nero's chain every day, that he may have a good scamper over
the fields, for papa says he should have plenty of exercise."
"Stop, stop, master Marten," replied nurse, "what is all this about? your
things and master Reuben's, do you say, are to be got ready for two
day's visit--and the doves fed? am I to find them before I feed them,
master Marten?" and nurse laughed.
"They are found, nurse," answered the boy, "and they are now safe in
the aviary, and I will take care the door shall not be opened again while
mamma is away. I mean to put a padlock on, nurse, so you see no one
can let them out, and I shall keep the key myself."
"Oh! master Marten, master Marten!" said nurse, laughing again--"I see,
if it depended upon you, we should all be in a bad way, and so the poor
birds are to be locked up, are they: and master Reuben is not to be
allowed to go into the aviary to talk to them, as the little one loves to
do--and all for what? Give me a steady ruler, if you please--not such as
you, master Marten--a fine head of a family you will make, if one may
judge of your boasted management of the doves in the first part of the
story, and then the leaving the aviary door open and finishing with
locking them up and keeping the key yourself. Well for their
happiness--mistress will soon be at home to attend to them herself; but
what are you going to do with the child, my own darling? I can't have
any tricks played with him, I tell you."

"Tricks, nurse," repeated Marten passionately. "What? do you mean to
say I would play tricks with my own brother? No one loves Reuben, I
am sure, better than I do, unless it is mamma. What do you mean,
nurse?"
"What do you mean, then, master Marten, by saying you are going to
take the child amongst strangers, neither me nor his mamma being with
him, and he never accustomed to strangers--and company in the house
too--I don't half like it--and I know I feel half inclined to say he shan't
go."
"And pray under whose charge was he left?" asked Marten. "Your's or
mine, nurse? I should like to know."
"It was much of a muchness," replied the good woman. "Missis said to
you, take care of your brother; but missis knew I loved the sweet
darling too dearly to require even half a word on the subject. And
supposing he does go with
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