



Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England




An Enchanted Garden
Fairy Stories
By Mrs Molesworth
Illustrations by W.J. Hennessy
Published by T. Fisher Unwin.

An Enchanted Garden, by Mrs Molesworth.

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AN ENCHANTED GARDEN, BY MRS MOLESWORTH.

CHAPTER ONE.

MADAM WREN.

"No," said Alix, "that's not a good plan at all.  It's perfectly stupid.
If you've no better ideas than that, Rafe, we needn't talk about it any
more."

Rafe looked and felt very snubbed indeed.

He was ten, she was nine.  But she generally took the lead; not always,
as I daresay you will see when you hear more about them, but
_generally_.  They were a nice little pair, and they were constantly
together, at lessons, at play, at everything.  This was a convenient
arrangement, for they were a good deal younger than the other brothers
and sisters of the family, and what Rafe would have been without Alix,
or Alix without Rafe, it would be difficult to imagine.  But there is
not much use in thinking over about might-have-beens, or
would-have-beens, unless to make us more thankful for what _is_.  So it
is enough to say that as things really were, they were very happy
children.

Still they had their troubles, and it was one of these they were
discussing this lovely spring morning, when they were sitting under
their favourite tree--a magnificent ilex in the garden, at one corner of
the great lawn which was one of the beauties of their home.

It was a lovely day, clear and bright and joyous, full of its own
delights, and yet almost fuller of the summer ones to come!  This is, I
suppose, the real secret of the charm of spring-time--the promise and
hope it tells of.  Everything seemed bursting with good news, the birds
most of all perhaps, though the smiling faces of the early flowers, and
the tender whispers of the gentle wind through the branches, were not
behindhand.  But the children's faces were clouded.

This was their trouble.  They could not get any one to tell them any
more stories!  They had read all their books through, over and over
again, and besides, books aren't _quite_ as nice as "told" stories.  At
least not when they have to be shared by two.  Rafe and Alix had tried
several plans--reading aloud did not answer _very_ well, and looking
over the pages was worse.  They never managed to keep quite together,
and then the one who got down to the last line first was sure to fidget
or to try in some way to hurry up the other, which was apt to lead to
unpleasant results.  And besides this, at present there was no question
of story-books, for, as I said, the children had read all they possessed
really _too_ often.

Hitherto perhaps they had been a little spoilt about having stories told
to them.  Papa, who was an old soldier, had a good many tales of
adventure; mamma had some lovely ones about "when she was a little
girl."  And the big brothers and sisters were very kind too, especially
if Rafe or Alix, or both, as sometimes was the case, happened to be ill.
But their stories were mostly out of books; now and then indeed they
would unluckily turn out to be already known to the children, and though
they did not altogether object to them on this account--I have noticed
that children rather enjoy a book story retold by voice--it was not
always so pleasant for Ena or Jean, or Eric when he was at home from
college.  For Rafe and Alix were so exceedingly particular.

"No," one of them would say, just when Eric had got to the most
thrilling part of a robber story, "the entrance to the inner cave was at
the _left_ side of the big one;" or if Jean was describing her heroine's
dress, "It wasn't green--I'm sure it was blue--blue with tiny rosebuds
on," so that sometimes Jean would reply, "Really, children, if you
interrupt so I can't go on," or Eric would go off with a grunt and tell
them to provide stories for themselves.

This had happened the evening before, and this it was which put the idea
into Rafe's mind which Alix snubbed so.

"Suppose," he said, "that we make stories for each other--you for me,
Alix, and I for you?"

It sounded rather nice, but it did not find favour in her eyes at all.

"I know exactly what they'd be," she said; "just mixings up of all our
other ones.  It might do to amuse stranger children with, perhaps--but
not for us ourselves.  I know all that's in your head, and you know
what's in mine, far too well.  So it would be perfectly stupid."

And Rafe had no more to say.

It was Easter holidays--Easter was as late as it could be that year--and
the weather was so beautiful that it really felt like summer.  You would
think the children should have been content; but they weren't.  They had
no lessons at all to do, and a whole fortnight of nothing you really
must do is, in my opinion, a mistake.  During the long summer holidays
Miss Brander, their governess, always left them _something_ to do, just
enough to give a nice fresh taste to the holidaying the rest of their
time, and to prevent their feeling the reins _quite_ loose on their
necks like runaway ponies.  And even without this, in the summer it was
different, for they generally went to the seaside or to some hilly place
for a month or so, to have a change of air, and away from home in a new
place time seldom hangs much on children's hands.

This Easter it was certainly doing so a good deal.  There were other
reasons too why the little couple felt rather at a loose end, rather
tired of themselves.  The big people were all unusually busy, for Ena
was going to be married in June; and she and their mother or she and
Jean were always going somewhere or other to order things, or to give
their opinion about the doing up of the pretty old house, ten miles or
so away, which was to be her new home.  And though Ena was very kind
when she had time, and the new brother-to-be held out grand promises of
the visits they were to pay to their sister, and the fun they should
have, still, all that seemed a good way off, and in the meantime Rafe
and Alix felt rather out of it all.  I am not sure but that they were
just a little jealous of the new brother.  "It's only a pretence sort of
brother," said Alix one day when her feelings had been ruffled.  I am
afraid they felt as if he had some how put both their small noses out of
joint.

So now you understand why Rafe and Alix were sitting rather
disconsolately under the ilex, though the sun was shining brightly
enough to melt away all clouds and mists inside as well as outside, any
one would have thought.

In spite of Alix's snub, Rafe looked up again in a minute or two.

"Why don't you think of a better plan, then, if you don't like mine?" he
said.  "It's always easy to say things won't do," (which is exceedingly
true!), "but why don't you find something that _will_ do?"

Alix turned round.  She was sitting on the end of the rustic bench,
swinging her legs, which was not difficult, as they scarcely reached the
ground, and staring up at the thickly-growing branches overhead.  But
now she looked at Rafe--he felt a little nervous; was she going to take
offence at his speech?

No--she had heard what he said, but she was not vexed.

"I know what I wish we _could_ find," she said.  "Do you remember, Rafe,
the story of a white lady, up, up in a room at the very top of a castle
somewhere, who was always spinning stories?  They came out of the hum of
her spinning-wheel somehow, and the children could hear them when they
sat down on the floor beside her.  _Oh_, if we could find somebody like
that!"

"It was fairies," said Rafe doubtfully.  "At least the white lady was a
fairy, and there aren't any really, I suppose."

"Everybody says so," Alix replied doubtfully, "but I don't quite see why
there mightn't be.  If there have never been any, what began all the
fairy stories?  And I know one thing--papa said so himself one day when
he was telling some--what's the word?--it means a sort of a fairy story
that's been told over and over since ever, _ever_ so long ago,
ledge--_what_ is it?"

"Legends, you mean," said her brother.  "Yes, I remember papa telling us
some very queer ones he had heard in India."

"And he said there were fairy stories in _every_ country," Alix went on.
"So what _I_ say is there must have been something to make them begin!"

This sounded very convincing to Rafe--Alix certainly had clever ways of
putting things.

"Oh!" he said, with a deep sigh.  "If we could but find some one old
enough to remember the beginnings of them--something like the white
lady, you know."

Both children sat silent for a moment or two, their eyes gazing before
them.  Suddenly on the short green turf appeared a tiny figure, a wren,
so tame that she hopped fearlessly to within a very short distance of
the little brother and sister, and then, standing still, seemed to look
up at them with her bright eyes, her small head cocked knowingly on one
side.

"Rafe," exclaimed Alix eagerly, though in a low voice.

"Alix," said Rafe in his turn.

Then they looked at each other, thinking the same thoughts.

"Rafe," whispered Alix, while the wren still stood there looking at
them, "just look at her; she's not a bird, she's a fairy--or at least if
she's not a fairy she's got some message for us from one."

The wren hopped on a few steps, still looking back at them.  The
children slipped off the seat and moved softly after her without
speaking.  On she went, hopping, then fluttering just a little way above
the ground, then hopping again, till in this way she had led them right
across the wide stretch of lawn to some shrubberies at the far side.
Here a small footpath, scarcely visible till you were close to it, led
through the bushes to a strip of half-wild garden ground, used as a sort
of nursery for young trees, which skirted a lane known by the name of
the "Ladywood Path."  And indeed it was little more than a path
nowadays, for few passed that way, though the story went that in the old
days it had been a good road leading to a house that was no longer in
existence.

Over the low wall clambered the children, to find to their delight that
the wren was in the lane before them, just a little way ahead.  But now
she took to flying higher and faster than she had yet done; to keep up
with her at all they had to run, and even with this they sometimes lost
sight of her altogether for a minute or two.  But they kept up bravely--
they were too eager and excited to waste breath by speaking.  The race
lasted for some minutes, till at last, just as Alix was about to give
in, Rafe suddenly twitched her arm.

"Stop, Alix," he panted--truth to tell, the running was harder on him
than on his sister, for Rafe was of an easy-going disposition, and not
given to violent exercise--"stop, Alix, she's lighted on the old
gateway."

They both stood still and looked.  Yes, there was Madam Wren on the
topmost bar of a dilapidated wooden gate, standing between two solid
posts at what had once been the entrance to the beautiful garden of an
ancient house.

How beautiful neither the children nor any one now living knew, for even
the very oldest inhabitants of that part of the country could only dimly
remember having been told by their grandparents, or great-grandparents
perhaps, how once upon a time Ladywood Hall had been the pride of the
neighbourhood.

The wren flapped her wings, then rose upwards and flew off.  This time,
somehow, the children felt that it was no use trying to follow her.

"She's gone for good," said Rafe dolefully; but Alix's eyes sparkled.

"You _are_ stupid," she said.  "Don't you see what she's told us.  We're
to look for--for something, or some one, I don't quite know what, in the
Lady's garden."  For so somehow the grounds of the vanished house had
come to be spoken of.  "I think it was very dull of us not to have
thought of it for ourselves, for it is a very fairy sort of place."

"If it is that way," said Rafe, "_they_ must have heard us talking, and
sent the wren to tell us."

"Of course," said Alix, "that's just what I mean.  Perhaps the wren is
one herself."

"Shall we go on now?" said Rafe.  "No"--for just at that moment the
clear sound of a bell ringing reached them from the direction of their
own home--"for there's our dinner."  And dinner was an important event
in Rafe's eyes, even when rivalled by a fairy hunt.

"How provoking," said Alix.  "_How_ quickly the morning has gone.  We
must go in now or they will come hunting us up and find out all about
it; and you know, Rafe, if it has anything to do with fairies we must
keep it a secret."

Rafe nodded his head sagely.

"Of course," he replied.  "When do you think we had best come?  This
afternoon we are going a walk with nurse, and she'd never let us off."

"No," said Alix, with a sigh, for a walk with nurse was not a very
interesting affair.  "But I'll tell you what, Rafe; if I can get hold of
mamma to-night, just even for a minute, I'll ask her if we mayn't take
something for dinner out with us to-morrow, and not come in till
tea-time--the way we sometimes did last summer; for just now it's really
as fine and warm as if it was June.  I think she'll let us."

"I do hope she will," said the boy.

CHAPTER TWO.

TAPPING.

The children were not very fortunate in their nurse.  Perhaps this
helped to make them feel lonely and dull sometimes, when there scarcely
seemed real reason for their being so.  She was a good woman, and meant
to be kind, and their mother trusted her completely.  But she was
getting old, and was rather tired of children.  She had had such a lot
to bring up--the four big brothers and sisters of Rafe and Alix, and
before them a large family of their cousins.  And I don't think she was
really very fond of children, though she was devoted to tiny babies.
She didn't in the least understand children's fancifulnesses or many of
their little ways, and was far too fond of saying, "Stuff and nonsense,
Master Rafe," or "Miss Alix," as the case might be.

The walk this afternoon would not have been any livelier than usual, so
far as nurse was concerned, but the children were so brimful of their
new ideas that they felt quite bright and happy, and after a while even
nurse was won over to enter into their talk, or at least to answer their
questions pretty cheerfully.

For though of course they had not the least idea of telling her their
secret, it was too much on their minds for them not to chatter round
about it, so to say.

"Have you ever seen a fairy, nurse?" said Alix; and, rather to her
surprise, nurse answered quite seriously:

"No, my dear.  Time was, I suppose, as such things were to be seen, but
that's past and gone.  People have to work too hard nowadays to give any
thought to fairies or fairyland."

But on the whole this reply was rather encouraging.

"You must have heard of fairies, though," said Rafe.  "Can't you
remember any stories about them?"

Nurse had never been great at story-telling.

"Oh dear no, Master Rafe," she replied; "I never knew any except the
regular old ones, that you've got far prettier in your books than I
could tell them.  _Sayings_ I may have heard, just countryside talk,
when I was a child.  My old granny, who lived and died in the village
here, would have it that, for those that cared to look for them, there
were odd sights and sounds in the grounds of the old house down the
lane.  Beautiful singing _her_ mother had heard there when she was a
girl; and once when a cow strayed in there for a night, they said when
she came out again she was twice the cow she had been before, and that
no milk was ever as good as hers."

The children looked at each other.

"I wonder they didn't turn all the cows in there," said Rafe
practically.

"Why didn't they, nurse?"

"Oh dear me, Master Rafe, that's more than I can tell.  It was but an
old tale.  You can't expect much sense in such."

"Whom did the old house belong to?  Who lived there?" said Alix.

"Nobody knows," said nurse.  "It's too long ago to say.  But there's
always been good luck about the place, that's certain.  You've seen the
flowers there in the summer time.  Some of them look as beautiful as if
they were in a proper garden; and it's certain sure there's no wood near
here like it for the nightingales."

This was very satisfactory so far as it went, but nurse would say no
more, doubtless because she had nothing more to say.

"I do believe, Rafe," said Alix, when they were sitting together after
tea, "that the old garden is a sort of entrance to fairyland, and that
it's been waiting for us to find it out."

Her eyes were shining with eagerness, and Rafe, too, felt very excited.

"I do hope mamma will let us have all to-morrow to ourselves," he said.
"You see, one has to be very careful with fairies, Alix--all the stories
agree about that.  We must go to work very cautiously, so as not to
offend them in any way."

"You're always cautious," said Alix, with a little contempt; "rather too
cautious for me.  Of course we shall be very _polite_, and take care not
to spoil any of the plants, but we'll have to be a little venturesome
too.  And," she went on, "you may count that they've invited us.  The
wren brought a regular message.  I only hope they're not offended with
us for not going to-day."

"If they're good kind of fairies," said Rafe sagely--"and I think
they're sure to be--they wouldn't have liked us to be disobedient; and
you know mamma's awfully particular about our coming in the moment we
hear the bell ring."

"Yes," said Alix; "that's true."

Mamma's heart was extra soft that evening, I think.  She had seen so
little of the children lately that she was feeling rather sorry for
them, and all the more ready to agree to any wish of theirs.  So they
had no difficulty in getting her consent to their picnic plan for
to-morrow.  And the weather was wonderfully settled, as it sometimes is
even in England, though early in the year.

So the next morning saw them set off, carrying a little basket of
provisions and a large parasol, full of eagerness and excitement as to
what might be before them.

They did not cross the lawn as they had done the day before, for they
had a sort of feeling that they did not wish anyone to see them start,
or to know exactly which way they went.  It added to the pleasant
mystery of the expedition.  So they went straight out by the front
gates, and after following the high road for a quarter of a mile or so,
entered a little wood which skirted the grass-grown lane along one side,
and from which they made their way out with some scrambling and
clambering at only a few yards' distance from the entrance to the
deserted garden where they had last seen the wren.

The sight of the gate-posts reminded Alix of the bird, and she stopped
short with some misgiving.

"Rafe," she said, "do you think perhaps we should have waited for her at
the ilex tree?  I never thought of it before."

"Oh no," said Rafe; "I'm sure it's all right.  We've come to the place
she led us to.  She didn't need to show us the way twice!  Fairies don't
like stupid people."

"You seem to know a great lot about fairies," said Alix, who had no idea
of being snubbed herself, though she was fond of snubbing other people;
"so I think you'd better settle what we're to do."

"I expect we'll find the wren inside the gate," said Rafe; and they made
their way on in silence.

There was no difficulty in getting into the grounds, for though the gate
on its rusty hinges would have been far too heavy for the children to
move, there was a space between it and the posts where the wood had
rotted away, through which it was easy for them to creep.  First came
Rafe, then the basket, next Alix, and finally the big parasol.

It was a good while since they had been in the Ladywood garden, and when
they had got on to their feet again, they stood still for a minute or
two looking round them.  It was a curious-looking place certainly; the
very beauty of it had something strange and dream-like about it.

Here and there the old paths were clearly to be traced.  The main
approach, or drive, as we should now call it, leading to where the house
had been, was still quite distinct, though the house itself was entirely
gone--not even any remains of ruins were to be seen, for all the stone
and wood of which it had been built had long since been carted away to
be used elsewhere.

But the children knew where the old hall had actually stood--a large,
square, level plateau, bordered on three sides by a broad terrace, all
grass-grown, showing in two or three places where stone steps had once
led down to the lower grounds, told its own tale.  Along the front of
this plateau, supporting it, as it were, there was still a very
strongly-built stone wall banked up into the soil.  The children walked
on slowly till they were near the foot of this wall, and then stood
still again.  It was about five feet high; they seemed attracted to it,
they scarcely knew why--perhaps because it was the only remaining thing
actually to show that here had been once a home where people had lived.

"I daresay," said Alix, looking up, "that the children used to run along
the terrace at the top of that wall, and their mammas and nurses would
call after them to take care they didn't fall over.  Doesn't it seem
funny, Rafe, to think there have _always_ been children in the world?"

"I daresay the boys jumped down sometimes," said Rafe.  "I'd like to
try, but I won't to-day, for I promised mamma to take care of you, and
if I sprained my ankle it would be rather awkward."

They had forgotten their little quarrel, and for the moment they had
forgotten about the wren.

She was nowhere to be seen.

What was to be done?

"If we were only looking for a nice place for our picnic," said Rafe,
"nothing could be better than the shelter of this wall.  With it on one
side, and the parasol tilted up on the other, it would be as good as a
tent."

"But we're not only looking for a picnic place," said Alix impatiently.
"The only thing to do is to poke about till we find _something_, for I'm
perfectly certain the wren didn't bring us here for nothing; and then,
you know, there's even what nurse told us about this garden."

Alix's words roused Rafe's energy again; for he was a trifle lazy, and
wouldn't have been altogether disinclined to sit down comfortably and
think about dinner.  But once he got a thing in his head, he was not
without ideas.

"Let's follow right along the wall," he said, "and examine it closely."

"I don't know what you expect to find," said Alix.  "It's just a wall,
as straight and plain as can be."

And so indeed it seemed from where they stood.

"I'll look all along the ground, in case there might be a ring fixed in
a stone somewhere, like in the _Arabian Nights_.  That's a regular fairy
sort of plan," said Alix.

