Produced by Delphine Lettau and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Canada Team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net









  THE
  PALACE IN THE GARDEN.


  BY
  MRS. MOLESWORTH,
  AUTHOR OF "CARROTS," "SILVERTHORNS," "FOUR WINDS FARM," ETC.


  LONDON:
  HATCHARDS, PICCADILLY.
  1887.




CONTENTS.


  CHAPTER I.                    PAGE
  WE THREE                         1

  CHAPTER II.
  THE SCORED-OUT NAME             22

  CHAPTER III.
  "ROSEBUDS"                      50

  CHAPTER IV.
  THE DOOR IN THE GARDEN WALL     73

  CHAPTER V.
  WHAT GERALD FOUND               99

  CHAPTER VI.
  OPEN, SESAME                   124

  CHAPTER VII.
  GRANDPAPA'S SECRETARY          146

  CHAPTER VIII.
  STEPPED OUT OF THE FRAME       172

  CHAPTER IX.
  OUR FAIRY                      198

  CHAPTER X.
  THREE STARLINGS                223

  CHAPTER XI.
  BROTHER AND SISTER             248

  CHAPTER XII.
  THE STORY OF THE OLD HOUSE     272




THE PALACE IN THE GARDEN.




CHAPTER I.

WE THREE.

  "Sisters and brothers, little maid,
    How many may you be?"


I think the best beginning is the morning that grandpapa sent for us
to come down to the study. Tib and Gerald, don't think so. They say I
should begin by telling our names, and how old we were, and all that--at
least, Gerald says so; Tib isn't quite sure. Tib very often isn't quite
sure. She has got too grand ideas, and if she were going to write a
story, she would make it like poetry, very difficult to understand, and
awfully long words, and lots about feelings and sorrows and mysteries.
I like mysteries, too--I think they are very interesting, and I _have_
one to tell about, as you will see, only I must tell it my own way,
and after all, as this story is only to be read by Tib and Gerald--and
our children--we have settled that when we are all three grown-up and
married, and have children, it shall be made into a book for them--I
daresay it doesn't much matter how it is told.

Well, that morning we were all poking our heads as far as we dared out
of the school-room window--Miss Evans hadn't yet come--to see the first
primrose man that had passed that year. We heard his "All a blowing, all
a growing," far off down the street, but we hadn't yet seen him and his
basket with the beautiful light yellow bunches at the top, and we were
wondering if we could get Fanny to run out and buy us twopence-worth,
when Bland stuck his solemn and rather crabbed-looking face in at the
door. Bland is grandpapa's "own man," as they say, and his name doesn't
suit him at all--at least, it didn't then--he's not so bad now we're
older.

"Young ladies and Master Gerald," he said, "my master wishes you all to
come down stairs to speak to him before he goes out."

Down we all tumbled from the window-sill. Tib and I began smoothing our
aprons and tugging at each other's hair--grandpapa was very particular.
Gerald only looked at his hands.

"They are rather dirty," he said seriously. "But I did wash them so
very well this morning, and it's not ten o'clock yet. Do you think,
Gussie----?"

I knew what he was going to say, so I cut him short.

"Yes, I do think you'd better run and wash them _at once_--why, you
might have had them done by now--they are just perfectly grimy."

For Gerald would any day talk for ten minutes about why he _needn't_
wash his hands rather than run off and do them. I am afraid he was
rather a dirty little boy--he'll be very angry if he sees that, for he
is now getting to be very particular indeed--for though he liked bathing
in the sea, he would do anything to avoid washing--regular good soapy
washing. But he was too afraid of grandpapa to stand out when I said
his hands were as bad as "grimy;" so off he went.

"Are we to come down at once?" asked Tib.

"Yes, miss. Your grandpapa has ordered the brougham to be round in ten
minutes," Bland graciously informed us as Gerald started off.

"I wonder what it's about?" said Tib. "I hope he's not vexed with us."

For it wasn't often that grandpapa sent for us in the morning, except on
birthdays or Christmas Day, when he had presents for us. He never forgot
about that, I must say.

"Why should he be vexed with us?" I said. "We've not done anything
naughty;" for Tib was standing there with the tears on their way to
her big blue eyes, as I could see quite well--and I've no patience
with people who look as if they had been naughty when they haven't.

"Well, you go in first, then, Gussie," said Tib. "I wish I wasn't
frightened, but I can't help it."

By this time we were on the stairs, not far from the study door, and
Gerald had run after us, with very red shiny paws, you may be sure, and
in another moment we were all three in "the august presence," as Tib
called it afterwards.

Grandpapa had just finished his breakfast. He used often to have it
like that, just on a little tray in the study. It didn't look very
comfortable, and he might quite as well have had it in the dining-room
all nicely set out, and Tib and me to pour out his coffee in turns. But
he did not think of it, I suppose, and at that time I don't think we
did, either. We had never seen any other "ways;" we didn't know how
other families lived--families where there were mammas, or any way
grandmammas, or aunts, as well as children, and we were so young that we
just took things as we found them. I think children are generally like
that, especially if they see very little outside their own homes.

Grandpapa was not old-looking at all--not the least like the pictures in
old-fashioned books of a very aged man, with a gentle and rather silly
face, and a white beard, and a stick, sitting in a big arm-chair by the
fire, and patting a very curly-haired grandchild on the head. I'm quite
sure grandpapa never patted any of us on the head; and _now_, of course,
we're too big. But I didn't mind his not being like the pictures of
grandpapas, and now I mind it still less, for I'm really proud of his
being so nice-looking. That morning I can remember quite well how he
looked as he sat by the table, with the tray pushed away, and a whole
bundle of letters before him. He glanced up at us as we came trooping
in, with his bright dark eyes and a half smile on his face. We were not
very fond of that half smile of his: it made it so difficult to tell if
he was in fun or earnest.

"Well, young people," he said, "and how does the wind blow this
morning?"

He looked at Gerald as he spoke. Gerald was staring at his red hands.

"I don't know, grandpapa," he said; and then seeing that grandpapa's
eyes were still fixed on him, he got uncomfortable, and tugged Tib,
who was next him. "Tib knows, p'r'aps," he said. "I'm only seven,
grandpapa."

Grandpapa moved his eyes to Tib.

"It strikes me," he said, "that you're getting too big, young woman, to
be spoken of as if you were a kitten. You must call your sister by her
proper name, Gerald."

"It's hard for him to say, grandpapa," said Tib. "That's why Gussie and
he always say Tib, instead of Mercedes."

"Umph!--yes--Tom-fool name!" said grandpapa, which made me rather angry.

"No, grandpapa, it's not a Tom-fool name," I said. "It's Spanish; and it
was because our papa and mamma lived in Spain that they called it her."

I daresay I spoke pertly. Any way, I was punished, for my words had the
effect of bringing the eyes upon me in my turn.

"Called it her? called it her?" he repeated slowly. "What English! Miss
Evans is to be congratulated on her success! So Mercedes is a Spanish
name, is it? Thank you--thank you very much indeed for the information.
Now perhaps you will all be good enough to listen to some information
from me."

I had got very red while grandpapa was speaking, quite as much from
anger as from shame, for I wasn't so easily put down as Tib and Gerald;
I had a quicker temper. But when grandpapa spoke of having information
to give us, I felt so curious to know what it could be that I tried to
look as if I hadn't minded what he said. So he went on:

"I'm going to send you all off to the country next week; I don't want
to keep this house open. I am very busy, and I would rather live at my
club." Grandpapa stopped a minute. I think he wanted to see what we
would say.

"Are we to go to Ansdell Friars so soon?" I said. I suppose I didn't
seem very pleased, and no more did Tib or Gerald. It wasn't very
long--only three or four months--since we had come from there, and there
was nothing at Ansdell we much cared about. We knew it all so well. It
was a regular big, grand country house; but its bigness was not much
good to us, as we were strictly shut up in our own rooms, and sharply
scolded if we were found out of them; and there was nothing amusing or
interesting there. The country is not pretty, and the walks are not to
be compared with those at--never mind where; I shall tell you the name
of the place in a little while. So we had no particular reason for being
glad to go back there; on the whole, I think we liked London better. We
had less of Miss Evans in London, for she only came every day; but at
Ansdell Friars she lived with us. Grandpapa had persuaded her to do so,
but she didn't like it, and we didn't like it, so we were not very happy
together. She didn't like children, and was only a governess because she
had to be, not because she liked it, and she was always telling us so.
I used to think then all governesses were the same, but I know better
now. There are some _awfully_ nice, who really like teaching, and aren't
always scolding the children, as if it was their own fault that they are
children and have to be taught.

"And is Miss Evans coming?" said Gerald, dolefully.

"You are not going to Ansdell Friars at all; and, I am sorry to say,"
grandpapa went on, "Miss Evans is not able to go with you. Nurse will
have to look after you till I can find another Miss Evans."

Our faces fell, I have no doubt, at the last sentence. Another Miss
Evans! Still, it was very nice to think there'd be _no_ Miss Evans for
a while. Nurse looking after us meant, as we knew very well, that we
should do pretty much as we liked; for nurse spoiled us most horribly.
It was a very delightful prospect.

"We'll try to be very good, grandpapa," said Tib.

"Umph!" said grandpapa.

"And when are we going, please?" I could not resist putting in. I was
burning with curiosity, and so, I am sure, were the others, though they
were afraid to ask. Grandpapa looked at me.

"Upon my word, Gustava," he said, "I think you might give me time to
tell you. When I was young, children were not allowed to cross-question
their elders. You are going to a little country house I have which
you have never seen nor heard of. It is much nearer town than Ansdell
Friars, so I shall be able to come down every now and then to see you,
and to hear if you are behaving properly. It is a much smaller place
than Ansdell--in fact, it's quite a small house. But there's a good
garden; you will have plenty of space to play in. Only I wish you
to understand one thing: there are other houses near--it isn't like
Ansdell, all alone in a park--and neighbours, of course. Now, I won't
have you make friends with any one unless I tell you you may. You are
not to go into other people's houses or to chatter to strangers. Do
you understand?"

"Yes, grandpapa," we all three replied, feeling rather frightened. I
don't think we did quite understand, for we never had made friends with
any one. We had lived very solitary lives, without any companions of
our own age--for we had scarcely any relations, and none that we knew
anything of. And as people don't miss what they have never had, I don't
think it would ever have come into our heads to do what grandpapa was so
afraid of. He certainly made us think more about other people than we
had ever done before.

"What is the name of the place, please, grandpapa?" asked Tib in her
soft voice.

If it had been _me_ that had asked it, he would have snubbed me again.
But it was certainly true, as the servants all said, that he favoured
Tib the most. Perhaps it was that she was so pretty--perhaps it was for
a reason that I can't tell just yet.

"The name of the place," he repeated--"of the house, I suppose you mean?
The name of the place does not matter to you. You will not have to take
your own tickets at the station. The house has an absurd name, but as
it has always been called so, it is no use thinking of changing it. It
is called 'Rosebuds.'"

Grandpapa stood up as he spoke, and just then Bland opened the door to
announce the carriage. So we all said good-bye to him and trotted off.
We knew we should probably not see him again for two or three days, but
we were so used to it we did not care; and we had plenty to interest our
minds and give us something to talk of.

"What a very pretty name 'Rosebuds' is," Tib exclaimed, as soon as we
were safely out of hearing. "I'm sure it must be a very pretty place
to have such a name. I daresay it's a white cottage, with beautiful
old-fashioned windows, and roses climbing all over."

"I don't like cottages with roses growing over them," said Gerald.
"There are always witches living in cottages like that, in the fairy
tales. There is in _Snow-white and Rose-red_."

"Well," said Tib, "it would be rather fun to have a witch at Rosebuds.
I do hope there'll be something interesting and out of the common
there--something _romantic_." Tib said the last word rather slowly. I
don't think she was quite sure how to say it, and I am quite sure none
of us knew what it meant.

"I hope there'll be nice hide-and-seek places in the garden, and nice
trees for climbing up, and perhaps grassy hills for rolling down," said
I. "If grandpapa only comes to see us now and then, and there's no Miss
Evans, and only old Liddy"--old Liddy was nurse--"it _will_ be very
jolly. I shouldn't wonder--I really shouldn't--if it was more jolly than
we've ever had anything in our lives--more like how the children in
story-books are, you know, Tib."

For about this time we had begun to read a good deal more to ourselves,
and among the old books in grandpapa's library we had found a nest
which contained great treasures; many of the volumes had belonged to
our father when he was a boy, and some even had been grandpapa's own
childish books. Grandpapa had given us leave to read them, and you can
fancy what a treat it was to us, who had had so little variety in our
lives, to get hold of _Holiday House_, and the _Swiss Family Robinson_,
and the _Parent's Assistant_, and best of all perhaps, the dearest
little shabby, dumpy, dark-brown book of real old-fashioned fairy
tales. I have it still--no shabbier for all our thumbing of it: it
is so strongly bound, though it is so plain and dingy-looking, and
I mean to keep it for my children.

"But grandpapa said he was going to find another Miss Evans, Gussie,"
said Gerald.

"Never mind. She isn't found yet; and I don't believe there _could_ be
another quite as bad as this one," I said, consolingly.

But a brilliant idea struck Tib. She stopped short on the top step but
one--we were climbing up stairs by this time--before the school-room
landing, and turned round so as to face us two--Gerald and me.

"I tell you what, Gussie and Gerald," she said: "suppose we were to be
very, just _dreadfully_ good at our lessons for a little, don't you
think it _might_ make Miss Evans tell grandpapa that she really thought
we should be the better for a holiday. I should think even _she_ would
like to do something good-natured before she left."

Gerald and I stood listening. It was a grave matter, and we did not want
to commit ourselves hastily.

"Do you mean being very quiet in the school-room, never whispering to
each other, or making even the least little bit of funny faces when
she's not looking? or do you mean doing our lessons for her just awfully
well?"

"Both," said Tib, solemnly.

"Oh, I don't think I _could_," I replied. "It is so very nice to be
naughty sometimes."

"But, Gussie," said Gerald, "any way, you might settle to do our lessons
terribly well. Don't you see, if we did them quite well Miss Evans might
think we knew everything, and she might tell grandpapa we didn't need to
learn anything more."

"And you might settle to be naughty with _us_ or with Liddy," said Tib,
persuasively. "Gerald and I will promise not to mind, won't we, Gerald?
And we'll explain to Liddy."

"I'll think about it," was all I could say.




CHAPTER II.

THE SCORED-OUT NAME.

  "How new life reaps what the old life did sow."
                                      EDWIN ARNOLD.


I was the naughty one of the family. I dare say you--whoever you
are--that are going to read this will have found this out already, and
it was best to make it plain at the beginning. Tib and Gerald were
really very good--at least, they would have been if I had let them. But
still, as I used often to say to them as a sort of a make-up for the
troubles I got them into, it _would_ have been rather dull work had we
all three been extra good. And even the great thing that I have to write
about, _the_ thing that put it into my head to write at all, would never
have come but for our being in a way naughty--that is very queer, isn't
it? To think that good and nice things should sometimes come out of
being naughty! I have often puzzled about it. I think it must be that
there are different kinds of naughtiness--_perfectly_ different--for
nothing good could come out of real, wicked naughtiness--telling lies,
or being cruel to each other, or things like that; but the sort of
naughtiness of just being mischievous, and of being so bubbling over
with the niceness of being alive, that you _can't_ keep quiet, and
remember about not knocking things over and tearing yourself, and the
naughtiness of hating your lessons on a beautiful day, when it's really
too tempting out-of-doors--all these kinds of naughtiness and lots of
others I could tell you, for I've thought so much about it--all these
kinds are different, surely? And one can fancy good and nice things
coming out of them without getting one's ideas muddled. That's one thing
I'm going to be very particular about with my children--I'm going to
explain to them _well_ about the two kinds of being naughty, so that
they won't get all into a puzzle about it. I think I even shall settle
to have two kinds of words for them; for I do know, I am sorry to say,
what it is to be really naughty too. Just a few times in my life I can
remember the dreadful feeling of real, boiling anger at some one--I had
it several times to Miss Evans, and once or twice to--no, I won't say;
it's all so different now. And _once_ I told what wasn't true, quite
knowing all about it. But I _never_ did it again. The horribleness of
the feeling was too bad, and in _that_ way my naughtiness did me good!

Our plan for getting Miss Evans to help us to a holiday hadn't much
chance, as you shall hear.

When we got to the school-room we found she hadn't come, though it was
a quarter to ten, and she generally came at half-past nine.

"Everything seems going topsy-turvy to-day," said I, seating myself on
the high guard, and swinging my feet about. It was a very dangerous
seat, as the guard was anything but steady, and if it toppled over,
there was no saying but that you might be landed in the middle of the
fire. "Miss Evans late--and us going away to a place we never heard of
before! It's almost as nice as if the sun had forgotten to get up--what
fun that would be!"

"I don't think that would be fun at all," said Gerald. "I'd much rather
he should forget to go to bed some night. Which would you rather, Tib?"

But Tib wasn't listening. She was pressing her face against the window,
her thoughts intent upon primroses again.

"Hush!" she said; "I'm sure I heard him. He can't be far off yet, or
else it's another man. Listen." And as she held up her finger there came
softly through the distance again the "All a growing, all a blowing."

"I wonder why things seem so much prettier far off," said Tib,
thoughtfully. But just then the cry came again, and this time
unmistakably nearer. Off darted Tib. "I will try to get Fanny to catch
him," she said; and in five minutes she was back again in triumph.

"Fanny wasn't to be found, of course," she said. "But that good Liddy
poked up the little page-boy--he's new, so he hasn't learnt to be
impudent yet--and sent him down the street. We shall have the primroses
directly. Oh, I say, Gussie and Gerald"--and Tib flung herself down on
the hearth-rug, and rolled herself over, as if she were on a lawn of
beautiful fresh grass--"just fancy if we were in the country, and could
gather primroses for ourselves--as many as ever we wanted. _Wouldn't_ it
be lovely?"

"Perhaps we may--perhaps they won't be over when we go to that place,"
said Gerald.

"I wonder when exactly we shall go?" I said. And then our thoughts all
returned to Rosebuds, and what our grandfather had said about it.

"I wonder why he doesn't want us to make friends with any of the
neighbours?" I said. "I think it's rather crabby of him. There may
be some nice children there, and we never have any playfellows."

"I suppose he's got some reason for it," said Tib. "Perhaps the people
who live there are all very common. You know, grandpapa is right to be
particular about us."

"I don't think it is that. I think he has some other reason. Tib, do you
know," I exclaimed, as a curious idea flashed across my mind, "I have an
idea that----"

But I was interrupted before I could say more by the entrance of old
Liddy, bringing the primroses. They were not very big bunches, but they
were very sweet and fresh, and we all sniffed at them in a way that
must have astonished the poor things. Nurse smiled at us.

"I'd like to see you gathering them for yourselves, my dears," she said.

"Well, we shall, perhaps, if we go to the country so soon. Do you know
that place where we're going to, Liddy?" asked Tib.

She shook her head--she had come to us from mamma's family, and she
didn't know much about the Ansdells.

"No, Miss Tib. I never heard of it till your grandpapa told me last
night about getting you ready. And that reminds me--Bland told me just
now that his master forgot to say Miss Evans wouldn't be coming to-day."

"Miss Evans not coming to-day!" we all three exclaimed in the greatest
astonishment, for it must be confessed Miss Evans was the most exact
person possible. "Is she never coming any more, Liddy?"

Nurse shook her head.

"Nay, my dear, how should I know? I only heard what Bland said. Miss
Evans isn't coming with us to the country, master said."

"But he's going to get another," said Gerald. "Will she be just
_exactly_ the same--will she have a big freckle on her cheek, and will
she nip up her mouth the same, do you think, nursey?"

We all burst out laughing at poor Gerald.

"It would quite spoil Rosebuds to have the big freckle there," said Tib.
"But, nursey, do you know grandpapa says we're not to make any friends
there, and not to know anybody?"

This time Liddy nodded her head.

"I know, my dears. Well, it can't be helped. It'll be no duller for you
there than at Ansdell Friars, any way, and it's a beautiful country for
walks, cook says. She comes from somewhere that way."

"But why does grandpapa not want us to know anybody there--do you know,
nursey? Does cook know, perhaps?"

Liddy looked uncomfortable.

"My dears, there may be reasons for many things that you're too young to
understand," she said. "If your grandpapa had wanted to give his reasons
to you, he'd have done so himself; and if he didn't wish to give you
any, it would ill become me to be telling you over any fancies or
chatter I might hear about master's affairs."

Tib's eyes grew very round.

"I do believe there's a mystery," she said. "Oh, how beautiful! Nursey,
I'm sure you know something. What fun it would be if there was really a
mystery, and if we were to find it out. Gussie, do listen."

But I wouldn't listen just that minute. The thought which had been put
out of my mind by nurse coming in with the primroses had come back
again.

"Wait a minute, Tib," I said, "I've got an idea. I'm only going down to
the library to fetch a book. I may go as Miss Evans isn't coming;" and
off I flew.

The library was not a large room--indeed, it was a good deal smaller
than grandpapa's study--but it held a great many books. It was nothing
but books, for there were shelves all round it, packed as close as they
could hold. In one corner were all the books that grandpapa allowed us
to read. He had shown them to us himself, and simply told us we might
read any of them we liked, provided we always put them back again in
their places, but that we mustn't ever take any other books without
asking his leave. That was one thing grandpapa was very nice about;
though he was so cold and strict, he always trusted us, and never
doubted our words. I'm sure that is the best way to make children quite
truthful. Except that one time I've told you of, I don't remember any of
us telling a story. It didn't seem to come into our heads to do so--we
had been with grandpapa ever since we could remember, and he had always
been the same. We had never known what it was to be loved or petted,
except by Liddy, for both papa and mamma had died of a fever in Spain,
and we had been sent home with old nurse. (I suppose I should have
explained this at the beginning; but it doesn't matter.)

