<h2><SPAN name="png.245" id="png.245"></SPAN><b>IX</b><br/>THE RELATED MUFF</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">We</span> had never seen our cousin Sidney till that
Christmas Eve, and we didn’t want to see him
then, and we didn’t like him when we did see
him. He was just dumped down into the
middle of us by mother, at a time when it
would have been unkind to her to say how
little we wanted him.</p>
<p>We knew already that there wasn’t to be
any proper Christmas for us, because Aunt
Ellie—the one who always used to send the
necklaces and carved things from India, and
remembered everybody’s birthday—had come
home ill. Very ill she was, at a hotel in
London, and mother had to go to her, and, of
course, father was away with his ship.</p>
<p>And then after we had said good-bye to
mother, and told her how sorry we were, we
were left to ourselves, and told each other what
a shame it was, and no presents or anything.
And then mother came suddenly back in a cab,
<SPAN name="png.246" id="png.246"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>and we all shouted ‘Hooray’ when we saw the
cab stop, and her get out of it. And then we
saw she was getting something out of the cab,
and our hearts leapt up like the man’s in the
piece of school poetry when he beheld a rainbow
in the sky—because we thought she had
remembered about the presents, and the thing
she was getting out of the cab was <em>them</em>.</p>
<p>Of course it was not—it was Sidney, very
thin and yellow, and looking as sullen as a pig.</p>
<p>We opened the front door. Mother didn’t
even come in. She just said, ‘Here’s your
Cousin Sidney. Be nice to him and give him
a good time, there’s darlings. And don’t
forget he’s your visitor, so be very extra nice
to him.’</p>
<p>I have sometimes thought it was the fault
of what mother said about the visitor that
made what did happen happen, but I am
almost sure really that it was the fault of us,
though I did not see it at the time, and even
now I’m sure we didn’t mean to be unkind.
Quite the opposite. But the events of life
are very confusing, especially when you try to
think what made you do them, and whether
you really meant to be naughty or not. Quite
often it is not—but it turns out just the same.</p>
<p>When the cab had carried mother away—Hilda
said it was like a dragon carrying away
<SPAN name="png.247" id="png.247"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>a queen—we said, ‘How do you do’ to our
Cousin Sidney, who replied, ‘Quite well, thank
you.’</p>
<p>And then, curiously enough, no one could
think of anything more to say.</p>
<p>Then Rupert—which is me—remembered
that about being a visitor, and he said:</p>
<p>‘Won’t you come into the drawing-room?’</p>
<p>He did when he had taken off his gloves
and overcoat. There was a fire in the drawing-room,
because we had been going to have
games there with mother, only the telegram
came about Aunt Ellie.</p>
<p>So we all sat on chairs in the drawing-room,
and thought of nothing to say harder than ever.</p>
<p>Hilda did say, ‘How old are you?’ but,
of course, we knew the answer to that. It
was ten.</p>
<p>And Hugh said, ‘Do you like England or
India best?’</p>
<p>And our cousin replied, ‘India ever so
much, thank you.’</p>
<p>I never felt such a duffer. It was awful.