"Very well," agreed Rafe; "you can do that, and I'll keep tapping the
wall to see if it sounds hollow anywhere."

And so they proceeded, Alix carrying the basket now, and Rafe the
parasol, as it came in handy for his tapping.

For some moments neither of them spoke.  Alix's eyes were fixed on the
ground.  Once or twice, where it looked rough and uneven, she stooped to
examine it more closely, but nothing came of it, except a little
grumbling from Rafe at her stopping the way.  To avoid this she ran on a
few paces in front of him, so that when, within a few yards of the end
of the wall, her brother suddenly stopped short, she wasn't aware that
he had done so till she heard him calling her in a low but eager voice.

"What is it?" she said breathlessly, hurrying back again.

"Alix," he said, "there's some one tapping back at us from the other
side.  Listen."

"A woodpecker," said Alix hastily; "or the echo of your tappings."

She was in such a hurry that she didn't stop to reflect what silly
things she was saying.  To tell the truth, she didn't quite like the
idea of Rafe having the honour and glory of the discovery, if such it
was.

"A woodpecker," repeated Rafe.  "What nonsense!  Do woodpeckers tap
inside a wall?  And an echo wouldn't wait till I had finished tapping to
begin.  It's just like answering me.  Listen again."

He tapped three times, slowly and distinctly, then stopped.  Yes, sure
enough there came what seemed indeed like an answer.  Three clear, sharp
little raps--clearer and sharper, indeed, than those he made with the
parasol handle.  Alix was now quite convinced.

"It sounds like a little silver hammer," she said.  "Oh, Rafe, _suppose_
we've really found something magic!" and her bright eyes danced with
eagerness.

Rafe did not reply.  He seemed intent on listening.

"Alix," he said, "the tapping is going on--a little farther off now, and
then it comes back again, as if it was to lead us on.  It must be on
purpose."

CHAPTER THREE.

THE CARETAKER.

"Let's follow it along," said Alix, after another moment or two's
hesitation.

They were standing, as I said, not many yards from the end of the wall,
and thither the sound seemed to lead them.  When they got quite to the
corner the tapping had stopped.  But the children were not discouraged.

"That's what fairies do," said Alix, as if all her life she had lived on
intimate terms with the beings she spoke of.  "They show you a bit, and
then they leave you to find out a bit for yourself.  We must poke about
now and see what we can find."

Rafe had already set to work in this way: he was feeling and prodding
the big, solid-looking stones which finished off the corner.

"Alix," he exclaimed, "one of these stones shakes a little; let's push
at it together."

Yes, there was no doubt that it yielded a little, especially at one
side.  The children pushed with all their might and main, but for some
time an uncertain sort of wobbling was the only result.  Rafe stood back
a little to recover his breath, and to look at the stone more
critically.

"There may be some sort of spring or hinge about it," he said at last.
"Give me the parasol again, Alix."

He then pressed the point of it firmly along the side of the stone, down
the seam of mortar which appeared to join it to its neighbour in the
wall.  He need not have pressed so hard, for when he got to the middle
of the line the stone suddenly yielded, turning inwards so quickly and
sharply that Rafe almost fell forward on the parasol, and a square dark
hole was open before them.

Alix darted forward and peeped in.

"Rafe," she cried, "there's a sort of handle inside; shall I try to turn
it?"

She did so without waiting for his answer.  It moved quite easily, and
then they found that the two or three stones completing the row to the
ground, below the one that had already opened, were really only thin
slabs joined together and forming a little door.  It was like the doors
you sometimes see in a library, which on the outside have the appearance
of a row of books.

The opening was now clear before them, and they did not hesitate to pass
through.  They had to stoop a little, but once within, it was easy to
stand upright, and even side by side.  Alix caught hold of Rafe's hand.

"Let's keep fast hold of each other," she whispered.

For a few steps they advanced in almost total darkness, for the door
behind them had noiselessly closed.  But this was in the nature of
things, and quite according to Alix's programme.

"I only hope," she went on, "that we haven't somehow or other got inside
the cave where the pied piper took the children.  It might have an
opening into England somehow, even though I think Hamelin was in
Germany; but, of course, there's nothing to be frightened at, is there,
Rafe?" though her own heart was beating fast.

Rafe's only answer was a sort of grunt, which expressed doubt, though we
will not say fear.  Perhaps it was the safest answer he could make under
the very peculiar circumstances.  But no doubt it was a great relief to
both when, before they had time really to ask themselves whether they
were frightened or not, a faint light showed itself in front of them,
growing stronger and brighter as they stepped on, till at last they
could clearly make out in what sort of a place they were.

It was a short, fairly wide passage, seemingly hollowed out of the
ground, and built up in the same way as the wall outside into the soil--
in fact it was like a small tunnel.  The light was of a reddish hue, and
soon they saw the reason of this.  It came from an inner room, the door
of which was half open, where a fire was brightly burning, and by the
hearth sat a small figure.

The children looked at each other, then they bent forward to see more.
Noiseless though they were, the little person seemed to know they were
coming.  She lifted her head, and though her face was partly hidden by
the hood of the scarlet cloak which covered her almost entirely, they
saw that it was that of a very old woman.

"Welcome, my dears," she said at once.  "I have been looking for you
this long time."

Her voice, though strange--in what way it was strange the children could
not have told, for it seemed to come from far away, and yet it seemed to
them that they had often heard it before--encouraged them to step
forward.

"Good-morning," Alix began, but then she hesitated.  Was it morning, or
evening, or night, or what?  It was difficult to believe that only a few
minutes ago they had been standing outside in the warm sunshine, with
the soft spring breeze wafting among the fresh green leaves, and the
birds singing overhead.  _That_ all seemed a dream.  "I beg your
pardon," the little girl began again; "I don't quite know what I should
say, but thank you for speaking so kindly.  How did you know we were
coming?"

"I heard you," replied the old woman.  "I heard your little footsteps up
to the gateway yesterday, and I knew you'd come again to-day."

By this time Rafe had found his tongue too.

"Did you send the wren?" he said.

"Never mind about that just now," she answered.  "I've many a messenger;
and what's better still, I've quick eyes, and even quicker ears, for all
that I'm so very old.  I know what you want of me, and if you're good
children you shall not be disappointed.  I've been getting ready for you
in more ways than one."

"Do you mean you've got stories to tell us?" exclaimed the children
eagerly.

"Of course," she replied, with a smile.

"I wouldn't be much good if I hadn't stories for you."

All this time, I must tell you, the old woman had been busily knitting.
Her needles made a little silvery click, but there was nothing fidgeting
about this sound; now and then her words seemed to go in a sort of time
with it.  What she was knitting they could not see.

Alix gave a deep sigh of satisfaction.

"How beautiful!" she said; "and may we come every day, and may we stay
as long as we like, and will you sometimes invite us to tea, perhaps?
and--"

"Alix!" said Rafe, in a tone of reproval.

"Nay, nay," said their hostess.  "Let her chatter.  All in good time, my
love," she added to Alix, and the click of the needles seemed to repeat
the words, "All in good time," like a little song.

Rafe's eyes, which were sometimes more observant than Alix's, as his
tongue did not use up so much of his attention as hers, had meanwhile
been wandering round the room.  It can, I think, be best described as a
very cosy kitchen, but, unlike many kitchens, it was fresh and not the
least too hot.  There was a strange, pleasant fragrance in the air that
made one think of pine woods.  Afterwards the children found out that
this came from the fire, for it was entirely of fir-cones, of which a
large heap stood neatly stacked in one corner.

Along chain hung down the chimney, with a hook at the end, to which a
bright red copper pan was fastened; a little kettle of the same metal
stood on the hearthstone, which was snowy white.  The walls of the room
were of rough stone, redder in colour than the wall outside, or else the
firelight made them seem so.  Behind where the old woman sat hung a
grass-green curtain, closely drawn; there was no lamp or candle, but the
firelight was quite enough.  A wooden dresser ran along one side, and on
its shelves were arranged cups and plates and jugs of the queerest
shapes and colours you could imagine.  I must tell you more about these
later on.  There was a settle with a very curious patchwork cushion, but
besides this and the rocking-chair on which sat the old woman--I forgot
to say that she was sitting on a rocking-chair--the only seats were two
little three-legged stools.  The middle of the floor was covered by
matting of a kind the children had never seen; it was shaded brown, and
made you think of a path strewn over with fallen leaves in autumn.

The old woman's kindly tone encouraged Rafe to speak in his turn.

"May I ask you one or two things," he said, "before you begin telling us
the stories?"

"As many as you like, my boy," she replied cheerfully.  "I don't say
I'll answer them all--that's rather a different matter--but you can ask
all the same."

"It's so puzzling," said Rafe, hesitating a little.  "I don't think it
puzzles Alix so much as me; she knows more about fairy things, I think.
I do so want to know if you've lived here a very long time.  Have you
always lived here--even when the old house was standing and there were
people in it?"

"Never mind about always," replied the old woman.  "A very, very long
time?  Yes, longer than you could understand, even if I explained it!
Long before the old house was pulled down?  Yes, indeed, long before the
old house was ever thought of!  I'm the caretaker here nowadays, you
see."

"The caretaker!"  Rafe repeated; "but there's no house to take care of."

"There's a great deal to take care of nevertheless," she replied.
"Think of all the creatures up in the garden, the birds and the
butterflies, not to speak of the flowers and the blossom.  Ah, yes! we
caretakers have a busy time of it, I can tell you, little as you might
think it.  _And_ the stories--why, if I had nothing else to do, the
looking after them would keep me busy.  They take a deal of tidying.
You'd scarcely believe the state they come home in sometimes when
they've been out for a ramble--all torn and jagged and draggle-tailed,
or else, what's worse, dressed up in such vulgar new clothes that their
own mother, and I'm as good as their mother, would scarcely know them
again.  No, no," and she shook her head, "I've no patience with such
ways."

Alix looked delighted.  She quite understood the old woman.

"How nicely you say it," she exclaimed.  "It's like something papa told
us the other day about legends; don't you remember, Rafe?"

Rafe's slower wits were still rather perplexed, but he took things
comfortably.  Somehow he no longer remembered any more questions to ask.
The old woman's bright eyes as she looked at him gave him a pleasant,
contented feeling.

"Have you got a story quite ready for us?" asked Alix.

"One, two, three, four," said the old woman, counting her stitches.
"I'm setting it on, my dear; it'll be ready directly.  But what have you
got in your basket?  It's your dinner, isn't it?  You must be getting
hungry.  Wouldn't you like to eat something while the story's getting
ready?"

"Are you going to _knit_ the story?" said Alix, looking very surprised.

"Oh dear no!" said the old woman, smiling.  "It's only a way I have.
The knitting keeps it straight, otherwise it might fly off once I've let
it out.  Now open your basket and let's see what you've got for your
dinner.  There, set it on the table, and you may reach down plates and
jugs for yourselves."

"It's nothing much," said Alix, "just some sandwiches and two
hard-boiled eggs and some slices of cake."

"Very good things in their way," said the old woman, as Alix unpacked
the little parcels and laid them on the plates which Rafe handed her
from the dresser.  "And if you look into my larder you'll find some
fruit, maybe, which won't go badly for dessert.  What should you say to
strawberries and cream?"

She nodded towards one corner of the kitchen where there was a little
door which the children had not before noticed, so very neatly was it
fitted into the wall.

The opening of it was another surprise; the "larder" was quite different
from the room inside.  It was a little arbour, so covered over with
greenery that you could not see through the leaves to the outside,
though the sunshine managed to creep in here and there, and the
twittering of the birds was clearly heard.

On a stone slab stood a curiously-shaped basket filled with--oh! such
lovely strawberries! and beside it a bowl of tempting yellow cream;
these were the only eatables to be seen in the larder.

"Strawberries!" exclaimed Rafe; "just fancy, Alix, and it's only April."

"But we're in Fairyland, you stupid boy," said Alix; "or at least
somewhere very near it."

"Quick, children," came the old woman's voice from the kitchen.  "You
bring the strawberries, Alix, and Rafe the cream.  There'll be no time
for stories if you dawdle!"

This made them hurry back, and soon they were seated at the table, with
all the nice things neatly before them.  They were not greedy children
fortunately, for, as everybody knows, fairy-folk hold few things in
greater horror than greediness; and they were orderly children too.
They packed up their basket neatly again when they had finished, and
Alix asked if they should wash up the plates that had been lent to them,
which seemed to please their old friend, for she smiled as she replied
that it wasn't necessary.

"My china is of a different kind from any you've ever seen," she said.
"_Whiff_, plates," she added; and then, to the children's amusement,
there was a slight rattle, and all the crockery was up in its place
again, shining as clean and bright as before it had been used.

There was now no doubt at all that they were really in Fairyland.

CHAPTER FOUR.

THE STORY OF THE THREE WISHES.

"And now for a story," said Alix joyfully.  "May we sit close beside
you, Mrs--oh dear!  Mayn't we call you something?"

"Anything you like," replied the old woman, smiling.

"I know," cried Alix; "Mrs Caretaker--will that do?  It's rather a nice
name when you come to think of it."

"Yes," agreed their old friend; "and it should be everybody's name, more
or less, if everybody did their duty.  There's no one without something
to take care of."

"No," said Rafe thoughtfully; "I suppose not."

"Draw the two little stools close beside me--one at the right, one at
the left; and if you like, you may lean your heads on my knee, you'll
hear none the worse."

"Oh, that's beautiful," said Alix; "it's like the children and the white
lady.  Do you know about the white lady?" she went on, starting up
suddenly.

Mrs Caretaker nodded.  "Oh yes," she said; "she's a relation of mine.
But we mustn't chatter any more if you're to have a story."

And the children sat quite silent.  Click, click, went the
knitting-needles.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Story of the Three Wishes.

That was the name of the first of Mrs Caretaker's stories.

Once upon a time there lived two sisters in a cottage on the edge of a
forest.  It was rather a lonely place in some ways, though there was an
old town not more than a mile off, where there were plenty of friendly
people.  But it was lonely in this way, that but seldom any of the
townsfolk passed near the cottage, or cared to come to see the sisters,
even though they were good and pretty girls, much esteemed by all who
knew them.

For the forest had a bad name.  Nobody seemed to know exactly why, or
what the bad name meant, but there it was.  Even in the bright long
summer days the children of the town would walk twice as far on the
other side to gather posies of the pretty wood-flowers in a little
copse, not to be compared with the forest for beauty, rather than
venture within its shade.  And the young men and maidens of a summer
evening, though occasionally they might come to its outskirts in their
strolls, were never tempted to do more than stand for a moment or two
glancing along its leafy glades.  Only the sisters, Arminel and Chloe,
had sometimes entered the forest, though but for a little way, and not
without some fear and trembling.

But they had no misgiving as to living in its near neighbourhood.
Custom does a great deal, and here in the cottage by the forest-side
they had spent all their lives.  And the grandmother, who had taken care
of them since they had been left orphans in their babyhood, told them
there was no need for fear so long as they loved each other and did
their duty.  All the same, she never denied that the great forest was an
uncanny place.

This was the story of it, so far as any one knew.  Long, long ago, when
many things in the world were different from what they are now, a race
of giants, powerful and strong, were the owners of the forest, and so
long as they were just and kindly to their weaker neighbours, all went
well.  But after a while they grew proud and tyrannical, and did some
very cruel things.  Then their power was taken from them, and they
became, as a punishment, as weak and puny as they had been the opposite.
Now and then, so it was said about the countryside, one or two of them
had been seen, miserable-looking little dwarfs.  And the seeing of them
was the great thing to be dreaded, for it was supposed to be a certain
sign of bad luck.

But the grandmother had heard more than this, though where, or when, or
how, she could not remember.  The spell over the forest dwarfs was not
to be for ever; something some day was to break it, though what she did
not know.

"And who can tell," she would say now and then, "how better things may
come about for the poor creatures?  There's maybe a reason for your
being here, children.  Keep love and pity in your hearts, and never let
any fear prevent you doing a kind action if it comes in your way."

But till now, though they had gone on living in the old cottage since
their grandmother's death in the same way, never forgetting what she had
said, Arminel and Chloe had never caught sight of their strange
neighbours.  True, once or twice they had seen a small figure scuttering
away when they had ventured rather farther than usual along the forest
paths, but then it might have been only some wild wood creature, of
whom, no doubt, there were many who had their dwellings in the lonely
gloom.  Sometimes a strange curiosity really to see one of the dwarfs
for themselves would come over them; they often talked about it in the
long winter evenings when they had nothing to amuse them.

But it was only to each other that they talked in this way.  To their
friends in the town, for they had friends there whom they saw once a
week on the market-day, they never chattered about the forest or the
dwarfs; and when they were asked why they went on living in this strange
and lonely place, they smiled and said it was their home, and they were
happier there than anywhere else.

And so they were.  They were very busy to begin with, for their butter
and eggs and poultry were more prized than any to be had far or near.
Arminel was the dairy-woman, and Chloe the hen-wife, and at the end of
each week they would count up their earnings, eager to see which had
made the more by their labours.  Fortunately for their happy feelings to
each other, up till now their gains had been pretty nearly equal, for
there is no saying where jealousy will not creep in, even between the
dearest of friends.

But quite lately, for the first time, things had not been going so well.
It was late in the autumn, and there had been unusually heavy rains,
and when they ceased the winter seemed to begin all at once, and before
its time, and the animals suffered for it.  The cow's milk fell off
before Arminel had looked for its doing so, and some great plans which
she had been making for the future seemed likely to be disappointed.
She had hoped to save enough through the winter to buy another cow in
the spring, so that with the two she would have had a supply of butter
for her customers in the town all the year round.  And Chloe's hens were
not doing well either.  One or two of them had even died, and she
couldn't get her autumn chickens to fatten.  Worst of all, the eggs grew
fewer day by day.

These misfortunes distressed the sisters very much.  Sadder still, they
grew irritable and short-tempered, each reproaching the other, and
making out that she herself had managed better.

"It is all your want of foresight," said Arminel to Chloe one market-day
when the egg-basket looked but poorly filled.

"Everybody knows that hens stop laying with the first cold.  You should
have potted some eggs a few weeks ago when they were so plentiful."

"My customers don't care for potted eggs," said Chloe.  "Till now I have
always had a pretty fair supply of fresh ones, except for a week or two
about Christmas time.  How should I have known that this year would be
different from other years?  If you are so wonderfully wise, why did you
not bring Strawberry indoors a month sooner than usual?  It is evident
that she has caught cold.  You need not sneer at my eggs when you count
your pats of butter.  Why, there are not above half what you had two
months ago."

"When you manage your own affairs properly, you may find fault with
mine," said Arminel snappishly.

And they felt so unamiable towards each other that all the way to market
and back they walked on separate sides of the road without speaking a
word.

Such a state of things had never been known before.

It was late when they got home that afternoon, and being a dull and
cloudy day it was almost dark.  The poor girls felt tired and unhappy,
for each was sad with the double sadness of having to bear her troubles
alone.  And besides this, there is nothing more tiring than ill-temper.