Well, I ran down to the library and went straight to our own corner.
They were funny-looking books--mostly rather shabby, for they had been
children's books for two, and some of them for three, generations. It
took me a little while to find the one I was in search of; indeed, I
wasn't quite sure which it was, and I had to take out several, and open
them to see the page at the beginning before I got the right one. It
was a small book; the name of it was _Ornaments Discovered_, and on the
first leaf was written the name of the person it had belonged to. There
were two names, but the first had been so scored through that one could
only distinguish the first letter of it, which was "R," and the second
name was our name and grandpapa's name, "Ansdell." And lower down on the
page was the date, and the name of a place just above it. But this name
also had been scored through, only not so blackly as the other, so that
it was still easy to make out that it was that of the house we were
going to live at: "Rosebuds."

I remembered it quite well now--I had often puzzled over the writing in
this book, and though I had never made out the name before, "Ansdell,"
I remembered having read that the other was "Rosebuds." I understood now
a sort of feeling I had had when grandpapa had told us the name that
morning, that I had heard it before--or, as it turned out, _seen_ it
before.

I rushed up stairs with the little red book in my hand.

"Tib," I said, looking and feeling very excited, "just look at this."

Up jumped Tib--she had been down on the floor arranging the primroses
in some little glasses that we always kept on the mantelpiece for any
flowers that came our way. Liddy had left the room, and Gerald had gone
with her. We leant over the book together.

"You see?" I said, pointing to the word above the date.

"Yes," said Tib; "it's certainly 'Rosebuds.' I suppose grandpapa had it
when he was a little boy, there."

"Oh, you stupid!" I exclaimed. "You're always wanting to make up
wonderful stories of adventures and mysteries, and now, when I've found
you a real mystery, all ready made, you won't see it. If it had just
been grandpapa's book, what would he have scored the name out for?
Besides, you know very well that his name is 'Gerald,' like papa and
Gerald. And _this_ name begins with a 'R.'"

Tib had taken the book in her own hands by this time, and was peering at
it.

"You may call me stupid, if you like," she said, "but I've found out
something else. The name is 'Regina'--my second name;" for Tib's whole
name was Mercedes Regina. "Mercedes Regina Ansdell"--isn't that an
awfully grand name for a little girl? She was a little girl then.

I seized the book in my turn. Sure enough, now that Tib had put the
idea into my head, it seemed quite plain--even through the very thick
crossing-out one could see the confused shapes of the word "Regina."

"You're right, Gussie," said Tib; "there _is_ a mystery. You remember
that time that grandpapa was grumbling at my name--like he did this
morning--and I said, 'Mightn't I be called by my second name?' how he
snapped out, 'No, certainly not.' It frightened me so, I remember. There
must have been somebody called 'Regina Ansdell' that he didn't like, or
he was angry with, or _something_. Oh! how I do wonder who she was, and
why he has never told us about her?"

"We might ask nurse," I said. "I am sure she knows something--for
you see, this Regina Ansdell must have lived at Rosebuds, and it's
something about there that Liddy has heard, and won't tell us. And I
shouldn't wonder if it has to do with grandpapa's not wanting us to
know any of the people there."

"What can it be?" said Tib, her eyes growing bigger and rounder.
"There can't surely be any one shut up there--a mysterious lady called
'Regina.' Oh, no, that can't be it, for grandpapa would never take us
there if there were. Besides--though he's rather frightening and
strict--grandpapa's not bad and wicked."

"The Queen wouldn't let him be in the Parliament if he were," said I.
"At least, I _suppose_ not."

"It's good of him to have all of us living with him. Nursey says it is.
I don't think we've got any money of our own."

"Well, we're his grandchildren, and it isn't our fault that papa and
mamma died," I said. "I don't think _that's_ so very good of him.
Still, he is good to us in some ways, I know."

Tib was still staring at the book.

"I don't think it's any use asking nurse," she said. "If she does know
anything she doesn't want to tell us. And it's no use telling Gerald:
he's too little. If we told him not to speak of it, he'd very likely get
red the first time grandpapa looked at him--like that day you filled the
hood of Miss Evans' waterproof with peas, and he kept staring at it all
the time of our lessons, till she found out there was something the
matter."

"No," said I; "it's better not to tell him. Of course, Tib, we mustn't
do anything _naughty_. It would be naughty to go prying into grandpapa's
secrets, if he has any. But what we've found out hasn't been with
prying. It's impossible not to _wonder_ a little about it. And it's
grandpapa's own fault for telling us so sharply not to know anybody or
speak to anybody at Rosebuds. Of course, we'll obey him, but we can't
help our minds wondering--they're made to wonder."

Tib considered for a while. Then her face cleared.

"I'll tell you what we can do, Gussie," she said; "we can turn it into
a play. We can't leave off wondering, as you say, but we can mix up our
wondering with fancy, and make up a plan of how it all was. It will be
_very_ interesting, for we shall know there _is_ something real, and
yet we can make it more wonderful than anything real could be now
that everything's grown so plain and--and--I don't know the word--the
opposite of poetry and fairy stories, I mean--in the world. We must
think about it, Gussie. We might make it an 'ancient times' story, or
an ogre story, or----"

"Yes," I said, "we'll think about it."

I did not want to disappoint Tib, and I thought, in a way, it was rather
a good idea. But I am not so fond of fancying or pretending as Tib--I
like real things. And the idea of a real secret or mystery had taken
hold of my mind, and I wanted to find out about it. Still, the making a
play of it wasn't a bad idea. As Tib said, it would be more interesting
than an altogether make-up play.

We didn't say anything about the name in the book to Liddy. It was no
use worrying the poor old thing by teasing her about what she thought
would be wrong to tell; even if it had not anything to do with our
mystery, it would have been wrong and unkind of _us_. And we said
nothing to Gerald either; and indeed for some days we did not think or
speak much about our discovery even to each other; we were so very much
taken up about the real preparing to go away.

It was much more of a nice bustle and fuss than it had ever been to go
to Ansdell Friars. There, everything was left from year to year just
as we had always had it. The rooms had all we needed, and there was
very little besides our clothes to pack up and take. But for going to
Rosebuds it was quite different. None of the servants had ever been
there, and they were all in a to-do about it, especially as only about
half of them were to go; and the other half were cross at being sent
away, and kept telling the others they'd be sure to find everything
wrong there.

Nurse was the only one who was really pleased to go; and I am sure, dear
old thing, it was more for our sakes than her own.

"It'll be a real change for them, poor dears," she kept saying; and this
gave her patience to bear all our teasing and the servants' grumbling.
What a time she had of it, to be sure! From Gerald's "Nursey, may I take
_all_ my horses? If I leave Sultan in the cupboard won't the mouses and
butterflies eat him?"--Gerald always called moths butterflies--"Will
there be any wheelbarrows, like at Ansdell?" to Fanny's suggestion that
there'd be no nursery tea-service there--"a house that nobody's been
in for years and years"--everything fell on old Liddy! And you see she
dared not go asking grandpapa all sorts of things, as if he'd been a
lady. He was even rather cross when she went trembling one day to ask
if there were shops anywhere near Rosebuds, or if she must plan to take
everything we could want for all the summer.

"Shops," said grandpapa--I heard him, for Liddy had caught him on
his way down stairs one morning, and I was standing just inside the
school-room doorway; "of course there are shops near enough--five miles
off or so. I'm not going to take you to the middle of Africa. I dare say
there are shops enough in the village for common things. Mrs. Munt will
tell you all that. No need to worry me about it."

"Mrs. Munt!" I had never heard that name before. I pricked up my ears,
but I was dreadfully afraid that Liddy would be too frightened to
ask any more. To my satisfaction I heard her meek old voice again:

"And who may Mrs. Munt be, sir, if you please?"

At this grandpapa stopped short and looked at her--I couldn't see him,
but I _felt_ him stop short and look at her. Poor Liddy!

"Upon my soul!" he said. Then some reflection seemed to strike him, for
his next words were more amiable.

"Mrs. Munt is the housekeeper at Rosebuds. She's been there ever since
_I_ can remember. You didn't suppose I was going to trust to that Mary
Ann's cooking?" Mary Ann was the kitchen-maid. She was coming with us,
but not the cook, who was leaving to be married. "Mrs. Munt is, or used
to be, a very good cook, and a very good sort of person altogether."

"Oh, thank you, sir," said Liddy very heartily. Mrs. Munt was a great
relief to her mind, for the idea of Mary Ann's cooking on the days that
"master" came down to Rosebuds had been weighing on it. To me the idea
of Mrs. Munt brought back the thought of the mystery. If she had been
there as long as _grandpapa_ could remember, what must she not know?

I flew off to Tib with the news, but she did not receive it with much
interest.

"An old cook!" she said disdainfully. "Why, that would spoil it all.
It wouldn't matter so much for an ogre story, if we could fancy her a
witch, but for an 'ancient times' one, it would never do."

"Oh, bother!" I exclaimed, "I don't want pretending. I want to know
about it really. If you only wanted make-ups, you can always get
things that will do for them. I am sure Miss Evans would have been a
_beautiful_ witch! Oh, Tib, aren't you glad she isn't coming any more?"

For Miss Evans had left off coming altogether. She was going to begin a
school--how we pitied the scholars!--and had asked grandpapa to let her
off at once. She came to say good-bye to us, and gave us each a present
of a book--and, to our surprise, there were tears in her eyes when she
kissed us! People are really very queer in this world--they never seem
to care for things till they know they are not going to have them any
more. We all felt rather ashamed that we couldn't cry too, and Tib said
she was afraid we must have very little feeling, which made Gerald and
me quite unhappy for a while.

All the same, we weren't at all in a hurry to hear of the new "Miss
Evans."




CHAPTER III.

"ROSEBUDS."

  "To one who has been long in city pent,
   'Tis very sweet to look into the fair
   And open face of heaven."
                          KEATS' _Sonnets_.


I suppose it is true, as older people say, that things very seldom turn
out as one expects. Sometimes they are not so bad as one feels sure they
will be--and very often, or almost always, they are not so nice as one
has thought they would be, if one has been fancying and picturing a
great deal about them. And any way, they are never quite _what_ one
expects. I am beginning to find this out for myself now--looking back, I
can recollect very few nice things in my life that have turned out as
nice as I had imagined them. But of these few, Rosebuds was one, and
that has made me always remember with particular distinctness all about
our first acquaintance with the dear little place. I think I could tell
_everything_ about our arrival there, exactly how each room looked, and
what we had for tea--oh, how hungry we were that first evening! and I
seem to feel again the feeling of the snowy white sheets and the sort of
faint hay-ey--Tib said it was lavender--scent in our beds when we got
into them that first night--very tired, but very happy.

What plans we made for the next day--how we settled to get up with the
sun, to ramble about and see everything--and how, after all, we slept,
of course, much later than usual! Still, it was a delicious waking. Do
you know how beautiful a first waking in the real country is when you
have been a long time in London? There is a sort of clear stillness
in the air that you can _feel_, and then a cock crows--with quite a
different crow from the poor London cocks, I always think, and hens
cluck a little, just under your window perhaps; or, best of all, a
turkey gobble-wobbles and some ducks quack--perhaps there is a rush of
all together if your window happens to be not far from the poultry-yard,
and the girl is coming out with the creatures' breakfast--and further
off you hear a moo from some cows, and nearer, and yet more distant, the
clear sweet notes of the ever busy little birds as they pass by on their
way up to who knows where? Oh, it is too delicious--and when you hear
all those sounds, as you are lying there still dreamy and sleepy,
there is a sort of strangeness and _fairy-ness_--I must make up that
word--that makes you think of Red Riding-hood setting off in the early
morning to her grandmother's cottage, or of the little princess who went
to live with the dwarfs to keep house for them.

But I must come back to the evening before--the evening, that is to say,
of our arrival at Rosebuds. It had been a pouring wet day when we left
London (it went on pouring till we were only about half-an-hour from our
journey's end); and just at the last moment grandpapa had got a telegram
which stopped his coming with us. He grumbled a little, but I don't
think he had been looking forward with _much_ pleasure to the journey in
our company, and though we thought it our duty to look grave, and Tib
said gently, "What a pity!" I don't think _we_ minded much either.
Indeed, to tell the real truth--and it isn't any harm telling it in
here, as grandpapa will never see this story--I think it was his not
being with us, and our feeling so lovelily free and unafraid, that made
that first evening at Rosebuds so delightful.

_And_ Mrs. Munt!--oh, yes, it had to do with Mrs. Munt. There never was
anybody so nice as Mrs. Munt--there never could be!

But I _must_ go straight on, and not keep slipping a little bit
backwards, and hurrying on too far forwards, this sort of way. Well
then, as I was saying, it rained and rained all through the three hours'
journey, or at least two hours and a half of it, so that we all felt
rather doleful and shivery, and Liddy began hoping there'd be no mistake
about the carriage from the inn meeting us at the station, as grandpapa
had told her it should. Poor Liddy was rather inclined to get nervous
when she was thrown on her own resources.

"Never mind, nursey," we said, all three, to comfort her; "we can easily
walk if it isn't there. You know grandpapa said it was only about half
a mile, and we've got our big cloaks on--the rain wouldn't hurt us."

But Liddy still looked rather unhappy, till suddenly from her side of
the railway carriage Tib called out, "It's clearing up--it's clearing up
splendidly; and oh, Gussie! do look--there's such a lovely rainbow!"

So there was. I never before or since saw such a rainbow--it seemed
a very nice welcome for us, and after all, Liddy's fears were quite
without reason. For the queer old "one-horse fly" was waiting for us,
and we all bundled into it and drove off without any mishaps, except
that nurse was sure the packet of umbrellas had been left in the railway
carriage, and stood shouting to the guard to stop after the train was
already moving out of the station, which made us all laugh so, that we
hadn't breath to tell her that it was all safe in the fly.

Though Rosebuds is almost _in_ the village--at least, a very tiny bit
out of it--it is some little way from the station, because for some
reason that I've never found out, the station stands away by itself in
the fields, as if it and the village had quarrelled and wouldn't have
anything to say to each other. I dare say it's not a bad thing that it
is so: the nice country-ness of it all would have been a little spoilt
by the trains whistling in and out, and as it is, we scarcely hear it,
as the railroad is low down and is hardly noticed. And the road from the
station to the village _is_ so pretty. I never, even now, go along it
without remembering that first evening when we drove to Rosebuds in
the clear brightness that comes after rain, the fields and the hedges
glistening with the water diamonds, the little clouds hurrying away as
if they were afraid of being caught, and over all the sort of hush
that seems to me to follow a regular rainy day--as if the world were a
naughty child that had cried itself to sleep with the tears still on its
cheeks.

It is a hilly bit of road--first it goes down, and then it goes up, and
when it comes into the village it does so quite suddenly. You see a
high, ivy-covered wall, which is the wall of the church-yard, and then
comes a row of sweet little alms-houses, and then the inn, and one by
one all the village houses and shops in the most irregular way possible.
Some one said once that it was more like an old German village than an
English one, but I have never been in Germany, so I can't tell, only it
certainly is very unlike everywhere else. We were so pleased to see it
so queer and funny, that we kept tugging each other to look out, first
at one side, and then at the other, and sometimes at both at once. Then
we began wondering which of the houses, as we came to them, could be
Rosebuds, and I think we would have been quite pleased whichever it
was--they _all_ looked so tempting and snug.

But we were all wrong in our guesses, for, as I said, Rosebuds was
quite at the end, and, like the village itself, we came upon it quite
suddenly, turning sharply down a sort of lane so shaded with trees that
you could scarcely see where you were going; then with some tugging at
the old horse, and some swaying of the clumsy old fly, in we drove at an
open gate, and pulled up in front of a low white house, nestling, so to
speak, in thickly-growing, bushy trees.

Never was a house so like its name! The trees were not really planted
so very close as they looked, but it seemed at first sight as if it was
almost buried in them: it stood out so white against their green. It
looks at first sight smaller than it really is, for it extends a good
deal out at the back. But large or small, to us it was just perfection,
and so was the very rosy old woman who stood smiling and bobbing in the
porch. She was so comical-looking that we could hardly help laughing. I
think she must find the world a very good-humoured place, for nobody
_could_ be cross when they look at her!

"Mrs. Munt, ma'am, I suppose?" said nurse as she got down.

And, "Certainly, ma'am," replied Mrs. Munt, and then the two old bodies
shook hands very ceremoniously. It was so funny to see their politeness
to each other. But Mrs. Munt was too eager to see us to waste much time
on Liddy.

"And is these the dear young ladies and gentleman?" she said, hastening
forward as we emerged from the fly. "Dear, dear! to think you should be
so big already, and me never to have seen you before!"

The tears were in her eyes, and we felt rather at a loss what to say or
do. She seemed to know all about us so well that we felt really ashamed
to think--though it certainly was not our fault--that we had never heard
of her till about two days ago. I felt too shy to speak, but Tib held
out her hand.

"I am very glad to see you, Mrs. Munt," she said. "I am the eldest, you
know. I am Miss Ansdell."

A slight shadow of pain crossed the old woman's face.

"Miss Ansdell," she repeated, with a strange sadness in her tone: "yes,
my dear--to be sure--you _are_ Miss Ansdell--Master Gerald's eldest."

"_I'm_ Gerald, too," said Gerald himself. "I'm called after grandpapa
and papa. Did you know papa when he was as little as me?"

Mrs. Munt smiled.

"I should think so, indeed--and your grandpapa too," she said. "And this
is Miss Gustava--you're not like the others, my dear. Perhaps you take
after your mamma's family--the Ansdells have all blue eyes and dark
hair. I remember Master Gerald writing about his lady's beautiful light
hair."

"Yes, indeed," said nurse, rather primly, very anxious to put in a word
for her side of the house, "Miss Gussie's hair is very nice, but it's
nothing to what her dear mamma's was."

But we didn't want to stand at the door all the evening while the old
bodies discussed our looks in this way. Gerald, who somehow seemed less
shy with Mrs. Munt than Tib and I, put a stop to it in his own way.

"Mrs. Munt," he said, "I'm dreadfully hungry. I'm only seven years old,
you know, though I look more; and nurse says seven's a hungry age."

"And we're hungry too--Tib and I, though I'm ten and Tib's eleven," said
I. "And we do _so_ want to see all the rooms and everything. Oh, I do
think Rosebuds is far the nicest place in the world."

My words quite gained Mrs. Munt's heart.

"Indeed, miss, I don't think you're far wrong," she said. And then, just
for a moment before going in, we stood and looked round. In front of
the house there was a beautiful lawn, right down to the low wall which
separated it from the high road. And away on the other side of that,
the ground sloped down gradually, so that we seemed to have nothing to
interfere with the view, which was really a very lovely one--right over
the old Forest of Evold, to where the river Rother flows quietly along
at the foot of the Rothering Hills. But children don't care much for
views--it's since I've got big that I've learnt to like the view--we
were much more interested to follow Mrs. Munt into the house, across the
low square hall into a short wide passage, with a window along one side,
and a flight of steps at one end. A door stood open close to the foot
of the stairs, and Mrs. Munt led the way through it into a bright,
plainly-furnished room, where tea was already set out for us.

"I might have got it ready in the dining-room this first evening," she
said, "but I thought master would be coming, and that there'd be his
dinner to see to. This is the old play-room--the school-room as used to
be is now a bed-room--and I thought this would be the best for you to
have quite as your own."

"It will be very nice, I'm sure," said Tib, whom Mrs. Munt looked at as
the eldest. "And there's a door right out into the garden--oh, that will
be nice! won't it, Gussie?"

"So that we can come out and in whenever we like. Yes, I'm glad
of that," I said. "Is the garden big, Mrs. Munt? I hope it is,
because--because we've no chance of being allowed to play in any other,"
I was going to say, but I stopped, and I felt myself grow a little red.
I wondered if Mrs. Munt knew why grandpapa was so strict about our not
making any friends; and I fancied she looked at me curiously as she
replied--

"Yes, Miss Gustava; it's a good big garden, and it's nice to play in,
for there's a deal of rather wild shrubbery--down at the back. Our
young ladies and gentlemen long ago used to say there was nowhere like
Rosebuds for hide-and-seek."

"Who were your young ladies and gentlemen?" I asked quietly. "Papa had
no brothers and sisters, I know."

"Ah! but I was here long before your dear papa's time, Miss Gustava,"
said Mrs. Munt. "I was here when your grandpapa was a boy. I'm five
years older nor master."

"And had _grandpapa_ brothers and sisters, then?" I asked again.

Mrs. Munt grew a little uneasy.

"You must have heard of your uncle, the Colonel, who was killed in
India," she said. "And there was Miss Mary, who died when she was only
fifteen. You must have seen her grave at Ansdell Friars."

I shook my head.

"No, I don't think so. But I do remember the tablet in the church to
Colonel Baldwin Ansdell. I often wondered who he was. You remember it,
Tib? But hadn't grandpapa any other sisters? You said young _ladies_,
Mrs. Munt."

I had forgotten all my shyness now in curiosity. But it was not fated to
be satisfied just then. Nurse suddenly interrupted.

"Miss Gussie, dear, you must wait a while to hear all these things from
Mrs. Munt. The tea's all ready, and I'm sure you're all hungry. Just run
up stairs with Miss Tib to take off your hats, there's a dear. Will you
show us the rooms, Mrs. Munt, please?"

So we were all trotted off again--up stairs this time, though it
scarcely seemed like going up stairs at all, so broad and shallow were
the steps compared with the high-up flights in our London house. And Tib
and I were so pleased with the room which Mrs. Munt told us was to be
ours, that we should have forgotten all about the talk down stairs if
she hadn't made another remark, which put my unanswered question into my
head again.