With all the millions of interesting things that
there are to say at other times, and I couldn’t
think of one. At last I said, ‘Do you like
games?’</p>
<div class="illus">
<p><SPAN name="png.248" id="png.248"></SPAN><span class="ns">[</span><span class="pgmark">opp p208</span><ANTIMG class="framed" src="images/illus-248.png"
width="650" height="437" alt="" title="" /><br/>So we all sat on chairs in the drawing-room, and thought of nothing to say harder than ever.</p>
</div>
<p>And our cousin replied, ‘Some games I do,’
in a tone that made me sure that the games he
<SPAN name="png.250" id="png.250"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>liked wouldn’t be our kind, but some wild
Indian sort that we didn’t know.</p>
<p>I could see that the others were feeling just
like me, and I knew we could not go on like
this till tea-time. And yet I didn’t see any
other way to go on in. It was Hilda who cut
the Gorgeous knot at last. She said:</p>
<p>‘Hugh, let you and I go and make a lovely
surprise for Rupert and Sidney.’</p>
<p>And before I could think of any way of
stopping them without being downright rude
to our new cousin, they had fled the scene, just
like any old conspirators. Rupert—me, I mean—was
left alone with the stranger. I said:</p>
<p>‘Is there anything you’d like to do?’</p>
<p>And he said, ‘No, thank you.’</p>
<p>Then neither of us said anything for a bit—and
I could hear the others shrieking with
laughter in the hall.</p>
<p>I said, ‘I wonder what the surprise will be
like.’</p>
<p>He said, ‘Yes, I wonder’; but I could tell
from his tone that he did not wonder a bit.</p>
<p>The others were yelling with laughter.
Have you ever noticed how very amused
people always are when you’re not there? If
you’re in bed—ill, or in disgrace, or anything—it
always sounds like far finer jokes than ever
occur when you are not out of things.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.251" id="png.251"></SPAN>‘Do you like reading?’ said I—who am
Rupert—in the tones of despair.</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ said the cousin.</p>
<p>‘Then take a book,’ I said hastily, for I
really could not stand it another second, ‘and
you just read till the surprise is ready. I think
I ought to go and help the others. I’m the
eldest, you know.’</p>
<p>I did not wait—I suppose if you’re ten you
can choose a book for yourself—and I went.</p>
<p>Hilda’s idea was just Indians, but I thought
a wigwam would be nice. So we made one
with the hall table and the fur rugs off the
floor. If everything had been different, and
Aunt Ellie hadn’t been ill, we were to have had
turkey for dinner. The turkey’s feathers were
splendid for Indians, and the striped blankets
off Hugh’s and my beds, and all mother’s beads.
The hall is big like a room, and there was a fire.
The afternoon passed like a beautiful dream.
When Rupert had done his own feathering and
blanketing, as well as brown paper moccasins,
he helped the others. The tea-bell rang before
we were quite dressed. We got Louisa to go
up and tell our cousin that the surprise was
ready, and we all got inside the wigwam. It
was a very tight fit, with the feathers and the
blankets.</p>
<p>He came down the stairs very slowly, reading
<SPAN name="png.252" id="png.252"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>all the time, and when he got to the mat at
the bottom of the stairs we burst forth in all
our war-paint from the wigwam. It upset,
because Hugh and Hilda stuck between the
table’s legs, and it fell on the stone floor with
quite a loud noise. The wild Indians picked
themselves up out of the ruins and did the
finest war-dance I’ve ever seen in front of my
cousin Sidney.</p>
<p>He gave one little scream, and then sat
down suddenly on the bottom steps. He
leaned his head against the banisters and we
thought he was admiring the war-dance, till
Eliza, who had been laughing and making as
much noise as any one, suddenly went up to
