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- The Phoenix and the Carpet
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- by E. Nesbit
-
- March, 1997 [Etext #836]
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-
-
-
-
- The Phoenix and the Carpet
-
- E. Nesbit
-
-
-
- TO
-
- My Dear Godson
- HUBERT GRIFFITH
- and his sister
- MARGARET
-
-
- TO HUBERT
-
- Dear Hubert, if I ever found
- A wishing-carpet lying round,
- I'd stand upon it, and I'd say:
- 'Take me to Hubert, right away!'
- And then we'd travel very far
- To where the magic countries are
- That you and I will never see,
- And choose the loveliest gifts for you, from me.
-
- But oh! alack! and well-a-day!
- No wishing-carpets come my way.
- I never found a Phoenix yet,
- And Psammeads are so hard to get!
- So I give you nothing fine--
- Only this book your book and mine,
- And hers, whose name by yours is set;
- Your book, my book, the book of Margaret!
-
- E. NESBIT
- DYMCHURCH
- September, 1904
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- 1 The Egg
- 2 The Topless Tower
- 3 The Queen Cook
- 4 Two Bazaars
- 5 The Temple
- 6 Doing Good
- 7 Mews from Persia
- 8 The Cats, the Cow, and the Burglar
- 9 The Burglar's Bride
- 10 The Hole in the Carpet
- 11 The Beginning of the End
- 12 The End of the End
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 1
- THE EGG
-
-
- It began with the day when it was almost the Fifth of November, and
- a doubt arose in some breast--Robert's, I fancy--as to the quality
- of the fireworks laid in for the Guy Fawkes celebration.
-
- 'They were jolly cheap,' said whoever it was, and I think it was
- Robert, 'and suppose they didn't go off on the night? Those
- Prosser kids would have something to snigger about then.'
-
- 'The ones _I_ got are all right,' Jane said; 'I know they are,
- because the man at the shop said they were worth thribble the
- money--'
-
- 'I'm sure thribble isn't grammar,' Anthea said.
-
- 'Of course it isn't,' said Cyril; 'one word can't be grammar all by
- itself, so you needn't be so jolly clever.'
-
- Anthea was rummaging in the corner-drawers of her mind for a very
- disagreeable answer, when she remembered what a wet day it was, and
- how the boys had been disappointed of that ride to London and back
- on the top of the tram, which their mother had promised them as a
- reward for not having once forgotten, for six whole days, to wipe
- their boots on the mat when they came home from school.
-
- So Anthea only said, 'Don't be so jolly clever yourself, Squirrel.
- And the fireworks look all right, and you'll have the eightpence
- that your tram fares didn't cost to-day, to buy something more
- with. You ought to get a perfectly lovely Catharine wheel for
- eightpence.'
-
- 'I daresay,' said Cyril, coldly; 'but it's not YOUR eightpence
- anyhow--'
-
- 'But look here,' said Robert, 'really now, about the fireworks. We
- don't want to be disgraced before those kids next door. They think
- because they wear red plush on Sundays no one else is any good.'
-
- 'I wouldn't wear plush if it was ever so--unless it was black to be
- beheaded in, if I was Mary Queen of Scots,' said Anthea, with scorn.
-
- Robert stuck steadily to his point. One great point about Robert
- is the steadiness with which he can stick.
-
- 'I think we ought to test them,' he said.
-
- 'You young duffer,' said Cyril, 'fireworks are like postage-stamps.
- You can only use them once.'
-
- 'What do you suppose it means by "Carter's tested seeds" in the
- advertisement?'
-
- There was a blank silence. Then Cyril touched his forehead with
- his finger and shook his head.
-
- 'A little wrong here,' he said. 'I was always afraid of that with
- poor Robert. All that cleverness, you know, and being top in
- algebra so often--it's bound to tell--'
-
- 'Dry up,' said Robert, fiercely. 'Don't you see? You can't TEST
- seeds if you do them ALL. You just take a few here and there, and
- if those grow you can feel pretty sure the others will be--what do
- you call it?--Father told me--"up to sample". Don't you think we
- ought to sample the fire-works? Just shut our eyes and each draw
- one out, and then try them.'
-
- 'But it's raining cats and dogs,' said Jane.
-
- 'And Queen Anne is dead,' rejoined Robert. No one was in a very
- good temper. 'We needn't go out to do them; we can just move back
- the table, and let them off on the old tea-tray we play toboggans
- with. I don't know what YOU think, but _I_ think it's time we did
- something, and that would be really useful; because then we
- shouldn't just HOPE the fireworks would make those Prossers sit
- up--we should KNOW.'
-
- 'It WOULD be something to do,' Cyril owned with languid approval.
-
- So the table was moved back. And then the hole in the carpet, that
- had been near the window till the carpet was turned round, showed
- most awfully. But Anthea stole out on tip-toe, and got the tray
- when cook wasn't looking, and brought it in and put it over the
- hole.
-
- Then all the fireworks were put on the table, and each of the four
- children shut its eyes very tight and put out its hand and grasped
- something. Robert took a cracker, Cyril and Anthea had Roman
- candles; but Jane's fat paw closed on the gem of the whole collection,
- the Jack-in-the-box that had cost two shillings, and one at least of the
- party--I will not say which, because it was sorry afterwards--declared
- that Jane had done it on purpose. Nobody was pleased. For the worst of
- it was that these four children, with a very proper dislike of anything
- even faintly bordering on the sneakish, had a law, unalterable as those
- of the Medes and Persians, that one had to stand by the results of a
- toss-up, or a drawing of lots, or any other appeal to chance, however
- much one might happen to dislike the way things were turning out.
-
- 'I didn't mean to,' said Jane, near tears. 'I don't care, I'll
- draw another--'
-
- 'You know jolly well you can't,' said Cyril, bitterly. 'It's
- settled. It's Medium and Persian. You've done it, and you'll have
- to stand by it--and us too, worse luck. Never mind. YOU'LL have
- your pocket-money before the Fifth. Anyway, we'll have the
- Jack-in-the-box LAST, and get the most out of it we can.'
-
- So the cracker and the Roman candles were lighted, and they were
- all that could be expected for the money; but when it came to the
- Jack-in-the-box it simply sat in the tray and laughed at them, as
- Cyril said. They tried to light it with paper and they tried to
- light it with matches; they tried to light it with Vesuvian fusees
- from the pocket of father's second-best overcoat that was hanging
- in the hall. And then Anthea slipped away to the cupboard under
- the stairs where the brooms and dustpans were kept, and the rosiny
- fire-lighters that smell so nice and like the woods where
- pine-trees grow, and the old newspapers and the bees-wax and turpentine,
- and the horrid an stiff dark rags that are used for cleaning brass and
- furniture, and the paraffin for the lamps. She came back with a little
- pot that had once cost sevenpence-halfpenny when it was full of
- red-currant jelly; but the jelly had been all eaten long ago, and now
- Anthea had filled the jar with paraffin. She came in, and she threw the
- paraffin over the tray just at the moment when Cyril was trying with the
- twenty-third match to light the Jack-in-the-box. The
- Jack-in-the-box did not catch fire any more than usual, but the
- paraffin acted quite differently, and in an instant a hot flash of
- flame leapt up and burnt off Cyril's eyelashes, and scorched the
- faces of all four before they could spring back. They backed, in
- four instantaneous bounds, as far as they could, which was to the
- wall, and the pillar of fire reached from floor to ceiling.
-
- 'My hat,' said Cyril, with emotion, 'You've done it this time,
- Anthea.'
-
- The flame was spreading out under the ceiling like the rose of fire
- in Mr Rider Haggard's exciting story about Allan Quatermain.
- Robert and Cyril saw that no time was to be lost. They turned up
- the edges of the carpet, and kicked them over the tray. This cut
- off the column of fire, and it disappeared and there was nothing
- left but smoke and a dreadful smell of lamps that have been turned
- too low.
-
- All hands now rushed to the rescue, and the paraffin fire was only
- a bundle of trampled carpet, when suddenly a sharp crack beneath
- their feet made the amateur firemen start back. Another crack--the
- carpet moved as if it had had a cat wrapped in it; the
- Jack-in-the-box had at last allowed itself to be lighted, and it
- was going off with desperate violence inside the carpet.
-
- Robert, with the air of one doing the only possible thing, rushed
- to the window and opened it. Anthea screamed, Jane burst into
- tears, and Cyril turned the table wrong way up on top of the carpet
- heap. But the firework went on, banging and bursting and
- spluttering even underneath the table.
-
- Next moment mother rushed in, attracted by the howls of Anthea, and
- in a few moments the firework desisted and there was a dead
- silence, and the children stood looking at each other's black
- faces, and, out of the corners of their eyes, at mother's white
- one.
-
- The fact that the nursery carpet was ruined occasioned but little
- surprise, nor was any one really astonished that bed should prove
- the immediate end of the adventure. It has been said that all
- roads lead to Rome; this may be true, but at any rate, in early
- youth I am quite sure that many roads lead to BED, and stop
- there--or YOU do.
-
- The rest of the fireworks were confiscated, and mother was not
- pleased when father let them off himself in the back garden, though
- he said, 'Well, how else can you get rid of them, my dear?'
-
- You see, father had forgotten that the children were in disgrace,
- and that their bedroom windows looked out on to the back garden.
- So that they all saw the fireworks most beautifully, and admired
- the skill with which father handled them.
-
- Next day all was forgotten and forgiven; only the nursery had to be
- deeply cleaned (like spring-cleaning), and the ceiling had to be
- whitewashed.
-
- And mother went out; and just at tea-time next day a man came with
- a rolled-up carpet, and father paid him, and mother said--
-
- 'If the carpet isn't in good condition, you know, I shall expect
- you to change it.' And the man replied--
-
- 'There ain't a thread gone in it nowhere, mum. It's a bargain, if
- ever there was one, and I'm more'n 'arf sorry I let it go at the
- price; but we can't resist the lydies, can we, sir?' and he winked
- at father and went away.
-
- Then the carpet was put down in the nursery, and sure enough there
- wasn't a hole in it anywhere.
-
- As the last fold was unrolled something hard and loud-sounding
- bumped out of it and trundled along the nursery floor. All the
- children scrambled for it, and Cyril got it. He took it to the
- gas. It was shaped like an egg, very yellow and shiny,
- half-transparent, and it had an odd sort of light in it that
- changed as you held it in different ways. It was as though it was
- an egg with a yolk of pale fire that just showed through the stone.
-
- 'I MAY keep it, mayn't I, mother?' Cyril asked.
-
- And of course mother said no; they must take it back to the man who
- had brought the carpet, because she had only paid for a carpet, and
- not for a stone egg with a fiery yolk to it.
-
- So she told them where the shop was, and it was in the Kentish Town
- Road, not far from the hotel that is called the Bull and Gate. It
- was a poky little shop, and the man was arranging furniture outside
- on the pavement very cunningly, so that the more broken parts
- should show as little as possible. And directly he saw the
- children he knew them again, and he began at once, without giving
- them a chance to speak.
-
- 'No you don't' he cried loudly; 'I ain't a-goin' to take back no
- carpets, so don't you make no bloomin' errer. A bargain's a
- bargain, and the carpet's puffik throughout.'
-
- 'We don't want you to take it back,' said Cyril; 'but we found
- something in it.'
-
- 'It must have got into it up at your place, then,' said the man,
- with indignant promptness, 'for there ain't nothing in nothing as
- I sell. It's all as clean as a whistle.'
-
- 'I never said it wasn't CLEAN,' said Cyril, 'but--'
-
- 'Oh, if it's MOTHS,' said the man, 'that's easy cured with borax.
- But I expect it was only an odd one. I tell you the carpet's good
- through and through. It hadn't got no moths when it left my
- 'ands--not so much as an hegg.'
-
- 'But that's just it,' interrupted Jane; 'there WAS so much as an
- egg.'
-
- The man made a sort of rush at the children and stamped his foot.
-
- 'Clear out, I say!' he shouted, 'or I'll call for the police. A
- nice thing for customers to 'ear you a-coming 'ere a-charging me
- with finding things in goods what I sells. 'Ere, be off, afore I
- sends you off with a flea in your ears. Hi! constable--'
-
- The children fled, and they think, and their father thinks, that
- they couldn't have done anything else. Mother has her own opinion.
-
- But father said they might keep the egg.
-
- 'The man certainly didn't know the egg was there when he brought
- the carpet,' said he, 'any more than your mother did, and we've as
- much right to it as he had.'
-
- So the egg was put on the mantelpiece, where it quite brightened up
- the dingy nursery. The nursery was dingy, because it was a
- basement room, and its windows looked out on a stone area with a
- rockery made of clinkers facing the windows. Nothing grew in the
- rockery except London pride and snails.
-
- The room had been described in the house agent's list as a
- 'convenient breakfast-room in basement,' and in the daytime it was
- rather dark. This did not matter so much in the evenings when the
- gas was alight, but then it was in the evening that the
- blackbeetles got so sociable, and used to come out of the low
- cupboards on each side of the fireplace where their homes were, and
- try to make friends with the children. At least, I suppose that
- was what they wanted, but the children never would.
-
- On the Fifth of November father and mother went to the theatre, and
- the children were not happy, because the Prossers next door had
- lots of fireworks and they had none.
-
- They were not even allowed to have a bonfire in the garden.
-
- 'No more playing with fire, thank you,' was father's answer, when
- they asked him.
-
- When the baby had been put to bed the children sat sadly round the
- fire in the nursery.
-
- 'I'm beastly bored,' said Robert.
-
- 'Let's talk about the Psammead,' said Anthea, who generally tried
- to give the conversation a cheerful turn.
-
- 'What's the good of TALKING?' said Cyril. 'What I want is for
- something to happen. It's awfully stuffy for a chap not to be
- allowed out in the evenings. There's simply nothing to do when
- you've got through your homers.'
-
- Jane finished the last of her home-lessons and shut the book with
- a bang.
-
- 'We've got the pleasure of memory,' said she. 'Just think of last
- holidays.'
-
- Last holidays, indeed, offered something to think of--for they had
- been spent in the country at a white house between a sand-pit and
- a gravel-pit, and things had happened. The children had found a
- Psammead, or sand-fairy, and it had let them have anything they
- wished for--just exactly anything, with no bother about its not
- being really for their good, or anything like that. And if you
- want to know what kind of things they wished for, and how their
- wishes turned out you can read it all in a book called Five
- Children and It (It was the Psammead). If you've not read it,
- perhaps I ought to tell you that the fifth child was the baby
- brother, who was called the Lamb, because the first thing he ever
- said was 'Baa!' and that the other children were not particularly
- handsome, nor were they extra clever, nor extraordinarily good.
- But they were not bad sorts on the whole; in fact, they were rather
- like you.
-
- 'I don't want to think about the pleasures of memory,' said Cyril;
- 'I want some more things to happen.'
-
- 'We're very much luckier than any one else, as it is,' said Jane.
- 'Why, no one else ever found a Psammead. We ought to be grateful.'
-
- 'Why shouldn't we GO ON being, though?' Cyril asked--'lucky, I
- mean, not grateful. Why's it all got to stop?'
-
- 'Perhaps something will happen,' said Anthea, comfortably. 'Do you
- know, sometimes I think we are the sort of people that things DO
- happen to.'
-
- 'It's like that in history,' said Jane: 'some kings are full of
- interesting things, and others--nothing ever happens to them,
- except their being born and crowned and buried, and sometimes not
- that.'
-
- 'I think Panther's right,' said Cyril: 'I think we are the sort of
- people things do happen to. I have a sort of feeling things would
- happen right enough if we could only give them a shove. It just
- wants something to start it. That's all.'
-
- 'I wish they taught magic at school,' Jane sighed. 'I believe if
- we could do a little magic it might make something happen.'
-
- 'I wonder how you begin?' Robert looked round the room, but he got
- no ideas from the faded green curtains, or the drab Venetian
- blinds, or the worn brown oil-cloth on the floor. Even the new
- carpet suggested nothing, though its pattern was a very wonderful
- one, and always seemed as though it were just going to make you
- think of something.
-
- 'I could begin right enough,' said Anthea; 'I've read lots about
- it. But I believe it's wrong in the Bible.'
-
- 'It's only wrong in the Bible because people wanted to hurt other
- people. I don't see how things can be wrong unless they hurt
- somebody, and we don't want to hurt anybody; and what's more, we
- jolly well couldn't if we tried. Let's get the Ingoldsby Legends.
- There's a thing about Abra-cadabra there,' said Cyril, yawning.
- 'We may as well play at magic. Let's be Knights Templars. They
- were awfully gone on magic. They used to work spells or something
- with a goat and a goose. Father says so.'
-
- 'Well, that's all right,' said Robert, unkindly; 'you can play the
- goat right enough, and Jane knows how to be a goose.'
-
- 'I'll get Ingoldsby,' said Anthea, hastily. 'You turn up the
- hearthrug.'
-
- So they traced strange figures on the linoleum, where the hearthrug
- had kept it clean. They traced them with chalk that Robert had
- nicked from the top of the mathematical master's desk at school.
- You know, of course, that it is stealing to take a new stick of
- chalk, but it is not wrong to take a broken piece, so long as you
- only take one. (I do not know the reason of this rule, nor who
- made it.) And they chanted all the gloomiest songs they could think
- of. And, of course, nothing happened. So then Anthea said, 'I'm
- sure a magic fire ought to be made of sweet-smelling wood, and have
- magic gums and essences and things in it.'
-
- 'I don't know any sweet-smelling wood, except cedar,' said Robert;
- 'but I've got some ends of cedar-wood lead pencil.'
-
- So they burned the ends of lead pencil. And still nothing
- happened.
-
- 'Let's burn some of the eucalyptus oil we have for our colds,' said
- Anthea.
-
- And they did. It certainly smelt very strong. And they burned
- lumps of camphor out of the big chest. It was very bright, and
- made a horrid black smoke, which looked very magical. But still
- nothing happened. Then they got some clean tea-cloths from the
- dresser drawer in the kitchen, and waved them over the magic
- chalk-tracings, and sang 'The Hymn of the Moravian Nuns at
- Bethlehem', which is very impressive. And still nothing happened.
- So they waved more and more wildly, and Robert's tea-cloth caught
- the golden egg and whisked it off the mantelpiece, and it fell into
- the fender and rolled under the grate.
-
- 'Oh, crikey!' said more than one voice.
-
- And every one instantly fell down flat on its front to look under
- the grate, and there lay the egg, glowing in a nest of hot ashes.
-
- 'It's not smashed, anyhow,' said Robert, and he put his hand under
- the grate and picked up the egg. But the egg was much hotter than
- any one would have believed it could possibly get in such a short
- time, and Robert had to drop it with a cry of 'Bother!' It fell on
- the top bar of the grate, and bounced right into the glowing
- red-hot heart of the fire.
-
- 'The tongs!' cried Anthea. But, alas, no one could remember where
- they were. Every one had forgotten that the tongs had last been
- used to fish up the doll's teapot from the bottom of the water-
- butt, where the Lamb had dropped it. So the nursery tongs were
- resting between the water-butt and the dustbin, and cook refused to
- lend the kitchen ones.
-
- 'Never mind,' said Robert, 'we'll get it out with the poker and the
- shovel.'
-
- 'Oh, stop,' cried Anthea. 'Look at it! Look! look! look! I do
- believe something IS going to happen!'
-
- For the egg was now red-hot, and inside it something was moving.
- Next moment there was a soft cracking sound; the egg burst in two,
- and out of it came a flame-coloured bird. It rested a moment among
- the flames, and as it rested there the four children could see it
- growing bigger and bigger under their eyes.
-
- Every mouth was a-gape, every eye a-goggle.
-
- The bird rose in its nest of fire, stretched its wings, and flew
- out into the room. It flew round and round, and round again, and
- where it passed the air was warm. Then it perched on the fender.
- The children looked at each other. Then Cyril put out a hand
- towards the bird. It put its head on one side and looked up at
- him, as you may have seen a parrot do when it is just going to
- speak, so that the children were hardly astonished at all when it
- said, 'Be careful; I am not nearly cool yet.'
-
- They were not astonished, but they were very, very much interested.
-
- They looked at the bird, and it was certainly worth looking at.
- Its feathers were like gold. It was about as large as a bantam,
- only its beak was not at all bantam-shaped. 'I believe I know what
- it is,' said Robert. 'I've seen a picture.'
-
- He hurried away. A hasty dash and scramble among the papers on
- father's study table yielded, as the sum-books say, 'the desired
- result'. But when he came back into the room holding out a paper,
- and crying, 'I say, look here,' the others all said 'Hush!' and he
- hushed obediently and instantly, for the bird was speaking.
-
- 'Which of you,' it was saying, 'put the egg into the fire?'
-
- 'He did,' said three voices, and three fingers pointed at Robert.
-
- The bird bowed; at least it was more like that than anything else.
-
- 'I am your grateful debtor,' it said with a high-bred air.
-
- The children were all choking with wonder and curiosity--all except
- Robert. He held the paper in his hand, and he KNEW. He said so.
- He said--
-
- '_I_ know who you are.'
-
- And he opened and displayed a printed paper, at the head of which
- was a little picture of a bird sitting in a nest of flames.
-
- 'You are the Phoenix,' said Robert; and the bird was quite pleased.
-
- 'My fame has lived then for two thousand years,' it said. 'Allow
- me to look at my portrait.' It looked at the page which Robert,
- kneeling down, spread out in the fender, and said--
-
- 'It's not a flattering likeness ... And what are these
- characters?' it asked, pointing to the printed part.
-
- 'Oh, that's all dullish; it's not much about YOU, you know,' said
- Cyril, with unconscious politeness; 'but you're in lots of books.'
-
- 'With portraits?' asked the Phoenix.
-
- 'Well, no,' said Cyril; 'in fact, I don't think I ever saw any
- portrait of you but that one, but I can read you something about
- yourself, if you like.'
-
- The Phoenix nodded, and Cyril went off and fetched Volume X of the
- old Encyclopedia, and on page 246 he found the following:--
-
- 'Phoenix - in ornithology, a fabulous bird of antiquity.'
-
- 'Antiquity is quite correct,' said the Phoenix, 'but
- fabulous--well, do I look it?'
-
- Every one shook its head. Cyril went on--
-
-
- 'The ancients speak of this bird as single, or the only one of its
- kind.'
-
- 'That's right enough,' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'They describe it as about the size of an eagle.'
-
- 'Eagles are of different sizes,' said the Phoenix; 'it's not at all
- a good description.'
-
- All the children were kneeling on the hearthrug, to be as near the
- Phoenix as possible.
-
- 'You'll boil your brains,' it said. 'Look out, I'm nearly cool
- now;' and with a whirr of golden wings it fluttered from the fender
- to the table. It was so nearly cool that there was only a very
- faint smell of burning when it had settled itself on the
- table-cloth.
-
- 'It's only a very little scorched,' said the Phoenix,
- apologetically; 'it will come out in the wash. Please go on
- reading.'
-
- The children gathered round the table.
-
- 'The size of an eagle,' Cyril went on, 'its head finely crested
- with a beautiful plumage, its neck covered with feathers of a gold
- colour, and the rest of its body purple; only the tail white, and
- the eyes sparkling like stars. They say that it lives about five
- hundred years in the wilderness, and when advanced in age it builds
- itself a pile of sweet wood and aromatic gums, fires it with the
- wafting of its wings, and thus burns itself; and that from its
- ashes arises a worm, which in time grows up to be a Phoenix. Hence
- the Phoenicians gave--'
-
- 'Never mind what they gave,' said the Phoenix, ruffling its golden
- feathers. 'They never gave much, anyway; they always were people
- who gave nothing for nothing. That book ought to be destroyed.
- It's most inaccurate. The rest of my body was never purple, and as
- for my--tail--well, I simply ask you, IS it white?'
-
- It turned round and gravely presented its golden tail to the
- children.
-
- 'No. it's not,' said everybody.
-
- 'No, and it never was,' said the Phoenix. 'And that about the worm
- is just a vulgar insult. The Phoenix has an egg, like all
- respectable birds. It makes a pile--that part's all right--and it
- lays its egg, and it burns itself; and it goes to sleep and wakes
- up in its egg, and comes out and goes on living again, and so on
- for ever and ever. I can't tell you how weary I got of it--such a
- restless existence; no repose.'
-
- 'But how did your egg get HERE?' asked Anthea.
-
- 'Ah, that's my life-secret,' said the Phoenix. 'I couldn't tell it
- to any one who wasn't really sympathetic. I've always been a
- misunderstood bird. You can tell that by what they say about the
- worm. I might tell YOU,' it went on, looking at Robert with eyes
- that were indeed starry. 'You put me on the fire--' Robert looked
- uncomfortable.
-
- 'The rest of us made the fire of sweet-scented woods and gums,
- though,' said Cyril.
-
- 'And--and it was an accident my putting you on the fire,' said
- Robert, telling the truth with some difficulty, for he did not know
- how the Phoenix might take it. It took it in the most unexpected
- manner.
-
- 'Your candid avowal,' it said, 'removes my last scruple. I will
- tell you my story.'
-
- 'And you won't vanish, or anything sudden will you?, asked Anthea,
- anxiously.
-
- 'Why?' it asked, puffing out the golden feathers, 'do you wish me
- to stay here?'
-
- 'Oh YES,' said every one, with unmistakable sincerity.
-
- 'Why?' asked the Phoenix again, looking modestly at the
- table-cloth.
-
- 'Because,' said every one at once, and then stopped short; only
- Jane added after a pause, 'you are the most beautiful person we've
- ever seen.'
- 'You are a sensible child,' said the Phoenix, 'and I will NOT
- vanish or anything sudden. And I will tell you my tale. I had
- resided, as your book says, for many thousand years in the
- wilderness, which is a large, quiet place with very little really
- good society, and I was becoming weary of the monotony of my
- existence. But I acquired the habit of laying my egg and burning
- myself every five hundred years--and you know how difficult it is
- to break yourself of a habit.'
-
- 'Yes,' said Cyril; 'Jane used to bite her nails.'
-
- 'But I broke myself of it,' urged Jane, rather hurt, 'You know I
- did.'
-
- 'Not till they put bitter aloes on them,' said Cyril.
-
- 'I doubt,' said the bird, gravely, 'whether even bitter aloes (the
- aloe, by the way, has a bad habit of its own, which it might well
- cure before seeking to cure others; I allude to its indolent
- practice of flowering but once a century), I doubt whether even
- bitter aloes could have cured ME. But I WAS cured. I awoke one
- morning from a feverish dream--it was getting near the time for me
- to lay that tiresome fire and lay that tedious egg upon it--and I
- saw two people, a man and a woman. They were sitting on a
- carpet--and when I accosted them civilly they narrated to me their
- life-story, which, as you have not yet heard it, I will now proceed
- to relate. They were a prince and princess, and the story of their
- parents was one which I am sure you will like to hear. In early
- youth the mother of the princess happened to hear the story of a
- certain enchanter, and in that story I am sure you will be
- interested. The enchanter--'
-
- 'Oh, please don't,' said Anthea. 'I can't understand all these
- beginnings of stories, and you seem to be getting deeper and deeper
- in them every minute. Do tell us your OWN story. That's what we
- really want to hear.'
-
- 'Well,' said the Phoenix, seeming on the whole rather flattered,
- 'to cut about seventy long stories short (though _I_ had to listen to
- them all--but to be sure in the wilderness there is plenty of
- time), this prince and princess were so fond of each other that
- they did not want any one else, and the enchanter--don't be
- alarmed, I won't go into his history--had given them a magic carpet
- (you've heard of a magic carpet?), and they had just sat on it and
- told it to take them right away from every one--and it had brought
- them to the wilderness. And as they meant to stay there they had
- no further use for the carpet, so they gave it to me. That was
- indeed the chance of a lifetime!'
-
- 'I don't see what you wanted with a carpet,' said Jane, 'when
- you've got those lovely wings.'
-
- 'They ARE nice wings, aren't they?' said the Phoenix, simpering and
- spreading them out. 'Well, I got the prince to lay out the carpet,
- and I laid my egg on it; then I said to the carpet, "Now, my
- excellent carpet, prove your worth. Take that egg somewhere where
- it can't be hatched for two thousand years, and where, when that
- time's up, some one will light a fire of sweet wood and aromatic
- gums, and put the egg in to hatch;" and you see it's all come out
- exactly as I said. The words were no sooner out of my beak than
- egg and carpet disappeared. The royal lovers assisted to arrange
- my pile, and soothed my last moments. I burnt myself up and knew
- no more till I awoke on yonder altar.'
-
- It pointed its claw at the grate.
-
- 'But the carpet,' said Robert, 'the magic carpet that takes you
- anywhere you wish. What became of that?'
-
- 'Oh, THAT?' said the Phoenix, carelessly--'I should say that that
- is the carpet. I remember the pattern perfectly.'
-
- It pointed as it spoke to the floor, where lay the carpet which
- mother had bought in the Kentish Town Road for twenty-two shillings
- and ninepence.
-
- At that instant father's latch-key was heard in the door.
-
- 'OH,' whispered Cyril, 'now we shall catch it for not being in
- bed!'
-
- 'Wish yourself there,' said the Phoenix, in a hurried whisper, 'and
- then wish the carpet back in its place.'
-
- No sooner said than done. It made one a little giddy, certainly,
- and a little breathless; but when things seemed right way up again,
- there the children were, in bed, and the lights were out.
-
- They heard the soft voice of the Phoenix through the darkness.
-
- 'I shall sleep on the cornice above your curtains,' it said.
- 'Please don't mention me to your kinsfolk.'
-
- 'Not much good,' said Robert, 'they'd never believe us. I say,' he
- called through the half-open door to the girls; 'talk about
- adventures and things happening. We ought to be able to get some
- fun out of a magic carpet AND a Phoenix.'
-
- 'Rather,' said the girls, in bed.
-
- 'Children,' said father, on the stairs, 'go to sleep at once. What
- do you mean by talking at this time of night?'
-
- No answer was expected to this question, but under the bedclothes
- Cyril murmured one.
-
- 'Mean?' he said. 'Don't know what we mean. I don't know what
- anything means.'
-
- 'But we've got a magic carpet AND a Phoenix,' said Robert.
-
- 'You'll get something else if father comes in and catches you,'
- said Cyril. 'Shut up, I tell you.'
-
- Robert shut up. But he knew as well as you do that the adventures
- of that carpet and that Phoenix were only just beginning.
-
- Father and mother had not the least idea of what had happened in
- their absence. This is often the case, even when there are no
- magic carpets or Phoenixes in the house.
-
- The next morning--but I am sure you would rather wait till the next
- chapter before you hear about THAT.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 2
- THE TOPLESS TOWER
-
-
- The children had seen the Phoenix-egg hatched in the flames in
- their own nursery grate, and had heard from it how the carpet on
- their own nursery floor was really the wishing carpet, which would
- take them anywhere they chose. The carpet had transported them to
- bed just at the right moment, and the Phoenix had gone to roost on
- the cornice supporting the window-curtains of the boys' room.
-
- 'Excuse me,' said a gentle voice, and a courteous beak opened, very
- kindly and delicately, the right eye of Cyril. 'I hear the slaves
- below preparing food. Awaken! A word of explanation and
- arrangement ... I do wish you wouldn't--'
-
- The Phoenix stopped speaking and fluttered away crossly to the
- cornice-pole; for Cyril had hit out, as boys do when they are
- awakened suddenly, and the Phoenix was not used to boys, and his
- feelings, if not his wings, were hurt.
-
- 'Sorry,' said Cyril, coming awake all in a minute. 'Do come back!
- What was it you were saying? Something about bacon and rations?'
-
- The Phoenix fluttered back to the brass rail at the foot of the
- bed.
-
- 'I say--you ARE real,' said Cyril. 'How ripping! And the carpet?'
-
- 'The carpet is as real as it ever was,' said the Phoenix, rather
- contemptuously; 'but, of course, a carpet's only a carpet, whereas
- a Phoenix is superlatively a Phoenix.'
-
- 'Yes, indeed,' said Cyril, 'I see it is. Oh, what luck! Wake up,
- Bobs! There's jolly well something to wake up for today. And it's
- Saturday, too.'
-
- 'I've been reflecting,' said the Phoenix, 'during the silent
- watches of the night, and I could not avoid the conclusion that you
- were quite insufficiently astonished at my appearance yesterday.
- The ancients were always VERY surprised. Did you, by chance,
- EXPECT my egg to hatch?'
-
- 'Not us,' Cyril said.
-
- 'And if we had,' said Anthea, who had come in in her nightie when
- she heard the silvery voice of the Phoenix, 'we could never, never
- have expected it to hatch anything so splendid as you.'
-
- The bird smiled. Perhaps you've never seen a bird smile?
-
- 'You see,' said Anthea, wrapping herself in the boys' counterpane,
- for the morning was chill, 'we've had things happen to us before;'
- and she told the story of the Psammead, or sand-fairy.
-
- 'Ah yes,' said the Phoenix; 'Psammeads were rare, even in my time.
- I remember I used to be called the Psammead of the Desert. I was
- always having compliments paid me; I can't think why.'
-
- 'Can YOU give wishes, then?' asked Jane, who had now come in too.
-
- 'Oh, dear me, no,' said the Phoenix, contemptuously, 'at least--but
- I hear footsteps approaching. I hasten to conceal myself.' And it
- did.
-
- I think I said that this day was Saturday. It was also cook's
- birthday, and mother had allowed her and Eliza to go to the Crystal
- Palace with a party of friends, so Jane and Anthea of course had to
- help to make beds and to wash up the breakfast cups, and little
- things like that. Robert and Cyril intended to spend the morning
- in conversation with the Phoenix, but the bird had its own ideas
- about this.
-
- 'I must have an hour or two's quiet,' it said, 'I really must. My
- nerves will give way unless I can get a little rest. You must
- remember it's two thousand years since I had any conversation--I'm
- out of practice, and I must take care of myself. I've often been
- told that mine is a valuable life.' So it nestled down inside an
- old hatbox of father's, which had been brought down from the
- box-room some days before, when a helmet was suddenly needed for a
- game of tournaments, with its golden head under its golden wing,
- and went to sleep. So then Robert and Cyril moved the table back
- and were going to sit on the carpet and wish themselves somewhere
- else. But before they could decide on the place, Cyril said--
-
- 'I don't know. Perhaps it's rather sneakish to begin without the
- girls.'
-
- 'They'll be all the morning,' said Robert, impatiently. And then
- a thing inside him, which tiresome books sometimes call the 'inward
- monitor', said, 'Why don't you help them, then?'
-
- Cyril's 'inward monitor' happened to say the same thing at the same
- moment, so the boys went and helped to wash up the tea-cups, and to
- dust the drawing-room. Robert was so interested that he proposed
- to clean the front doorsteps--a thing he had never been allowed to
- do. Nor was he allowed to do it on this occasion. One reason was
- that it had already been done by cook.
-
- When all the housework was finished, the girls dressed the happy,
- wriggling baby in his blue highwayman coat and three-cornered hat,
- and kept him amused while mother changed her dress and got ready to
- take him over to granny's. Mother always went to granny's every
- Saturday, and generally some of the children went with her; but
- today they were to keep house. And their hearts were full of
- joyous and delightful feelings every time they remembered that the
- house they would have to keep had a Phoenix in it, AND a wishing
- carpet.
-
- You can always keep the Lamb good and happy for quite a long time
- if you play the Noah's Ark game with him. It is quite simple. He
- just sits on your lap and tells you what animal he is, and then you
- say the little poetry piece about whatever animal he chooses to be.
-
- Of course, some of the animals, like the zebra and the tiger,
- haven't got any poetry, because they are so difficult to rhyme to.
- The Lamb knows quite well which are the poetry animals.
-
- 'I'm a baby bear!' said the Lamb, snugging down; and Anthea began:
-
-
- 'I love my little baby bear,
- I love his nose and toes and hair;
- I like to hold him in my arm,
- And keep him VERY safe and warm.'
-
-
- And when she said 'very', of course there was a real bear's hug.
-
- Then came the eel, and the Lamb was tickled till he wriggled
- exactly like a real one:
-
-
- 'I love my little baby eel,
- He is so squidglety to feel;
- He'll be an eel when he is big--
- But now he's just--a--tiny SNIG!'
-
-
- Perhaps you didn't know that a snig was a baby eel? It is, though,
- and the Lamb knew it.
-
- 'Hedgehog now-!' he said; and Anthea went on:
-
-
- 'My baby hedgehog, how I like ye,
- Though your back's so prickly-spiky;
- Your front is very soft, I've found,
- So I must love you front ways round!'
-
-
- And then she loved him front ways round, while he squealed with
- pleasure.
-
- It is a very baby game, and, of course, the rhymes are only meant
- for very, very small people--not for people who are old enough to
- read books, so I won't tell you any more of them.
-
- By the time the Lamb had been a baby lion and a baby weazel, and a
- baby rabbit and a baby rat, mother was ready; and she and the Lamb,
- having been kissed by everybody and hugged as thoroughly as it is
- possible to be when you're dressed for out-of-doors, were seen to
- the tram by the boys. When the boys came back, every one looked at
- every one else and said--
-
- 'Now!'
-
- They locked the front door and they locked the back door, and they
- fastened all the windows. They moved the table and chairs off the
- carpet, and Anthea swept it.
-
- 'We must show it a LITTLE attention,' she said kindly. 'We'll give
- it tea-leaves next time. Carpets like tea-leaves.'
-
- Then every one put on its out-door things, because as Cyril said,
- they didn't know where they might be going, and it makes people
- stare if you go out of doors in November in pinafores and without
- hats.
-
- Then Robert gently awoke the Phoenix, who yawned and stretched
- itself, and allowed Robert to lift it on to the middle of the
- carpet, where it instantly went to sleep again with its crested
- head tucked under its golden wing as before. Then every one sat
- down on the carpet.
-
- 'Where shall we go?' was of course the question, and it was warmly
- discussed. Anthea wanted to go to Japan. Robert and Cyril voted
- for America, and Jane wished to go to the seaside.
-
- 'Because there are donkeys there,' said she.
-
- 'Not in November, silly,' said Cyril; and the discussion got warmer
- and warmer, and still nothing was settled.
-
- 'I vote we let the Phoenix decide,' said Robert, at last. So they
- stroked it till it woke. 'We want to go somewhere abroad,' they
- said, 'and we can't make up our minds where.'
-
- 'Let the carpet make up ITS mind, if it has one,' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'Just say you wish to go abroad.'
-
- So they did; and the next moment the world seemed to spin upside
- down, and when it was right way up again and they were ungiddy
- enough to look about them, they were out of doors.
-
- Out of doors--this is a feeble way to express where they were.
- They were out of--out of the earth, or off it. In fact, they were
- floating steadily, safely, splendidly, in the crisp clear air, with
- the pale bright blue of the sky above them, and far down below the
- pale bright sun-diamonded waves of the sea. The carpet had
- stiffened itself somehow, so that it was square and firm like a
- raft, and it steered itself so beautifully and kept on its way so
- flat and fearless that no one was at all afraid of tumbling off.
- In front of them lay land.
-
- 'The coast of France,' said the Phoenix, waking up and pointing
- with its wing. 'Where do you wish to go? I should always keep one
- wish, of course--for emergencies--otherwise you may get into an
- emergency from which you can't emerge at all.'
-
- But the children were far too deeply interested to listen.
-
- 'I tell you what,' said Cyril: 'let's let the thing go on and on,
- and when we see a place we really want to stop at--why, we'll just
- stop. Isn't this ripping?'
-
- 'It's like trains,' said Anthea, as they swept over the low-lying
- coast-line and held a steady course above orderly fields and
- straight roads bordered with poplar trees--'like express trains,
- only in trains you never can see anything because of grown-ups
- wanting the windows shut; and then they breathe on them, and it's
- like ground glass, and nobody can see anything, and then they go to
- sleep.'
-
- 'It's like tobogganing,' said Robert, 'so fast and smooth, only
- there's no door-mat to stop short on--it goes on and on.'
-
- 'You darling Phoenix,' said Jane, 'it's all your doing. Oh, look
- at that ducky little church and the women with flappy cappy things
- on their heads.'
-
- 'Don't mention it,' said the Phoenix, with sleepy politeness.
-
- 'OH!' said Cyril, summing up all the rapture that was in every
- heart. 'Look at it all--look at it--and think of the Kentish Town
- Road!'
-
- Every one looked and every one thought. And the glorious, gliding,
- smooth, steady rush went on, and they looked down on strange and
- beautiful things, and held their breath and let it go in deep
- sighs, and said 'Oh!' and 'Ah!' till it was long past dinner-time.
-
- It was Jane who suddenly said, 'I wish we'd brought that jam tart
- and cold mutton with us. It would have been jolly to have a picnic
- in the air.'