"Yes, it is a nice room," she said, looking round with pleasure at
the light-painted furniture and the two white beds side by side, the
old-fashioned cupboards in the wall, two of them with glass doors,
letting us see a few queer old china cups and teapots inside; "_and_
so little changed, even to its name. We've always called it the young
ladies' room."

There it was again--the young _ladies_; but nurse was listening
and evidently fussing to get us down to tea. I must trust to
cross-questioning Mrs. Munt some other time.

And the tea was really enough to take up all our attention. There was
everything of country things--fresh eggs, and butter and milk of the
best, and bread, and tea-cakes, and strawberry jam, and potted fish--all
"home-made," of course. I think Mrs. Munt and nurse were really a little
frightened to see how much we ate.

After tea we wanted, of course, to go out, but Liddy decided that it was
too damp, and Mrs. Munt consoled us by giving us leave to go all over
the house, for it was barely six o'clock and quite light. She took us
into the front hall and showed us the dining-room, out of which opened
the study, and beyond that again, what had been the school-room, and
was now grandpapa's bed-room. There was nothing _very_ interesting in
these rooms, though they were all quaint and old-fashioned; and through
all the house there was the sort of clean, fresh, and yet _not new_
feeling--a mixture of faint old scents that cannot be got away, and
wood-fires long ago burnt out, and yet the sweet, pure country air
preventing their being musty or stale--that you never notice except in
an old country house that has been carefully kept, and yet not really
lived in for many years.

And then Mrs. Munt, taking us through the hall again, showed us the door
of the drawing-room, and told us we might look at it by ourselves, which
we were pleased at.

It was _much_ more interesting, for, though a small room, it was filled
with pictures and curiosities. The pictures were mostly miniatures--such
queer things some of them were; gentlemen in uniform and the funniest
fancy dresses, some with wigs down to their waists, some of them with
helmets to make them like Roman soldiers. And ladies to match--some
looking dreadfully proud, with towers of hair on the top of their
heads, and some simpering in a silly way. One of these last was
really rather like Tib when she smiles in what I call her "company"
manner--though it's hardly fair to say that now, as she has really left
it off--and she was very angry at my saying so, and told me that the
most stuck-up-looking one of all was very like _me_; "and it's better
to look silly than to be so horribly proud," she added. We were really
rather near quarrelling, which would have been a bad beginning for our
life at Rosebuds, when we caught sight of an old cabinet in one corner,
of which the top half stood open, showing rows and rows of little
drawers, and here and there queer shaped doors opening into inside
places, where there were more drawers and shelves. It was a Japanese
cabinet, of course--a very old and valuable one. I have never seen one
so large and curious, and it quite absorbed our attention till nurse
came tapping at the door--I don't know why she tapped; I suppose she had
an idea that, as we were in the drawing-room, she must--to tell us it
was time, and more than time, to go to bed.

And though I wanted to talk to Tib in bed about the queerness of there
having been young _ladies_ long ago in this very room, and that Mrs.
Munt evidently didn't want to tell us about them, I was so sleepy, and
so was Tib, that our conversation got no further than, "Tib, don't you
think----" and a very indistinct murmur of "Yes, Gussie, of course I
do," before we were both fast asleep and----




CHAPTER IV.

THE DOOR IN THE GARDEN WALL.

  "Deep in a garden, rank and green,
    It were scarce older now than then,
  For all the seasons gone between."
                    C. C. FRASER TYTLER.


The next thing we knew it was to-morrow morning--our first morning at
Rosebuds!

I have told already about this first morning--how beautiful it was to
wake to all the fresh sweet country sounds and feelings. I have felt
this several times since then in my life, but never quite so newly and
strongly as that morning, and every time since then that I have felt it,
that day has come back to my mind.

It was very fine and bright, and immediately after breakfast we got
leave to go out into the garden.

"Not outside, of course," said nurse, anxiously. "When you want to go
a walk I will go with you--I or Fanny. Mrs. Munt will tell us all the
nicest walks."

"We shall never want to go walks here, I am sure," said Tib. "The
garden is much nicer, and we can find lots of things to amuse us in
it. Besides, nursey, you know you don't care about walks with your
rheumatics, and Fanny is sure to say she hasn't time, as she has to
be housemaid too here."

"It's much best to let us play in the garden always," I said. "I'm sure
grandpapa would like it best."

"Any way, till the new Miss Evans comes," said Gerald.

But Tib and I turned on him.

"Oh, you horrid little boy!" we said; "what is the use of spoiling our
nice first day by speaking of anything so dreadful?"

"I don't believe there ever could be anybody at all like Miss
Evans--that's one comfort, any way," I added. But Gerald looked rather
grumpy: he couldn't bear being called a "little boy"--he wouldn't have
minded being called "horrid" if we hadn't put in the "little."

All grumpiness, however, was forgotten when we found ourselves out of
doors, and free to do as we chose. This first day, of course, the great
thing to do was to explore, and that we did pretty thoroughly. The lawn
in front was a beautiful place for running races on, or for "Miller's
ground," or games like that--and the walk all round it was interesting
because Mrs. Munt told us that twelve times round it, made a mile.

"We might have walking matches," said Tib, consideringly. "It wouldn't
be very amusing; but still, if we got tired of everything else, it would
be worth remembering;" and then we proceeded to inspect the rest of our
domain.

_The_ place of places was the tangle, or shrubbery, as Mrs. Munt had
called it, away down at the back. It was quite a large place, and you
could not distinguish easily where it ended, for the wall which edged it
was so old, and so covered with ivy and other creepers run wild, that
till you actually felt it you couldn't have told it was there. Here and
there in the tangle there were little clearings, as it were, carefully
enough kept--indeed, the gardeners did clear out the tangle itself once
or twice a year, only it was meant to be wild--where you were sure to
find a bench, or a rustic seat, and in one place there was even a
summer-house, though a rather unhappy looking one.

"I don't suppose," said Tib, when we came upon this arbour, "I don't
suppose any one's been here since those children--grandpapa and the
brothers and sisters who are dead, or that we can't hear about--played
here, ever, ever so long ago. Papa hadn't any brothers or sisters, and
he wasn't much here--nurse knows that much. It looks like as if it had
never been touched since then--doesn't it? _Isn't_ it queer to think
of?" and Tib sat down on one of the shady seats, still feebly holding
together, and looked very serious. "Isn't it queer?" she repeated.

"It would be a nice place for a robber's castle," said Gerald, who had
mounted up beside Tib, and was peeping out at a little slit in the
side which had been meant to let light in by, in the days when the
summer-house had a door that would shut. "See here, this hole would just
do for an archer to shoot through when he saw the--the others you know,"
he went on, getting rather muddled, "marching up the hill--we could
fancy it was a hill."

"Nonsense, Gerald!" I said. "You're mixing up robbers' dens and feudal
castles. You're too little to plan plays. All you can do is to be what
Tib and I fix for you in our plans."

Gerald was very indignant. He muttered something about "just like
girls," but he dared not say it loud out; we kept him in far too good
order for that. Tib and I went on talking without noticing him, and he
sat down in a corner, and amused himself by poking about among the dry
fir needles that lay like a sort of sand on the floor, for the arbour
was made of fir branches and cones. I remembered afterwards hearing him
give a sort of little squeak, and say, "Hi! I declare!" or something
like that, but at the time I paid no attention, and he stayed quite
quiet in his corner.

His words, though I snubbed him so, had reminded Tib of her plans, and
we went on talking about them for some time. She was all for a regular
romance--there was to be a beautiful lady shut up by a cruel baron, who
wanted to get all her money by forcing her to marry his hump-backed son
(I am afraid that among the old children's books, one or two not quite
children's books had got in; I remember one, called "The Imprisoned
Heiress," which we read a chapter or two of, and then it got stupid),
and she was to escape by "scaling the fortress wall," which meant, we
had a hazy idea, stripping it down stone by stone, as if it were a fish
with scales. We decided that the summer-house would do very well for the
lonely tower, and we sallied forth at last, all three of us, to inspect
the wall and choose a good place for the imaginary escape. But time had
fled faster than we fancied; we had only gone a few steps, when we heard
Fanny's voice in the distance.

"Miss Tib, Miss Gussie, Master Gerald! Master Gerald, Miss Gussie,
Miss Tib! oh, dear, dear, wherever can they be? Your dinner's
ready--din--ner! din--ner!" she went on at last, as if she thought
the word "dinner" would be the best bait to catch us by.

We were rather hungry again already. We all set up a shout, and set
off in a scamper to where Fanny stood, the image of despair, at the
beginning of the tangle, which she dared not enter in her thin London
slippers, as the moss-grown paths looked damp and dirty.

That afternoon, to our vexation, was showery--it was not so hopelessly
rainy as to prevent our going out at all, but nurse told us we must stay
in the front, on the short-cropped lawn and the dry gravel paths.

So it was not till the next day that we returned to the old summer-house
and the tangle. We had, in the meantime, talked over the plan of the
play, and got it more into shape. You will see that it had nothing to do
with the "mystery," as Tib and I still called it to ourselves. We had
decided to wait a little before playing at _it_. I did not care for
Gerald to hear about it, for fear he should chatter to nurse, and I
also wanted to see if there really was anything else to find out. There
was no knowing but what in time Mrs. Munt would tell us more about the
family history, and though Tib was rather reluctant to give up making a
story of it, I persuaded her that so far we really knew too little.

We began cleaning out the summer-house, for I wanted to make it
habitable for the unfortunate heroine.

"You see," said I, "it would be more natural for the cruel baron to
persuade her that he was bringing her here for safety, as he had heard
his castle was going to be attacked by some enemy; so he makes it pretty
comfortable for her. And then, when she's been living here alone for
some time, and she must be finding it very dull, he sends the horrid
little hump-back, who pretends to be against his father, and tells her
she is going to be kept there unless she'll marry him, and that he is
dreadfully sorry for her, and----"

"I don't see why he need pretend to be against his father," said Tib;
"he might just say straight off that she must marry him or else she'll
never get out. But I think it would be much better to fancy it was a
horrid dungeon. Gerald, I don't think you need trouble to rake up the
cones and leaves into a bed for her. I don't see any sense in pretending
it's comfortable."

"I do--and it makes it much more of a play," I said. "Any way, we
might make it that way at first, and have her thrown into the dungeon
afterwards, and escape from there."

Tib did not object to this. But the word "escape" reminded her of the
wall. She proposed that we should examine it, and find the best place.

We had to scramble in among the bushes before we got to the wall. And
it proved to be a much higher one than we expected.

"The play will have to be all pretence," said Tib; "we couldn't
possibly get over this, or pull any stones away. It is far too strong."

We went on, however, a few steps, still at the foot of the wall.
Suddenly Tib gave a little exclamation.

"Look here, Gussie," she said, and with her hands she pulled back some
branches of ivy--"look here--there's a door in the wall--a very old
door, and not opened for ever so long; for see, the ivy has grown right
across it."

Gerald and I pushed forward eagerly. Yes, Tib was right. There was a
door in the wall--not a very big one, but very strong, for it did not
rattle or shake at all when we pounded on it. It was locked, firmly
locked we soon found out, when we had torn away as much of the ivy as
we could. The lock was a great big one, clumsy, but very strong, and so
rusty that, even without the testimony of the ivy, it would have been
clear that no one had passed through that doorway for a great number of
years.

We all three stood and looked at each other.

"Another mystery," was what Tib and I were thinking, though we did not
say it aloud.

But Gerald looked rather "funny;" his round rosy cheeks were rosier than
usual, and there was a queer sparkle in his eyes as he said--

"_Wouldn't_ you like to open it? _Wouldn't_ it be nice if one could find
the key?" and he jumped about and turned--or tried to turn--head over
heels: there wasn't much room in among the bushes, and he kept saying,
"Wouldn't it be nice if somebody could find a key to fit it? But little
boys are too little and silly to know anything, aren't they? They're
not like big young ladies."

And though Tib got hold of him, and we both _shook_ him we were so
provoked, that was all he would say. So we settled that he was just in
one of his teasing humours; he didn't have them very often, it is true.

So the only use to make of the door in the wall was another pretence.
We settled that it should be the entrance to the dungeon; it didn't do
badly for that, as two or three steps, looking very black and slimy, led
down to it. And we fixed that, instead of "scaling the wall," the lady
should escape by hiding in the wood till the prince who was to be her
rescuer passed that way. Gerald had to be the prince, in turns with the
horrid little hump-back, for I had to be the baron, and also a lady
attendant on the heiress, and Tib, of course, was the heiress. We
didn't much like having Gerald after the tiresome way he had been going
on, but there was no help for it.

And the next two or three days passed very happily. There was
still a great deal to see and inspect about Rosebuds; the house
itself--especially the drawing-room, with its treasures, which Mrs. Munt
showed us, and sometimes, when she found that we were careful children,
allowed us to examine for ourselves; the stables, where lived the old
pony who was still able to draw the still older pony-carriage, or
"shay"--as the farm-man called it--as far as the little town, where Mrs.
Munt liked to go once a month, and to bring home her purchases herself
instead of trusting them to the railway. Then there were the dairy and
poultry-yard, her great pride, though she was rather mortified to hear
that we had never known that the butter and fresh eggs we ate in London
were sent up from Rosebuds every week.

"Why, we never even heard of Rosebuds till a few days before we came
here," I told her.

Her face grew sad at this, and I was sorry I had said it.

"Grandpapa is very _funny_," I went on, thinking, perhaps, we might get
round to the subject of the "young ladies" and the scored-out name,
which we couldn't help connecting together; "he never tells us anything.
I don't believe he'd have ever told us we'd had a papa and mamma if
nurse hadn't been our mamma's nurse, and so could tell us all about
her."

"Your grandpapa's had a deal of trouble, my dears," said Mrs. Munt. "And
there's some as trouble softens and makes more loving to all about them
and some as it hardens, or seems to harden, leastways to shut them up
in themselves. And I think it's no harm of me to tell you, now I see
what sensible children you are, that it's been that way with your
grandpapa. It's not really hardened him, for you know he has not got
selfish or unmindful of others. He is very good to you?" and poor Mrs.
Munt made the question anxiously, as if half afraid of what we might
answer.

"Nurse says he's very good to us," said Tib, slowly. "He gives us
everything we have."

"But it isn't our fault that we are his grandchildren," I said, rather
bitterly. "We didn't ask to be it. And he has plenty of money--what
could he do with it if he hadn't us?"

"Gussie," said Tib, reproachfully. But old Mrs. Munt only looked
distressed, not vexed.

"He does love you, my dears: I feel sure of it," she said. "Only he's
got out of the way of showing it--that's what's wrong. If you had your
grandmamma now, or----" and then she stopped. "A lady--a woman in the
family makes all so different. But try, my lovies, to believe that he
does love you. It is true, as Miss Gussie says--for I'd never be one to
say to children what their own sense feels is nonsense--that it would
be very wrong of your grandpapa _not_ to give you all you should have.
You're his own flesh and blood, for sure. Still, he might have done it
in a different way--he might have sent you to some sort of school, or
to some lady who'd have taken care of you all, and him have no trouble
about it. No one would have thought it unnatural if he'd done that way,
instead of taking up house again in London, when he'd got quite out of
the way of it, and settling all so that he should have you always near
him."

We both looked surprised.

"Did he do that?" we said.

"Yes," said Mrs. Munt, "he did indeed; and much more that he didn't, so
to speak, _need_ to have done--without, all the same, having fallen
short of his duty."

"I wish he would tell us things like that," I said. "How are we to
know?"

"No," said Tib, "not quite that. I think it seems more for his _not_
telling. But I wish--I wish he'd let us feel that he loves us, and then
we would, indeed we would, love him;" and some tears slowly made their
way into Tib's blue eyes.

"Well, well, dears, that's the right way to feel, any way. And maybe
things will change somehow. It's wonderful how things come round when
people really mean right. So keep up heart, and don't be afraid of
letting master see that you want to please him, and to love him too."

This talk with the old housekeeper made a great impression on us--so
great that it almost put the mystery out of our heads altogether. For a
great deal seemed explained by the thought of grandpapa's old troubles,
and what these had been in time past we knew quite well. He had lost so
many dear to him. Grandmamma, to begin with, had died quite young; then
there was the brother Baldwin, killed in India, and the sister Mary,
buried at Ansdell Friars. That was sad enough--and then his only son to
have died too, leaving us three helpless babies.

"I dare say he'd just as soon have been without us, and have had nobody
at all belonging to him," I said to Tib. "It must have been a great
nuisance to have us stupid little things sent home, and not even poor
mamma to take care of us. Do you remember, Tib, how we used to cry and
run back to nurse when he sent for us down to the library to see him? We
thought him a sort of an ogre."

A few days after this talk with Mrs. Munt, grandpapa came down to
Rosebuds from a Saturday to a Monday. We weren't exactly glad to see
him, but what the old housekeeper had said was fresh in our minds,
and we were all anxious to do our best to please him. So we made no
objection when nurse called us a full hour before he could possibly
arrive, "to be made neat against your dear grandpapa comes." Poor old
Liddy--she would have thought it her duty to call him our dear grandpapa
even if he _had_ been an ogre, I do believe!

And we had worked ourselves up to being so extra good, that we did not
even grumble at the long time we had to sit still doing nothing on the
window-seat in the hall, watching, or listening rather, for the first
rumble of the carriage wheels as the signal for all running out into the
porch to meet him. That part of it was a "plan" of Tib's--everything
with her was sure to run into "plans," and with this new idea of
pleasing grandpapa, she was constantly casting about in her head what we
could do.

"I think seeing us standing together in the porch will touch him, you
see, Gussie," she said. "It is a little like some scene I've read of in
a story-book--the orphans, you know--oh, _where_ was it?--and the stern
guardian, and it quite melts him, and----"

"He begins to cry, I suppose," I said, rather contemptuously, I fear; "I
must say I'd be a good deal astonished to see _grandpapa_ begin to cry
over us, wouldn't you, Gerald?"

But the idea was quite beyond Gerald's imagination.

"I do wish one thing," he said solemnly.

"What?" asked Tib and I eagerly. When Gerald had an idea, it was rather
startling.

"If he--grandpapa, you know--really wished to please us--he might be
thinking of us on the journey, you know--wouldn't it be beautiful if he
was to bring us each a packet of that splendid butter-scotch that there
was at the station in London? I looked at it while we were waiting. I
really _could_ love him if he did."

"You greedy little pig!" said Tib.

It wasn't often Tib condescended to use such expressions, but no doubt
Gerald's butter-scotch seemed rather a come-down from her romantic
ideas. I was sorry for her, but I _couldn't_ help laughing at the look
of disgust in her face, and at Gerald's face of astonishment. He
muttered something I couldn't hear--of course there was something about
"girls," and "sha'n't get it out of me," which I didn't understand. But
Tib's indignation next fell upon me.

"How can you laugh at him--such low ideas," she said, reproachfully, to
which I answered rather crossly. Indeed, we were all on the verge of a
quarrel when at last the sound of wheels turning in at the gate was
heard, and up we all jumped.




CHAPTER V.

WHAT GERALD FOUND.

  "Give a little love to a child, and you get a great deal
   back."--RUSKIN.


It was very funny, after all poor Tib's great preparations, when she
really saw grandpapa that she seemed as if she could say nothing. I had
already run forward, and quite without thinking of pleasing him, or of
anything except that I was awfully glad he was there, because I _was_ so
tired of sitting still and squabbling, I called out quite loudly--

"Oh, grandpapa, I _am_ so glad you've come!"

He was just getting down from the dog-cart--he had had it and a horse
and groom sent down to Rosebuds to be ready for taking him to and from
the station; the old one-horse fly wouldn't have suited grandpapa, I can
assure you!--and when he heard me he turned round with quite a nice, not
the least "making-fun-of-you," smile on his face. I don't think I had
ever before seen his face look so nice. "Are you really glad I have
come, Gussie? I'm sure I feel very flattered."

I felt both pleased and vexed. I did so wish I could have let him go on
thinking I meant it that way, and I felt myself getting very red as I
blurted out--

"Yes, grandpapa, I am--we are all glad you've come. But I meant,
perhaps, partly that we've been dressed and waiting for you _such_ a
time, and we were all getting rather cross."

A slight look of disappointment--it was really disappointment, and it
made me feel still more sorry--crossed grandpapa's face at my words.
Then he smiled again, but this time I was sorry to see there _was_ a
little of the old smile in it.

"You are candid, at least, my dear granddaughter. Ah, well! we must take
the goods the gods send us, and not expect impossibilities, I suppose!
And that any one should be glad to see _me_, in the ordinary acceptation
of the words, comes within that category, naturally."

He used such long words, he puzzled me. (I must tell you that I have
been helped here and there to write things that grandpapa said by some
one who knows quite well his sort of way, otherwise I couldn't have got
it quite right, though I remember it all in my own way.) I looked up and
said, "Grandpapa, I don't understand you."

Then his face grew nicer again, and he stooped down to kiss us in his
usual way, saying to me as he did so, "Never mind; such understanding
comes soon enough."

And Tib, who, I suppose, had been gathering courage all this time, then
looked up, and said very prettily--Tib _is_ very pretty, you know, and
that makes what she says pretty too, I think--

"Grandpapa, perhaps we could understand some things--nice things--better
than you think. We do understand that you're very good to us--it was
very good of you to let us come here. We are so happy!"

Grandpapa put his hand under Tib's chin, and raised her face so that he
could see straight into her blue eyes.

"Has any one been putting that into your head, Mercedes?" he said,
almost sternly. "The truth, now, child--for Heaven's sake let me see if
you are true! _Can_ she be with those eyes--those very same eyes?" he
added to himself, so low that no one but I--for I have dreadfully quick
ears--heard it. Tib didn't; she told me so afterwards, but that was
perhaps because she was thinking so what she should answer. But she
looked up fearlessly, and she didn't get red.