him and shook him.</p>
<p>‘Stop that noise,’ she said to us, ‘he’s gone
off into a dead faint.’</p>
<p>He had.</p>
<p>Of course we were very sorry and all that,
but we never thought he’d be such a muff as to
be frightened of three Red Indians and a wigwam
that happened to upset. He was put to
bed, and we had our teas.</p>
<p>‘I wish we hadn’t,’ Hilda said.</p>
<p>‘So do I,’ said Hugh.</p>
<p>But Rupert said, ‘No one <em>could</em> have
expected a cousin of ours to be a chicken-hearted
duffer. He’s a muff. It’s bad enough
<SPAN name="png.253" id="png.253"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>to have a muff in the house at all, and at
Christmas time, too. But a related muff!’</p>
<p>Still the affair had cast a gloom, and we
were glad when it was bed-time.</p>
<p>Next day was Christmas Day, and no
presents, and nobody but the servants to wish
a Merry Christmas to.</p>
<p>Our cousin Sidney came down to breakfast,
and as it was Christmas Day Rupert bent his
proud spirit to own he was sorry about the
Indians.</p>
<p>Sidney said, ‘It doesn’t matter. I’m sorry
too. Only I didn’t expect it.’</p>
<p>We suggested two or three games, such as
Parlour Cricket, National Gallery, and Grab—but
Sidney said he would rather read. So we
said would he mind if we played out the Indian
game which we had dropped, out of politeness,
when he fainted.</p>
<p>He said:</p>
<p>‘I don’t mind at all, now I know what it is
you’re up to. No, thank you, I’d rather read,’
he added, in reply to Rupert’s unselfish offer to
dress him for the part of Sitting Bull.</p>
<p>So he read <cite>Treasure Island</cite>, and we fought on
the stairs with no casualties except the gas
globes, and then we scalped all the dolls—putting
on paper scalps first because Hilda
wished it—and we scalped Eliza as she passed
<SPAN name="png.256" id="png.256"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>through the hall—hers was a white scalp with
lacey stuff on it and long streamers.</p>
<div class="illus">
<p><SPAN name="png.255" id="png.255"></SPAN><span class="ns">[</span><span class="pgmark">opp p213</span><ANTIMG class="framed" src="images/illus-255.png" width-obs="439" height-obs="700" alt="" title="" /><br/>‘We scalped Eliza as she passed through the hall.’</p>
</div>
<p>And when it was beginning to get dark
we thought of flying machines. Of course
Sidney wouldn’t play at that either, and Hilda
and Hugh were contented with paper wings—there
were some rolls of rather decent yellow
and pink crinkled paper that mother had bought
to make lamp shades of. They made wings
of this, and then they played at fairies up and
down the stairs, while Sidney sat at the bottom
of the stairs and went on reading <cite>Treasure
Island</cite>. But Rupert was determined to have a
flying machine, with real flipper-flappery wings,
like at Hendon. So he got two brass fire-guards
out of the spare room and mother’s
bedroom, and covered them with newspapers
fastened on with string. Then he got a tea-tray
and fastened it on to himself with rug-straps,
and then he slipped his arms in between
the string and the fire-guards, and went to the
top of the stairs and shouting, ‘Look out
below there! Beware Flying Machines!’ he
sat down suddenly on the tray, and tobogganed
gloriously down the stairs, flapping his fire-guard
wings. It was a great success, and felt more
like flying than anything he ever played at. But
Hilda had not had time to look out thoroughly,
because he did not wait any time between his
<SPAN name="png.257" id="png.257"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>warning and his descent. So that she was still
fluttering, in the character of Queen of the
Butterfly Fairies, about half-way down the stairs
when the flying machine, composed of the two
guards, the tea-tray, and Rupert, started from
the top of them, and she could only get out of
the way by standing back close against the wall.