-
- The jam tart and cold mutton were, however, far away, sitting
- quietly in the larder of the house in Camden Town which the
- children were supposed to be keeping. A mouse was at that moment
- tasting the outside of the raspberry jam part of the tart (she had
- nibbled a sort of gulf, or bay, through the pastry edge) to see
- whether it was the sort of dinner she could ask her little
- mouse-husband to sit down to. She had had a very good dinner
- herself. It is an ill wind that blows nobody any good.
-
- 'We'll stop as soon as we see a nice place,' said Anthea. 'I've
- got threepence, and you boys have the fourpence each that your
- trams didn't cost the other day, so we can buy things to eat. I
- expect the Phoenix can speak French.'
-
- The carpet was sailing along over rocks and rivers and trees and
- towns and farms and fields. It reminded everybody of a certain
- time when all of them had had wings, and had flown up to the top of
- a church tower, and had had a feast there of chicken and tongue and
- new bread and soda-water. And this again reminded them how hungry
- they were. And just as they were all being reminded of this very
- strongly indeed, they saw ahead of them some ruined walls on a
- hill, and strong and upright, and really, to look at, as good as
- new--a great square tower.
-
- 'The top of that's just the exactly same size as the carpet,' said
- Jane. '_I_ think it would be good to go to the top of that, because
- then none of the Abby-what's-its-names--I mean natives--would be
- able to take the carpet away even if they wanted to. And some of
- us could go out and get things to eat--buy them honestly, I mean,
- not take them out of larder windows.'
-
- 'I think it would be better if we went--' Anthea was beginning; but
- Jane suddenly clenched her hands.
-
- 'I don't see why I should never do anything I want, just because
- I'm the youngest. I wish the carpet would fit itself in at the top
- of that tower--so there!'
-
- The carpet made a disconcerting bound, and next moment it was
- hovering above the square top of the tower. Then slowly and
- carefully it began to sink under them. It was like a lift going
- down with you at the Army and Navy Stores.
-
- 'I don't think we ought to wish things without all agreeing to them
- first,' said Robert, huffishly. 'Hullo! What on earth?'
-
- For unexpectedly and greyly something was coming up all round the
- four sides of the carpet. It was as if a wall were being built by
- magic quickness. It was a foot high--it was two feet high--three,
- four, five. It was shutting out the light--more and more.
-
- Anthea looked up at the sky and the walls that now rose six feet
- above them.
-
- 'We're dropping into the tower,' she screamed. 'THERE WASN'T ANY TOP
- TO IT. So the carpet's going to fit itself in at the bottom.'
-
- Robert sprang to his feet.
-
- 'We ought to have--Hullo! an owl's nest.' He put his knee on a
- jutting smooth piece of grey stone, and reached his hand into a
- deep window slit--broad to the inside of the tower, and narrowing
- like a funnel to the outside.
-
- 'Look sharp!' cried every one, but Robert did not look sharp
- enough. By the time he had drawn his hand out of the owl's
- nest--there were no eggs there--the carpet had sunk eight feet
- below him.
-
- 'Jump, you silly cuckoo!' cried Cyril, with brotherly anxiety.
-
- But Robert couldn't turn round all in a minute into a jumping
- position. He wriggled and twisted and got on to the broad ledge,
- and by the time he was ready to jump the walls of the tower had
- risen up thirty feet above the others, who were still sinking with
- the carpet, and Robert found himself in the embrasure of a window;
- alone, for even the owls were not at home that day. The wall was
- smoothish; there was no climbing up, and as for climbing
- down--Robert hid his face in his hands, and squirmed back and back
- from the giddy verge, until the back part of him was wedged quite
- tight in the narrowest part of the window slit.
-
- He was safe now, of course, but the outside part of his window was
- like a frame to a picture of part of the other side of the tower.
- It was very pretty, with moss growing between the stones and little
- shiny gems; but between him and it there was the width of the
- tower, and nothing in it but empty air. The situation was
- terrible. Robert saw in a flash that the carpet was likely to
- bring them into just the same sort of tight places that they used
- to get into with the wishes the Psammead granted them.
-
- And the others--imagine their feelings as the carpet sank slowly
- and steadily to the very bottom of the tower, leaving Robert
- clinging to the wall. Robert did not even try to imagine their
- feelings--he had quite enough to do with his own; but you can.
-
- As soon as the carpet came to a stop on the ground at the bottom of
- the inside of the tower it suddenly lost that raft-like stiffness
- which had been such a comfort during the journey from Camden Town
- to the topless tower, and spread itself limply over the loose
- stones and little earthy mounds at the bottom of the tower, just
- exactly like any ordinary carpet. Also it shrank suddenly, so that
- it seemed to draw away from under their feet, and they stepped
- quickly off the edges and stood on the firm ground, while the
- carpet drew itself in till it was its proper size, and no longer
- fitted exactly into the inside of the tower, but left quite a big
- space all round it.
-
- Then across the carpet they looked at each other, and then every
- chin was tilted up and every eye sought vainly to see where poor
- Robert had got to. Of course, they couldn't see him.
-
- 'I wish we hadn't come,' said Jane.
-
- 'You always do,' said Cyril, briefly. 'Look here, we can't leave
- Robert up there. I wish the carpet would fetch him down.'
-
- The carpet seemed to awake from a dream and pull itself together.
- It stiffened itself briskly and floated up between the four walls
- of the tower. The children below craned their heads back, and
- nearly broke their necks in doing it. The carpet rose and rose.
- It hung poised darkly above them for an anxious moment or two; then
- it dropped down again, threw itself on the uneven floor of the
- tower, and as it did so it tumbled Robert out on the uneven floor
- of the tower.
-
- 'Oh, glory!' said Robert, 'that was a squeak. You don't know how
- I felt. I say, I've had about enough for a bit. Let's wish
- ourselves at home again and have a go at that jam tart and mutton.
- We can go out again afterwards.'
-
- 'Righto!' said every one, for the adventure had shaken the nerves
- of all. So they all got on to the carpet again, and said--
-
- 'I wish we were at home.'
-
- And lo and behold, they were no more at home than before. The
- carpet never moved. The Phoenix had taken the opportunity to go to
- sleep. Anthea woke it up gently.
-
- 'Look here,' she said.
-
- 'I'm looking,' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'We WISHED to be at home, and we're still here,' complained Jane.
-
- 'No,' said the Phoenix, looking about it at the high dark walls of
- the tower. 'No; I quite see that.'
-
- 'But we wished to be at home,' said Cyril.
-
- 'No doubt,' said the bird, politely.
-
- 'And the carpet hasn't moved an inch,' said Robert.
-
- 'No,' said the Phoenix, 'I see it hasn't.'
-
- 'But I thought it was a wishing carpet?'
-
- 'So it is,' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'Then why--?' asked the children, altogether.
-
- 'I did tell you, you know,' said the Phoenix, 'only you are so fond
- of listening to the music of your own voices. It is, indeed, the
- most lovely music to each of us, and therefore--'
-
- 'You did tell us WHAT?' interrupted an Exasperated.
-
- 'Why, that the carpet only gives you three wishes a day and YOU'VE
- HAD THEM.'
-
- There was a heartfelt silence.
-
- 'Then how are we going to get home?' said Cyril, at last.
-
- 'I haven't any idea,' replied the Phoenix, kindly. 'Can I fly out
- and get you any little thing?'
-
- 'How could you carry the money to pay for it?'
-
- 'It isn't necessary. Birds always take what they want. It is not
- regarded as stealing, except in the case of magpies.'
-
- The children were glad to find they had been right in supposing
- this to be the case, on the day when they had wings, and had
- enjoyed somebody else's ripe plums.
-
- 'Yes; let the Phoenix get us something to eat, anyway,' Robert
- urged--' ('If it will be so kind you mean,' corrected Anthea, in a
- whisper); 'if it will be so kind, and we can be thinking while it's
- gone.'
-
- So the Phoenix fluttered up through the grey space of the tower and
- vanished at the top, and it was not till it had quite gone that
- Jane said--
-
- 'Suppose it never comes back.'
-
- It was not a pleasant thought, and though Anthea at once said, 'Of
- course it will come back; I'm certain it's a bird of its word,' a
- further gloom was cast by the idea. For, curiously enough, there
- was no door to the tower, and all the windows were far, far too
- high to be reached by the most adventurous climber. It was cold,
- too, and Anthea shivered.
-
- 'Yes,' said Cyril, 'it's like being at the bottom of a well.'
-
- The children waited in a sad and hungry silence, and got little
- stiff necks with holding their little heads back to look up the
- inside of the tall grey tower, to see if the Phoenix were coming.
-
- At last it came. It looked very big as it fluttered down between
- the walls, and as it neared them the children saw that its bigness
- was caused by a basket of boiled chestnuts which it carried in one
- claw. In the other it held a piece of bread. And in its beak was
- a very large pear. The pear was juicy, and as good as a very small
- drink. When the meal was over every one felt better, and the
- question of how to get home was discussed without any
- disagreeableness. But no one could think of any way out of the
- difficulty, or even out of the tower; for the Phoenix, though its
- beak and claws had fortunately been strong enough to carry food for
- them, was plainly not equal to flying through the air with four
- well-nourished children.
-
- 'We must stay here, I suppose,' said Robert at last, 'and shout out
- every now and then, and some one will hear us and bring ropes and
- ladders, and rescue us like out of mines; and they'll get up a
- subscription to send us home, like castaways.'
-
- 'Yes; but we shan't be home before mother is, and then father'll
- take away the carpet and say it's dangerous or something,' said
- Cyril.
-
- 'I DO wish we hadn't come,' said Jane.
-
- And every one else said 'Shut up,' except Anthea, who suddenly
- awoke the Phoenix and said--
-
- 'Look here, I believe YOU can help us. Oh, I do wish you would!'
-
- 'I will help you as far as lies in my power,' said the Phoenix, at
- once. 'What is it you want now?'
-
- 'Why, we want to get home,' said every one.
-
- 'Oh,' said the Phoenix. 'Ah, hum! Yes. Home, you said?
- Meaning?'
-
- 'Where we live--where we slept last night--where the altar is that
- your egg was hatched on.'
-
- 'Oh, there!' said the Phoenix. 'Well, I'll do my best.' It
- fluttered on to the carpet and walked up and down for a few minutes
- in deep thought. Then it drew itself up proudly.
-
- 'I CAN help you,' it said. 'I am almost sure I can help you.
- Unless I am grossly deceived I can help you. You won't mind my
- leaving you for an hour or two?' and without waiting for a reply it
- soared up through the dimness of the tower into the brightness
- above.
-
- 'Now,' said Cyril, firmly, 'it said an hour or two. But I've read
- about captives and people shut up in dungeons and catacombs and
- things awaiting release, and I know each moment is an eternity.
- Those people always do something to pass the desperate moments.
- It's no use our trying to tame spiders, because we shan't have
- time.'
-
- 'I HOPE not,' said Jane, doubtfully.
-
- 'But we ought to scratch our names on the stones or something.'
-
- 'I say, talking of stones,' said Robert, 'you see that heap of
- stones against the wall over in that corner. Well, I'm certain
- there's a hole in the wall there--and I believe it's a door. Yes,
- look here--the stones are round like an arch in the wall; and
- here's the hole--it's all black inside.'
-
- He had walked over to the heap as he spoke and climbed up to
- it--dislodged the top stone of the heap and uncovered a little dark
- space.
-
- Next moment every one was helping to pull down the heap of stones,
- and very soon every one threw off its jacket, for it was warm work.
-
- 'It IS a door,' said Cyril, wiping his face, 'and not a bad thing
- either, if--'
-
- He was going to add 'if anything happens to the Phoenix,' but he
- didn't for fear of frightening Jane. He was not an unkind boy when
- he had leisure to think of such things.
-
- The arched hole in the wall grew larger and larger. It was very,
- very black, even compared with the sort of twilight at the bottom
- of the tower; it grew larger because the children kept pulling off
- the stones and throwing them down into another heap. The stones
- must have been there a very long time, for they were covered with
- moss, and some of them were stuck together by it. So it was fairly
- hard work, as Robert pointed out.
-
- When the hole reached to about halfway between the top of the arch
- and the tower, Robert and Cyril let themselves down cautiously on
- the inside, and lit matches. How thankful they felt then that they
- had a sensible father, who did not forbid them to carry matches, as
- some boys' fathers do. The father of Robert and Cyril only
- insisted on the matches being of the kind that strike only on the
- box.
-
- 'It's not a door, it's a sort of tunnel,' Robert cried to the
- girls, after the first match had flared up, flickered, and gone
- out. 'Stand off--we'll push some more stones down!'
-
- They did, amid deep excitement. And now the stone heap was almost
- gone--and before them the girls saw the dark archway leading to
- unknown things. All doubts and fears as to getting home were
- forgotten in this thrilling moment. It was like Monte Cristo--it
- was like--
-
- 'I say,' cried Anthea, suddenly, 'come out! There's always bad air
- in places that have been shut up. It makes your torches go out,
- and then you die. It's called fire-damp, I believe. Come out, I
- tell you.'
-
- The urgency of her tone actually brought the boys out--and then
- every one took up its jacket and fanned the dark arch with it, so
- as to make the air fresh inside. When Anthea thought the air
- inside 'must be freshened by now,' Cyril led the way into the arch.
-
- The girls followed, and Robert came last, because Jane refused to
- tail the procession lest 'something' should come in after her, and
- catch at her from behind. Cyril advanced cautiously, lighting
- match after match, and peerIng before him.
-
- 'It's a vaulting roof,' he said, 'and it's all stone--all right,
- Panther, don't keep pulling at my jacket! The air must be all
- right because of the matches, silly, and there are--look out--there
- are steps down.'
-
- 'Oh, don't let's go any farther,' said Jane, in an agony of
- reluctance (a very painful thing, by the way, to be in). 'I'm sure
- there are snakes, or dens of lions, or something. Do let's go
- back, and come some other time, with candles, and bellows for the
- fire-damp.'
-
- 'Let me get in front of you, then,' said the stern voice of Robert,
- from behind. 'This is exactly the place for buried treasure, and
- I'm going on, anyway; you can stay behind if you like.'
-
- And then, of course, Jane consented to go on.
-
- So, very slowly and carefully, the children went down the
- steps--there were seventeen of them--and at the bottom of the steps
- were more passages branching four ways, and a sort of low arch on
- the right-hand side made Cyril wonder what it could be, for it was
- too low to be the beginning of another passage.
-
- So he knelt down and lit a match, and stooping very low he peeped
- in.
-
- 'There's SOMETHING,' he said, and reached out his hand. It touched
- something that felt more like a damp bag of marbles than anything
- else that Cyril had ever touched.
-
- 'I believe it IS a buried treasure,' he cried.
-
- And it was; for even as Anthea cried, 'Oh, hurry up,
- Squirrel--fetch it out!' Cyril pulled out a rotting canvas
- bag--about as big as the paper ones the greengrocer gives you with
- Barcelona nuts in for sixpence.
-
- 'There's more of it, a lot more,' he said.
-
- As he pulled the rotten bag gave way, and the gold coins ran and
- span and jumped and bumped and chinked and clinked on the floor of
- the dark passage.
-
- I wonder what you would say if you suddenly came upon a buried
- treasure? What Cyril said was, 'Oh, bother--I've burnt my
- fingers!' and as he spoke he dropped the match. 'AND IT WAS THE LAST!'
- he added.
-
- There was a moment of desperate silence. Then Jane began to cry.
-
- 'Don't,' said Anthea, 'don't, Pussy--you'll exhaust the air if you
- cry. We can get out all right.'
-
- 'Yes,' said Jane, through her sobs, 'and find the Phoenix has come
- back and gone away again--because it thought we'd gone home some
- other way, and--Oh, I WISH we hadn't come.'
-
- Every one stood quite still--only Anthea cuddled Jane up to her and
- tried to wipe her eyes in the dark.
-
- 'D-DON'T,' said Jane; 'that's my EAR--I'm not crying with my ears.'
-
- 'Come, let's get on out,' said Robert; but that was not so easy,
- for no one could remember exactly which way they had come. It is
- very difficult to remember things in the dark, unless you have
- matches with you, and then of course it is quite different, even if
- you don't strike one.
-
- Every one had come to agree with Jane's constant wish--and despair
- was making the darkness blacker than ever, when quite suddenly the
- floor seemed to tip up--and a strong sensation of being in a
- whirling lift came upon every one. All eyes were closed--one's
- eyes always are in the dark, don't you think? When the whirling
- feeling stopped, Cyril said 'Earthquakes!' and they all opened
- their eyes.
-
- They were in their own dingy breakfast-room at home, and oh, how
- light and bright and safe and pleasant and altogether delightful it
- seemed after that dark underground tunnel! The carpet lay on the
- floor, looking as calm as though it had never been for an excursion
- in its life. On the mantelpiece stood the Phoenix, waiting with an
- air of modest yet sterling worth for the thanks of the children.
-
- 'But how DID you do it?' they asked, when every one had thanked the
- Phoenix again and again.
-
- 'Oh, I just went and got a wish from your friend the Psammead.'
-
- 'But how DID you know where to find it?'
-
- 'I found that out from the carpet; these wishing creatures always
- know all about each other--they're so clannish; like the Scots, you
- know--all related.'
-
- 'But, the carpet can't talk, can it?'
-
- 'No.'
-
- 'Then how--'
-
- 'How did I get the Psammead's address? I tell you I got it from
- the carpet.'
-
- 'DID it speak then?'
-
- 'No,' said the Phoenix, thoughtfully, 'it didn't speak, but I
- gathered my information from something in its manner. I was always
- a singularly observant bird.'
-
- it was not till after the cold mutton and the jam tart, as well as
- the tea and bread-and-butter, that any one found time to regret the
- golden treasure which had been left scattered on the floor of the
- underground passage, and which, indeed, no one had thought of till
- now, since the moment when Cyril burnt his fingers at the flame of
- the last match.
-
- 'What owls and goats we were!' said Robert. 'Look how we've always
- wanted treasure--and now--'
-
- 'Never mind,' said Anthea, trying as usual to make the best of it.
- 'We'll go back again and get it all, and then we'll give everybody
- presents.'
-
- More than a quarter of an hour passed most agreeably in arranging
- what presents should be given to whom, and, when the claims of
- generosity had been satisfied, the talk ran for fifty minutes on
- what they would buy for themselves.
-
- It was Cyril who broke in on Robert's almost too technical account
- of the motor-car on which he meant to go to and from school--
-
- 'There!' he said. 'Dry up. It's no good. We can't ever go back.
- We don't know where it is.'
-
- 'Don't YOU know?' Jane asked the Phoenix, wistfully.
-
- 'Not in the least,' the Phoenix replied, in a tone of amiable
- regret.
-
- 'Then we've lost the treasure,' said Cyril. And they had.
-
- 'But we've got the carpet and the Phoenix,' said Anthea.
-
- 'Excuse me,' said the bird, with an air of wounded dignity, 'I do
- SO HATE to seem to interfere, but surely you MUST mean the Phoenix
- and the carpet?'
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 3
- THE QUEEN COOK
-
-
- It was on a Saturday that the children made their first glorious
- journey on the wishing carpet. Unless you are too young to read at
- all, you will know that the next day must have been Sunday.
-
- Sunday at 18, Camden Terrace, Camden Town, was always a very pretty
- day. Father always brought home flowers on Saturday, so that the
- breakfast-table was extra beautiful. In November, of course, the
- flowers were chrysanthemums, yellow and coppery coloured. Then
- there were always sausages on toast for breakfast, and these are
- rapture, after six days of Kentish Town Road eggs at fourteen a
- shilling.
-
- On this particular Sunday there were fowls for dinner, a kind of
- food that is generally kept for birthdays and grand occasions, and
- there was an angel pudding, when rice and milk and oranges and
- white icing do their best to make you happy.
-
- After dinner father was very sleepy indeed, because he had been
- working hard all the week; but he did not yield to the voice that
- said, 'Go and have an hour's rest.' He nursed the Lamb, who had a
- horrid cough that cook said was whooping-cough as sure as eggs, and
- he said--
-
- 'Come along, kiddies; I've got a ripping book from the library,
- called The Golden Age, and I'll read it to you.'
-
- Mother settled herself on the drawing-room sofa, and said she could
- listen quite nicely with her eyes shut. The Lamb snugged into the
- 'armchair corner' of daddy's arm, and the others got into a happy
- heap on the hearth-rug. At first, of course, there were too many
- feet and knees and shoulders and elbows, but real comfort was
- actually settling down on them, and the Phoenix and the carpet were
- put away on the back top shelf of their minds (beautiful things
- that could be taken out and played with later), when a surly solid
- knock came at the drawing-room door. It opened an angry inch, and
- the cook's voice said, 'Please, m', may I speak to you a moment?'
-
- Mother looked at father with a desperate expression. Then she put
- her pretty sparkly Sunday shoes down from the sofa, and stood up in
- them and sighed.
-
- 'As good fish in the sea,' said father, cheerfully, and it was not
- till much later that the children understood what he meant.
-
- Mother went out into the passage, which is called 'the hall', where
- the umbrella-stand is, and the picture of the 'Monarch of the Glen'
- in a yellow shining frame, with brown spots on the Monarch from the
- damp in the house before last, and there was cook, very red and
- damp in the face, and with a clean apron tied on all crooked over
- the dirty one that she had dished up those dear delightful chickens
- in. She stood there and she seemed to get redder and damper, and
- she twisted the corner of her apron round her fingers, and she said
- very shortly and fiercely--
-
- 'If you please ma'am, I should wish to leave at my day month.'
- Mother leaned against the hatstand. The children could see her
- looking pale through the crack of the door, because she had been
- very kind to the cook, and had given her a holiday only the day
- before, and it seemed so very unkind of the cook to want to go like
- this, and on a Sunday too.
-
- 'Why, what's the matter?' mother said.
-
- 'It's them children,' the cook replied, and somehow the children
- all felt that they had known it from the first. They did not
- remember having done anything extra wrong, but it is so frightfully
- easy to displease a cook. 'It's them children: there's that there
- new carpet in their room, covered thick with mud, both sides,
- beastly yellow mud, and sakes alive knows where they got it. And
- all that muck to clean up on a Sunday! It's not my place, and it's
- not my intentions, so I don't deceive you, ma'am, and but for them
- limbs, which they is if ever there was, it's not a bad place,
- though I says it, and I wouldn't wish to leave, but--'
-
- 'I'm very sorry,' said mother, gently. 'I will speak to the
- children. And you had better think it over, and if you REALLY wish
- to go, tell me to-morrow.'
-
- Next day mother had a quiet talk with cook, and cook said she
- didn't mind if she stayed on a bit, just to see.
-
- But meantime the question of the muddy carpet had been gone into
- thoroughly by father and mother. Jane's candid explanation that
- the mud had come from the bottom of a foreign tower where there was
- buried treasure was received with such chilling disbelief that the
- others limited their defence to an expression of sorrow, and of a
- determination 'not to do it again'. But father said (and mother
- agreed with him, because mothers have to agree with fathers, and
- not because it was her own idea) that children who coated a carpet
- on both sides with thick mud, and when they were asked for an
- explanation could only talk silly nonsense--that meant Jane's
- truthful statement--were not fit to have a carpet at all, and,
- indeed, SHOULDN'T have one for a week!
-
- So the carpet was brushed (with tea-leaves, too) which was the only
- comfort Anthea could think of) and folded up and put away in the
- cupboard at the top of the stairs, and daddy put the key in his
- trousers pocket. 'Till Saturday,' said he.
-
- 'Never mind,' said Anthea, 'we've got the Phoenix.'
-
- But, as it happened, they hadn't. The Phoenix was nowhere to be
- found, and everything had suddenly settled down from the rosy wild
- beauty of magic happenings to the common damp brownness of ordinary
- November life in Camden Town--and there was the nursery floor all
- bare boards in the middle and brown oilcloth round the outside, and
- the bareness and yellowness of the middle floor showed up the
- blackbeetles with terrible distinctness, when the poor things came
- out in the evening, as usual, to try to make friends with the
- children. But the children never would.
-
- The Sunday ended in gloom, which even junket for supper in the blue
- Dresden bowl could hardly lighten at all. Next day the Lamb's
- cough was worse. It certainly seemed very whoopy, and the doctor
- came in his brougham carriage.
-
- Every one tried to bear up under the weight of the sorrow which it
- was to know that the wishing carpet was locked up and the Phoenix
- mislaid. A good deal of time was spent in looking for the Phoenix.
-
- 'It's a bird of its word,' said Anthea. 'I'm sure it's not
- deserted us. But you know it had a most awfully long fly from
- wherever it was to near Rochester and back, and I expect the poor
- thing's feeling tired out and wants rest. I am sure we may trust
- it.'
-
- The others tried to feel sure of this, too, but it was hard.
-
- No one could be expected to feel very kindly towards the cook,
- since it was entirely through her making such a fuss about a little
- foreign mud that the carpet had been taken away.
-
- 'She might have told us,' said Jane, 'and Panther and I would have
- cleaned it with tea-leaves.'
-
- 'She's a cantankerous cat,' said Robert.
-
- 'I shan't say what I think about her,' said Anthea, primly,
- 'because it would be evil speaking, lying, and slandering.'
-
- 'It's not lying to say she's a disagreeable pig, and a beastly
- blue-nosed Bozwoz,' said Cyril, who had read The Eyes of Light, and
- intended to talk like Tony as soon as he could teach Robert to talk
- like Paul.
-
- And all the children, even Anthea, agreed that even if she wasn't
- a blue-nosed Bozwoz, they wished cook had never been born.
-
- But I ask you to believe that they didn't do all the things on
- purpose which so annoyed the cook during the following week, though
- I daresay the things would not have happened if the cook had been
- a favourite. This is a mystery. Explain it if you can. The
- things that had happened were as follows:
-
- Sunday.--Discovery of foreign mud on both sides of the carpet.
-
- Monday.--Liquorice put on to boil with aniseed balls in a saucepan.
- Anthea did this, because she thought it would be good for the
- Lamb's cough. The whole thing forgotten, and bottom of saucepan
- burned out. It was the little saucepan lined with white that was
- kept for the baby's milk.
-
- Tuesday.--A dead mouse found in pantry. Fish-slice taken to dig
- grave with. By regrettable accident fish-slice broken. Defence:
- 'The cook oughtn't to keep dead mice in pantries.'
-
- Wednesday.--Chopped suet left on kitchen table. Robert added
- chopped soap, but he says he thought the suet was soap too.
-
- Thursday.--Broke the kitchen window by falling against it during a
- perfectly fair game of bandits in the area.
-
- Friday.--Stopped up grating of kitchen sink with putty and filled
- sink with water to make a lake to sail paper boats in. Went away
- and left the tap running. Kitchen hearthrug and cook's shoes
- ruined.
-
- On Saturday the carpet was restored. There had been plenty of time
- during the week to decide where it should be asked to go when they
- did get it back.
-
- Mother had gone over to granny's, and had not taken the Lamb
- because he had a bad cough, which, cook repeatedly said, was
- whooping-cough as sure as eggs is eggs.
-
- 'But we'll take him out, a ducky darling,' said Anthea. 'We'll
- take him somewhere where you can't have whooping-cough. Don't be
- so silly, Robert. If he DOES talk about it no one'll take any
- notice. He's always talking about things he's never seen.'
-
- So they dressed the Lamb and themselves in out-of-doors clothes,
- and the Lamb chuckled and coughed, and laughed and coughed again,
- poor dear, and all the chairs and tables were moved off the carpet
- by the boys, while Jane nursed the Lamb, and Anthea rushed through
- the house in one last wild hunt for the missing Phoenix.
-
- 'It's no use waiting for it,' she said, reappearing breathless in
- the breakfast-room. 'But I know it hasn't deserted us. It's a
- bird of its word.'
-
- 'Quite so,' said the gentle voice of the Phoenix from beneath the
- table.
-
- Every one fell on its knees and looked up, and there was the
- Phoenix perched on a crossbar of wood that ran across under the
- table, and had once supported a drawer, in the happy days before
- the drawer had been used as a boat, and its bottom unfortunately
- trodden out by Raggett's Really Reliable School Boots on the feet
- of Robert.
-
- 'I've been here all the time,' said the Phoenix, yawning politely
- behind its claw. 'If you wanted me you should have recited the ode
- of invocation; it's seven thousand lines long, and written in very
- pure and beautiful Greek.'
-
- 'Couldn't you tell it us in English?' asked Anthea.
-
- 'It's rather long, isn't it?' said Jane, jumping the Lamb on her
- knee.
-
- 'Couldn't you make a short English version, like Tate and Brady?'
-
- 'Oh, come along, do,' said Robert, holding out his hand. 'Come
- along, good old Phoenix.'
-
- 'Good old BEAUTIFUL Phoenix,' it corrected shyly.
-
- 'Good old BEAUTIFUL Phoenix, then. Come along, come along,' said
- Robert, impatiently, with his hand still held out.
-
- The Phoenix fluttered at once on to his wrist.
-
- 'This amiable youth,' it said to the others, 'has miraculously been
- able to put the whole meaning of the seven thousand lines of Greek
- invocation into one English hexameter--a little misplaced some of
- the words--but
-
- 'Oh, come along, come along, good old beautiful Phoenix!'
-
- 'Not perfect, I admit--but not bad for a boy of his age.'
-
- 'Well, now then,' said Robert, stepping back on to the carpet with
- the golden Phoenix on his wrist.
-
- 'You look like the king's falconer,' said Jane, sitting down on the
- carpet with the baby on her lap.
-
- Robert tried to go on looking like it. Cyril and Anthea stood on
- the carpet.
-
- 'We shall have to get back before dinner,' said Cyril, 'or cook
- will blow the gaff.'
-
- 'She hasn't sneaked since Sunday,' said Anthea.
-
- 'She--' Robert was beginning, when the door burst open and the
- cook, fierce and furious, came in like a whirlwind and stood on the
- corner of the carpet, with a broken basin in one hand and a threat
- in the other, which was clenched.
-
- 'Look 'ere!' she cried, 'my only basin; and what the powers am I to
- make the beefsteak and kidney pudding in that your ma ordered for
- your dinners? You don't deserve no dinners, so yer don't.'
-
- 'I'm awfully sorry, cook,' said Anthea gently; 'it was my fault,
- and I forgot to tell you about it. It got broken when we were
- telling our fortunes with melted lead, you know, and I meant to
- tell you.'
-
- 'Meant to tell me,' replied the cook; she was red with anger, and
- really I don't wonder--'meant to tell! Well, _I_ mean to tell, too.
- I've held my tongue this week through, because the missus she said
- to me quiet like, "We mustn't expect old heads on young shoulders,"
- but now I shan't hold it no longer. There was the soap you put in
- our pudding, and me and Eliza never so much as breathed it to your
- ma--though well we might--and the saucepan, and the fish-slice,
- and--My gracious cats alive! what 'ave you got that blessed child
- dressed up in his outdoors for?'
-
- 'We aren't going to take him out,' said Anthea; 'at least--' She
- stopped short, for though they weren't going to take him out in the
- Kentish Town Road, they certainly intended to take him elsewhere.
- But not at all where cook meant when she said 'out'. This confused
- the truthful Anthea.
-
- 'Out!' said the cook, 'that I'll take care you don't;' and she
- snatched the Lamb from the lap of Jane, while Anthea and Robert
- caught her by the skirts and apron. 'Look here,' said Cyril, in
- stern desperation, 'will you go away, and make your pudding in a
- pie-dish, or a flower-pot, or a hot-water can, or something?'
-
- 'Not me,' said the cook, briefly; 'and leave this precious poppet
- for you to give his deathercold to.'
-
- 'I warn you,' said Cyril, solemnly. 'Beware, ere yet it be too
- late.'
-
- ' Late yourself the little popsey-wopsey,' said the cook, with
- angry tenderness. 'They shan't take it out, no more they shan't.
- And--Where did you get that there yellow fowl?' She pointed to the
- Phoenix.
-
- Even Anthea saw that unless the cook lost her situation the loss
- would be theirs.
-
- 'I wish,' she said suddenly, 'we were on a sunny southern shore,
- where there can't be any whooping-cough.'
-
- She said it through the frightened howls of the Lamb, and the
- sturdy scoldings of the cook, and instantly the
- giddy-go-round-and-falling-lift feeling swept over the whole party,
- and the cook sat down flat on the carpet, holding the screaming
- Lamb tight to her stout print-covered self, and calling on St
- Bridget to help her. She was an Irishwoman.
-
- The moment the tipsy-topsy-turvy feeling stopped, the cook opened
- her eyes, gave one sounding screech and shut them again, and Anthea
- took the opportunity to get the desperately howling Lamb into her
- own arms.
-
- 'It's all right,' she said; 'own Panther's got you. Look at the
- trees, and the sand, and the shells, and the great big tortoises.
- Oh DEAR, how hot it is!'
-
- It certainly was; for the trusty carpet had laid itself out on a
- southern shore that was sunny and no mistake, as Robert remarked.
- The greenest of green slopes led up to glorious groves where
- palm-trees and all the tropical flowers and fruits that you read of
- in Westward Ho! and Fair Play were growing in rich profusion.
- Between the green, green slope and the blue, blue sea lay a stretch
- of sand that looked like a carpet of jewelled cloth of gold, for it
- was not greyish as our northern sand is, but yellow and
- changing--opal-coloured like sunshine and rainbows. And at the
- very moment when the wild, whirling, blinding, deafening, tumbling
- upside-downness of the carpet-moving stopped, the children had the
- happiness of seeing three large live turtles waddle down to the
- edge of the sea and disappear in the water. And it was hotter than
- you can possibly imagine, unless you think of ovens on a
- baking-day.
-
- Every one without an instant's hesitation tore off its
- London-in-November outdoor clothes, and Anthea took off the Lamb's
- highwayman blue coat and his three-cornered hat, and then his
- jersey, and then the Lamb himself suddenly slipped out of his
- little blue tight breeches and stood up happy and hot in his little
- white shirt.
-
- 'I'm sure it's much warmer than the seaside in the summer,' said
- Anthea. 'Mother always lets us go barefoot then.'
-
- So the Lamb's shoes and socks and gaiters came off, and he stood
- digging his happy naked pink toes into the golden smooth sand.
-
- 'I'm a little white duck-dickie,' said he--'a little white
- duck-dickie what swims,' and splashed quacking into a sandy pool.
-
- 'Let him,' said Anthea; 'it can't hurt him. Oh, how hot it is!'
-
- The cook suddenly opened her eyes and screamed, shut them, screamed
- again, opened her eyes once more and said--
-
- 'Why, drat my cats alive, what's all this? It's a dream, I expect.
-
- Well, it's the best I ever dreamed. I'll look it up in the
- dream-book to-morrow. Seaside and trees and a carpet to sit on.
- I never did!'
-
- 'Look here,' said Cyril, 'it isn't a dream; it's real.'
-
- 'Ho yes!' said the cook; 'they always says that in dreams.'
-
- 'It's REAL, I tell you,' Robert said, stamping his foot. 'I'm not
- going to tell you how it's done, because that's our secret.' He
- winked heavily at each of the others in turn. 'But you wouldn't go
- away and make that pudding, so we HAD to bring you, and I hope you
- like it.'
-
- 'I do that, and no mistake,' said the cook unexpectedly; 'and it
- being a dream it don't matter what I say; and I WILL say, if it's
- my last word, that of all the aggravating little varmints--'
- 'Calm yourself, my good woman,' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'Good woman, indeed,' said the cook; 'good woman yourself' Then she
- saw who it was that had spoken. 'Well, if I ever,' said she; 'this
- is something like a dream! Yellow fowls a-talking and all! I've
- heard of such, but never did I think to see the day.'
-
- 'Well, then,' said Cyril, impatiently, 'sit here and see the day
- now. It's a jolly fine day. Here, you others--a council!'
- They walked along the shore till they were out of earshot of the
- cook, who still sat gazing about her with a happy, dreamy, vacant
- smile.
-
- 'Look here,' said Cyril, 'we must roll the carpet up and hide it,
- so that we can get at it at any moment. The Lamb can be getting
- rid of his whooping-cough all the morning, and we can look about;
- and if the savages on this island are cannibals, we'll hook it, and
- take her back. And if not, we'll LEAVE HER HERE.'
-
- 'Is that being kind to servants and animals, like the clergyman
- said?' asked Jane.
-
- 'Nor she isn't kind,' retorted Cyril.
-
- 'Well--anyway,' said Anthea, 'the safest thing is to leave the
- carpet there with her sitting on it. Perhaps it'll be a lesson to
- her, and anyway, if she thinks it's a dream it won't matter what
- she says when she gets home.'
-
- So the extra coats and hats and mufflers were piled on the carpet.
- Cyril shouldered the well and happy Lamb, the Phoenix perched on
- Robert's wrist, and 'the party of explorers prepared to enter the
- interior'.
-
- The grassy slope was smooth, but under the trees there were tangled
- creepers with bright, strange-shaped flowers, and it was not easy
- to walk.
-
- 'We ought to have an explorer's axe,' said Robert. 'I shall ask
- father to give me one for Christmas.'
-
- There were curtains of creepers with scented blossoms hanging from
- the trees, and brilliant birds darted about quite close to their
- faces.
-
- 'Now, tell me honestly,' said the Phoenix, 'are there any birds
- here handsomer than I am? Don't be afraid of hurting my
- feelings--I'm a modest bird, I hope.'
-
- 'Not one of them,' said Robert, with conviction, 'is a patch upon
- you!'
-
- 'I was never a vain bird,' said the Phoenix, 'but I own that you
- confirm my own impression. I will take a flight.' It circled in
- the air for a moment, and, returning to Robert's wrist, went on,
- 'There is a path to the left.'
-
- And there was. So now the children went on through the wood more
- quickly and comfortably, the girls picking flowers and the Lamb
- inviting the 'pretty dickies' to observe that he himself was a
- 'little white real-water-wet duck!'
-
- And all this time he hadn't whooping-coughed once.
-
- The path turned and twisted, and, always threading their way amid
- a tangle of flowers, the children suddenly passed a corner and
- found themselves in a forest clearing, where there were a lot of
- pointed huts--the huts, as they knew at once, of SAVAGES.
-
- The boldest heart beat more quickly. Suppose they WERE cannibals.
- It was a long way back to the carpet.
-
- 'Hadn't we better go back?' said Jane. 'Go NOW,' she said, and her
- voice trembled a little. 'Suppose they eat us.'
-
- 'Nonsense, Pussy,' said Cyril, firmly. 'Look, there's a goat tied
- up. That shows they don't eat PEOPLE.'
-
- 'Let's go on and say we're missionaries,' Robert suggested.
-
- 'I shouldn't advise THAT,' said the Phoenix, very earnestly.
-
- 'Why not?'
-
- 'Well, for one thing, it isn't true,' replied the golden bird.
-
- It was while they stood hesitating on the edge of the clearing that
- a tall man suddenly came out of one of the huts. He had hardly any
- clothes, and his body all over was a dark and beautiful coppery
- colour--just like the chrysanthemums father had brought home on
- Saturday. In his hand he held a spear. The whites of his eyes and
- the white of his teeth were the only light things about him, except
- that where the sun shone on his shiny brown body it looked white,
- too. If you will look carefully at the next shiny savage you meet
- with next to nothing on, you will see at once--if the sun happens
- to be shining at the time--that I am right about this.
-
- The savage looked at the children. Concealment was impossible. He
- uttered a shout that was more like 'Oo goggery bag-wag' than
- anything else the children had ever heard, and at once brown
- coppery people leapt out of every hut, and swarmed like ants about
- the clearing. There was no time for discussion, and no one wanted
- to discuss anything, anyhow. Whether these coppery people were
- cannibals or not now seemed to matter very little.
-
- Without an instant's hesitation the four children turned and ran
- back along the forest path; the only pause was Anthea's. She stood
- back to let Cyril pass, because he was carrying the Lamb, who
- screamed with delight. (He had not whooping-coughed a single once
- since the carpet landed him on the island.)
-
- 'Gee-up, Squirrel; gee-gee,' he shouted, and Cyril did gee-up. The
- path was a shorter cut to the beach than the creeper-covered way by
- which they had come, and almost directly they saw through the trees
- the shining blue-and-gold-and-opal of sand and sea.
-
- 'Stick to it,' cried Cyril, breathlessly.
-
- They did stick to it; they tore down the sands--they could hear
- behind them as they ran the patter of feet which they knew, too
- well, were copper-coloured.
-
- The sands were golden and opal-coloured--and BARE. There were
- wreaths of tropic seaweed, there were rich tropic shells of the
- kind you would not buy in the Kentish Town Road under at least
- fifteen pence a pair. There were turtles basking lumpily on the
- water's edge--but no cook, no clothes, and no carpet.
-
- 'On, on! Into the sea!' gasped Cyril. 'They MUST hate water.
- I've--heard--savages always--dirty.'