"Mrs. Munt has been speaking to us very nicely, grandpapa," she said.
"But she didn't tell me to say anything to you--oh no, grandpapa. All
she did was to make us think perhaps better than we have ever done
before how very good you are to us;" and then, with the last words
Tib's courage began to go away, and the tears came welling up into her
eyes.

Grandpapa looked at her still for a minute, and then he said quietly--

"What I do is no more than you have a right to. Still, at your age the
less thought about rights--and wrongs too--the better, no doubt. And so
you are happy here?"

"Very," we all replied, heartily. And then Gerald--oh, that tiresome
boy!--must needs add--

"And it is _so_ nice without Miss Evans!"

Grandpapa laughed at this, really laughed; but Tib and I could have
pinched Gerald. For, alas! grandpapa added--

"That's right--not to have let me forget about finding a new Miss
Evans;" and if he saw--which I don't know--Tib's and my faces when he
said that, he must have been satisfied that we could _look_ what we felt
very candidly.

Grandpapa only stayed two days; but his visit was really much nicer than
we had fancied it would be. He took us to church on Sunday himself. But,
rather to our disappointment, not to the pretty old church we had passed
on first entering the village, but to one at least three miles off,
which was not at all pretty nor interesting. There was nobody at all
there except very stupid-looking, poor country people, and the sermon
was very long, and the clergyman very dull and stupid himself. To be
sure, the driving there and back in the dog-cart a _little_ made up for
it; but still, we were very vexed when grandpapa said we were to come to
this church every Sunday, if it was fine, in the dog-cart, Tib in front
beside Reeves the groom, and me behind with nurse, and Gerald stuck in
beside Tib; and if it was rainy, in the old fly from the inn in the
village.

We heard grandpapa giving these orders to Reeves on the way home.

"Oh, grandpapa!" I said--I was sitting on the back seat, so I felt more
courageous, I suppose--"must we go every Sunday to that stupid little
church? I'm sure the one in the village is much nicer."

"Have you been there?" said grandpapa, very sharply.

"No, grandpapa," I replied; "we've not been anywhere at all in the
village. But we saw the church the day we came."

"Then you cannot possibly know anything about it; and if you were even
capable of having an opinion, it would not make the slightest difference
to mine," he said, in his very horridest cold way.

But he got nicer again after a bit. He even took us a little walk with
him in the afternoon, round a very pretty way, going away down the lane
into which the gate of Rosebuds opens, and into some woods and copsey
sort of places that were awfully nice. Grandpapa was very quiet, and
didn't speak much; but he wasn't sharp or catching up. Once or twice he
stood still, and looked about him with an expression on his face I had
never seen there before, and he said to us--

"I remember these woods--every tree in them, I believe--as long as I
remember myself;" and then he gave a little sigh.

"Do you really, grandpapa?" we said. "Won't you tell us a little about
when you were a little boy?"

"Can you remember so long ago? Was it as much as a hundred years ago?"
asked Gerald, opening his mouth very wide.

"Not quite so long--but too long ago to tell you stories about," he
replied, and then he walked on without speaking.

Grandpapa had taken us an in-and-out sort of way--we hadn't exactly
noticed where we were going, and we were surprised to find ourselves
suddenly quite near home again. We had come up another lane, on the
other side of Rosebuds, as it were; this lane was skirted by a high
stone wall, a wall that looked something like the one that bordered
our "tangle."

"Is inside there our garden, then?" asked Tib, for grandpapa had just
said to us we were close to home.

"No," said grandpapa, but without looking in the direction she pointed,
"that is not the Rosebuds' garden yet."

"Then what's behind there, please?" said Gerald, in his slow way. I
didn't expect grandpapa to take the trouble of answering him, but he
did.

"There is another garden behind there," he replied, "the garden
of another house, that is to say. But it is a house that has been
uninhabited for a great number of years--the garden must be a perfect
wilderness by now--the place is going to be sold immediately, and the
house pulled down most likely, or else turned into a mere farmhouse--the
owner of the farm over there," and he pointed over our heads, "wants to
buy it. So much the better."

There was a sort of dreaminess in the way grandpapa spoke, as if his
thoughts were looking back somehow far beyond his words.

"May we play in that garden if there's nobody there?" asked Gerald.

"Why should you want to play there?" said grandpapa. "It does not belong
to me."

"And I'm sure we couldn't have a nicer garden than our own, and it's
very big too," said I.

"We may go anywhere we like in _our_ garden, mayn't we?" said Gerald.

"Yes," said grandpapa.

"And if we _could_ get through the door in the wall, we might, mightn't
we?" Gerald continued in his slow, drawly way. He speaks better now, but
then he had a way of going on once he began, all in the same tone so
that you really hardly noticed that he was talking. I have thought since
that grandpapa didn't in the least know what he was consenting to, when
for the second time he replied "yes."

Gerald would have gone on, no doubt, but Tib interrupted him.

"Does that door lead into a tool-house, grandpapa?" she said. Her voice
was soft and gentle. It was only I that had a quick, sharp way of
speaking.

"A tool-house?" repeated grandpapa, "oh, yes, I fancy so." He must have
thought that Tib was asking him if there was a tool-house in the garden.

"Oh," she said in a rather disappointed tone. There wasn't much mystery
about a tool-house!

Just then the lane stopped, and we came out on a path bordered by a
field on one side, and on the other by a wall which _was_ that of our
own garden. Very near the foot-path in the field lay two or three ponds
or pools of water close together, and on one of them floated some large
leaves looking like water-lily leaves, with some bushy high-growing
green among them. Tib darted forward.

"Oh, look, Gussie," she said, "there'll be the most lovely water
forget-me-nots here in the summer, and--" But she stopped short in a
fright, for grandpapa had caught her by the arm and was pulling her
back.

"Child, take care," he said sharply, "another minute, and you would have
been in the water. The edge is as slippery as glass. If the field were
mine, I would soon have these pits filled in," he went on, looking round
as if he wished there were some one at hand to give the order to on the
spot.

"But they are such little pools, grandpapa, they don't take up much
room," I objected, "and if there were water-lilies, and forget-me-nots
there in the summer, it would be a dreadful pity to take them away."

"And when the lilies and forget-me-nots come out, what is more likely
than that you or Mercedes should be stretching over to get them and fall
in," said grandpapa.

"But if we did it wouldn't hurt us," said I. "If Tib fell in, I would
pull her out, and if I fell in, she would pull me out."

"And if both Tib and Gussie fell in I would pull them both out," said
Gerald, feeling, I suppose, that he had been left rather out in the
cold.

Grandpapa, who had been poking at the back of the pit with his stick,
turned sharp round upon us. "Children," he said, "listen to me. If one
of you, or two of you, or all of you fell into one of those ponds, you
would be drowned--as certainly as that I am standing here, you would be
drowned. They are very, _very_ deep--there would be no chance of saving
you, far less than in a larger piece of water, even if it were as deep.
I cannot have the pits filled up nor railed round, for the place does
not belong to me, and I cannot ask anything of the person it does belong
to. All I can do is to make you promise--to make you give your word of
honour, if you know what that means--that you will never come here
alone, and never try to reach flowers; if you come this way with nurse,
you must pass by as quickly as possible. Now, do you hear? Do you quite
understand? Have I your promise?"

We all stood still, looking and feeling rather frightened.

"Do you promise?" repeated grandpapa.

"Yes, grandpapa," we all said together, "we do promise."

"That's right," he said, and then we all walked on in silence.
Grandpapa's earnestness had impressed us. I think the same thought was
in all our minds: "He must love us, after all, or he would not be so
afraid of our being drowned." I don't think we had ever felt ourselves
of so much consequence before.

"Was ever anybody drowned in those pools, please, grandpapa?" I ventured
to ask.

"Not that I know of," he said; "but two or three cows have been drowned
there. The place is exceedingly dangerous--it is a shame to leave it so.
I shall speak to Farmer Blake about it when he comes into possession."

Then we went in to tea, and early the next morning grandpapa went back
to London.

But oh! I am forgetting--before he went he told us another thing. Our
holidays were over already. He had found us another Miss Evans! No; I
am joking. It was not quite so bad as that. He _couldn't_ find another
Miss Evans, so he had had to make another plan. We were to have a tutor
instead of a governess; and I don't think we were sorry to hear it.
The tutor was a young man living in the town, two stations from _our_
station, and he was to come every morning, except Saturday, for two
hours. That wasn't so bad, was it? He wasn't to come before half-past
ten, so we could have an hour and a half's play in our dear garden
before he came, and all the afternoons to ourselves; for we were quite
sure we could do all the preparing of our lessons in the evening, and
grandpapa had always been very sensible about not wanting us to have too
many lessons to do.

It turned out very well. Mr. Markham began to come that very week, but
he was really very nice, and he didn't give us too much to do, though
what he did give was pretty hard, for he would have it done very well.
Only when we did try he was pleased, and told us so. But of course we
did not see very much of him, as he was very busy at his home, and he
had to leave as soon as ever lessons were over, to get back in time.

We went on with our fancy play in the tangle. In the mornings it was
hardly worth while beginning it, for if you have ever played at that
sort of game you will know that it needs a comfortable feeling of plenty
of time before you can get into it properly. We should have liked to
dress up a little for it, but nurse wouldn't let us do so till the
weather was warmer, and we were obliged to promise her never to take off
our hats and jackets in the garden for fear of catching cold. We were
more in danger of "catching hot," Gerald told her, for we really worked
pretty hard, particularly at getting the summer-house into order. We got
some nails and a hammer from Mrs. Munt, and hammered the broken seats
together again; we fastened on the door rather cleverly by making hinges
of an old leather belt of Gerald's, and we put up one or two shelves on
the walls, as we called them, on which the princess, or heiress--we
called her sometimes one, and sometimes the other--could keep her
tea-cups and saucers in her tower. These tea-cups and saucers were the
remains of an old toy set, which Mrs. Munt had found and given us to
play with--no doubt, Tib and I said to each other, the "young ladies"
had played with them long ago!

Then we "carted" heaps of dry leaves from one corner, where they were
really dry and not sodden, to make a bed for her. This carting was an
uncertain sort of business, for we had to be content with Gerald's
wheelbarrow, which was painfully low and little, except when we could
get hold of the gardener's standing about. And _his_ was, on the
contrary, disagreeably heavy and big. But at last, one fine afternoon
we came to an end of our labours, and stood surveying them with
considerable satisfaction.

"It really looks quite nice and comfortable," Tib said. "I really think
to-morrow the baron may carry her off to the tower--he's to pretend, you
know, to be only taking her out a walk in her litter."

"A _walk_ in a litter," I said; "why, a litter's a lying-down-in thing,
and we haven't got anything the least like one."

"Well, then, a walk on her feet," said Tib, testily; "that did very well
the other day," for you must understand that we had acted it all several
times, and then we found what was wanting in the way of scenery, &c.

"If only we had the dungeon," she went on. "It's a very poor pretence to
call those steps the dungeon--besides, they're horribly damp and dirty."

"Oh, for that part of it, all the better," I said. "Dungeons always are
damp and dirty."

"But my frock?" said Tib, ruefully. "I _can't_ sit down on those steps
without getting it horribly spoilt. If we could but get into the
tool-house!"

Gerald, who was standing beside us--we were close to the door in the
wall--gave a sudden exclamation and darted off. Tib and I looked at each
other in surprise. "What's the matter with him?" we said. But he was
back again in a moment, holding something in his hand. As he came near
us he put both his hands behind his back.

"I've got something," he said. "I'd forgot about it. It was the day you
teased me I found it. And I hid it, and I was afraid it was lost among
the leaves, and all that, but it wasn't. I'd hidden it safe. Guess what
it is."

We tried, but we couldn't. Gerald raised his hand slowly. "Shut your
eyes," he said; and we shut them. "Now open them;" we opened them. "What
is it?" we said, breathlessly.

"The key of the door!" he said, solemnly.

"The key of the tool-house!" exclaimed Tib. "How do you know it is it?
Where did you find it?"

"I found it among the prickly things on the floor of the summer-house,"
he replied. "It's quite dry and clean, see!" and so it was, as if it had
been packed in sawdust.

"But how do you know what key it is?" we asked.

"I tried it--I stayed behind a minute that day; you didn't notice. It is
the key. It fits _pairfittly_," said Gerald. "Only it's very stiff, and
my hands wasn't quite strong enough. If we all try, perhaps."

He put the key into the lock. Yes, it was evident it _was_ the key, lost
for who knows how many years. How queer that no one had ever had another
made; there was another tool-house, and one was enough, perhaps. But
still, it did seem queer. First Tib, then I, tried to turn it, but it
was no use.

"If we put a stick through the end of the key, we might turn it that
way."

"But it might break it; don't you remember we broke the nursery door key
in London by trying to turn it with a tooth-brush handle?" I said. "It
wants oiling, Tib--that's it; not the key, perhaps, but the lock. We
must wait till to-morrow, and get some oil in one of the doll's cups,
and a feather, and then I'm sure it'll do. But what a bother to have to
wait till to-morrow!"

There was no help for it, however. Wait till to-morrow we must.




CHAPTER VI.

OPEN, SESAME.

  "I know thee not; but well my heart
   Interprets, darling, what thou art;
   Light of some old ancestral hall,
   Queen-gem of some proud coronal!
   For, certes, such a perfect grace,
   Such lustrous loveliness of face,
   Such artless majesty as thine
   Proclaims thee of no sordid line!"
       _The Unknown Portrait_--SIR NOEL PATON.


There was time the next morning, before Mr. Markham came, for coaxing
a little oil out of Mrs. Munt, and fetching a feather from the
poultry-yard, but for no more. For Mrs. Munt, kind as she was, very
naturally objected to giving us the oil in one of the best tea-cups,
which Gerald had brought for the purpose, thinking it must be "an old
one," which it was indeed, though not in his sense of the word. So Tib
ran off to the princess's tower for one of the doll ones, and Gerald and
I went in the other direction for a long feather. And by the time that
we were ready for operations, it was within a quarter of an hour of
lessons, and being rather sensible children in some ways--we had early
learnt experience and responsibility in our own affairs, having no one
to advise or arrange for us in such matters--we decided it was better to
wait till we were sure of plenty of, and uninterrupted, time.

"You see, if Fanny came shouting for us just as we had got into the
tool-house, she might see it, and it would be no longer a private place
of our own; we must keep it quite for our own," I said.

"_Certainly_," said Tib. "You know I asked grandpapa about it, and he
didn't seem to mind."

But lessons that morning did go very slowly. Once or twice Mr. Markham
had to call us to attention, and there was even a slight threat on
his part of "extra work to be done for to-morrow," if the rest of our
preparation should not prove better done. It was not the fault of the
preparation--which had been done as well as usual--it was that our heads
were all agog over the tool-house! But we pulled up after this, and
things ended fairly well.

And at last--though not till after our dinner, for we were never allowed
more than "a run," and that well within view of the schoolroom window,
between lessons and dinner--we found ourselves again in safety before
the door in the wall--oil-cup and feather in hand.

We set to work methodically--with the help of nurse's largest scissors
and a skewer--how Gerald had got the skewer I don't know: we raked out
all the little bits of dirt and rubbish that had collected in the
lock; then we oiled it as thoroughly as we knew how, though under the
circumstances this was certainly a process of working in the dark. Then
we carefully inserted the key--it went in to perfection, but we all
looked at each other, and grew hot with excitement when it came to the
moment for trying to turn it.

Tib as the eldest had the first try--a barren honour; she hurt her hands
over it, but it would not move--not a hair's breadth! Then it came to
me. I have larger hands than Tib, and stronger muscles; I fancy I set
to work in a more business-like manner. With me the key turned--with
groans and grunts, it must be allowed--but still it turned--half-way!
then I too looked blank. Fortunately it did not refuse to turn back
again, and then I took it out and looked at it reproachfully.

Gerald laid hands on it. It was _his_ turn, but what I had failed in, it
was not likely his little, fat, stumpy paws would achieve. But Gerald is
sharp in some ways. He first examined the key all over. Then he took up
the oily feather again.

"See here," he said, "some parts of the key are quite oily, but some,
inside, are quite dry. We should have oiled the key as well as the
lock."

He was right; his small grasp did what ours had failed in. Grunting and
groaning still, but forced to obey, the old key woke from its sleep of
thirty or forty years and did the work it was made for. And in another
minute we had tugged at the door till it moved on its rusty hinges--you
will understand afterwards how they came to be no rustier--slowly
opening and revealed--

What did it reveal? For a few minutes we were too dazzled to
tell--really dazzled--as well as amazed. A perfect flood of light seemed
to pour out upon us, and instead of the dingy, musty tool-house we had
been expecting, we found ourselves standing at what at first sight
appeared like the entrance to some fairy palace of brightness and
brilliance. We stood, dazed, rubbing our eyes and looking at each other.
_Was_ it magic? Had we chanced upon some such wonder of old world
times as our little heads were stuffed with? Tib--and Gerald too,
perhaps--would have been ready to believe it. Had the door there and
then shut upon us, leaving us but the remembrance of the vision, they
would have lived upon beautiful fancies for the rest of their lives.
But I--practical I--did not long stand bewildered. A slight creak of the
door brought me back to common-place.

"Come inside, quick!" I said, pulling at the others--we were all huddled
together on the steps--"shut the door, or else some one will see the
light through the trees," for I have told you how _very_ dark the tangle
is, even on a bright day. "Stay--dare we shut the door? Is there a
keyhole on the inside? Oh, yes; and not rusty at all," and quick as
thought I drew the key out and fitted it in to the other side; it turned
now with ease. "That's right;" and before Tib or Gerald had found out
for certain whether they were awake or dreaming, we were all three safe
inside the enchanted palace, at liberty to look about us and find out
where we really were.

I feel in a way sorry to explain it. But this is not a fairy story; and
in the end I think you will allow, when you have come to know the whole,
that it _is_ very interesting, perhaps more interesting than a fairy
story after all. So I will go on without leaving you in perplexity any
more.

The place where we found ourselves was a conservatory: it was prettily
built in a high, round-roofed sort of way, so as to catch all the light
and sun-heat possible. It was, to begin with, a very bright afternoon;
then the shrubbery on our side was _very_ dark; high up in the
conservatory there was a band of coloured glass, rich red, and little
bits of every colour at the edge, like a strip of rainbow, through which
the light came in gleams of all sorts of beautiful tints. You can easily
see how startlingly brilliant it had seemed to us; and besides this, the
conservatory itself was not at all in a neglected state. There were few
_pots_ of flowers; the shelves were mostly empty; but there were plants
growing in earth borders along the sides, which were evidently cared
for, as they twined up the walls luxuriantly. And the whole place was
heated, though not very much. _That_, you see, was how the door and the
lock remained in such good condition.

We found out all these particulars for ourselves by degrees; and
gradually we noticed other things. The conservatory had evidently, at
some time or other, been a favourite place to sit in. There was a little
_very_ old and shaky rustic table, and two or three seats to match;
there was a little corner shelf on which still lay two or three old
books. After we had got over our first surprise, we were conscious of
something about the whole place which made the tears come to our eyes.
But our spirits soon rose again.

"_What_ a bower for the princess!" exclaimed Tib.

I felt quite out of patience with her.

"Rubbish!" I said, "I can't think any more of the princess or any
make-up things. This is _far_ more interesting. I want to find out all
about what place it is, and why it is shut up and deserted, as it
evidently is."

"Perhaps it's been shut up for hundreds of years," suggested Gerald.

"_That's_ rubbish, if you like," answered Tib. "It doesn't look as if
anybody lived here, but it's not dirty--scarcely even dusty."

"There must be some other way of getting into it besides our door,
then," I said, "for certainly the _door_ hasn't been opened for a great
many years. If we look about, perhaps we'll find some other entrance."

At first sight there was no appearance of any, and we began to think the
conservatory must, after all, belong to Rosebuds, and that from time to
time the gardener _did_ open the door and get in to clean it. Only why,
then, was it always locked up? Just as we were feeling quite puzzled,
Gerald called out--

"Oh! see here, Tib and Gussie, this is another door--here in the
glass; here's a handle that turns. Why, see, it's a door made of
looking-glass!"

That was why we had not noticed it. It was cleverly managed to imitate
panes, like the rest of the conservatory, and it was somewhat in the
shade in one corner. There was no lock to this door; it opened at once,
and before us we saw a long, rather narrow, covered passage, lighted
by a skylight roof. It was all growing more and more mysterious; half
frightened, but too eager and curious to think of being afraid, on we
ran. The passage ended in a short flight of steps, at the top of which
was another door, a regular proper door this time, with a handle and a
lock, but no key in the lock.

"Oh! supposing it's locked," I cried, excitedly; "it will be too bad. We
can't find out any more."

But it wasn't. The key, as we afterwards found, was inside, and not
turned in the lock. They were evidently not very afraid of robbers. All
the years the house had stood empty, no one had ever broken into it; we
were the first intruders.

We pressed forward. First we found ourselves in a sort of little
ante-room, very small, hardly bigger than a closet, and out of this,
through another door, opened a very large and handsome drawing-room. It
had a row of windows at one side looking out upon a terrace, and a large
bow window at one end, with closely-drawn blinds--we could not see what
it looked on to; the floor was of beautifully polished wood, inlaid in
a pattern such as you see more often in French houses than in English
ones; the two mantelpieces were very high, and beautifully carved,
and from the centre of the ceiling hung an immense gilt and crystal
chandelier, covered up in muslin. There was not much furniture in the
room, and what there was looked stiff and cold: two or three great
cabinets against the walls, and some gilt consol-tables, and in one
corner a group of sofas, and chairs, and arm-chairs all drawn together,
and all in white linen covers. Everything was handsome, and stately, and
melancholy; the very feeling of the room told you it had not been really
lived in for many a day.

