This boy did the same, to help him cope with a difficult situation.
***
Sredni Vashtar
By Saki
Conradin
was ten years old, and the doctor had pronounced his professional opinion that
the boy would not live another five years.
The
doctor was silky and effete, and
counted for little, but his opinion was endorsed by Mrs. De Ropp, who counted
for nearly everything.
Mrs. De
Ropp was Conradin's cousin and guardian, and in his eyes she represented those
three-fifths of the world that are necessary and disagreeable and real; the
other two-fifths, in perpetual antagonism to the foregoing, were summed up in
himself and his imagination.
One of
these days Conradin supposed he would succumb to the mastering pressure of
wearisome necessary things--such as illnesses and coddling restrictions and
drawn-out dullness. Without his imagination, which was rampant under the spur
of loneliness, he would have succumbed long ago.
Mrs. De
Ropp would never, in her honestest moments, have confessed to herself that she
disliked Conradin, though she might have been dimly aware that thwarting him
"for his good" was a duty which she did not find particularly
irksome.
Conradin
hated her with a desperate sincerity which he was perfectly able to mask.
Such
few pleasures as he could contrive for himself gained an added relish from the
likelihood that they would be displeasing to his guardian, and from the realm
of his imagination she was locked out--an unclean thing, which should find no
entrance.In the dull, cheerless garden, overlooked by so many windows that were ready to open with a message not to do this or that, or a reminder that medicines were due, he found little attraction.
The few
fruit-trees that it contained were set jealously apart from his plucking, as
though they were rare specimens of their kind blooming in an arid waste; it
would probably have been difficult to find a market-gardener who would have
offered ten shillings for their entire yearly produce.
In a
forgotten corner, however, almost hidden behind a dismal shrubbery, was a
disused tool-shed of respectable proportions, and within its walls Conradin
found a haven, something that took on the varying aspects of a playroom and a
cathedral.
He had
peopled it with a legion of familiar phantoms, evoked partly from fragments of
history and partly from his own brain, but it also boasted two inmates of flesh
and blood...
***
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