-
- Their feet were splashing in the warm shallows before his
- breathless words were ended. The calm baby-waves were easy to go
- through. It is warm work running for your life in the tropics, and
- the coolness of the water was delicious. They were up to their
- arm-pits now, and Jane was up to her chin.
-
- 'Look!' said the Phoenix. 'What are they pointing at?'
-
- The children turned; and there, a little to the west was a head--a
- head they knew, with a crooked cap upon it. It was the head of the
- cook.
-
- For some reason or other the savages had stopped at the water's
- edge and were all talking at the top of their voices, and all were
- pointing copper-coloured fingers, stiff with interest and
- excitement, at the head of the cook.
-
- The children hurried towards her as quickly as the water would let
- them.
-
- 'What on earth did you come out here for?' Robert shouted; 'and
- where on earth's the carpet?'
-
- 'It's not on earth, bless you,' replied the cook, happily; 'it's
- UNDER ME--in the water. I got a bit warm setting there in the sun,
- and I just says, "I wish I was in a cold bath"--just like that--and
- next minute here I was! It's all part of the dream.'
-
- Every one at once saw how extremely fortunate it was that the
- carpet had had the sense to take the cook to the nearest and
- largest bath--the sea, and how terrible it would have been if the
- carpet had taken itself and her to the stuffy little bath-room of
- the house in Camden Town!
-
- 'Excuse me,' said the Phoenix's soft voice, breaking in on the
- general sigh of relief, 'but I think these brown people want your
- cook.'
-
- 'To--to eat?' whispered Jane, as well as she could through the
- water which the plunging Lamb was dashing in her face with happy
- fat hands and feet.
-
- 'Hardly,' rejoined the bird. 'Who wants cooks to EAT? Cooks are
- ENGAGED, not eaten. They wish to engage her.'
-
- 'How can you understand what they say?' asked Cyril, doubtfully.
-
- 'It's as easy as kissing your claw,' replied the bird. 'I speak
- and understand ALL languages, even that of your cook, which is
- difficult and unpleasing. It's quite easy, when you know how it's
- done. It just comes to you. I should advise you to beach the
- carpet and land the cargo--the cook, I mean. You can take my word
- for it, the copper-coloured ones will not harm you now.'
-
- It is impossible not to take the word of a Phoenix when it tells
- you to. So the children at once got hold of the corners of the
- carpet, and, pulling it from under the cook, towed it slowly in
- through the shallowing water, and at last spread it on the sand.
- The cook, who had followed, instantly sat down on it, and at once
- the copper-coloured natives, now strangely humble, formed a ring
- round the carpet, and fell on their faces on the rainbow-and-gold
- sand. The tallest savage spoke in this position, which must have
- been very awkward for him; and Jane noticed that it took him quite
- a long time to get the sand out of his mouth afterwards.
-
- 'He says,' the Phoenix remarked after some time, 'that they wish to
- engage your cook permanently.'
-
- 'Without a character?' asked Anthea, who had heard her mother speak
- of such things.
-
- 'They do not wish to engage her as cook, but as queen; and queens
- need not have characters.'
-
- There was a breathless pause.
-
- 'WELL,' said Cyril, 'of all the choices! But there's no accounting
- for tastes.'
-
- Every one laughed at the idea of the cook's being engaged as queen;
- they could not help it.
-
- 'I do not advise laughter,' warned the Phoenix, ruffling out his
- golden feathers, which were extremely wet. 'And it's not their own
- choice. It seems that there is an ancient prophecy of this
- copper-coloured tribe that a great queen should some day arise out
- of the sea with a white crown on her head, and--and--well, you see!
- There's the crown!'
-
- It pointed its claw at cook's cap; and a very dirty cap it was,
- because it was the end of the week.
-
- 'That's the white crown,' it said; 'at least, it's nearly
- white--very white indeed compared to the colour THEY are--and
- anyway, it's quite white enough.'
-
- Cyril addressed the cook. 'Look here!' said he, 'these brown
- people want you to be their queen. They're only savages, and they
- don't know any better. Now would you really like to stay? or, if
- you'll promise not to be so jolly aggravating at home, and not to
- tell any one a word about to-day, we'll take you back to Camden
- Town.'
-
- 'No, you don't,' said the cook, in firm, undoubting tones. 'I've
- always wanted to be the Queen, God bless her! and I always thought
- what a good one I should make; and now I'm going to. IF it's only
- in a dream, it's well worth while. And I don't go back to that
- nasty underground kitchen, and me blamed for everything; that I
- don't, not till the dream's finished and I wake up with that nasty
- bell a rang-tanging in my ears--so I tell you.'
-
- 'Are you SURE,' Anthea anxiously asked the Phoenix, 'that she will
- be quite safe here?'
-
- 'She will find the nest of a queen a very precious and soft thing,'
- said the bird, solemnly.
-
- 'There--you hear,' said Cyril. 'You're in for a precious soft
- thing, so mind you're a good queen, cook. It's more than you'd any
- right to expect, but long may you reign.'
-
- Some of the cook's copper-coloured subjects now advanced from the
- forest with long garlands of beautiful flowers, white and
- sweet-scented, and hung them respectfully round the neck of their
- new sovereign.
-
- 'What! all them lovely bokays for me!' exclaimed the enraptured
- cook. 'Well, this here is something LIKE a dream, I must say.'
-
- She sat up very straight on the carpet, and the copper-coloured
- ones, themselves wreathed in garlands of the gayest flowers, madly
- stuck parrot feathers in their hair and began to dance. It was a
- dance such as you have never seen; it made the children feel almost
- sure that the cook was right, and that they were all in a dream.
- Small, strange-shaped drums were beaten, odd-sounding songs were
- sung, and the dance got faster and faster and odder and odder, till
- at last all the dancers fell on the sand tired out.
-
- The new queen, with her white crown-cap all on one side, clapped
- wildly.
-
- 'Brayvo!' she cried, 'brayvo! It's better than the Albert Edward
- Music-hall in the Kentish Town Road. Go it again!'
-
- But the Phoenix would not translate this request into the
- copper-coloured language; and when the savages had recovered their
- breath, they implored their queen to leave her white escort and
- come with them to their huts.
-
- 'The finest shall be yours, O queen,' said they.
-
- 'Well--so long!' said the cook, getting heavily on to her feet,
- when the Phoenix had translated this request. 'No more kitchens
- and attics for me, thank you. I'm off to my royal palace, I am;
- and I only wish this here dream would keep on for ever and ever.'
-
- She picked up the ends of the garlands that trailed round her feet,
- and the children had one last glimpse of her striped stockings and
- worn elastic-side boots before she disappeared into the shadow of
- the forest, surrounded by her dusky retainers, singing songs of
- rejoicing as they went.
-
- 'WELL!' said Cyril, 'I suppose she's all right, but they don't seem
- to count us for much, one way or the other.'
-
- 'Oh,' said the Phoenix, 'they think you're merely dreams. The
- prophecy said that the queen would arise from the waves with a
- white crown and surrounded by white dream-children. That's about
- what they think YOU are!'
-
- 'And what about dinner?' said Robert, abruptly.
-
- 'There won't be any dinner, with no cook and no pudding-basin,'
- Anthea reminded him; 'but there's always bread-and-butter.'
-
- 'Let's get home,' said Cyril.
-
- The Lamb was furiously unwishful to be dressed in his warm clothes
- again, but Anthea and Jane managed it, by force disguised as
- coaxing, and he never once whooping-coughed.
-
- Then every one put on its own warm things and took its place on the
- carpet.
-
- A sound of uncouth singing still came from beyond the trees where
- the copper-coloured natives were crooning songs of admiration and
- respect to their white-crowned queen. Then Anthea said 'Home,'
- just as duchesses and other people do to their coachmen, and the
- intelligent carpet in one whirling moment laid itself down in its
- proper place on the nursery floor. And at that very moment Eliza
- opened the door and said--
-
- 'Cook's gone! I can't find her anywhere, and there's no dinner
- ready. She hasn't taken her box nor yet her outdoor things. She
- just ran out to see the time, I shouldn't wonder--the kitchen clock
- never did give her satisfaction--and she's got run over or fell
- down in a fit as likely as not. You'll have to put up with the
- cold bacon for your dinners; and what on earth you've got your
- outdoor things on for I don't know. And then I'll slip out and see
- if they know anything about her at the police-station.'
-
- But nobody ever knew anything about the cook any more, except the
- children, and, later, one other person.
-
-
- Mother was so upset at losing the cook, and so anxious about her,
- that Anthea felt most miserable, as though she had done something
- very wrong indeed. She woke several times in the night, and at
- last decided that she would ask the Phoenix to let her tell her
- mother all about it. But there was no opportunity to do this next
- day, because the Phoenix, as usual, had gone to sleep in some
- out-of-the-way spot, after asking, as a special favour, not to be
- disturbed for twenty-four hours.
-
- The Lamb never whooping-coughed once all that Sunday, and mother
- and father said what good medicine it was that the doctor had given
- him. But the children knew that it was the southern shore where
- you can't have whooping-cough that had cured him. The Lamb babbled
- of coloured sand and water, but no one took any notice of that. He
- often talked of things that hadn't happened.
-
- It was on Monday morning, very early indeed, that Anthea woke and
- suddenly made up her mind. She crept downstairs in her night-gown
- (it was very chilly), sat down on the carpet, and with a beating
- heart wished herself on the sunny shore where you can't have
- whooping-cough, and next moment there she was.
-
- The sand was splendidly warm. She could feel it at once, even
- through the carpet. She folded the carpet, and put it over her
- shoulders like a shawl, for she was determined not to be parted
- from it for a single instant, no matter how hot it might be to
- wear.
-
- Then trembling a little, and trying to keep up her courage by
- saying over and over, 'It is my DUTY, it IS my duty,' she went up
- the forest path.
-
- 'Well, here you are again,' said the cook, directly she saw Anthea.
-
- 'This dream does keep on!'
-
- The cook was dressed in a white robe; she had no shoes and
- stockings and no cap and she was sitting under a screen of
- palm-leaves, for it was afternoon in the island, and blazing hot.
- She wore a flower wreath on her hair, and copper-coloured boys were
- fanning her with peacock's feathers.
-
- 'They've got the cap put away,' she said. 'They seem to think a
- lot of it. Never saw one before, I expect.'
-
- 'Are you happy?' asked Anthea, panting; the sight of the cook as
- queen quite took her breath away.
-
- 'I believe you, my dear,' said the cook, heartily. 'Nothing to do
- unless you want to. But I'm getting rested now. Tomorrow I'm
- going to start cleaning out my hut, if the dream keeps on, and I
- shall teach them cooking; they burns everything to a cinder now
- unless they eats it raw.'
-
- 'But can you talk to them?'
-
- 'Lor' love a duck, yes!' the happy cook-queen replied; 'it's quite
- easy to pick up. I always thought I should be quick at foreign
- languages. I've taught them to understand "dinner," and "I want a
- drink," and "You leave me be," already.'
-
- 'Then you don't want anything?' Anthea asked earnestly and
- anxiously.
-
- 'Not me, miss; except if you'd only go away. I'm afraid of me
- waking up with that bell a-going if you keep on stopping here
- a-talking to me. Long as this here dream keeps up I'm as happy as
- a queen.'
-
- 'Goodbye, then,' said Anthea, gaily, for her conscience was clear
- now.
-
- She hurried into the wood, threw herself on the ground, and said
- 'Home'--and there she was, rolled in the carpet on the nursery
- floor.
-
- 'SHE'S all right, anyhow,' said Anthea, and went back to bed. 'I'm
- glad somebody's pleased. But mother will never believe me when I
- tell her.'
-
- The story is indeed a little difficult to believe. Still, you
- might try.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 4
- TWO BAZAARS
-
-
- Mother was really a great dear. She was pretty and she was loving,
- and most frightfully good when you were ill, and always kind, and
- almost always just. That is, she was just when she understood
- things. But of course she did not always understand things. No
- one understands everything, and mothers are not angels, though a
- good many of them come pretty near it. The children knew that
- mother always WANTED to do what was best for them, even if she was
- not clever enough to know exactly what was the best. That was why
- all of them, but much more particularly Anthea, felt rather
- uncomfortable at keeping the great secret from her of the wishing
- carpet and the Phoenix. And Anthea, whose inside mind was made so
- that she was able to be much more uncomfortable than the others,
- had decided that she MUST tell her mother the truth, however little
- likely it was that her mother would believe it.
-
- 'Then I shall have done what's right,' said she to the Phoenix;
- 'and if she doesn't believe me it won't be my fault--will it?'
-
- 'Not in the least,' said the golden bird. 'And she won't, so
- you're quite safe.'
-
- Anthea chose a time when she was doing her home-lessons--they were
- Algebra and Latin, German, English, and Euclid--and she asked her
- mother whether she might come and do them in the drawing-room--'so
- as to be quiet,' she said to her mother; and to herself she said,
- 'And that's not the real reason. I hope I shan't grow up a LIAR.'
-
- Mother said, 'Of course, dearie,' and Anthea started swimming
- through a sea of x's and y's and z's. Mother was sitting at the
- mahogany bureau writing letters.
-
- 'Mother dear,' said Anthea.
-
- 'Yes, love-a-duck,' said mother.
-
- 'About cook,' said Anthea. '_I_ know where she is.'
-
- 'Do you, dear?' said mother. 'Well, I wouldn't take her back after
- the way she has behaved.'
-
- 'It's not her fault,' said Anthea. 'May I tell you about it from
- the beginning?'
-
- Mother laid down her pen, and her nice face had a resigned
- expression. As you know, a resigned expression always makes you
- want not to tell anybody anything.
-
- 'It's like this,' said Anthea, in a hurry: 'that egg, you know,
- that came in the carpet; we put it in the fire and it hatched into
- the Phoenix, and the carpet was a wishing carpet--and--'
-
- 'A very nice game, darling,' said mother, taking up her pen. 'Now
- do be quiet. I've got a lot of letters to write. I'm going to
- Bournemouth to-morrow with the Lamb--and there's that bazaar.'
-
- Anthea went back to x y z, and mother's pen scratched busily.
-
- 'But, mother,' said Anthea, when mother put down the pen to lick an
- envelope, 'the carpet takes us wherever we like--and--'
-
- 'I wish it would take you where you could get a few nice Eastern
- things for my bazaar,' said mother. 'I promised them, and I've no
- time to go to Liberty's now.'
-
- 'It shall,' said Anthea, 'but, mother--'
-
- 'Well, dear,' said mother, a little impatiently, for she had taken
- up her pen again.
-
- 'The carpet took us to a place where you couldn't have
- whooping-cough, and the Lamb hasn't whooped since, and we took cook
- because she was so tiresome, and then she would stay and be queen
- of the savages. They thought her cap was a crown, and--'
-
- 'Darling one,' said mother, 'you know I love to hear the things you
- make up--but I am most awfully busy.'
-
- 'But it's true,' said Anthea, desperately.
-
- 'You shouldn't say that, my sweet,' said mother, gently. And then
- Anthea knew it was hopeless.
-
- 'Are you going away for long?' asked Anthea.
-
- 'I've got a cold,' said mother, 'and daddy's anxious about it, and
- the Lamb's cough.'
-
- 'He hasn't coughed since Saturday,' the Lamb's eldest sister
- interrupted.
-
- 'I wish I could think so,' mother replied. 'And daddy's got to go
- to Scotland. I do hope you'll be good children.'
-
- 'We will, we will,' said Anthea, fervently. 'When's the bazaar?'
-
- 'On Saturday,' said mother, 'at the schools. Oh, don't talk any
- more, there's a treasure! My head's going round, and I've
- forgotten how to spell whooping-cough.'
-
-
- Mother and the Lamb went away, and father went away, and there was
- a new cook who looked so like a frightened rabbit that no one had
- the heart to do anything to frighten her any more than seemed
- natural to her.
-
- The Phoenix begged to be excused. It said it wanted a week's rest,
- and asked that it might not be disturbed. And it hid its golden
- gleaming self, and nobody could find it.
-
- So that when Wednesday afternoon brought an unexpected holiday, and
- every one decided to go somewhere on the carpet, the journey had to
- be undertaken without the Phoenix. They were debarred from any
- carpet excursions in the evening by a sudden promise to mother,
- exacted in the agitation of parting, that they would not be out
- after six at night, except on Saturday, when they were to go to the
- bazaar, and were pledged to put on their best clothes, to wash
- themselves to the uttermost, and to clean their nails--not with
- scissors, which are scratchy and bad, but with flat-sharpened ends
- of wooden matches, which do no harm to any one's nails.
-
- 'Let's go and see the Lamb,' said Jane.
-
- But every one was agreed that if they appeared suddenly in
- Bournemouth it would frighten mother out of her wits, if not into
- a fit. So they sat on the carpet, and thought and thought and
- thought till they almost began to squint.
-
- 'Look here,' said Cyril, 'I know. Please carpet, take us somewhere
- where we can see the Lamb and mother and no one can see us.'
-
- 'Except the Lamb,' said Jane, quickly.
-
- And the next moment they found themselves recovering from the
- upside-down movement--and there they were sitting on the carpet,
- and the carpet was laid out over another thick soft carpet of brown
- pine-needles. There were green pine-trees overhead, and a swift
- clear little stream was running as fast as ever it could between
- steep banks--and there, sitting on the pine-needle carpet, was
- mother, without her hat; and the sun was shining brightly, although
- it was November--and there was the Lamb, as jolly as jolly and not
- whooping at all.
-
- 'The carpet's deceived us,' said Robert, gloomily; 'mother will see
- us directly she turns her head.'
-
- But the faithful carpet had not deceived them.
-
- Mother turned her dear head and looked straight at them, and DID NOT SEE
- THEM!
-
- 'We're invisible,' Cyril whispered: 'what awful larks!'
-
- But to the girls it was not larks at all. It was horrible to have
- mother looking straight at them, and her face keeping the same,
- just as though they weren't there.
-
- 'I don't like it,' said Jane. 'Mother never looked at us like that
- before. Just as if she didn't love us--as if we were somebody
- else's children, and not very nice ones either--as if she didn't
- care whether she saw us or not.'
-
- 'It is horrid,' said Anthea, almost in tears.
-
- But at this moment the Lamb saw them, and plunged towards the
- carpet, shrieking, 'Panty, own Panty--an' Pussy, an' Squiggle--an'
- Bobs, oh, oh!'
-
- Anthea caught him and kissed him, so did Jane; they could not help
- it--he looked such a darling, with his blue three-cornered hat all
- on one side, and his precious face all dirty--quite in the old
- familiar way.
-
- 'I love you, Panty; I love you--and you, and you, and you,' cried
- the Lamb.
-
- It was a delicious moment. Even the boys thumped their baby
- brother joyously on the back.
-
- Then Anthea glanced at mother--and mother's face was a pale
- sea-green colour, and she was staring at the Lamb as if she thought
- he had gone mad. And, indeed, that was exactly what she did think.
-
- 'My Lamb, my precious! Come to mother,' she cried, and jumped up
- and ran to the baby.
-
- She was so quick that the invisible children had to leap back, or
- she would have felt them; and to feel what you can't see is the
- worst sort of ghost-feeling. Mother picked up the Lamb and hurried
- away from the pinewood.
-
- 'Let's go home,' said Jane, after a miserable silence. 'It feels
- just exactly as if mother didn't love us.'
-
- But they couldn't bear to go home till they had seen mother meet
- another lady, and knew that she was safe. You cannot leave your
- mother to go green in the face in a distant pinewood, far from all
- human aid, and then go home on your wishing carpet as though
- nothing had happened.
-
- When mother seemed safe the children returned to the carpet, and
- said 'Home'--and home they went.
-
- 'I don't care about being invisible myself,' said Cyril, 'at least,
- not with my own family. It would be different if you were a
- prince, or a bandit, or a burglar.'
-
- And now the thoughts of all four dwelt fondly on the dear greenish
- face of mother.
-
- 'I wish she hadn't gone away,' said Jane; 'the house is simply
- beastly without her.'
-
- 'I think we ought to do what she said,' Anthea put in. 'I saw
- something in a book the other day about the wishes of the departed
- being sacred.'
-
- 'That means when they've departed farther off,' said Cyril.
- 'India's coral or Greenland's icy, don't you know; not Bournemouth.
- Besides, we don't know what her wishes are.'
-
- 'She SAID'--Anthea was very much inclined to cry--'she said, "Get
- Indian things for my bazaar;" but I know she thought we couldn't,
- and it was only play.'
-
- 'Let's get them all the same,' said Robert. 'We'll go the first
- thing on Saturday morning.'
-
- And on Saturday morning, the first thing, they went.
-
- There was no finding the Phoenix, so they sat on the beautiful
- wishing carpet, and said--
-
- 'We want Indian things for mother's bazaar. Will you please take
- us where people will give us heaps of Indian things?'
-
- The docile carpet swirled their senses away, and restored them on
- the outskirts of a gleaming white Indian town. They knew it was
- Indian at once, by the shape of the domes and roofs; and besides,
- a man went by on an elephant, and two English soldiers went along
- the road, talking like in Mr Kipling's books--so after that no one
- could have any doubt as to where they were. They rolled up the
- carpet and Robert carried it, and they walked bodily into the town.
-
- It was very warm, and once more they had to take off their
- London-in-November coats, and carry them on their arms.
-
- The streets were narrow and strange, and the clothes of the people
- in the streets were stranger and the talk of the people was
- strangest of all.
-
- 'I can't understand a word,' said Cyril. 'How on earth are we to
- ask for things for our bazaar?'
-
- 'And they're poor people, too,' said Jane; 'I'm sure they are.
- What we want is a rajah or something.'
-
- Robert was beginning to unroll the carpet, but the others stopped
- him, imploring him not to waste a wish.
-
- 'We asked the carpet to take us where we could get Indian things
- for bazaars,' said Anthea, 'and it will.'
-
- Her faith was justified.
-
- Just as she finished speaking a very brown gentleman in a turban
- came up to them and bowed deeply. He spoke, and they thrilled to
- the sound of English words.
-
- 'My ranee, she think you very nice childs. She asks do you lose
- yourselves, and do you desire to sell carpet? She see you from her
- palkee. You come see her--yes?'
-
- They followed the stranger, who seemed to have a great many more
- teeth in his smile than are usual, and he led them through crooked
- streets to the ranee's palace. I am not going to describe the
- ranee's palace, because I really have never seen the palace of a
- ranee, and Mr Kipling has. So you can read about it in his books.
- But I know exactly what happened there.
-
- The old ranee sat on a low-cushioned seat, and there were a lot of
- other ladies with her--all in trousers and veils, and sparkling
- with tinsel and gold and jewels. And the brown, turbaned gentleman
- stood behind a sort of carved screen, and interpreted what the
- children said and what the queen said. And when the queen asked to
- buy the carpet, the children said 'No.'
-
- 'Why?' asked the ranee.
-
- And Jane briefly said why, and the interpreter interpreted. The
- queen spoke, and then the interpreter said--
-
- 'My mistress says it is a good story, and you tell it all through
- without thought of time.'
-
- And they had to. It made a long story, especially as it had all to
- be told twice--once by Cyril and once by the interpreter. Cyril
- rather enjoyed himself. He warmed to his work, and told the tale
- of the Phoenix and the Carpet, and the Lone Tower, and the
- Queen-Cook, in language that grew insensibly more and more Arabian
- Nightsy, and the ranee and her ladies listened to the interpreter,
- and rolled about on their fat cushions with laughter.
-
- When the story was ended she spoke, and the interpreter explained
- that she had said, 'Little one, thou art a heaven-born teller of
- tales,' and she threw him a string of turquoises from round her
- neck.
-
- 'OH, how lovely!' cried Jane and Anthea.
-
- Cyril bowed several times, and then cleared his throat and said--
-
- 'Thank her very, very much; but I would much rather she gave me
- some of the cheap things in the bazaar. Tell her I want them to
- sell again, and give the money to buy clothes for poor people who
- haven't any.'
-
- 'Tell him he has my leave to sell my gift and clothe the naked with
- its price,' said the queen, when this was translated.
-
- But Cyril said very firmly, 'No, thank you. The things have got to
- be sold to-day at our bazaar, and no one would buy a turquoise
- necklace at an English bazaar. They'd think it was sham, or else
- they'd want to know where we got it.'
-
- So then the queen sent out for little pretty things, and her
- servants piled the carpet with them.
-
- 'I must needs lend you an elephant to carry them away,' she said,
- laughing.
-
- But Anthea said, 'If the queen will lend us a comb and let us wash
- our hands and faces, she shall see a magic thing. We and the
- carpet and all these brass trays and pots and carved things and
- stuffs and things will just vanish away like smoke.'
-
- The queen clapped her hands at this idea, and lent the children a
- sandal-wood comb inlaid with ivory lotus-flowers. And they washed
- their faces and hands in silver basins.
- Then Cyril made a very polite farewell speech, and quite suddenly
- he ended with the words--
-
- 'And I wish we were at the bazaar at our schools.'
-
- And of course they were. And the queen and her ladies were left
- with their mouths open, gazing at the bare space on the inlaid
- marble floor where the carpet and the children had been.
-
- 'That is magic, if ever magic was!' said the queen, delighted with
- the incident; which, indeed, has given the ladies of that court
- something to talk about on wet days ever since.
-
- Cyril's stories had taken some time, so had the meal of strange
- sweet foods that they had had while the little pretty things were
- being bought, and the gas in the schoolroom was already lighted.
- Outside, the winter dusk was stealing down among the Camden Town
- houses.
-
- 'I'm glad we got washed in India,' said Cyril. 'We should have
- been awfully late if we'd had to go home and scrub.'
-
- 'Besides,' Robert said, 'it's much warmer washing in India. I
- shouldn't mind it so much if we lived there.'
-
- The thoughtful carpet had dumped the children down in a dusky space
- behind the point where the corners of two stalls met. The floor
- was littered with string and brown paper, and baskets and boxes
- were heaped along the wall.
-
- The children crept out under a stall covered with all sorts of
- table-covers and mats and things, embroidered beautifully by idle
- ladies with no real work to do. They got out at the end,
- displacing a sideboard-cloth adorned with a tasteful pattern of
- blue geraniums. The girls got out unobserved, so did Cyril; but
- Robert, as he cautiously emerged, was actually walked on by Mrs
- Biddle, who kept the stall. Her large, solid foot stood firmly on
- the small, solid hand of Robert and who can blame Robert if he DID
- yell a little?
-
- A crowd instantly collected. Yells are very unusual at bazaars,
- and every one was intensely interested. It was several seconds
- before the three free children could make Mrs Biddle understand
- that what she was walking on was not a schoolroom floor, or even,
- as she presently supposed, a dropped pin-cushion, but the living
- hand of a suffering child. When she became aware that she really
- had hurt him, she grew very angry indeed. When people have hurt
- other people by accident, the one who does the hurting is always
- much the angriest. I wonder why.
-
- 'I'm very sorry, I'm sure,' said Mrs Biddle; but she spoke more in
- anger than in sorrow. 'Come out! whatever do you mean by creeping
- about under the stalls, like earwigs?'
-
- 'We were looking at the things in the corner.'
-
- 'Such nasty, prying ways,' said Mrs Biddle, 'will never make you
- successful in life. There's nothing there but packing and dust.'
-
- 'Oh, isn't there!' said Jane. 'That's all you know.'
-
- 'Little girl, don't be rude,' said Mrs Biddle, flushing violet.
-
- 'She doesn't mean to be; but there ARE some nice things there, all
- the same,' said Cyril; who suddenly felt how impossible it was to
- inform the listening crowd that all the treasures piled on the
- carpet were mother's contributions to the bazaar. No one would
- believe it; and if they did, and wrote to thank mother, she would
- think--well, goodness only knew what she would think. The other
- three children felt the same.
-
- 'I should like to see them,' said a very nice lady, whose friends
- had disappointed her, and who hoped that these might be belated
- contributions to her poorly furnished stall.
-
- She looked inquiringly at Robert, who said, 'With pleasure, don't
- mention it,' and dived back under Mrs Biddle's stall.
-
- 'I wonder you encourage such behaviour,' said Mrs Biddle. 'I
- always speak my mind, as you know, Miss Peasmarsh; and, I must say,
- I am surprised.' She turned to the crowd. 'There is no
- entertainment here,' she said sternly. 'A very naughty little boy
- has accidentally hurt himself, but only slightly. Will you please
- disperse? It will only encourage him in naughtiness if he finds
- himself the centre of attraction.'
-
- The crowd slowly dispersed. Anthea, speechless with fury, heard a
- nice curate say, 'Poor little beggar!' and loved the curate at once
- and for ever.
-
- Then Robert wriggled out from under the stall with some Benares
- brass and some inlaid sandalwood boxes.
-
- 'Liberty!' cried Miss Peasmarsh. 'Then Charles has not forgotten,
- after all.'
-
- 'Excuse me,' said Mrs Biddle, with fierce politeness, 'these
- objects are deposited behind MY stall. Some unknown donor who does
- good by stealth, and would blush if he could hear you claim the
- things. Of course they are for me.'
-
- 'My stall touches yours at the corner,' said poor Miss Peasmarsh,
- timidly, 'and my cousin did promise--'
-
- The children sidled away from the unequal contest and mingled with
- the crowd. Their feelings were too deep for words--till at last
- Robert said--
-
- 'That stiff-starched PIG!'
-
- 'And after all our trouble! I'm hoarse with gassing to that
- trousered lady in India.'
-
- 'The pig-lady's very, very nasty,' said Jane.
-
- It was Anthea who said, in a hurried undertone, 'She isn't very
- nice, and Miss Peasmarsh is pretty and nice too. Who's got a
- pencil?'
-
- it was a long crawl, under three stalls, but Anthea did it. A
- large piece of pale blue paper lay among the rubbish in the corner.
-
- She folded it to a square and wrote upon it, licking the pencil at
- every word to make it mark quite blackly: 'All these Indian things
- are for pretty, nice Miss Peasmarsh's stall.' She thought of
- adding, 'There is nothing for Mrs Biddle;' but she saw that this
- might lead to suspicion, so she wrote hastily: 'From an unknown
- donna,' and crept back among the boards and trestles to join the
- others.
-
- So that when Mrs Biddle appealed to the bazaar committee, and the
- corner of the stall was lifted and shifted, so that stout clergymen
- and heavy ladies could get to the corner without creeping under
- stalls, the blue paper was discovered, and all the splendid,
- shining Indian things were given over to Miss Peasmarsh, and she
- sold them all, and got thirty-five pounds for them.
-
- 'I don't understand about that blue paper,' said Mrs Biddle. 'It
- looks to me like the work of a lunatic. And saying you were nice
- and pretty! It's not the work of a sane person.'
-
- Anthea and Jane begged Miss Peasmarsh to let them help her to sell
- the things, because it was their brother who had announced the good
- news that the things had come. Miss Peasmarsh was very willing,
- for now her stall, that had been SO neglected, was surrounded by
- people who wanted to buy, and she was glad to be helped. The
- children noted that Mrs Biddle had not more to do in the way of
- selling than she could manage quite well. I hope they were not
- glad--for you should forgive your enemies, even if they walk on
- your hands and then say it is all your naughty fault. But I am
- afraid they were not so sorry as they ought to have been.
-
- It took some time to arrange the things on the stall. The carpet
- was spread over it, and the dark colours showed up the brass and
- silver and ivory things. It was a happy and busy afternoon, and
- when Miss Peasmarsh and the girls had sold every single one of the
- little pretty things from the Indian bazaar, far, far away, Anthea
- and Jane went off with the boys to fish in the fishpond, and dive
- into the bran-pie, and hear the cardboard band, and the phonograph,
- and the chorus of singing birds that was done behind a screen with
- glass tubes and glasses of water.
-
- They had a beautiful tea, suddenly presented to them by the nice
- curate, and Miss Peasmarsh joined them before they had had more
- than three cakes each. It was a merry party, and the curate was
- extremely pleasant to every one, 'even to Miss Peasmarsh,' as Jane
- said afterwards.
-
- 'We ought to get back to the stall,' said Anthea, when no one could
- possibly eat any more, and the curate was talking in a low voice to
- Miss Peas marsh about 'after Easter'.
-
- 'There's nothing to go back for,' said Miss Peasmarsh gaily;
- 'thanks to you dear children we've sold everything.'
-
- 'There--there's the carpet,' said Cyril.
-
- 'Oh,' said Miss Peasmarsh, radiantly, 'don't bother about the
- carpet. I've sold even that. Mrs Biddle gave me ten shillings for
- it. She said it would do for her servant's bedroom.'
-
- 'Why,' said Jane, 'her servants don't HAVE carpets. We had cook
- from her, and she told us so.'
-
- 'No scandal about Queen Elizabeth, if YOU please,' said the curate,
- cheerfully; and Miss Peasmarsh laughed, and looked at him as though
- she had never dreamed that any one COULD be so amusing. But the
- others were struck dumb. How could they say, 'The carpet is ours!'
- For who brings carpets to bazaars?
-
- The children were now thoroughly wretched. But I am glad to say
- that their wretchedness did not make them forget their manners, as
- it does sometimes, even with grown-up people, who ought to know
- ever so much better.
-
- They said, 'Thank you very much for the jolly tea,' and 'Thanks for
- being so jolly,' and 'Thanks awfully for giving us such a jolly
- time;' for the curate had stood fish-ponds, and bran-pies, and
- phonographs, and the chorus of singing birds, and had stood them
- like a man. The girls hugged Miss Peasmarsh, and as they went away
- they heard the curate say--
-
- 'Jolly little kids, yes, but what about--you will let it be
- directly after Easter. Ah, do say you will--'
-
- And Jane ran back and said, before Anthea could drag her away,
- 'What are you going to do after Easter?'
-
- Miss Peasmarsh smiled and looked very pretty indeed. And the
- curate said--
-
- 'I hope I am going to take a trip to the Fortunate Islands.'
-
- 'I wish we could take you on the wishing carpet,' said Jane.
-
- 'Thank you,' said the curate, 'but I'm afraid I can't wait for
- that. I must go to the Fortunate Islands before they make me a
- bishop. I should have no time afterwards.'
-
- 'I've always thought I should marry a bishop,' said Jane: 'his
- aprons would come in so useful. Wouldn't YOU like to marry a
- bishop, Miss Peasmarsh?'
-
- It was then that they dragged her away.
-
- As it was Robert's hand that Mrs Biddle had walked on, it was
- decided that he had better not recall the incident to her mind, and
- so make her angry again. Anthea and Jane had helped to sell things
- at the rival stall, so they were not likely to be popular.
-
- A hasty council of four decided that Mrs Biddle would hate Cyril
- less than she would hate the others, so the others mingled with the
- crowd, and it was he who said to her--
-
- 'Mrs Biddle, WE meant to have that carpet. Would you sell it to
- us? We would give you--'
-
- 'Certainly not,' said Mrs Biddle. 'Go away, little boy.'
-
- There was that in her tone which showed Cyril, all too plainly, the
- hopelessness of persuasion. He found the others and said--
-
- 'It's no use; she's like a lioness robbed of its puppies. We must
- watch where it goes--and-- Anthea, I don't care what you say. It's
- our own carpet. It wouldn't be burglary. It would be a sort of
- forlorn hope rescue party--heroic and daring and dashing, and not
- wrong at all.'
-
- The children still wandered among the gay crowd--but there was no
- pleasure there for them any more. The chorus of singing birds
- sounded just like glass tubes being blown through water, and the
- phonograph simply made a horrid noise, so that you could hardly
- hear yourself speak. And the people were buying things they
- couldn't possibly want, and it all seemed very stupid. And Mrs
- Biddle had bought the wishing carpet for ten shillings. And the
- whole of life was sad and grey and dusty, and smelt of slight gas
- escapes, and hot people, and cake and crumbs, and all the children
- were very tired indeed.
-
- They found a corner within sight of the carpet, and there they
- waited miserably, till it was far beyond their proper bedtime. And
- when it was ten the people who had bought things went away, but the
- people who had been selling stayed to count up their money.
-
- 'And to jaw about it,' said Robert. 'I'll never go to another
- bazaar as long as ever I live. My hand is swollen as big as a
- pudding. I expect the nails in her horrible boots were poisoned.'
-
- Just then some one who seemed to have a right to interfere said--
-
- 'Everything is over now; you had better go home.'
-
- So they went. And then they waited on the pavement under the gas
- lamp, where ragged children had been standing all the evening to
- listen to the band, and their feet slipped about in the greasy mud
- till Mrs Biddle came out and was driven away in a cab with the many
- things she hadn't sold, and the few things she had bought--among
- others the carpet. The other stall-holders left their things at
- the school till Monday morning, but Mrs Biddle was afraid some one
- would steal some of them, so she took them in a cab.
-
- The children, now too desperate to care for mud or appearances,
- hung on behind the cab till it reached Mrs Biddle's house. When
- she and the carpet had gone in and the door was shut Anthea said--
-
- 'Don't let's burgle--I mean do daring and dashing rescue acts--till
- we've given her a chance. Let's ring and ask to see her.'
-
- The others hated to do this, but at last they agreed, on condition
- that Anthea would not make any silly fuss about the burglary
- afterwards, if it really had to come to that.
-
- So they knocked and rang, and a scared-looking parlourmaid opened
- the front door. While they were asking for Mrs Biddle they saw
- her. She was in the dining-room, and she had already pushed back
- the table and spread out the carpet to see how it looked on the
- floor.
-
- 'I knew she didn't want it for her servants' bedroom,' Jane
- muttered.
-
- Anthea walked straight past the uncomfortable parlourmaid, and the
- others followed her. Mrs Biddle had her back to them, and was
- smoothing down the carpet with the same boot that had trampled on
- the hand of Robert. So that they were all in the room, and Cyril,
- with great presence of mind, had shut the room door before she saw
- them.
-
- 'Who is it, Jane?' she asked in a sour voice; and then turning
- suddenly, she saw who it was. Once more her face grew violet--a
- deep, dark violet. 'You wicked daring little things!' she cried,
- 'how dare you come here? At this time of night, too. Be off, or
- I'll send for the police.'
-
- 'Don't be angry,' said Anthea, soothingly, 'we only wanted to ask
- you to let us have the carpet. We have quite twelve shillings
- between us, and--'
-
- 'How DARE you?' cried Mrs Biddle, and her voice shook with
- angriness.
-
- 'You do look horrid,' said Jane suddenly.
-
- Mrs Biddle actually stamped that booted foot of hers. 'You rude,
- barefaced child!' she said.
-
- Anthea almost shook Jane; but Jane pushed forward in spite of her.
-
- 'It really IS our nursery carpet,' she said, 'you ask ANY ONE if it
- isn't.'
-
- 'Let's wish ourselves home,' said Cyril in a whisper.
-
- 'No go,' Robert whispered back, 'she'd be there too, and raving mad
- as likely as not. Horrid thing, I hate her!'
-
- 'I wish Mrs Biddle was in an angelic good temper,' cried Anthea,
- suddenly. 'It's worth trying,' she said to herself.
-
- Mrs Biddle's face grew from purple to violet, and from violet to
- mauve, and from mauve to pink. Then she smiled quite a jolly
- smile.
-
- 'Why, so I am!' she said, 'what a funny idea! Why shouldn't I be
- in a good temper, my dears.'
-
- Once more the carpet had done its work, and not on Mrs Biddle
- alone. The children felt suddenly good and happy.
-
- 'You're a jolly good sort,' said Cyril. 'I see that now. I'm
- sorry we vexed you at the bazaar to-day.'
-
- 'Not another word,' said the changed Mrs Biddle. 'Of course you
- shall have the carpet, my dears, if you've taken such a fancy to
- it. No, no; I won't have more than the ten shillings I paid.'
-
- 'It does seem hard to ask you for it after you bought it at the
- bazaar,' said Anthea; 'but it really IS our nursery carpet. It got
- to the bazaar by mistake, with some other things.'
-
- 'Did it really, now? How vexing!' said Mrs Biddle, kindly. 'Well,
- my dears, I can very well give the extra ten shillings; so you take
- your carpet and we'll say no more about it. Have a piece of cake
- before you go! I'm so sorry I stepped on your hand, my boy. Is it
- all right now?'
-
- 'Yes, thank you,' said Robert. 'I say, you ARE good.'
-
- 'Not at all,' said Mrs Biddle, heartily. 'I'm delighted to be able
- to give any little pleasure to you dear children.'
-
- And she helped them to roll up the carpet, and the boys carried it
- away between them.
-
- 'You ARE a dear,' said Anthea, and she and Mrs Biddle kissed each
- other heartily.
-
-
- 'WELL!' said Cyril as they went along the street.
-
- 'Yes,' said Robert, 'and the odd part is that you feel just as if
- it was REAL--her being so jolly, I mean--and not only the carpet
- making her nice.'
-
- 'Perhaps it IS real,' said Anthea, 'only it was covered up with
- crossness and tiredness and things, and the carpet took them away.'
-
- 'I hope it'll keep them away,' said Jane; 'she isn't ugly at all
- when she laughs.'
