
- 292 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Cricket
About this book
I won't have it! I won't have it! If they come, I'll run away and hide! shouted the child, wildly. That will be very rude. No one acts like that - no one except a barbarian, said Miss Wilder, calmly. I want to be a bar - - one of those things you said. You act like one most of the time.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
No, books cannot be downloaded as external files, such as PDFs, for use outside of Perlego. However, you can download books within the Perlego app for offline reading on mobile or tablet. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere — even offline. Perfect for commutes or when you’re on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Cricket by Cooke, Marjorie Benton in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Classics. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
CHAPTER ONE
"I won't have it! I won't have it! If they come,
I'll run away and hide!" shouted the child, wildly. "That will be
very rude. No one acts like that – no one except a barbarian," said
Miss Wilder, calmly. "I want to be a bar – – one of those things
you said." "You act like one most of the time."
The child brain caught at a new idea. "What
is that – that what you said?" "Barbarian?
B-a-r-b-a-r-i-a-n," she spelled slowly. "It is a savage creature
with no manners, no morals, no clothes even. It lives in a hut or a
tree, and eats roots and nuts, and nearly raw meat," Miss Wilder
remarked, none too accurately, but slowly, in order to distract
Isabelle's attention from the late subject of unpleasantness. The
little girl considered her words thoughtfully. "Do they have
children?" "Yes." "Where do they live?" "Oh, strange places; Fiji
Islands, for one." "Are there any near here?" "Not that I know of."
"I want to go live with the bar-barbarians."
Miss Wilder's stern face underwent no change. She
answered seriously: "You would not like it; you would be very
uncomfortable. The children have no pretty clothes, no nice homes
with gardens to play in, no kind parents or patient teachers." "Do
they have horses?" "I suppose so." "Do they swim?" "Probably. They
have rude boats called dug-outs," continued Miss Wilder, glad of an
absorbing subject. "Do the children go in the boats?" "No doubt."
"They can't get their clothes spoiled if they don't wear any."
"Obviously. Come, now, Isabelle, put on your dress like a nice
girl. The children will be coming to the party, and you won't be
dressed." "I won't put on that dress, and I'm not
going to the party, I tell you; I hate them."
Miss Wilder tried force, but in vain. She tried
strategy, with no results. Isabelle wriggled out of her grasp and
darted out of the room. Miss Wilder called; no reply. She
commanded; no answer. Then she closed her lips more firmly and
betook herself to the door of Mrs. Bryce's room. "What is it? I
told you not to bother me," an irritated voice called, at her
knock. "I'm sorry, Mrs. Bryce, but Isabelle refuses to be dressed
for the party. She says she won't go." "Come in," called the
voice.
The governess opened the door and entered. It was a
hot day, and Mrs. Bryce, in a cool négligé, lay stretched out on a
chaise longue, with a pitcher of something iced beside her,
a book open on her lap. She was the picture of luxurious comfort,
except for the frown upon her pretty brow. "Why don't you make her
behave, Miss Wilder?" "I do my best, Mrs. Bryce, but she is very
difficult," the older woman sighed. "Of course she's difficult –
she's a brat! But that is what I have you for, to teach her some
manners, and make her act like a civilized being. Where is she?"
"She ran away when I tried to put her dress on her." "What do you
expect me to do about it?" "I thought you might order her to get
dressed." "Much good it would do! I don't see why I have to be
bothered with it. I didn't want the party; it's a perfect nuisance,
cluttering up the place with noisy kids; but she owes it to them,
and she has to have them here once a season."
A small, determined figure appeared at the door, in
a brief petticoat and socks. "I won't go to that party," she
announced. "Come here to me this instant," exploded her mother at
sight of her.
The child walked slowly to her mother's side, with
disconcerting dignity, all out of proportion to her four brief
years. "What do you mean by acting like this when I give you a
birthday party? There is everything on earth ordered to eat, and
all the children in the colony are asked to come and play with you,
and you make a monkey of yourself." "I won't go." "Why won't you
go?" "You didn't ask Patsy." "You can't ask that common little
Irishman to a party," objected her parent. "I won't go. He's
my friend. I like him best, an' if he don't come, I won't go." "But
it's your party – – " "I hate 'em." "You ought to whip her!"
Mrs. Bryce said to the governess.
A maid appeared at the door to announce the first
arrivals. "Now, you see, your guests are coming, and you aren't
even dressed." "I won't go," reiterated the child, sullenly. "If we
ask Patsy, will you go?" asked Mrs. Bryce desperately. "No – o;
yes." "Put on her clothes, Miss Wilder, and telephone the Lodge
that Isabelle wants Patsy for her party." "But, Mrs. Bryce, do you
think we ought to humour her? Will not the children's mothers
object to Patsy?" "Well, if you want her to go to this party, you'd
better make a bargain with her. I know her." "Come on. Hurry up,
Miss Wilder; I want to go after Patsy myself," cried the tyrant,
racing down the hall.
