His Big Opportunity - Cover

His Big Opportunity

Copyright© 2024 by Amy Le Feuvre

Chapter 11: A Gift to the Queen

“Can I see Master Roy, please?”

It was Rob who spoke, and he seemed breathless with haste and importance, as he stood at the front door one cold afternoon the end of October.

“You can give me your message,” the young footman said, rather superciliously.

“No, I can’t,” was the blunt retort; “ask Master Roy to speak to me.”

Rob gained his point, and was ushered into the library where Roy and Dudley were amusing themselves in the firelight.

The old nursery was not much used now, and the library had begun to be considered the boys’ room, partly because owing to it being on the ground floor, and opening into the garden, it was more convenient for Roy’s use.

Roy was now the possessor of a cork leg; and with the help of a stick he was nearly as active as ever. His spirits were as high, and his purposes as plentiful as before his illness; and his grandmother and aunt marvelled that he could take his deformity so lightly. Yet there were times unknown to any, when Roy’s brave little heart sank with the consciousness of it; and often in bed at night his pillow would be wet with tears.

“Oh, God,” he would often pray, “you wouldn’t let me die, do help me to do something worth living for. I feel my leg will keep away all the opportunities now, but please give me something big to do for you still.”

“Hulloo, Rob, come on,” was Roy’s exclamation as he caught sight of his friend. “Just look at Nibble and Dibble, we’re teaching them to draw a cart. It makes you die of laughing to look at them. There they go, and Dibble turns head over heels in his excitement!”

Roy’s happy laugh rang out, but though Dudley joined him, Rob’s face was grave and set.

“Please, can I speak to you on business, Master Roy?”

“Goody! What a long face!” exclaimed Dudley, pulling down his own in imitation of Rob’s, and thereby causing a fresh peal of laughter from Roy. “Have you been a naughty boy, Rob, and has old Hal been thrashing you? Have you been skylarking on the top of the greenhouse, and smashed through on Hal’s pate?”

“I should like to speak to Master Roy, alone,” said Rob, a little wistfully; in no way disturbed by Dudley’s teasing.

“Oh, it’s one of your secrets again. I’ll be off, Roy, I want to see old Principle!”

And Dudley dashed out of the room, whilst Rob came nearer and began his “business.”

“Master Roy, I’ve been thinking a lot lately, and Miss Bertram asked me the other day if I’d like any other job for the winter as there’s hardly enough work for me in the garden now. And yesterday I saw a chap in the village I used to know. He’s a recruiting sergeant for the ----shire regiment, and he wants me to enlist straight away. I wouldn’t have given it a thought only what you said about serving the Queen has stuck to me, and it does seem a chance, and somehow that song has been in my head ever since I heard Miss Bertram sing it. I’d like to be in a regiment.”

Rob paused for breath, and Roy’s eyes were wide open with wonder and astonishment.

“But, Rob, you aren’t old enough to be a soldier yet!”

“I’m just the age—they take them at eighteen, and I was that the other day, only I don’t look it.”

“But you’re going to be my servant. I couldn’t let you go.”

Rob’s face fell.

“I thought I could have seven years—or even twelve years would hardly find you ready to take up your property. And then I’d come back to you and never leave you again!”

“But I want you with me now—always”—said Roy, in a distressed tone; “I couldn’t do without you all that time, and it’s horrid of you to want to get away from here, I think.”

“All right, Master Roy, I won’t go—I’ll get a job in the village that will keep me close at hand.”

Rob tried to speak cheerfully, and after waiting a minute to see if Roy would say any more, he left the room quietly; all the light having died out of his honest grey eyes.

Roy watched the antics of his mice in the firelight, but his thoughts were far away from them. At last he opened the door and made his way up to his grandmother’s room to have his usual chat with her before tea.

“Granny, if a person you like will do anything you like, ought you to make that person do what you like instead of what they like?”

“It sounds like a riddle,” said Mrs. Bertram, with a smile. “I won’t ask who the person is, the question is whether you like that person or yourself best. Which do you?”

Roy did not answer for a minute, then he hung his head.

“I’m afraid I like myself best.”

“If you give me more details, perhaps I can advise you.”

“Well, granny, may I talk first to Dudley about it, and then I’ll tell you. But you see it’s like this—the person wants to please you, and you can’t pretend to be pleased if he does what doesn’t please you!”

“I think the best plan would be to leave yourself out of the question entirely, and only think of the other person; that would be the most unselfish way.”

Roy knitted his brows and heaved a heavy sigh.

“Am I a very selfish person, granny?”

“You are much more selfish than Dudley is,” said Mrs. Bertram, decidedly, who never minced matters with her grandsons.

Roy flushed a deep crimson, and his grandmother added,

“I do not say that you are altogether to blame, for Dudley has always given way to you and spoiled you; but you do not very often think of his wishes before your own.”

“No, I never do.”

Roy’s tone was of the deepest dejection; but the sudden entrance of Dudley gave a turn to the conversation, and he gradually recovered his spirits.

When the two boys were at their tea half an hour later, Roy spread the whole matter before Dudley who looked at it in quite a different light.

“How stunning! And is he really going? Hurray! One of us will be a soldier, at any rate. I wish I was big enough to go with him.”

“But I don’t want him to go, and I told him so, and he isn’t going!”

Dudley opened his eyes at this.

“You going to keep him back? Why you’re the one that’s always talking about serving the Queen, and fighting for her!”

“Yes, I should like to, but—but Rob is different. I want him to be with me.”

“Then you don’t care about serving the Queen, if you’re going to do her out of a soldier who might fight for her!”

This was quite a new aspect of the affair.

“You think I’m like the dog in the manger? I can’t go myself and I don’t want him to. But if you go to a boarding school like Aunt Judy talks of, and I’m not allowed to go with you, and Rob is gone, I shall be left all alone; and I hate being alone, you don’t know how I hate it—I think I should die!”

 
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