-
- The carpet has done many wonders in its day; but the case of Mrs
- Biddle is, I think, the most wonderful. For from that day she was
- never anything like so disagreeable as she was before, and she sent
- a lovely silver tea-pot and a kind letter to Miss Peasmarsh when
- the pretty lady married the nice curate; just after Easter it was,
- and they went to Italy for their honeymoon.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 5
- THE TEMPLE
-
-
- 'I wish we could find the Phoenix,' said Jane. 'It's much better
- company than the carpet.'
-
- 'Beastly ungrateful, little kids are,' said Cyril.
-
- 'No, I'm not; only the carpet never says anything, and it's so
- helpless. It doesn't seem able to take care of itself. It gets
- sold, and taken into the sea, and things like that. You wouldn't
- catch the Phoenix getting sold.'
-
- It was two days after the bazaar. Every one was a little
- cross--some days are like that, usually Mondays, by the way. And
- this was a Monday.
-
- 'I shouldn't wonder if your precious Phoenix had gone off for
- good,' said Cyril; 'and I don't know that I blame it. Look at the
- weather!'
-
- 'It's not worth looking at,' said Robert. And indeed it wasn't.
-
- 'The Phoenix hasn't gone--I'm sure it hasn't,' said Anthea. 'I'll
- have another look for it.'
-
- Anthea looked under tables and chairs, and in boxes and baskets, in
- mother's work-bag and father's portmanteau, but still the Phoenix
- showed not so much as the tip of one shining feather.
-
- Then suddenly Robert remembered how the whole of the Greek
- invocation song of seven thousand lines had been condensed by him
- into one English hexameter, so he stood on the carpet and chanted--
-
- 'Oh, come along, come along, you good old beautiful Phoenix,'
-
- and almost at once there was a rustle of wings down the kitchen
- stairs, and the Phoenix sailed in on wide gold wings.
-
- 'Where on earth HAVE you been?' asked Anthea. 'I've looked
- everywhere for you.'
-
- 'Not EVERYWHERE,' replied the bird, 'because you did not look in
- the place where I was. Confess that that hallowed spot was
- overlooked by you.'
-
- 'WHAT hallowed spot?' asked Cyril, a little impatiently, for time
- was hastening on, and the wishing carpet still idle.
-
- 'The spot,' said the Phoenix, 'which I hallowed by my golden
- presence was the Lutron.'
-
- 'The WHAT?'
-
- 'The bath--the place of washing.'
-
- 'I'm sure you weren't,' said Jane. 'I looked there three times and
- moved all the towels.'
-
- 'I was concealed,' said the Phoenix, 'on the summit of a metal
- column--enchanted, I should judge, for it felt warm to my golden
- toes, as though the glorious sun of the desert shone ever upon it.'
-
- 'Oh, you mean the cylinder,' said Cyril: 'it HAS rather a
- comforting feel, this weather. And now where shall we go?'
-
- And then, of course, the usual discussion broke out as to where
- they should go and what they should do. And naturally, every one
- wanted to do something that the others did not care about.
-
- 'I am the eldest,' Cyril remarked, 'let's go to the North Pole.'
-
- 'This weather! Likely!' Robert rejoined. 'Let's go to the
- Equator.'
-
- 'I think the diamond mines of Golconda would be nice,' said Anthea;
- 'don't you agree, Jane?'
-
- 'No, I don't,' retorted Jane, 'I don't agree with you. I don't
- agree with anybody.'
-
- The Phoenix raised a warning claw.
-
- 'If you cannot agree among yourselves, I fear I shall have to leave
- you,' it said.
-
- 'Well, where shall we go? You decide!' said all.
-
- 'If I were you,' said the bird, thoughtfully, 'I should give the
- carpet a rest. Besides, you'll lose the use of your legs if you go
- everywhere by carpet. Can't you take me out and explain your ugly
- city to me?'
-
- 'We will if it clears up,' said Robert, without enthusiasm. 'Just
- look at the rain. And why should we give the carpet a rest?'
-
- 'Are you greedy and grasping, and heartless and selfish?' asked the
- bird, sharply.
-
- 'NO!' said Robert, with indignation.
-
- 'Well then!' said the Phoenix. 'And as to the rain--well, I am not
- fond of rain myself. If the sun knew _I_ was here--he's very fond of
- shining on me because I look so bright and golden. He always says
- I repay a little attention. Haven't you some form of words
- suitable for use in wet weather?'
-
- 'There's "Rain, rain, go away,"' said Anthea; 'but it never DOES
- go.'
-
- 'Perhaps you don't say the invocation properly,' said the bird.
-
- 'Rain, rain, go away,
- Come again another day,
- Little baby wants to play,'
-
- said Anthea.
-
- 'That's quite wrong; and if you say it in that sort of dull way, I
- can quite understand the rain not taking any notice. You should
- open the window and shout as loud as you can--
-
- 'Rain, rain, go away,
- Come again another day;
- Now we want the sun, and so,
- Pretty rain, be kind and go!
-
- 'You should always speak politely to people when you want them to
- do things, and especially when it's going away that you want them
- to do. And to-day you might add--
-
- 'Shine, great sun, the lovely Phoe-
- Nix is here, and wants to be
- Shone on, splendid sun, by thee!'
-
- 'That's poetry!' said Cyril, decidedly.
-
- 'It's like it,' said the more cautious Robert.
-
- 'I was obliged to put in "lovely",' said the Phoenix, modestly, 'to
- make the line long enough.'
-
- 'There are plenty of nasty words just that length,' said Jane; but
- every one else said 'Hush!' And then they opened the window and
- shouted the seven lines as loud as they could, and the Phoenix said
- all the words with them, except 'lovely', and when they came to
- that it looked down and coughed bashfully.
-
- The rain hesitated a moment and then went away.
-
- 'There's true politeness,' said the Phoenix, and the next moment it
- was perched on the window-ledge, opening and shutting its radiant
- wings and flapping out its golden feathers in such a flood of
- glorious sunshine as you sometimes have at sunset in autumn time.
- People said afterwards that there had not been such sunshine in
- December for years and years and years.
-
- 'And now,' said the bird, 'we will go out into the city, and you
- shall take me to see one of my temples.'
-
- 'Your temples?'
-
- 'I gather from the carpet that I have many temples in this land.'
-
- 'I don't see how you CAN find anything out from it,' said Jane: 'it
- never speaks.'
-
- 'All the same, you can pick up things from a carpet,' said the
- bird; 'I've seen YOU do it. And I have picked up several pieces of
- information in this way. That papyrus on which you showed me my
- picture--I understand that it bears on it the name of the street of
- your city in which my finest temple stands, with my image graved in
- stone and in metal over against its portal.'
-
- 'You mean the fire insurance office,' said Robert. 'It's not
- really a temple, and they don't--'
-
- 'Excuse me,' said the Phoenix, coldly, 'you are wholly misinformed.
- It IS a temple, and they do.'
-
- 'Don't let's waste the sunshine,' said Anthea; 'we might argue as
- we go along, to save time.'
-
- So the Phoenix consented to make itself a nest in the breast of
- Robert's Norfolk jacket, and they all went out into the splendid
- sunshine. The best way to the temple of the Phoenix seemed to be
- to take the tram, and on the top of it the children talked, while
- the Phoenix now and then put out a wary beak, cocked a cautious
- eye, and contradicted what the children were saying.
-
- It was a delicious ride, and the children felt how lucky they were
- to have had the money to pay for it. They went with the tram as
- far as it went, and when it did not go any farther they stopped
- too, and got off. The tram stops at the end of the Gray's Inn
- Road, and it was Cyril who thought that one might well find a short
- cut to the Phoenix Office through the little streets and courts
- that lie tightly packed between Fetter Lane and Ludgate Circus. Of
- course, he was quite mistaken, as Robert told him at the time, and
- afterwards Robert did not forbear to remind his brother how he had
- said so. The streets there were small and stuffy and ugly, and
- crowded with printers' boys and binders' girls coming out from
- work; and these stared so hard at the pretty red coats and caps of
- the sisters that they wished they had gone some other way. And the
- printers and binders made very personal remarks, advising Jane to
- get her hair cut, and inquiring where Anthea had bought that hat.
- Jane and Anthea scorned to reply, and Cyril and Robert found that
- they were hardly a match for the rough crowd. They could think of
- nothing nasty enough to say. They turned a corner sharply, and
- then Anthea pulled Jane into an archway, and then inside a door;
- Cyril and Robert quickly followed, and the jeering crowd passed by
- without seein them.
-
- Anthea drew a long breath.
-
- 'How awful!' she said. 'I didn't know there were such people,
- except in books.'
-
- 'It was a bit thick; but it's partly you girls' fault, coming out
- in those flashy coats.'
-
- 'We thought we ought to, when we were going out with the Phoenix,'
- said Jane; and the bird said, 'Quite right, too'--and incautiously
- put out his head to give her a wink of encouragement.
-
- And at the same instant a dirty hand reached through the grim
- balustrade of the staircase beside them and clutched the Phoenix,
- and a hoarse voice said--
-
- 'I say, Urb, blowed if this ain't our Poll parrot what we lost.
- Thank you very much, lidy, for bringin' 'im home to roost.'
-
- The four turned swiftly. Two large and ragged boys were crouched
- amid the dark shadows of the stairs. They were much larger than
- Robert and Cyril, and one of them had snatched the Phoenix away and
- was holding it high above their heads.
-
- 'Give me that bird,' said Cyril, sternly: 'it's ours.'
-
- 'Good arternoon, and thankin' you,' the boy went on, with maddening
- mockery. 'Sorry I can't give yer tuppence for yer trouble--but
- I've 'ad to spend my fortune advertising for my vallyable bird in
- all the newspapers. You can call for the reward next year.'
-
- 'Look out, Ike,' said his friend, a little anxiously; 'it 'ave a
- beak on it.'
-
- 'It's other parties as'll have the Beak on to 'em presently,' said
- Ike, darkly, 'if they come a-trying to lay claims on my Poll
- parrot. You just shut up, Urb. Now then, you four little gells,
- get out er this.'
-
- 'Little girls!' cried Robert. 'I'll little girl you!'
-
- He sprang up three stairs and hit out.
-
- There was a squawk--the most bird-like noise any one had ever heard
- from the Phoenix--and a fluttering, and a laugh in the darkness,
- and Ike said--
-
- 'There now, you've been and gone and strook my Poll parrot right in
- the fevvers--strook 'im something crool, you 'ave.'
-
- Robert stamped with fury. Cyril felt himself growing pale with
- rage, and with the effort of screwing up his brain to make it
- clever enough to think of some way of being even with those boys.
- Anthea and Jane were as angry as the boys, but it made them want to
- cry. Yet it was Anthea who said--
-
- 'Do, PLEASE, let us have the bird.'
-
- 'Dew, PLEASE, get along and leave us an' our bird alone.'
-
- 'If you don't,' said Anthea, 'I shall fetch the police.'
-
- 'You better!' said he who was named Urb. 'Say, Ike, you twist the
- bloomin' pigeon's neck; he ain't worth tuppence.'
-
- 'Oh, no,' cried Jane, 'don't hurt it. Oh, don't; it is such a
- pet.'
-
- 'I won't hurt it,' said Ike; 'I'm 'shamed of you, Urb, for to think
- of such a thing. Arf a shiner, miss, and the bird is yours for
- life.'
-
- 'Half a WHAT?' asked Anthea.
-
- 'Arf a shiner, quid, thick 'un--half a sov, then.'
-
- 'I haven't got it--and, besides, it's OUR bird,' said Anthea.
-
- 'Oh, don't talk to him,' said Cyril and then Jane said suddenly--
-
- 'Phoenix--dear Phoenix, we can't do anything. YOU must manage it.'
-
- 'With pleasure,' said the Phoenix--and Ike nearly dropped it in his
- amazement.
-
- 'I say, it do talk, suthin' like,' said he.
-
- 'Youths,' said the Phoenix, 'sons of misfortune, hear my words.'
-
- 'My eyes!' said Ike.
-
- 'Look out, Ike,' said Urb, 'you'll throttle the joker--and I see at
- wunst 'e was wuth 'is weight in flimsies.'00
-
- 'Hearken, O Eikonoclastes, despiser of sacred images--and thou,
- Urbanus, dweller in the sordid city. Forbear this adventure lest
- a worse thing befall.'
-
- 'Luv' us!' said Ike, 'ain't it been taught its schoolin' just!'
-
- 'Restore me to my young acolytes and escape unscathed. Retain
- me--and--'
-
- 'They must ha' got all this up, case the Polly got pinched,' said
- Ike. 'Lor' lumme, the artfulness of them young uns!'
-
- 'I say, slosh 'em in the geseech and get clear off with the swag's
- wot I say,' urged Herbert.
-
- 'Right O,' said Isaac.
-
- 'Forbear,' repeated the Phoenix, sternly. 'Who pinched the click
- off of the old bloke in Aldermanbury?' it added, in a changed tone.
-
- 'Who sneaked the nose-rag out of the young gell's 'and in Bell
- Court? Who--'
-
- 'Stow it,' said Ike. 'You! ugh! yah!--leave go of me. Bash him
- off, Urb; 'e'll have my bloomin' eyes outer my ed.'
-
- There were howls, a scuffle, a flutter; Ike and Urb fled up the
- stairs, and the Phoenix swept out through the doorway. The
- children followed and the Phoenix settled on Robert, 'like a
- butterfly on a rose,' as Anthea said afterwards, and wriggled into
- the breast of his Norfolk jacket, 'like an eel into mud,' as Cyril
- later said.
-
- 'Why ever didn't you burn him? You could have, couldn't you?'
- asked Robert, when the hurried flight through the narrow courts had
- ended in the safe wideness of Farringdon Street.
-
- 'I could have, of course,' said the bird, 'but I didn't think it
- would be dignified to allow myself to get warm about a little thing
- like that. The Fates, after all, have not been illiberal to me.
- I have a good many friends among the London sparrows, and I have a
- beak and claws.'
-
- These happenings had somewhat shaken the adventurous temper of the
- children, and the Phoenix had to exert its golden self to hearten
- them up.
-
- Presently the children came to a great house in Lombard Street, and
- there, on each side of the door, was the image of the Phoenix
- carved in stone, and set forth on shining brass were the words--
-
- PHOENIX FIRE OFFICE
-
-
- 'One moment,' said the bird. 'Fire? For altars, I suppose?'
-
- '_I_ don't know,' said Robert; he was beginning to feel shy, and that
- always made him rather cross.
-
- 'Oh, yes, you do,' Cyril contradicted. 'When people's houses are
- burnt down the Phoenix gives them new houses. Father told me; I
- asked him.'
-
- 'The house, then, like the Phoenix, rises from its ashes? Well
- have my priests dealt with the sons of men!'
-
- 'The sons of men pay, you know,' said Anthea; 'but it's only a
- little every year.'
-
- 'That is to maintain my priests,' said the bird, 'who, in the hour
- of affliction, heal sorrows and rebuild houses. Lead on; inquire
- for the High Priest. I will not break upon them too suddenly in
- all my glory. Noble and honour-deserving are they who make as
- nought the evil deeds of the lame-footed and unpleasing
- Hephaestus.'
-
- 'I don't know what you're talking about, and I wish you wouldn't
- muddle us with new names. Fire just happens. Nobody does it--not
- as a deed, you know,' Cyril explained. 'If they did the Phoenix
- wouldn't help them, because its a crime to set fire to things.
- Arsenic, or something they call it, because it's as bad as
- poisoning people. The Phoenix wouldn't help THEM--father told me
- it wouldn't.'
-
- 'My priests do well,' said the Phoenix. 'Lead on.'
-
- 'I don't know what to say,' said Cyril; and the Others said the
- same.
-
- 'Ask for the High Priest,' said the Phoenix. 'Say that you have a
- secret to unfold that concerns my worship, and he will lead you to
- the innermost sanctuary.'
-
- So the children went in, all four of them, though they didn't like
- it, and stood in a large and beautiful hall adorned with Doulton
- tiles, like a large and beautiful bath with no water in it, and
- stately pillars supporting the roof. An unpleasing representation
- of the Phoenix in brown pottery disfigured one wall. There were
- counters and desks of mahogany and brass, and clerks bent over the
- desks and walked behind the counters. There was a great clock over
- an inner doorway.
-
- 'Inquire for the High Priest,' whispered the Phoenix.
-
- An attentive clerk in decent black, who controlled his mouth but
- not his eyebrows, now came towards them. He leaned forward on the
- counter, and the children thought he was going to say, 'What can I
- have the pleasure of showing you?' like in a draper's; instead of
- which the young man said--
-
- 'And what do YOU want?'
-
- 'We want to see the High Priest.'
-
- 'Get along with you,' said the young man.
-
- An elder man, also decent in black coat, advanced.
-
- 'Perhaps it's Mr Blank' (not for worlds would I give the name).
- 'He's a Masonic High Priest, you know.'
-
- A porter was sent away to look for Mr Asterisk (I cannot give his
- name), and the children were left there to look on and be looked on
- by all the gentlemen at the mahogany desks. Anthea and Jane
- thought that they looked kind. The boys thought they stared, and
- that it was like their cheek.
-
- The porter returned with the news that Mr Dot Dash Dot (I dare not
- reveal his name) was out, but that Mr--
-
- Here a really delightful gentleman appeared. He had a beard and a
- kind and merry eye, and each one of the four knew at once that this
- was a man who had kiddies of his own and could understand what you
- were talking about. Yet it was a difficult thing to explain.
-
- 'What is it?' he asked. 'Mr'--he named the name which I will never
- reveal--'is out. Can I do anything?'
-
- 'Inner sanctuary,' murmured the Phoenix.
-
- 'I beg your pardon,' said the nice gentleman, who thought it was
- Robert who had spoken.
-
- 'We have something to tell you,' said Cyril, 'but'--he glanced at
- the porter, who was lingering much nearer than he need have
- done--'this is a very public place.'
-
- The nice gentleman laughed.
-
- 'Come upstairs then,' he said, and led the way up a wide and
- beautiful staircase. Anthea says the stairs were of white marble,
- but I am not sure. On the corner-post of the stairs, at the top,
- was a beautiful image of the Phoenix in dark metal, and on the wall
- at each side was a flat sort of image of it.
-
- The nice gentleman led them into a room where the chairs, and even
- the tables, were covered with reddish leather. He looked at the
- children inquiringly.
-
- 'Don't be frightened,' he said; 'tell me exactly what you want.'
-
- 'May I shut the door?' asked Cyril.
-
- The gentleman looked surprised, but he shut the door.
-
- 'Now,' said Cyril, firmly, 'I know you'll be awfully surprised, and
- you'll think it's not true and we are lunatics; but we aren't, and
- it is. Robert's got something inside his Norfolk--that's Robert,
- he's my young brother. Now don't be upset and have a fit or
- anything sir. Of course, I know when you called your shop the
- "Phoenix" you never thought there was one; but there is--and
- Robert's got it buttoned up against his chest!'
-
- 'If it's an old curio in the form of a Phoenix, I dare say the
- Board--' said the nice gentleman, as Robert began to fumble with
- his buttons.
-
- 'It's old enough,' said Anthea, 'going by what it says, but--'
-
- 'My goodness gracious!' said the gentleman, as the Phoenix, with
- one last wriggle that melted into a flutter, got out of its nest in
- the breast of Robert and stood up on the leather-covered table.
-
- 'What an extraordinarily fine bird!' he went on. 'I don't think I
- ever saw one just like it.'
-
- 'I should think not,' said the Phoenix, with pardonable pride. And
- the gentleman jumped.
-
- 'Oh, it's been taught to speak! Some sort of parrot, perhaps?'
-
- 'I am,' said the bird, simply, 'the Head of your House, and I have
- come to my temple to receive your homage. I am no parrot'--its
- beak curved scornfully--'I am the one and only Phoenix, and I
- demand the homage of my High Priest.'
-
- 'In the absence of our manager,' the gentleman began, exactly as
- though he were addressing a valued customer--'in the absence of our
- manager, I might perhaps be able--What am I saying?' He turned
- pale, and passed his hand across his brow. 'My dears,' he said,
- 'the weather is unusually warm for the time of year, and I don't
- feel quite myself. Do you know, for a moment I really thought that
- that remarkable bird of yours had spoken and said it was the
- Phoenix, and, what's more, that I'd believed it.'
-
- 'So it did, sir,' said Cyril, 'and so did you.'
-
- 'It really--Allow me.'
-
- A bell was rung. The porter appeared.
-
- 'Mackenzie,' said the gentleman, 'you see that golden bird?'
-
- 'Yes, sir.'
-
- The other breathed a sigh of relief.
-
- 'It IS real, then?'
-
- 'Yes, sir, of course, sir. You take it in your hand, sir,' said
- the porter, sympathetically, and reached out his hand to the
- Phoenix, who shrank back on toes curved with agitated indignation.
-
- 'Forbear!' it cried; 'how dare you seek to lay hands on me?'
-
- The porter saluted.
-
- 'Beg pardon, sir,' he said, 'I thought you was a bird.'
-
- 'I AM a bird--THE bird--the Phoenix.'
-
- 'Of course you are, sir,' said the porter. 'I see that the first
- minute, directly I got my breath, sir.'
-
- 'That will do,' said the gentleman. 'Ask Mr Wilson and Mr Sterry
- to step up here for a moment, please.'
-
- Mr Sterry and Mr Wilson were in their turn overcome by
- amazement--quickly followed by conviction. To the surprise of the
- children every one in the office took the Phoenix at its word, and
- after the first shock of surprise it seemed to be perfectly natural
- to every one that the Phoenix should be alive, and that, passing
- through London, it should call at its temple.
-
- 'We ought to have some sort of ceremony,' said the nicest
- gentleman, anxiously. 'There isn't time to summon the directors
- and shareholders--we might do that tomorrow, perhaps. Yes, the
- board-room would be best. I shouldn't like it to feel we hadn't
- done everything in our power to show our appreciation of its
- condescension in looking in on us in this friendly way.'
-
- The children could hardly believe their ears, for they had never
- thought that any one but themselves would believe in the Phoenix.
- And yet every one did; all the men in the office were brought in by
- twos and threes, and the moment the Phoenix opened its beak it
- convinced the cleverest of them, as well as those who were not so
- clever. Cyril wondered how the story would look in the papers next
- day. He seemed to see the posters in the streets:
-
- PHOENIX FIRE OFFICE
- THE PHOENIX AT ITS TEMPLE
- MEETING TO WELCOME IT
- DELIGHT OF THE MANAGER AND EVERYBODY.
-
- 'Excuse our leaving you a moment,' said the nice gentleman, and he
- went away with the others; and through the half-closed door the
- children could hear the sound of many boots on stairs, the hum of
- excited voices explaining, suggesting, arguing, the thumpy drag of
- heavy furniture being moved about.
-
- The Phoenix strutted up and down the leather-covered table, looking
- over its shoulder at its pretty back.
-
- 'You see what a convincing manner I have,' it said proudly.
-
- And now a new gentleman came in and said, bowing low--
-
- 'Everything is prepared--we have done our best at so short a
- notice; the meeting--the ceremony--will be in the board-room. Will
- the Honourable Phoenix walk--it is only a few steps--or would it
- like to be--would it like some sort of conveyance?'
-
- 'My Robert will bear me to the board-room, if that be the unlovely
- name of my temple's inmost court,' replied the bird.
-
- So they all followed the gentleman. There was a big table in the
- board-room, but it had been pushed right up under the long windows
- at one side, and chairs were arranged in rows across the room--like
- those you have at schools when there is a magic lantern on 'Our
- Eastern Empire', or on 'The Way We Do in the Navy'. The doors were
- of carved wood, very beautiful, with a carved Phoenix above.
- Anthea noticed that the chairs in the front rows were of the kind
- that her mother so loved to ask the price of in old furniture
- shops, and never could buy, because the price was always nearly
- twenty pounds each. On the mantelpiece were some heavy bronze
- candlesticks and a clock, and on the top of the clock was another
- image of the Phoenix.
-
- 'Remove that effigy,' said the Phoenix to the gentlemen who were
- there, and it was hastily taken down. Then the Phoenix fluttered
- to the middle of the mantelpiece and stood there, looking more
- golden than ever. Then every one in the house and the office came
- in--from the cashier to the women who cooked the clerks' dinners in
- the beautiful kitchen at the top of the house. And every one bowed
- to the Phoenix and then sat down in a chair.
-
- 'Gentlemen,' said the nicest gentleman, 'we have met here today--'
-
- The Phoenix was turning its golden beak from side to side.
-
- 'I don't notice any incense,' it said, with an injured sniff. A
- hurried consultation ended in plates being fetched from the
- kitchen. Brown sugar, sealing-wax, and tobacco were placed on
- these, and something from a square bottle was poured over it all.
- Then a match was applied. It was the only incense that was handy
- in the Phoenix office, and it certainly burned very briskly and
- smoked a great deal.
-
- 'We have met here today,' said the gentleman again, 'on an occasion
- unparalleled in the annals of this office. Our respected Phoenix--'
-
- 'Head of the House,' said the Phoenix, in a hollow voice.
-
- 'I was coming to that. Our respected Phoenix, the Head of this
- ancient House, has at length done us the honour to come among us.
- I think I may say, gentlemen, that we are not insensible to this
- honour, and that we welcome with no uncertain voice one whom we
- have so long desired to see in our midst.'
-
- Several of the younger clerks thought of saying 'Hear, hear,' but
- they feared it might seem disrespectful to the bird.
-
- 'I will not take up your time,' the speaker went on, 'by
- recapitulating the advantages to be derived from a proper use of
- our system of fire insurance. I know, and you know, gentlemen,
- that our aim has ever been to be worthy of that eminent bird whose
- name we bear, and who now adorns our mantelpiece with his presence.
- Three cheers, gentlemen, for the winged Head of the House!'
-
- The cheers rose, deafening. When they had died away the Phoenix
- was asked to say a few words.
-
- It expressed in graceful phrases the pleasure it felt in finding
- itself at last in its own temple.
-
- 'And,' it went on, 'You must not think me wanting in appreciation
- of your very hearty and cordial reception when I ask that an ode
- may be recited or a choric song sung. It is what I have always
- been accustomed to.'
-
- The four children, dumb witnesses of this wonderful scene, glanced
- a little nervously across the foam of white faces above the sea of
- black coats. It seemed to them that the Phoenix was really asking
- a little too much.
-
- 'Time presses,' said the Phoenix, 'and the original ode of
- invocation is long, as well as being Greek; and, besides, it's no
- use invoking me when here I am; but is there not a song in your own
- tongue for a great day such as this?'
-
- Absently the manager began to sing, and one by one the rest
- joined--
-
- 'Absolute security!
- No liability!
- All kinds of property
- insured against fire.
- Terms most favourable,
- Expenses reasonable,
- Moderate rates for annual
- Insurance.'
-
- 'That one is NOT my favourite,' interrupted the Phoenix, 'and I
- think you've forgotten part of it.'
-
- The manager hastily began another--
-
- 'O Golden Phoenix, fairest bird,
- The whole great world has often heard
- Of all the splendid things we do,
- Great Phoenix, just to honour you.'
-
- 'That's better,' said the bird.
- And every one sang--
-
- 'Class one, for private dwelling-house,
- For household goods and shops allows;
- Provided these are built of brick
- Or stone, and tiled and slated thick.'
-
- 'Try another verse,' said the Phoenix, 'further on.'
-
- And again arose the voices of all the clerks and employees and
- managers and secretaries and cooks--
- 'In Scotland our insurance yields
- The price of burnt-up stacks in fields.'
-
- 'Skip that verse,' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'Thatched dwellings and their whole contents
- We deal with--also with their rents;
- Oh, glorious Phoenix, look and see
- That these are dealt with in class three.
-
- 'The glories of your temple throng
- Too thick to go in any song;
- And we attend, O good and wise,
- To "days of grace" and merchandise.
-
- 'When people's homes are burned away
- They never have a cent to pay
- If they have done as all should do,
- O Phoenix, and have honoured you.
-
- 'So let us raise our voice and sing
- The praises of the Phoenix King.
- In classes one and two and three,
- Oh, trust to him, for kind is he!'
-
- 'I'm sure YOU'RE very kind,' said the Phoenix; 'and now we must be
- going. An thank you very much for a very pleasant time. May you
- all prosper as you deserve to do, for I am sure a nicer,
- pleasanter-spoken lot of temple attendants I have never met, and
- never wish to meet. I wish you all good-day!'
-
- It fluttered to the wrist of Robert and drew the four children from
- the room. The whole of the office staff followed down the wide
- stairs and filed into their accustomed places, and the two most
- important officials stood on the steps bowing till Robert had
- buttoned the golden bird in his Norfolk bosom, and it and he and
- the three other children were lost in the crowd.
-
- The two most important gentlemen looked at each other earnestly and
- strangely for a moment, and then retreated to those sacred inner
- rooms, where they toil without ceasing for the good of the House.
-
- And the moment they were all in their places--managers,
- secretaries, clerks, and porters--they all started, and each looked
- cautiously round to see if any one was looking at him. For each
- thought that he had fallen asleep for a few minutes, and had
- dreamed a very odd dream about the Phoenix and the board-room.
- And, of course, no one mentioned it to any one else, because going
- to sleep at your office is a thing you simply MUST NOT do.
-
- The extraordinary confusion of the board-room, with the remains of
- the incense in the plates, would have shown them at once that the
- visit of the Phoenix had been no dream, but a radiant reality, but
- no one went into the board-room again that day; and next day,
- before the office was opened, it was all cleaned and put nice and
- tidy by a lady whose business asking questions was not part of.
- That is why Cyril read the papers in vain on the next day and the
- day after that; because no sensible person thinks his dreams worth
- putting in the paper, and no one will ever own that he has been
- asleep in the daytime.
-
- The Phoenix was very pleased, but it decided to write an ode for
- itself. It thought the ones it had heard at its temple had been
- too hastily composed. Its own ode began--
-
- 'For beauty and for modest worth
- The Phoenix has not its equal on earth.'
-
- And when the children went to bed that night it was still trying to
- cut down the last line to the proper length without taking out any
- of what it wanted to say.
-
- That is what makes poetry so difficult.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 6
- DOING GOOD
-
-
- 'We shan't be able to go anywhere on the carpet for a whole week,
- though,' said Robert.
-
- 'And I'm glad of it,' said Jane, unexpectedly.
-
- 'Glad?' said Cyril; 'GLAD?'
-
- It was breakfast-time, and mother's letter, telling them how they
- were all going for Christmas to their aunt's at Lyndhurst, and how
- father and mother would meet them there, having been read by every
- one, lay on the table, drinking hot bacon-fat with one corner and
- eating marmalade with the other.
-
- 'Yes, glad,' said Jane. 'I don't want any more things to happen
- just now. I feel like you do when you've been to three parties in
- a week--like we did at granny's once--and extras in between, toys
- and chocs and things like that. I want everything to be just real,
- and no fancy things happening at all.'
- 'I don't like being obliged to keep things from mother,' said
- Anthea. 'I don't know why, but it makes me feel selfish and mean.'
-
- 'If we could only get the mater to believe it, we might take her to
- the jolliest places,' said Cyril, thoughtfully. 'As it is, we've
- just got to be selfish and mean--if it is that--but I don't feel it
- is.'
-
- 'I KNOW it isn't, but I FEEL it is,' said Anthea, 'and that's just
- as bad.'
-
- 'It's worse,' said Robert; 'if you knew it and didn't feel it, it
- wouldn't matter so much.'
-
- 'That's being a hardened criminal, father says,' put in Cyril, and
- he picked up mother's letter and wiped its corners with his
- handkerchief, to whose colour a trifle of bacon-fat and marmalade
- made but little difference.
-
- 'We're going to-morrow, anyhow,' said Robert. 'Don't,' he added,
- with a good-boy expression on his face--'don't let's be ungrateful
- for our blessings; don't let's waste the day in saying how horrid
- it is to keep secrets from mother, when we all know Anthea tried
- all she knew to give her the secret, and she wouldn't take it.
- Let's get on the carpet and have a jolly good wish. You'll have
- time enough to repent of things all next week.'
-
- 'Yes,' said Cyril, 'let's. It's not really wrong.'
-
- 'Well, look here,' said Anthea. 'You know there's something about
- Christmas that makes you want to be good--however little you wish
- it at other times. Couldn't we wish the carpet to take us
- somewhere where we should have the chance to do some good and kind
- action? It would be an adventure just the same,' she pleaded.
-
- 'I don't mind,' said Cyril. 'We shan't know where we're going, and
- that'll be exciting. No one knows what'll happen. We'd best put
- on our outers in case--'
-
- 'We might rescue a traveller buried in the snow, like St Bernard
- dogs, with barrels round our necks,' said Jane, beginning to be
- interested.
-
- 'Or we might arrive just in time to witness a will being
- signed--more tea, please,' said Robert, 'and we should see the old
- man hide it away in the secret cupboard; and then, after long
- years, when the rightful heir was in despair, we should lead him to
- the hidden panel and--'
-
- 'Yes,' interrupted Anthea; 'or we might be taken to some freezing
- garret in a German town, where a poor little pale, sick child--'
-
- 'We haven't any German money,' interrupted Cyril, 'so THAT'S no go.
- What I should like would be getting into the middle of a war and
- getting hold of secret intelligence and taking it to the general,
- and he would make me a lieutenant or a scout, or a hussar.'
-
- When breakfast was cleared away, Anthea swept the carpet, and the
- children sat down on it, together with the Phoenix, who had been
- especially invited, as a Christmas treat, to come with them and
- witness the good and kind action they were about to do.
-
- Four children and one bird were ready, and the wish was wished.
-
- Every one closed its eyes, so as to feel the topsy-turvy swirl of
- the carpet's movement as little as possible.
-
- When the eyes were opened again the children found themselves on
- the carpet, and the carpet was in its proper place on the floor of
- their own nursery at Camden Town.
-
- 'I say,' said Cyril, 'here's a go!'
-
- 'Do you think it's worn out? The wishing part of it, I mean?'
- Robert anxiously asked the Phoenix.
-
- 'It's not that,' said the Phoenix; 'but--well--what did you
- wish--?'
-
- 'Oh! I see what it means,' said Robert, with deep disgust; 'it's
- like the end of a fairy story in a Sunday magazine. How perfectly
- beastly!'
-
- 'You mean it means we can do kind and good actions where we are?
- I see. I suppose it wants us to carry coals for the cook or make
- clothes for the bare heathens. Well, I simply won't. And the last
- day and everything. Look here!' Cyril spoke loudly and firmly.
- 'We want to go somewhere really interesting, where we have a chance
- of doing something good and kind; we don't want to do it here, but
- somewhere else. See? Now, then.'
-
- The obedient carpet started instantly, and the four children and
- one bird fell in a heap together, and as they fell were plunged in
- perfect darkness.
-
- 'Are you all there?' said Anthea, breathlessly, through the black
- dark. Every one owned that it was there.
-
- 'Where are we? Oh! how shivery and wet it is! Ugh!--oh!--I've put
- my hand in a puddle!'
-
- 'Has any one got any matches?' said Anthea, hopelessly. She felt
- sure that no one would have any.
-
- It was then that Robert, with a radiant smile of triumph that was
- quite wasted in the darkness, where, of course, no one could see
- anything, drew out of his pocket a box of matches, struck a match
- and lighted a candle--two candles. And every one, with its mouth
- open, blinked at the sudden light.
-
- 'Well done Bobs,' said his sisters, and even Cyril's natural
- brotherly feelings could not check his admiration of Robert's
- foresight.
-
- 'I've always carried them about ever since the lone tower day,'
- said Robert, with modest pride. 'I knew we should want them some
- day. I kept the secret well, didn't I?'
-
- 'Oh, yes,' said Cyril, with fine scorn. 'I found them the Sunday
- after, when I was feeling in your Norfolks for the knife you
- borrowed off me. But I thought you'd only sneaked them for Chinese
- lanterns, or reading in bed by.'
-
- 'Bobs,' said Anthea, suddenly, 'do you know where we are? This is
- the underground passage, and look there--there's the money and the
- money-bags, and everything.'
-
- By this time the ten eyes had got used to the light of the candles,
- and no one could help seeing that Anthea spoke the truth.
-
- 'It seems an odd place to do good and kind acts in, though,' said
- Jane. 'There's no one to do them to.'
-
- 'Don't you be too sure,' said Cyril; 'just round the next turning
- we might find a prisoner who has languished here for years and
- years, and we could take him out on our carpet and restore him to
- his sorrowing friends.'
-
- 'Of course we could,' said Robert, standing up and holding the
- candle above his head to see further off; 'or we might find the
- bones of a poor prisoner and take them to his friends to be buried
- properly--that's always a kind action in books, though I never
- could see what bones matter.'
-
- 'I wish you wouldn't,' said Jane.
-
- 'I know exactly where we shall find the bones, too,' Robert went
- on. 'You see that dark arch just along the passage? Well, just
- inside there--'
-
- 'If you don't stop going on like that,' said Jane, firmly, 'I shall
- scream, and then I'll faint--so now then!'
-
- 'And _I_ will, too,' said Anthea.
-
- Robert was not pleased at being checked in his flight of fancy.
-
- 'You girls will never be great writers,' he said bitterly. 'They
- just love to think of things in dungeons, and chains, and knobbly
- bare human bones, and--'
-
- Jane had opened her mouth to scream, but before she could decide
- how you began when you wanted to faint, the golden voice of the
- Phoenix spoke through the gloom.
-
- 'Peace!' it said; 'there are no bones here except the small but
- useful sets that you have inside you. And you did not invite me to
- come out with you to hear you talk about bones, but to see you do
- some good and kind action.'
-
- 'We can't do it here,' said Robert, sulkily.
-
- 'No,' rejoined the bird. 'The only thing we can do here, it seems,
- is to try to frighten our little sisters.'
-
- 'He didn't, really, and I'm not so VERY little,' said Jane, rather
- ungratefully.
-
- Robert was silent. It was Cyril who suggested that perhaps they
- had better take the money and go.
-
- 'That wouldn't be a kind act, except to ourselves; and it wouldn't
- be good, whatever way you look at it,' said Anthea, 'to take money
- that's not ours.'
-
- 'We might take it and spend it all on benefits to the poor and
- aged,' said Cyril.
-
- 'That wouldn't make it right to steal,' said Anthea, stoutly.
-
- 'I don't know,' said Cyril. They were all standing up now.
- 'Stealing is taking things that belong to some one else, and
- there's no one else.'
-
- 'It can't be stealing if--'
-
- 'That's right,' said Robert, with ironical approval; 'stand here
- all day arguing while the candles burn out. You'll like it awfully
- when it's all dark again--and bony.'
-
- 'Let's get out, then,' said Anthea. 'We can argue as we go.' So
- they rolled up the carpet and went. But when they had crept along
- to the place where the passage led into the topless tower they
- found the way blocked by a great stone, which they could not move.
-
- 'There!' said Robert. 'I hope you're satisfied!'
-
- 'Everything has two ends,' said the Phoenix, softly; 'even a
- quarrel or a secret passage.'
-
- So they turned round and went back, and Robert was made to go first
- with one of the candles, because he was the one who had begun to
- talk about bones. And Cyril carried the carpet.
-
- 'I wish you hadn't put bones into our heads,' said Jane, as they
- went along.
-
- 'I didn't; you always had them. More bones than brains,' said
- Robert.
-
- The passage was long, and there were arches and steps and turnings
- and dark alcoves that the girls did not much like passing. The
- passage ended in a flight of steps. Robert went up them.
-
- Suddenly he staggered heavily back on to the following feet of
- Jane, and everybody screamed, 'Oh! what is it?'
-
- 'I've only bashed my head in,' said Robert, when he had groaned for
- some time; 'that's all. Don't mention it; I like it. The stairs
- just go right slap into the ceiling, and it's a stone ceiling. You
- can't do good and kind actions underneath a paving-stone.'
-
- 'Stairs aren't made to lead just to paving-stones as a general
- rule,' said the Phoenix. 'Put your shoulder to the wheel.'
-
- 'There isn't any wheel,' said the injured Robert, still rubbing his
- head.
-
- But Cyril had pushed past him to the top stair, and was already
- shoving his hardest against the stone above. Of course, it did not
- give in the least.
-
- 'If it's a trap-door--' said Cyril. And he stopped shoving and
- began to feel about with his hands.
-
- 'Yes, there is a bolt. I can't move it.'