Miss Wilder followed, and Mrs. Bryce turned to her
book, with a sense of irritated futility which her only child
always aroused in her. But the party soon faded from her mind, save
when shrill shouts from the lawn below caught her attention.
Eventually Mr. Walter Bryce, familiarly known as
Wally, appeared at his wife's door. He was an undersized, dapper
little man, with almost no chin. His sole claim to attention lay in
the millions accumulated by his father. "Nice row you've got on
down stairs," he remarked. "Isabelle's birthday party," yawned his
wife. "Looks to me like poor old Wilder's birthday party. Just as I
came along, a line of kids was marching up to give their hostess
their presents. Old Wilder was hanging on to Isabelle so she
wouldn't bolt, and the little beast wouldn't take one of the
packages. Said she didn't want their presents. The poor Wilder
appealed to me, and I told Isabelle to act like a lady, and whadye
think she said to me – right there before all those smart-aleck
kids? – 'Get out, Wally, this is my party'!"
Mrs. Bryce laughed. "You ought to know better than
to give her a chance like that." "Look here now, Max, she's got to
be attended to. She's the limit. She's got no more manners than an
alley cat." "That's no news to me, Wally." "Why don't you do
something about it?" "Do something? Don't I get her a new governess
every month? Nobody can do anything with her." "I don't see where
she gets it," said Wally. "She gets it from you, and she gets it
from me. She's the worst of both of us personified." "Poor kid,
that's tough luck for her" – seriously. "A little late for vain
regrets" – sarcastically.
He went over to the window and looked down at the
party scattered about below. "Why wouldn't it be a good idea to
keep her with you awhile every day, Max?" "Not much! I come down
here to rest, not to play nursemaid. You might take her round with
you, if you feel that she needs uplifting." "She's beyond me. I
don't understand her; and, on the whole, I don't like her." "Nobody
likes her; she's queer. And plain; my word, why do you
suppose I had to have a child that looks like that? She hasn't one
good point." "Um – she's got eyes." "Great big goopy eyes too big
for her head! This parent business is too much of a gamble. If you
could go pick out a nice blue-eyed, pink-and-white, ready-made
infant – – " "I suppose you should have picked out a pink-and-white
ready-made husband, if you wanted that kind," Wally interposed.
"Well, I never would have picked out Isabelle." "After all, you're
her mother, Max," he began. "Look here, Wally, don't begin on that
mother stuff. I didn't want her any more than you did, and we were
fools to have her. That may be abnormal, unnatural, and all the
rest of it, but it's the truth, and there are lots of other women
just like me. You can't lump us, any more than you can lump men. We
don't all of us have the maternal instinct, not by a long shot."
"Don't talk like that, Max; it's not nice." "There you go. It's all
right for you not to want a child, but it's indecent in me. That's
a man-made idea, and it won't work any more. Lots of us don't find
motherhood either satisfying or interesting, and we're getting
courage enough to say so." "The less you say about it, the better,"
counselled Wally. "To get back to Isabelle, she's here, and she's
just as much your responsibility as she is mine." "Being here isn't
her fault, poor kid. Seems as if somebody ought to – well – love
her," he finished in embarrassment. "Go ahead. I've no
objection."
Mrs. Bryce returned to her book. "By Jove, Max,
you're hard as rocks." "Oh, get out, Wally. I'm not interested in
your conversation. Go liven up the party." "Why don't you try a
younger governess, for a change?" he went on, undeterred. "Wilder
is so old and sort of set."
Mrs. Bryce closed her book with irritated finality.
"Wally, I will give you a chance at running our darling child for
the rest of this summer. I declare a strike! You get her
governesses, you donate your society to her. You've got nothing to
do. She may keep you out of mischief." "Oh, I say, I don't want to
butt in, I only thought – – " "She's yours. I'm through until
September first."
There was an uproar from below, louder than before.
Wally looked out. "I wonder what they're up to," he said.
A maid, red and flustered, appeared at the door.
"Oh, Mrs. Bryce, please come down to the party. Isabelle ran away
with Patsy and we've just found her."
Mrs. Bryce, oblivious of her costume, followed Mr.
Bryce and the maid down the stairs, as fast as possible. Evidently
a crisis had occurred below. All the girls in their white dresses
and pink or blue sashes, all the boys in their white collars of
ceremony, were grouped about on the lawn, around the base of a big
shade tree. Pink hair bows were a-flutter with excitement. The
patent leather pumps of the boys trod upon the white slippers of
the little girls in their efforts to see what was happening.