But the one thing which caught our attention was a life-size portrait
hanging at the end of the room opposite the bow window. It was the only
picture of any kind, and even though we were ignorant children, we
could see in a moment that it was a very beautiful one. It represented
a young girl, richly dressed in the fashion of a hundred years ago or
more, with long-waisted bodice, and skirt of white satin, looped up
over an under-one of rose-coloured brocade. She was standing on a
terrace--this very terrace we afterwards found--her hat hanging on her
arm, and a greyhound beside her. It was all pretty much the same as one
often sees in portraits of that time, but her face was _so_ charming!
And immediately we saw it, both Gerald and I exclaimed--

"Oh, Tib, she is exactly like you!" and going close to examine it more
particularly, I saw some letters in one corner, and, to my immense
surprise, they were those of the name scored out in the old book,
"Ornaments Discovered," and of Tib's second name also--"Regina." The
initials of the artist--"L.K.," I think--were there also.

"It is my name," said Tib, opening her eyes in astonishment; "how very
strange! Can it be the picture of some great-great-grandmother of ours,
I wonder? But this is not grandpapa's house. How could any portrait of
our family be here?"

We were completely puzzled, but, children-like, we did not think very
much more about it. It was such fun to slide up and down the polished
floor, or to climb over among the shrouded chairs and sofas, and make
ourselves a comfortable nest among them. For it was plain that our
discoveries were not to go further--the large double doors of this
drawing-room were securely locked from the outside.

We went close up to this door, putting our ears to the keyhole even,
and listened, but not the least sound was to be heard.

"The house must be shut up," I said. "There is certainly no one moving
about in it."

"Perhaps it is enchanted," said Gerald, in an awe-struck tone. "Perhaps
that lady is _really_ alive, and the fairies have fastened her up into
that picture till--till--" and he hesitated; his imagination had come to
an end of its flight.

Tib and I looked at each other without speaking. We did not snub Gerald
as we often did for such speeches--somehow it didn't seem so very
impossible! Everything was so strange; the room itself so unlike
anything we had ever seen, the mysterious way into it, the silence
and desertedness, yet the signs of care; above all, the portrait so
wonderfully like Tib, and actually bearing her name. There was no
explaining it by anything we could think of or imagine.

"We may as well use it all to make a play of," said Tib, at last,
returning to her favourite idea. "We can pretend that the lady in the
portrait _is_ the princess something, as Gerald says. Yes, it would be
still nicer to make her be enchanted instead of only shut up, and then,
Gussie, you must help me to plan how she's to be got out."

"But, Tib," I said, "do you think we can come here again? Don't you
think grandpapa would mind, after all he said to us about not making
friends, or going into any houses in the village?"

"And are we making friends?" said Tib. "Unless the portrait comes out of
its frame some day, and begins talking to us, there's certainly nobody
else to talk to here."

"Do you think there's nobody living in the house?" I said, doubtfully.

"I'm sure there's not. Most likely some one comes to dust it every now
and then."

"And don't you remember," said Gerald, "that last Sunday I asked
grandpapa if we might come through the door in the wall if we _could_,
and he said 'yes'? P'r'aps he knew about this place, and didn't mind if
we did come here to play."

"Perhaps," I said; "anyway we can ask him the next time he comes."

"We needn't say anything about it to Mrs. Munt, or nurse," said Tib,
decidedly. "As long as we haven't been told _not_ to come, we're not
disobeying, and it's much nicer not to ask any one but grandpapa
himself."

With that I quite agreed, especially as I felt sure grandpapa himself
would like it better. We knew we were doing no mischief; there was
nobody to speak to, as Tib had said, so we felt quite at ease, and spent
a most agreeable afternoon. When we had examined everything there was in
the big drawing-room, or saloon, as Tib preferred to call it--and that
did not take us very long; there were no curiosities or small ornaments
about, as in the Rosebuds drawing-room--we began to plan again about
our play story. We arranged it most beautifully, and the portrait was
a great help, for it almost gave us another actor, as we could always
pretend it was the princess, when Tib was wanted for another person.
And it was such a wonderfully life-like picture--you could really have
fancied its expression changed as we talked to it.

But at last we began to get frightened that we should be missed at home
if we stayed any longer.

"We must go, Gussie," said Tib, "let us all say good-night to the
princess. It is sad to leave you alone here, princess," she went on,
turning to the portrait, and speaking in the tone of one of the ladies
in the play, who were going to help her to escape, "but, alas, there is
no other way to do. If we stayed longer we should only be suspected of
plotting, so we must resign ourselves."

"And I dare say you're pretty well accustomed to being left alone by
this time. You must be nearly a hundred years old, though you look so
young," said Gerald, as he bowed to her. I could not help laughing,
though Tib was rather vexed.

"I wish you wouldn't think it clever to turn everything into ridicule,
Gerald," but he looked up with such a surprised face that we saw he
hadn't been in fun at all.

"There's one thing we'd better do if we want ever to get in here again,"
I said. "We must hide the key of the door leading from the passage. I
dare say the person who comes to dust will never notice it's not there.
They can't be in the habit of locking it regularly; but it's as well to
hide it," and so saying, I took the key out of the lock and slipped it
inside a drawer of one of the big cabinets, where it may be lying still,
for all I know (I must look, by the by: writing this all out has
reminded me of several things I had forgotten).

Then we closed the door carefully and ran down the passage to the
conservatory again, where we found everything just as we had left
it--_our_ key, as we called it, sticking in the lock inside. It was
still rather stiff to turn--and the next morning we oiled it again--but
we managed to unlock it, and then to lock the door again on the outside.

And Gerald ran off with the key to hide it again in the summer-house;
only we wrapped it up in paper before burying it in the fir dust.

"Who would have thought," said Tib, as we ran in, "who _could_ have
thought, what we should find this afternoon?"

But our surprises, as you shall hear, were not yet at an end.




CHAPTER VII.

GRANDPAPA'S SECRETARY.

     ... "Children are the best judges of character at first
   sight in the world."--HOGG.


Grandpapa did not come down to Rosebuds again for three or four weeks.
Mrs. Munt wrote to him regularly to tell him how we were, and we, once
or twice--it was she who put it in our heads, I must confess--wrote a
little scrap to put inside hers, for which he told her to thank us when
he wrote back to her, but he never sent _us_ any letter.

We didn't mind his not coming, except that now and then we thought we
should like to tell him of our discovery, and hear what he said about
it. But we were very happy; we never cared to go out for walks, which I
don't think nurse regretted; we always said we were much happier playing
about. And the conservatory and the saloon became our regular haunts
every, or almost every, afternoon. No one ever disturbed us--we never
heard the slightest sound in the house where the big drawing-room was;
indeed, for all we knew, it might not have been a house at all, but
just that one large room, for the other door--the proper door of the
room--was never opened. We tried it two or three times; it was always
firmly locked. But still it was clear that somebody came to dust the
room and the conservatory, if not every day, at least two or three
times a week, for they were not allowed to get any dustier.

It was a good thing we were quiet children, not given to mischief, or
rough and wild, otherwise we might have done harm in some way, such
as breaking the glass in the conservatory, or spoiling the beautiful
"parquet" floor. And we certainly would have been discovered. It was
partly the fear of this that made us so careful, as well as a queer
fancy we had that the picture on the wall--the princess, as we still
called her--watched all we did, and that she would be very vexed if we
were not quite good.

"Of course," Tib used to say, "it's a great honour to be allowed to play
in a palace, and we must show we are to be trusted."

For after a while we got tired of our play-story about the baron and the
humpback and all the rest of it, and then we pretended that we came to
visit the princess in her beautiful palace, and that she was very kind
to us indeed.

Sometimes we brought our books and work with us; on a rainy day we
always found it difficult to get to our secret haunts, for of course we
wouldn't tell stories about it, and nurse naturally didn't approve of
our going out in the damp. But after a while, when nurse found that we
came in quite dry, and that we never caught cold even when she left us
to our own devices on a wet day, she gave up being so fidgety, and so we
often did get to our palace all the same.

One Friday at last there came a letter, saying grandpapa would be down
the next day and a gentleman with him.

"What a bore that he's not coming alone," said I. "We shan't have a
word with him, and the gentleman's sure to be one of those stupid
Parliamentary people that talk to grandpapa about 'the House,' and
'so-and-so's bill,' all the time." For we had had some experience of
grandpapa's friends sometimes at Ansdell, when we had come in to dessert
and heard them talking. "I wonder if they go on all day long in the
'House' about bills, Tib? There must be a fearful lot of people who
never pay theirs if it takes all those clever gentlemen all their time
to be settling about them in the 'House.'" We were rather proud of
knowing what the "House" meant, you see. We thought from grandpapa's
being in it, that we knew all about the government things.

Tib looked rather solemn.

"I suppose it's because of the National Debt," she said. "It shows how
careful people should be not to spend too much, doesn't it, Gussie? But
I'm not sure that I care to speak to grandpapa more than usual. I'm so
awfully afraid of his stopping us going to the palace."

"_Are_ you?" said I. "I'm not. That is to say, if I thought he'd mind
it, I wouldn't go there. What I want is to _find out_ about it from him.
I have still such an idea that it has something to do with the old
mystery."

"If I thought that," said Tib, "I'd be far too frightened to tell him
about it."

We spent a long time that afternoon in the big drawing-room. When we
were coming away, we all somehow felt a little melancholy.

"We are pretty sure not to be able to come to-morrow, and certainly not
on Sunday," said Tib, sadly. "Dear princess," she went on, looking at
the portrait, "you mustn't forget us if we don't come to see you for a
few days. It won't be _our_ fault, you may be sure;" and really we could
have fancied that the sweet face smiled at us as we turned to go.

We were playing on the lawn when grandpapa arrived the next day. Nurse
had intended to have us all solemnly prepared, like the last time, but
he came by an earlier train, and somehow she didn't know about it early
enough, so we were all in our garden things quite comfortably messy,
when we heard the sound of wheels, and looking round, saw to our
astonishment that it was the dog-cart.

There was no help for it; we hadn't even time to wash our hands,
and there was no use trying to get out of the way, for to have gone
hurry-skurrying off as if we were ashamed would have vexed grandpapa
more than anything, especially as he had a friend with him. So we
marched boldly across the lawn and stood waiting, while the gentlemen
got down.

"How do you do, grandpapa?" I said. "We didn't expect you quite so
soon."

"Indeed," said he, as he kissed us in his usual cool sort of way, "an
unwelcome surprise--eh?"

Tib got red at this, and looked as if she were going to cry. But I
didn't feel inclined to be put down like that, before a stranger, too.

"No, grandpapa; it's not an unwelcome surprise, but we would have liked
to have been tidier; you know we generally are _quite_ tidy when you see
us."

"For my part, I prefer to see small people when they're _not_ very
tidy," said a pleasant, hearty voice; and then the owner of it came
round from the other side of the dog-cart where he had jumped down. "You
must introduce me, Mr. Ansdell, please, to my--small, I was going to
say, but I'm surprised to see the word would be almost a
libel--cousins."

"Umph," said grandpapa, "'cousins,' in the Scotch sense; how many
degrees removed, it would be difficult to say."

"_I've_ not been taught to count you so very far away," said the
gentleman, good-humouredly, but with something in his tone that showed
he wasn't the sort of person to be very easily put down; "besides, sir,
as I'm your _godson_ as well as your cousin----"

"I might be a little more civil, eh, Charles?" said grandpapa, laughing
a little. "Ah, well, I'm too old to learn, I fear. Nevertheless, I have
no objection to your calling each other cousins if you choose. Mercedes,
Gustava, and Gerald--your cousin, Mr. Charles Truro."

We looked at him, and he looked at us. What we saw was a well-made,
pleasant-looking young man, not very tall, though not short, with
merry-looking grey eyes, close cut brown hair, and a particularly kindly
expression, a great improvement upon most of grandpapa's gentlemen
friends, who never looked at us as if they saw us.

"Mercedes and Gustava," he repeated, slowly. "I thought one of them was
called Re----"

But grandpapa interrupted him.

"Mercedes is an absurd name for an English child," he said. "It was a
fancy of poor Gerald's--they were in Spain, you know."

"But you needn't call Tib 'Mercedes,' unless you like," I said,
boldly--I don't really know what spirit of defiance, perhaps of
curiosity, made me say it--"she has another name; her second name is
Regina, like----"

Would you believe it? I was on the point of saying "like the picture;"
but I cut myself short before I said more, and even had I not stopped,
grandpapa's tone would have startled me into doing so.

"Will you be so good, Gustava, as to answer questions and remarks that
are addressed to you, and those only?" he said, in his horrible, icy
way.

_I_ felt myself getting red now, especially as I was certain Mr. Truro
was looking at me. I made a silent vow that I wouldn't try to be nicer
to grandpapa, and that I would _certainly_ not tell him about our
secret. This comforted me a little, and I glanced up, to find that the
stranger was looking at me, but in such a nice way that I couldn't have
felt vexed if I had tried.

"Will you take me round the garden?" he said. "I am quite stiff with
sitting so long."

He spoke to us all, but I think he meant it most for me. Grandpapa
didn't seem to mind. I think that when he had said anything very
crabbed, he _was_ sorry, though he wouldn't say so.

"Don't be very long, Charles," he said, as he went into the house and we
turned the other way, "I shall want you to look over those papers."

"All right, sir, I won't be long," Mr. Truro called back in his cheery
tone.

"Why does he want you to do his papers?" I asked.

Mr. Truro laughed.

"Because I'm acting as Mr. Ansdell's secretary just now," he said.

Tib looked disappointed.

"Oh," she said, "I thought you were a----" and she stopped.

"Say on," said Mr. Truro.

"A--a gentleman," said Tib.

"Well, I hope I am," he said, smiling.

"But doesn't he," I said, nodding my head towards the house, for I
perfectly understood what Tib meant, "pay you for being that?"

"In point of fact Mr. Ansdell does _not_ pay me," he said. "What I learn
from being with him is far more valuable than money to me. But all the
same, if your grandfather _did_ pay me for my services, _that_ would not
make me less of a gentleman!" and Mr. Truro stood erect, and gave a
little toss to his head, which showed he could be in earnest when he
liked. But then he laughed again, and we saw he was not really vexed.
"May I make a remark in turn?" he said. "Are you young people in the
habit of talking of Mr. Ansdell as 'he' and 'him?' 'She,' I know, is
'the cat.' I have yet to learn who 'he' is."

We laughed, but we blushed too, a little.

"We don't always," said Tib; "but you see you _are_ a cousin; mayn't we
tell him things?" she exclaimed, impulsively, turning to Gerald and me.
"He's got such a kind face, and--and we haven't anybody like other
children."

Mr. Truro turned his face away for half a second. I fancy he didn't want
us to see how sorry he looked. By this time we had sauntered round to
the other side of the lawn, out of sight of the house almost. There was
a garden seat near where we stood. Mr. Truro took Tib and me by the
hand, and Gerald trotted after.

"Let's sit down," he said. "Now, that's comfortable. Yes, dears, I
_am_ a cousin, and I think you'll find me a faithful one. Do tell me
'things.' I won't let you say anything not right of your grandfather;
there is no man living I respect more. But perhaps I may help you to
understand him better."

"Is he never cross to you?" asked Tib; "at least, not so much cross as
that horrid laughy-at-you-way--laughy without being funny or nice, you
know."

"Yes, I do know," he answered. "I think Mr. Ansdell is inclined to be
that way to everybody a little. I wish you could hear how he makes some
of them smart now and then in the House."

"The people who don't pay their bills--the people who make the National
Debt, do you mean?" I asked.

"The how much?" asked our new cousin in his turn, opening his eyes very
wide.

And when I explained what I meant, about all the talk we had heard about
_bills_, and how Tib had read something about the National Debt, and
thought it must mean that, you should have seen how he laughed; not a
bit like grandpapa, but just _roaring_. I know better now, of course. I
know that there are different kinds of bills, and that the ones we had
heard of being talked about in Parliament are new plans or proposals
that the gentlemen there--"members," like grandpapa--want to have made
into laws, because they think they would be good laws. I know, too,
pretty well--at least a little--about the National Debt, and that
somehow it isn't a bad thing, though little debts are very bad things.
I don't see how, but I suppose I shall understand when _I'm_ big, that
things that are bad when they're little aren't always bad when they're
very big.

When Mr. Truro had finished laughing, he began to listen to all we had
to tell him. You would hardly believe how much we told him. Indeed, when
we thought it over afterwards we could hardly believe it ourselves; to
think that here was a strange gentleman we hadn't known an hour, whose
name we had never heard in our lives, and that we were talking to him
as we had never before talked to anybody. He had such a way of looking
as if he really _cared_ to hear. I think it was that that made it so
easy to talk to him; and then, of course, his being a cousin made a
difference. He wasn't a very near one, but I have noticed that sometimes
rather far-off cousins care for you quite as much or more than much
nearer ones. And anything in the shape of a cousin was a great deal to
us; we had never heard of having any at all.

After we had chattered away for some time, some little remark, I forget
what exactly, something about what we did with ourselves all day after
lessons were over, seeing that we had no friends or companions, for we
had told him about grandpapa's not allowing us to know any neighbours;
something of that kind brought us dreadfully near the subject of our
discovery. We had already said _something_, though very little, about
the old book with the scored-out name, and Mr. Truro listened eagerly,
though it struck me afterwards more than at the time that he had not
seemed very surprised.

And when we did not at once answer about how we amused ourselves, he
repeated the question. We looked at each other. Then Tib got rather red,
and said, quietly,

"We can't tell you all we do, at least, I don't think we can," she said,
glancing at Gerald and me.

Mr. Truro looked a little startled.

"Why not?" he said. "I am sure, at least I think I may be, that you
wouldn't do anything you shouldn't. If, for example, you had been
tempted to make friends with any of the village children, it would be
much better to tell your grandfather; he might not mind if they were
good children, even if they were not of the same class as you. But it
would be wrong not to tell him."

We began to feel a little frightened, and for the first time a misgiving
came over us that perhaps grandpapa might be angry at our having played
in the palace. I suppose our faces grew so solemn that Mr. Truro felt
more uneasy.

"Come now," he said, "can't you tell me all about it? I don't look very
ogre-y, do I? That is, if you've no real objection to telling me before
you tell Mr. Ansdell."

"We meant to tell him; we were going to tell him to-day," I said.
"Indeed, we, at least I, _wanted_ to tell him. I thought perhaps he'd
explain, or that we'd find out about it. But he isn't as kind this time
as he was the last, and perhaps he'd be angry, really angry. I never
thought before that it was a thing he could be angry about, did you,
Tib?"

"No," said Tib, faintly; "and it would be so dreadful not to go there
any more."

Gerald began to cry.

Mr. Truro's face grew graver and graver.

"My dear children," he began, "my dear little cousins, I must speak very
earnestly to you. You must tell this secret, whatever it is, to your
grandfather. It might not make him angry just now, but if you did _not_
tell him, I very much fear it might."

"But he is so very sharp to-day," said Tib; "you could see he was. And
when he is like that we can't tell things properly, and it somehow seems
as if we were naughty when we aren't really. We can't tell him _to-day_,
can we?"

Mr. Truro reflected.

"It is true," he said, "that Mr. Ansdell is _particularly_ busy and
worried. He has been terribly overworked lately; indeed, he came down
here expressly to be able to work without interruption. Can't you
confide in me, children? I promise to advise you to the very best
of my ability."

"And you wouldn't tell him--grandpapa, I mean," said Tib, correcting
herself, "without _telling_ us you were going to?"

"Certainly not. I should have no right to tell him without your leave,"
he replied.

We all looked at each other again.

"I suppose we'd better, then," I said. "You begin, Tib. It's rather
difficult to think where it began," I went on. "It had to do with
grandpapa telling us so about not knowing the neighbours, or making
friends with any one, and we had never heard of Rosebuds before, you
know, and then I remembered seeing it in the book, and Tib likes
mysteries so, and----"

"Take breath, Gussie, there's no such dreadful hurry," said Mr. Truro,
and his face grew more smiling as I went on.

"We fixed to make a story about it. It didn't seem like prying to play
at it that way," said Tib.

And then we went on to tell all about the imprisoned princess, and the
old arbour, and the supposed tool-house, which was to be a dungeon, and
Gerald finding the key, and just everything--all that I have written; I
needn't tell it all again. And with every word Mr. Truro's kind face
grew kinder and brighter; all the grave, uneasy look went quite out
of it, and this, of course, made it much easier to tell it all quite
comfortably. By the time we had quite finished--it took a good while,
for Gerald _would_ interrupt to tell that _he_ had found the key, and
_he_ had made it turn when Tib and Gussie couldn't--Mr. Truro's face had
grown more than bright, it looked quite beaming.

"And the portrait of the princess is like Tib, you say--Mercedes, I
_should_ say? I would like best of all to call you 'Regina';" and he
passed his hand softly over Tib's dark hair.

"Awfully like Tib, only prettier," I said, bluntly. But Tib didn't mind.
Something in Mr. Truro's tone had caught her attention.

"Did you ever know any one called Regina?" she asked. "You seem to like
it so."

Mr. Truro did not answer for a moment. Then he said, quietly, "It is a
family name with me, too. I have heard it all my life. You know I am
your cousin."

"Oh, of course," we all said.

Then he went on to talk of what we had been telling him.

"Will you let me think over about it?" he said. "I am the last person to
advise you not to tell your grandfather _everything_, but I do not think
it would be wise to tell him anything just now, as he is extremely busy
and worried. I will tell you what I think you should do before I go."

Of course we agreed readily to what he said.




CHAPTER VIII.

STEPPED OUT OF THE FRAME.

  "And, even as one on household stairs,
   Who meets an angel unawares,
   Might hold his breath; in silent awe
   We stood."
      _The Unknown Portrait_--SIR NOEL PATON.


We saw very little of grandpapa during this visit, and not as much of
Mr. Truro as we would have liked. For it was some very bothering time
about government things, and everybody that had to do with them was
very busy. We came in to dessert, as we always did, and grandpapa
was kind in his own way. He seemed pleased that we were such good
friends with Mr. Truro. I remember he said something to him about his
having done already what _he_--grandpapa--had not been able to do
himself--"gained our hearts," or something like that. And Mr. Truro
answered. "You could if you would, sir, or probably you _have_ if you
would but think so." But grandpapa only shook his head, though he smiled
a little in a nice way.

And then they began talking again about all the papers and writings they
had to do, and we got tired of sitting still, and fidgeted with the wine
glasses and things on the table, so that grandpapa told us we had better
go to bed.

The next day, Sunday, was pouring wet.

We didn't see either grandpapa or our cousin till we were sitting in
church. We had come with nurse in the one-horse fly, which knew it
always had to come for us on wet Sundays, and we didn't hear anything of
the two gentlemen. We couldn't bear the long drive in the stuffy fly,
and we did not like the church, for the clergyman was old, and mumbled
his words, and the music wasn't nice nor anything else.

"If we might only go to the pretty church in the village!" we whispered
to each other, as we whispered every Sunday. For this about the church
was the thing we disliked at Rosebuds, and at Ansdell we loved going to
church. It was so nice; beautiful hummy music and lovely singing, and
all so pretty. And the clergyman with a nice clear voice, and not too
long sermons. And--perhaps you will be shocked at this--everybody at
Ansdell knew us, and there was always a little sort of rustle when we
went in, and I could almost hear the school-girls talking in whispers
about "our young ladies' hats;" and if we happened to see one of them we
knew, and gave her a little nod and smile, she looked as proud as proud!
It was just as different as could be from this ugly, stupid little
church that grandpapa had taken it into his head to make us go to here,
and we were very pleased when we saw Mr. Truro coming up the aisle after
grandpapa, both of them looking so nice and grand, even though in a way
we felt ashamed for our cousin to see what an ugly little church it was.

"He'll see for himself," I whispered to Tib, "and perhaps he'll say
something to grandpapa."

For we were beginning to think of Mr. Truro as a sort of good fairy who
was to put everything right.

Grandpapa and he had driven over in the dog-cart of course; they didn't
mind the rain, though I'm sure _we_ didn't mind it either, for that
matter--we should only have been too happy to drive over in the dog-cart
under waterproofs and mackintoshes; and when we were getting into the
fly after church, Gerald looked so woebegone, that Mr. Truro took pity
on him, and picked him out again.

"I'll find a corner for you where you shan't get wet," he said, in his
nice, bright way.

Lucky Gerald! we heard him chattering as he went off in Mr. Truro's
arms. "You know it _is_ worstest for me, isn't it? for I'm only seven,
and it does make my head ache so."

I suppose he had--what is it you call it?--squeams of conscience, is
that the word? I must ask Re--oh, how stupid I am! that it was selfish
of him to desert us. He always takes refuge in his being the youngest
and "only seven," as it was _then_, when he is afraid he is going to be
blamed.

But, after all, it was a good deal better in the fly without him. Nurse
doesn't think it rude of us to whisper when we are alone with her, so
Tib and I could say anything we liked to each other all the way home,
without Gerald's rosy round face poking in between us every moment to
say, "_What_ did you say, Tib?" "I can't hear, Gussie!"

What we did keep saying to each other was mostly about Mr. Truro. What
was he going to fix we should do? Would he "think it over" till he found
out we should tell grandpapa at once; and if grandpapa were worried, and
said in a hurry we must never go to our palace any more, how horrible
it would be!

"I don't _think_ he will," said Tib. "He's so very understanding. If
he could only see the place himself, he would quite understand that we
can't get any harm there, or do any mischief."

"Yes," I said, "I wish we could have shown it him. Besides, if he's our
cousin, and has heard about 'Reginas,' he _might_ find out something
about our princess."

But Tib didn't care about this idea.

"I don't want it spoilt," she said; "I've got used to her being just our
princess, and to there being a mystery. I don't want to undo it."

It didn't look very like undoing it. We never saw Mr. Truro all that
afternoon, and it was one of the longest I ever remember. It cleared up
about tea-time, and we went three times round the lawn, on the gravel
path, of course, and we saw grandpapa at the drawing-room window, which
he had thrown open for some air, as we came in, and he asked us if we
had seen Mr. Truro. And when we said no, he turned away, saying, rather
crossly, "I wish he'd be quick; I'm sure it's not a very tempting day
for a long walk," and Tib and I rather agreed with Gerald that we
shouldn't much care to be grandpapa's "Scretchetary."

But late that evening--near bed-time it was--we heard a quick step
coming to the schoolroom door.

"May I come in?" said Mr. Truro's voice.

We all jumped up to welcome him, and nurse discreetly retired.

"I can't stay long, dears," he said, "and we are off first thing
to-morrow morning. But listen; I don't think you need speak to your
grandfather about your discovery just now. Wait till he comes back the
next time, a fortnight hence. I shall come with him, and he will not
then be nearly so busy. I have satisfied myself that you cannot come to
any harm in your palace, and I am sure you will do no mischief there."

"No; and _perhaps_ grandpapa knew of it--what do you think?--the day he
said we might go through the door in the wall if we could. And he only
forbade us making friends with people."

"Not with portraits," said Mr. Truro, with a smile. "Well, good-bye, my
dear little cousins. I can't tell you how pleased I am to have made
friends with you."

He stooped and kissed us all, hurriedly, for we heard doors opening,
and a voice in the distance, which we were quite sure was grandpapa's,
"Where is Mr. Truro?" and then he was gone, and we didn't see him again
the next morning.

It almost seemed like a dream his having been at Rosebuds at all,
especially when we again found ourselves in the saloon that afternoon,
our dear princess smiling down at us as usual.

"You don't know, princess, what a nice new cousin we have got," we said
to her, for we had got into the way of telling her everything that
interested us; "I'm sure you'd like him, and I'm sure he'd like _you_,"
Tib went on, and we really could have fancied the sweet, proud face gave
a little amused smile. "I think he was very sorry not to come to see
you, but perhaps he will the next time he's here."

Then we went on with some of our usual plays, and we were as happy as
could be. It seemed somehow a good long while since we had been in the
palace, though in reality it was only three days, and we were tempted
to stay a little later than usual. But just as we were thinking we must
go, a rather queer thing happened. You remember my telling you that the
other door of the saloon, the real big door, which must have been the
regular way of coming into the room from the rest of the house--if there
was a house--I don't think we had really ever thought seriously if there
was a house, or if the saloon was a sort of pavilion in a garden all by
itself--well, this door was locked, firmly locked; we had tried it two
or three times, but it was quite fast. Not stuck or stiff, or anything
like that, but quite locked. But this day, just as we were coming away,
we heard a little, very little, faint squeak, like some one trying to
open or shut a door very, very softly, and looking at the big heavy gilt
handles--it was a double door, with two sets of handles and all that,
you understand--we distinctly saw one of them turn, and then all was
quiet and motionless again.

We looked at each other, and then we all darted forward--I think it
_was_ rather brave of us--and seized _the_ handle. It turned certainly,
easily enough, as door handles generally do, but that was all. The door
didn't open; it was as firmly fastened as before.

"If we hadn't _all_ seen it," said Tib, "I should have thought it was
fancy."

But we were satisfied that it wasn't.

"Whoever turned the handle must have locked the door again on the other
side as quick as thought," I said. "They must have been peeping in at us
without our hearing, and then when they heard the squeak the handle made
as they were closing the door again, they must have quietly locked it,
expecting us to come to see who was there. I wonder who it was!"

We all wondered, but in vain.

"It _may_ have only been the person who comes in to dust," said Tib;
"there must be such a person, unless the princess herself comes out
of her frame in the night to do it. Only if it were that person, most
likely she'd have come in and asked us who we were, and what business we
had there; it's very queer."

We decided when we went home that the next day we should make our way
in as quietly as we possibly could, so that if any one were there, they
shouldn't hear us in time to run away.

"And we'll sit quite still all the afternoon," said Gerald; "we won't
make the least bit of noise, so that they'll think we're not there, and
then they'll come straight in."

"They must have known we were there to-day; it's not likely they'll
come straight in if they don't want us to see them," said Tib. "I can't
make it out; whoever they are, they've more right there than we have. I
think the only way is to take our books to-day and sit quietly reading;
and we had better hide ourselves as much as we can, so that we shouldn't
be seen all at once."

"Aren't you at all frightened?" said Gerald. "S'pose it was some kind of
robbers?"

"Nonsense," said I. "Mr. Truro said he was satisfied we couldn't
come to any harm there: I believe what he said. I'm not going to be
frightened--are you Tib?"

"N--no. I don't think so," she replied, rather doubtfully. "Any way, I
shouldn't at all like never to go there again."

But we all three did feel very excited the next afternoon, and I
think all our hearts were beating a good deal faster than usual as we
noiselessly made our way out of the conservatory and along the passage
now so familiar to us, through the little anteroom, and then, as quietly
as possible, opened the door into the saloon. And then--

You know, I dare say--big people must know all about these things better
than children--how _very_ quickly thoughts, or feelings, or something
not exactly either--since I wrote that, a big person has told me that
the word that best says what I mean is _impressions_: I am not sure that
it says it to me; but that is, perhaps, because I have never thought of
the word in that way before--You must know how _very_ quickly one seems
to know a thing sometimes, before there could have been time, even, to
get to know it by any regular way of hearing or seeing. Well, that was
how it was with us that day. The very instant the door opened we knew
there was something different in the room--it seemed warmer, more alive,
there was more feeling in it; and yet it was darker than we had ever
seen it before--at least, that end of the room where our princess was
had got into the shade somehow. _Her_ face was not the first thing that
caught our eyes, as it usually was; or _was_ it her face?

I dare say you will think us too silly when I tell you that for about
half a second we _did_ think the princess had really stepped down out
of the frame. It was _so_ like her. There she stood, quite still, but
smiling at us as if she had expected us. Her hair was dark--like Tib's
and like the picture's--her eyes just the same as both of theirs; but
she was far, far prettier than either! She was dressed in something
white, and there was some pink about it, too; and though of course it
wasn't really made the same way as the dress in the picture, it was like
enough to give a confused feeling at the first of being the same. And
she was standing a little in the same way, and a hat--a black hat with
drooping feathers--was slung on her arm.

We three just stood and gaped, and stared as if our eyes would come out
of our heads. And she stood, still smiling, but perfectly motionless.

Gerald was the first to come to his senses. He ran forward a little
towards the end of the room where the portrait was--it was still there;
it was only that one of the blinds had been drawn down so as to cast it
into shade--and glancing up at the wall, he called out,

"It's still there--it isn't _it_. It's another princess."

And at his words a peal of laughter--not very loud, but such pretty
clear laughter, I wish you could hear it!--rang through the room, and
the new princess, the living, moving princess, came forward to us,
holding out her hands.

"So you have come at last," she said; "I expected you this morning. I
knew you heard me at the door yesterday, and I thought your curiosity
would bring you early."

I didn't quite like her calling us "curious." It wasn't quite the right
word to use for all our pretty fancies about the princess, and even
about the mystery.

"We never can come in the morning," I said, "because of our lessons.
And--it wasn't _curiosity_."

"Indeed!" she replied, a tiny little bit mockingly; "not curiosity. What
shall I call it, then, your inquiring minds, eh?"

I felt my face get red, and I felt that Tib's was getting red too.

"I don't know who you are," I burst out, "and if you don't choose to
tell us, I am not going to ask. _That_ isn't curiosity. But I wish you
hadn't come; you've spoilt it all. Our own princess," and I glanced up
at the portrait, looking, I could not but confess, like a washed-out
doll beside the brilliant living beauty of the girl beside us, "our own
princess is much nicer than you. And if we had been so curious we might
have tried to find out things in pokey ways. We've never done that."

I looked, I suppose ready to cry. The lady's face changed, and then I
knew that while she had been talking in that half teasing way, something
in her voice and smile had reminded me of grandpapa--of grandpapa, I
mean, when he was in that sort of laughing-at-us way that we couldn't
bear. Perhaps this had made us all feel more vexed at her than she
really deserved us to be. But when her face changed, and a soft, sorry
look came over it, she reminded me of _more_ than any real face I had
ever seen--she reminded me of all the prettiest and nicest fancies I had
ever had; the sweet look in her eyes was _so_ sweet, that I wished I
might put my arms round her and kiss her. And Tib told me afterwards
that she had felt exactly the same.

"I'm very sorry," she said, simply; "I didn't come here to hurt your
feelings. Good fairies never do that, unless to very naughty children,
whose feelings need to be hurt. And yours don't need to be hurt, for
I know you're not naughty children--very far from it. Of course you
wouldn't try to find out things in any way that wasn't nice, I know
that. But wouldn't you like to know my name?"

"If you like to tell it," we said, smiling up at her.

"Or would you rather count me a sort of a fairy?" she went on.

"_Are_ you one?" said Gerald, softly stroking the pretty soft stuff of
which her dress was made.

"Perhaps," she said, smiling again. "I shouldn't wonder if you could
decide that better than I can. Try to find out--think of some things I
couldn't know unless I were a fairy."

"I know," said Gerald; "_our_ names. You _couldn't_ know them if you
weren't a fairy, or--or if perhaps you knowed some fairies who had told
you them," he added, getting a little muddled.

"If I had a fairy godmother, for instance, who had told me them," she
said.

"Yes--that might be it," said Gerald.

"Well, then--dear me, I mustn't make any mistake, or my godmother would
be very angry, after all her teaching," she said, pretending to look
very trying-to-remember, like Gerald when he stops at "eight times
nine," and screws up his mouth and knits his brows. "Well, to begin
with, the eldest. This is Tib--but her real name is Mercedes Regina;
this is Gustava; and this is Gerald Charles. And Gustava is generally
called 'Gussie.' Now, have I said my lesson rightly?"

We all stared at her.

"You must be a fairy," said Gerald. But Tib and I felt too puzzled to
say anything.

"What shall we call you?" I asked.

"Anything you like. I've got a lot of names. One of them, curious to
say, is the same as the name scribbled on the portrait just above the
name of the painter. Did you ever notice it?"

"Do you mean the same name as Tib's second one?" I asked; "Regina?"

The young lady nodded her head.

"That's very funny," we said. "That's the name in the book in London
too."

"What book?" she asked, quickly.

I hesitated a moment. Then I thought as I had said so much it would be
stupid not to explain. So I told her. She looked sad and thoughtful as
she listened.

"It was scored out, you said?" she asked.

"Yes, with a thick black stroke, as if somebody had been very angry
when they did it," I said. "If we hadn't known the name, from its being
Tib's, I don't think we could ever have made it out."

"Ah," said the young lady, and it sounded like a sigh. But in a moment
she smiled again.

"I didn't come here to make you sad," she said. "Won't you tell me about
the games you play, and let me play with you. Perhaps my fairy godmother
has taught me some that you don't know and that you would like to
learn."

But we didn't feel quite ready for playing games yet. There were two
or three things on our minds. The new princess saw that we looked
uncertain.

"What is it?" she said. "You look as if you were afraid of me."

"No," said Tib, and "No," said I. "It isn't that, but there are some
things we want to ask you."

"Ask them. I won't call you curious, I prom----"

But just that moment a bell rang--not loudly, but she heard it at once,
and started up. She had been sitting on one of the old couches, with
us all about her. "I must go," she said. "Come to-morrow and I will
tell you all I can. Good-bye; good-bye till to-morrow," and in half an
instant--I never saw any one move so quick--she had gone. We heard a
key turn in the lock of the double door outside, and that was all!

We looked at each other again without speaking. Surely she must be a
fairy of some kind, after all!




CHAPTER IX.

OUR FAIRY.

  "A creature not too bright or good
   For human nature's daily food."
                           WORDSWORTH.


It seemed a very long time to the next afternoon, and if Liddy hadn't
been the most unnoticing old woman in the world, she would certainly
have seen that there was something unusual in our heads. We could think
of nothing but our new friend the fairy, or "the other princess," as
Gerald would call her. Who could she be? where had she come from?
how--and this, perhaps, was the thing we wondered most about--how in
the world did she know all about us, or our names, even down to our pet
names, any way?

Then another thought was in my mind and Tib's. Grandpapa had told us to
make no friends with the neighbours. Would it be disobeying him to go to
meet the young lady in the saloon and play with her, as she had asked
us?

"Is she a neighbour?" said Tib. "We don't know--we don't know if she
lives there, or where she lives, or anything."

"We must ask her," I said; "any way, we must go and see her again to ask
her. We must go to see her _once_, and we will tell her what grandpapa
said."

"I think she is a fairy, and that she lives in Fairyland; and grandpapa
didn't say we weren't to speak to fairies," said Gerald.

"Oh! how I wish Mr. Truro was here; we could ask him about it," I said.

"And there's another thing," said Tib: "we almost promised Mr. Truro we
wouldn't say anything about the palace and all that to grandpapa just
now--not till they came again. It's rather a muddle altogether, don't
you think, Gussie?"

"I dare say she--we must get a name for her, Tib----"

"We'd better just call her Regina," Tib said. "She said it was her
name."

"Well, I dare say Regina will tell us what she thinks we should do. Any
way, as you say, we must go to see her once to tell her about it. I
wonder what the bell was that rang, and made her rush off in such a
hurry. That part of it was really very like a fairy story."

"If only she had left a slipper behind her, it would have been a little
like Cinderella," I said; "though the deserted, quiet rooms, and that
part of it, is more like the Sleeping Beauty."

"And the first day, when we were trying to get in at the door in the
wall, was like one of the stories of dwarfs and gnomes in the woods,
wasn't it?" said Tib. "We've really had a good many adventures at
Rosebuds."

This conversation took place the morning after we had first seen Regina.
We were in the schoolroom, waiting for Mr. Markham. It was a little past
his usual time when he came in.

"I'm a little late, I fear," he said. "I had to go to the Rectory to
settle about giving some holiday lessons to one of the boys there. It
will be Whit-week holidays soon, you know."

We didn't care very much; Whit-week would make no difference to
us. Indeed, Christmas itself we didn't look forward to in _those_
days, as most children do. It brought no happy family meetings, no
Christmas-trees, or merry blind-man's buff and snap-dragon to us. But we
knew too little about these things in other homes to think about what we
missed, and grandpapa always gave us a pound each to spend as we chose.
And at Ansdell, the Christmases we happened to be there, the servants
had a party, and we used to watch them from the gallery that runs round
the big hall. But Whit-week we cared nothing about.

"We're not to have holidays, then, are we?" I asked.

"Oh, no; Mr. Ansdell has said nothing about it," Mr. Markham replied.
"By the by, Miss Gussie, you don't know when he will be coming down
again, do you?"

"No," I said. "It won't be next Saturday, and perhaps not the Saturday
after."

"Ah well! I can write to him. I thought perhaps he would say something
for me to the rector--you don't know the family at the Rectory, I
think?"

"No," said Tib.

"It is curious," said Mr. Markham--he was rather talkative this morning;
perhaps it had put him into an extra good humour to have the hope of
some more pupils--"it is curious--I saw a young lady there this morning
that I could really have thought was an elder sister of Miss Tib's--she
was so very like her."

We were all ears and attention now.

"So like Tib?" said Gerald and I.

"So like me?" said Tib.

"Yes," repeated Mr. Markham, "exceedingly like."

He didn't add, as I have done, "only a great deal prettier." Perhaps it
is because Tib is my own sister, and I'm always seeing her and know her
face so well, that I don't think her as pretty as other people do--or
rather, I don't think about it. When you love people dearly you don't
think about whether they're pretty or not--even now with Reg----Oh! I
am too stupid again.

"It is very funny," we said, in which Mr. Markham agreed. He was
thinking, of course, that the likeness was curious; _we_ were thinking
of far more than that--of how strange it would be if our mysterious lady
was staying at the Rectory. If so, how did she get into the saloon?--how
did she know our names?--how did she know that we went there to play?

"Yes, I should like you to see it for yourselves. But you don't know the
family there?"

"No," repeated Tib, rather sharply, "we don't. Grandpapa doesn't wish us
to make any friends here."

"Oh, exactly--I beg your pardon," said poor Mr. Markham. Probably
grandpapa had said something about it to our tutor himself, which for
the moment he had forgotten, for he got rather red, poor young man,
and began rather hurriedly to get the books ready. "We mustn't waste
any more time," he said, and, as we were sorry to see him looking
uncomfortable, we didn't remind him, as we might have done, that it was
he, and not we, who had begun the conversation.

It was a little later than usual when we got out that afternoon. Nurse
had kept us to try on some new frocks she was making for us, and we
were very cross about it, I remember. But after all, it didn't matter.
When we found ourselves at last in the saloon, and looked round eagerly,
there was no one to greet us, but the smiling face of the portrait--the
same which we had before thought so lovely, but which now seemed
uninteresting and disappointing compared to the living, changing,
half-mischievous, half-tender face, which already I really believe we
had learnt to love.

"She'll be coming soon, I dare say," said Tib. "Let's sit down quietly,
and think of all we want to ask her, in case she makes off in a hurry
like yesterday," and we were turning towards the end of the room where
stood all the old chairs and couches, when something on one of the
marble consols caught our eyes. It was something lightly covered with a
sheet of white tissue-paper, and lifting it up, there were three little
nosegays of lovely flowers--delicate, brilliant hot-house flowers they
were, and each nosegay lay on a book, and a card with writing on it was
put so that it could be seen at once on the middle nosegay. The words on
the card were these:--

    "For Tib, Gussie, and Gerald. I am so sorry I cannot come
    to-day. The books are to amuse you instead, and I will come
    again the first day I can.
                                                        "R."

We were very disappointed. Still, it was very nice and funny to receive
messages and presents in this mysterious way. The flowers were really
beautiful, and the books were chosen as if she had known us all our
lives. We knew at once which was for which, by the way they were lying
on the table. Gerald's was about animals--stories, I mean--and Tib's was
Lamb's _Tales from Shakespeare_, and mine was _The Wonder Book_.

We sat down and looked at our books, and scented our flowers--don't you
think it's very ugly to talk of _smelling_ flowers? _we_ always say
"scenting," though somebody laughs at us for it, and says it isn't the
proper meaning of the word--and then we all three made ourselves very
comfortable in different corners of the arm-chairs and couches, and read
our new stories. And thus we spent the afternoon. It wasn't as long a
one as usual, for we had come so late. But before we went away we got
into a great puzzle about how to thank her for the books and flowers.

"It would be rude to go away and leave no message," said Tib. "And she
doesn't say she'll come to-morrow, only 'The first day I can.' Perhaps
she'll come in the morning, and look to see if we've taken the books."

But not one of us had a pencil or a scrap of paper in our pockets,
though we turned them inside out. Gerald had a top and some nails,
and an awful little pink and white grimy ball that he called his
"handkercher"; and Tib had her garden gloves, and a rather clean
handkerchief, and some red wool with a crochet needle stuck in it, as
she was learning to crochet; and I had nothing at all. What was to be
done?

"I know," I said; "you don't mind using your wool, do you, Tib? Well,
look here, we'll write with it on the white marble," and I set to work,
and very soon I had written the words, "Thank you, kind fairy," to which
Gerald made me add, "Come soon," and our initials, "T" and two "G's." It
really looked quite pretty, and one comfort was, there was no fear of
any one spoiling it before Regina saw it.

And then we went home, but we left our new books in the conservatory,
because we shouldn't have known what to say if nurse had asked us about
them.

The next day, to our great vexation, something prevented our going at
all--I forget what it was--oh no! I remember. It was that nurse took us
to the little town where Mr. Markham came from, to get us spring hats.
She had got grandpapa's leave to take us when he was at Rosebuds, and
she hadn't told us--poor old Liddy!--because she thought it would be
such a delightful surprise.

It would have been a great treat if we hadn't had our heads so full of
Regina, and wanting to see her again. But we were not so unkind and
selfish as not to look pleased when nurse told us about it.

"How are we to go to the station?" I asked, for nurse had said it was
two stations off by train, and when she said we should walk to the
station--it was quite fine, and if it hadn't been fine we would have
had to wait for another day--we were very pleased.

"We can peep in at the Rectory garden as we pass," I said to Tib, "and
perhaps we'll see the lady that's like you, whoever she is. I _wonder_
if she is Regina?"

"So do I," said Tib; "I wonder about it altogether."

But though we stared in with all our eyes at the garden of the pretty
house next the church, on our way to the station, there was nobody to
be seen.

"That is the Rectory, isn't it, nurse?" Tib asked her.

"I suppose so, my dears," she replied, rather nervously. "But I couldn't
say for certain, having been so little in the village."

She was always in such a fright, for fear of getting to know any one or
anything in the village. It was rather stupid of her to show it so, for
it only put all grandpapa's funny ways about it more into our heads, but
we didn't like to tease her, so we said no more.

But on the way home we took another peep in at the Rectory gates. Nurse
was a little way behind, loaded with parcels which she _wouldn't_ let
us help her to carry; and we ran on a little. It was easy to peep in
without being seen, but what we saw added to our puzzle. A lady was
walking up and down the avenue with a book in her hand which she was
reading, and as she turned our way, we saw her face clearly.

"Tib," I whispered, "_she's_ like you, and she's like Regina, too--only
she's old. _And_, Tib, she's like grandpapa."

So she was. She had the same straight-up, rather proud way of holding
herself as he has, dark hair, which was beginning to get grey, and those
pretty blue eyes with the bright eager look which all the blue eyes
among us have--yes, she was like them _all_--the portrait, too. And just
as we were staring, there came a call from the house, and an old, quite
old, lady came to a glass door which opened on to the terrace. I knew
afterwards that this old lady was the clergyman's mother or his wife's
mother, who lived with them, and they have all lived there a very long
time.

"Regina, Queenie, my dear," the old lady called out, "tea is ready.
Frances wants you to come in."

The lady turned quickly.

"I'm coming, Mrs. Leslie," she said, and then she walked quickly to the
house.

"Regina, another Regina!" we exclaimed. "And Queenie: what a pretty
name for a pet name! I wonder our Regina didn't tell us to call her
'Queenie.'"

For of course, as we had learned a little Latin, we knew that Regina
meant "queen."

"We must ask her why she didn't," said Gerald.

You can fancy how we looked forward to the next afternoon, and how we
hoped our pretty lady would be there.

It all went right for once. Nurse was more busy than usual about all the
things she had bought for us at Welford, and very glad to get rid of us
as soon as we had had our dinner. For, happily, she had no trying-on to
do to-day.

"You may have a good long afternoon in the garden," she said. "I must
say you're wonderful good children for amusing yourselves. There's never
any tease-teasing, like with some I've known--'What shall we do, nurse?'
or, 'We've nothing to play at.' And you're getting very good, too, about
never getting into mischief. You're _much_ better, Miss Gussie, than you
were last year at Ansdell: for it was you as was the ringleader."

"Yes," said I, not very much ashamed of the distinction. "Do you
remember the day I took grandpapa's new railway rug to make a carpet to
our tent, and left it out all night, and it rained and all the colour
ran? And do you remember when I pushed Gerald into the pond to catch the
little fishes, and how he stood shivering and crying?"

"Ah, yes, indeed," said nurse. "But speaking of ponds--the one at
Ansdell was nothing; but those nasty pits or pools in the fields near
by: you never go near them? Your grandpapa has a real fear of them, and
he told me not to let you forget what he'd said."

"No fear," we all answered, "we never go near them. We promised him we
wouldn't, nurse."

Then off we ran.

"Even if she isn't there, she's sure to have left some message for us,
like the last time," said Gerald as we ran. "I wish she'd bring us some
butter-scotch."

"_Gerald!_" exclaimed Tib and I, "what sort of ideas have you? Fairies
and butter-scotch mixed in the same breath. I only hope," Tib went on,
"that she won't think we're ungrateful for the books, or that we don't
care for them, because we had to leave them in the conservatory."

"If only she's there, we can explain everything," said I.

And she _was_ there.

Not waiting in the saloon this time, but running down the long passage
to meet us as soon as she heard our steps, looking prettier, and
merrier, and sweeter than ever. _Dear_ Regina!

I have never minded her teasing since that first day, when I really
didn't understand her. I shall never mind it again, I am sure.

She led us into the big drawing-room, where she had prepared another
little surprise for us. She was as pleased about it as we were
ourselves. It was more of Gerald's kind of treat this time--not
butter-scotch, but fruit--grapes, and beautiful little Tangiers
oranges, and little cakes and biscuits of ever so many kinds. They
were so nice, and we ate such a lot of them, and Regina ate a good
many herself.

"You see, though I am a fairy, I like nice things," she said.

"Do you have afternoon luncheon every day?" asked Gerald. "Oh, how I
would like to be you."

"_Isn't_ he a greedy boy?" I said; and then I told her about the
butter-scotch, and somehow the butter-scotch led to our talking of
grandpapa--you remember about Gerald wishing he'd bring us some--and
then we all got rather grave, for we had a great deal to tell our new
princess, and to ask her.

We sat together in a little group on one of the arm-chairs, and Regina
listened to us very attentively. We told her all that grandpapa had said
to us before we came to Rosebuds, and all about the book in the library
in London, and how we wanted to love grandpapa better, as Mrs. Munt had
told us we should, but that it was rather difficult. We told her all we
had told Mr. Truro, only more, for we had to tell her all about him as
well. And then we asked her if she thought it was disobeying grandpapa
for us to come to see her; and when we had told her all we could think
of, we waited very anxiously to hear what she would say. Her face looked
grave, though not exactly sad.

"Your friend--Mr. Truro--told you to wait till he came back again?" she
said.

"Yes, but that was only about coming in here to play. We hadn't seen
you then--and grandpapa told us not to make friends with any of the
neighbours. Are you a neighbour? Do you live here?"

"No," said Regina. "I live far from here."

"And how can you come so often to see us, then?" we asked.

She smiled.

"Can't you fancy I come on a sunbeam, or a cloud, or on a broomstick if
you like? Or if I had only thought of taking the picture away, you might
really have thought I had come out of the frame! No children, I'm not
going to tell you where I come from, or how I come, or _anything_. Then
you can feel you're not hearing from me anything your grandfather would
not wish you to hear, and when he and Mr. Truro come here again, you
can tell them all--everything, and see what they say. You can bring Mr.
Truro here to see me, if you like, and we'll talk it over. Now, as who
knows how seldom we may see each other again, suppose we make the best
use of our time. I've got some games to teach you--new games. Let us be
as happy and merry as we can be while we _are_ together."

And you cannot fancy what fun we had.

She kept us playing, and guessing tricks and riddles, and even singing
little glees--she had such a pretty voice--so busily that we hadn't
time to ask her any more questions, and indeed forgot to do so. So that
when it grew late and we had to go home, and Regina kissed us and said
good-bye, we knew as little about her, or where she had come from or was
going to, as if she had really flown down to us from some fairy country
invisible to mortal eyes.

"And will you come again soon?" we asked.

"Whenever I can, but that is all I can promise," she said, and then she
disappeared behind the heavy doors, and we heard the key turn in the
lock on the other side.

And we went home, wishing it were to-morrow.

"No, not to-morrow--she's sure not to come so soon again, but, all the
same, we must come and see."




CHAPTER X.

THREE STARLINGS.

  "'I can't get out; I can't get out,' said the starling.
   'God help thee,' said I; 'but I'll let thee out.'"
                                     _Sentimental Journey._


She didn't come the next day, but instead of her we actually found three
little packets of butter-scotch tied up in white paper, with a different
coloured ribbon on each: mine was pink, and Tib's blue, and Gerald's
green. I think nothing that had happened to us pleased Gerald as much
as this, though he couldn't pretend to think it had come from Fairyland.

And two days after that, the girl herself came again, and we had another
merry afternoon of games and fun. How we laughed! there never was any
one as clever as our new princess at games. And when we were all too
tired and hot to play any more, she told us to sit down quietly to rest,
and to shut our eyes, and pretend to go to sleep for five minutes. And
when we did so we heard a little faint rustling, and if we had not
promised I am sure we should have opened our eyes, we were so afraid
she was tricking us, and running away without saying good-bye.

But in a minute we heard the rustling again.

"Open your eyes," said her voice, and when we opened them, lo and
behold! there was a glass jug filled with lemonade--it was so good--and
four little tumblers, and sponge cakes. The tumblers were red and of a
queer shape, and so was the big jug.

"These might have come from Fairyland," I said. "You know, Regina"--for
she would make us call her so--"Gerald won't give up about you being a
fairy; only when it came to packets of butter-scotch----"

"Even he couldn't believe there were butter-scotch manufactories in
Fairyland," said she, laughing. And then we all laughed just because we
were so happy.

"We've never laughed so much in our lives before, I don't think," said
Tib.

"Poor little pets," said Regina, "it won't do you any harm. It should do
the old house good too--it's many a long day since it heard any merry
voices."

"The old house," said I; "what do you mean?"

"Why, the old house we're in--the place where you are. Where do you
suppose yourself to be at this moment?" she asked, seeing I looked more
and more puzzled.

"I don't know," I said. "We thought it was perhaps just this room, or
else that it was a sort of a palace. We never thought of it as a regular
house."

"A pavilion of some kind, I suppose you mean," said she.

"Why do you call it the _old house_? Is it very old?" asked Tib.

"Yes," said Regina, "it is. It has got into being called the old house
because it is the oldest anywhere about, I suppose. And then, you see,
when people haven't lived in a place for very, very long, they get into
that way of speaking of it--out of a sort of affection--just as one
speaks of the old days, you know, when one speaks of long ago."

"Did you live here long ago, and then not for a great while?"

"No, I never lived here, and then I'm not so old as all that. I heard
about the old days of course from----" but then she got red, and stopped
suddenly. "I think it's time to go," she said.

"Wait a minute," said I; "will you show us some of the rooms of the
house? We should so like to see them."

The new princess hesitated. Then she shook her head. "No, dears," she
said, "I'd better not. Just try to keep to your old fancies, and take
Gerald's way: it's the best just now. And now listen: this is Wednesday.
I can't come to-morrow. You'll promise to come on Friday?"

"Yes," we all said.

"I particularly want you to come on Friday," she went on, and her face
grew a little sad, "though I can't quite explain why--except--just that
after that perhaps I can't see you for a good while."

"Oh! don't say that," we all cried together; "do try and not let it be
that way. We will come on Friday, you may be sure."

"But don't expect me very early," she said. "I may not be able to come
till pretty late."

And then she kissed us all again, and she went her way, and we ours.

It happened very well that she had asked us to come on Friday, and not
on Thursday, for on Thursday it was so _extra_ pouring wet that nurse
wouldn't let us go out at all. And we were exceedingly anxious on Friday
morning to see what the weather was going to be, and we were all
delighted to see it was fine.

"We must have a long afternoon to ourselves, nurse," we said. "It's
horrid to be cooped up in the house all day."

"Well, I'm sure, my dears, I'm as sorry as you can be when it has to be
so," said nurse. "But it's very wet everywhere still to-day. It did pour
so yesterday. You must be sure to take your goloshes, and to come in at
once if you feel chilly or shivery. I wouldn't for anything have you
take cold."

"We never do, nurse," Tib said. "You must allow that we don't give you
much trouble about our being ill."

"As if I'd grudge any trouble, my dear," said Liddy--she was very matter
of fact. "But it's true you've given no trouble of any kind since you've
been here, and so I shall tell your dear grandpapa--and so, I'm sure,
will Mrs. Munt. She thinks there never were such children. But do be
careful now, dears, not to catch cold just as your dear grandpapa's
coming?"

"Grandpapa coming! You never told us," we exclaimed. "When is he
coming?"

"To-morrow; and Mr. Truro too. At least, Mrs. Munt's sure it's him,
though Mr. Ansdell only says to prepare the same rooms as last time. I
meant to tell you when we began speaking--Mrs. Munt just got the letter
this morning."

"What a good thing he's not coming to-day," we said to ourselves. "Nurse
would never have let us out at all, or else we would have had to come in
early, and _she_ said she couldn't come early. I wonder, Tib," I went
on, "I wonder if somehow her wanting us so much to-day, and what she has
said, has anything to do with grandpapa's coming?"

"How could _she_ know he was coming before we knew it ourselves, even?
Gussie, it's not _me_ that's too fanciful nowadays," said Tib. "Of
course, on _our_ side, knowing he was coming might have made us say
perhaps it would be the last time. You know we've promised her and
ourselves to tell Mr. Truro all about her, and then he or we must tell
grandpapa, and who knows what he'll say? It's to be hoped he's not so
busy and worried as he was when he was here before."

But the thought that it _might_ be the last time we should see our
pretty princess--that grandpapa might even forbid our ever going to our
palace, as we still called it, at all, made us rather sad and subdued,
and it was not as merrily as usual that we ran through the tangle to the
door in the wall.

"Be quick, Gerald," I said, when he had got the key in the lock, and was
turning it--he always counted it his business; "what are you pulling
at?"

"It's stiff to-day--it may have got rusty with it raining so yesterday,"
he said. For we still always left the key in the summer-house--we were
afraid to take it into the house. "It needs oiling again, perhaps;" but
he had managed to open the door by this time, and he took the key out of
the lock as he spoke, and we all passed through, Gerald locking the door
again _inside_, and leaving the key in the lock, as we always did.

Regina was not yet there, but we were not surprised: she had said she
might be late of coming, and we had not waited, just _for fear_ of nurse
stopping us at the last minute. We amused ourselves with some of the
puzzles she had brought and left for us to play with when we were not
inclined for noisier games, and in about an hour, to our delight, we
heard the key turn in the big door, and in came our princess, a basket
on her arm, which she set down on the floor, while she locked the door
inside, and put the key in her pocket.

"You needn't do that," said Tib and I, rather offended; "we're not going
to try to go out of the room, since you told us you didn't want us to."

"I did it without thinking," said Regina. "I know I can trust you. Now
kiss me, darlings, and let us be as happy as we can."

"But we're not very happy," we answered; and then we told her that
grandpapa and Mr. Truro were coming the next day, and that perhaps we
wouldn't be allowed to come to see her any more. She looked sorry, but
not very surprised.

"We must hope the best," she said. "Mr. Truro is so kind, you say. Won't
_he_, perhaps, be able to get your grandpapa to let you come?"

"Perhaps," we said. But it was only "perhaps."

But Regina wouldn't let us be sad. She opened her basket, which was
filled with things she thought would please us, and we had our afternoon
luncheon, as Gerald called it, together. Then as we weren't much in the
humour for games, she sat and told us stories--such pretty ones, I wish
I could write some of them down, for I believe she made them up out of
her head--till, feeling afraid it was getting late, she looked at her
watch, and jumped up in a fright, like Cinderella again.

"Darlings, darlings!" she cried, "I must go," and she kissed us very
lovingly, but very hurriedly.

"And when are we to see you again?"

Regina shook her head.

"That is more for you to know than for me," she said. "We must leave it
this way--if you _can_ come again, you'll find some message from me,
and you can leave one for me, and then I'll come."

"But listen," I said; "the other day you said you weren't sure that
_you_ could come, and to-day you didn't seem surprised that perhaps _we_
can't come. Regina, tell me, did you know grandpapa was coming before we
did? _Are_ you a fairy?"

She shook her head, laughing, but she would say nothing, and in another
moment she was gone.

We sat still, talking, for some time after she had gone--we couldn't
help feeling dull and sad. We were so afraid of what grandpapa might
say.

"It's a very good thing Mr. Truro's coming," said Tib. "It would have
been too dreadful to have had to tell grandpapa ourselves."

"I don't see that," I said. "You speak as if we had done something very
naughty, that we should be ashamed of telling. I'm not a bit afraid of
telling grandpapa, in that way; _I'm_ only afraid for fear he should
forbid us ever to come to the old house again;" we had left off calling
it the palace, since Regina had explained it was really a house, and the
"_old_ house" sounded nice, somehow.

"Well, yes," said Tib, "that's what I'm the most afraid of too, of
course."

"And there's something we can't understand altogether," I went on. "Why
did grandpapa stop us knowing anybody here? I'm sure the people at the
Rectory would be kind to us, and I daresay there are other nice people.
Then, who is Regina? and how does she know about us? and whose house is
this? and why is it shut up? and----" I stopped, out of breath.

"And who is the portrait? and why is it like her, and like me? And the
lady at the Rectory--the oldish lady, and the young one Mr. Markham
spoke of--who are they? Oh yes, there are just thousands of things we
don't understand. I don't think I shall ever wish for mysteries again,"
said Tib, dolefully. "Just because Regina is so fond of us, and we are
so fond of her--just because of that you may be sure we shall never see
her again."

At these words Gerald began to cry. I was half vexed with him, and half
sorry for him.

"Don't cry, Gerald," I said; "though, all the same, Tib, I don't see why
you need always make the worst of things. It may be all right, Gerald
dear--perhaps grandpapa may not mind. And just think how nice it would
be to be able to have her to come to see us at Rosebuds!"

Gerald began drying his eyes, for which purpose another little grimy
ball--this time blue and white--was brought into requisition.

"I'm sure I love her the best of us all," he said, as a sort of apology.

"You can't love her more than we do," said Tib and I, rather grumpily.

Then we began to think perhaps we had better be going home. We had some
lessons still to do for Mr. Markham, and it must be near tea-time,
though we weren't very hungry, on account of the afternoon luncheon we
had had.

We left the saloon with a lingering look at all, especially at the old
princess, as we now called her--our first friend, whom we felt we had
rather neglected of late. There she was, smiling as usual, with the
sweet, but slightly contemptuous smile she had always worn--as if she
knew herself to be above all foolish weaknesses and changeablenesses,
and could afford to smile at them amiably.

"Good-bye, princess," I said. "I don't know if we shall ever see you
again, but if not, we thank you for your politeness to us, though we
can't pretend to say we love you as much as our new princess."

"It isn't her fault, poor thing," added Tib, "she can't help being only
a picture instead of a living person. And, Gussie, she must have been a
living person once; I mean there must have been a person just like her,
and that person must have been very like Regina. Isn't it sad to think
that there's nothing left of her except this cold picture, always
smiling the same, whatever happens?"

"It's no more sad about her than about any other picture," I said, rather
crossly. Sometimes I do get cross with Tib when she is sentimental. I'm
sure I don't know why--it _is_ ill-natured. "I wonder," I went on, more
eagerly, "I wonder if possibly she could be the portrait of the oldish
lady--when the oldish lady was young, you know, Tib, for she is so like
Regina."

It was Tib's turn to snub _me_ now.

"The portrait of _that_ lady," she said. "My goodness, Gussie! for it to
be her portrait she would need to be about a hundred and twenty years
old. Can't you tell that by the dress, and the _look_ of the picture?"

"Well, never mind," I said. "We can't find out anything about her, so
it's no use squabbling. We must go, Tib; I'm sure it's late; and we
don't want to do anything that could vex nurse just as grandpapa's
coming, for you know he always asks her if we've been good."