-
- By a happy chance Cyril had in his pocket the oil-can of his
- father's bicycle; he put the carpet down at the foot of the stairs,
- and he lay on his back, with his head on the top step and his feet
- straggling down among his young relations, and he oiled the bolt
- till the drops of rust and oil fell down on his face. One even
- went into his mouth--open, as he panted with the exertion of
- keeping up this unnatural position. Then he tried again, but still
- the bolt would not move. So now he tied his handkerchief--the one
- with the bacon-fat and marmalade on it--to the bolt, and Robert's
- handkerchief to that, in a reef knot, which cannot come undone
- however much you pull, and, indeed, gets tighter and tighter the
- more you pull it. This must not be confused with a granny knot,
- which comes undone if you look at it. And then he and Robert
- pulled, and the girls put their arms round their brothers and
- pulled too, and suddenly the bolt gave way with a rusty scrunch,
- and they all rolled together to the bottom of the stairs--all but
- the Phoenix, which had taken to its wings when the pulling began.
-
- Nobody was hurt much, because the rolled-up carpet broke their
- fall; and now, indeed, the shoulders of the boys were used to some
- purpose, for the stone allowed them to heave it up. They felt it
- give; dust fell freely on them.
-
- 'Now, then,' cried Robert, forgetting his head and his temper,
- 'push all together. One, two, three!'
-
- The stone was heaved up. It swung up on a creaking, unwilling
- hinge, and showed a growing oblong of dazzling daylight; and it
- fell back with a bang against something that kept it upright.
- Every one climbed out, but there was not room for every one to
- stand comfortably in the little paved house where they found
- themselves, so when the Phoenix had fluttered up from the darkness
- they let the stone down, and it closed like a trap-door, as indeed
- it was.
-
- You can have no idea how dusty and dirty the children were.
- Fortunately there was no one to see them but each other. The place
- they were in was a little shrine, built on the side of a road that
- went winding up through yellow-green fields to the topless tower.
- Below them were fields and orchards, all bare boughs and brown
- furrows, and little houses and gardens. The shrine was a kind of
- tiny chapel with no front wall--just a place for people to stop and
- rest in and wish to be good. So the Phoenix told them. There was
- an image that had once been brightly coloured, but the rain and
- snow had beaten in through the open front of the shrine, and the
- poor image was dull and weather-stained. Under it was written: 'St
- Jean de Luz. Priez pour nous.' It was a sad little place, very
- neglected and lonely, and yet it was nice, Anthea thought, that
- poor travellers should come to this little rest-house in the hurry
- and worry of their journeyings and be quiet for a few minutes, and
- think about being good. The thought of St Jean de Luz--who had, no
- doubt, in his time, been very good and kind--made Anthea want more
- than ever to do something kind and good.
-
- 'Tell us,' she said to the Phoenix, 'what is the good and kind
- action the carpet brought us here to do?'
-
- 'I think it would be kind to find the owners of the treasure and
- tell them about it,' said Cyril.
-
- 'And give it them ALL?' said Jane.
-
- 'Yes. But whose is it?'
-
- 'I should go to the first house and ask the name of the owner of
- the castle,' said the golden bird, and really the idea seemed a
- good one.
-
- They dusted each other as well as they could and went down the
- road. A little way on they found a tiny spring, bubbling out of
- the hillside and falling into a rough stone basin surrounded by
- draggled hart's-tongue ferns, now hardly green at all. Here the
- children washed their hands and faces and dried them on their
- pocket-handkerchiefs, which always, on these occasions, seem
- unnaturally small. Cyril's and Robert's handkerchiefs, indeed,
- rather undid the effects of the wash. But in spite of this the
- party certainly looked cleaner than before.
-
- The first house they came to was a little white house with green
- shutters and a slate roof. It stood in a prim little garden, and
- down each side of the neat path were large stone vases for flowers
- to grow in; but all the flowers were dead now.
-
- Along one side of the house was a sort of wide veranda, built of
- poles and trellis-work, and a vine crawled all over it. It was
- wider than our English verandas, and Anthea thought it must look
- lovely when the green leaves and the grapes were there; but now
- there were only dry, reddish-brown stalks and stems, with a few
- withered leaves caught in them.
-
- The children walked up to the front door. It was green and narrow.
- A chain with a handle hung beside it, and joined itself quite
- openly to a rusty bell that hung under the porch. Cyril had pulled
- the bell and its noisy clang was dying away before the terrible
- thought came to all. Cyril spoke it.
-
- 'My hat!' he breathed. 'We don't know any French!'
-
- At this moment the door opened. A very tall, lean lady, with pale
- ringlets like whitey-brown paper or oak shavings, stood before
- them. She had an ugly grey dress and a black silk apron. Her eyes
- were small and grey and not pretty, and the rims were red, as
- though she had been crying.
-
- She addressed the party in something that sounded like a foreign
- language, and ended with something which they were sure was a
- question. Of course, no one could answer it.
-
- 'What does she say?' Robert asked, looking down into the hollow of
- his jacket, where the Phoenix was nestling. But before the Phoenix
- could answer, the whitey-brown lady's face was lighted up by a most
- charming smile.
-
- 'You--you ar-r-re fr-r-rom the England!' she cried. 'I love so
- much the England. Mais entrez--entrez donc tous! Enter,
- then--enter all. One essuyes his feet on the carpet.' She pointed
- to the mat.
-
- 'We only wanted to ask--'
-
- 'I shall say you all that what you wish,' said the lady. 'Enter
- only!'
-
- So they all went in, wiping their feet on a very clean mat, and
- putting the carpet in a safe corner of the veranda.
-
- 'The most beautiful days of my life,' said the lady, as she shut
- the door, 'did pass themselves in England. And since long time I
- have not heard an English voice to repeal me the past.'
-
- This warm welcome embarrassed every one, but most the boys, for the
- floor of the hall was of such very clean red and white tiles, and
- the floor of the sitting-room so very shiny--like a black
- looking-glass--that each felt as though he had on far more boots
- than usual, and far noisier.
-
- There was a wood fire, very small and very bright, on the
- hearth--neat little logs laid on brass fire-dogs. Some portraits
- of powdered ladies and gentlemen hung in oval frames on the pale
- walls. There were silver candlesticks on the mantelpiece, and
- there were chairs and a table, very slim and polite, with slender
- legs. The room was extremely bare, but with a bright foreign
- bareness that was very cheerful, in an odd way of its own.
- At the end of the polished table a very un-English little boy sat
- on a footstool in a high-backed, uncomfortable-looking chair. He
- wore black velvet, and the kind of collar--all frills and lacey--
- that Robert would rather have died than wear; but then the little
- French boy was much younger than Robert.
-
- 'Oh, how pretty!' said every one. But no one meant the little
- French boy, with the velvety short knickerbockers and the velvety
- short hair.
-
- What every one admired was a little, little Christmas-tree, very
- green, and standing in a very red little flower-pot, and hung round
- with very bright little things made of tinsel and coloured paper.
- There were tiny candles on the tree, but they were not lighted yet.
-
- 'But yes--is it not that it is genteel?' said the lady. 'Sit down
- you then, and let us see.'
-
- The children sat down in a row on the stiff chairs against the
- wall, and the lady lighted a long, slim red taper at the wood
- flame, and then she drew the curtains and lit the little candles,
- and when they were all lighted the little French boy suddenly
- shouted, 'Bravo, ma tante! Oh, que c'est gentil,' and the English
- children shouted 'Hooray!'
-
- Then there was a struggle in the breast of Robert, and out
- fluttered the Phoenix--spread his gold wings, flew to the top of
- the Christmas-tree, and perched there.
-
- 'Ah! catch it, then,' cried the lady; 'it will itself burn--your
- genteel parrakeet!'
-
- 'It won't,' said Robert, 'thank you.'
-
- And the little French boy clapped his clean and tidy hands; but the
- lady was so anxious that the Phoenix fluttered down and walked up
- and down on the shiny walnut-wood table.
-
- 'Is it that it talks?' asked the lady.
-
- And the Phoenix replied in excellent French. It said,
- 'Parfaitement, madame!'
-
- 'Oh, the pretty parrakeet,' said the lady. 'Can it say still of
- other things?'
-
- And the Phoenix replied, this time in English, 'Why are you sad so
- near Christmas-time?'
-
- The children looked at it with one gasp of horror and surprise, for
- the youngest of them knew that it is far from manners to notice
- that strangers have been crying, and much worse to ask them the
- reason of their tears. And, of course, the lady began to cry
- again, very much indeed, after calling the Phoenix a bird without
- a heart; and she could not find her handkerchief, so Anthea offered
- hers, which was still very damp and no use at all. She also hugged
- the lady, and this seemed to be of more use than the handkerchief,
- so that presently the lady stopped crying, and found her own
- handkerchief and dried her eyes, and called Anthea a cherished angel.
-
- 'I am sorry we came just when you were so sad,' said Anthea, 'but
- we really only wanted to ask you whose that castle is on the hill.'
-
- 'Oh, my little angel,' said the poor lady, sniffing, 'to-day and for
- hundreds of years the castle is to us, to our family. To-morrow it
- must that I sell it to some strangers--and my little Henri, who
- ignores all, he will not have never the lands paternal. But what
- will you? His father, my brother--Mr the Marquis--has spent much
- of money, and it the must, despite the sentiments of familial
- respect, that I admit that my sainted father he also--'
-
- 'How would you feel if you found a lot of money--hundreds and
- thousands of gold pieces?' asked Cyril.
-
- The lady smiled sadly.
-
- 'Ah! one has already recounted to you the legend?' she said. 'It
- is true that one says that it is long time; oh! but long time, one
- of our ancestors has hid a treasure--of gold, and of gold, and of
- gold--enough to enrich my little Henri for the life. But all that,
- my children, it is but the accounts of fays--'
-
- 'She means fairy stories,' whispered the Phoenix to Robert. 'Tell
- her what you have found.'
-
- So Robert told, while Anthea and Jane hugged the lady for fear she
- should faint for joy, like people in books, and they hugged her
- with the earnest, joyous hugs of unselfish delight.
-
- 'It's no use explaining how we got in,' said Robert, when he had
- told of the finding of the treasure, 'because you would find it a
- little difficult to understand, and much more difficult to believe.
- But we can show you where the gold is and help you to fetch it
- away.'
-
- The lady looked doubtfully at Robert as she absently returned the
- hugs of the girls.
-
- 'No, he's not making it up,' said Anthea; 'it's true, TRUE,
- TRUE!--and we are so glad.'
-
- 'You would not be capable to torment an old woman?' she said; 'and
- it is not possible that it be a dream.'
-
- 'It really IS true,' said Cyril; 'and I congratulate you very
- much.'
-
- His tone of studied politeness seemed to convince more than the
- raptures of the others.
-
- 'If I do not dream,' she said, 'Henri come to Manon--and you--you
- shall come all with me to Mr the Curate. Is it not?'
-
- Manon was a wrinkled old woman with a red and yellow handkerchief
- twisted round her head. She took Henri, who was already sleepy
- with the excitement of his Christmas-tree and his visitors, and
- when the lady had put on a stiff black cape and a wonderful black
- silk bonnet and a pair of black wooden clogs over her black
- cashmere house-boots, the whole party went down the road to a
- little white house--very like the one they had left--where an old
- priest, with a good face, welcomed them with a politeness so great
- that it hid his astonishment.
-
- The lady, with her French waving hands and her shrugging French
- shoulders and her trembling French speech, told the story. And now
- the priest, who knew no English, shrugged HIS shoulders and waved
- HIS hands and spoke also in French.
-
- 'He thinks,' whispered the Phoenix, 'that her troubles have turned
- her brain. What a pity you know no French!'
-
- 'I do know a lot of French,' whispered Robert, indignantly; 'but
- it's all about the pencil of the gardener's son and the penknife of
- the baker's niece--nothing that anyone ever wants to say.'
-
- 'If _I_ speak,' the bird whispered, 'he'll think HE'S mad, too.'
-
- 'Tell me what to say.'
-
- 'Say "C'est vrai, monsieur. Venez donc voir,"' said the Phoenix;
- and then Robert earned the undying respect of everybody by suddenly
- saying, very loudly and distinctly--
-
- 'Say vray, mossoo; venny dong vwaw.'
-
- The priest was disappointed when he found that Robert's French
- began and ended with these useful words; but, at any rate, he saw
- that if the lady was mad she was not the only one, and he put on a
- big beavery hat, and got a candle and matches and a spade, and they
- all went up the hill to the wayside shrine of St John of Luz.
-
- 'Now,' said Robert, 'I will go first and show you where it is.'
-
- So they prised the stone up with a corner of the spade, and Robert
- did go first, and they all followed and found the golden treasure
- exactly as they had left it. And every one was flushed with the
- joy of performing such a wonderfully kind action.
-
- Then the lady and the priest clasped hands and wept for joy, as
- French people do, and knelt down and touched the money, and talked
- very fast and both together, and the lady embraced all the children
- three times each, and called them 'little garden angels,' and then
- she and the priest shook each other by both hands again, and
- talked, and talked, and talked, faster and more Frenchy than you
- would have believed possible. And the children were struck dumb
- with joy and pleasure.
-
- 'Get away NOW,' said the Phoenix softly, breaking in on the radiant
- dream.
-
- So the children crept away, and out through the little shrine, and
- the lady and the priest were so tearfully, talkatively happy that
- they never noticed that the guardian angels had gone.
-
- The 'garden angels' ran down the hill to the lady's little house,
- where they had left the carpet on the veranda, and they spread it
- out and said 'Home,' and no one saw them disappear, except little
- Henri, who had flattened his nose into a white button against the
- window-glass, and when he tried to tell his aunt she thought he had
- been dreaming. So that was all right.
-
- 'It is much the best thing we've done,' said Anthea, when they
- talked it over at tea-time. 'In the future we'll only do kind
- actions with the carpet.'
-
- 'Ahem!' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'I beg your pardon?' said Anthea.
-
- 'Oh, nothing,' said the bird. 'I was only thinking!'
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 7
- MEWS FROM PERSIA
-
-
- When you hear that the four children found themselves at Waterloo
- Station quite un-taken-care-of, and with no one to meet them, it
- may make you think that their parents were neither kind nor
- careful. But if you think this you will be wrong. The fact is,
- mother arranged with Aunt Emma that she was to meet the children at
- Waterloo, when they went back from their Christmas holiday at
- Lyndhurst. The train was fixed, but not the day. Then mother
- wrote to Aunt Emma, giving her careful instructions about the day
- and the hour, and about luggage and cabs and things, and gave the
- letter to Robert to post. But the hounds happened to meet near
- Rufus Stone that morning, and what is more, on the way to the meet
- they met Robert, and Robert met them, and instantly forgot all
- about posting Aunt Emma's letter, and never thought of it again
- until he and the others had wandered three times up and down the
- platform at Waterloo--which makes six in all--and had bumped
- against old gentlemen, and stared in the faces of ladies, and been
- shoved by people in a hurry, and 'by-your-leaved' by porters with
- trucks, and were quite, quite sure that Aunt Emma was not there.
- Then suddenly the true truth of what he had forgotten to do came
- home to Robert, and he said, 'Oh, crikey!' and stood still with his
- mouth open, and let a porter with a Gladstone bag in each hand and
- a bundle of umbrellas under one arm blunder heavily into him, and
- never so much as said, 'Where are you shoving to now?' or, 'Look
- out where you're going, can't you?' The heavier bag smote him at
- the knee, and he staggered, but he said nothing.
-
- When the others understood what was the matter I think they told
- Robert what they thought of him.
-
- 'We must take the train to Croydon,' said Anthea, 'and find Aunt
- Emma.'
-
- 'Yes,' said Cyril, 'and precious pleased those Jevonses would be to
- see us and our traps.'
-
- Aunt Emma, indeed, was staying with some Jevonses--very prim
- people. They were middle-aged and wore very smart blouses, and
- they were fond of matinees and shopping, and they did not care
- about children.
-
- 'I know MOTHER would be pleased to see us if we went back,' said
- Jane.
-
- 'Yes, she would, but she'd think it was not right to show she was
- pleased, because it's Bob's fault we're not met. Don't I know the
- sort of thing?' said Cyril. 'Besides, we've no tin. No; we've got
- enough for a growler among us, but not enough for tickets to the
- New Forest. We must just go home. They won't be so savage when
- they find we've really got home all right. You know auntie was
- only going to take us home in a cab.'
-
- 'I believe we ought to go to Croydon,' Anthea insisted.
-
- 'Aunt Emma would be out to a dead cert,' said Robert. 'Those
- Jevonses go to the theatre every afternoon, I believe. Besides,
- there's the Phoenix at home, AND the carpet. I votes we call a
- four-wheeled cabman.'
-
- A four-wheeled cabman was called--his cab was one of the
- old-fashioned kind with straw in the bottom--and he was asked by
- Anthea to drive them very carefully to their address. This he did,
- and the price he asked for doing so was exactly the value of the
- gold coin grandpapa had given Cyril for Christmas. This cast a
- gloom; but Cyril would never have stooped to argue about a cab-
- fare, for fear the cabman should think he was not accustomed to
- take cabs whenever he wanted them. For a reason that was something
- like this he told the cabman to put the luggage on the steps, and
- waited till the wheels of the growler had grittily retired before
- he rang the bell.
-
- 'You see,' he said, with his hand on the handle, 'we don't want
- cook and Eliza asking us before HIM how it is we've come home
- alone, as if we were babies.'
-
- Here he rang the bell; and the moment its answering clang was
- heard, every one felt that it would be some time before that bell
- was answered. The sound of a bell is quite different, somehow,
- when there is anyone inside the house who hears it. I can't tell
- you why that is--but so it is.
-
- 'I expect they're changing their dresses,' said Jane.
-
- 'Too late,' said Anthea, 'it must be past five. I expect Eliza's
- gone to post a letter, and cook's gone to see the time.'
-
- Cyril rang again. And the bell did its best to inform the
- listening children that there was really no one human in the house.
- They rang again and listened intently. The hearts of all sank low.
- It is a terrible thing to be locked out of your own house, on a
- dark, muggy January evening.
-
- 'There is no gas on anywhere,' said Jane, in a broken voice.
-
- 'I expect they've left the gas on once too often, and the draught
- blew it out, and they're suffocated in their beds. Father always
- said they would some day,' said Robert cheerfully.
-
- 'Let's go and fetch a policeman,' said Anthea, trembling.
-
- 'And be taken up for trying to be burglars--no, thank you,' said
- Cyril. 'I heard father read out of the paper about a young man who
- got into his own mother's house, and they got him made a burglar
- only the other day.'
-
- 'I only hope the gas hasn't hurt the Phoenix,' said Anthea. 'It
- said it wanted to stay in the bathroom cupboard, and I thought it
- would be all right, because the servants never clean that out. But
- if it's gone and got out and been choked by gas--And besides,
- directly we open the door we shall be choked, too. I KNEW we ought
- to have gone to Aunt Emma, at Croydon. Oh, Squirrel, I wish we
- had. Let's go NOW.'
-
- 'Shut up,' said her brother, briefly. 'There's some one rattling
- the latch inside.' Every one listened with all its ears, and every
- one stood back as far from the door as the steps would allow.
-
- The latch rattled, and clicked. Then the flap of the letter-box
- lifted itself--every one saw it by the flickering light of the
- gas-lamp that shone through the leafless lime-tree by the gate--a
- golden eye seemed to wink at them through the letter-slit, and a
- cautious beak whispered--
-
- 'Are you alone?'
-
- 'It's the Phoenix,' said every one, in a voice so joyous, and so
- full of relief, as to be a sort of whispered shout.
-
- 'Hush!' said the voice from the letter-box slit. 'Your slaves have
- gone a-merry-making. The latch of this portal is too stiff for my
- beak. But at the side--the little window above the shelf whereon
- your bread lies--it is not fastened.'
-
- 'Righto!' said Cyril.
-
- And Anthea added, 'I wish you'd meet us there, dear Phoenix.'
-
- The children crept round to the pantry window. It is at the side
- of the house, and there is a green gate labelled 'Tradesmen's
- Entrance', which is always kept bolted. But if you get one foot on
- the fence between you and next door, and one on the handle of the
- gate, you are over before you know where you are. This, at least,
- was the experience of Cyril and Robert, and even, if the truth must
- be told, of Anthea and Jane. So in almost no time all four were in
- the narrow gravelled passage that runs between that house and the
- next.
-
- Then Robert made a back, and Cyril hoisted himself up and got his
- knicker-bockered knee on the concrete window-sill. He dived into
- the pantry head first, as one dives into water, and his legs waved
- in the air as he went, just as your legs do when you are first
- beginning to learn to dive. The soles of his boots--squarish muddy
- patches--disappeared.
-
- 'Give me a leg up,' said Robert to his sisters.
-
- 'No, you don't,' said Jane firmly. 'I'm not going to be left
- outside here with just Anthea, and have something creep up behind
- us out of the dark. Squirrel can go and open the back door.'
-
- A light had sprung awake in the pantry. Cyril always said the
- Phoenix turned the gas on with its beak, and lighted it with a waft
- of its wing; but he was excited at the time, and perhaps he really
- did it himself with matches, and then forgot all about it. He let
- the others in by the back door. And when it had been bolted again
- the children went all over the house and lighted every single
- gas-jet they could find. For they couldn't help feeling that this
- was just the dark dreary winter's evening when an armed burglar
- might easily be expected to appear at any moment. There is nothing
- like light when you are afraid of burglars--or of anything else,
- for that matter.
-
- And when all the gas-jets were lighted it was quite clear that the
- Phoenix had made no mistake, and that Eliza and cook were really
- out, and that there was no one in the house except the four
- children, and the Phoenix, and the carpet, and the blackbeetles who
- lived in the cupboards on each side of the nursery fire-place.
- These last were very pleased that the children had come home again,
- especially when Anthea had lighted the nursery fire. But, as
- usual, the children treated the loving little blackbeetles with
- coldness and disdain.
-
- I wonder whether you know how to light a fire? I don't mean how to
- strike a match and set fire to the corners of the paper in a fire
- someone has laid ready, but how to lay and light a fire all by
- yourself. I will tell you how Anthea did it, and if ever you have
- to light one yourself you may remember how it is done. First, she
- raked out the ashes of the fire that had burned there a week
- ago--for Eliza had actually never done this, though she had had
- plenty of time. In doing this Anthea knocked her knuckle and made
- it bleed. Then she laid the largest and handsomest cinders in the
- bottom of the grate. Then she took a sheet of old newspaper (you
- ought never to light a fire with to-day's newspaper--it will not
- burn well, and there are other reasons against it), and tore it
- into four quarters, and screwed each of these into a loose ball,
- and put them on the cinders; then she got a bundle of wood and
- broke the string, and stuck the sticks in so that their front ends
- rested on the bars, and the back ends on the back of the paper
- balls. In doing this she cut her finger slightly with the string,
- and when she broke it, two of the sticks jumped up and hit her on
- the cheek. Then she put more cinders and some bits of coal--no
- dust. She put most of that on her hands, but there seemed to be
- enough left for her face. Then she lighted the edges of the paper
- balls, and waited till she heard the fizz-crack-crack-fizz of the
- wood as it began to burn. Then she went and washed her hands and
- face under the tap in the back kitchen.
-
- Of course, you need not bark your knuckles, or cut your finger, or
- bruise your cheek with wood, or black yourself all over; but
- otherwise, this is a very good way to light a fire in London. In
- the real country fires are lighted in a different and prettier way.
-
- But it is always good to wash your hands and face afterwards,
- wherever you are.
-
- While Anthea was delighting the poor little blackbeetles with the
- cheerful blaze, Jane had set the table for--I was going to say tea,
- but the meal of which I am speaking was not exactly tea. Let us
- call it a tea-ish meal. There was tea, certainly, for Anthea's
- fire blazed and crackled so kindly that it really seemed to be
- affectionately inviting the kettle to come and sit upon its lap.
- So the kettle was brought and tea made. But no milk could be
- found--so every one had six lumps of sugar to each cup instead.
- The things to eat, on the other hand, were nicer than usual. The
- boys looked about very carefully, and found in the pantry some cold
- tongue, bread, butter, cheese, and part of a cold pudding--very
- much nicer than cook ever made when they were at home. And in the
- kitchen cupboard was half a Christmassy cake, a pot of strawberry
- jam, and about a pound of mixed candied fruit, with soft crumbly
- slabs of delicious sugar in each cup of lemon, orange, or citron.
-
- It was indeed, as Jane said, 'a banquet fit for an Arabian Knight.'
-
- The Phoenix perched on Robert's chair, and listened kindly and
- politely to all they had to tell it about their visit to Lyndhurst,
- and underneath the table, by just stretching a toe down rather far,
- the faithful carpet could be felt by all--even by Jane, whose legs
- were very short.
-
- 'Your slaves will not return to-night,' said the Phoenix. 'They
- sleep under the roof of the cook's stepmother's aunt, who is, I
- gather, hostess to a large party to-night in honour of her
- husband's cousin's sister-in-law's mother's ninetieth birthday.'
-
- 'I don't think they ought to have gone without leave,' said Anthea,
- 'however many relations they have, or however old they are; but I
- suppose we ought to wash up.'
-
- 'It's not our business about the leave,' said Cyril, firmly, 'but
- I simply won't wash up for them. We got it, and we'll clear it
- away; and then we'll go somewhere on the carpet. It's not often we
- get a chance of being out all night. We can go right away to the
- other side of the equator, to the tropical climes, and see the sun rise
- over the great Pacific Ocean.'
-
- 'Right you are,' said Robert. 'I always did want to see the
- Southern Cross and the stars as big as gas-lamps.'
-
- 'DON'T go,' said Anthea, very earnestly, 'because I COULDN'T. I'm
- SURE mother wouldn't like us to leave the house and I should hate
- to be left here alone.'
-
- 'I'd stay with you,' said Jane loyally.
-
- 'I know you would,' said Anthea gratefully, 'but even with you I'd
- much rather not.'
-
- 'Well,' said Cyril, trying to be kind and amiable, 'I don't want
- you to do anything you think's wrong, BUT--'
-
- He was silent; this silence said many things.
-
- 'I don't see,' Robert was beginning, when Anthea interrupted--
-
- 'I'm quite sure. Sometimes you just think a thing's wrong, and
- sometimes you KNOW. And this is a KNOW time.'
-
- The Phoenix turned kind golden eyes on her and opened a friendly
- beak to say--
-
- 'When it is, as you say, a "know time", there is no more to be
- said. And your noble brothers would never leave you.'
-
- 'Of course not,' said Cyril rather quickly. And Robert said so
- too.
-
- 'I myself,' the Phoenix went on, 'am willing to help in any way
- possible. I will go personally--either by carpet or on the
- wing--and fetch you anything you can think of to amuse you during
- the evening. In order to waste no time I could go while you wash
- up.--Why,' it went on in a musing voice, 'does one wash up teacups
- and wash down the stairs?'
-
- 'You couldn't wash stairs up, you know,' said Anthea, 'unless you
- began at the bottom and went up feet first as you washed. I wish
- cook would try that way for a change.'
-
- 'I don't,' said Cyril, briefly. 'I should hate the look of her
- elastic-side boots sticking up.'
-
- 'This is mere trifling,' said the Phoenix. 'Come, decide what I
- shall fetch for you. I can get you anything you like.'
-
- But of course they couldn't decide. Many things were suggested--a
- rocking-horse, jewelled chessmen, an elephant, a bicycle, a
- motor-car, books with pictures, musical instruments, and many other
- things. But a musical instrument is agreeable only to the player,
- unless he has learned to play it really well; books are not
- sociable, bicycles cannot be ridden without going out of doors, and
- the same is true of motor-cars and elephants. Only two people can
- play chess at once with one set of chessmen (and anyway it's very
- much too much like lessons for a game), and only one can ride on a
- rocking-horse. Suddenly, in the midst of the discussion, the
- Phoenix spread its wings and fluttered to the floor, and from there
- it spoke.
-
- 'I gather,' it said, 'from the carpet, that it wants you to let it
- go to its old home, where it was born and brought up, and it will
- return within the hour laden with a number of the most beautiful
- and delightful products of its native land.'
-
- 'What IS its native land?'
-
- 'I didn't gather. But since you can't agree, and time is passing,
- and the tea-things are not washed down--I mean washed up--'
-
- 'I votes we do,' said Robert. 'It'll stop all this jaw, anyway.
- And it's not bad to have surprises. Perhaps it's a Turkey carpet,
- and it might bring us Turkish delight.'
-
- 'Or a Turkish patrol,' said Robert.
-
- 'Or a Turkish bath,' said Anthea.
-
- 'Or a Turkish towel,' said Jane.
-
- 'Nonsense,' Robert urged, 'it said beautiful and delightful, and
- towels and baths aren't THAT, however good they may be for you.
- Let it go. I suppose it won't give us the slip,' he added, pushing
- back his chair and standing up.
-
- 'Hush!' said the Phoenix; 'how can you? Don't trample on its
- feelings just because it's only a carpet.'
-
- 'But how can it do it--unless one of us is on it to do the
- wishing?' asked Robert. He spoke with a rising hope that it MIGHT
- be necessary for one to go and why not Robert? But the Phoenix
- quickly threw cold water on his new-born dream.
-
- 'Why, you just write your wish on a paper, and pin it on the
- carpet.'
-
- So a leaf was torn from Anthea's arithmetic book, and on it Cyril
- wrote in large round-hand the following:
-
-
- We wish you to go to your dear native home, and bring back the most
- beautiful and delightful productions of it you can--and not to be
- gone long, please.
- (Signed) CYRIL.
- ROBERT.
- ANTHEA.
- JANE.
-
-
- Then the paper was laid on the carpet.
-
- 'Writing down, please,' said the Phoenix; 'the carpet can't read a
- paper whose back is turned to it, any more than you can.'
-
- It was pinned fast, and the table and chairs having been moved, the
- carpet simply and suddenly vanished, rather like a patch of water
- on a hearth under a fierce fire. The edges got smaller and
- smaller, and then it disappeared from sight.
-
- 'It may take it some time to collect the beautiful and delightful
- things,' said the Phoenix. 'I should wash up--I mean wash down.'
-
- So they did. There was plenty of hot water left in the kettle, and
- every one helped--even the Phoenix, who took up cups by their
- handles with its clever claws and dipped them in the hot water, and
- then stood them on the table ready for Anthea to dry them. But the
- bird was rather slow, because, as it said, though it was not above
- any sort of honest work, messing about with dish-water was not
- exactly what it had been brought up to. Everything was nicely
- washed up, and dried, and put in its proper place, and the
- dish-cloth washed and hung on the edge of the copper to dry, and
- the tea-cloth was hung on the line that goes across the scullery.
- (If you are a duchess's child, or a king's, or a person of high
- social position's child, you will perhaps not know the difference
- between a dish-cloth and a tea-cloth; but in that case your nurse
- has been better instructed than you, and she will tell you all
- about it.) And just as eight hands and one pair of claws were being
- dried on the roller-towel behind the scullery door there came a
- strange sound from the other side of the kitchen wall--the side
- where the nursery was. It was a very strange sound, indeed--most
- odd, and unlike any other sounds the children had ever heard. At
- least, they had heard sounds as much like it as a toy engine's
- whistle is like a steam siren's.
-
- 'The carpet's come back,' said Robert; and the others felt that he
- was right.
-
- 'But what has it brought with it?' asked Jane. 'It sounds like
- Leviathan, that great beast.'
-
- 'It couldn't have been made in India, and have brought elephants?
- Even baby ones would be rather awful in that room,' said Cyril. 'I
- vote we take it in turns to squint through the keyhole.'
-
- They did--in the order of their ages. The Phoenix, being the
- eldest by some thousands of years, was entitled to the first peep.
- But--
-
- 'Excuse me,' it said, ruffling its golden feathers and sneezing
- softly; 'looking through keyholes always gives me a cold in my
- golden eyes.'
-
- So Cyril looked.
-
- 'I see something grey moving,' said he.
-
- 'It's a zoological garden of some sort, I bet,' said Robert, when
- he had taken his turn. And the soft rustling, bustling, ruffling,
- scuffling, shuffling, fluffling noise went on inside.
-
- '_I_ can't see anything,' said Anthea, 'my eye tickles so.'
-
- Then Jane's turn came, and she put her eye to the keyhole.
-
- 'It's a giant kitty-cat,' she said; 'and it's asleep all over the
- floor.'
-
- 'Giant cats are tigers--father said so.'
-
- 'No, he didn't. He said tigers were giant cats. It's not at all
- the same thing.'
-
- 'It's no use sending the carpet to fetch precious things for you if
- you're afraid to look at them when they come,' said the Phoenix,
- sensibly. And Cyril, being the eldest, said--
-
- 'Come on,' and turned the handle.
-
- The gas had been left full on after tea, and everything in the room
- could be plainly seen by the ten eyes at the door. At least, not
- everything, for though the carpet was there it was invisible,
- because it was completely covered by the hundred and ninety-nine
- beautiful objects which it had brought from its birthplace.
-
- 'My hat!' Cyril remarked. 'I never thought about its being a
- PERSIAN carpet.'
-
- Yet it was now plain that it was so, for the beautiful objects
- which it had brought back were cats--Persian cats, grey Persian
- cats, and there were, as I have said, 199 of them, and they were
- sitting on the carpet as close as they could get to each other.
- But the moment the children entered the room the cats rose and
- stretched, and spread and overflowed from the carpet to the floor,
- and in an instant the floor was a sea of moving, mewing
- pussishness, and the children with one accord climbed to the table,
- and gathered up their legs, and the people next door knocked on the
- wall--and, indeed, no wonder, for the mews were Persian and
- piercing.
-
- 'This is pretty poor sport,' said Cyril. 'What's the matter with
- the bounders?'
-
- 'I imagine that they are hungry,' said the Phoenix. 'If you were
- to feed them--'
-
- 'We haven't anything to feed them with,' said Anthea in despair,
- and she stroked the nearest Persian back. 'Oh, pussies, do be
- quiet--we can't hear ourselves think.'
-
- She had to shout this entreaty, for the mews were growing
- deafening, 'and it would take pounds' and pounds' worth of
- cat's-meat.'
-
- 'Let's ask the carpet to take them away,' said Robert. But the
- girls said 'No.'
-
- 'They are so soft and pussy,' said Jane.
-
- 'And valuable,' said Anthea, hastily. 'We can sell them for lots
- and lots of money.'
-
- 'Why not send the carpet to get food for them?' suggested the
- Phoenix, and its golden voice came harsh and cracked with the
- effort it had to be make to be heard above the increasing
- fierceness of the Persian mews.
-
- So it was written that the carpet should bring food for 199 Persian
- cats, and the paper was pinned to the carpet as before.
-
- The carpet seemed to gather itself together, and the cats dropped
- off it, as raindrops do from your mackintosh when you shake it.
- And the carpet disappeared.
-
- Unless you have had one-hundred and ninety-nine well-grown Persian
- cats in one small room, all hungry, and all saying so in
- unmistakable mews, you can form but a poor idea of the noise that now
- deafened the children and the Phoenix. The cats did not seem to have
- been at all properly brought up. They seemed to have no idea of its
- being a mistake in manners to ask for meals in a strange house--let
- alone to howl for them--and they mewed, and they mewed, and they
- mewed, and they mewed, till the children poked their fingers into their
- ears and waited in silent agony, wondering why the whole of Camden
- Town did not come knocking at the door to ask what was the matter, and
- only hoping that the food for the cats would come before the neighbours
- did--and before all the secret of the carpet and the Phoenix had to
- be given away beyond recall to an indignant neighbourhood.
-
- The cats mewed and mewed and twisted their Persian forms in and out
- and unfolded their Persian tails, and the children and the Phoenix
- huddled together on the table.
-
- The Phoenix, Robert noticed suddenly, was trembling.
-
- 'So many cats,' it said, 'and they might not know I was the
- Phoenix. These accidents happen so quickly. It quite un-mans me.'
-
- This was a danger of which the children had not thought.
-
- 'Creep in,' cried Robert, opening his jacket.
-
- And the Phoenix crept in--only just in time, for green eyes had
- glared, pink noses had sniffed, white whiskers had twitched, and as
- Robert buttoned his coat he disappeared to the waist in a wave of
- eager grey Persian fur. And on the instant the good carpet slapped
- itself down on the floor. And it was covered with rats--three hundred
- and ninety-eight of them, I believe, two for each cat.
-
- 'How horrible!' cried Anthea. 'Oh, take them away!'
-
- 'Take yourself away,' said the Phoenix, 'and me.'
-
- 'I wish we'd never had a carpet,' said Anthea, in tears.
-
- They hustled and crowded out of the door, and shut it, and locked
- it. Cyril, with great presence of mind, lit a candle and turned
- off the gas at the main.
-
- 'The rats'll have a better chance in the dark,' he said.
-
- The mewing had ceased. Every one listened in breathless silence.
- We all know that cats eat rats--it is one of the first things we
- read in our little brown reading books; but all those cats eating
- all those rats--it wouldn't bear thinking of.
-
- Suddenly Robert sniffed, in the silence of the dark kitchen, where
- the only candle was burning all on one side, because of the
- draught.
-
- 'What a funny scent!' he said.
-
- And as he spoke, a lantern flashed its light through the window of
- the kitchen, a face peered in, and a voice said--
-
- 'What's all this row about? You let me in.'
-
- It was the voice of the police!
-
- Robert tip-toed to the window, and spoke through the pane that had
- been a little cracked since Cyril accidentally knocked it with a
- walking-stick when he was playing at balancing it on his nose. (It
- was after they had been to a circus.)
-
- 'What do you mean?' he said. 'There's no row. You listen;
- everything's as quiet as quiet.' And indeed it was.
-
- The strange sweet scent grew stronger, and the Phoenix put out its
- beak.
-
- The policeman hesitated.
-
- 'They're MUSK-rats,' said the Phoenix. 'I suppose some cats eat
- them--but never Persian ones. What a mistake for a well-informed
- carpet to make! Oh, what a night we're having!'
-
- 'Do go away,' said Robert, nervously. 'We're
- just going to bed--that's our bedroom candle; there isn't any row.
- Everything's as quiet as a mouse.'
-
- A wild chorus of mews drowned his words, and with the mews were
- mingled the shrieks of the musk-rats. What had happened? Had the
- cats tasted them before deciding that they disliked the flavour?
-
- 'I'm a-coming in,' said the policeman. 'You've got a cat shut up
- there.'
-
- 'A cat,' said Cyril. 'Oh, my only aunt! A cat!'
-
- 'Come in, then,' said Robert. 'It's your own look out. I advise
- you not. Wait a shake, and I'll undo the side gate.'
-
- He undid the side gate, and the policeman, very cautiously, came
- in. And there in the kitchen, by the light of one candle, with the
- mewing and the screaming going like a dozen steam sirens, twenty
- waiting on motor-cars, and half a hundred squeaking pumps, four
- agitated voices shouted to the policeman four mixed and wholly
- different explanations of the very mixed events of the evening.
-
- Did you ever try to explain the simplest thing to a policeman?
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 8
- THE CATS, THE COW, AND THE BURGLAR
-
- The nursery was full of Persian cats and musk-rats that had been
- brought there by the wishing carpet. The cats were mewing and the
- musk-rats were squeaking so that you could hardly hear yourself
- speak. In the kitchen were the four children, one candle, a
- concealed Phoenix, and a very visible policeman.
-
- 'Now then, look here,' said the Policeman, very loudly, and he
- pointed his lantern at each child in turn, 'what's the meaning of
- this here yelling and caterwauling. I tell you you've got a cat
- here, and some one's a ill-treating of it. What do you mean by it,
- eh?'
-
- It was five to one, counting the Phoenix; but the policeman, who
- was one, was of unusually fine size, and the five, including the
- Phoenix, were small. The mews and the squeaks grew softer, and in
- the comparative silence, Cyril said--
-
- 'It's true. There are a few cats here. But we've not hurt them.
- It's quite the opposite. We've just fed them.'
-
- 'It don't sound like it,' said the policeman grimly.
-
- 'I daresay they're not REAL cats,' said Jane madly, perhaps they're
- only dream-cats.'
-
- 'I'll dream-cat you, my lady,' was the brief response of the force.
-
- 'If you understood anything except people who do murders and
- stealings and naughty things like that, I'd tell you all about it,'
- said Robert; 'but I'm certain you don't. You're not meant to shove
- your oar into people's private cat-keepings. You're only supposed
- to interfere when people shout "murder" and "stop thief" in the
- street. So there!'
-
- The policeman assured them that he should see about that; and at
- this point the Phoenix, who had been making itself small on the
- pot-shelf under the dresser, among the saucepan lids and the fish-
- kettle, walked on tip-toed claws in a noiseless and modest manner,
- and left the room unnoticed by any one.
-
- 'Oh, don't be so horrid,' Anthea was saying, gently and earnestly.
- 'We LOVE cats--dear pussy-soft things. We wouldn't hurt them for
- worlds. Would we, Pussy?'
-
- And Jane answered that of course they wouldn't. And still the
- policeman seemed unmoved by their eloquence.
-
- 'Now, look here,' he said, 'I'm a-going to see what's in that room
- beyond there, and--'
-
- His voice was drowned in a wild burst of mewing and squeaking. And
- as soon as it died down all four children began to explain at once;
- and though the squeaking and mewing were not at their very loudest,
- yet there was quite enough of both to make it very hard for the
- policeman to understand a single word of any of the four wholly
- different explanations now poured out to him.
-
- 'Stow it,' he said at last. 'I'm a-goin' into the next room in the
- execution of my duty. I'm a-goin' to use my eyes--my ears have
- gone off their chumps, what with you and them cats.'
-
- And he pushed Robert aside, and strode through the door.
-
- 'Don't say I didn't warn you,' said Robert.
-
- 'It's tigers REALLY,' said Jane. 'Father said so. I wouldn't go
- in, if I were you.'
-
- But the policeman was quite stony; nothing any one said seemed to
- make any difference to him. Some policemen are like this, I
- believe. He strode down the passage, and in another moment he
- would have been in the room with all the cats and all the rats
- (musk), but at that very instant a thin, sharp voice screamed from
- the street outside--
-
- 'Murder--murder! Stop thief!'
-
- The policeman stopped, with one regulation boot heavily poised in
- the air.
-
- 'Eh?' he said.
-
- And again the shrieks sounded shrilly and piercingly from the dark
- street outside.
-
- 'Come on,' said Robert. 'Come and look after cats while somebody's
- being killed outside.' For Robert had an inside feeling that told
- him quite plainly WHO it was that was screaming.
-
- 'You young rip,' said the policeman, 'I'll settle up with you
- bimeby.'
-
- And he rushed out, and the children heard his boots going weightily
- along the pavement, and the screams also going along, rather ahead
- of the policeman; and both the murder-screams and the policeman's
- boots faded away in the remote distance.
-
- Then Robert smacked his knickerbocker loudly with his palm, and
- said--
-
- 'Good old Phoenix! I should know its golden voice anywhere.'
-
- And then every one understood how cleverly the Phoenix had caught
- at what Robert had said about the real work of a policeman being to
- look after murderers and thieves, and not after cats, and all
- hearts were filled with admiring affection.
-
- 'But he'll come back,' said Anthea, mournfully, 'as soon as it
- finds the murderer is only a bright vision of a dream, and there
- isn't one at all really.'
-
- 'No he won't,' said the soft voice of the clever Phoenix, as it
- flew in. 'HE DOES NOT KNOW WHERE YOUR HOUSE IS. I heard him own
- as much to a fellow mercenary. Oh! what a night we are having!
- Lock the door, and let us rid ourselves of this intolerable smell
- of the perfume peculiar to the musk-rat and to the house of the
- trimmers of beards. If you'll excuse me, I will go to bed. I am
- worn out.'
-
- It was Cyril who wrote the paper that told the carpet to take away
- the rats and bring milk, because there seemed to be no doubt in any
- breast that, however Persian cats may be, they must like milk.
-
- 'Let's hope it won't be musk-milk,' said Anthea, in gloom, as she
- pinned the paper face-downwards on the carpet. 'Is there such a
- thing as a musk-cow?' she added anxiously, as the carpet shrivelled
- and vanished. 'I do hope not. Perhaps really it WOULD have been
- wiser to let the carpet take the cats away. It's getting quite
- late, and we can't keep them all night.'
-
- 'Oh, can't we?' was the bitter rejoinder of Robert, who had been
- fastening the side door. 'You might have consulted me,' he went
- on. 'I'm not such an idiot as some people.'
-
- 'Why, whatever--'
-
- 'Don't you see? We've jolly well GOT to keep the cats all
- night--oh, get down, you furry beasts!--because we've had three
- wishes out of the old carpet now, and we can't get any more till
- to-morrow.'
-
- The liveliness of Persian mews alone prevented the occurrence of a
- dismal silence.
-
- Anthea spoke first.
-
- 'Never mind,' she said. 'Do you know, I really do think they're
- quieting down a bit. Perhaps they heard us say milk.'
-
- 'They can't understand English,' said Jane. 'You forget they're
- Persian cats, Panther.'
-
- 'Well,' said Anthea, rather sharply, for she was tired and anxious,
- 'who told you "milk" wasn't Persian for milk. Lots of English
- words are just the same in French--at least I know "miaw" is, and
- "croquet", and "fiance". Oh, pussies, do be quiet! Let's stroke
- them as hard as we can with both hands, and perhaps they'll stop.'
-
- So every one stroked grey fur till their hands were tired, and as
- soon as a cat had been stroked enough to make it stop mewing it was
- pushed gently away, and another mewing mouser was approached by the
- hands of the strokers. And the noise was really more than half
- purr when the carpet suddenly appeared in its proper place, and on
- it, instead of rows of milk-cans, or even of milk-jugs, there was
- a COW. Not a Persian cow, either, nor, most fortunately, a
- musk-cow, if there is such a thing, but a smooth, sleek,
- dun-coloured Jersey cow, who blinked large soft eyes at the
- gas-light and mooed in an amiable if rather inquiring manner.
-
- Anthea had always been afraid of cows; but now she tried to be
- brave.
-
- 'Anyway, it can't run after me,' she said to herself 'There isn't
- room for it even to begin to run.'
-
- The cow was perfectly placid. She behaved like a strayed duchess
- till some one brought a saucer for the milk, and some one else
- tried to milk the cow into it. Milking is very difficult. You may
- think it is easy, but it is not. All the children were by this
- time strung up to a pitch of heroism that would have been
- impossible to them in their ordinary condition. Robert and Cyril
- held the cow by the horns; and Jane, when she was quite sure that
- their end of the cow was quite secure, consented to stand by, ready
- to hold the cow by the tail should occasion arise. Anthea, holding
- the saucer, now advanced towards the cow. She remembered to have
- heard that cows, when milked by strangers, are susceptible to the
- soothing influence of the human voice. So, clutching her saucer
- very tight, she sought for words to whose soothing influence the
- cow might be susceptible. And her memory, troubled by the events
- of the night, which seemed to go on and on for ever and ever,
- refused to help her with any form of words suitable to address a
- Jersey cow in.
-
- 'Poor pussy, then. Lie down, then, good dog, lie down!' was all
- that she could think of to say, and she said it.
-
- And nobody laughed. The situation, full of grey mewing cats, was
- too serious for that. Then Anthea, with a beating heart, tried to
- milk the cow. Next moment the cow had knocked the saucer out of
- her hand and trampled on it with one foot, while with the other
- three she had walked on a foot each of Robert, Cyril, and Jane.
-
- Jane burst into tears. 'Oh, how much too horrid everything is!'
- she cried. 'Come away. Let's go to bed and leave the horrid cats
- with the hateful cow. Perhaps somebody will eat somebody else.
- And serve them right.'
-
- They did not go to bed, but they had a shivering council in the
- drawing-room, which smelt of soot--and, indeed, a heap of this lay
- in the fender. There had been no fire in the room since mother
- went away, and all the chairs and tables were in the wrong places,
- and the chrysanthemums were dead, and the water in the pot nearly
- dried up. Anthea wrapped the embroidered woolly sofa blanket round
- Jane and herself, while Robert and Cyril had a struggle, silent and
- brief, but fierce, for the larger share of the fur hearthrug.
-
- 'It is most truly awful,' said Anthea, 'and I am so tired. Let's
- let the cats loose.'
-
- 'And the cow, perhaps?' said Cyril. 'The police would find us at
- once. That cow would stand at the gate and mew--I mean moo--to
- come in. And so would the cats. No; I see quite well what we've
- got to do. We must put them in baskets and leave them on people's
- doorsteps, like orphan foundlings.'
-
- 'We've got three baskets, counting mother's work one,' said Jane
- brightening.
-
- 'And there are nearly two hundred cats,' said Anthea, 'besides the
- cow--and it would have to be a different-sized basket for her; and
- then I don't know how you'd carry it, and you'd never find a
- doorstep big enough to put it on. Except the church one--and--'
-
- 'Oh, well,' said Cyril, 'if you simply MAKE difficulties--'
-
- 'I'm with you,' said Robert. 'Don't fuss about the cow, Panther.
- It's simply GOT to stay the night, and I'm sure I've read that the
- cow is a remunerating creature, and that means it will sit still
- and think for hours. The carpet can take it away in the morning.
- And as for the baskets, we'll do them up in dusters, or
- pillow-cases, or bath-towels. Come on, Squirrel. You girls can be
- out of it if you like.'
-
- His tone was full of contempt, but Jane and Anthea were too tired
- and desperate to care; even being 'out of it', which at other times
- they could not have borne, now seemed quite a comfort. They
- snuggled down in the sofa blanket, and Cyril threw the fur
- hearthrug over them.
-
- 'Ah, he said, 'that's all women are fit for--to keep safe and warm,
- while the men do the work and run dangers and risks and things.'
-
- 'I'm not,' said Anthea, 'you know I'm not.' But Cyril was gone.
-
- It was warm under the blanket and the hearthrug, and Jane snuggled
- up close to her sister; and Anthea cuddled Jane closely and kindly,
- and in a sort of dream they heard the rise of a wave of mewing as
- Robert opened the door of the nursery. They heard the booted
- search for baskets in the back kitchen. They heard the side door
- open and close, and they knew that each brother had gone out with
- at least one cat. Anthea's last thought was that it would take at
- least all night to get rid of one hundred and ninety-nine cats by
- twos. There would be ninety-nine journeys of two cats each, and one
- cat over.
-
- 'I almost think we might keep the one cat over,' said Anthea. 'I
- don't seem to care for cats just now, but I daresay I shall again
- some day.' And she fell asleep. Jane also was sleeping.
-
- It was Jane who awoke with a start, to find Anthea still asleep.
- As, in the act of awakening, she kicked her sister, she wondered
- idly why they should have gone to bed in their boots; but the next
- moment she remembered where they were.
-
- There was a sound of muffled, shuffled feet on the stairs. Like
- the heroine of the classic poem, Jane 'thought it was the boys',
- and as she felt quite wide awake, and not nearly so tired as
- before, she crept gently from Anthea's side and followed the
- footsteps. They went down into the basement; the cats, who seemed
- to have fallen into the sleep of exhaustion, awoke at the sound of
- the approaching footsteps and mewed piteously. Jane was at the
- foot of the stairs before she saw it was not her brothers whose
- coming had roused her and the cats, but a burglar. She knew he was
- a burglar at once, because he wore a fur cap and a red and black
- charity-check comforter, and he had no business where he was.
-
- If you had been stood in jane's shoes you would no doubt have run
- away in them, appealing to the police and neighbours with horrid
- screams. But Jane knew better. She had read a great many nice
- stories about burglars, as well as some affecting pieces of poetry,
- and she knew that no burglar will ever hurt a little girl if he
- meets her when burgling. Indeed, in all the cases Jane had read
- of, his burglarishness was almost at once forgotten in the interest
- he felt in the little girl's artless prattle. So if Jane hesitated
- for a moment before addressing the burglar, it was only because she
- could not at once think of any remark sufficiently prattling and
- artless to make a beginning with. In the stories and the affecting
- poetry the child could never speak plainly, though it always looked
- old enough to in the pictures. And Jane could not make up her mind
- to lisp and 'talk baby', even to a burglar. And while she
- hesitated he softly opened the nursery door and went in.
-
- Jane followed--just in time to see him sit down flat on the floor,
- scattering cats as a stone thrown into a pool splashes water.
-
- She closed the door softly and stood there, still wondering whether
- she COULD bring herself to say, 'What's 'oo doing here, Mithter
- Wobber?' and whether any other kind of talk would do.
-
- Then she heard the burglar draw a long breath, and he spoke.
-
- 'It's a judgement,' he said, 'so help me bob if it ain't. Oh,
- 'ere's a thing to 'appen to a chap! Makes it come 'ome to you,
- don't it neither? Cats an' cats an' cats. There couldn't be all
- them cats. Let alone the cow. If she ain't the moral of the old
- man's Daisy. She's a dream out of when I was a lad--I don't mind
- 'er so much. 'Ere, Daisy, Daisy?'
-
- The cow turned and looked at him.
-
- 'SHE'S all right,' he went on. 'Sort of company, too. Though them
- above knows how she got into this downstairs parlour. But them
- cats--oh, take 'em away, take 'em away! I'll chuck the 'ole
- show--Oh, take 'em away.'
-
- 'Burglar,' said Jane, close behind him, and he started
- convulsively, and turned on her a blank face, whose pale lips
- trembled. 'I can't take those cats away.'
-
- 'Lor' lumme!' exclaimed the man; 'if 'ere ain't another on 'em.
- Are you real, miss, or something I'll wake up from presently?'
-
- 'I am quite real,' said Jane, relieved to find that a lisp was not
- needed to make the burglar understand her. 'And so,' she added,
- 'are the cats.'
-
- 'Then send for the police, send for the police, and I'll go quiet.
- If you ain't no realler than them cats, I'm done, spunchuck--out of
- time. Send for the police. I'll go quiet. One thing, there'd not
- be room for 'arf them cats in no cell as ever _I_ see.'
-
- He ran his fingers through his hair, which was short, and his eyes
- wandered wildly round the roomful of cats.
-
- 'Burglar,' said Jane, kindly and softly, 'if you didn't like cats,
- what did you come here for?'
-
- 'Send for the police,' was the unfortunate criminal's only reply.
- 'I'd rather you would--honest, I'd rather.'
-
- 'I daren't,' said Jane, 'and besides, I've no one to send. I hate
- the police. I wish he'd never been born.'
-
- 'You've a feeling 'art, miss,' said the burglar; 'but them cats is
- really a little bit too thick.'
-
- 'Look here,' said Jane, 'I won't call the police. And I am quite
- a real little girl, though I talk older than the kind you've met
- before when you've been doing your burglings. And they are real
- cats--and they want real milk--and--Didn't you say the cow was
- like somebody's Daisy that you used to know?'
-
- 'Wish I may die if she ain't the very spit of her,' replied the
- man.
-
- 'Well, then,' said Jane--and a thrill of joyful pride ran through
- her--'perhaps you know how to milk cows?'
-
- 'Perhaps I does,' was the burglar's cautious rejoinder.
-
- 'Then,' said Jane, 'if you will ONLY milk ours--you don't know how
- we shall always love you.'
-
- The burglar replied that loving was all very well.
-
- 'If those cats only had a good long, wet, thirsty drink of milk,'
- Jane went on with eager persuasion, 'they'd lie down and go to
- sleep as likely as not, and then the police won't come back. But
- if they go on mewing like this he will, and then I don't know
- what'll become of us, or you either.'
-
- This argument seemed to decide the criminal. Jane fetched the
- wash-bowl from the sink, and he spat on his hands and prepared to
- milk the cow. At this instant boots were heard on the stairs.
-
- 'It's all up,' said the man, desperately, 'this 'ere's a plant.
- 'ERE'S the police.' He made as if to open the window and leap from
- it.
-
- 'It's all right, I tell you,' whispered Jane, in anguish. 'I'll
- say you're a friend of mine, or the good clergyman called in, or my
- uncle, or ANYTHIING--only do, do, do milk the cow. Oh, DON'T
- go--oh--oh, thank goodness it's only the boys!'
-
- It was; and their entrance had awakened Anthea, who, with her
- brothers, now crowded through the doorway. The man looked about
- him like a rat looks round a trap.
-
- 'This is a friend of mine,' said Jane; 'he's just called in, and
- he's going to milk the cow for us. ISN'T it good and kind of him?'
-
- She winked at the others, and though they did not understand they
- played up loyally.
-
- 'How do?' said Cyril, 'Very glad to meet you. Don't let us
- interrupt the milking.'
-
- 'I shall 'ave a 'ead and a 'arf in the morning, and no bloomin'
- error,' remarked the burglar; but he began to milk the cow.
-
- Robert was winked at to stay and see that he did not leave off
- milking or try to escape, and the others went to get things to put
- the milk in; for it was now spurting and foaming in the wash-bowl,
- and the cats had ceased from mewing and were crowding round the
- cow, with expressions of hope and anticipation on their whiskered
- faces.
-
- 'We can't get rid of any more cats,' said Cyril, as he and his
- sisters piled a tray high with saucers and soup-plates and platters
- and pie-dishes, 'the police nearly got us as it was. Not the same
- one--a much stronger sort. He thought it really was a foundling
- orphan we'd got. If it hadn't been for me throwing the two bags of
- cat slap in his eye and hauling Robert over a railing, and lying
- like mice under a laurel-bush--Well, it's jolly lucky I'm a good
- shot, that's all. He pranced off when he'd got the cat-bags off
- his face--thought we'd bolted. And here we are.'
-
- The gentle samishness of the milk swishing into the hand-bowl
- seemed to have soothed the burglar very much. He went on milking
- in a sort of happy dream, while the children got a cap and ladled
- the warm milk out into the pie-dishes and plates, and platters and
- saucers, and set them down to the music of Persian purrs and
- lappings.
-
- 'It makes me think of old times,' said the burglar, smearing his
- ragged coat-cuff across his eyes--'about the apples in the orchard
- at home, and the rats at threshing time, and the rabbits and the
- ferrets, and how pretty it was seeing the pigs killed.'
-
- Finding him in this softened mood, Jane said--
-
- 'I wish you'd tell us how you came to choose our house for your
- burglaring to-night. I am awfully glad you did. You have been so
- kind. I don't know what we should have done without you,' she
- added hastily. 'We all love you ever so. Do tell us.'
-
- The others added their affectionate entreaties, and at last the
- burglar said--
-
- 'Well, it's my first job, and I didn't expect to be made so
- welcome, and that's the truth, young gents and ladies. And I don't
- know but what it won't be my last. For this 'ere cow, she reminds
- me of my father, and I know 'ow 'e'd 'ave 'ided me if I'd laid
- 'ands on a 'a'penny as wasn't my own.'
-
- 'I'm sure he would,' Jane agreed kindly; 'but what made you come
- here?'
-
- 'Well, miss,' said the burglar, 'you know best 'ow you come by them
- cats, and why you don't like the police, so I'll give myself away
- free, and trust to your noble 'earts. (You'd best bale out a bit,
- the pan's getting fullish.) I was a-selling oranges off of my
- barrow--for I ain't a burglar by trade, though you 'ave used the
- name so free--an' there was a lady bought three 'a'porth off me.
- An' while she was a-pickin' of them out--very careful indeed, and
- I'm always glad when them sort gets a few over-ripe ones--there was
- two other ladies talkin' over the fence. An' one on 'em said to
- the other on 'em just like this--
-
- "'I've told both gells to come, and they can doss in with M'ria and
- Jane, 'cause their boss and his missis is miles away and the kids
- too. So they can just lock up the 'ouse and leave the gas
- a-burning, so's no one won't know, and get back bright an' early by
- 'leven o'clock. And we'll make a night of it, Mrs Prosser, so we
- will. I'm just a-going to run out to pop the letter in the post."
- And then the lady what had chosen the three ha'porth so careful,
- she said: "Lor, Mrs Wigson, I wonder at you, and your hands all
- over suds. This good gentleman'll slip it into the post for yer,
- I'll be bound, seeing I'm a customer of his." So they give me the
- letter, and of course I read the direction what was written on it
- afore I shoved it into the post. And then when I'd sold my
- barrowful, I was a-goin' 'ome with the chink in my pocket, and I'm
- blowed if some bloomin' thievin' beggar didn't nick the lot whilst
- I was just a-wettin' of my whistle, for callin' of oranges is dry
- work. Nicked the bloomin' lot 'e did--and me with not a farden to
- take 'ome to my brother and his missus.'
-
- 'How awful!' said Anthea, with much sympathy.
-
- 'Horful indeed, miss, I believe yer,' the burglar rejoined, with
- deep feeling. 'You don't know her temper when she's roused. An'
- I'm sure I 'ope you never may, neither. And I'd 'ad all my oranges
- off of 'em. So it came back to me what was wrote on the
- ongverlope, and I says to myself, "Why not, seein' as I've been
- done myself, and if they keeps two slaveys there must be some
- pickings?" An' so 'ere I am. But them cats, they've brought me
- back to the ways of honestness. Never no more.'
-
- 'Look here,' said Cyril, 'these cats are very valuable--very
- indeed. And we will give them all to you, if only you will take
- them away.'
-
- 'I see they're a breedy lot,' replied the burglar. 'But I don't
- want no bother with the coppers. Did you come by them honest now?
- Straight?'
-
- 'They are all our very own,' said Anthea, 'we wanted them, but the
- confidement--'
-
- 'Consignment,' whispered Cyril.
-
- 'was larger than we wanted, and they're an awful bother. If you
- got your barrow, and some sacks or baskets, your brother's missus
- would be awfully pleased. My father says Persian cats are worth
- pounds and pounds each.'
-
- 'Well,' said the burglar--and he was certainly moved by her
- remarks--'I see you're in a hole--and I don't mind lending a helping
- 'and. I don't ask 'ow you come by them. But I've got a pal--'e's
- a mark on cats. I'll fetch him along, and if he thinks they'd
- fetch anything above their skins I don't mind doin' you a
- kindness.'
-
- 'You won't go away and never come back,' said Jane, 'because I
- don't think I COULD bear that.'
-
- The burglar, quite touched by her emotion, swore sentimentally
- that, alive or dead, he would come back.
-
- Then he went, and Cyril and Robert sent the girls to bed and sat up
- to wait for his return. It soon seemed absurd to await him in a
- state of wakefulness, but his stealthy tap on the window awoke them
- readily enough. For he did return, with the pal and the barrow and
- the sacks. The pal approved of the cats, now dormant in Persian
- repletion, and they were bundled into the sacks, and taken away on
- the barrow--mewing, indeed, but with mews too sleepy to attract
- public attention.
-
- 'I'm a fence--that's what I am,' said the burglar gloomily. 'I
- never thought I'd come down to this, and all acause er my kind
- 'eart.'
-
- Cyril knew that a fence is a receiver of stolen goods, and he
- replied briskly--
-
- 'I give you my sacred the cats aren't stolen. What do you make the
- time?'
-
- 'I ain't got the time on me,' said the pal--'but it was just about
- chucking-out time as I come by the "Bull and Gate". I shouldn't
- wonder if it was nigh upon one now.'
-
- When the cats had been removed, and the boys and the burglar had
- parted with warm expressions of friendship, there remained only the
- cow.
-
- 'She must stay all night,' said Robert. 'Cook'll have a fit when
- she sees her.'
-
- 'All night?' said Cyril. 'Why--it's tomorrow morning if it's one.
- We can have another wish!'
-
- So the carpet was urged, in a hastily written note, to remove the
- cow to wherever she belonged, and to return to its proper place on
- the nursery floor. But the cow could not be got to move on to the
- carpet. So Robert got the clothes line out of the back kitchen,
- and tied one end very firmly to the cow's horns, and the other end
- to a bunched-up corner of the carpet, and said 'Fire away.'
-
- And the carpet and cow vanished together, and the boys went to bed,
- tired out and only too thankful that the evening at last was over.
-
- Next morning the carpet lay calmly in its place, but one corner was
- very badly torn. It was the corner that the cow had been tied on
- to.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 9
- THE BURGLAR'S BRIDE
-
-
- The morning after the adventure of the Persian cats, the musk-rats,
- the common cow, and the uncommon burglar, all the children slept
- till it was ten o'clock; and then it was only Cyril who woke; but
- he attended to the others, so that by half past ten every one was
- ready to help to get breakfast. It was shivery cold, and there was
- but little in the house that was really worth eating.
-
- Robert had arranged a thoughtful little surprise for the absent
- servants. He had made a neat and delightful booby trap over the
- kitchen door, and as soon as they heard the front door click open
- and knew the servants had come back, all four children hid in the
- cupboard under the stairs and listened with delight to the
- entrance--the tumble, the splash, the scuffle, and the remarks of
- the servants. They heard the cook say it was a judgement on them
- for leaving the place to itself; she seemed to think that a booby
- trap was a kind of plant that was quite likely to grow, all by
- itself, in a dwelling that was left shut up. But the housemaid,
- more acute, judged that someone must have been in the house--a view
- confirmed by the sight of the breakfast things on the nursery
- table.
-
- The cupboard under the stairs was very tight and paraffiny,
- however, and a silent struggle for a place on top ended in the door
- bursting open and discharging Jane, who rolled like a football to
- the feet of the servants.
-
- 'Now,' said Cyril, firmly, when the cook's hysterics had become
- quieter, and the housemaid had time to say what she thought of
- them, 'don't you begin jawing us. We aren't going to stand it. We
- know too much. You'll please make an extra special treacle roley
- for dinner, and we'll have a tinned tongue.'
-
- 'I daresay,' said the housemaid, indignant, still in her outdoor
- things and with her hat very much on one side. 'Don't you come
- a-threatening me, Master Cyril, because I won't stand it, so I tell
- you. You tell your ma about us being out? Much I care! She'll be
- sorry for me when she hears about my dear great-aunt by marriage as
- brought me up from a child and was a mother to me. She sent for
- me, she did, she wasn't expected to last the night, from the spasms
- going to her legs--and cook was that kind and careful she couldn't
- let me go alone, so--'
-
- 'Don't,' said Anthea, in real distress. 'You know where liars go
- to, Eliza--at least if you don't--'
-
- 'Liars indeed!' said Eliza, 'I won't demean myself talking to you.'
-
- 'How's Mrs Wigson?' said Robert, 'and DID you keep it up last
- night?'
-
- The mouth of the housemaid fell open.
-
- 'Did you doss with Maria or Emily?' asked Cyril.
-
- 'How did Mrs Prosser enjoy herself?' asked Jane.
-
- 'Forbear,' said Cyril, 'they've had enough. Whether we tell or not
- depends on your later life,' he went on, addressing the servants.
- 'If you are decent to us we'll be decent to you. You'd better make
- that treacle roley--and if I were you, Eliza, I'd do a little
- housework and cleaning, just for a change.'
-
- The servants gave in once and for all.
-
- 'There's nothing like firmness,' Cyril went on, when the breakfast
- things were cleared away and the children were alone in the
- nursery. 'People are always talking of difficulties with servants.
- It's quite simple, when you know the way. We can do what we like
- now and they won't peach. I think we've broken THEIR proud spirit.
- Let's go somewhere by carpet.'
-
- 'I wouldn't if I were you,' said the Phoenix, yawning, as it
- swooped down from its roost on the curtain pole. 'I've given you
- one or two hints, but now concealment is at an end, and I see I
- must speak out.'
-
- It perched on the back of a chair and swayed to and fro, like a
- parrot on a swing.
-
- 'What's the matter now?' said Anthea. She was not quite so gentle
- as usual, because she was still weary from the excitement of last
- night's cats. 'I'm tired of things happening. I shan't go
- anywhere on the carpet. I'm going to darn my stockings.'
-
- 'Darn!' said the Phoenix, 'darn! From those young lips these
- strange expressions--'
-
- 'Mend, then,' said Anthea, 'with a needle and wool.'
-
- The Phoenix opened and shut its wings thoughtfully.
-
- 'Your stockings,' it said, 'are much less important than they now
- appear to you. But the carpet--look at the bare worn patches, look
- at the great rent at yonder corner. The carpet has been your
- faithful friend--your willing servant. How have you requited its
- devoted service?'
-
- 'Dear Phoenix,' Anthea urged, 'don't talk in that horrid lecturing
- tone. You make me feel as if I'd done something wrong. And really
- it is a wishing carpet, and we haven't done anything else to
- it--only wishes.'
-
- 'Only wishes,' repeated the Phoenix, ruffling its neck feathers
- angrily, 'and what sort of wishes? Wishing people to be in a good
- temper, for instance. What carpet did you ever hear of that had
- such a wish asked of it? But this noble fabric, on which you
- trample so recklessly' (every one removed its boots from the carpet
- and stood on the linoleum), 'this carpet never flinched. It did
- what you asked, but the wear and tear must have been awful. And
- then last night--I don't blame you about the cats and the rats, for
- those were its own choice; but what carpet could stand a heavy cow
- hanging on to it at one corner?'
-
- 'I should think the cats and rats were worse,' said Robert, 'look
- at all their claws.'
-
- 'Yes,' said the bird, 'eleven thousand nine hundred and forty of
- them--I daresay you noticed? I should be surprised if these had
- not left their mark.'
-
- 'Good gracious,' said Jane, sitting down suddenly on the floor, and
- patting the edge of the carpet softly; 'do you mean it's WEARING OUT?'
-
- 'Its life with you has not been a luxurious one,' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'French mud twice. Sand of sunny shores twice. Soaking in
- southern seas once. India once. Goodness knows where in Persia
- once. musk-rat-land once. And once, wherever the cow came from.
- Hold your carpet up to the light, and with cautious tenderness, if
- YOU please.'
-
- With cautious tenderness the boys held the carpet up to the light;
- the girls looked, and a shiver of regret ran through them as they
- saw how those eleven thoousand nine hundred and forty claws had run
- through the carpet. It was full of little holes: there were some
- large ones, and more than one thin
- place. At one corner a strip of it was torn, and hung forlornly.
-
- 'We must mend it,' said Anthea; 'never mind about my stockings. I
- can sew them up in lumps with sewing cotton if there's no time to
- do them properly. I know it's awful and no girl would who
- respected herself, and all that; but the poor dear carpet's more
- important than my silly stockings. Let's go out now this very
- minute.'
-
- So out they all went, and bought wool to mend the carpet; but there
- is no shop in Camden Town where you can buy wishing-wool, no, nor
- in Kentish Town either. However, ordinary Scotch heather-mixture
- fingering seemed good enough, and this they bought, and all that
- -day Jane and Anthea darned and darned and darned. The boys went
- out for a walk in the afternoon, and the gentle Phoenix paced up
- and down the table--for exercise, as it said--and talked to the
- industrious girls about their carpet.
-
- 'It is not an ordinary, ignorant, innocent carpet from
- Kidderminster,' it said, 'it is a carpet with a past--a Persian
- past. Do you know that in happier years, when that carpet was the
- property of caliphs, viziers, kings, and sultans, it never lay on
- a floor?'
-
- 'I thought the floor was the proper home of a carpet,' Jane
- interrupted.
-
- 'Not of a MAGIC carpet,' said the Phoenix; 'why, if it had been
- allowed to lie about on floors there wouldn't be much of it left
- now. No, indeed! It has lived in chests of cedarwood, inlaid with
- pearl and ivory, wrapped in priceless tissues of cloth of gold,
- embroidered with gems of fabulous value. It has reposed in the
- sandal-wood caskets of princesses, and in the rose-attar-scented
- treasure-houses of kings. Never, never, had any one degraded it by
- walking on it--except in the way of business, when wishes were
- required, and then they always took their shoes off. And YOU--'
-
- 'Oh, DON'T!' said Jane, very near tears. 'You know you'd never
- have been hatched at all if it hadn't been for mother wanting a
- carpet for us to walk on.'
-
- 'You needn't have walked so much or so hard!' said the bird, 'but
- come, dry that crystal tear, and I will relate to you the story of
- the Princess Zulieka, the Prince of Asia, and the magic carpet.'
-
- 'Relate away,' said Anthea--'I mean, please do.'
-
- 'The Princess Zulieka, fairest of royal ladies,' began the bird,
- 'had in her cradle been the subject of several enchantments. Her
- grandmother had been in her day--'
-
- But what in her day Zulieka's grandmother had been was destined
- never to be revealed, for Cyril and Robert suddenly burst into the
- room, and on each brow were the traces of deep emotion. On Cyril's
- pale brow stood beads of agitation and perspiration, and on the
- scarlet brow of Robert was a large black smear.
-
- 'What ails ye both?' asked the Phoenix, and it added tartly that
- story-telling was quite impossible if people would come
- interrupting like that.
-
- 'Oh, do shut up, for any sake!' said Cyril, sinking into a chair.
-
- Robert smoothed the ruffled golden feathers, adding kindly--
-
- 'Squirrel doesn't mean to be a beast. It's only that the MOST
- AWFUL thing has happened, and stories don't seem to matter so much.
- Don't be cross. You won't be when you've heard what's happened.'
-
- 'Well, what HAS happened?' said the bird, still rather crossly; and
- Anthea and Jane paused with long needles poised in air, and long
- needlefuls of Scotch heather-mixture fingering wool drooping from
- them.
-
- 'The most awful thing you can possibly think of,' said Cyril.
- 'That nice chap--our own burglar--the police have got him, on
- suspicion of stolen cats. That's what his brother's missis told
- me.'
-
- 'Oh, begin at the beginning!' cried Anthea impatiently.
-
- 'Well, then, we went out, and down by where the undertaker's is,
- with the china flowers in the window--you know. There was a crowd,
- and of course we went to have a squint. And it was two bobbies and
- our burglar between them, and he was being dragged along; and he
- said, "I tell you them cats was GIVE me. I got 'em in exchange for
- me milking a cow in a basement parlour up Camden Town way."
-
- 'And the people laughed. Beasts! And then one of the policemen
- said perhaps he could give the name and address of the cow, and he
- said, no, he couldn't; but he could take them there if they'd only
- leave go of his coat collar, and give him a chance to get his
- breath. And the policeman said he could tell all that to the
- magistrate in the morning. He didn't see us, and so we came away.'
-
- 'Oh, Cyril, how COULD you?' said Anthea.
-
- 'Don't be a pudding-head,' Cyril advised. 'A fat lot of good it
- would have done if we'd let him see us. No one would have believed
- a word we said. They'd have thought we were kidding. We did
- better than let him see us. We asked a boy where he lived and he
- told us, and we went there, and it's a little greengrocer's shop,
- and we bought some Brazil nuts. Here they are.' The girls waved
- away the Brazil nuts with loathing and contempt.
-
- 'Well, we had to buy SOMETHING, and while we were making up our
- minds what to buy we heard his brother's missis talking. She said
- when he came home with all them miaoulers she thought there was
- more in it than met the eye. But he WOULD go out this morning with
- the two likeliest of them, one under each arm. She said he sent
- her out to buy blue ribbon to put round their beastly necks, and
- she said if he got three months' hard it was her dying word that
- he'd got the blue ribbon to thank for it; that, and his own silly
- thieving ways, taking cats that anybody would know he couldn't have
- come by in the way of business, instead of things that wouldn't
- have been missed, which Lord knows there are plenty such, and--'
-
- 'Oh, STOP!' cried Jane. And indeed it was time, for Cyril seemed
- like a clock that had been wound up, and could not help going on.
- 'Where is he now?'
-
- 'At the police-station,' said Robert, for Cyril was out of breath.
- 'The boy told us they'd put him in the cells, and would bring him
- up before the Beak in the morning. I thought it was a jolly lark
- last night--getting him to take the cats--but now--'
-
- 'The end of a lark,' said the Phoenix, 'is the Beak.'
-
- 'Let's go to him,' cried both the girls jumping up. 'Let's go and
- tell the truth. They MUST believe us.'
-
- 'They CAN'T,' said Cyril. 'Just think! If any one came to you
- with such a tale, you couldn't believe it, however much you tried.
- We should only mix things up worse for him.'
-
- 'There must be something we could do,' said Jane, sniffing very
- much--'my own dear pet burglar! I can't bear it. And he was so
- nice, the way he talked about his father, and how he was going to
- be so extra honest. Dear Phoenix, you MUST be able to help us.
- You're so good and kind and pretty and clever. Do, do tell us what
- to do.'
-
- The Phoenix rubbed its beak thoughtfully with its claw.
-
- 'You might rescue him,' it said, 'and conceal him here, till the
- law-supporters had forgotten about him.'
-
- 'That would be ages and ages,' said Cyril, 'and we couldn't conceal
- him here. Father might come home at any moment, and if he found
- the burglar here HE wouldn't believe the true truth any more than
- the police would. That's the worst of the truth. Nobody ever
- believes it. Couldn't we take him somewhere else?'
-
- Jane clapped her hands.
-
- 'The sunny southern shore!' she cried, 'where the cook is being
- queen. He and she would be company for each other!'
-
- And really the idea did not seem bad, if only he would consent to
- go.
-
- So, all talking at once, the children arranged to wait till
- evening, and then to seek the dear burglar in his lonely cell.
-
- Meantime Jane and Anthea darned away as hard as they could, to make
- the carpet as strong as possible. For all felt how terrible it
- would be if the precious burglar, while being carried to the sunny
- southern shore, were to tumble through a hole in the carpet, and be
- lost for ever in the sunny southern sea.
-
- The servants were tired after Mrs Wigson's party, so every one went
- to bed early, and when the Phoenix reported that both servants were
- snoring in a heartfelt and candid manner, the children got up--they
- had never undressed; just putting their nightgowns on over their
- things had been enough to deceive Eliza when she came to turn out
- the gas. So they were ready for anything, and they stood on the
- carpet and said--
-
- 'I wish we were in our burglar's lonely cell.' and instantly they
- were.
-
- I think every one had expected the cell to be the 'deepest dungeon
- below the castle moat'. I am sure no one had doubted that the
- burglar, chained by heavy fetters to a ring in the damp stone wall,
- would be tossing uneasily on a bed of straw, with a pitcher of
- water and a mouldering crust, untasted, beside him. Robert,
- remembering the underground passage and the treasure, had brought
- a candle and matches, but these were not needed.
-
- The cell was a little white-washed room about twelve feet long and
- six feet wide. On one side of it was a sort of shelf sloping a
- little towards the wall. On this were two rugs, striped blue and
- yellow, and a water-proof pillow. Rolled in the rugs, and with his
- head on the pillow, lay the burglar, fast asleep. (He had had his
- tea, though this the children did not know--it had come from the
- coffee-shop round the corner, in very thick crockery.) The scene
- was plainly revealed by the light of a gas-lamp in the passage
- outside, which shone into the cell through a pane of thick glass
- over the door.
-
- 'I shall gag him,' said Cyril, 'and Robert will hold him down.
- Anthea and Jane and the Phoenix can whisper soft nothings to him
- while he gradually awakes.'
-
- This plan did not have the success it deserved, because the
- burglar, curiously enough, was much stronger, even in his sleep,
- than Robert and Cyril, and at the first touch of their hands he
- leapt up and shouted out something very loud indeed.
-
- Instantly steps were heard outside. Anthea threw her arms round
- the burglar and whispered--
-
- 'It's us--the ones that gave you the cats. We've come to save you,
- only don't let on we're here. Can't we hide somewhere?'
-
- Heavy boots sounded on the flagged passage outside, and a firm
- voice shouted--
-
- 'Here--you--stop that row, will you?'
-
- 'All right, governor,' replied the burglar, still with Anthea's
- arms round him; 'I was only a-talking in my sleep. No offence.'
-
- It was an awful moment. Would the boots and the voice come in.
- Yes! No! The voice said--
-
- 'Well, stow it, will you?'
-
- And the boots went heavily away, along the passage and up some
- sounding stone stairs.
-
- 'Now then,' whispered Anthea.
-
- 'How the blue Moses did you get in?' asked the burglar, in a hoarse
- whisper of amazement.
-
- 'On the carpet,' said Jane, truly.
-
- 'Stow that,' said the burglar. 'One on you I could 'a' swallowed,
- but four--AND a yellow fowl.'
-
- 'Look here,' said Cyril, sternly, 'you wouldn't have believed any
- one if they'd told you beforehand about your finding a cow and all
- those cats in our nursery.'
-
- 'That I wouldn't,' said the burglar, with whispered fervour, 'so
- help me Bob, I wouldn't.'
-
- 'Well, then,' Cyril went on, ignoring this appeal to his brother,
- 'just try to believe what we tell you and act accordingly. It
- can't do you any HARM, you know,' he went on in hoarse whispered
- earnestness. 'You can't be very much worse off than you are now,
- you know. But if you'll just trust to us we'll get you out of this
- right enough. No one saw us come in. The question is, where would
- you like to go?'
-
- 'I'd like to go to Boolong,' was the instant reply of the burglar.
- 'I've always wanted to go on that there trip, but I've never 'ad
- the ready at the right time of the year.'
-
- 'Boolong is a town like London,' said Cyril, well meaning, but
- inaccurate, 'how could you get a living there?'
-
- The burglar scratched his head in deep doubt.
-
- 'It's 'ard to get a 'onest living anywheres nowadays,' he said, and
- his voice was sad.
-
- 'Yes, isn't it?' said Jane, sympathetically; 'but how about a sunny
- southern shore, where there's nothing to do at all unless you want
- to.'
-
- 'That's my billet, miss,' replied the burglar. 'I never did care
- about work--not like some people, always fussing about.'
-
- 'Did you never like any sort of work?' asked Anthea, severely.
-
- 'Lor', lumme, yes,' he answered, 'gardening was my 'obby, so it
- was. But father died afore 'e could bind me to a nurseryman, an'-
- -'
-
- 'We'll take you to the sunny southern shore,' said Jane; 'you've no
- idea what the flowers are like.'
-
- 'Our old cook's there,' said Anthea. 'She's queen--'
-
- 'Oh, chuck it,' the burglar whispered, clutching at his head with
- both hands. 'I knowed the first minute I see them cats and that
- cow as it was a judgement on me. I don't know now whether I'm
- a-standing on my hat or my boots, so help me I don't. If you CAN
- get me out, get me, and if you can't, get along with you for
- goodness' sake, and give me a chanst to think about what'll be most
- likely to go down with the Beak in the morning.'
-
- 'Come on to the carpet, then,' said Anthea, gently shoving. The
- others quietly pulled, and the moment the feet of the burglar were
- planted on the carpet Anthea wished:
-
- 'I wish we were all on the sunny southern shore where cook is.'
-
- And instantly they were. There were the rainbow sands, the tropic
- glories of leaf and flower, and there, of course, was the cook,
- crowned with white flowers, and with all the wrinkles of crossness
- and tiredness and hard work wiped out of her face.
-
- 'Why, cook, you're quite pretty!' Anthea said, as soon as she had
- got her breath after the tumble-rush-whirl of the carpet. The
- burglar stood rubbing his eyes in the brilliant tropic sunlight,
- and gazing wildly round him on the vivid hues of the tropic land.
-
- 'Penny plain and tuppence coloured!' he exclaimed pensively, 'and
- well worth any tuppence, however hard-earned.'
-
- The cook was seated on a grassy mound with her court of
- copper-coloured savages around her. The burglar pointed a grimy
- finger at these.
-
- 'Are they tame?' he asked anxiously. 'Do they bite or scratch, or
- do anything to yer with poisoned arrows or oyster shells or that?'
-
- 'Don't you be so timid,' said the cook. 'Look'e 'ere, this 'ere's
- only a dream what you've come into, an' as it's only a dream
- there's no nonsense about what a young lady like me ought to say or
- not, so I'll say you're the best-looking fellow I've seen this many
- a day. And the dream goes on and on, seemingly, as long as you
- behaves. The things what you has to eat and drink tastes just as
- good as real ones, and--'
-
- 'Look 'ere,' said the burglar, 'I've come 'ere straight outer the
- pleece station. These 'ere kids'll tell you it ain't no blame er
- mine.'
-
- 'Well, you WERE a burglar, you know,' said the truthful Anthea
- gently.
-
- 'Only because I was druv to it by dishonest blokes, as well you
- knows, miss,' rejoined the criminal. 'Blowed if this ain't the
- 'ottest January as I've known for years.'
-
- 'Wouldn't you like a bath?' asked the queen, 'and some white
- clothes like me?'
-
- 'I should only look a juggins in 'em, miss, thanking you all the
- same,' was the reply; 'but a bath I wouldn't resist, and my shirt
- was only clean on week before last.'
-
- Cyril and Robert led him to a rocky pool, where he bathed
- luxuriously. Then, in shirt and trousers he sat on the sand and
- spoke.
-
- 'That cook, or queen, or whatever you call her--her with the white
- bokay on her 'ed--she's my sort. Wonder if she'd keep company!'
-
- 'I should ask her.'
-
- 'I was always a quick hitter,' the man went on; 'it's a word and a
- blow with me. I will.'
-
- In shirt and trousers, and crowned with a scented flowery wreath
- which Cyril hastily wove as they returned to the court of the
- queen, the burglar stood before the cook and spoke.
-
- 'Look 'ere, miss,' he said. 'You an' me being' all forlorn-like,
- both on us, in this 'ere dream, or whatever you calls it, I'd like
- to tell you straight as I likes yer looks.'
-
- The cook smiled and looked down bashfully.
-
- 'I'm a single man--what you might call a batcheldore. I'm mild in
- my 'abits, which these kids'll tell you the same, and I'd like to
- 'ave the pleasure of walkin' out with you next Sunday.'
-
- 'Lor!' said the queen cook, ''ow sudden you are, mister.'
-
- 'Walking out means you're going to be married,' said Anthea. 'Why
- not get married and have done with it? _I_ would.'
-
- 'I don't mind if I do,' said the burglar. But the cook said--
-
- 'No, miss. Not me, not even in a dream. I don't say anythink
- ag'in the young chap's looks, but I always swore I'd be married in
- church, if at all--and, anyway, I don't believe these here savages
- would know how to keep a registering office, even if I was to show
- them. No, mister, thanking you kindly, if you can't bring a
- clergyman into the dream I'll live and die like what I am.'
-
- 'Will you marry her if we get a clergyman?' asked the match-making
- Anthea.
-
- 'I'm agreeable, miss, I m sure,' said he, pulling his wreath
- straight. ''Ow this 'ere bokay do tiddle a chap's ears to be
- sure!'
-
- So, very hurriedly, the carpet was spread out, and instructed to
- fetch a clergyman. The instructions were written on the inside of
- Cyril's cap with a piece of billiard chalk Robert had got from the
- marker at the hotel at Lyndhurst. The carpet disappeared, and more
- quickly than you would have thought possible it came back, bearing
- on its bosom the Reverend Septimus Blenkinsop.
-
- The Reverend Septimus was rather a nice young man, but very much
- mazed and muddled, because when he saw a strange carpet laid out at
- his feet, in his own study, he naturally walked on it to examine it
- more closely. And he happened to stand on one of the thin places
- that Jane and Anthea had darned, so that he was half on wishing
- carpet and half on plain Scotch heather-mixture fingering, which
- has no magic properties at all.
-
- The effect of this was that he was only half there--so that the
- children could just see through him, as though he had been a ghost.
- And as for him, he saw the sunny southern shore, the cook and the
- burglar and the children quite plainly; but through them all he
- saw, quite plainly also, his study at home, with the books and the
- pictures and the marble clock that had been presented to him when
- he left his last situation.
-
- He seemed to himself to be in a sort of insane fit, so that it did
- not matter what he did--and he married the burglar to the cook.
- The cook said that she would rather have had a solider kind of a
- clergyman, one that you couldn't see through so plain, but perhaps
- this was real enough for a dream.
-
- And of course the clergyman, though misty, was really real, and
- able to marry people, and he did. When the ceremony was over the
- clergyman wandered about the island collecting botanical specimens,
- for he was a great botanist, and the ruling passion was strong even
- in an insane fit.
-
- There was a splendid wedding feast. Can you fancy Jane and Anthea,
- and Robert and Cyril, dancing merrily in a ring, hand-in-hand with
- copper-coloured savages, round the happy couple, the queen cook and
- the burglar consort? There were more flowers gathered and thrown
- than you have ever even dreamed of, and before the children took
- carpet for home the now married-and-settled burglar made a speech.
-
- 'Ladies and gentlemen,' he said, 'and savages of both kinds, only
- I know you can't understand what I'm a saying of, but we'll let
- that pass. If this is a dream, I'm on. If it ain't, I'm onner
- than ever. If it's betwixt and between--well, I'm honest, and I
- can't say more. I don't want no more 'igh London society--I've got
- some one to put my arm around of; and I've got the whole lot of
- this 'ere island for my allotment, and if I don't grow some
- broccoli as'll open the judge's eye at the cottage flower shows,
- well, strike me pink! All I ask is, as these young gents and
- ladies'll bring some parsley seed into the dream, and a penn'orth
- of radish seed, and threepenn'orth of onion, and I wouldn't mind
- goin' to fourpence or fippence for mixed kale, only I ain't got a
- brown, so I don't deceive you. And there's one thing more, you
- might take away the parson. I don't like things what I can see
- 'alf through, so here's how!' He drained a coconut-shell of palm
- wine.
-
- It was now past midnight--though it was tea-time on the island.
-
- With all good wishes the children took their leave. They also
- collected the clergyman and took him back to his study and his
- presentation clock.
-
- The Phoenix kindly carried the seeds next day to the burglar and
- his bride, and returned with the most satisfactory news of the
- happy pair.
-
- 'He's made a wooden spade and started on his allotment,' it said,
- 'and she is weaving him a shirt and trousers of the most radiant
- whiteness.'
-
- The police never knew how the burglar got away. In Kentish Town
- Police Station his escape is still spoken of with bated breath as
- the Persian mystery.
-
- As for the Reverend Septimus Blenkinsop, he felt that he had had a
- very insane fit indeed, and he was sure it was due to over-study.
- So he planned a little dissipation, and took his two maiden aunts
- to Paris, where they enjoyed a dazzling round of museums and
- picture galleries, and came back feeling that they had indeed seen
- life. He never told his aunts or any one else about the marriage
- on the island--because no one likes it to be generally known if he
- has had insane fits, however interesting and unusual.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 10
- THE HOLE IN THE CARPET
-
-
- Hooray! hooray! hooray!
- Mother comes home to-day;
- Mother comes home to-day,
- Hooray! hooray! hooray!'
-
- Jane sang this simple song directly after breakfast, and the
- Phoenix shed crystal tears of affectionate sympathy.
-
- 'How beautiful,' it said, 'is filial devotion!'
-
- 'She won't be home till past bedtime, though,' said Robert. 'We
- might have one more carpet-day.'
-
- He was glad that mother was coming home--quite glad, very glad; but
- at the same time that gladness was rudely contradicted by a quite
- strong feeling of sorrow, because now they could not go out all day
- on the carpet.
-
- 'I do wish we could go and get something nice for mother, only
- she'd want to know where we got it,' said Anthea. 'And she'd
- never, never believe it, the truth. People never do, somehow, if
- it's at all interesting.'
-
- 'I'll tell you what,' said Robert. 'Suppose we wished the carpet
- to take us somewhere where we could find a purse with money in
- it--then we could buy her something.'
-
- 'Suppose it took us somewhere foreign, and the purse was covered
- with strange Eastern devices, embroidered in rich silks, and full
- of money that wasn't money at all here, only foreign curiosities,
- then we couldn't spend it, and people would bother about where we
- got it, and we shouldn't know how on earth to get out of it at
- all.'
-
- Cyril moved the table off the carpet as he spoke, and its leg
- caught in one of Anthea's darns and ripped away most of it, as well
- as a large slit in the carpet.
-
- 'Well, now you HAVE done it,' said Robert.
-
- But Anthea was a really first-class sister. She did not say a word
- till she had got out the Scotch heather-mixture fingering wool and
- the darning-needle and the thimble and the scissors, and by that
- time she had been able to get the better of her natural wish to be
- thoroughly disagreeable, and was able to say quite kindly--
-
- 'Never mind, Squirrel, I'll soon mend it.'
-
- Cyril thumped her on the back. He understood exactly how she had
- felt, and he was not an ungrateful brother.
-
- 'Respecting the purse containing coins,' the Phoenix said,
- scratching its invisible ear thoughtfully with its shining claw,
- 'it might be as well, perhaps, to state clearly the amount which
- you wish to find, as well as the country where you wish to find it,
- and the nature of the coins which you prefer. It would be indeed
- a cold moment when you should find a purse containing but three
- oboloi.'
-
- 'How much is an oboloi?'
-
- 'An obol is about twopence halfpenny,' the Phoenix replied.
-
- 'Yes,' said Jane, 'and if you find a purse I suppose it is only
- because some one has lost it, and you ought to take it to the
- policeman.'
-
- 'The situation,' remarked the Phoenix, 'does indeed bristle with
- difficulties.'
-
- 'What about a buried treasure,' said Cyril, 'and every one was dead
- that it belonged to?'
-
- 'Mother wouldn't believe THAT,' said more than one voice.
-
- 'Suppose,' said Robert--'suppose we asked to be taken where we
- could find a purse and give it back to the person it belonged to,
- and they would give us something for finding it?'
-
- 'We aren't allowed to take money from strangers. You know we
- aren't, Bobs,' said Anthea, making a knot at the end of a needleful
- of Scotch heather-mixture fingering wool (which is very wrong, and
- you must never do it when you are darning).
-
- 'No, THAT wouldn't do,' said Cyril. 'Let's chuck it and go to the
- North Pole, or somewhere really interesting.'
-
- 'No,' said the girls together, 'there must be SOME way.'
-
- 'Wait a sec,' Anthea added. 'I've got an idea coming. Don't
- speak.'
-
- There was a silence as she paused with the darning-needle in the
- air! Suddenly she spoke:
-
- 'I see. Let's tell the carpet to take us somewhere where we can
- get the money for mother's present, and--and--and get it some way
- that she'll believe in and not think wrong.'
-
- 'Well, I must say you are learning the way to get the most out of
- the carpet,' said Cyril. He spoke more heartily and kindly than
- usual, because he remembered how Anthea had refrained from snarking
- him about tearing the carpet.
-
- 'Yes,' said the Phoenix, 'you certainly are. And you have to
- remember that if you take a thing out it doesn't stay in.'
-
- No one paid any attention to this remark at the time, but
- afterwards every one thought of it.
-
- 'Do hurry up, Panther,' said Robert; and that was why Anthea did
- hurry up, and why the big darn in the middle of the carpet was all
- open and webby like a fishing net, not tight and close like woven
- cloth, which is what a good, well-behaved darn should be.
-
- Then every one put on its outdoor things, the Phoenix fluttered on
- to the mantelpiece and arranged its golden feathers in the glass,
- and all was ready. Every one got on to the carpet.
-
- 'Please go slowly, dear carpet,' Anthea began; we like to see where
- we're going.' And then she added the difficult wish that had been
- decided on.
-
- Next moment the carpet, stiff and raftlike, was sailing over the
- roofs of Kentish Town.
-
- 'I wish--No, I don't mean that. I mean it's a PITY we aren't
- higher up,' said Anthea, as the edge of the carpet grazed a
- chimney-pot.
-
- 'That's right. Be careful,' said the Phoenix, in warning tones.
- 'If you wish when you're on a wishing carpet, you DO wish, and
- there's an end of it.'
-
- So for a short time no one spoke, and the carpet sailed on in calm
- magnificence over St Pancras and King's Cross stations and over the
- crowded streets of Clerkenwell.
-
- 'We're going out Greenwich way,' said Cyril, as they crossed the
- streak of rough, tumbled water that was the Thames. 'We might go
- and have a look at the Palace.'
-
- On and on the carpet swept, still keeping much nearer to the
- chimney-pots than the children found at all comfortable. And then,
- just over New Cross, a terrible thing happened.
-
- Jane and Robert were in the middle of the carpet. Part of them was
- on the carpet, and part of them--the heaviest part--was on the
- great central darn.
-
- 'It's all very misty,' said Jane; 'it looks partly like out of
- doors and partly like in the nursery at home. I feel as if I was
- going to have measles; everything looked awfully rum then,
- remember.'
-
- 'I feel just exactly the same,' Robert said.
-
- 'It's the hole,' said the Phoenix; 'it's not measles whatever that
- possession may be.'
-
- And at that both Robert and Jane suddenly, and at once, made a
- bound to try and get on to the safer part of the carpet, and the
- darn gave way and their boots went up, and the heavy heads and
- bodies of them went down through the hole, and they landed in a
- position something between sitting and sprawling on the flat leads
- on the top of a high, grey, gloomy, respectable house whose address
- was 705, Amersham Road, New Cross.
-
- The carpet seemed to awaken to new energy as soon as it had got rid
- of their weight, and it rose high in the air. The others lay down
- flat and peeped over the edge of the rising carpet.
-
- 'Are you hurt?' cried Cyril, and Robert shouted 'No,' and next
- moment the carpet had sped away, and Jane and Robert were hidden
- from the sight of the others by a stack of smoky chimneys.
-
- 'Oh, how awful!' said Anthea.
-
- 'It might have been worse,' said the Phoenix. 'What would have
- been the sentiments of the survivors if that darn had given way
- when we were crossing the river?'
-
- 'Yes, there's that,' said Cyril, recovering himself. 'They'll be
- all right. They'll howl till some one gets them down, or drop
- tiles into the front garden to attract attention of passersby.
- Bobs has got my one-and-fivepence--lucky you forgot to mend that
- hole in my pocket, Panther, or he wouldn't have had it. They can
- tram it home.'
-
- But Anthea would not be comforted.
-
- 'It's all my fault,' she said. 'I KNEW the proper way to darn, and
- I didn't do it. It's all my fault. Let's go home and patch the
- carpet with your Etons--something really strong--and send it to
- fetch them.'
-
- 'All right,' said Cyril; 'but your Sunday jacket is stronger than
- my Etons. We must just chuck mother's present, that's all. I
- wish--'
-
- 'Stop!' cried the Phoenix; 'the carpet is dropping to earth.'
-
- And indeed it was.
-
- It sank swiftly, yet steadily, and landed on the pavement of the
- Deptford Road. It tipped a little as it landed, so that Cyril and
- Anthea naturally walked off it, and in an instant it had rolled
- itself up and hidden behind a gate-post. It did this so quickly
- that not a single person in the Deptford Road noticed it. The
- Phoenix rustled its way into the breast of Cyril's coat, and almost
- at the same moment a well-known voice remarked--
-
- 'Well, I never! What on earth are you doing here?'
-
- They were face to face with their pet uncle--their Uncle Reginald.
-
- 'We DID think of going to Greenwich Palace and talking about
- Nelson,' said Cyril, telling as much of the truth as he thought his
- uncle could believe.
-
- 'And where are the others?' asked Uncle Reginald.
-
- 'I don't exactly know,' Cyril replied, this time quite truthfully.
-
- 'Well,' said Uncle Reginald, 'I must fly. I've a case in the
- County Court. That's the worst of being a beastly solicitor. One
- can't take the chances of life when one gets them. If only I could
- come with you to the Painted Hall and give you lunch at the "Ship"
- afterwards! But, alas! it may not be.'
-
- The uncle felt in his pocket.
-
- '_I_ mustn't enjoy myself,' he said, 'but that's no reason why you
- shouldn't. Here, divide this by four, and the product ought to
- give you some desired result. Take care of yourselves. Adieu.'
-
- And waving a cheery farewell with his neat umbrella, the good and
- high-hatted uncle passed away, leaving Cyril and Anthea to exchange
- eloquent glances over the shining golden sovereign that lay in
- Cyril's hand.
-
- 'Well!' said Anthea.
-
- 'Well!' said Cyril.
-
- 'Well!' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'Good old carpet!' said Cyril, joyously.
-
- 'It WAS clever of it--so adequate and yet so simple,' said the
- Phoenix, with calm approval.
-
- 'Oh, come on home and let's mend the carpet. I am a beast. I'd
- forgotten the others just for a minute,' said the
- conscience-stricken Anthea.
-
- They unrolled the carpet quickly and slyly--they did not want to
- attract public attention--and the moment their feet were on the
- carpet Anthea wished to be at home, and instantly they were.
-
- The kindness of their excellent uncle had made it unnecessary for
- them to go to such extremes as Cyril's Etons or Anthea's Sunday
- jacket for the patching of the carpet.
-
- Anthea set to work at once to draw the edges of the broken darn
- together, and Cyril hastily went out and bought a large piece of
- the marble-patterned American oil-cloth which careful house-wives
- use to cover dressers and kitchen tables. It was the strongest
- thing he could think of.
-
- Then they set to work to line the carpet throughout with the
- oil-cloth. The nursery felt very odd and empty without the others,
- and Cyril did not feel so sure as he had done about their being
- able to 'tram it' home. So he tried to help Anthea, which was very
- good of him, but not much use to her.
-
- The Phoenix watched them for a time, but it was plainly growing
- more and more restless. It fluffed up its splendid feathers, and
- stood first on one gilded claw and then on the other, and at last
- it said--
-
- 'I can bear it no longer. This suspense! My Robert--who set my
- egg to hatch--in the bosom of whose Norfolk raiment I have nestled
- so often and so pleasantly! I think, if you'll excuse me--'
-
- 'Yes--DO,' cried Anthea, 'I wish we'd thought of asking you
- before.'
-
- Cyril opened the window. The Phoenix flapped its sunbright wings
- and vanished.
-
- 'So THAT'S all right,' said Cyril, taking up his needle and
- instantly pricking his hand in a new place.
-
-
- Of course I know that what you have really wanted to know about all
- this time is not what Anthea and Cyril did, but what happened to
- Jane and Robert after they fell through the carpet on to the leads
- of the house which was called number 705, Amersham Road.
-
- But I had to tell you the other first. That is one of the most
- annoying things about stories, you cannot tell all the different
- parts of them at the same time.
-
- Robert's first remark when he found himself seated on the damp,
- cold, sooty leads was--
-
- 'Here's a go!'
-
- Jane's first act was tears.
-
- 'Dry up, Pussy; don't be a little duffer,' said her brother,
- kindly, 'it'll be all right.'
-
- And then he looked about, just as Cyril had known he would, for
- something to throw down, so as to attract the attention of the
- wayfarers far below in the street. He could not find anything.
- Curiously enough, there were no stones on the leads, not even a
- loose tile. The roof was of slate, and every single slate knew its
- place and kept it. But, as so often happens, in looking for one
- thing he found another. There was a trap-door leading down into
- the house.
-
- And that trap-door was not fastened.
-
- 'Stop snivelling and come here, Jane,' he cried, encouragingly.
- 'Lend a hand to heave this up. If we can get into the house, we
- might sneak down without meeting any one, with luck. Come on.'
-
- They heaved up the door till it stood straight up, and, as they
- bent to look into the hole below, the door fell back with a hollow
- clang on the leads behind, and with its noise was mingled a
- blood-curdling scream from underneath.
-
- 'Discovered!' hissed Robert. 'Oh, my cats alive!'
-
- They were indeed discovered.
-
- They found themselves looking down into an attic, which was also a
- lumber-room. It had boxes and broken chairs, old fenders and
- picture-frames, and rag-bags hanging from nails.
-
- In the middle of the floor was a box, open, half full of clothes.
- Other clothes lay on the floor in neat piles. In the middle of the
- piles of clothes sat a lady, very fat indeed, with her feet
- sticking out straight in front of her. And it was she who had
- screamed, and who, in fact, was still screaming.
-
- 'Don't!' cried Jane, 'please don't! We won't hurt you.'
-
- 'Where are the rest of your gang?' asked the lady, stopping short
- in the middle of a scream.
-
- 'The others have gone on, on the wishing carpet,' said Jane
- truthfully.
-
- 'The wishing carpet?' said the lady.
-
- 'Yes,' said Jane, before Robert could say 'You shut up!' 'You must
- have read about it. The Phoenix is with them.'
-
- Then the lady got up, and picking her way carefully between the
- piles of clothes she got to the door and through it. She shut it
- behind her, and the two children could hear her calling 'Septimus!
- Septimus!' in a loud yet frightened way.
-
- 'Now,' said Robert quickly; 'I'll drop first.'
-
- He hung by his hands and dropped through the trap-door.
-
- 'Now you. Hang by your hands. I'll catch you. Oh, there's no
- time for jaw. Drop, I say.'
-
- Jane dropped.
-
- Robert tried to catch her, and even before they had finished the
- breathless roll among the piles of clothes, which was what his
- catching ended in, he whispered--
-
- 'We'll hide--behind those fenders and things; they'll think we've
- gone along the roofs. Then, when all is calm, we'll creep down the
- stairs and take our chance.'
-
- They hastily hid. A corner of an iron bedstead stuck into Robert's
- side, and Jane had only standing room for one foot--but they bore
- it--and when the lady came back, not with Septimus, but with
- another lady, they held their breath and their hearts beat thickly.
-
- 'Gone!' said the first lady; 'poor little things--quite mad, my
- dear--and at large! We must lock this room and send for the
- police.'
-
- 'Let me look out,' said the second lady, who was, if possible,
- older and thinner and primmer than the first. So the two ladies
- dragged a box under the trap-door and put another box on the top of
- it, and then they both climbed up very carefully and put their two
- trim, tidy heads out of the trap-door to look for the 'mad
- children'.
-
- 'Now,' whispered Robert, getting the bedstead leg out of his side.
-
- They managed to creep out from their hiding-place and out through
- the door before the two ladies had done looking out of the
- trap-door on to the empty leads.
-
- Robert and Jane tiptoed down the stairs--one flight, two flights.
- Then they looked over the banisters. Horror! a servant was coming
- up with a loaded scuttle.
-
- The children with one consent crept swiftly through the first open
- door.
-
- The room was a study, calm and gentlemanly, with rows of books, a
- writing table, and a pair of embroidered slippers warming
- themselves in the fender. The children hid behind the
- window-curtains. As they passed the table they saw on it a
- missionary-box with its bottom label torn off, open and empty.
-
- 'Oh, how awful!' whispered Jane. 'We shall never get away alive.'
-
- 'Hush!' said Robert, not a moment too soon, for there were steps on
- the stairs, and next instant the two ladies came into the room.
- They did not see the children, but they saw the empty missionary
- box.
-
- 'I knew it,' said one. 'Selina, it WAS a gang. I was certain of
- it from the first. The children were not mad. They were sent to
- distract our attention while their confederates robbed the house.'
-
- 'I am afraid you are right,' said Selina; 'and WHERE ARE THEY NOW?'
-
- 'Downstairs, no doubt, collecting the silver milk-jug and
- sugar-basin and the punch-ladle that was Uncle Joe's, and Aunt
- Jerusha's teaspoons. I shall go down.'
-
- 'Oh, don't be so rash and heroic,' said Selina. 'Amelia, we must
- call the police from the window. Lock the door. I WILL--I will--'
-
- The words ended in a yell as Selina, rushing to the window, came
- face to face with the hidden children.
-
- 'Oh, don't!' said Jane; 'how can you be so unkind? We AREN'T
- burglars, and we haven't any gang, and we didn't open your
- missionary-box. We opened our own once, but we didn't have to use
- the money, so our consciences made us put it back and--DON'T! Oh,
- I wish you wouldn't--'
-
- Miss Selina had seized Jane and Miss Amelia captured Robert. The
- children found themselves held fast by strong, slim hands, pink at
- the wrists and white at the knuckles.
-
- 'We've got YOU, at any rate,' said Miss Amelia. 'Selina, your
- captive is smaller than mine. You open the window at once and call
- "Murder!" as loud as you can.
-
- Selina obeyed; but when she had opened the window, instead of
- calling 'Murder!' she called 'Septimus!' because at that very
- moment she saw her nephew coming in at the gate.
-
- In another minute he had let himself in with his latch-key and had
- mounted the stairs. As he came into the room Jane and Robert each
- uttered a shriek of joy so loud and so sudden that the ladies
- leaped with surprise, and nearly let them go.
-
- 'It's our own clergyman,' cried Jane.
-
- 'Don't you remember us?' asked Robert. 'You married our burglar
- for us--don't you remember?'
-
- 'I KNEW it was a gang,' said Amelia. 'Septimus, these abandoned
- children are members of a desperate burgling gang who are robbing
- the house. They have already forced the missionary-box and
- purloined its contents.'
-
- The Reverend Septimus passed his hand wearily over his brow.
-
- 'I feel a little faint,' he said, 'running upstairs so quickly.'
-
- 'We never touched the beastly box,' said Robert.
-
- 'Then your confederates did,' said Miss Selina.
-
- 'No, no,' said the curate, hastily. '_I_ opened the box myself.
- This morning I found I had not enough small change for the Mothers'
- Independent Unity Measles and Croup Insurance payments. I suppose
- this is NOT a dream, is it?'
-
- 'Dream? No, indeed. Search the house. I insist upon it.'
-
- The curate, still pale and trembling, searched the house, which, of
- course, was blamelessly free of burglars.
-
- When he came back he sank wearily into his chair.
-
- 'Aren't you going to let us go?' asked Robert, with furious
- indignation, for there is something in being held by a strong lady
- that sets the blood of a boy boiling in his veins with anger and
- despair. 'We've never done anything to you. It's all the carpet.
- It dropped us on the leads. WE couldn't help it. You know how it
- carried you over to the island, and you had to marry the burglar to
- the cook.'
-
- 'Oh, my head!' said the curate.
-
- 'Never mind your head just now,' said Robert; 'try to be honest and
- honourable, and do your duty in that state of life!'
-
- 'This is a judgement on me for something, I suppose,' said the
- Reverend Septimus, wearily, 'but I really cannot at the moment
- remember what.'
-
- 'Send for the police,' said Miss Selina.
-
- 'Send for a doctor,' said the curate.
-
- 'Do you think they ARE mad, then,' said Miss Amelia.
-
- 'I think I am,' said the curate.
-
- Jane had been crying ever since her capture. Now she said--
- 'You aren't now, but perhaps you will be, if--And it would serve
- you jolly well right, too.'
-
- 'Aunt Selina,' said the curate, 'and Aunt Amelia, believe me, this
- is only an insane dream. You will realize it soon. It has
- happened to me before. But do not let us be unjust, even in a
- dream. Do not hold the children; they have done no harm. As I
- said before, it was I who opened the box.'
-
- The strong, bony hands unwillingly loosened their grasp. Robert
- shook himself and stood in sulky resentment. But Jane ran to the
- curate and embraced him so suddenly that he had not time to defend
- himself.
-
- 'You're a dear,' she said. 'It IS like a dream just at first, but
- you get used to it. Now DO let us go. There's a good, kind,
- honourable clergyman.'
-
- 'I don't know,' said the Reverend Septimus; 'it's a difficult
- problem. It is such a very unusual dream. Perhaps it's only a
- sort of other life--quite real enough for you to be mad in. And if
- you're mad, there might be a dream-asylum where you'd be kindly
- treated, and in time restored, cured, to your sorrowing relatives.
- It is very hard to see your duty plainly, even in ordinary life,
- and these dream-circumstances are so complicated--'
-
- 'If it's a dream,' said Robert, 'you will wake up directly, and
- then you'd be sorry if you'd sent us into a dream-asylum, because
- you might never get into the same dream again and let us out, and
- so we might stay there for ever, and then what about our sorrowing
- relatives who aren't in the dreams at all?'
-
- But all the curate could now say was, 'Oh, my head!'
-
- And Jane and Robert felt quite ill with helplessness and
- hopelessness. A really conscientious curate is a very difficult
- thing to manage.
-
- And then, just as the hopelessness and the helplessness were
- getting to be almost more than they could bear, the two children
- suddenly felt that extraordinary shrinking feeling that you always
- have when you are just going to vanish. And the next moment they
- had vanished, and the Reverend Septimus was left alone with his
- aunts.
-
- 'I knew it was a dream,' he cried, wildly. 'I've had something
- like it before. Did you dream it too, Aunt Selina, and you, Aunt
- Amelia? I dreamed that you did, you know.'
-
- Aunt Selina looked at him and then at Aunt Amelia. Then she said
- boldly--
-
- 'What do you mean? WE haven't been dreaming anything. You must
- have dropped off in your chair.'
-
- The curate heaved a sigh of relief.
-
- 'Oh, if it's only _I_,' he said; 'if we'd all dreamed it I could
- never have believed it, never!'
-
- Afterwards Aunt Selina said to the other aunt--
-
- 'Yes, I know it was an untruth, and I shall doubtless be punished
- for it in due course. But I could see the poor dear fellow's brain
- giving way before my very eyes. He couldn't have stood the strain
- of three dreams. It WAS odd, wasn't it? All three of us dreaming
- the same thing at the same moment. We must never tell dear Seppy.
- But I shall send an account of it to the Psychical Society, with
- stars instead of names, you know.'
-
- And she did. And you can read all about it in one of the society's
- fat Blue-books.
-
- Of course, you understand what had happened? The intelligent
- Phoenix had simply gone straight off to the Psammead, and had
- wished Robert and Jane at home. And, of course, they were at home
- at once. Cyril and Anthea had not half finished mending the
- carpet.
-
- When the joyful emotions of reunion had calmed down a little, they
- all went out and spent what was left of Uncle Reginald's sovereign
- in presents for mother. They bought her a pink silk handkerchief,
- a pair of blue and white vases, a bottle of scent, a packet of
- Christmas candles, and a cake of soap shaped and coloured like a
- tomato, and one that was so like an orange that almost any one you
- had given it to would have tried to peel it--if they liked
- oranges, of course. Also they bought a cake with icing on, and the
- rest of the money they spent on flowers to put in the vases.
-
- When they had arranged all the things on a table, with the candles
- stuck up on a plate ready to light the moment mother's cab was
- heard, they washed themselves thoroughly and put on tidier clothes.
-
- Then Robert said, 'Good old Psammead,' and the others said so too.
-
- 'But, really, it's just as much good old Phoenix,' said Robert.
- 'Suppose it hadn't thought of getting the wish!'
-
- 'Ah!' said the Phoenix, 'it is perhaps fortunate for you that I am
- such a competent bird.'
-
- 'There's mother's cab,' cried Anthea, and the Phoenix hid and they
- lighted the candles, and next moment mother was home again.
-
- She liked her presents very much, and found their story of Uncle
- Reginald and the sovereign easy and even pleasant to believe.
-
- 'Good old carpet,' were Cyril's last sleepy words.
-
- 'What there is of it,' said the Phoenix, from the cornice-pole.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 11
- THE BEGINNING OF THE END
-
-
- 'Well, I MUST say,' mother said, looking at the wishing carpet as
- it lay, all darned and mended and backed with shiny American cloth,
- on the floor of the nursery--'I MUST say I've never in my life
- bought such a bad bargain as that carpet.'
-
- A soft 'Oh!' of contradiction sprang to the lips of Cyril, Robert,
- Jane, and Anthea. Mother looked at them quickly, and said--
-
- 'Well, of course, I see you've mended it very nicely, and that was
- sweet of you, dears.'
-
- 'The boys helped too,' said the dears, honourably.
-
- 'But, still--twenty-two and ninepence! It ought to have lasted for
- years. It's simply dreadful now. Well, never mind, darlings,
- you've done your best. I think we'll have coconut matting next
- time. A carpet doesn't have an easy life of it in this room, does
- it?'
-
- 'It's not our fault, mother, is it, that our boots are the really
- reliable kind?' Robert asked the question more in sorrow than in
- anger.
-
- 'No, dear, we can't help our boots,' said mother, cheerfully, 'but
- we might change them when we come in, perhaps. It's just an idea
- of mine. I wouldn't dream of scolding on the very first morning
- after I've come home. Oh, my Lamb, how could you?'
-
- This conversation was at breakfast, and the Lamb had been
- beautifully good until every one was looking at the carpet, and
- then it was for him but the work of a moment to turn a glass dish
- of syrupy blackberry jam upside down on his young head. It was the
- work of a good many minutes and several persons to get the jam off
- him again, and this interesting work took people's minds off the
- carpet, and nothing more was said just then about its badness as a
- bargain and about what mother hoped for from coconut matting.
-
- When the Lamb was clean again he had to be taken care of while
- mother rumpled her hair and inked her fingers and made her head
- ache over the difficult and twisted house-keeping accounts which
- cook gave her on dirty bits of paper, and which were supposed to
- explain how it was that cook had only fivepence-half-penny and a
- lot of unpaid bills left out of all the money mother had sent her
- for house-keeping. Mother was very clever, but even she could not
- quite understand the cook's accounts.
-
- The Lamb was very glad to have his brothers and sisters to play
- with him. He had not forgotten them a bit, and he made them play
- all the old exhausting games: 'Whirling Worlds', where you swing
- the baby round and round by his hands; and 'Leg and Wing', where
- you swing him from side to side by one ankle and one wrist. There
- was also climbing Vesuvius. In this game the baby walks up you,
- and when he is standing on your shoulders, you shout as loud as you
- can, which is the rumbling of the burning mountain, and then tumble
- him gently on to the floor, and roll him there, which is the
- destruction of Pompeii.
-
- 'All the same, I wish we could decide what we'd better say next
- time mother says anything about the carpet,' said Cyril,
- breathlessly ceasing to be a burning mountain.
-
- 'Well, you talk and decide,' said Anthea; 'here, you lovely ducky
- Lamb. Come to Panther and play Noah's Ark.'
-
- The Lamb came with his pretty hair all tumbled and his face all
- dusty from the destruction of Pompeii, and instantly became a baby
- snake, hissing and wriggling and creeping in Anthea's arms, as she
- said--
-
-
- 'I love my little baby snake,
- He hisses when he is awake,
- He creeps with such a wriggly creep,
- He wriggles even in his sleep.'
-
-
- 'Crocky,' said the Lamb, and showed all his little teeth. So
- Anthea went on--
-
-
- 'I love my little crocodile,
- I love his truthful toothful smile;
- It is so wonderful and wide,
- I like to see it--FROM OUTSIDE.'
-
-
- 'Well, you see,' Cyril was saying; 'it's just the old bother.
- Mother can't believe the real true truth about the carpet, and--'
-
- 'You speak sooth, O Cyril,' remarked the Phoenix, coming out from
- the cupboard where the blackbeetles lived, and the torn books, and
- the broken slates, and odd pieces of toys that had lost the rest of
- themselves. 'Now hear the wisdom of Phoenix, the son of the
- Phoenix--'
-
- 'There is a society called that,' said Cyril.
-
- 'Where is it? And what is a society?' asked the bird.
-
- 'It's a sort of joined-together lot of people--a sort of
- brotherhood--a kind of--well, something very like your temple, you
- know, only quite different.'
-
- 'I take your meaning,' said the Phoenix. 'I would fain see these
- calling themselves Sons of the Phoenix'
-
- 'But what about your words of wisdom?'
-
- 'Wisdom is always welcome,' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'Pretty Polly!' remarked the Lamb, reaching his hands towards the
- golden speaker.
-
- The Phoenix modestly retreated behind Robert, and Anthea hastened
- to distract the attention of the Lamb by murmuring--
-
-
- "I love my little baby rabbit;
- But oh! he has a dreadful habit
- Of paddling out among the rocks
- And soaking both his bunny socks.'
-
-
- 'I don't think you'd care about the sons of the Phoenix, really,'
- said Robert. 'I have heard that they don't do anything fiery.
- They only drink a great deal. Much more than other people, because
- they drink lemonade and fizzy things, and the more you drink of
- those the more good you get.'
-
- 'In your mind, perhaps,' said Jane; 'but it wouldn't be good in
- your body. You'd get too balloony.'
-
- The Phoenix yawned.
-
- 'Look here,' said Anthea; 'I really have an idea. This isn't like
- a common carpet. It's very magic indeed. Don't you think, if we
- put Tatcho on it, and then gave it a rest, the magic part of it
- might grow, like hair is supposed to do?'
-
- 'It might,' said Robert; 'but I should think paraffin would do as
- well--at any rate as far as the smell goes, and that seems to be
- the great thing about Tatcho.'
-
- But with all its faults Anthea's idea was something to do, and they
- did it.
-
- It was Cyril who fetched the Tatcho bottle from father's
- washhand-stand. But the bottle had not much in it.
-
- 'We mustn't take it all,' Jane said, 'in case father's hair began
- to come off suddenly. If he hadn't anything to put on it, it might
- all drop off before Eliza had time to get round to the chemist's
- for another bottle. It would be dreadful to have a bald father,
- and it would all be our fault.'
-
- 'And wigs are very expensive, I believe,' said Anthea. 'Look here,
- leave enough in the bottle to wet father's head all over with in
- case any emergency emerges--and let's make up with paraffin. I
- expect it's the smell that does the good really--and the smell's
- exactly the same.'
-
- So a small teaspoonful of the Tatcho was put on the edges of the
- worst darn in the carpet and rubbed carefully into the roots of the
- hairs of it, and all the parts that there was not enough Tatcho for
- had paraffin rubbed into them with a piece of flannel. Then the
- flannel was burned. It made a gay flame, which delighted the
- Phoenix and the Lamb.
-
- 'How often,' said mother, opening the door--'how often am I to tell
- you that you are NOT to play with paraffin? What have you been
- doing?'
-
- 'We have burnt a paraffiny rag,' Anthea answered.
-
- It was no use telling mother what they had done to the carpet. She
- did not know it was a magic carpet, and no one wants to be laughed
- at for trying to mend an ordinary carpet with lamp-oil.
-
- 'Well, don't do it again,' said mother. 'And now, away with
- melancholy! Father has sent a telegram. Look!' She held it out,
- and the children, holding it by its yielding corners, read--
-
-
- 'Box for kiddies at Garrick. Stalls for us, Haymarket. Meet
- Charing Cross, 6.30.'
-
-
- 'That means,' said mother, 'that you're going to see "The Water
- Babies" all by your happy selves, and father and I will take you
- and fetch you. Give me the Lamb, dear, and you and Jane put clean
- lace in your red evening frocks, and I shouldn't wonder if you
- found they wanted ironing. This paraffin smell is ghastly. Run
- and get out your frocks.'
-
- The frocks did want ironing--wanted it rather badly, as it
- happened; for, being of tomato-Coloured Liberty silk, they had been
- found very useful for tableaux vivants when a red dress was
- required for Cardinal Richelieu. They were very nice tableaux,
- these, and I wish I could tell you about them; but one cannot tell
- everything in a story. You would have been specially interested in
- hearing about the tableau of the Princes in the Tower, when one of
- the pillows burst, and the youthful Princes were so covered with
- feathers that the picture might very well have been called
- 'Michaelmas Eve; or, Plucking the Geese'.
-
- Ironing the dresses and sewing the lace in occupied some time, and
- no one was dull, because there was the theatre to look forward to,
- and also the possible growth of hairs on the carpet, for which
- every one kept looking anxiously. By four o'clock Jane was almost
- sure that several hairs were beginning to grow.
-
- The Phoenix perched on the fender, and its conversation, as usual,
- was entertaining and instructive--like school prizes are said to
- be. But it seemed a little absent-minded, and even a little sad.
-
- 'Don't you feel well, Phoenix, dear?' asked Anthea, stooping to
- take an iron off the fire.
-
- 'I am not sick,' replied the golden bird, with a gloomy shake of
- the head; 'but I am getting old.'
-
- 'Why, you've hardly been hatched any time at all.'
-
- 'Time,' remarked the Phoenix, 'is measured by heartbeats. I'm sure
- the palpitations I've had since I've known you are enough to blanch
- the feathers of any bird.'
-
- 'But I thought you lived 500 years,' said Robert, and you've hardly
- begun this set of years. Think of all the time that's before you.'
-
- 'Time,' said the Phoenix, 'is, as you are probably aware, merely a
- convenient fiction. There is no such thing as time. I have lived
- in these two months at a pace which generously counterbalances 500
- years of life in the desert. I am old, I am weary. I feel as if
- I ought to lay my egg, and lay me down to my fiery sleep. But
- unless I'm careful I shall be hatched again instantly, and that is
- a misfortune which I really do not think I COULD endure. But do
- not let me intrude these desperate personal reflections on your
- youthful happiness. What is the show at the theatre to-night?
- Wrestlers? Gladiators? A combat of cameleopards and unicorns?'
-
- 'I don't think so,' said Cyril; 'it's called "The Water Babies",
- and if it's like the book there isn't any gladiating in it. There
- are chimney-sweeps and professors, and a lobster and an otter and
- a salmon, and children living in the water.'
-
- 'It sounds chilly.' The Phoenix shivered, and went to sit on the
- tongs.
-
- 'I don't suppose there will be REAL water,' said Jane. 'And
- theatres are very warm and pretty, with a lot of gold and lamps.
- Wouldn't you like to come with us?'
-
- '_I_ was just going to say that,' said Robert, in injured tones,
- 'only I know how rude it is to interrupt. Do come, Phoenix, old
- chap; it will cheer you up. It'll make you laugh like any thing.
- Mr Bourchier always makes ripping plays. You ought to have seen
- "Shock-headed Peter" last year.'
-
- 'Your words are strange,' said the Phoenix, 'but I will come with
- you. The revels of this Bourchier, of whom you speak, may help me
- to forget the weight of my years.'
- So that evening the Phoenix snugged inside the waistcoat of
- Robert's Etons--a very tight fit it seemed both to Robert and to
- the Phoenix--and was taken to the play.
-
- Robert had to pretend to be cold at the glittering, many-mirrored
- restaurant where they ate dinner, with father in evening dress,
- with a very shiny white shirt-front, and mother looking lovely in
- her grey evening dress, that changes into pink and green when she
- moves. Robert pretended that he was too cold to take off his
- great-coat, and so sat sweltering through what would otherwise have
- been a most thrilling meal. He felt that he was a blot on the
- smart beauty of the family, and he hoped the Phoenix knew what he
- was suffering for its sake. Of course, we are all pleased to
- suffer for the sake of others, but we like them to know it unless
- we are the very best and noblest kind of people, and Robert was
- just ordinary.
-
- Father was full of jokes and fun, and every one laughed all the
- time, even with their mouths full, which is not manners. Robert
- thought father would not have been quite so funny about his keeping
- his over-coat on if father had known all the truth. And there
- Robert was probably right.
-
- When dinner was finished to the last grape and the last paddle in
- the finger glasses--for it was a really truly grown-up dinner--the
- children were taken to the theatre, guided to a box close to the
- stage, and left.
-
- Father's parting words were: 'Now, don't you stir out of this box,
- whatever you do. I shall be back before the end of the play. Be
- good and you will be happy. Is this zone torrid enough for the
- abandonment of great-coats, Bobs? No? Well, then, I should say
- you were sickening for something--mumps or measles or thrush or
- teething. Goodbye.'
-
- He went, and Robert was at last able to remove his coat, mop his
- perspiring brow, and release the crushed and dishevelled Phoenix.
- Robert had to arrange his damp hair at the looking-glass at the
- back of the box, and the Phoenix had to preen its disordered
- feathers for some time before either of them was fit to be seen.
-
- They were very, very early. When the lights went up fully, the
- Phoenix, balancing itself on the gilded back of a chair, swayed in
- ecstasy.
-
- 'How fair a scene is this!' it murmured; 'how far fairer than my
- temple! Or have I guessed aright? Have you brought me hither to
- lift up my heart with emotions of joyous surprise? Tell me, my
- Robert, is it not that this, THIS is my true temple, and the other
- was but a humble shrine frequented by outcasts?'
-
- 'I don't know about outcasts,' said Robert, 'but you can call this
- your temple if you like. Hush! the music is beginning.'
-
- I am not going to tell you about the play. As I said before, one
- can't tell everything, and no doubt you saw 'The Water Babies'
- yourselves. If you did not it was a shame, or, rather, a pity.
-
- What I must tell you is that, though Cyril and Jane and Robert and
- Anthea enjoyed it as much as any children possibly could, the
- pleasure of the Phoenix was far, far greater than theirs.
-
- 'This is indeed my temple,' it said again and again. 'What radiant
- rites! And all to do honour to me!'
-
- The songs in the play it took to be hymns in its honour. The
- choruses were choric songs in its praise. The electric lights, it
- said, were magic torches lighted for its sake, and it was so
- charmed with the footlights that the children could hardly persuade
- it to sit still. But when the limelight was shown it could contain
- its approval no longer. It flapped its golden wings, and cried in
- a voice that could be heard all over the theatre:
-
- 'Well done, my servants! Ye have my favour and my countenance!'
-
- Little Tom on the stage stopped short in what he was saying. A
- deep breath was drawn by hundreds of lungs, every eye in the house
- turned to the box where the luckless children cringed, and most
- people hissed, or said 'Shish!' or 'Turn them out!'
-
- Then the play went on, and an attendant presently came to the box
- and spoke wrathfully.
-
- 'It wasn't us, indeed it wasn't,' said Anthea, earnestly; 'it was
- the bird.'
-
- The man said well, then, they must keep their bird very quiet.
- 'Disturbing every one like this,' he said.
-
- 'It won't do it again,' said Robert, glancing imploringly at the
- golden bird; 'I'm sure it won't.'
-
- 'You have my leave to depart,' said the Phoenix gently.
-
- 'Well, he is a beauty, and no mistake,' said the attendant, 'only
- I'd cover him up during the acts. It upsets the performance.'
-
- And he went.
-
- 'Don't speak again, there's a dear,' said Anthea; 'you wouldn't
- like to interfere with your own temple, would you?'
-
- So now the Phoenix was quiet, but it kept whispering to the
- children. It wanted to know why there was no altar, no fire, no
- incense, and became so excited and fretful and tiresome that four
- at least of the party of five wished deeply that it had been left
- at home.
-
- What happened next was entirely the fault of the Phoenix. It was
- not in the least the fault of the theatre people, and no one could
- ever understand afterwards how it did happen. No one, that is,
- except the guilty bird itself and the four children. The Phoenix
- was balancing itself on the gilt back of the chair, swaying
- backwards and forwards and up and down, as you may see your own
- domestic parrot do. I mean the grey one with the red tail. All
- eyes were on the stage, where the lobster was delighting the
- audience with that gem of a song, 'If you can't walk straight, walk
- sideways!' when the Phoenix murmured warmly--
-
- 'No altar, no fire, no incense!' and then, before any of the
- children could even begin to think of stopping it, it spread its
- bright wings and swept round the theatre, brushing its gleaming
- feathers against delicate hangings and gilded woodwork.
-
- It seemed to have made but one circular wing-sweep, such as you may
- see a gull make over grey water on a stormy day. Next moment it
- was perched again on the chair-back--and all round the theatre,
- where it had passed, little sparks shone like tinsel seeds, then
- little smoke wreaths curled up like growing plants--little flames
- opened like flower-buds. People whispered--then people shrieked.
-
- 'Fire! Fire!' The curtain went down--the lights went up.
-
- 'Fire!' cried every one, and made for the doors.
-
- 'A magnificent idea!' said the Phoenix, complacently. 'An enormous
- altar--fire supplied free of charge. Doesn't the incense smell
- delicious?'
-
- The only smell was the stifling smell of smoke, of burning silk, or
- scorching varnish.
-
- The little flames had opened now into great flame-flowers. The
- people in the theatre were shouting and pressing towards the doors.
-
- 'Oh, how COULD you!' cried Jane. 'Let's get out.'
-
- 'Father said stay here,' said Anthea, very pale, and trying to
- speak in her ordinary voice.
-
- 'He didn't mean stay and be roasted,' said Robert. 'No boys on
- burning decks for me, thank you.'
-
- 'Not much,' said Cyril, and he opened the door of the box.
-
- But a fierce waft of smoke and hot air made him shut it again. It
- was not possible to get out that way.
-
- They looked over the front of the box. Could they climb down?
-
- It would be possible, certainly; but would they be much better off?
-
- 'Look at the people,' moaned Anthea; 'we couldn't get through.'
-
- And, indeed, the crowd round the doors looked as thick as flies in
- the jam-making season.
-
- 'I wish we'd never seen the Phoenix,' cried Jane.
-
- Even at that awful moment Robert looked round to see if the bird
- had overheard a speech which, however natural, was hardly polite or
- grateful.
-
- The Phoenix was gone.
-
- 'Look here,' said Cyril, 'I've read about fires in papers; I'm sure
- it's all right. Let's wait here, as father said.'
-
- 'We can't do anything else,' said Anthea bitterly.
-
- 'Look here,' said Robert, 'I'm NOT frightened--no, I'm not. The
- Phoenix has never been a skunk yet, and I'm certain it'll see us
- through somehow. I believe in the Phoenix!'
-
- 'The Phoenix thanks you, O Robert,' said a golden voice at his
- feet, and there was the Phoenix itself, on the Wishing Carpet.
-
- 'Quick!' it said. 'Stand on those portions of the carpet which are
- truly antique and authentic--and--'
-
- A sudden jet of flame stopped its words. Alas! the Phoenix had
- unconsciously warmed to its subject, and in the unintentional heat
- of the moment had set fire to the paraffin with which that morning
- the children had anointed the carpet. It burned merrily. The
- children tried in vain to stamp it out. They had to stand back and
- let it burn itself out. When the paraffin had burned away it was
- found that it had taken with it all the darns of Scotch
- heather-mixture fingering. Only the fabric of the old carpet was
- left--and that was full of holes.
-
- 'Come,' said the Phoenix, 'I'm cool now.'
-
- The four children got on to what was left of the carpet. Very
- careful they were not to leave a leg or a hand hanging over one of
- the holes. It was very hot--the theatre was a pit of fire. Every
- one else had got out.
-
- Jane had to sit on Anthea's lap.
-
- 'Home!' said Cyril, and instantly the cool draught from under the
- nursery door played upon their legs as they sat. They were all on
- the carpet still, and the carpet was lying in its proper place on
- the nursery floor, as calm and unmoved as though it had never been
- to the theatre or taken part in a fire in its life.
-
- Four long breaths of deep relief were instantly breathed. The
- draught which they had never liked before was for the moment quite
- pleasant. And they were safe. And every one else was safe. The
- theatre had been quite empty when they left. Every one was sure of
- that.
-
- They presently found themselves all talking at once. Somehow none
- of their adventures had given them so much to talk about. None
- other had seemed so real.
-
- 'Did you notice--?' they said, and 'Do you remember--?'
-
- When suddenly Anthea's face turned pale under the dirt which it had
- collected on it during the fire.
-
- 'Oh,' she cried, 'mother and father! Oh, how awful! They'll think
- we're burned to cinders. Oh, let's go this minute and tell them we
- aren't.'
-
- 'We should only miss them,' said the sensible Cyril.
-
- 'Well--YOU go then,' said Anthea, 'or I will. Only do wash your
- face first. Mother will be sure to think you are burnt to a cinder
- if she sees you as black as that, and she'll faint or be ill or
- something. Oh, I wish we'd never got to know that Phoenix.'
-
- 'Hush!' said Robert; 'it's no use being rude to the bird. I
- suppose it can't help its nature. Perhaps we'd better wash too.
- Now I come to think of it my hands are rather--'
-
- No one had noticed the Phoenix since it had bidden them to step on
- the carpet. And no one noticed that no one had noticed.
-
- All were partially clean, and Cyril was just plunging into his
- great-coat to go and look for his parents--he, and not unjustly,
- called it looking for a needle in a bundle of hay--when the sound
- of father's latchkey in the front door sent every one bounding up
- the stairs.
-
- 'Are you all safe?' cried mother's voice; 'are you all safe?' and
- the next moment she was kneeling on the linoleum of the hall,
- trying to kiss four damp children at once, and laughing and crying
- by turns, while father stood looking on and saying he was blessed
- or something.
-
- 'But how did you guess we'd come home,' said Cyril, later, when
- every one was calm enough for talking.
-
- 'Well, it was rather a rum thing. We heard the Garrick was on
- fire, and of course we went straight there,' said father, briskly.
- 'We couldn't find you, of course--and we couldn't get in--but the
- firemen told us every one was safely out. And then I heard a voice
- at my ear say, "Cyril, Anthea, Robert, and Jane"--and something
- touched me on the shoulder. It was a great yellow pigeon, and it
- got in the way of my seeing who'd spoken. It fluttered off, and
- then some one said in the other ear, "They're safe at home"; and
- when I turned again, to see who it was speaking, hanged if there
- wasn't that confounded pigeon on my other shoulder. Dazed by the
- fire, I suppose. Your mother said it was the voice of--'
-
- 'I said it was the bird that spoke,' said mother, 'and so it was.
- Or at least I thought so then. It wasn't a pigeon. It was an
- orange-coloured cockatoo. I don't care who it was that spoke. It
- was true and you're safe.'
-
- Mother began to cry again, and father said bed was a good place
- after the pleasures of the stage.
-
- So every one went there.
-
- Robert had a talk to the Phoenix that night.
-
- 'Oh, very well,' said the bird, when Robert had said what he felt,
- 'didn't you know that I had power over fire? Do not distress
- yourself. I, like my high priests in Lombard Street, can undo the
- work of flames. Kindly open the casement.'
-
- It flew out.
-
- That was why the papers said next day that the fire at the theatre
- had done less damage than had been anticipated. As a matter of
- fact it had done none, for the Phoenix spent the night in putting
- things straight. How the management accounted for this, and how
- many of the theatre officials still believe that they were mad on
- that night will never be known.
-
-
- Next day mother saw the burnt holes in the carpet.
-
- 'It caught where it was paraffiny,' said Anthea.
-
- 'I must get rid of that carpet at once,' said mother.
-
- But what the children said in sad whispers to each other, as they
- pondered over last night's events, was--
-
- 'We must get rid of that Phoenix.'
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 12
- THE END OF THE END
-
-
- 'Egg, toast, tea, milk, tea-cup and saucer, egg-spoon, knife,
- butter--that's all, I think,' remarked Anthea, as she put the last
- touches to mother's breakfast-tray, and went, very carefully up the
- stairs, feeling for every step with her toes, and holding on to the
- tray with all her fingers. She crept into mother's room and set
- the tray on a chair. Then she pulled one of the blinds up very
- softly.
-
- 'Is your head better, mammy dear?' she asked, in the soft little
- voice that she kept expressly for mother's headaches. 'I've
- brought your brekkie, and I've put the little cloth with
- clover-leaves on it, the one I made you.'
-
- 'That's very nice,' said mother sleepily.
-
- Anthea knew exactly what to do for mothers with headaches who had
- breakfast in bed. She fetched warm water and put just enough eau
- de Cologne in it, and bathed mother's face and hands with the
- sweet-scented water. Then mother was able to think about
- breakfast.
-
- 'But what's the matter with my girl?' she asked, when her eyes got
- used to the light.
-
- 'Oh, I'm so sorry you're ill,' Anthea said. 'It's that horrible
- fire and you being so frightened. Father said so. And we all feel
- as if it was our faults. I can't explain, but--'
-
- 'It wasn't your fault a bit, you darling goosie,' mother said.
- 'How could it be?'
-
- 'That's just what I can't tell you,' said Anthea. 'I haven't got
- a futile brain like you and father, to think of ways of explaining
- everything.'
-
- Mother laughed.
-
- 'My futile brain--or did you mean fertile?--anyway, it feels very
- stiff and sore this morning--but I shall be quite all right by and
- by. And don't be a silly little pet girl. The fire wasn't your
- faults. No; I don't want the egg, dear. I'll go to sleep again,
- I think. Don't you worry. And tell cook not to bother me about
- meals. You can order what you like for lunch.'
-
- Anthea closed the door very mousily, and instantly went downstairs
- and ordered what she liked for lunch. She ordered a pair of
- turkeys, a large plum-pudding, cheese-cakes, and almonds and
- raisins.
-
- Cook told her to go along, do. And she might as well not have
- ordered anything, for when lunch came it was just hashed mutton and
- semolina pudding, and cook had forgotten the sippets for the mutton
- hash and the semolina pudding was burnt.
-
- When Anthea rejoined the others she found them all plunged in the
- gloom where she was herself. For every one knew that the days of
- the carpet were now numbered. Indeed, so worn was it that you
- could almost have numbered its threads.
-
- So that now, after nearly a month of magic happenings, the time was
- at hand when life would have to go on in the dull, ordinary way and
- Jane, Robert, Anthea, and Cyril would be just in the same position
- as the other children who live in Camden Town, the children whom
- these four had so often pitied, and perhaps a little despised.
-
- 'We shall be just like them,' Cyril said.
-
- 'Except,' said Robert, 'that we shall have more things to remember
- and be sorry we haven't got.'
-
- 'Mother's going to send away the carpet as soon as she's well
- enough to see about that coconut matting. Fancy us with
- coconut-matting--us! And we've walked under live coconut-trees on
- the island where you can't have whooping-cough.'
-
- 'Pretty island,' said the Lamb; 'paint-box sands and sea all shiny
- sparkly.'
-
- His brothers and sisters had often wondered whether he remembered
- that island. Now they knew that he did.
-
- 'Yes,' said Cyril; 'no more cheap return trips by carpet for
- us--that's a dead cert.'
-
- They were all talking about the carpet, but what they were all
- thinking about was the Phoenix.
-
- The golden bird had been so kind, so friendly, so polite, so
- instructive--and now it had set fire to a theatre and made mother
- ill.
-
- Nobody blamed the bird. It had acted in a perfectly natural
- manner. But every one saw that it must not be asked to prolong its
- visit. Indeed, in plain English it must be asked to go!
-
- The four children felt like base spies and treacherous friends; and
- each in its mind was saying who ought not to be the one to tell the
- Phoenix that there could no longer be a place for it in that happy
- home in Camden Town. Each child was quite sure that one of them
- ought to speak out in a fair and manly way, but nobody wanted to be
- the one.
-
- They could not talk the whole thing over as they would have liked
- to do, because the Phoenix itself was in the cupboard, among the
- blackbeetles and the odd shoes and the broken chessmen.
-
- But Anthea tried.
-
- 'It's very horrid. I do hate thinking things about people, and not
- being able to say the things you're thinking because of the way
- they would feel when they thought what things you were thinking,
- and wondered what they'd done to make you think things like that,
- and why you were thinking them.'
-
- Anthea was so anxious that the Phoenix should not understand what
- she said that she made a speech completely baffling to all. It was
- not till she pointed to the cupboard in which all believed the
- Phoenix to be that Cyril understood.
-
- 'Yes,' he said, while Jane and Robert were trying to tell each
- other how deeply they didn't understand what Anthea were saying;
- 'but after recent eventfulnesses a new leaf has to be turned over,
- and, after all, mother is more important than the feelings of any
- of the lower forms of creation, however unnatural.'
-
- 'How beautifully you do do it,' said Anthea, absently beginning to
- build a card-house for the Lamb--'mixing up what you're saying, I
- mean. We ought to practise doing it so as to be ready for
- mysterious occasions. We're talking about THAT,' she said to Jane
- and Robert, frowning, and nodding towards the cupboard where the
- Phoenix was. Then Robert and Jane understood, and each opened its
- mouth to speak.
-
- 'Wait a minute,' said Anthea quickly; 'the game is to twist up what
- you want to say so that no one can understand what you're saying
- except the people you want to understand it, and sometimes not
- them.'
-
- 'The ancient philosophers,' said a golden voice, 'Well understood
- the art of which you speak.'
-
- Of course it was the Phoenix, who had not been in the cupboard at
- all, but had been cocking a golden eye at them from the cornice
- during the whole conversation.
-
- 'Pretty dickie!' remarked the Lamb. 'CANARY dickie!'
-
- 'Poor misguided infant,' said the Phoenix.
-
- There was a painful pause; the four could not but think it likely
- that the Phoenix had understood their very veiled allusions,
- accompanied as they had been by gestures indicating the cupboard.
- For the Phoenix was not wanting in intelligence.
-
- 'We were just saying--' Cyril began, and I hope he was not going to
- say anything but the truth. Whatever it was he did not say it, for
- the Phoenix interrupted him, and all breathed more freely as it
- spoke.
-
- 'I gather,' it said, 'that you have some tidings of a fatal nature
- to communicate to our degraded black brothers who run to and fro
- for ever yonder.' It pointed a claw at the cupboard, where the
- blackbeetles lived.
-
- 'Canary TALK,' said the Lamb joyously; 'go and show mammy.'
-
- He wriggled off Anthea's lap.
-
- 'Mammy's asleep,' said Jane, hastily. 'Come and be wild beasts in
- a cage under the table.'
-
- But the Lamb caught his feet and hands, and even his head, so often
- and so deeply in the holes of the carpet that the cage, or table,
- had to be moved on to the linoleum, and the carpet lay bare to
- sight with all its horrid holes.
-
- 'Ah,' said the bird, 'it isn't long for this world.'
-
- 'No,' said Robert; 'everything comes to an end. It's awful.'
-
- 'Sometimes the end is peace,' remarked the Phoenix. 'I imagine
- that unless it comes soon the end of your carpet will be pieces.'
-
- 'Yes,' said Cyril, respectfully kicking what was left of the
- carpet. The movement of its bright colours caught the eye of the
- Lamb, who went down on all fours instantly and began to pull at the
- red and blue threads.
-
- 'Aggedydaggedygaggedy,' murmured the Lamb; 'daggedy ag ag ag!'
-
- And before any one could have winked (even if they had wanted to,
- and it would not have been of the slightest use) the middle of the
- floor showed bare, an island of boards surrounded by a sea of
- linoleum. The magic carpet was gone, AND SO WAS THE LAMB!
-
- There was a horrible silence. The Lamb--the baby, all alone--had
- been wafted away on that untrustworthy carpet, so full of holes and
- magic. And no one could know where he was. And no one could
- follow him because there was now no carpet to follow on.
-
- Jane burst into tears, but Anthea, though pale and frantic, was
- dry-eyed.
-
- 'It MUST be a dream,' she said.
-
- 'That's what the clergyman said,' remarked Robert forlornly; 'but
- it wasn't, and it isn't.'
-
- 'But the Lamb never wished,' said Cyril; 'he was only talking
- Bosh.'
-
- 'The carpet understands all speech,' said the Phoenix, 'even Bosh.
- I know not this Boshland, but be assured that its tongue is not
- unknown to the carpet.'
-
- 'Do you mean, then,' said Anthea, in white terror, 'that when he
- was saying "Agglety dag," or whatever it was, that he meant
- something by it?'
-
- 'All speech has meaning,' said the Phoenix.
-
- 'There I think you're wrong,' said Cyril; 'even people who talk
- English sometimes say things that don't mean anything in
- particular.'
-
- 'Oh, never mind that now,' moaned Anthea; 'you think "Aggety dag"
- meant something to him and the carpet?'
-
- 'Beyond doubt it held the same meaning to the carpet as to the
- luckless infant,' the Phoenix said calmly.
-
- 'And WHAT did it mean? Oh WHAT?'
-
- 'Unfortunately,' the bird rejoined, 'I never studied Bosh.'
-
- Jane sobbed noisily, but the others were calm with what is
- sometimes called the calmness of despair. The Lamb was gone--the
- Lamb, their own precious baby brother--who had never in his happy
- little life been for a moment out of the sight of eyes that loved
- him--he was gone. He had gone alone into the great world with no
- other companion and protector than a carpet with holes in it. The
- children had never really understood before what an enormously big
- place the world is. And the Lamb might be anywhere in it!
-
- 'And it's no use going to look for him.' Cyril, in flat and
- wretched tones, only said what the others were thinking.
-
- 'Do you wish him to return?' the Phoenix asked; it seemed to speak
- with some surprise.
-
- 'Of course we do!' cried everybody.
-
- 'Isn't he more trouble than he's worth?' asked the bird doubtfully.
-
- 'No, no. Oh, we do want him back! We do!'
-
- 'Then,' said the wearer of gold plumage, 'if you'll excuse me, I'll
- just pop out and see what I can do.'
-
- Cyril flung open the window, and the Phoenix popped out.
-
- 'Oh, if only mother goes on sleeping! Oh, suppose she wakes up and
- wants the Lamb! Oh, suppose the servants come! Stop crying, Jane.
- It's no earthly good. No, I'm not crying myself--at least I wasn't
- till you said so, and I shouldn't anyway if--if there was any
- mortal thing we could do. Oh, oh, oh!'
-
- Cyril and Robert were boys, and boys never cry, of course. Still,
- the position was a terrible one, and I do not wonder that they made
- faces in their efforts to behave in a really manly way.
-
- And at this awful moment mother's bell rang.
-
- A breathless stillness held the children. Then Anthea dried her
- eyes. She looked round her and caught up the poker. She held it
- out to Cyril.
-
- 'Hit my hand hard,' she said; 'I must show mother some reason for
- my eyes being like they are. Harder,' she cried as Cyril gently
- tapped her with the iron handle. And Cyril, agitated and
- trembling, nerved himself to hit harder, and hit very much harder
- than he intended.
-
- Anthea screamed.
-
- 'Oh, Panther, I didn't mean to hurt, really,' cried Cyril,
- clattering the poker back into the fender.
-
- 'It's--all--right,' said Anthea breathlessly, clasping the hurt
- hand with the one that wasn't hurt; 'it's--getting--red.'
-
- It was--a round red and blue bump was rising on the back of it.
- 'Now, Robert,' she said, trying to breathe more evenly, 'you go
- out--oh, I don't know where--on to the dustbin--anywhere--and I
- shall tell mother you and the Lamb are out.'
-
- Anthea was now ready to deceive her mother for as long as ever she
- could. Deceit is very wrong, we know, but it seemed to Anthea that
- it was her plain duty to keep her mother from being frightened
- about the Lamb as long as possible. And the Phoenix might help.
-
- 'It always has helped,' Robert said; 'it got us out of the tower,
- and even when it made the fire in the theatre it got us out all
- right. I'm certain it will manage somehow.'
-
- Mother's bell rang again.
-
- 'Oh, Eliza's never answered it,' cried Anthea; 'she never does.
- Oh, I must go.'
-
- And she went.
-
- Her heart beat bumpingly as she climbed the stairs. Mother would
- be certain to notice her eyes--well, her hand would account for
- that. But the Lamb--
-
- 'No, I must NOT think of the Lamb, she said to herself, and bit her
- tongue till her eyes watered again, so as to give herself something
- else to think of. Her arms and legs and back, and even her
- tear-reddened face, felt stiff with her resolution not to let
- mother be worried if she could help it.
-
- She opened the door softly.
-
- 'Yes, mother?' she said.
-
- 'Dearest,' said mother, 'the Lamb--'
-
- Anthea tried to be brave. She tried to say that the Lamb and
- Robert were out. Perhaps she tried too hard. Anyway, when she
- opened her mouth no words came. So she stood with it open. It
- seemed easier to keep from crying with one's mouth in that unusual
- position.
-
- 'The Lamb,' mother went on; 'he was very good at first, but he's
- pulled the toilet-cover off the dressing-table with all the brushes
- and pots and things, and now he's so quiet I'm sure he's in some
- dreadful mischief. And I can't see him from here, and if I'd got
- out of bed to see I'm sure I should have fainted.'
-
- 'Do you mean he's HERE?' said Anthea.
-
- 'Of course he's here,' said mother, a little impatiently. 'Where
- did you think he was?'
-
- Anthea went round the foot of the big mahogany bed. There was a
- pause.
-
- 'He's not here NOW,' she said.
-
- That he had been there was plain, from the toilet-cover on the
- floor, the scattered pots and bottles, the wandering brushes and
- combs, all involved in the tangle of ribbons and laces which an
- open drawer had yielded to the baby's inquisitive fingers.
-
- 'He must have crept out, then,' said mother; 'do keep him with you,
- there's a darling. If I don't get some sleep I shall be a wreck
- when father comes home.'
-
- Anthea closed the door softly. Then she tore downstairs and burst
- into the nursery, crying--
-
- 'He must have wished he was with mother. He's been there all the
- time. "Aggety dag--"'
-
- The unusual word was frozen on her lip, as people say in books.
-
- For there, on the floor, lay the carpet, and on the carpet,
- surrounded by his brothers and by Jane, sat the Lamb. He had
- covered his face and clothes with vaseline and violet powder, but
- he was easily recognizable in spite of this disguise.
-
- 'You are right,' said the Phoenix, who was also present; 'it is
- evident that, as you say, "Aggety dag" is Bosh for "I want to be
- where my mother is," and so the faithful carpet understood it.'
-
- 'But how,' said Anthea, catching up the Lamb and hugging him--'how
- did he get back here?'
-
- 'Oh,' said the Phoenix, 'I flew to the Psammead and wished that
- your infant brother were restored to your midst, and immediately it
- was so.'
-
- 'Oh, I am glad, I am glad!' cried Anthea, still hugging the baby.
- 'Oh, you darling! Shut up, Jane! I don't care HOW much he comes
- off on me! Cyril! You and Robert roll that carpet up and put it
- in the beetle-cupboard. He might say "Aggety dag" again, and it
- might mean something quite different next time. Now, my Lamb,
- Panther'll clean you a little. Come on.'
-
- 'I hope the beetles won't go wishing,' said Cyril, as they rolled
- up the carpet.
-
-
- Two days later mother was well enough to go out, and that evening
- the coconut matting came home. The children had talked and talked,
- and thought and thought, but they had not found any polite way of
- telling the Phoenix that they did not want it to stay any longer.
-
- The days had been days spent by the children in embarrassment, and
- by the Phoenix in sleep.
-
- And, now the matting was laid down, the Phoenix awoke and fluttered
- down on to it.
-
- It shook its crested head.
-
- 'I like not this carpet,' it said; 'it is harsh and unyielding, and
- it hurts my golden feet.'
-
- 'We've jolly well got to get used to its hurting OUR golden feet,'
- said Cyril.
-
- 'This, then,' said the bird, 'supersedes the Wishing Carpet.'
-
- 'Yes,' said Robert, 'if you mean that it's instead of it.'
-
- 'And the magic web?' inquired the Phoenix, with sudden eagerness.
-
- 'It's the rag-and-bottle man's day to-morrow,' said Anthea, in a
- low voice; 'he will take it away.'
-
- The Phoenix fluttered up to its favourite perch on the chair-back.
-
- 'Hear me!' it cried, 'oh youthful children of men, and restrain
- your tears of misery and despair, for what must be must be, and I
- would not remember you, thousands of years hence, as base ingrates
- and crawling worms compact of low selfishness.'
-
- 'I should hope not, indeed,' said Cyril.
-
- 'Weep not,' the bird went on; 'I really do beg that you won't weep.
-
- I will not seek to break the news to you gently. Let the blow fall
- at once. The time has come when I must leave you.'
-
- All four children breathed forth a long sigh of relief.
-
- 'We needn't have bothered so about how to break the news to it,'
- whispered Cyril.
-
- 'Ah, sigh not so,' said the bird, gently. 'All meetings end in
- partings. I must leave you. I have sought to prepare you for
- this. Ah, do not give way!'
-
- 'Must you really go--so soon?' murmured Anthea. It was what she
- had often heard her mother say to calling ladies in the afternoon.
-
- 'I must, really; thank you so much, dear,' replied the bird, just
- as though it had been one of the ladies.
-
- 'I am weary,' it went on. 'I desire to rest--after all the
- happenings of this last moon I do desire really to rest, and I ask
- of you one last boon.'
-
- 'Any little thing we can do,' said Robert.
-
- Now that it had really come to parting with the Phoenix, whose
- favourite he had always been, Robert did feel almost as miserable
- as the Phoenix thought they all did.
-
- 'I ask but the relic designed for the rag-and-bottle man. Give me
- what is left of the carpet and let me go.'
-
- 'Dare we?' said Anthea. 'Would mother mind?'
-
- 'I have dared greatly for your sakes,' remarked the bird.
-
- 'Well, then, we will,' said Robert.
-
- The Phoenix fluffed out its feathers joyously.
-
- 'Nor shall you regret it, children of golden hearts,' it said.
- 'Quick--spread the carpet and leave me alone; but first pile high
- the fire. Then, while I am immersed in the sacred preliminary
- rites, do ye prepare sweet-smelling woods and spices for the last
- act of parting.'
-
- The children spread out what was left of the carpet. And, after
- all, though this was just what they would have wished to have
- happened, all hearts were sad. Then they put half a scuttle of
- coal on the fire and went out, closing the door on the
- Phoenix--left, at last, alone with the carpet.
-
- 'One of us must keep watch,' said Robert, excitedly, as soon as
- they were all out of the room, 'and the others can go and buy sweet
- woods and spices. Get the very best that money can buy, and plenty
- of them. Don't let's stand to a threepence or so. I want it to
- have a jolly good send-off. It's the only thing that'll make us
- feel less horrid inside.'
-
- It was felt that Robert, as the pet of the Phoenix, ought to have
- the last melancholy pleasure of choosing the materials for its
- funeral pyre.
-
- 'I'll keep watch if you like,' said Cyril. 'I don't mind. And,
- besides, it's raining hard, and my boots let in the wet. You might
- call and see if my other ones are "really reliable" again yet.'
-
- So they left Cyril, standing like a Roman sentinel outside the door
- inside which the Phoenix was getting ready for the great change,
- and they all went out to buy the precious things for the last sad
- rites.
-
- 'Robert is right,' Anthea said; 'this is no time for being careful
- about our money. Let's go to the stationer's first, and buy a
- whole packet of lead-pencils. They're cheaper if you buy them by
- the packet.'
-
- This was a thing that they had always wanted to do, but it needed
- the great excitement of a funeral pyre and a parting from a beloved
- Phoenix to screw them up to the extravagance.
-
- The people at the stationer's said that the pencils were real
- cedar-wood, so I hope they were, for stationers should always speak
- the truth. At any rate they cost one-and-fourpence. Also they
- spent sevenpence three-farthings on a little sandal-wood box inlaid
- with ivory.
-
- 'Because,' said Anthea, 'I know sandalwood smells sweet, and when
- it's burned it smells very sweet indeed.'
-
- 'Ivory doesn't smell at all,' said Robert, 'but I expect when you
- burn it it smells most awful vile, like bones.'
-
- At the grocer's they bought all the spices they could remember the
- names of--shell-like mace, cloves like blunt nails, peppercorns,
- the long and the round kind; ginger, the dry sort, of course; and
- the beautiful bloom-covered shells of fragrant cinnamon. Allspice
- too, and caraway seeds (caraway seeds that smelt most deadly when
- the time came for burning them).
-
- Camphor and oil of lavender were bought at the chemist's, and also
- a little scent sachet labelled 'Violettes de Parme'.
-
- They took the things home and found Cyril still on guard. When
- they had knocked and the golden voice of the Phoenix had said 'Come
- in,' they went in.
-
- There lay the carpet--or what was left of it--and on it lay an egg,
- exactly like the one out of which the Phoenix had been hatched.
-
- The Phoenix was walking round and round the egg, clucking with joy
- and pride.
-
- 'I've laid it, you see,' it said, 'and as fine an egg as ever I
- laid in all my born days.'
-
- Every one said yes, it was indeed a beauty.
-
- The things which the children had bought were now taken out of
- their papers and arranged on the table, and when the Phoenix had
- been persuaded to leave its egg for a moment and look at the
- materials for its last fire it was quite overcome.
-
- 'Never, never have I had a finer pyre than this will be. You shall
- not regret it,' it said, wiping away a golden tear. 'Write
- quickly: "Go and tell the Psammead to fulfil the last wish of the
- Phoenix, and return instantly".'
-
- But Robert wished to be polite and he wrote--
-
- 'Please go and ask the Psammead to be so kind as to fulfil the
- Phoenix's last wish, and come straight back, if you please.'
- The paper was pinned to the carpet, which vanished and returned in
- the flash of an eye.
-
- Then another paper was written ordering the carpet to take the egg
- somewhere where it wouldn't be hatched for another two thousand
- years. The Phoenix tore itself away from its cherished egg, which
- it watched with yearning tenderness till, the paper being pinned
- on, the carpet hastily rolled itself up round the egg, and both
- vanished for ever from the nursery of the house in Camden Town.
-
- 'Oh, dear! oh, dear! oh, dear!' said everybody.
-
- 'Bear up,' said the bird; 'do you think _I_ don't suffer, being
- parted from my precious new-laid egg like this? Come, conquer your
- emotions and build my fire.'
-
- 'OH!' cried Robert, suddenly, and wholly breaking down, 'I can't
- BEAR you to go!'
-
- The Phoenix perched on his shoulder and rubbed its beak softly
- against his ear.
-
- 'The sorrows of youth soon appear but as dreams,' it said.
- 'Farewell, Robert of my heart. I have loved you well.'
-
- The fire had burnt to a red glow. One by one the spices and sweet
- woods were laid on it. Some smelt nice and some--the caraway seeds
- and the Violettes de Parme sachet among them--smelt worse than you
- would think possible.
-
- 'Farewell, farewell, farewell, farewell!' said the Phoenix, in a
- far-away voice.
-
- 'Oh, GOOD-BYE,' said every one, and now all were in tears.
-
- The bright bird fluttered seven times round the room and settled in
- the hot heart of the fire. The sweet gums and spices and woods
- flared and flickered around it, but its golden feathers did not
- burn. It seemed to grow red-hot to the very inside heart of
- it--and then before the eight eyes of its friends it fell together,
- a heap of white ashes, and the flames of the cedar pencils and the
- sandal-wood box met and joined above it.
-
-
- 'Whatever have you done with the carpet?' asked mother next day.
-
- 'We gave it to some one who wanted it very much. The name began
- with a P,' said Jane.
-
- The others instantly hushed her.
-
- 'Oh, well, it wasn't worth twopence,' said mother.
-
- 'The person who began with P said we shouldn't lose by it,' Jane
- went on before she could be stopped.
-
- 'I daresay!' said mother, laughing.
-
- But that very night a great box came, addressed to the children by
- all their names. Eliza never could remember the name of the
- carrier who brought it. It wasn't Carter Paterson or the Parcels
- Delivery.
-
- It was instantly opened. It was a big wooden box, and it had to be
- opened with a hammer and the kitchen poker; the long nails came
- squeaking out, and boards scrunched as they were wrenched off.
- Inside the box was soft paper, with beautiful Chinese patterns on
- it--blue and green and red and violet. And under the paper--well,
- almost everything lovely that you can think of. Everything of
- reasonable size, I mean; for, of course, there were no motors or
- flying machines or thoroughbred chargers. But there really was
- almost everything else. Everything that the children had always
- wanted--toys and games and books, and chocolate and candied
- cherries and paint-boxes and photographic cameras, and all the
- presents they had always wanted to give to father and mother and
- the Lamb, only they had never had the money for them. At the very
- bottom of the box was a tiny golden feather. No one saw it but
- Robert, and he picked it up and hid it in the breast of his jacket,
- which had been so often the nesting-place of the golden bird. When
- he went to bed the feather was gone. It was the last he ever saw
- of the Phoenix.
-
- Pinned to the lovely fur cloak that mother had always wanted was a
- paper, and it said--
-
- 'In return for the carpet. With gratitude.--P.'
-
- You may guess how father and mother talked it over. They decided
- at last the person who had had the carpet, and whom, curiously
- enough, the children were quite unable to describe, must be an
- insane millionaire who amused himself by playing at being a
- rag-and-bone man. But the children knew better.
-
- They knew that this was the fulfilment, by the powerful Psammead,
- of the last wish of the Phoenix, and that this glorious and
- delightful boxful of treasures was really the very, very, very end
- of the Phoenix and the Carpet.
-
-
-
-
-
- End of Project Gutenberg Etext of The Phoenix and the Carpet by Nesbit
-
-