At the foot of the tree stood Miss Wilder red and
tired, speaking sternly to some one overhead. Mr. and Mrs. Bryce
rushed to join her, brushing children aside. "What is the matter,
Miss Wilder?" demanded Mrs. Bryce. "Oh, Mrs. Bryce, she's – she's –
– " "Isabelle Bryce, come down here this moment," commanded her
mother, loudly.
There was a whispered colloquy overhead, among the
branches. "That wretched Patsy is with her," wailed Miss Wilder.
"They ran away, and hid for hours, and then we found them up here."
"Isabelle!" shouted her father. "All right. We're going to drop,"
said a voice from above.
Suddenly two white and shining little bodies hung
side by side from a limb, then two naked youngsters dropped into
the midst of the astounded party. "Isabelle Bryce!" gasped her
mother. "We're playing barbarian," said Isabelle, coolly; "Miss
Wilder told me about them." "Miss Wilder!" protested Wally. "But I
didn't – I mean – I – – " "You said they lived in trees and never
wore clothes."
The children began to titter. "This is your affair,
I believe, Wally," remarked Mrs. Bryce, and she walked in a
leisurely way into the house. "Oh, I say," he called after her;
then: "Get her indoors, will you? Who's the boy?" "The gardener's
child, Patsy." "Where are your clothes?" he demanded. "Up in the
tree, sorr," said the boy. "Get them, and cut home," said Wally,
severely.
Patsy obeyed, but Isabelle resisted force. "I won't
hurry and I won't be carried, I'll walk," said she, and – properly
clad in her "birthday clothes" – Isabelle Bryce disposed of her
first party!
CHAPTER TWO
Following upon the exit of his daughter came the realization to Wally that something must be done about the "party." He turned to the group of children, huddled together in horror, like butterflies in a rain storm. Serious and large-eyed, they focussed their attention upon him, in the apparent belief that, being a parent, he would be able to handle this unprecedented situation. They ranged in age from three to six; they were the children of his neighbours and life-long associates; and yet Wally had the feeling that he was hemmed in by a pack of alert, curious little animals. "Well, children," he managed to say, "I'm sorry that Isabelle was such a naughty girl at her own party, but she is only four years old, we must remember, and I suppose she did not know any better." "I'm free an' a half, an' I don't take off my cloves at a party," bragged one of the female infants. "No, I'm sure you don't. It isn't done," said Wally, helplessly. "She always spoils parties. I wanted not to have her at mine, but mother made me," remarked Tommy Page. "Hard luck, old man," said Wally. "She always wants to boss everything," Margie Hunter complained. "Are you going to whip her?" demanded another child. "She will be punished, believe me," replied Wally, firmly. "But I think we'd better call the party over." "We can't go yet, the nurses and chauffeurs haven't come," Tommy protested. "I'd like to hear her yell when she's licked." "Our man will take you all home in the big station wagon, so get on your hats," Wally ordered.
Fifteen minutes later the smallest child was packed in, with one of the maids in command, and the motor slid off down the drive, leaving Wally on the door step. "Little beasts!" he remarked, feelingly.
In the hall he met Miss Wilder, still bearing marks of the late excitement. "I have put Isabelle to bed, Mr. Bryce. Mrs. Bryce says that you are to prescribe her punishment."
Wally looked his misery. "I don't want to punish her. Can't you manage it alone?" he said. "No, I cannot. Isabelle needs the authority of her parents now and then to back me up," said Miss Wilder, severely. "Well, I'll have a talk with her." "I think a severe spanking is what she needs." "What do ye suppose ever put such an idea in her head?" "You never know what she is going to do. She asked me about barbarians when I was trying to induce her to get dressed for the party. I told her some facts, just to occupy her mind." "It occupied her mind all right," laughed Wally, who left Miss Wilder with the idea that he thought the joke was at her expense. She determined to give notice at once, and leave at the end of her month.
Wally went upstairs and turned his unaccustomed feet into the nursery. He hesitated before he opened the door, but no sounds of repentant sobs met his ear, so he went in. Isabelle, the picture of alert interest, sat up in bed and eyed him. "Have you come to punish me?" she asked. "Something like that." "Go ahead," said she.
