I was not going to do any wicked act, but somehow I felt as if all this

was very wrong, and I found myself running along the grass borders,

leaping over the gravel paths, so that my footsteps should not be heard,

and in this way I reached the tool-house, where, quite at home in the

darkness, and making no more noise than jingling a hanging spade against

the bricks, I reached up on to the corner shelf and found my lantern and

matches.

There was the little lamp inside already trimmed, and I soon had it

alight and darkened by the shade, slipped it in my pocket, and then

started down the long green walk by the big wall where the espaliers

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were trained, and the wall was covered with big pear-trees.

"I feel just like a robber," I said to myself as I stole along to find

Ike and turn him out.

Then I stopped short, for there was a scrambling noise on one side.

"He is awake and trying to get over the wall," I said to myself, and

setting down my lantern by one of the big trees, I went forward towards

the great pear-tree, whose branches would make a ladder right to the

top.

It was very dark, and the great wall made it seem blacker as I stole on

over the soft green path meaning to make sure that Ike had gone over

quite safely, and then go to my moth-hunting.

"It's as well not to speak to him," I thought.

Then I stopped again, for if it was Ike he was either talking to himself

or had some one whispering to him.

"It can't be Ike," I thought, for after the whispering some one jumped

down on the soft bed, and then some one else followed--crash.

There was a scuffle here, and some one uttered an ejaculation of pain as

if he had hurt himself in jumping, while the other laughed, and then

they whispered together.

It was not Ike going away then, but two people come over the wall to get

at the great choice pears that were growing on my left.

"What a shame," I thought; and as I recalled a similar occurrence at Old

Brownsmith's I wished that Shock were with me to help protect Sir

Francis' choice fruit.

I ought to have slipped off back and told Mr Solomon, who would have

made the gardener come from the lower cottage; but I did not think of

that; I only listened and heard one of the thieves whisper to the other: "Get up; you aren't hurt. Come along."

Then there was a rustling as they forced their way among the bushes, and

went bang up against an espalier. This they skirted, coming close to me

as I stood in the shadow of a pear-tree.




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