Unluckily the place where she was, was also
the place where the gas was burning in a little
recess. You remember we had broken the
globe when we were playing Indians.</p>
<p>Now, of course, you know what happened,
because you have read <cite>Harriett and the Matches</cite>,
and all the rest of the stories that have been
written to persuade children not to play with
fire. No one was playing with fire that day, it
is true, or doing anything really naughty at
all—but however naughty we had been the
thing that happened couldn’t have been much
worse. For the flying machine as it came
rushing round the curve of the staircase banged
against the legs of Hilda. She screamed and
stumbled back. Her pink paper wings went
into the gas that hadn’t a globe. They flamed
up, her hair frizzled, and her lace collar caught
fire. Rupert could not do anything because he
was held fast in his flying machine, and he and
it were rolling painfully on the mat at the
bottom of the stairs.</p>
<div class="illus">
<p><SPAN name="png.259" id="png.259"></SPAN><span class="ns">[</span><span class="pgmark">opp p215</span><ANTIMG class="framed" src="images/illus-259.png" width-obs="650" height-obs="625" alt="" title="" /><br/>Sidney threw the rug over her, and rolled her over and over.</p>
</div>
<p><SPAN name="png.260" id="png.260"></SPAN>Hilda screamed.</p>
<p>I have since heard that a great yellow light
fell on the pages of <cite>Treasure Island</cite>.</p>
<p>Next moment <cite>Treasure Island</cite> went spinning
across the room. Sidney caught up the
fur rug that was part of the wigwam, and as
Hilda, screaming horribly, and with wings not
of paper but of flames, rushed down the staircase,
and stumbled over the flying machine,
Sidney threw the rug over her, and rolled her
over and over on the floor.</p>
<p>‘Lie down!’ he cried. ‘Lie down! It’s the
only way.’</p>
<p>But somehow people never will lie down
when their clothes are on fire, any more than
they will lie still in the water if they think they
are drowning, and some one is trying to save
them. It came to something very like a
fight. Hilda fought and struggled. Rupert
got out of his fire-guards and added himself
and his tea-tray to the scrimmage. Hugh slid
down to the knob of the banisters and sat
there yelling. The servants came rushing in.</p>
<p>But by that time the fire was out. And
Sidney gasped out, ‘It’s all right. You aren’t
burned, Hilda, are you?’</p>
<p>Hilda was much too frightened to know
whether she was burnt or not, but Eliza
looked her over, and it turned out that only
<SPAN name="png.261" id="png.261"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>her neck was a little scorched, and a good deal
of her hair frizzled off short.</p>
<p>Every one stood, rather breathless and pale,
and every one’s face was much dirtier than
customary, except Hugh’s, which he had, as
usual, dirtied thoroughly quite early in the
afternoon. Rupert felt perfectly awful, ashamed
and proud and rather sick. ‘You’re a regular
hero, Sidney,’ he said—and it was not easy
to say—‘and yesterday I said you were a related
muff. And I’m jolly sorry I did. Shake
hands, won’t you?’</p>
<p>Sidney hesitated.</p>
<p>‘Too proud?’ Rupert’s feelings were hurt,
and I should not wonder if he spoke rather
fiercely.</p>
<p>‘It’s—it’s a little burnt, I think,’ said Sidney,
‘don’t be angry,’ and he held out the left hand.</p>
<p>Rupert grasped it.</p>
<p>‘I do beg your pardon,’ he said, ‘you <em>are</em> a
hero!’</p>
<div class="blockq fivestar">* * * * *</div>
<p>Sidney’s hand was bad for ever so long,
but we were tremendous chums after that.</p>
<p>It was when they’d done the hand up with
scraped potato and salad oil—a great, big, fat, wet
plaster of it—that I said to him:</p>
<p>‘I don’t care if you don’t like games. Let’s <!-- "Lets" sans apostrophe in original -->
be pals.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.262" id="png.262"></SPAN>And he said, ‘I do like games, but I couldn’t
care about anything with mother so ill. I
know you’ll think I’m a muff, but I’m not
really, only I do love her so.’</p>
<p>And with that he began to cry, and I
thumped him on the back, and told him exactly
what a beast I knew I was, to comfort him.</p>
<p>When Aunt Ellie was well again we kept
Christmas on the 6th of January, which used
to be Christmas Day in middle-aged times.</p>
<p>Father came home before New Year, and
he had a silver medal made, with a flame on
one side, and on the other Sidney’s name, and
‘For Bravery.’</p>
<p class="pgbrk">If I had not been tied up in fire-guards and
tea-trays perhaps I should have thought of the
rug and got the medal. But I do not grudge
it to Sidney. He deserved it. And he is not
a muff. I see now that a person might very
well be frightened at finding Indians in the
hall of a strange house, especially if the person
had just come from the kind of India where the
Indians are quite a different sort, and much
milder, with no feathers and wigwams and war-dances,
but only dusky features and University
Degrees.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />