Don't you worry. It's only a
dragon."
"Only a dragon?" cried his father. "What do you mean, sitting
there, you and your dragons? Only a dragon indeed! And what do you
know about it?"
"'Cos it is, and 'cos I do know," replied the Boy, quietly.
"Look here, father, you know we've each of us got our line. You
know about sheep, and weather, and things; I know about dragons. I
always said, you know, that that cave up there was a dragon-cave. I
always said it must have belonged to a dragon some time, and ought
to belong to a dragon now, if rules count for anything. Well, now
you tell me it has got a dragon, and so that's all right. I'm not
half as much surprised as when you told me it hadn't got a dragon.
Rules always come right if you wait quietly. Now, please, just
leave this all to me. And I'll stroll up to-morrow morning—no, in
the morning I can't, I've got a whole heap of things to do—well,
perhaps in the evening, if I'm quite free, I'll go up and have a
talk to him, and you'll find it'll be all right. Only, please,
don't you go worrying round there without me. You don't understand
'em a bit, and they're very sensitive, you know!"
"He's quite right, father," said the sensible mother. "As he
says, dragons is his line and not ours. He's wonderful knowing
about book-beasts, as every one allows. And to tell the truth, I'm
not half happy in my own mind, thinking of that poor animal lying
alone up there, without a bit o' hot supper or anyone to change the
news with; and maybe we'll be able to do something for him; and if
he ain't quite respectable our Boy'll find it out quick enough.
He's got a pleasant sort o' way with him that makes everybody tell
him everything."
Next day, after he'd had his tea, the Boy strolled up the chalky
track that led to the summit of the Downs; and there, sure enough,
he found the dragon, stretched lazily on the sward in front of his
cave. The view from that point was a magnificent one. To the right
and left, the bare and billowy leagues of Downs; in front, the
vale, with its clustered homesteads, its threads of white roads
running through orchards and well-tilled acreage, and, far away, a
hint of grey old cities on the horizon. A cool breeze played over
the surface of the grass and the silver shoulder of a large moon
was showing above distant junipers. No wonder the dragon seemed in
a peaceful and contented mood; indeed, as the Boy approached he
could hear the beast purring with a happy regularity. "Well, we
live and learn!" he said to himself. "None of my books ever told me
that dragons purred!
"Hullo, dragon!" said the Boy, quietly, when he had got up to
him.
The dragon, on hearing the approaching footsteps, made the
beginning of a courteous effort to rise. But when he saw it was a
Boy, he set his eyebrows severely.
"Now don't you hit me," he said; "or bung stones, or squirt
water, or anything. I won't have it, I tell you!"
"Not goin' to hit you," said the Boy wearily, dropping on the
grass beside the beast: "and don't, for goodness' sake, keep on
saying 'Don't;' I hear so much of it, and it's monotonous, and
makes me tired. I've simply looked in to ask you how you were and
all that sort of thing; but if I'm in the way I can easily clear
out. I've lots of friends, and no one can say I'm in the habit of
shoving myself in where I'm not wanted!"
"No, no, don't go off in a huff," said the dragon, hastily;
"fact is,—I 'm as happy up here as the day's long; never without an
occupation, dear fellow, never without an occupation! And yet,
between ourselves, it is a trifle dull at times."
The Boy bit off a stalk of grass and chewed it. "Going to make a
long stay here?" he asked, politely.
"Can't hardly say at present," replied the dragon. "It seems a
nice place enough—but I've only been here a short time, and one
must look about and reflect and consider before settling down. It's
rather a serious thing, settling down. Besides—now I 'm going to
tell you something! You'd never guess it if you tried ever so!—fact
is, I'm such a confoundedly lazy beggar!"
"You surprise me," said the Boy, civilly.
"It's the sad truth," the dragon went on, settling down between
his paws and evidently delighted to have found a listener at last:
"and I fancy that's really how I came to be here. You see all the
other fellows were so active and earnest and all that sort of
thing—always rampaging, and skirmishing, and scouring the desert
sands, and pacing the margin of the sea, and chasing knights all
over the place, and devouring damsels, and going on
generally—whereas I liked to get my meals regular and then to prop
my back against a bit of rock and snooze a bit, and wake up and
think of things going on and how they kept going on just the same,
you know! So when it happened I got fairly caught."
"When what happened, please?" asked the Boy.
"That's just what I don't precisely know," said the dragon.
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