He sat down on the edge of her bed and looked at her. Max was right; she was no prize beauty, with her baby face like an old woman's, with her nondescript features, her short brown hair. But her eyes were disturbing – big dusky, wise eyes, with no effect of childishness. "Look here, Isabelle, why do you act like this?" That was regular parent-talk, so she made no answer. "Here you are, four years old, and you can't behave at your own party," he continued. "I hate parties." "Well, but you have to have parties." "Why?" "Oh, all children do." "Nasty things! I hate 'em all, except Patsy." "Hate those nice little girls?" "Yes!" – hotly. "And those handsome boys?" "Yes. They're ugly. Patsy is handsome." "Why are you so crazy about this Patsy?" "Because he always does what I say." Wally stifled a smile. "But don't you know you mustn't take off your clothes before mixed company?" "But we were playing barbarian." "Well, you shouldn't play that kind of game." "Why not?" "Because – – " He floundered. "Now, look here, you must never take off your clothes again." "Not when I go to bed?" – with interest. "I mean before people." "Not before Miss Wilder, or Mary?" "Don't be stupid," he exploded. "You know what I mean – before boys and girls." "Why not?" "Because it isn't nice. Don't you know what modesty is?" "No; what is it?" "It's – it's – well, it's just that you mustn't show your body to people." "Isn't my face my body?" "That's different. Everybody shows his face." She considered that. "If everybody showed their bodies it would be nice, wouldn't it?" "No," Wally said, harshly, because he felt she was making a fool of him. "But the barbarians never wore any clothes, and they were nice." "That's different. They didn't know any better." "Didn't they? Why didn't God tell them any better?" "I don't know." "Did Jesus wear clothes?" she inquired. "Who?" he demanded, caught unawares. "Jesus. You know, God's boy," she replied, earnestly. "Of course he wore clothes," Wally protested. "Why didn't he tell the barbarians?" "O Lord, I don't know. This has got nothing to do with your performance this afternoon," Wally urged, trying to get back to the subject and on to solid ground. "What kind of punishing are you going to do?" she inquired. "I don't know," he admitted. "What do you think I ought to do?"
She thought about that with awakened interest. "There's whipping, but I don't mind that." "You don't?" "No. There's shutting up, but that's fun. I play I'm a prisoner then." "Are there any punishments you don't like?" "Yes. Parties are punishment, and kindiegarden in winter is punishment." "You think the party this afternoon was punishment, do you?" "Yes." "Who punished you?" "Max." "I wish you wouldn't call your mother 'Max.'" "Why not?" "Why do you call her that?" "Because you do." "I don't have to be respectful to her – I mean – – " "If you call her that, I'm going to," she said, dismissing that subject. "You're being punished now, you know, being sent off to bed in broad daylight." "But I like it, when you talk to me."
He rose promptly. "I'm not going to talk to you. Your punishment is that nobody will talk to you for the rest of the day." "All right" – cheerfully. "You'll just lie here, all alone." "Oh, no," she corrected him, "my playmates will be here, and God's always around." "No playmates shall come in here," he reiterated. "But you can't keep Dorothy and Reginald out, because they're just pretend," she defied him.
Wally knew he was beaten. He had never felt so futile in his life. She sat there with her straight little back, her wise eyes fixed on him, and he wished he were well out of the room. "I hope you will lie here and think of what I have said to you," he remarked sonorously. "I'm surprised at you, Isabelle," he added sternly.
He rose and hurried toward the door. "Good night, Wally," she said pleasantly, and smiled at him.
It is not too much to say that Wally fled. He sought out his wife, who was dressing for dinner. "Well, did you whip her?" she inquired.
He evaded that. "I've had a good talk with her" – firmly.
She turned her face over her shoulder at him, and laughed. "Terrified her, no doubt." "Where on earth does she get her ideas?" "Not from me, – " indifferently. "She's – she's uncanny, that kid." "Hurry and dress, we're dining at the club. I wish you the joy of your job," she added, as he left her.
A day or two later, when Wally came out of the bath house on the way to swim, he encountered his daughter on the beach. "I'll swim with you, Wally," she said. "No, thanks. I'm going to the raft." "So am I," she answered.
He looked at her and laughed. She looked like a Kewpie in her abbreviated bathing suit, with water wings fastened to her back. She walked rapidly into the sea, and, perforce, he followed. Miss Wilder shouted orders in vain from the shore. The tide was running in, and nearly high, so she was over her depth in a second, but she paddled out toward the distant raft, her head well out of the water, thanks to her wings. Much amused, Wall...
Table of contents
- CHAPTER ONE
- CHAPTER TWO
- CHAPTER THREE
- CHAPTER FOUR
- CHAPTER FIVE
- CHAPTER SIX
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- CHAPTER EIGHT
- CHAPTER NINE
- CHAPTER TEN
- CHAPTER ELEVEN
- CHAPTER TWELVE
- CHAPTER THIRTEEN
- CHAPTER FOURTEEN
- CHAPTER FIFTEEN
- CHAPTER SIXTEEN
- CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
- CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
- CHAPTER NINETEEN
- CHAPTER TWENTY
- CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
- CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
- CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
- CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
- CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
- CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
- CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
- CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
- CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
- CHAPTER THIRTY
- CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
- Copyright