Arminel sat down weariedly on a chair.  The fire was out; the cottage
felt very chilly; the one little candle which Chloe had lighted gave but
a feeble ray.  Arminel sighed deeply.  Chloe, whose heart was very soft,
felt sorry for her, and setting down her basket began to see to the
fire.

"Leave it alone," said her sister.  "We may as well go to bed without
any supper.  I'm too tired to eat; and it's just as well to get
accustomed to scanty fare.  It is what is before us, I suppose."

"You need not be quite so downhearted," said Chloe, persevering in her
efforts.  "Things may mend again.  I sold my eggs for more than ever
before.  It seems that everybody's hens are doing badly.  I'll have the
fire burning in a minute, and some nice hot coffee ready, and then
you'll feel better."

But Arminel was not to be so easily consoled.

"If you've done well with your eggs it's more than I did with my
butter," she said.  "Dame Margery, the housekeeper from the castle, says
she'll take no more from me if I can't promise as much as last year.
She doesn't like to go changing about for her butter, she says; and mine
was enough for the ladies."

"I'm sure you've enough for two ladies still," said Chloe.

"Yes; but if I don't keep a little for my other customers, they won't
come back to me when I have plenty again," answered her sister, who
seemed determined to look on the black side of things.

Then, unluckily, in spite of Chloe's care, the cold and the damp of the
chimney made the fire smoke; great clouds puffed out, almost filling the
kitchen.

"I wish you had let me go to bed," said Arminel hastily; and Chloe's
patience being exhausted, she retorted by calling her sister unkind and
ungrateful.

The smoke was very disagreeable, no doubt.  Arminel opened the window
wide to let it clear off.  The wind was blowing from the forest which
lay on this side of the house.  All looked dark and gloomy, and Arminel
gave a little shiver as she glanced out.  Suddenly she started.

"Chloe," she said, "did you hear that?"

"What?" said Chloe.

"A cry--yes, there it is again, as if some one was in great trouble."

Chloe heard it too, but she was feeling rather sulky and contradictory.

"It's nothing," she said.  "Only a hare or some wild creature; they
often scream," and she turned back to the table where she was preparing
coffee.

But though the room was now pretty clear of smoke and the fire was
behaving better, Arminel did not close the window.  She still stood by
it listening.  And again there came the strange shrill yet feeble cry,
telling unmistakably of anguish, or whether of beast or man no one could
have told.  And this time Chloe stood still with the kettle in her hand,
more startled than she had been before.

"Sister," said Arminel decidedly, "that is not the squeal of a hare; it
is something worse.  Perhaps some child from the town may have strayed
into the forest and got benighted.  It is possible at least.  And the
forest is not like other places.  Who knows what might happen to one
astray there?"

"What could we do in such a case?" said Chloe.  "We're not
all-powerful."  She spoke more out of a little remaining temper than
from cowardice or indifference, for like her sister she was both brave
and kind.

"Remember what our grandmother said," said Arminel, and she repeated the
grandmother's words: "`Never hang back from doing a kind action; no harm
can come to you while you love each other and do your duty.'  I am going
alone to the forest if you will not come," she went on, and she turned
towards the door as she spoke.

"Of course I will come with you," said Chloe, reaching down her mantle
and hood which she had hung up on a nail.  "Close the window, Arminel,"
she said.  "I'll leave the coffee on the hob.  The fire is burning
nicely now, and we shall find it bright and warm when we come back."

As they stepped outside, closing the door behind them, the cry broke out
again.  Tired though they were with their long day at market, the
sisters set off running.  Two or three fields lay between them and the
edge of the wood, and part of the way the ground was very rough, but
they were nimble and sure-footed.  And ever as they ran came the cries,
feebler yet more distinct, and before long they could distinguish the
words, "Help! comrades, help!"

"It is not a hare, you see," said Arminel.

"No, indeed," answered Chloe, and both felt a thrill of fear, though
they only ran the faster.

The cries, though now they grew rarer, becoming indeed mingled with
groans, still served to guide them.  Soon they were in the midst of the
trees, making their way more by a sort of instinct, for it was almost
dark.  Suddenly a ray of moonlight glimmered through the firs, and a few
paces in front of them they saw lying on the ground a small dark object
writhing and groaning.

Just here the trees were not so thick.  It was like a little clearing.
The girls stepped onwards cautiously, catching hold of each other.

"It is--" whispered Arminel--"Oh, Chloe, it is one of the dwarfs."

"Courage," murmured Chloe in return, though her own heart was beating
very fast.  "He seems in no state to hurt us now, if only it be not a
trick."

The groans had ceased, and when they got close to the strange figure on
the ground it seemed quite motionless.  The moonlight had grown
stronger.  They stooped down and examined the dwarf.  His eyes were
closed; his face was wrinkled and brown; he was brown all over.  He wore
a furry coat, much the same colour as his own skin.

Arminel lifted one of his queer clawlike hands; it fell down again by
his side.

"I believe he is dead," she said.  "I didn't know the dwarfs ever could
die.  What shall we do, Chloe?  We cannot leave him here, in case he
should be still living."

"We must carry him home, I'm afraid," said Chloe.  "Yes, I'm afraid we
must, for see, Arminel, he's opening his eyes," as two bright black
beads suddenly glanced up at them.

"Nimbo, Hugo," said a weak, hoarse little voice.  "Are you there?  No,"
and the dwarf opened his eyes more widely, and tried to sit up.  "No,"
he went on, "it is not my comrades!  Who are you?" and he shuddered as
if with fear.

CHAPTER FIVE.

THE STORY OF THE THREE WISHES--CONTINUED.

It was indeed a turning of the tables for a dwarf to be afraid of them.
It gave the sisters courage to speak to him.  "We heard your cries,"
said Arminel.  "Ever so far off in our cottage across the fields we
heard them.  What is the matter?  Have you hurt yourself?"  The little
man groaned.

"I have had a fall," he said, "from a branch of the tree under which I
am lying.  I climbed up to shake down some large fir-cones, and lost my
footing.  I have hurt myself sadly.  I feel bruised all over.  How I
shall ever get back to my comrades I do not know," and again he groaned.

He was not a very courageous dwarf evidently; perhaps the courage of the
race had been lost with its stature!  But the sisters felt very sorry
for him.

"Have you broken any bones, do you think?" said Chloe, who was very
practical.

The dwarf turned and twisted himself about with many sighs and moans.

"No," said he, "I think I am only bruised and terribly cold.  I have
been lying here so long, so long.  I cannot go home; they are miles away
in the centre of the forest."

Arminel and Chloe considered.  They did not much like the idea of the
uncanny creature spending a night under their roof, even though they no
longer feared that he was playing them any trick.  If the mere sight of
a dwarf brought ill-luck, what might not they expect from the visit of
one of the spell-bound race?  But their grandmother's words returned to
their mind.

"You must come home with us," they said, speaking together.  "We can at
least give you shelter and warmth, and a night's rest may do you much
good."

"There is the salve for bruises which granny taught us to make," added
Chloe.

"We have some of it by us, I know."  The dwarf gave a sigh of relief.

"Maidens," he said, "you shall never have cause to regret your kindness.
I know your cottage.  We have often watched you when you little knew
it.  I think I could make shift to walk there if you will each give me
an arm."  They got him to his feet with some difficulty.  He was so
small, hardly reaching up to their elbows, that it ended in their almost
carrying him between them.  And they seemed to get home much more
quickly than they had come, even though they walked slowly.  The dwarf
knew every step of the way, and his queer bead-like eyes pierced through
the darkness as if it had been noonday.

"A little to the right," he would say, or, "a few paces to the left, the
ground is better."

And almost before they knew where they were they found themselves before
their own door.  The wind had gone down, all was peaceful and still, and
inside the kitchen was a picture of comfort, the fire burning red and
cheerily.

"Ah," said the little man, when they had settled him on a stool in front
of the hearth, "this is good!" and he stretched out his small brown
hands to the ruddy glow.  "It is long since I have seen such a fire, and
very long since I have been in a room like this."  But then he grew
quite silent, and the sisters did not like to ask him what he meant.

Chloe busied herself with the coffee which boiled up in no time; and in
the larder, to her surprise, when she went in to fetch a loaf of bread
intended for the sisters' supper, she found a pat of butter and a jug of
cream which she had not known were there.  She was very pleased, for
both she and Arminel had hospitable hearts, and she would have been
sorry to have had nothing for their guest but dry bread and skim-milk
coffee.

"Arminel," she said, as she came back into the kitchen, "you had
forgotten this cream and butter, fortunately so, for now we can give our
friend a nice supper."

Arminel looked quite astonished.

"I took all the butter there was with me to market this morning, and I
never keep cream except for our Sunday treat."

But there was another surprise in store.

Arminel in her turn went into the larder.

"Chloe!" she called out, "see what _you_ have forgotten.  Eggs!" and she
held up three large, beautiful brown eggs.

"I don't know where they have come from," said Chloe.  "I'm certain they
were not there when I packed my basket.  Besides, none of my hens lay
eggs of that colour."

"Never mind," said the dwarf; "here they are, and that is enough.  We
shall now have an omelette for supper.  An omelette and hot coffee!
That is a supper for a king."

He seemed to be getting quite bright and cheerful, and complained no
more of his bruises as he sat there basking in the pleasant warmth of
the fire.  Supper was soon ready, and the three spent a pleasant
evening; the little man asking the sisters many questions about their
life and occupations.  They told him all about their present troubles,
and he told them to keep up heart, and never forget their good
grandmother's counsel.

"Did you know our grandmother?" they asked in surprise.

"I have heard of her," was all he said; and though they were curious to
know more, they did not venture to question him further.

After supper they made up a bed for him on the kitchen settle, where he
said he was sure he would sleep most comfortably.

"And now farewell," he added; "I shall be off in the morning before you
are stirring.  Your kindness has so refreshed me that I feel sure I
shall be able to make my way home without difficulty."

He gave a little sigh as he spoke.

"I would fain do what I can in return for your goodness," he continued.
"Some things are still in my power.  I can give you three wishes which,
under certain conditions, will be fulfilled."

The sisters' eyes sparkled with delight.

"Oh, thank you a thousand times," they said.  "Pray tell us what we must
do, and we will follow your orders exactly."

"Three wishes between you are all I can give," he replied.  "One each,
and the fulfilment of these depends upon the third, to which a secret is
attached, and this secret you must discover for yourselves.  The key of
it is, I trust, in your own hearts."

"We will do our best to find it," said Arminel.  "If it has to do with
our love for each other you may trust us.  Chloe and I never quarrel."

But suddenly, as she said this, the remembrance of that day struck her,
and she grew red, feeling the dwarfs eyes fixed upon her.

"At least," she added hurriedly, "I should say we seldom quarrel, though
I'm afraid our anxieties lately have not sweetened our tempers."

"Beware, then, for the future," said the dwarf.  "All will depend on
yourselves."

The sisters went to bed full of eagerness and hopefulness, longing for
the next day to come that they might decide how to use their strange
friend's gift.

"I shall not be able to sleep," said Arminel; "my head is so full of the
three wishes."

"And so is mine," said her sister.

"You shall have the first, Arminel, and I the second.  The third will be
the one to ponder over."

"I shall have no difficulty in deciding," said Arminel.  "And you,
Chloe, being the younger, must, of course, be guided partly by my
advice."

"I don't see that at all," said Chloe.  "The dwarf said nothing about
elder or younger, and--"

At this moment a loud snore from the kitchen reminded them that their
guest was still there.

"Dear, dear," said Chloe.  "What would he think if he heard us beginning
to quarrel already?  We must beware."

But Arminel was not so ready to give in, and there is no saying what
might not have befallen, had it not happened that the moment her head
touched the pillow she fell fast asleep.  And Chloe quickly followed her
example.

They awoke later than usual the next morning, feeling quite rested and
refreshed.

"I never slept so soundly in my life," said Arminel.  "I suppose it was
with being so tired."

"I don't know," said Chloe.  "I have an idea that our friend had
something to do with our falling asleep so quickly to prevent us
quarrelling.  Now, Arminel, whatever we do, let us remember his
warning."

"Of course, I don't want to quarrel," her sister replied.  "We didn't
need the dwarf to come here to tell us to be good friends.  But, after
all, his promise of fulfilling our wishes may be nonsense.  I long to
test it.  I wonder if he is still there, by the bye."

No, he was gone; the little bed they had made up for him on the settle,
of some extra blankets and pillows, was neatly folded away.  The fire
was already lighted and burning brightly, the kettle singing on the
hearth--the room showed signs of having been carefully swept and dusted,
and the window was slightly open to admit a breath of the fresh morning
air.

"Good little dwarf!" exclaimed Arminel.  "I wish he would pay us a visit
often if he helps us so nicely with our work."

They sat down to breakfast in the best of spirits; and when the meal was
over, and they went out, they found that the dwarf's good offices had
not been confined to the house.  The cow was carefully foddered, and
looking most prosperous and comfortable--the poultry had been seen to,
the hen-house cleaned out, and already, early as it was, several lovely
cream white eggs had been laid in the nests.

All this was very encouraging.  "There can be no sort of doubt," said
Chloe, "that our friend, dwarf though he be, has a kind heart and magic
power.  I feel certain his promises are to be relied upon.  But
remember, Arminel, the first two wishes will be no good unless we agree
about the third.  What shall we do?"

"I propose," said Arminel, who had plenty of good sense, "that we go
about our work as usual till this evening.  Then each of us will have
had time to decide as to her own wish, and each of us can propose
something for the third.  As to the third, we can then consult
together."

To this Chloe agreed.

They spoke little to each other during the day, but when the light began
to fail their work was over.  They sat down together by the fire.

"Now for a good talk," said Chloe.  "We have the whole evening before
us."

"Five minutes would be enough for me," said Arminel.  "I've got my wish
cut and dry.  I have been longing to tell you all day, but I thought it
best to keep to our determination of this morning."

"How strange!" said Chloe.  "I am just in the same condition.  I decided
upon my wish almost immediately.  Tell me what yours is, and I will tell
you mine."

"My wish," said Arminel, "is to have a cow.  A dun-coloured cow I think
I should prefer--I can picture her so sweet and pretty--who would give
milk all the year round without ever running short."

"Excellent," cried Chloe; "my wish goes well with yours.  For what I
want is a dozen hens who would each lay an egg every morning in the year
without fail.  I should thus have as many fresh eggs as I could possibly
want, and enough to spare for setting whenever I liked.  Some of my
present hens are very good mothers, and would hatch them beautifully."

"I think your wish a very good one," said Arminel.  "But now as to the
fulfilment.  We have now expressed our wishes distinctly, but there is
no use as yet in going to look for the new cow in the shed or hens in
the hen-house, seeing that there remains, alas! the third one!  What can
it be?"

"Could it be for a hen-house?" said Chloe; "my poor hens are not very
well off in their present one, and it is right to make one's animals
comfortable; so this would be a kind-hearted wish."

"Not more than to wish for a warm shed for my cows," said Arminel.
"Cows require much more care than hens.  I daresay that is what we are
meant to wish for."

"I am certain it is not," said Chloe.  "At least, if you wish for a
cow-shed, _I_ wish for a hen-house."

"That, of course, is nonsense," said Arminel.  "I feel sure the dwarf
meant we were to agree in what we wished for.  And if you were amiable
and unselfish you would join with me, Chloe."

"I might say precisely the same thing to you," said Chloe coldly.

And though they went on talking till bedtime they came to no conclusion.
Indeed, I fear a good many sharp and unkind words passed between them,
and they went to bed without saying good-night to each other.  So far it
did not seem as if the dwarf's gift was to bring them happiness.

CHAPTER SIX.

THE STORY OF THE THREE WISHES--CONCLUDED.

When they woke in the morning they were in a calmer state of mind, and
began to see how foolish they had been.

"Chloe," said Arminel, as they sat at breakfast, "we were very nearly
quarrelling last night; and if we quarrel we shall certainly never find
out the secret of the third wish; and all our hopes will be at an end.
Now, let us think over quietly what the third wish is likely to be.  Let
me see--what were the dwarf's exact words?"

"He said we must seek for it in our own hearts," replied Chloe.  "That
means, of course, that it must be something kind."

"Perhaps he meant that it must be something to do us both good," said
Arminel.  "What is there we are equally in want of?  Oh!  I know;
suppose we wish for a good stack of fuel for the winter.  That would
certainly benefit us both."

"It can do no harm to try," said Chloe; "so I agree to the wish for a
stack of fuel."

Arminel's eyes sparkled.

"I daresay we have guessed it," she exclaimed, jumping up.  "Come out at
once to see, Chloe."

But, alas! the heap of brushwood for their winter's firing, in the
corner of the yard, had grown no bigger than the day before.  No fresh
sounds of cheerful cackling reached them from the hen-house; and
Strawberry stood alone in her stall.

The wishes were still unfulfilled.

The sisters returned to the house rather crestfallen.

"What can it be?" said Arminel; and this time Chloe made a suggestion.

"Supposing we wish that the copper coins we have put aside for our
Christmas charities should be turned into silver," she said.  "That
would be a kind thought for the very poor folk we try to help a little."

"As you like," said her sister; "but I doubt its being any use.  We are
always told that charity which costs us nothing is little worth."

She was right.  When they opened the little box which held the coins she
spoke of, there they still were, copper as before, so this time it was
no use to look outside for the new cow and hens.  And all through the
day they went on thinking first of one thing, then of another, without
any success, so that by the evening their work had suffered from their
neglect, and they went tired and dispirited to bed.

The next day they were obliged to work doubly hard to make up, and one
or two new ideas occurred to them which they put to the test, always,
alas! with the same result.

"We are wasting our time and our temper for no use," said Arminel at
last.

"I am afraid the truth is that the dwarf was only playing us a
mischievous trick."  And even Chloe was forced to allow that it seemed
as if her sister was in the right.

"We will try to forget all about it," said Arminel.  "It must be indeed
true that having anything to do with the dwarfs only brings bad luck."

But though she spoke courageously, Chloe was wakened in the night by
hearing her sister crying softly to herself.

"Poor dear Arminel," thought Chloe, though she took care to lie quite
still as if sleeping.  "I do feel for her.  If I had but my hens I could
soon make up to her for her disappointment."

But of course as the dun cow did not come, neither did the fairy hens,
and a time of really great anxiety began for the sisters.  Strawberry's
milk dwindled daily; so did the number of eggs, till at last something
very like real poverty lay before them.  They were almost ashamed to go
to market, so little had they to offer to their customers.  Never had
they been so unhappy or distressed.

But out of trouble often comes good.  Their affection for each other
grew stronger, and all feelings of jealousy died away as each felt more
and more sorry for her sister.

"If only we had never gone near the wood," said Arminel one evening when
things were looking very gloomy indeed, "none of these worst troubles
would have come upon us, I feel sure.  I begin to believe everything
that has been said about those miserable dwarfs.  It is very good of
you, dear Chloe, not to blame me as the cause of all our misfortunes,
for it was I who heard the cries in the wood and made you come with me
to see what was the matter."

"How could I blame you?" said Chloe.  "We did it together, and it was
what grandmother would have wished.  If we had not gone we should always
have reproached ourselves for not doing a kind action, and even as
things are, even supposing we are suffering from the dwarfs
spitefulness, it is better to suffer with a clear conscience than to
prosper with a bad one."

Her words comforted her sister a little.  They kissed each other
affectionately and went to bed, sad at heart certainly, but not
altogether despondent.

In the night Arminel awoke.  There was bright moonlight in the room, and
as she glanced at her sleeping sister, she saw traces of tears on
Chloe's pale face.

"My poor sister!" she said to herself.  "She has been crying, and would
not let me know it.  I do not care for myself, if only dear Chloe could
have her hens.  I could bear the disappointment about my cow.  How I
wish it might be so."

As the thought passed through her mind, a sweet feeling of peace and
satisfaction stole over her.  She closed her eyes and almost immediately
fell asleep, and slept soundly.

Very soon after this in her turn Chloe awoke.  She, too, sat up and
looked at her sister.  There was a smile on Arminel's sleeping face
which touched Chloe almost more than the traces of tears on her own had
touched her sister.

"Poor dear Arminel," she thought.  "She is dreaming, perhaps, of her dun
cow.  How little I should mind my own disappointment if I could see her
happy.  Oh!  I do wish she could have her cow!"

And having thought this, she, too, as her sister had done, fell asleep
with a feeling of peace and hopefulness such as she had not had for
long.

The winter sun was already some little way up on his journey when the
sisters awoke the next morning, for they had slept much later than
usual.  Arminel was the first to start up with a feeling that something
pleasant had happened.

"Chloe!" she exclaimed.  "We have overslept ourselves.  And on such a
bright morning, too!  How can it have happened?"

Chloe opened her eyes and looked about her with a smile.

"Yes, indeed," she replied.  "One could imagine it was summer time, and
I have had such a good night, and such pleasant dreams."

"So have I," answered her sister.  "And I am so hungry!"

That was scarcely to be wondered at, for they had gone almost supperless
to bed, and there was little if anything in the larder for their
breakfast.

"I am hungry too," said Chloe.  "But I am afraid there isn't much for
our breakfast.  However, I feel in much better spirits, though I don't
know why."

Chloe was ready a little before her sister, and hastened into the
kitchen, to light the fire and prepare such food as there was.  But just
as Arminel was turning to follow her, she was startled by a cry from
Chloe.

"Sister!" she called.  "Come quick!  See what I have found!"

She was in the larder, which served them also as a dairy.  Arminel
hurried in.  There stood Chloe, her face rosy with pleasure and
surprise, a basket in her hands full of beautiful large eggs of the same
rich browny colour as those which had come so mysteriously the evening
of the dwarfs visit.

"After all," said Chloe, "I believe the little man meant well by us.  It
must be he who has sent these eggs.  Oh, Arminel! do let us try again to
discover the secret of the third wish!"

But Arminel didn't seem to hear what her sister was saying.  Her eyes
were fixed in amazement on the stone slab behind where Chloe was
standing.  There were two large bowls filled to the brim with new milk;
it was many weeks since such a sight had been seen in the cottage.

"Chloe," was all she could say as she pointed it out to her sister.

Chloe did not speak; she darted outside closely followed by Arminel.
The same idea had come to them both, and they were not mistaken in it.
There in the cow-house, in the hitherto unused stall beside
Strawberry's, stood the dearest little cow you could picture to
yourself, dun-coloured, sleek, and silky, as if indeed she had just come
from fairyland.  She turned her large soft brown eyes on Arminel as the
happy girl ran up to her, and gave a low soft "moo," as if to
say--"You're my dear mistress.  I know you will be kind to me, and in
return I promise you that you shall find me the best of cows."

But Arminel only waited to give her one loving pat, and then hurried off
to the poultry yard.

There too a welcome sight awaited them.  Twelve beautiful white hens
were pecking about, and as Chloe drew near them she was greeted with
clucks of welcome as the pretty creatures ran towards her.

"They know they belong to you, Chloe, you see," said Arminel.  "They are
asking for their breakfast!  See, what is that sack in the corner? it
looks like corn for them."

So it was, and in another moment Chloe had thrown them out a good
handful, in which her old hens were allowed to share.  Poor things, they
had not had too much to eat just lately, and evidently the new-comers
were of most amiable dispositions.  All promised peace and prosperity.

The sisters made their way back to their little kitchen, but though they
had now eggs in plenty and new milk for their coffee they felt too
excited to eat.

"How can it have come about?" said Arminel.  "Chloe, have you wished for
anything without telling me?"

"Have you?" said Chloe, in her turn.  "One of us wishing alone would not
have been enough.  All I know is, that in the night I felt so sorry for
you that I said to myself if only _your_ wish could be fulfilled I would
give up my own."

"How strange!" exclaimed Arminel; "the very same thing happened to me.
I woke up and saw traces of tears on your face, and the thought went
through me that if _your_ wish could come to pass, I should be content."

"Then we have found the secret," said Chloe.  "Each of us was to forget
herself for the sake of the other; and the dwarf has indeed been a good
friend."

It would be difficult to describe the happiness that now reigned in the
cottage, or the pride with which the sisters set off to market the next
time with their well-filled baskets.  And all through the winter it was
the same.  Never did the little cow's milk fail, nor the number of eggs
fall off, so that the sisters became quite famous in the neighbourhood
for always having a supply of butter, poultry, and eggs of the best
quality.

One evening, when the spring-time had come round again, the sisters were
strolling in the outskirts of the forest, everything was looking calm
and peaceful--the ground covered with the early wood-flowers, the little
birds twittering softly before they settled to roost for the night.

"How sweet it is here," said Arminel.  "I never feel now as if I could
be the least afraid of the forest, nor of a whole army of dwarfs if we
met them."

"I wish we could meet our dwarf," said Chloe.  "I would love to thank
him for all the happiness he has given us."

This was a wish they had often expressed before.

"Somehow," said Arminel, "I have an idea that the dwarfs no longer
inhabit the forest.  Everything seems so much brighter and less gloomy
than it used to do here.  Besides, if our friend were still anywhere
near, I cannot help thinking we should have seen him."

As she said the words, they heard a rustling beside them.  Where they
stood there was a good deal of undergrowth, and for a moment or two they
saw nothing, though the sound continued.  Then suddenly a little figure
emerged from among the trees and stood before them.  It was their friend
the dwarf.

At first sight he looked much the same as when they had last seen him;
but the moment he began to speak they felt there was a difference.  His
voice was soft and mellow, instead of harsh and croaking; his brown eyes
had lost the hunted, suspicious look which had helped to give him such a
miserable expression.

"I am pleased that you have wished to see me again," he said, kindly.

"Oh yes, indeed!" the sisters exclaimed; "we can never thank you enough
for the happiness you have given us."

"You have yourselves to thank for it as much as me, my children," said
the little man; "and in discovering the secret which has brought you
prosperity, you have done for others also what you had no idea of.  The
spell under which I and my comrades have suffered so long is broken, now
that one of us has been able to be of real and lasting benefit to some
beings of the race who, ages ago, were the victims of our cruelty.  We
are now leaving the forest for ever.  No longer need the young men and
maidens shrink from strolling under these ancient trees, or the little
children start away in terror from every rustle among the leaves for
fear of seeing one of us."

"Are you going to be giants again?" said Arminel, curiously.

The dwarf smiled.

"That I cannot tell you," he said, as he shook his head; "and what does
it matter?  In some far-off land we shall again be happy, for we shall
have learnt our lesson."

And before the sisters had time to speak, he had disappeared; only the
same little rustle among the bushes was to be heard for a moment or two.
Then all was silent, till a faint "tu-whit--" from an owl waking up in
the distance, and the first glimmer of the moonlight among the branches,
warned Arminel and Chloe that it was time for them to be turning
homewards.

CHAPTER SEVEN.

THE SUMMER PRINCESS.

All was silent too in the little kitchen as the old woman's voice died
away and the click of her knitting-needles ceased.

Alix was the first to speak.

"That was a lovely story," she said approvingly.  "It will give Rafe and
me a lot to talk about.  It is so interesting to think what we would
wish for if we had the chance."

"I'm afraid you mustn't stay with me any longer to talk about it
to-day," said the old woman.  "It is quite--time--for you--to go home;"
and somehow her voice seemed to grow into a sort of singing, and the
needles began to click again, though very faintly, as if heard from some
way off.

What was the matter?

Alix felt as if she were going to sleep.  She rubbed her eyes, but
Rafe's voice speaking to her quite clearly and distinctly woke her up
again.

"Alix," he was saying, "don't you see where we are?" and glancing up,
she found that she and her brother were sitting on a moss-grown stone in
the old garden, not very far from the gate by which the wren had invited
them to enter.

It was growing towards evening.  Already the "going to bed" feeling
seemed about in the air.  The birds' voices came softly; a little chill
evening breeze made the children shiver slightly, though it only meant
to wish them "good-night."

"It feels like the end of the story," said Alix.  "Let's go home, Rafe."

This was how the next story came to be told.

The days had passed happily for Rafe and Alix; the weather had been very
fine and mild, and they had played a great deal in the old garden, which
grew lovelier every day.

"I hardly feel as if we had anything to wish for just now," said Alix,
one afternoon, when, tired with playing, she and her brother were
resting for a little while on the remains of a rustic bench which they
had found in a corner under the trees.  "We've been so happy lately,
Rafe; haven't we?  Ever since that day!"

Somehow they had not talked very much to each other of their visit to
the old caretaker; but now and then they had amused themselves by
planning what they would have wished for had they come across a dwarf
with magic power.

Rafe did not answer for a moment.  He was looking up, high up among the
branches.

"Hush," he said, in a half whisper.  "Do you hear that bird, Alix?  I
never heard a note like it before."

"Two notes," said Alix, in the same low voice.  "It's two birds talking
to each other, I feel certain."

"It does sound like it," said Rafe.  "Oh, I say, Alix, wouldn't you like
to understand what they're saying?"

"Yes," said his sister.  "I do wish we could.  There must be some sense
in it.  It sounds so real and--Look, Rafe," she went on, "they're coming
nearer us;" and so they were.  Still chirping, the birds flew downwards
till they lighted on a branch not very far above the children's heads.

Suddenly Alix caught hold of Rafe's arm.

"Be quite, quite still," she whispered.  "I have an idea that if we
listen very carefully we can make sense of what they're saying."

She almost held her breath, so eager was she; and Rafe, too, sat
perfectly motionless.  And Alix was not mistaken.  After a while the
birds' chirps took shape to the children's ears.  Bit by bit the "tweet,
tweet" varied and changed, like a voice heard in the distance, which, as
it draws nearer, grows from a murmur into syllables and words.

One bird was answering the other; in fact, there was a lively discussion
going on between them.

"No, no," said the first.  "I tell you it is my turn to begin, brother.
I have my story quite ready, just as I heard it down there in the sunny
lands from one of my companions, and I must tell it at once before I
forget it."

"Mine is ready too," replied the other bird.  "At least almost.  I have
just to--think over a few little points, and I am just as anxious as you
to amuse the dear children.  However, it would be setting them a bad
example if we began to quarrel about it, so I will give in.  I will fly
to a higher branch to meditate a little undisturbed, while you can hop
lower still and attract their attention."

Alix and Rafe looked at each other with a smile as the little fellow
fluttered downwards and alighted on a branch still nearer them.  There
he flapped his wings and cleared his throat.

"Cheep, cheep," he began.  At least that is what it would have sounded
to any one else, but the children knew it meant "good-afternoon."

"Thank you," they said.  That was not exactly a reply to
"good-afternoon," certainly; but they meant to thank him for his kind
intentions.

"Oh, so you know all about it, I see," said the bird.  "If you do not
mind, I should prefer your making no further observations.  It
interrupts the thread of my narration."

The children were perfectly silent.  One has to be very careful, you
see, when a bird is telling a story; you can't catch hold of him and
push him back into the arm-chair, as if he was a big person to be coaxed
into entertaining you.

"The title of my story," began the bird, "is `The Summer Princess,'" and
again he cleared his throat.

Once upon a time, in a country far to the north of the world, lived a
King and a Queen, who had everything they could wish for except an heir
to their throne.  When I say they had everything they could wish for,
that does not mean they had no troubles at all.  The Queen thought she
had a good many; and the King had one which was more real than any of
her fancied ones.  He had a wife who was a terrible grumbler.  She was a
grumbler by nature, and besides this she had been a spoilt child.

As she was very beautiful and could be very sweet and charming when in a
contented mood, the King had fallen deeply in love with her when he was
on his travels round the world, and had persuaded her to leave her own
home in the sunny south to accompany him to his northern kingdom.  There
she had much to make her happy.  Her husband was devoted to her, and
while the first bright summer lasted, she almost forgot to grumble, but
when the winter came, fierce and boisterous as it always is in those
lands, she grew very miserable.  She shivered with the cold and instead
of bracing herself to bear it, she wrapped herself in her furs and sat
from morning till night cowering over a huge fire.  In vain the King
endeavoured to persuade her to go out with him in his beautiful sledge
drawn by the fleetest reindeer, or to make one in the merry skating
parties which were the great amusement of his court.

"No, no," she cried fretfully.  "It would kill me to do anything of the
kind."  And though she brightened up as each summer came round, with the
return of each winter it was again the same sad story.

As the years passed on another and more real trouble came upon the
discontented young Queen.  She had no children.  She longed so
grievously to have a little baby that sometimes she almost forgot her
other causes for complaint and left off looking out for the signs of the
winter's approach in the melancholy way she was wont to do.  So that one
day late in the autumn she actually forgot her terror of the cold so far
as to remain out walking in the grounds of the palace, though the snow
clouds were gathering thick and heavy overhead.

She was alone.  For sometimes in her saddest moods she could bear no
one, not even the most faithful of her ladies, near her.

"If only I had a little baby, a dear little baby of my own, I would
never complain of anything again."

No doubt she quite meant what she said.  And I must say if her only
complaints had been of the cold northern winter, I could indeed find it
in my heart to pity her--not that I have any experience of them myself
(and the bird gave a little shiver), but I can imagine how terrible they
must be.  Indeed the friend from whom I have this story has often
described his sufferings to me, one year when he was belated in the
north, owing to an injured wing.  That is how he came to know the story.

As the Queen uttered her wish, she raised her eyes upwards, and was
startled to see some snowflakes already falling; she turned to hasten
indoors, exclaiming as she went:

"To think that winter is upon us already; I shall no longer have even
the small pleasure of a stroll in the garden.  But if I had a little
baby to play with and care for, even the dreary winter would not seem
long.  Everything would be bright and sunshiny to me."

"Are you sure of that?" said a voice beside her, and glancing up the
Queen saw a lovely figure.  It was that of a beautiful woman, with
golden hair wreathed with flowers.  But her face was somewhat pale and
she drew round her a mantle of russet brown as if to protect her from
the cold.

"I am the Spirit of the Summer," she said.  "I knew you well in your
childhood in the south, and here too I have watched you, though you did
not know it.  Your wish shall be fulfilled.  When I return to my
northern home, I will bring you the child you are longing for.  But
remember, the gift will lead to no lasting happiness unless you overcome
your habit of discontent.  For I can only do my part.  My brother, the
powerful Spirit of the Winter, though good and true and faithful, is
stern and severe.  He has heard your murmurings already, and if, when
your great wish is granted, you still continue them, I tremble for the
fate of your child."

The Queen could hardly speak, so overcome was she with delight.

"Thank you, oh, thank you, sweet spirit," she said.  "I will indeed take
heed for the future and never murmur again."

"I trust so," replied the fairy, "for listen what will happen if you
forget your resolution.  The slightest touch of snow would, in that
case, put the baby into my stern brother's power, and you would find
yourself terribly punished.  Beware, therefore!  Now I must hasten away.
I have lingered too long this year, and though my brother and I work
together and trust each other, he brooks no interference."  And as she
said this, the gracious figure seemed to disappear in a rosy haze, and
almost at the same moment a cold blast, driving the snowflakes before
it, came with a rush from behind where the young Queen stood, almost
lifting her from her feet.

"That must surely be the Spirit of the Winter himself," she thought as
she hurried indoors.

But her cheeks were rosy and her eyes bright.  It was whispered in the
palace that evening that for the first time the young Queen had the
brave and fearless air of a true daughter of the north.  And that winter
was far the happiest that the King and his wife had yet spent.  Scarce a
murmur was heard to escape from the Queen's lips, and in her anxiety to
win the good-will of the Winter Spirit, she often went out sleighing and
joined in the other amusements which hitherto she had refused to take
any part in during the cold season.  More than once, even, she was heard
to express admiration of the snow-covered mountains, or of the wonderful
northern sunsets and clear star-bespangled skies.

Nevertheless, the return of the warm and sunny days was watched for by
her most eagerly.  And the Summer Spirit was true to her promise.  On
the loveliest morning of all that year was born a baby Princess, the
prettiest baby that ever was seen, with dark-blue eyes and little golden
curls all over her head.

"A true child of the summer," said the happy Queen.

"And strong to brave and enjoy the winter too, I trust," added the King.
"She must be a true Princess of the north, as her mother is fast
becoming, I hope," he went on with a smile.

But his words did not please the Queen, though they were so kindly
meant.  With the possession of the baby, though she was so overjoyed to
have her, the young Queen's wayward and dissatisfied spirit began to
return.  She seemed to think the Princess was to be only hers, that the
nation and even the King, who naturally felt they had a share in her,
must give way, in everything that concerned the child, to its mother's
will.  She was even displeased one day when she overheard some of her
ladies admiring the beautiful colour of the baby's hair and saying that
it showed her a true daughter of the north.

"No such thing," said the Queen.

"It shows her a child of the sunshine and the summer.  My sweet Rose!"
for so, to please the Queen, the baby had been named.

On the whole, however, while the summer lasted the Queen was too happy
with her baby to give way to any real murmuring, and once or twice when
she might perhaps have done so, there was wafted to her by the breeze
the sound of a gentle "Beware!" and she knew that the summer fairy was
near.

So for the first winter of the baby's life she was on her guard, and
nothing went wrong, except now and then when the King reproached his
wife with overcare of the child when the weather was at all severe.

"Do you wish to kill her?" the Queen would reply, angrily.

"I wish to make her brave and hardy, like all the daughters of our
race," replied the King.

But not wishing to distress his wife, he said no more, reflecting that
it would be time enough when the little girl could walk and run to
accustom her to the keen and bracing air of the northern winter.

But in some strange, mysterious way, the princess, baby though she was,
seemed to understand what her father felt about her.  It was noticed
that before she could speak at all, she would dance in her nurse's arms
and stretch out her little hands with glee at the sight of the
snowflakes falling steadily.  And once or twice when a draught of the
frosty air blew upon her she laughed with delight, instead of shrinking
or shivering.

But so well were the Queen's feelings understood that no one ventured to
tell her of these clear signs that little Rose felt herself at home in
the land of the snow.

CHAPTER EIGHT.

THE SUMMER PRINCESS--CONTINUED.

The winter passed and the summer came again--the second summer of the
baby's life.  She had grown like the flowers, and was as happy as the
butterflies.  Never was a sweeter or a merrier child.  The Queen
idolised her, and the King loved her quite as dearly, though in a wiser
way.  And that summer passed very happily.

Unfortunately, however, the warm fine days came to an end unusually
early that year.  Many of the birds took flight for the south sooner
than their wont, and the flowers drooped and withered as if afraid of
what was coming.

The Queen noticed these signs with a sinking heart.  Standing one chilly
morning at the palace windows, she watched the grey autumn sky and
sighed deeply.

"Alas, alas!" she said.  "All the beauty and brightness are going
again."

She did not know that the King had entered the room, and was standing
behind her.

"Nay," he said, cheerfully.  "You have no reason to feel so sad.  If you
have no other flower you have our little Rose, blooming as brightly in
the winter as in the warmth."

He meant it well, but it would have been wiser if he had said nothing.
The Queen turned towards him impatiently.

"It is not so," she said angrily.

"Rose is like me.  She loves the summer and the sunshine!  I do not
believe she would live through your wretched northern winters but for my
incessant care and constant watchfulness.  And the anxiety is too much
for me; it will wear me to death before she is grown up.  Indeed there
are times when I almost regret that she ever was born.  The life in this
country is but half a life.  Would that I had known it before I ever
came hither."

It was rarely, discontented and complaining though she was, that the
Queen had so yielded to her temper.  The King was deeply hurt and
disappointed, and he left the room without speaking.  He was generally
so kind and patient that this startled her, and brought her to her
senses.

"How wrong of me to grieve him so by my wild words," she thought,
penitently.  "And--" A sudden horror came over her.  What had she been
saying?  What had she done?  And the fairy's warning returned to her
memory: "If you forget your resolution, the slightest touch of snow will
put the baby into my stern brother's power, and you will find yourself
terribly punished."

The poor Queen shivered.  Already to her excited fancy, as she glanced
at the sky, it seemed that the lurid grey which betokened snow was
coming over it.

"Oh, sweet Summer Spirit!" she cried; "forgive me and plead for me."
But a melancholy wail from the cold wind blowing through the trees in
the grounds of the palace was the only reply; the summer fairy was far
away.

The sky cleared again later that day, and for some short time the cold
did not increase.  But it would be difficult to describe what the Queen
went through.  It was useless to hope that the winter would pass without
snow; for, so far north, such a thing had never been known.  Still, no
doubt, its coming appeared to be delayed, and the weather prophets felt
somewhat at fault.  The Queen began to breathe rather more freely again,
in the hope that possibly her appeal to the Summer Spirit had, after
all, been heard.  Every one had noticed her pale and anxious looks;
every one had noticed also how very gentle and uncomplaining she had
become.  She was so eager to make all the amends she could, that one
day, when the King remarked that he thought it very wrong for the
Princess to be so guarded from the open air as she had been lately, the
Queen, though with fear and trembling, gave orders that the baby should
be taken out.

"I will accompany her myself," she said to the attendants; so the little
Princess was wrapped up in her costly furs and placed in her tiny
chariot drawn by goats, the Queen walking beside her.

The little girl laughed with delight, and chattered in her baby way
about everything she saw.  She seemed like a little prisoner suddenly
set at liberty; for the last few weeks had been spent by the poor little
thing in rooms specially prepared, where no breath of the outer air
could find its way in.

"For who knows," thought the Queen, "how some tiny flake of snow might
be wafted down the chimney, or through the slightest chink of the
window."

To-day, in spite of her anxiety, the baby's happy face made her mother's
heart feel lighter.

"Surely," she said to herself, "it must be a sign that I am forgiven,
and that all will yet be well."

And to please her little daughter she took her farther than she had
intended, even entering a little way into a pine wood skirting the
palace grounds at one side, a favourite resort of hers in the summer.

The Princess's nurse picked up some fir-cones and gave them to the
little girl, who threw them about in glee and called out for more.  They
were all so busy playing with her that they did not notice how, above
the heads of the tall fir-trees, the sky was growing dark and overcast,
till suddenly a strange, chill blast made the Queen gather her mantle
round her and gaze up in alarm.

"We must hasten home," she said; "it is growing so cold."

"Yes, indeed," said one of the ladies; "it almost looks like--" But the
Queen interrupted her; she could not bear even the mention of the fatal
word.

"Wrap up the Princess!" she exclaimed.  "Cover her over, face and all!
Never mind if she cries!  My darling, we shall be home directly.  The
cold wind would hurt you," added she to the little girl.

Then they hurried back to the palace as quickly as the goats could be
persuaded to go, even the Queen herself running fast to keep up with the
little carriage.

They were within a short distance of the palace before any snow fell,
though it was clear to be seen that it was not far off; and the Queen
was beginning to breathe again more freely, when suddenly Princess Rose,
who had behaved beautifully till now, with a cry of baby mischief,
pushed away the shawl that was over her face, shouting with glee.  At
that very moment the first fluttering snowflakes began to fall.  The
little Princess opened wide her eyes as she caught sight of them, and
smiled as if in greeting; and alas! before the terrified Queen had time
to replace the covering the child had thrown off, one solitary flake
alighted on her cheek, melting there into a tiny drop which looked like
a tear, though still the little Princess smiled.

The Queen seized the child in her arms, and, though her heart had almost
ceased beating with terror, rushed up the long flights of steps, all
through the great halls and corridors like a mad creature, nor stopped
even to draw breath till she had reached the Princess's apartments, and
had her safe in the rooms specially prepared for her during the winter.

But was she safe?  Was it not already too late?  With trembling dread
the Queen drew away the furs and shawls wrapped round the baby, almost
expecting to find her changed in some strange way, perhaps even dead;
and it was with thankfulness that she saw that little Rose was still
herself--sweet and smiling in her sleep.  For she was fast asleep.

"The darling, the precious angel," thought the poor mother as she laid
her in her little cot, just as the ladies, and nurses, and all the
attendants came trooping into the room.  "She is only asleep," said the
Queen, in a whisper.

"Nothing has happened to her--she is sleeping sweetly."

The ladies stared--the Queen's behaviour had been so strange they could
not understand her.

"It is a pity to be so anxious about the child," they said to each
other.  "It will bring no blessing," for they thought it all came from
the Queen's foolish terror lest the little Princess should catch cold,
and they shook their heads.

But the Queen seemed full of thankfulness, very gentle, and subdued.
Many times that afternoon she came back to see if little Rose was well--
the baby looked a picture of health, but--she was still sleeping.

"The fresh keen air has made her drowsy, I suppose," said the head
nurse, late in the evening when the Queen returned again.

"And she has had nothing to eat since the middle of the day," said the
mother, anxiously.  "I almost think if she does not wake of herself in
an hour or so, you will have to rouse her."

To this the nurse agreed.  But two hours later, on the Queen's next
visit to the nursery, there was a strange report to give her.  The nurse
had tried to wake the baby, but it was all in vain.  Little Rose just
smiled sweetly and rolled over on her other side, without attempting in
the least to open her eyes.  It seemed cruel to disturb her.  She was so
very sleepy.

"I think we must let the Princess have her sleep out--children are like
that sometimes," said the nurse.

And the Queen was forced to agree to it, though she had a strange
sinking at the heart, and even the King when he came to look at his
little daughter felt uneasy, though he tried to speak cheerfully.

"No doubt she will awake in the morning quite bright and merry," he
said,--"all the brighter and merrier for sleeping a good round and a
half of the clock."

The morning dawned--the slow-coming winter daylight of the north found
its way into the Princess's nursery through the one thickly glazed
window--a tiny gleam of ruddy sunshine even managed to creep in to kiss
her dimpled cheek, but still the baby slept--as soundly as if the night
was only beginning.  And matters grew serious.

It was no use trying to wake her.  They all did their best--King, Queen,
ladies, nurses; and after them the great court physicians and learned
men of every kind.  All were summoned and all consulted, and as the days
went on, a hundred different things were tried.  They held the strongest
smelling salts to her poor little nostrils; the baby only drew up her
small nose the least bit in the world and turned over again with a tiny
snore.  They rang the bells, they had the loudest German bands to be
found far or near to play all at once in her room; they fetched all the
pet dogs in the neighbourhood and set them snarling and snapping at each
other close beside her; as a last resource they lifted her out of bed
and plunged her into a cold bath--she did not even shiver!

And with tears rolling down their faces, the Queen and the ladies and
the nurses wrapped her up again and put her back cosily to bed, where
she seemed as contented as ever, while they all sat down together to
have a good cry, which, sad to say, was of no use at all.

"She is bewitched," said the cleverest of all the doctors, and as time
went on, everybody began to agree with him.  Even the King himself was
obliged to think something of the kind must be at the bottom of it, and
at last one day the Queen, unable to endure her remorse any longer, told
him the whole story, entreating him to forgive her for having by her
discontent and murmuring brought upon him so great a sorrow.

The King was very kind but very grave.

"I understand it now," he said.  "The summer fairy told you true.  Our
northern Winter Spirit is indeed stern and implacable; we must submit--
if we are patient and resigned it is possible that in the future even
his cold heart may be melted by the sight of our suffering."

"It is only I who deserve it," wept the poor Queen.  "The worst part of
it all is to know that I have brought this sorrow upon you, my dear
husband."

And so repentant was she that she almost forgot to think of herself--
never had she been so sweet and loving a wife.  She did everything she
possibly could to please and cheer the King, concealing from him the
many bitter tears she shed as she sat for hours together beside the
sleeping child.

The winter was terribly severe--never had the snow lain more thickly,
never had the wind-blasts raged and howled more furiously.  Often did
the Queen think to herself that the storm spirits must be infuriated at
her very presence in their special domain.

"They might pity me now," she thought, "now that I am so punished;" but
she bore all the winter cold and terrors uncomplainingly, nay, even
cheerfully, nerving herself to go out alone in the bitterest weather
with a sort of hope of pleasing the winter fairy; possibly if she could
but see him, of making an appeal to him.  But for many months he held
his icy sway--often indeed it seemed as if gentler times were never to
return.

Then suddenly one night the frost went; a mild soft breeze replaced the
fierce blast; spring had come.  And wonderful to relate, the very next
morning the Queen was roused by loud knockings and voices at her door;
trembling, she knew not why, she opened it; and the head nurse fell at
her feet laughing and crying at once.  The Princess had awakened!

Yes; there she was, chattering in her baby way, smiling and rosy, as if
nothing had been the matter.  She held out her arms to her mother,
calling "Mamma," in the most delightful way; she knew her father again
quite well; she was very hungry for her breakfast.  Oh! the joy of her
parents, and the jubilation all through the palace!  I could not
describe it.

And all through the summer little Rose was wide awake, in the day-time
that is to say, just like other children.  She was as well and strong
and happy as a baby could be.  But--the summer will not last for ever;
again returned the autumn bringing with it the signs of the approaching
winter, and one morning when her nurse went to awaken the Princess, she
found it was no use--Rose was sleeping again, with a smile on her face,
calm and content, but alas! not to be awakened!  And then it was
remembered that the first snow had fallen during the night.

More to satisfy the Queen than with the hope of its doing any good, all
the efforts of the year before were repeated, but with no success.  And
gradually the child's distressed parents resigned themselves to the sad
truth: their daughter was to be theirs only for half her life; for full
six months out of every twelve, she was to be in a sense as far away
from them as if the winter monarch had carried her off to his palace of
ice altogether.

But no; it was not quite so bad as that would have been.  And the Queen,
who was fast learning to count her blessings instead of her troubles,
smiled through her tears as she said to the King what a mercy it was
that they were still able to watch beside their precious child--to kiss
her soft warm cheek every morning and every night.

And so it went on.  In the spring the Princess woke up again, bright and
well and lively, and in every way six months older than when she had
fallen asleep; so that, to see her in the summer time, no one could have
guessed the strange spell that was over her.  She became the sweetest
and most charming girl in the world; only one thing ever saddened her,
and that was any mention of the winter, especially of snow.

"What does it mean?" she would ask sometimes.  "What are they talking
of?  Show me this wonderful thing!  Where does it grow?  I want to see
it."

But no one could make her understand; and at these times a very strange
look would come into her blue eyes.

"I must see it," she said.  "Some day I shall go away and travel far,
far, till I find it."

These words used to distress her mother more, than she could say; and
she would shower presents and treasures on her daughter, of flowers and
singing-birds, and lovely embroidered dresses--all to make her think of
the sunshine and the summer.  And for the time they would please the
girl, till again she shook her head and murmured--"I want the snow."

So the years followed each other, till Rose was sixteen.  Every winter
the Queen had a faint hope, which, however, grew ever fainter and
fainter, that the spell was perhaps to be broken.  But it was not so.
And strange stories got about concerning the Princess--some saying she
was a witch in disguise; others that she had no heart or understanding;
others that she turned into a bird or some animal during half her life--
so that the neighbouring Princes, in spite of her beauty and sweetness,
were afraid to ask her in marriage.  And this brought new sorrow to her
parents.  For she was their only child.

"What will become of her after we are dead and gone?" they said.  "Who
will care for and protect our darling?  Who will help her to rule over
our nation?  No people will remain faithful to a sovereign who is only
awake half the year.  There will be revolts and rebellion, and our angel
Rose may perhaps be put to death, or driven away."

And they fretted so over this, that the hair of both King and Queen grew
white long before its time.  But Rose only loved them the more on this
account, for she had heard some one say that white hair was like snow;
though she kept the fancy to herself, for she knew it troubled the Queen
if ever she mentioned the strange, mysterious word.

She was so lovely that painters came from many countries just to see her
face, and, if possible, be allowed to make a picture of her.  And one of
these portraits found its way to the court of a King who was a distant
cousin of her father, and who had heard the strange things said of the
Princess.  He was very angry about it, for he had two sons, and he was
afraid of their falling in love with the beautiful face.  So he ordered
the picture to be destroyed before the elder Prince, who was away on a
visit, came home.

But the servant who was to burn the picture thought it such a pity to do
so, that he only hid it away in a lumber-room; and thither, as fate
would have it, came the younger Prince one day in search of a pet kitten
of his sister's which had strayed away; for he was a Prince of a most
kind and amiable nature.

The moment he saw the picture he fell in love with it.  He made inquiry,
and heard all there was to tell.  Then he arrayed himself for a journey,
and came to bid his father farewell.

"I go," he said, "to woo the Princess Rose for my bride."  And in spite
of all the king could say he kept firm.

"If she is a witch," he said, "I would rather perish by her hands than
live with any other."

And amidst tears and lamentations he set out.

He was received with great delight at the court of Princess Rose's
parents, though he came without any pomp or display; for he lost no time
in telling the King and Queen the reason of his visit.  Knowing him to
be a Prince of most estimable character, they were overjoyed to hear of
his resolve.

"I only trust," said the Queen, "that all may go well.  But, as you have
doubtless heard, our darling child, despite her beauty and goodness, is
under a strange spell."

She then proceeded to tell him the whole matter, of which he had already
heard garbled accounts.

He was relieved to find that the enchantment was of no worse a nature,
and declared that it made no difference in his intentions, but rather
increased his love for the Princess.  And when he first set eyes on her
(more beautiful by far than even the beautiful portrait), he felt that
his whole life would not be too much to devote to her, even considering
her strange affliction.

"And who knows," he said to himself, "but that such love as mine may
find out a way to release her from the spell?"

The Princess quickly learned to like him.  She had never before had a
companion so near her own age, and the last days of the summer passed
most happily, till the time came when the Prince thought he might
venture to ask her to be his wife.

They were walking on the terrace in front of the castle when he did so.
It had been a lovely day, but the afternoon had grown chilly; and as the
Princess listened to his words, a cold breath of wind passed near them.

The Princess started; and, aware of the Queen's anxiety about her, the
Prince hastily proposed that they should return to the house; but Rose
looked at him with a light in her eyes which he had never before seen,
and a strange smile broke over her face.

"It is new life to me," she said.

"Can you not understand, you who are yourself a child of the north?
Yes, Prince, I will marry you on one condition, that you will show me
the snow--but on no other."

Then she turned, and, without another word, walked slowly back to the
palace.

Prince Orso, for so he was called, felt terribly distressed.

"The spell is upon her," he thought to himself.  "She asks me to do what
would probably kill her, or separate her for ever from all who love
her."  And the King and Queen, when they heard his story, were nearly as
disappointed as he.

But that very night the Prince had a strange dream.  He thought he was
walking in the wood near the castle, when again a chill blast, but still
more icy, swept past him, and he heard a voice speaking to him.  It
sounded hoarse and stern.

"Orso," it said, "you're as foolish as the rest.  Have you no trust?
See what came of rebellion against me, who, after all, love my many
children as dearly as does my sister of the summer.  Leave the Princess
to the leadings of her own heart, and dare not to interfere."

Then with a crash as of thunder the spirit went on his way.  And the
Prince awoke to find that the window of his room had been dashed in by
the force of a sudden gale which had arisen.

But the next morning all was again calm.  It almost seemed as if the
milder weather was returning again; and the Queen looked brighter; but
it was not so with the Princess, who was silent and almost sad.  And so
things continued for some days.

At last the Prince could bear it no longer.  One afternoon when he found
himself alone with the Princess, he turned to her suddenly.

"Princess," he said, "can you not give me another answer?  You must know
that I would fain promise anything you wish; but I dare not bind myself
to what might perhaps do you some injury."

Rose turned towards him impatiently.

"That is just it," she said.  "I am always met by excuses when I ask for
the one thing I really desire.  What is there about me different from
others?  Why should I so often hear of what others seem to understand,
and not have it explained to me?  I am no longer a child; in my dreams I
see things I cannot put in words; and beautiful as the world is, I feel
that I only half know it.  I long for what they call the winter, and
what they call the snow, and they never come.  Only the cold wind, which
I have felt once or twice, brings new life to me, and fills me with
strange joy."

The Prince hesitated.  He understood her perfectly, for he was himself
of the same brave and hardy race.  Yet the Queen's forebodings made him
tremble.  The Princess's words reminded him of his own dream; and again
he felt as if he heard the voice of the stern Winter Spirit.  And as if
in answer to his uncertainty, at that moment the howl of the cold blast
sounded near them among the trees, and lurid clouds began to gather
overhead.

The Princess's face lighted up.

"Ah," she exclaimed, "it is coming again!"

"I fear so indeed," said Orso; and in his terror for her he caught her
hand and would have hurried her back to the palace.

But at that moment a shrill little cry was heard overhead not far from
where they stood, and glancing up they saw a bird of prey clutching a
smaller one in his claws.  With a terrible effort the captive managed to
free himself, but he was sadly wounded; and as Rose gazed upwards in
great concern, she saw him fall fluttering feebly to the ground.  All
else was forgotten in the sight.

"Poor bird," she cried.  "Let me go, Prince; I must find him where he
has fallen, or a cruel death of slow suffering will be his."

The Prince loosed her hand; he dared not hold her back, though he could
have done so.

"Leave her to the guidings of her own heart," resounded in his ears.

Almost at once she was lost to his sight among the trees which grew very
closely; almost at the same moment, to his horror, something cold and
soft touched his face, and lifting his eyes, he saw that the snowflakes
were falling thickly.  If harm was to betide, it was too late to save
her; but he pressed forward in unspeakable anxiety.

It was some little time before he found her; and no reply came to his
calls; but at last he caught sight of something blue on the ground.  It
was the Princess's robe; and there, indeed, she lay motionless--her eyes
closed, a sweet smile on her face, the little wounded bird tenderly
clasped in her hands.

And now I may tell you that this wounded bird was the friend from whom I
had the story; for, as you will hear, he had plenty of opportunity of
learning it all.

Orso threw himself on the ground beside the Princess.

"Ah," he exclaimed, "my carelessness has killed her.  How can I ever
dare to face the King and Queen?  Oh!  Winter Spirit, you have indeed
deceived me."

But as he said the words the Princess opened her eyes.

"No, Prince," she said.  "I am not dead.  I am not even asleep.  It was
the strange gladness that seemed to take away my breath for a moment,
and I must have sunk down without knowing.  But now I feel stronger and
happier than ever in my life before, now that I have seen and felt the
beautiful snow of my own country, now that I have breathed the winter
air I have been longing for always," and she sprang to her feet, her
blue eyes sparkling with delight, looking lovelier than he had ever seen
her.

"Orso," she went on, half shyly, "you have done what I asked you;
through you I have seen the snow," and she held out her hand, which,
white though it was, looked pink in comparison with the little flakes
which were fluttering down on it.

The Prince was overjoyed, but he hesitated.

"I fear," he said, "that in reality you should rather thank the poor
little bird, or most of all your own kind heart."

"Poor little bird," she replied, looking at it as it lay in her other
hand.  "It is not dead.  I will do all I can for it!  Let us hasten
home, Prince, so that I may bind up its poor wing.  My father and mother
too will be anxious about me."

And together they returned to the palace.  One glance at the Princess as
she came in sprinkled over with snow showed the Queen that the spell was
at last broken.  And her joy was past all words.

My friend recovered slowly.  He spent all the winter in the palace,
tenderly cared for by the Princess Rose, only flying away when the warm
sunny days returned.  He pays them a visit still every summer to show
his gratitude, and tells me that in all his travels he seldom sees a
happier family than his friends in the old palace away up in the far,
far northern land.

"Thank you," said the children, "Thank you, oh so much!"  But whether
the bird heard them or not they could not tell--he had already flown
away.

CHAPTER NINE.

THE CHRISTMAS SURPRISE.

For some days the story of the bewitched Princess gave Rafe and Alix
enough to talk about, and to play at too, for they invented a game in
which Alix was supposed to fall into an enchanted sleep if Rafe
succeeded in touching her with a branch of leaves, which represented
snowflakes; and as she was a very quick runner it was not so easy as it
sounds.

Besides, by this time the Easter holidays were over and lessons had
begun again.  The children had not _too_ many lessons, however, and
always a good part of the afternoon to themselves, and they remained
faithful to the old garden as their favourite playground.  So some hours
of every day--of every fine day at least--were spent there, and though
they had not seen the old caretaker a second time, nor ever managed to
find the concealed door in the rough stone wall again, hunt for it as
they would, still they had sometimes a queer, mysterious, pleasant
feeling that she knew about them--knew they were there, and was perhaps
even peeping out at them through some hidden hole.

It would have been a great sorrow to them if they had had to give up
their visits to the garden.  But fortunately their nurse rather approved
of their playing there.  There was something that brought good luck with
it about the Lady wood grounds.  No ill-chance ever happened to them
there, no tumbles or sprained ankles, or torn clothes, or such not
uncommon misfortunes when children are by themselves.  Best of all, they
almost never quarrelled when in the old garden, and perhaps _that_ had a
good deal to do with the keeping clear of other troubles.

They were growing "quite to be trusted," nurse told their mother, and it
scarcely seemed needful for them to go regular walks now, which nurse
was very glad of, as it left her free to get on nicely with all the
needlework, in which--next to a baby, and there had been no new baby
since Alix--her heart delighted.

So the discovery of the pleasures of the deserted manor suited
everybody.

But after a while, the children began to think it was time to have
another story, and to wonder if their old friend had forgotten them, or
possibly gone away.  There was no use hunting any more for the hidden
door; they had hurt their fingers and tired themselves to no purpose in
doing so already.  And at last they came to the conclusion that if Mrs
Caretaker didn't want them to find it, it was no use trying, and that if
she _did_, she would soon find ways and means of fetching them.

"Unless, of course," said Alix, "she has gone.  Perhaps she's like the
birds, you know--only turned the other way.  I mean perhaps she goes off
in the summer, once she's started everything, and all the plants and
things _are_ growing beautifully now, in their wild way.  You see she's
not like a regular trim gardener--she doesn't want them to grow all
properly like you can see anywhere."

"Still she must take great care of them somehow," said Rafe
thoughtfully, "for you know people often notice how few weeds there are
about Ladywood, and in full summer the wild flowers are quite wonderful.
And the birds--it's always here the nightingales are heard the best."

Alix looked up.  They were sitting in their favourite place, at the foot
of some very tall trees.

"If we'd had any sense," she said, "we might almost have seen for
ourselves long ago that there was something fairy about the place, even
before the wren led us here."

The mention of the wren made her remember something she had noticed.

"Rafe," she went on, "do you know I've seen a little robin hopping about
us the last day or two, and chirping in a _talking_ sort of way.  I
forgot to tell you.  I wonder if he has anything to say to us, for you
know there were _two_ birds that wanted to tell us stories."

"Per--" began Rafe in his slow fashion.

But before he had time to get to "haps" his sister caught hold of his
arm.

"Hush!" she whispered, "there he is."

Yes, there he was, and "he" _was_ a robin.

He hopped about in front of them for a minute or two, now and then
cocking his head on one side and looking at them over his shoulder, as
it were, as if to see whether he had caught their attention.  Then he
flew up a little way, and settled himself on a branch not far from them,
with a peculiar little chirp.

"I believe," said Alix, still in a whisper, "I believe he wants us to
speak to him."

"Try," replied Rafe.

"Robin," said Alix, clearly though softly, "robin, have you come to see
us?  Have you got a message for us from Mrs Caretaker, perhaps?"

The bird looked at her reproachfully.  I don't know that she could see
it was _reproachfully_, but from the way he held his head it was plain
to any one that he was not altogether pleased.

Then came a succession of chirps, and gradually, just as had happened
before, by dint of listening very attentively and keeping quite, quite
quiet, bits of words and then words themselves began to grow out of the
chirping.  To tell the truth, if any one had passed that way, he or she
would have imagined Rafe and Alix were asleep.  For there they sat, like
a picture of the babes in the wood--Alix's head resting on her brother's
shoulder, and his arm thrown round her--_quite_ motionless.  But they
weren't asleep, of course, for their two pairs of eyes were fixed on the
little red-breasted fellow up above them.

"So you had forgotten all about me," in a melancholy tone, quite unlike
a cheery little robin.  "I gave up to that other fellow and let him tell
his story first.  I suppose you don't care to hear mine."

"Oh, dear robin, of course we do," said Alix.  "But you see we didn't
understand."

"I've been following you about all these days.  I'm sure you might have
seen me, and I've been asking you over and over again if you didn't want
to listen."

"But you see, dear robin, we couldn't understand what you said.  It
takes a good while to get used to--to your way of speaking, you know,"
said Alix.  She was desperately afraid of hurting his feelings still
more.

"I am afraid that is not the real reason.  You think a robin's story is
sure to be stupid.  You see I am not one of those fine travelled
fellows--the swallows and the martins, and all the rest of them--who
spend the winter in the south and know such a lot of the world.  I'm
only a home bird.  Here I was hatched and here I have lived, and mean to
live till I die.  It's quite true that my story is a very stupid one.
I've made no fine acquaintances such as kings and queens and princesses,
and I've never visited at court, north or south either, so you know what
you have to expect."

He seemed rather depressed, but less offended than he had been.

"Please begin," said Rafe.  "I'm sure we shall like your story.  We
don't want always to hear the same kind."  The robin cleared his throat.

"Such as it is," he began, "I can vouch for the truth of it, as it
happened to be my own self.  I didn't `have it' from any one else.  And
in my own mind I have given it the name of `The Christmas Surprise.'"

And after he had cleared his throat again for the last time, he went
straight on.

"I have often noticed," he began, "that whatever we have not got,
whatever is not ours or with us at the present moment, is the thing we
prize the most.  This applies both to birds and human beings, and it is
often the case about the seasons of the year.  There is a great charm
about absence.  In the winter we are always looking forward to the
spring and the summer; in the hot summer we think of the cool shady days
of autumn, of the cheerful fires and merry doings that come with
Christmas.  I am speaking especially of men and women and children just
now, but there is a good deal of the same kind of thing among us birds,
though you mightn't think it.  And of all birds, I think we robins have
the most sympathy with human folk.  We really love Christmas time; it is
gratifying to know how much we are thought of at that season--how our
portraits are sent about by one friend to another, how our figures are
placed on your Christmas trees, and how every one thinks of us with
kindness.  And except by _very_ thoughtless people we are generally
cared for well.  During a hard winter it is seldom that our wants are
forgotten.  I myself," and here he plumed himself importantly, "I myself
have been most fortunate in this respect.  There are at least a dozen
houses within easy flight of Ladywood where I am always sure of a good
breakfast of crumbs."

"But," began Alix, rather timidly, "please don't mind my interrupting
you, but doesn't Mrs Caretaker look after you?  I thought that was what
she was here for, to take care of all the living creatures in this
garden."

"Exactly so, exactly so," said the robin, hastily, "far be it from me to
make any complaint.  I would not change my home for the garden of a
palace.  But, as I have said, I think we robins have much sympathy with
your race.  Human beings interest me extremely.  I like to study their
characters.  So I go about in my own part of the country a good deal,
and thus I know the ways of many of my wingless neighbours pretty
intimately.  Thus comes it that I have stories to tell, all from my own
observation, you see.  Well, as I was remarking, we often love to dwell
in fancy on what is not ours at present, so as it is really like a
summer day, quite hot for the time of year, I daresay it will amuse you
to transport your thoughts to Christmas time.  Most of my human stories
belong to that season, for it is then we have so much to do with you.
The Christmas of which I am going to tell you was what is called an
`old-fashioned one,'--though it strikes me that snowy, frosty, very cold
Christmases are fast becoming new-fashioned again--ah, it _was_ cold!  I
was a young bird then; it was my first experience of frost and snow, and
in spite of my feathers I did shiver, I can tell you.  Still I enjoyed
it; I was strong and hearty, and I began to make acquaintance with the
houses in the neighbourhood, at several of which one was pretty sure of
a breakfast in front of some window.

"There was a very large house which had been shut up for some time, as
the owners were abroad.  It had a charming terrace in front, and my
friends and I often regretted that it was not inhabited.  For the
terrace faced south and all the sunshine going was sure to be found
there, and it would have been a pleasant resort for us.  And one morning
our wishes were fulfilled.  I met a cousin of mine flying off in great
excitement.

"`The Manor House is open again,' he told me.  `Come quickly.  Through
the windows on to the terrace, fires are to be seen in all the rooms,
and they are evidently preparing for a merry Christmas.  No doubt they
will not forget us, but it is as well to remind them that we should be
glad of some crumbs.'

"I flew off with him, and found it just as he had said.  The house had
quite a different appearance; it looked bright and cheery, and in one
room a large party was assembled at breakfast.  We--for several of us
were there--hopped up and down the terrace for some little time, but no
notice was taken of us.  So one by one my companions flew away,
remarking that it was no use wasting their time; they would look in
again some other day when perhaps the new-comers would have thought of
them.  But I remained behind; I was not very busy, being a young bird,
and I felt a wish to see something of the family who had been so long
absent, for I am of what some people call a `curious' disposition; I
myself should rather describe it as observant and thoughtful.

"I perched close beside the dining-room window and peeped in.  There
were several grown-up people, but only two children; two little girls,
very prettily dressed, but thin and pale, and with a somewhat
discontented expression of face.  After a while, when the meal was over
and all had risen from the table, the children came to the window with a
young lady and stood looking out.

"Oh, how cold it is," said one of them shivering, "I wish papa and mamma
had not come back to England.  I liked India much better."

"So did I," said the other little girl.  "I don't want to go a walk when
it's so cold.  Need we go, Miss Meadows?  And yet I don't know what to
do in the house.  I'm tired of all our toys.  We shall have new ones
next week when Christmas Day comes; that's a good thing."

The young lady they called Miss Meadows looked rather troubled.  In her
heart she thought the children had far too many toys already, and she
felt sure they would get tired of the new ones before they had had them
long.

"I don't care much for Christmas except for the toys," said the first
little girl.  "Do you, Miss Meadows?"

"Yes, indeed I do, Norna dear," she said.  "And I think in your heart
you really care for it too--and Ivy also.  You both know _why_ it should
be so cared for."

"Oh, yes; in that sort of a way, I know it would be naughty not to care
for it," said Norna, looking a little ashamed.  "But it's different when
you've lived in England, I suppose.  Mamma has told us stories of
Christmas when she was little, that sounded very nice--all about carols,
and lots of cousins playing together, and presents, and school feasts.
But we haven't any cousins to play with.  Had you, Miss Meadows, at your
own home?"

Miss Meadows' eyes looked rather odd for a moment.  She turned away for
half an instant and then she seemed all right again.

"I had lots of brothers and sisters," she said, "and that's even better
than cousins."

It was her first Christmas away from home, and she had only been a few
days with Norna and Ivy.

"I wish we had!" sighed Norna, who always wanted what she had not got.

"But surely there are some things you can have that would cheer you up,"
said Miss Meadows.  "Perhaps it is too soon to settle about school
feasts just yet, but have you no presents to get ready for any one?"

"No," sighed Ivy.  "Mamma has everything she wants; and so have we.
It's rubbish giving each other presents just to say they're presents."

"Yes," said Miss Meadows.  "I think it is.  But--"

She said no more, for just then Ivy touched her, and whispered softly,--

"I do believe there's a real little robin redbreast.  Don't let's
frighten him away."

The child's eyes sparkled with pleasure; she looked quite different.

"It's the first _real_ one we've ever seen," said she and Norna
together.

"Poor little man!" said their governess; "he must be hungry to be so
tame.  Let us throw crumbs every morning, children.  I am sure your
mamma won't mind.  This terrace is a splendid place."

The idea pleased them mightily.  I hid myself in the ivy for a few
moments, and when I came out again, there was a delightful spread all
ready.  So I flew down and began to profit by it, expressing my thanks,
of course, in a well-bred manner.  The window was still open, and I
heard some words that Miss Meadows murmured to herself:

"I wish I could find out some little service for others that they could
do, even this first Christmas," she said.

"They would be so much happier, poor little things!  Dear robin, I am
even grateful to you for making me think of throwing out crumbs."

She looked so sweet that my heart warmed to her, and I wished I could
help her.  And at that moment an idea struck me.  You will soon hear
what it was.

I had another visit to pay that morning; indeed I had been on my way to
do so when the exciting news about the Manor House attracted me thither.
But now I flew off, to the little home where I was always welcome.  It
was a very small cottage at the outskirts of the same village of which
the home of the newly-returned family was the great house.  In this
cottage lived a couple and their two children--a boy and a girl.  They
had always been poor, but striving and thrifty, so that the little place
looked bright and comfortable though so bare, and the children tidy and
rosy.  But now, alas! things had changed for the worse.  A bad accident
to the father, who was a woodcutter, had entirely crippled him; and
though some help was given them, it was all the poor mother could do to
keep out of the workhouse.  I made a point of visiting the cottage every
day; it cheered them up, and there were generally some crumbs for me.
But this morning--not that it mattered to me after my good breakfast at
the Manor House--there were none; and as I alighted on the sill of the
little kitchen and looked in, everything was dull and cheerless.  No
fire was lighted; the two children, Jem and Joyce, sat crouched together
on the settle by the empty grate as if to gain a little warmth from each
other.  They looked blue and pinched, and scarcely awake; but when they
saw me at the window they brightened up a little.

"There's robin," said Joyce.  "Poor robin! we've nothing for you this
morning."

A small pane was broken in the window and pasted over with paper, but a
corner was torn, and so I could hear what they said.

"No indeed," said Jem; "we've had nothing ourselves--not since yesterday
at dinner time.  And it is so cold."

I stood still on one leg, and chirped that I was very sorry.  I think
they understood me.

"Mother's gone to Farmer Bantry's," said Joyce, as if she was glad to
have some one--"even a bird," some folk who know precious little about
us would say--to tell her troubles to.  "They're cleanin' up for
Christmas, and she'll get a shilling and maybe some broken victuals, she
said.  So we're tryin' to go to sleep again to make the time pass."

"There was two sixpences yesterday," said Jem, mournfully; "and one
would 'a got some coal, and t'other some bread and tea.  But the doctor
said as father must have somefin'--" (Jem was only five and Joyce
eight)--"queer stuff--I forget the name--to wunst.  So mother she went
to the shop, and father's got the stuff, and he's asleep; but we've not
had nuffin'."

"And Christmas is coming next week, mother says," Joyce added.  "Last
Christmas we had new shoes, and meat for dinner."

I was sadly grieved for them.  Joyce spoke in a dull, broken sort of
tone that did not sound like a child.  But I hoped to serve them better
than by standing there repeating my regret; so, after a few more chirps
of sympathy, I flew off.

"Robin doesn't care to stay," said Jem, dolefully.

Later in the day I met the children's mother trudging home.  She looked
tired; but she had a basket on her arm, so I hoped the farmer's wife had
given them some scraps which would help them for the time.

Now I had a plan in my head.  Late that afternoon, after flying all
round the Manor House and peeping in at a great many windows, I perched
in the ivy--there was ivy over a great part of the walls--just outside
one on the first floor.  It was the children's bedroom.  I waited
anxiously, afraid that I might have no chance of getting in; but
fortunately for me the fire smoked a little when it was lighted in the
evening for the young ladies to be dressed by, and the nurse opened the
window a tiny bit, so in I flew, very careful not to be seen, you may be
sure.  I found a very cosy corner on the edge of a picture in a dark
part of the room, and there I had time for a nap before Norna and Ivy
came to bed.  Then when all was silent for the night, I flew down and
took up my quarters on the rail at the head of Norna's bed; and when I
had spent an hour or so beside her, I gently fluttered across to her
sister; and though I was chirping nearly all the time, my voice was so
low that no one entering the room would have noticed it; or if they had
done so, they would probably have thought it a drowsy cricket, half
aroused by the pleasant warmth of the fire.

But my chirping did more than soothe my little friends' slumbers (and
here the robin cocked his head afresh and looked very solemn).  Children
(he said), human beings know very little about themselves.  You don't
know, for instance, anything at all about yourselves when you're asleep,
or what dreams really are.  You speak of being "sleepy," or half-asleep,
as if it meant something very stupid; whereas, sometimes when you are
whole asleep, you are much wiser than when you are awake.  Now it is not
my business to teach you things you're perhaps not meant to understand
at present, but this I can tell you--if I perched on your pillows at
night when you're asleep, and chirped in my own way to you, you'd have
no difficulty in understanding me.  And this was what happened to the
two little maidens a few nights before their first Christmas in England.
They thought they had had a wonderful dream--each of them separately,
and they never knew that the robin who flew out of the window early in
the morning before any one noticed him, had had anything to do with it.

I (for it was I myself, of course) perched again in the ivy beside the
dining-room window, _partly_, I allow, with a view to breakfast; partly
and principally to see what would happen.

They did not forget me--us, perhaps I should say, for several other
birds collected on the terrace, thanks to the news I had scattered
about--and as soon as those within had risen from table, Miss Meadows
and her two little companions came to the window, which they opened, and
threw out a splendid plateful of crumbs.  It was not so cold this
morning.  I hopped close to them, for I wanted to hear what they were
saying as they stood by the open window-door, all the grown-up people
having left the room.

The pale little faces looked bright and eager, and very full of
something their owners were relating.

"Yes, Miss Meadows; it was quite wonderful.  Ivy dreamed it, and I
dreamed it.  I believe it was a fairy dream."

"And please do let us try to find out if there are any poor children
like that near here," said Ivy.  "I don't think there _could_ be; do
you, Miss Meadows?"

Miss Meadows shook her head.

"I'm afraid, dear, it is not uncommon in either town or country to find
children quite as poor as those you dreamt of.  But when we go out a
walk to-day, we'll try and inquire a little.  It would be nice if you
could do something for other people even this first Christmas in
England."

She looked quite bright and eager herself; and as the three started off
down the drive about an hour later, on their way to the village, I
noticed that they were all talking eagerly, and that Norna and Ivy were
giving little springs as they walked along one on each side of their
kind governess; and I must confess I felt pleased to think I had had
some hand in this improvement.

Miss Meadows had lived most of her life in the country, and she was
accustomed to country ways.  So she meant to go to the village, and
there try to pick up a little information about any of the families who
might be very poor this Christmas time.  But I had no intention of
letting them go so far--no indeed--I knew what I was about.

The cottage of my little friends, Joyce and Jem, was about half-way
between the Manor House and the village, and the village was a good mile
from the great house.  A lane led from the high road to the cottage.
Just as the three reached the corner of the lane, Ivy gave a little cry.

"Miss Meadows, Norna," she said, "there is the robin.  I'm sure it's our
robin.  Don't you think it is, Miss Meadows?"

The governess smiled.

"There are a great many robins, Ivy dear.  It's not very likely it's the
same one.  We human beings are too stupid to tell the difference between
birds of the same kind, you see."

But, as _you_ know, Ivy was right.

"Do let's follow him a little way down the lane," she said.  "He keeps
hopping on and then looking back at us.  I wonder if his home is down
here."

No, it was not _my_ home, but it was my little friends' home; and soon I
managed to bring the little party to a standstill before the cottage
gate, where I had perched.

"What a nice cottage," said Norna; and so it looked at the first glance.
But in a moment or two she added: "Oh, do look at that little girl; how
very thin and pale she is!"

It was Joyce.  Miss Meadows called to her; and in her kind way soon got
the little girl to tell her something of their troubles.  Things were
even worse with them to-day; for Jem's feet were so bad with chilblains
that he could not get about at all.  The governess satisfied herself
that there was no illness in the cottage that could hurt Norna and Ivy,
and then they all went in to see poor Jem; and Miss Meadows went
upstairs to speak to the bedridden father.  When she came down again her
face looked very sad, but bright too.

"Children," she said, as soon as they were out on the road again, "I
don't think we need go on to the village.  We have found what we were
looking for."

Then she went on to tell them that she had left a message with the
woodcutter, asking his wife to come up to speak to her that evening at
the Manor House.

"I know your mamma won't mind," she said.  "I will tell her all about it
as soon as we get home.  She will like you to try to do something for
these poor children,"--which was quite true.  The lady of the Manor was
kind and gentle; only, you see, many years in India had got her out of
English ways.

So that evening, when the woodcutter's wife came up to the great house,
there was a grand consultation.  And for some days to come, for
Christmas was very near, Ivy and Norna were so busy that they had no
time to grumble at the cold or to wish they were back in India, though
they did find time to skip and dance along the passages, and to sing
verses of the carols Miss Meadows was teaching them.

Things improved at the cottage from that day.  But it is about Christmas
morning I want to tell you.

Joyce and Jem woke early--long before it was light--but they lay still
and spoke in a whisper, not to wake their poor father or their tired
mother.  There was no one to hear except a little robin, who had managed
to creep in the night before.

"It's Christmas, Jem," said Joyce; "and we shall have a nice fire.
They've sent mother some coals from the great house; and I _believe_
we're going to have meat for dinner."

Jem sighed with pleasure.  He could scarcely believe it.

"Shall we go to church like last Christmas, Joyce?" he asked.  "My boots
is so drefful bad, I don't know as I could walk in them."

"So's mine," said Joyce.  "But p'r'aps if the roads is very dry, we
might manage."

And so they chattered, till at last the first rays of winter daylight
began to find their way into the little room.  The children looked about
them--somehow they had a feeling that things could not look _quite_ the
same on Christmas morning!  But what they did see was something very
wonderful.  On the floor near the window were two _very_ big brown paper
parcels; and Joyce jumping out of bed to see what they were, saw that to
each was pinned a card; and on one card was written, "Joyce," on the
other, "Jem."

"_Jem_," she cried, "it must be fairies," and with trembling fingers
they undid the packages.

It is difficult to tell you their delight!

There was a new frock of warm linsey for Joyce, and a suit of corduroy
for Jem, boots for both--stockings and socks--two splendid red
comforters, one knitted by Ivy and one by Norna; a picture book for
each, a bag of oranges, and a beautiful home-made cake.

Never were children so wild with joy; never had there been such a
Christmas surprise.

I was so pleased that I could not remain hidden any longer.  Out I came,
and perching on the window-sill, warbled a Christmas carol in my own
way.  And I must say children are very quick.

"Dear robin," said Joyce; "do you know, Jem, I do believe he's a fairy!
I shouldn't wonder if he'd somehow told the kind little young ladies to
come and see us."

There was a pause.  Rafe and Alix waited a moment to make sure that the
robin had quite finished; then they looked up.  He was not in such a
hurry to fly off as the other bird had been.

"Thank you _very_ much, dear robin," they said.  "It is a very pretty
story indeed; and then it's so nice to know it's quite true."

The robin looked pleased.

"Yes," he said, "there's that to be said for it.  It's a very simple,
homely story; but it's my own experience.  But now I think I must bid
you good-bye for the present, though there's no saying but what we may
meet again."  He flew off.

"Rafe," said Alix, "besides all the things mamma does and lets us help
in sometimes for the poor people, wouldn't it be nice if we found some
children we could do things for, more our own selves, you know?"

"Yes," Rafe agreed, "I think it would be."

CHAPTER TEN.

THE MAGIC ROSE.

The days and weeks and months went on, till it was full summer time
again; more than full summer indeed.  For it was August, and in a day or
two Rafe and Alix were to go to the seaside for several weeks.  They
were very pleased of course, but still there is always a _little_ sad
feeling at "going away," especially from one's own home, even though it
is only for a short time.  They went all round the garden saying
good-bye, as well as to the stables and the poultry yard and all the
familiar places.

Then a sudden thought struck Alix.

"Rafe," she said--it was the very evening before they left--"do let's
say good-bye to the old garden too.  And perhaps if we stood close to
the corner of the wall and called through very loud, _perhaps_ Mrs
Caretaker would hear us.  It seems so funny that we've never seen her
again.  I think she _must_ be away."

"I don't know, I'm sure," Rafe replied.

"I've sometimes had a feeling like you, Alix, that she was there all the
time."

"And of course it was she who made the birds tell us their stories,"
said Alix, "so we really should be very much obliged to her.  Just think
what nice games we've made out of them; and what nice things we've begun
to get ready for the poor children next Christmas.  I do think, Rafe,
we've _never_ felt dull since we've played so much in the Lady wood
garden."

Rafe quite agreed with her, and they made their way down the lane and
through the well-known old gateway.  It was the first time they had been
in the deserted grounds so late of an evening.  For they had had tea
long ago, and it was not so _very_ far off bedtime: already the bushes
and shrubs began to look shadowy and mysterious in the twilight, and the
moon's profile--for it was about half-way to full--to gleam pearl-like
up among the branches.

"We mustn't stay very long," said Rafe.

"Nurse won't mind our being a little later than usual, as she's busy
packing," said Alix.  "And it's still so hot, indoors at least.  Last
night I _couldn't_ get to sleep, though I pushed off everything except
one sheet.  I was just boiling.  And when I told mamma she said it was
no use going to bed only to toss about, and that we might as well sit up
a little later."

"I hope it will be cooler at the seaside," said Rafe.

"It's pretty sure to be," Alix replied.  "If it was just about as cool
as it is here just now.  Isn't it lovely?  And that breeze is so
refreshing."

They were standing near the walled-up mound as she spoke, and the wind
came with a long sighing sound through the trees.  It seemed at first
like a sigh, but by degrees it changed into a soft kind of laughter,
which did not fade away, but grew, as they listened, more and more
distinct.  And then it sounded as if coming not from up among the trees
overhead, but from somewhere underground.  And it was not the wind after
all, for by this time everything was perfectly, strangely still.  The
children looked at each other; they were used to odd things happening in
the garden.  They just stood still and waited to see what was going to
take place.

The laughing ceased, and there came a voice instead, and the voice grew
clearer as the hidden door in the wall which they had sought for so
often, swung round, and out from the dark passage came the small figure,
red cloak, hood, and all, of Mrs Caretaker.  She was still laughing
just a little, and her laugh was so bright and rippling that it made the
children laugh too, though they did not know why.

"And so you are going away, my dears," said their old friend.  How she
got up so quickly to where they stood they did not see, but there she
was, as alert as possible.  And again she laughed.

"If you please, if it's not rude, we'd like to know what you're laughing
at," said Alix, not quite sure if she was pleased or not.

"Only a little joke, my dear; only a little joke I was having all to
myself.  I hear so many funny stories, you see.  They all have to tell
me them: the wind and the rain often chatter to me, as well as the birds
and the bees and all the others that _you_ call living creatures.  And
the sea, ah! the sea has grand stories to tell sometimes."

"We're going to the seaside," said Rafe.

Mrs Caretaker nodded.

"I know," she said, "I know most things about my friends.  I thought you
would come to say good-bye before you left.  I've been waiting for you.
And if there is anything you would like me to take care of for you while
you're away, you have only to tell me."

"Thank you," said the children.  But Alix did not feel quite pleased
yet.

"Mrs Caretaker," she said, "you shouldn't speak as if this was the only
time we've come to see you.  We've been and been _ever_ so often, but we
never could find the door.  And we've always kept saying how kind you'd
been; making the birds tell us stories too."

"It's all right, my dear," said the old woman.  "Yes, I heard you on the
other side of the wall.  But I'm very busy sometimes; too busy for
visitors.  I'm not busy to-night though, and it's getting chilly out
here.  Come inside with me for a while, and tell me about where you're
going to."

"We mustn't stay long," said the children.  "It's later than usual for
us to be out, but it's been so hot all day; we got leave to stay a
little longer."

"I will see you home.  Don't be uneasy," said Mrs Caretaker.  She led
the way to the wall--almost without her seeming to touch it, the door
opened, and they followed her along the little passage into the kitchen.

The fire was pleasantly low; the curtains were drawn back, and through
the open window the moonlight, much clearer and fuller than in the
garden outside, fell on a little lake of water, where two or three
snow-white swans were floating dreamily.  Rafe and Alix almost screamed
with surprise, but Mrs Caretaker only smiled.

"You didn't know what a view I had out of my window," she said, as she
seated herself in her rocking-chair, and drew forward two stools--one on
each side for the children.  "Yes, it is beautiful with the moon on it;
and to-morrow night you will be looking at a still more beautiful
sight--the great sea itself."

"Do you love the sea?" they asked.

"Sometimes," Mrs Caretaker replied.  "You said it told you stories,"
said Alix.  "Will you tell us one of them?  Just for a treat, you know,
as we are going away, and we can think of it when we are walking along
the shore watching the waves coming in."

Mrs Caretaker did not speak for a moment.

Then she said--and her voice sounded rather sad--"I can't tell you one
of the stories the sea tells me.  They're not of the laughing kind, and
it's best for you to hear them for yourselves when you are older.  But I
will tell you a little story, if you like, of some of the folk that live
in the sea.  Did you ever hear tell of mermaids?"

"Oh yes!" cried the children, eagerly; "often.  There are lovely stories
about them in some of our fairy books; and when we are at the seaside we
do _so_ wish we could see them."

Mrs Caretaker smiled.

"I can't promise you that you ever will," she said; "but you shall have
my story.  Yes; sit closer, both of you, and rest your heads on my
knees."

"You're not knitting to-night," said Alix.  "The last time the needles
made us hear the story better somehow; it was like as if you took us a
long way off, and the story came so clear and distinct."

"It will be all right, never fear," said the old woman.  And as she
spoke, she gently stroked the children's heads.  Then the same strange
feeling came over them; they felt as if they were far away; they forgot
all about its being nearly bedtime and about going away to-morrow; they
just lived in the story which Mrs Caretaker's clear voice began to
tell.

"It is called `The Magic Rose,'" said she; "but it is a story of those
that live in the sea.  Down, deep down below the waves, all is calm and
still, and there is the country of the mermen.  Strange things have
happened before now down there among the sea-folk.  Some who have been
thought drowned have been cared for there, and lived their lives long
after those who had known them up above were past and gone.  For the
mer-folk are long-lived; what men count age is to them but youth; their
days follow each other in a calm that human beings could scarce imagine.
They live now in these stirring times as their forbears lived when men
and women had their homes in the forests, long before there were houses
or towns, or roads, or any of the things which you now think the
commonest necessities.

"But the sea-folk have their troubles too, sometimes; and my story has
to do with trouble.  The Queen--the beautiful Queen of the sea-country--
was ill, and the King was in despair.  Now I must tell you that the
Queen was not quite one of the sea race--so at least it was believed.
Her grandmother--or her great-grandmother, maybe--was a maiden of the
land, who had fallen into the sea as a little baby, and had been brought
back to life and cared for by the mer-folk; and when she grew up, a
great lord among them loved her for her beauty and made her his bride.
She had no memory of her native land, of course; but still there were
strange things about her and her children, and their children again,
which told whence they had come.

"And now that the young Queen was so ill, one of these old feelings had
awakened."

"I shall die," she said.  "I shall surely die unless I can smell the
scent of a rose--a deep-red rose, such as the land maidens love.  It has
come to me in my dreams.  Though I have never seen one, I know what it
must be like, and I feel that life would return--life and strength that
are fast fading away--if I could breathe its exquisite fragrance and
bury my face among its soft petals."

They were amazed to hear her speak thus.  The great court physicians at
first said she was wandering in her mind, and no attention should be
paid to her.  But she kept on ever the same entreaty; and the King, who
loved her devotedly, at last could bear it no longer.

"It all comes of her ancestor having been so foolish as to wed a human
bride," said one of the doctors, feeling in a very bad temper, as they
all were.

The sea-doctors are not very wise, I fear, because they have so very
little experience.  It happens so rarely that any of the mer-folk fall
ill.  And so, as they had nothing to propose, the most sensible thing to
do was to get angry.  But the King was not to be so put off.

"Whatever it comes from," he said, "I am determined that the Queen's
wish shall be complied with if it is in any way possible.  What is this
thing she is longing for?--what is a rose?"

The doctors did not know; but seeing that the King was so much in
earnest they agreed that they would try to find out.  And after a great
deal of consultation together, and looking up in their learned books,
they did find out something.  The Queen, meanwhile, soothed by her
husband's promise that all was being done to carry out her entreaty,
grew a shade better; at least for some days she did not get any worse,
which was always something.  And on the fourth day the wise men asked
for an audience of the King in order to tell him what they had
discovered.

The King awaited them eagerly.

"Well," he said, "have you found out what the Queen means by a rose?
And if so, how is one to be procured?"

Yes; they were able to describe pretty well what a rose was; for of
course, down below, they are not without gardens and flowers, though of
very different kinds from ours.  But a great difficulty remained.  Even
if any one was daring enough to swim up to the surface and venture on
land in search of the flower, and even if it was procured, how could it
be brought, alive and fragrant, to the Queen?

"Why not?" asked the King.  For he had never been up to the surface of
the sea.  It is one of the sea-people's laws that their royal folk must
stay down below, so he knew nothing of the land or the things that grow
there.

The learned men explained to him that, without air, and exposed to the
salt water of the ocean, a flower of the earth must quickly fade and
die; and as the King listened, his face grew sadder and sadder.  But
after a few moments' silence, one of the doctors spoke again.  They were
never in a hurry, you see, and they felt that it added dignity to their
words to dole them out sparingly.

"It has occurred to us," he said, "that it might be well to consult the
wise woman of the sea--the ancient mermaid who lives in the Anemone
Cave.  Not that as a rule, the advice of a member of her sex is of much
use, but the ancient mermaid has lived long and--"

"Of course! of course!" exclaimed the King, impatiently; "she is the
very person.  Why did I not think of her before?  Why--the story goes
that she nursed the Queen's human ancestress when, as a baby, she came
among us."

"I wish she had stayed away," muttered the wisest of the wise men,
though he spoke too low for the King to hear.

Then the King ordered his chariot and his swiftest steeds--they were
dolphins--to be got ready at once, and off he set.

It was rather a long swim to the Anemone Cave.  I wish I could give you
any idea of the wonderful things the King passed by on his way--the
groves of coral and forests of great branching seaweeds of all shapes
and colour, the strangely formed creatures whom he scarcely glanced at.
For of course it was not wonderful to him, and to-day his mind was so
full of his trouble that he would have found it difficult to notice or
admire anything.

The wise woman of the sea was at home.  The King's heart beat faster
than usual as he was ushered into her presence, not from cowardice, but
because he was feeling so very anxious about his dearly-loved wife.  And
King though he was, he made as low an obeisance before the ancient
mermaid as if he had been one of the humblest of his own subjects.

She was very strange to behold.  Mermaids, as your stories tell you, are
often very beautiful, and possibly this aged lady may have been so in
her day, but now she was so very old that she looked like the mummy of a
mermaid; her hair was like a thin frosting of hoar on a winter morning;
her eyes were so deep down in her head that you could scarcely see them;
the scales on her tail had lost all their glitter.  Still there was
something dignified about her, and she received the King as if quite
prepared for his visit.  She was not the least surprised.  Very wise
people, whether on land or in the sea, never are, and she listened to
the King's story as if she knew all about it.

"Yes," she replied, in a thin croaking voice like a frog's, "you have
done well to come to me.  When the human baby, the great-grandmother of
the Queen, was confided to my charge, I studied her fate and that of her
descendants.  The sea-serpent was an admirer of mine in those days, and
he was very obliging.  He noted the position of the stars when he went
up above, and reported them to me.  Between us we found out some of the
future.  I read that a descendant of the stranger should be seized with
mortal illness while still young, and that her life should only be saved
by the breath of an earth-flower that they call the rose, but that great
difficulties would attend the procuring it for her, and that some
conditions attach to the matter which I was unable to understand fully.
All I know is this, the flower must be sought for by a beautiful and
youthful mermaid, but the first efforts will not succeed.  Now you know
all I have to tell you.  Farewell, you have no time to lose."

And not another word would the wise mermaid say.

The King had to take leave.  His dolphins conducted him home again still
more quickly than they had brought him, for the words rang in his ears,
"You have no time to lose."  Yet he knew not what to do.  The conditions
he had already been told were difficult enough, for it was not a very
easy task to swim to the surface, as, calm though the ocean always is
down below in the sea-folks' country, there is no telling how stormy and
furious it may be up above.  And for a young and beautiful mermaid to
undertake such an adventure would call for great courage.  It was quite
against the usual customs of the sea-people.

For the old stories and legends we hear about troops of lovely creatures
seen floating on the water, combing their hair and singing strange
melodies, were only true in the very-long-ago days.  Now that mankind
has spread and increased so that there are but few solitary places in
the world, few shores where only the sea-gull and the wild mew dwell,
the daughters of the ocean stay in their own domain, whence it comes
that in these modern times many people do not believe in their existence
at all.

The King went straight to the Queen's bower, where she lay surrounded by
her ladies.  She was sleeping, and though so pale and thin, her face was
very sweet and lovely, her golden hair sparkling on the soft cushions of
sea moss on which she lay.  Even as she was, she was more beautiful than
any of the mermaids about her.

Yet some of them were very beautiful.  The King's glance fell especially
on two who were noted as the most charming among the Queen's attendants.
Their names were Ila and Orona.  A sudden idea struck the King.

"I will cause it to be announced that a great reward shall be given to
any young and beautiful mermaid who will undertake the quest of the red
rose on which depends the Queen's recovery," he thought, and the idea
raised his hopes.  And as he stooped over the sleeping Queen, she smiled
and whispered something as if she were dreaming.

"The gift of love," were the only words he could distinguish.  But he
took the smile as a good omen.

The next morning there was great excitement amongst the fair young
mermaids.  For it was announced that whoever of them should succeed in
bringing, blooming and fragrant, a red rose to the suffering Queen,
should be rewarded by the gift of a pearl necklace, which was considered
one of the most precious of the crown jewels, and that furthermore the
fortunate mermaid should take the highest rank of all the sea-ladies
next to the Queen herself.

Ila and Orona were both beautiful and courageous, and before the day was
many hours older they had offered themselves for the task.  The King was
delighted, and as Ila was the elder of the two it was decided that she
must be the first to try.  She received many compliments on her daring,
and the King thanked her most warmly.  She accepted all that was said to
her, but to Orona, who was her chosen confidante, she owned that she
would never have dreamt of making the attempt but for her intense wish
to possess the necklace, which she had often admired on the young
Queen's fair skin.

"I would do anything to win it," she said.  "There is nothing in the
world I admire so much as pearls, but if I gain it, Orona, I promise to
lend it to you sometimes."

"Many thanks," Orona replied, "but I do not care for jewels as you do.
If _I_ have the chance of seeking the rose--that is to say if you fail--
my motive will not be to gain the necklace, but to win the position of
the highest rank next to the Queen.  _That_ I should care far more for."

Both mermaids, however, kept their ambitions secret from every one else,
and calmly accepted the praises showered upon them.

And the very next day Ila started on her upward journey.

CHAPTER ELEVEN.

THE MAGIC ROSE--CONTINUED.

Ila found it trying and toilsome, for she was not accustomed to swimming
upwards so long together, and she did not like to lose time by resting
on the way.  But when at last she reached the surface, her surprise at
all she saw there took away her fatigue.  It was a lovely summer day,
the sunshine was deliciously warm, and as the mermaid lay on some smooth
rocks a little way from the shore she could see the green fields, and
trees, and houses, and gardens bordering the coast, quite plainly.  She
could even perceive some people walking along, and she thought their way
of moving most extremely awkward and ungraceful.

"Thank goodness I am a mermaid and not a woman," she thought.  "I cannot
believe that anything to be found on land is as beautiful as our
sea-treasures.  How splendid the great pearls in the centre of the
necklace would look in this brilliant light!  When they are mine I must
carry them up here some day for the sake of seeing them glisten on my
neck in the sunshine."

And her thoughts were so full of the jewels that she almost forgot what
she had come for.  Suddenly the sight of some red blossoms on a tree
growing close to the water's edge reminded her of what she was there to
do, and she looked about her wondering how best to set to work.  The
wise men had described roses to her; they had even found a picture of
one in a book about the plants of the land, so she knew very fairly well
what it should be like and that it must have a delicious scent.  But
that was all, and though she saw fields and gardens not far off, she
knew not how to get to them.  Suddenly glancing in another direction she
caught sight of a barge, its white sails gleaming like the wings of a
great bird, at anchor some little way from the shore.  To and from this
barge little boats were coming and going, laden with baskets and cases.
Ila swam quietly towards it, taking care to keep almost entirely under
water, so that she should not be seen.

When she got quite close to the barge she saw that one of the little
boats was approaching it, and this boat was filled with flowers and
rowed by but one boy.  The little vessel was in fact preparing for a
pleasure trip, and the boats were employed in bringing all that could be
wanted of decorations and provisions.  The boy rowed quite close to the
barge, and then throwing a rope on deck from his boat, he himself sprang
on board to call some one to help him to unload his flowers.

Now was the mermaid's chance--she swam up to the boat and stretching out
her hand drew from a basket, filled with roses of all shades, the most
beautiful red one she could see.  She had no doubt of its being a rose,
for the perfume had reached her even some little way off.  The boy
turned round at that moment and gave a cry of terror as he caught sight
of a shining white arm and hand taking a flower from the basket of
roses, and for long after, a story went about that the spirit of some
one shipwrecked off that coast haunted that part of the bay.

But Ila only laughed at the boy's fright, and swam off as fast as she
could, delighted to have succeeded.  She hid the rose carefully in the
folds of the gauzy robe she wore, and after one breath of its fragrance
prepared to hasten home as fast as she could go.

"The pearls are mine," she thought with exultation, giving no thought to
the poor Queen.  "I can fancy already that I feel their smooth touch
against my skin--so adorned I shall certainly be the most beautiful
mermaid that has ever been seen."

But alas for vain Ila's hopes!

No sooner had she reached the bottom of the sea than she hastened to the
palace, and sought at once for an audience of the King.  Eager past
words for her return, he hurried out to the hall where she stood.

"I have got it," she exclaimed, and she slid her hand into the folds of
her dress and drew out--a little crumpled rag--a few miserable leaves,
sodden and colourless, with no scent or fragrance--the poor wretched
ghost of what had once been a magnificent rose!

The King's face fell.  Ila gave a cry of despair.

"I brought it so carefully," she said.

"Your care was in vain," replied the King.  "It is evident that some
condition has not been complied with.  How did you get the rose?"

She told him all, and Orona, who had followed her, listened eagerly.

"It may be," said the King, "that you took it without paying for it.  I
wish I had thought of that."

But his hopes revived when he remembered that the "first effort was not
to succeed."  And too anxious to give much thought to Ila's
disappointment, he turned to Orona.

"Now," he said, "it is for you to try.  But you must take with you
payment."

"Yes," said Orona calmly, "I have thought of that.  I will select two or
three of our most valuable shells, for I have been told that rare shells
are greatly esteemed by the land-folk.  I am not surprised that Ila has
been punished for taking what was not hers without paying for it."

She looked so calm and confident that the King felt as if she must
succeed.  It was too late to set off that day; but the next morning
Orona started.  She was far more business-like than Ila; when she
reached the surface, instead of wasting time in dreaming about the pearl
necklace, she swam round the bay as near the shore as she dared venture,
peering about in all directions.  And at last she came to a little
creek, which worked its way into the land till it became a small stream,
whose banks were bordered by trees.  This the mermaid followed for some
distance; till, tasting the water, she found it had almost lost its
briny flavour altogether.  This startled her, for no sea-folk could live
many hours in fresh water, and she began to think she must turn back.
But just then she saw that a few yards farther on the stream turned
suddenly; and swimming still a little way, she discovered that here it
entered a beautiful park, through which it wound its way till lost to
view.

And close to where Orona now was, stood a pretty cottage, whose garden
at the back sloped down to the water, and here were growing in profusion
flowers of many kinds; among them roses, red, white, and all shades
between.  For this was the cottage of the gardener of the great house,
and he liked to have choice specimens of the flowers he tended near his
own home.

It was easy for the mermaid to choose and gather a beautiful rose, for
no one was about, it being still what human beings call very early in
the morning.  Orona did so, selecting carefully a rose not too fully
blown, and wrapping it in some large cool green leaves which she found
growing on the bank.  And there, just where she had plucked the flower,
she laid down two magnificent shells, which she had brought, as payment.

In her calm way, quite as triumphant as her sister mermaid had been,
Orona swam back with all possible swiftness.  She reached her own
country without misadventure, and, smiling confidently, entered the
great hall of the palace, where the King was awaiting her with intense
eagerness.

"Success!" she exclaimed, as she drew out her leafy parcel.  The outside
looked green and fresh enough, but, alas! inside there was only the same
miserable little bundle of colourless rags as Ila had brought back the
day before--nay, of the two, to-day's withered flower looked even less
like a rose than the former one!

Orona clenched her hands in rage; the King's face sank into utter
despair, for the Queen's state was considered worse this morning.

"Alas, alas!" he cried, as he turned away, "it is hopeless."

But among those who overheard his words was one who was not satisfied
with feeling very sorry for the poor King.

This was a little mermaid named Chryssa.  She was younger than Ila and
Orona, and she was of far less exalted position; in fact, she was
scarcely more than a little servant in the Queen's household.  And
probably no one would have spoken of her as beautiful if asked to
describe her.  But she _was_ beautiful, nevertheless, and wonderfully
sweet and loving; and the living being she loved the most in the world
was the Queen.  Of course, like every one else, Chryssa had heard all
about the quest of the rose which was to cure the Queen; and now the
thought struck her, could _she_, unknown to any one, try in her turn to
bring the earth-flower fresh and fragrant which alone would have magic
power to save her royal mistress's life?  There seemed something lucky
in being the _third_ to try, "and, at least," thought Chryssa, "it would
be, so far as I am concerned, `the gift of love,' as the poor Queen
keeps murmuring."

She determined to make the endeavour; and late that night, just for fear
of being seen--though she was so insignificant a person that there was
not much chance of her being missed--she set off.  She was not by nature
so strong or courageous as Ila and Orona; she knew very little, indeed,
of anything but her own sea home, as she had been treated like a child,
and had never heard the stories and descriptions of the world above,
which were often related to entertain the Queen and her ladies.  No
wonder her poor little heart almost failed her through the long dark
journey up to land.  And at first when she reached the surface all was
still as dark there as below.  But as she lay there panting, almost
doubting if she had done well to come, up above, over the land, there
shone out a marvellous light, which at once filled her with hope and
joy.  It was the moon--slowly the silvery lamp glided out from behind
the clouds, and the little mermaid almost cried aloud for joy.

"Oh, beautiful light," she said, "thank you for coming.  Show me what to
do; I will follow your guidance," and a gleaming streak across the water
shone out as if inviting her to follow it.

Swiftly the mermaid swam in the direction of the land, full in the glow
of the light; and a girl--an earth-maiden--standing at her window in the
summer night thought that she saw a vision, and scarce knew if she were
awake or dreaming.

"It is late," she thought.  "I must get to sleep or I shall be growing
too fanciful."

But before she lay down on her little bed she carefully unfastened a
beautiful red rose which was pinned to her bodice and placed it in a
glass of water, kissing it as she did so, for it was the first gift of
her betrothed.

Poor Chryssa reached the shore; but though the moonlight still shone
pale and pure and clear, it gave her no help.  For the radiance was now
spread all over the land; and before her there stretched a steep and
rocky coast, beyond which--far off it looked to the mermaid--she could
dimly see trees and bushes and some darker, harder form among them.

"It may be a house, such as the earth-folk live in," she thought.  "And
there perhaps these flowers they call roses are growing.  But how am I
to get there? and how should I find the flower if I were there?"

Still she must try.  Slowly and painfully she drew herself some little
way up the shore, catching hold of the stones with her hands; then she
stopped to rest, and set off again.  It was really not very distant, but
to poor Chryssa it seemed terrible: she could only go a few yards at a
time without resting.  The night was far gone, the dawn at hand, when
the little mermaid, gasping and exhausted, her tender hands bruised and
bleeding, sank for the last time, unable to drag herself any farther, on
a grass plot just below the window whence the young girl had seen her in
the moonlight like a vision, floating towards the shore.

Hebe, for so the maiden was called, woke early, and after glancing at
her rose, threw open the window and leant out to watch the sunrise.

"How lovely it is," she thought, "and how happy I am!" for her betrothal
had only taken place the day before.

"Dear rose, I will keep you always--even when withered--always, till--"

But a low sob or wail, just below the window, startled her.  What could
it be?  Leaning farther out, she saw at first nothing but a long tangle
of shining hair covering some unseen object, for Chryssa's hair was like
a golden cloak.

"What is it?  Who is lying there?"

A faint voice answered--

"Oh, lady, I think I am dying!  I have lain here all night, torn and
bleeding, and none of my race can live many hours on land."

Half-terrified at the strange words, but still more pitiful, Hebe
hastened out.  The window opened on to a little balcony, and steps led
down to the garden.  She would almost have been too frightened to
approach Chryssa--for though there were old legends of mer-folk about
that coast, generations had passed since any had actually been seen--but
for the sweet expression in the little mermaid's face and eyes, dying
though she seemed.  This gave Hebe courage to go near her, and with the
ointment and linen she quickly fetched, to bind up her cuts and bruises.
Then Chryssa told her story in gasping words.

"If I could but live to take a rose to the Queen," she said, "I would
not mind dying; though, for one of my race, life should last for full
five hundred years, and life is very beautiful."

"Alas!" said the earth-maiden, "there are no roses in our garden, the
soil does not suit them; and before I could procure one for you, you
would die, I fear.  But,"--and she made a great effort--"I will do for
you what I had thought I could never do but a few minutes ago.  I will
give you my own rose--the first gift of my best beloved."  And with the
words, she ran back to her chamber and returned, the red rose fresh and
blooming in her hand.

She kissed it as she gave it to Chryssa.

"Carry healing in your fragrance," she murmured.  And, strange to say,
as a breath of its perfume reached the mermaid, she herself in some
magical way began to revive.  Her eyes sparkled as she blessed Hebe for
her generous sacrifice.

"I feel," she said, "that the conditions are all fulfilled.  My Queen
will be saved."

But Hebe's eyes looked over the fields to where the waves were lapping
the shore.

"The tide is coming in," she said, "you will not now have so far to go.
But I must help you.  Clasp me firmly round the neck, and I will carry
you to the nearest creek, where already you will find the ocean water,
which is to you what this fresh, balmy air is to us."

And little Chryssa did as she was told, and Hebe, lifting the light
burden in her strong young arms, carried the daughter of the strange
unknown race of the sea as tenderly as if she had been a fragile sister
of her own.  For, after all, there was the greatest of all bonds between
them--love and self-sacrifice in their hearts.

All went well.  Chryssa reached the sea-king's palace feeling stronger
and better than when she set out, and the rose, too, seemed to have
gained fresh beauty and fragrance by its contact with the waves.  No
sooner did the almost dying Queen breathe its perfume than her strength
began to return, and in a few hours she was cured.

No reward would have been too great for the King and Queen to bestow
upon the little mermaid; but she asked for none save to be her
mistress's constant attendant.

They say--so, at least, the waves, who told me the story, whispered--
that down in the ocean depths, somewhere in a wonderful palace, there
blooms still a flower of earth--a red rose--endowed with a magic gift of
health and healing.

Mrs Caretaker's voice stopped.  For a moment or two the children did
not move.  Then she laid her hand gently on their heads, and they lifted
them.

"It is a lovely story," said Alix, with a sigh of content.  "Do you
think, dear Mrs Caretaker, that _perhaps_ we may see Chryssa some day
when we are bathing?"

Mrs Caretaker shook her head.

"At least we may _look_ for her; perhaps she comes up to the shore
sometimes--we _might_ catch a peep of her face among the surf.  You
might send her a message by one of the fishes you know, Mrs Caretaker."
The old woman smiled.

But suddenly Rafe started.

"I was forgetting," he said.  "Haven't we been here a great while?  What
_will_ nurse say?"

"Never mind," said their friend.  "Remember, I promised to see you
home," and again she stroked their heads.

And that was all that happened, till--

"You must be getting up, my dear; to-day you are going to the sea,
remember," sounded first by one little bedside and then by the other.

"Were we very late of coming in last night?" asked the children at
breakfast.

"Not so very, I don't think," nurse replied.  "But you see I can't tell
exactly, as I found you both undressed and in bed fast asleep when I
came up from my supper.  You did give me a surprise."

Rafe and Alix looked at each other and smiled.  Nurse thought it was
only that they were pleased at the trick they had played her.

The seaside visit was delightful.  But before it came to an end a very
unexpected thing happened.  The children's father, who was a very clever
man, was chosen for an important post out of England.  It all came about
in a great hurry, and Rafe and Alix have never since returned to the
country house where, for most of the years of their life, they had been
so happy.  And all this time their home has been a long way off.

They often speak of Ladywood, and declare that when they come back to
England they _must_ go there and try to find the old caretaker again.
But I almost hope they will not do so; for, I am sorry to say, Ladywood
has been bought and all changed.  A new house has been built at last on
the site of the old one, and the foundations all opened out.  I feel
sure Mrs Caretaker is no longer there.

Still, there is no saying but that Rafe and Alix may come across her
again _some_ day and _some_ where.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

The End.






End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of An Enchanted Garden, by Mrs Molesworth

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