"Come along, then," said Tib.

We walked slowly down the long passage and into the conservatory, where
everything looked just exactly the same as the first day we had seen it.

"Oh dear, I am so unhappy!" said Gerald, again. "I've got a _feeling_
that all the nice has finished."

"Open the door quick, Gerald, or let me do it, and don't make things
worse by talking nonsense."

Gerald turned to the door--the key was sticking in the lock, as I
said--Gerald always left it _after_ locking it.

"Do be quick," said Tib, impatiently.

Whether it was her hurrying him that made him awkward or jerky, or
whether it was just that something had gone wrong with the lock or the
key--you remember we had noticed it was stiffer than usual when we came
in--I can't say. But, however that may have been, this is what happened.
The key wouldn't turn in the lock! Gerald fumbled at it for some time,
then Tib and I got impatient.

"What _is_ the matter?" said Tib.

"What _are_ you doing?" said I; and we both ran forward, pushing poor
Gerald aside, and each trying to get hold of the key. We each took a
turn at it, like the first day, only now our flurry and fear made us
less cool and careful. It was no use; we pressed, and pulled, and
tugged, we took the key out, and rubbed it and cleaned it as if we had
been Bluebeard's wife, and put it back again to try afresh. No use!

"I really think keys have got spirits in them sometimes," said Tib.
"They _are_ so contrary."

And then, hot and worried, beginning to be frightened too, we looked at
our sore fingers, which the horrid key had bruised and scratched, and
asked ourselves what to do.

Tib started forward again--she had spied a strong bit of stick in a
corner.

"I believe it's only stiffness, after all," she said. "There _can't_ be
anything the matter with the key."

She seized the stick--it _was_ a very stout one--ran it through the ring
of the key, and before Gerald and I really knew what she was doing, she
had grasped the two ends with her two hands, and was turning vigorously.

"Ah! I told you so," she cried, as she felt that the stick _did_ turn,
"it only wanted some strength. But oh, Gussie! oh, Gerald!" she screamed
the next moment, "see, see!"

She drew back a little--we did see--the key had _broken_, not turned!
the ring was still hanging on the stick; the useless end of the key
stuck out of the lock as if in mockery.

"Oh, Tib!" I cried, for somehow one's first feeling always is to blame
some one, "why were you so hasty? Oh dear! what _shall_ we do?"

Tib was too subdued to resent my blame.

"It wouldn't turn before," she said meekly. "Perhaps we are no worse off
than before."

"Yes, we are," I said angrily. "Then, at least, we could take the key
out and shout through the key-hole. Now we can't even do that," for I
had tried, and found that there was now no moving the key the least
little bit. There really was _nothing_ to be done. But we did not
realise that all at once. We set to work shouting and kicking on the
door, in hopes that somebody might be passing by the tangle, though
nothing was more unlikely. We climbed up on the shelves of the
conservatory, in hopes somebody might be in that garden--the garden
of the old house, as we now knew it to be. But very little was to be
seen--only some grass stretching towards a belt of trees, and no sign of
anybody--it wasn't till afterwards that we knew there _was_ another door
into the conservatory, concealed in a corner--a door for gardeners to
come in by, but it hadn't been used for many years, and the key was
lost, so the knowledge wouldn't have done us much good--and we gave up
that hope in despair.

Then another idea struck us--we ran back to the saloon to try the door
by which Regina came in. If _possibly_ she hadn't locked it, we might
get into the house, and out through it, and so home. But no--the great
double doors were as firm as a rock. Regina had locked them only too
securely!

"She might have left it unlocked," we said, in a sort of unreasonable
rage; "she might have thought perhaps we might need to get out this
way." And then we remembered that she had been used to see us coming
in and out quite easily. She had had no reason for any misgiving.

"But there may be some one in the house," said Tib. So again we set to
work calling, and knocking, and banging at the doors. In vain--in vain!
We were completely locked in, and evidently there was no one near enough
to hear us.

Tired out at last, we sat down, huddled together, on one of the
arm-chairs, where we had sat so happily with Regina.

"We must stay all night," I said.

"Till the dusting person comes in the morning," said Tib.

"Any way, it's a good thing we had some afternoon luncheon," said
Gerald, though even this consoling reflection did not prevent the tears
rolling down his poor fat cheeks.

We didn't as yet feel hungry--nor did we feel exactly frightened, though
it did begin to feel "eerie." But very soon we felt very cold. It is
strange how cold an unused room gets to feel as soon as the bright
daylight goes. We had our jackets on, fortunately, and we took some of
the linen covers off the chairs, and wrapped them round us, so that we
looked like ghosts or dancing dervishes. And thus enveloped, we huddled
together as close as we could.

And the last thing we saw as the light faded, so that everything in the
room grew dim and shadowy, was the calmly smiling face of the "old
princess" up above us on the wall.

I never see it now without remembering that strange evening.




CHAPTER XI.

BROTHER AND SISTER.

  "For this relief, much thanks."--_Hamlet._


My story is getting rather difficult to manage now. Indeed, I don't
quite see how to do. I _think_, if I had known how long it would be, and
what a lot of half-holidays I should have to stay in to write it, I
_think_ I would never have begun it. But I won't be laughed at for
"beginning, and not ending." And if I get it rather muddley, and can't
do it the way authors do who know how to plan stories, and write them so
that they seem all to come of themselves, like flowers growing, you good
people, whoever you are, that come to read it must forgive me and
believe I did my best.

But I can't go on regularly the "I" way now. That is what puzzles me. I
have to be, as it were, in three places at once. First of all--we three
are all locked up in the old house now--I must tell you what was
happening at Rosebuds.

Nurse didn't miss us for a good while; she was busy helping Mrs. Munt,
as there was always a good deal of fuss when grandpapa was expected. And
just as they were getting things pretty ready, and nurse _would_ have
begun seeing about our tea, up comes a man from the telegraph office at
Welford with the usual brown envelope and pink paper inside, addressed
to Mrs. Munt, to say that grandpapa was coming _that_ evening, would be
there about eight o'clock. Immediately, of course, all the bustle and
fuss began over again, only twice as bad; for Mrs. Munt had to get a
dinner ready all in a hurry, and to send one running this way and
another that way for all the things needed. Nurse went with her to the
kitchen, calling to Fanny to take up our tea, and see that we got it
properly; you can understand that, just thinking of us as at play in the
garden, it never occurred to nurse to ask if we were in, or to feel the
least anxious. Fanny, on her side, wasn't at all given to being anxious
about anything except her own bonnets and caps, so she merely set the
tea, and then, "supposing" we were up stairs, and would come down when
we heard the bell, off she went to her own room and her bonnets.

But the tea got cold in the teapot, the bread-and-butter was untouched,
the honey was at the disposal of all the flies who chose to sip it--we
three never came! And when nurse, after helping Mrs. Munt till the two
old bodies were satisfied that all would be right, trotted up to the
schoolroom to put _us_ in order next, there was no one to be seen! Just
at first, I fancy, she was more vexed than frightened.

"Dear, dear!" says I (this is nurse, you understand, telling it over to
me afterwards), "where can they be, the naughty children? But I wasn't
not to say afraid of anything wrong. I called Fanny, idle girl that she
is, and sent her out into the garden to look for you, never doubting but
that in two minutes she'd be back with you all."

But when Fanny, after considerably more than two minutes, reappeared
with the news that we were nowhere to be seen, then poor nurse was
dreadfully upset. She ran to Mrs. Munt, and the two trotted everywhere
about the grounds, giving the alarm to the gardener and his boy, who
joined them in the search.

It was getting near the time for grandpapa's arrival. The dog-cart had
started for the station before our absence had been discovered, and to
add to her own great anxiety, nurse had the fear of grandpapa's driving
in every moment and demanding what was the matter. It must really have
been a terrible evening for both nurse and Mrs. Munt; and as time passed
and grandpapa did not come, their fear of his displeasure gave way to
the wish that he were there to advise and direct them what to do.

They had exhausted all their energies when at last--about nine
o'clock--the dog-cart appeared with him. He had missed the train which
stopped at our little station, and had come on by the next--an express,
by which he was obliged to get out at Welford. So he had telegraphed to
the groom to drive on, and meet him there instead.

Mrs. Munt met him at the door; a moment before, she had been at the
gate, but when she heard the dog-cart approaching, she hurried back to
the house. Not even her fears of every kind could set aside her ideas of
what was proper and respectful.

"God grant Mr. Truro may be with master!" she said to herself, and
her heart sank still lower when she saw that grandpapa was alone.

"Good evening, Mrs. Munt," he said, as he got down; "you will have been
wondering what has become of me," and then he quickly explained what had
happened. But receiving no distinct reply, he looked at her, and saw
that she was crying.

"What's the matter?" he said. "Are the children ill?"

"Oh, sir!" she exclaimed, "oh, my dear master, I only wish I knew!" and
then she told him of our strange disappearance.

He listened, but for some time he could not believe it was quite as she
said.

"They are hiding somewhere to trick you, you may be sure," he said.

"But they'd never keep it up so long, sir," she replied. "Nine o'clock
at night--their bedtime, and had nothing to eat since their dinner at
one. Oh no, sir--I wish I could think it--but it's not in the nature of
children to keep it up so long. And not of those dear children: they'd
have come out wherever they were, on hearing poor nurse and me
a-praying and a-begging of them to come out."

Grandpapa did not speak, but Mrs. Munt saw that he began to take it
seriously. He would not go into the house till every corner of the
grounds had again been searched under his own eye. And not the grounds
only, but the house; and when at last there was nowhere else to look,
and grandpapa had shouted to us in every tone--scolding, appealing,
entreating--fancy him entreating--us to give some sign of life,
promising not to be angry, never again to be vexed with us whatever we
did, if we would but answer: when _everywhere_ had been searched, and
everything said and done that could be thought of, poor grandpapa,
looking quite old and shaky all of a sudden, sat down by the table in
the dining-room, where his dinner was so neatly set out, and buried his
face in his hands.

It was terrible, both nurse and the old housekeeper told us--terrible to
see the cold, strong man so overcome, and to hear what he murmured to
himself.

"All that I had left--all," he said. "My own children, for she was as my
daughter to me, and my poor boy--one gone, one to have deceived me. And
now, in my old age, these little creatures whom I was learning to love!
Is it my fault? Was I too harsh to them? Did I neglect them? Why is it
that all belonging to me seem doomed in some way?"

And then he raised his poor white face, and told what he was thinking.

"Munt," he said, abruptly, "I have refused to allow the idea in my
mind--but it must be the truth. I have tried not to entertain it, for
I knew if it were the case, there was nothing to be done. It is so
dreadfully deep----" and he gave a little shudder. "They must have
fallen into the pits at the corner of the Old House fields. I had a
presentiment of it from their first coming here. Tell the man to fetch
the ropes--there must be the right thing in the village, for cows have
fallen in before now; those pools must be dragged."

Mrs. Munt gave a little scream. Then she grew quiet again.

"No, sir," she said, "the dear children are too obedient for that. They
remembered what you said to them about not going to those pits, and they
repeated their promise to nurse only a day or two ago."

Grandpapa looked up with a gleam of hope. But it faded again, and he
only repeated the words--

"Those pools must be dragged. Send the men. I can do no more."

Then he half fell back upon his chair, and stayed thus--almost
unconscious, Mrs. Munt thinks--while she went away to obey his orders,
till----

But now I must take up another end of the story.

The family at the Rectory went early to bed as a rule, even when they
had visitors with them. This eventful evening they and their two
visitors were just standing about the drawing-room, preparing to say
good-night and to light their bed-room candles, when they were startled
by a loud violent ringing at the door.

"Dear me," said they all, "what can that be? So late, too; it is past
ten."

"Some one ill, and wanting me, possibly," said the rector, and he went
out to the hall, where the footman was already at the door, leaving the
four ladies--his mother-in-law, and Mrs. Lauriston, his wife, and the
two visitors--looking at each other rather startledly. Still, there
was no reason to expect anything wrong--all the young Lauristons were
upstairs safe in bed their mother remembered with satisfaction.

They heard voices at the door--then the rector came back, looking
shocked and troubled.

"I must go out," he said; "a sad, a terribly sad thing is supposed to
have happened."

"Where? Any of our people?" exclaimed his wife.

Mr. Lauriston hesitated--he glanced at the two stranger ladies--at the
elder one especially--the lady Tib and I had seen from the Rectory gate.

"You must hear it sooner or later," he said; "I'm very sorry to have
to tell it. It is at--at Rosebuds--the children there, poor Gerald's
children--are missing, and it is feared they have fallen into the
pits--near--near your house, Mrs. Mowbray. They have sent to me for the
things to drag with." (There was a pond almost big enough to be called a
little lake in the Rectory grounds: that was how they had ropes there.)

Mrs. Mowbray gave a scream.

"The children--_drowned_!" she cried in an agony. "Oh, Edith! oh,
William! if it is so, it is my fault. I should not have left these pits
to be filled up by Farmer Jackman when he buys the place. The moment I
knew the children were at Rosebuds, _I_ should have done it. Oh God!
it is too awful, and too cruel--just when I was beginning, faintly
beginning, to hope."

She seemed as if she were going to faint. But her daughter, _our_
Regina, our dear fairy, darted from the room, calling out as she did
so--

"Wait a moment, dear mamma. Don't be so miserable. It may be a mistake."

She rushed to the hall, where stood the Rectory servants in a group, and
Barstow, grandpapa's very spruce, stuck-up London groom, who had come
to ask for the ropes, with a very solemn face, but very proud, all the
same, to be the centre of information. Regina seized hold of him by the
coat collar, I believe; he told nurse afterwards that the young lady
shook him, shook him hard, "as if it was all _my_ fault," he said to
nurse.

"Leave off chattering and gossiping," she said, for our princess can be
very determined when she likes, "and attend to me. Are the children
_known_ to be in the pool? Were they seen near there? or heard? or how
is it?"

"Oh no, bless you, Miss," said Barstow, shaking himself free rather
resentfully. "It's only that they're not to be found nowhere else.
They've been out a-playing in the garden, as everybody thought, since
two or three o'clock, and they've never come home, and they're nowhere
to be found; and my master--Gerald Ansdell, Esq., M.P., if you please,
Miss,"--for Regina and all the Rectory folk were perfect strangers to
him "my master has got it in his head that the young ladies and Master
Gerald is--has--must be drowned, Miss, to speak plain."

Regina dashed back to the drawing-room.

"Mamma darling, it's all right. Mr. Lauriston, Mrs. Lauriston, all of
you, help me to explain. _I_ know where the children are--they're locked
in, in the Old House--that's all that's wrong--I'm sure of it. It was
a little plan of Charles Truro's and mine; we thought if I got to know
the dear little things it might lead to something--to a reconciliation.
They had found their way there by themselves, and told him about it. But
I must go at once to let them out, the poor darlings. And, mamma, mamma,
take courage--seize the moment. While I fetch them, you go to Uncle
Ansdell and tell him the good news. You may never have such a chance
again. Don't you think so, Mr. Lauriston--you who know the whole
story--oh, do say you think she should do it?" and Regina wrung her
hands in her eagerness.

It took a little cross-questioning to make them understand all; but
Regina got her way. Barstow, to keep him quiet, was allowed to go off
with the gardener to get the drags, and in less time than you would have
thought it possible they all set off--Mr. Lauriston, Regina, and her
mother. But at the gate of Rosebuds they separated. Regina hurried on
down the lane with the rector, her mother with trembling, shaking
steps, went in and made her way up to the porch.

The front door stood open; in the confusion and excitement nobody had
thought of closing it.

Grandpapa--poor grandpapa--was sitting as Mrs. Munt had left him when
she went off to give orders about dragging the pools. A little noise,
the door softly opening and closing again, made him look up. A tall
figure, all dressed in black, with a white, sweet, anxious face and blue
eyes, like Tib's and grandpapa's own, streaming with tears, stood beside
him. He stared at it half stupefied. I think he thought he was dreaming.
But it spoke.

"Brother, dear, dear brother, it is I. Do you know me--will you forgive
me at last? Oh, dear, dear brother, forgive me."

He gazed at her as if he did not see her.

"I do not know why you have come," he said. "Do you know what has
happened? My children--poor Gerald's children--are drowned, all of them.
I am quite alone in the world."

"No, no," she cried, "they are not drowned. They will be here in a few
minutes. It was that gave me courage to come--to bring you the good
news. Gerald, for _their_ sake, for the dear children's sake, won't you
at last forgive me and let me help you with them? Oh, I will love them
so if you will let me. Brother, say quick before they come--say you will
forgive me at last. I have so suffered, I have been punished so long.
Brother, say you forgive your poor Queenie."

She half knelt, half sank down beside him--all I am writing is from
what Regina has told me, and her mother herself told her--grandpapa
stretched out his arms, and she flung herself into them.

"Queenie, my little Queenie," he said, "_you_ have brought me the good
news--is it true, quite true?"

Auntie--that is, of course, what she is to us--auntie was almost
frightened. He was so gentle, so clinging, and unlike his usual cold
decided self. And a sort of terror went through her for a moment,
"Suppose it didn't turn out to be true that we were safe."

"I should never forgive myself, _never_," she thought, "if I have raised
his hopes only for them to be dashed again;" and even while she went on
repeating that it was true, he would see us directly, she trembled.

But there came a noise--a very slight, distant sound at first--of many
voices and steps approaching. Auntie's ears are quick, and that evening
they were quicker than usual, even. She heard it ever so far off, long
before grandpapa heard anything. And she listened, trembling. Were the
voices cheerful?--_was_ it all right?

I have so often heard all the story of that evening--of other people's
part of it, I mean--that I seem to be able to see it all for myself as
it must have looked to them. I can so picture auntie standing there,
scarcely daring to breathe in her anxiety to hear! And the first thing
that quite reassured her was Regina's voice speaking in a pitying,
petting, yet laughing way to Gerald.

"My poor old man! no one will be vexed with you for crying, for, as you
say, you _are_ only seven years old." _Of course_, in Gerald's troubles
he had begun his old cry!

And in another moment the dining-room door opened and a queer-looking
group appeared. There was Regina in a shawl thrown over her head, she
had not waited to put on her hat; there was Mr. Lauriston and two or
three gardeners and people we had gathered on the way--for, of course,
we had come round by the proper entrance to the Old House, and had
found them all at the pit--and in the middle of the crowd three very
dishevelled-looking little figures, with eyes swollen with crying, and
now blinking at the sudden light, who rushed forward to grandpapa,
calling out all together--

"Oh! dear grandpapa, please forgive us. We didn't mean to disobey you."

And before we knew where we were he had us all in his arms at once, and
he was hugging us as he had never hugged us before.

"My children," he said, "my dear little children."

But when he looked up and saw Regina, he really did start.

"Is it----?" he began, and then he looked round at auntie. "It is
yourself over again," he said, "it is you, Queenie--as I last saw you."

Fancy that; fancy the years and years that had gone by since they had
met! How very, very strange it must have seemed.

But auntie explained who Regina was, and then grandpapa kissed her too,
with a curious wistful look in his eyes. And then came hurrying in nurse
and Mrs. Munt, whom the good news of our return had just reached, and we
were bundled off to bed, where we each had some nice hot stuff to drink,
and Regina explained all the queer story to the two old servants, while
down stairs grandpapa and auntie were together alone. And all that
_they_ had to tell and ask of course we would never expect to hear, but
still, we had enough told to us to make all that had puzzled us plain,
and to clear away all remains of our family "mystery."

This I will tell you in the next chapter. And I will also explain to you
how Regina had come to know of our having found our way into the Old
House, the hopes that this had put into her head--hopes which had been
more than fulfilled, thanks to the accident with the key, which had so
strangely turned to good.




CHAPTER XII.

THE STORY OF THE OLD HOUSE.

  "Old house! that time hath deigned to spare,
  'Mid sunny slopes and gardens fair."--SIGOURNEY.


It all seemed like a dream the next morning. We slept much later than
usual, for we were quite tired out. I can never even now think of that
evening--shut up in the dark in the big bare room--without a sort of
shudder. It really was dreadful: we were so cold that when we did
fall asleep it was only to wake again with a start to find ourselves
shivering and aching. And it was frightening, too: though we squeezed
together as close as we could, we felt dreadfully alone. And alone we
really were; for, as we understood afterwards, there was nobody at all
in the Old House. The person who dusted it was the woman who lived at
the lodge, and only came up in the mornings. Regina had taken her a
little into her confidence. The day she hurried away when a bell rang,
it was the woman ringing to let her know the Rectory pony-carriage was
coming up the lane. Auntie knew that Regina came to the Old House, but
she thought it was just to wander about the garden, and that day she had
promised to call for her at the lodge. For the Old House belonged to
auntie: it had belonged to the Mowbrays for a very, very great many
years. And this brings me to the story of the long-ago troubles which we
were told--the story which explained everything which had puzzled us.

It was Mrs. Munt who told it us. She came into our room--Tib's and my
room--that morning before we were up--we had had our breakfast in
bed--and sat down between our cots.

"My dears," she began, "your dear grandpapa and--and my dear lady, Mrs.
Mowbray, Miss Queenie as was--they have asked me to tell you something
of the past, so that you may understand all. It is a great honour they
have done me, and I will endeavour to show that I feel it such. But oh,"
and here she fairly broke down, "this is a happy, a blessed day--to see
them at one again, and oh, my dears, it was a happy day that brought
you to Rosebuds, for all the anguish of heart of Mrs. Liddy and myself
last night, we shall never but be thankful to the over-ruling powers as
directed the finding of the key, and your innocent minds to the Old
House."

At this point Mrs. Munt stopped. It was a sort of little address which
she thought it her duty to make, and after this, she went straight on.

"It is a many years ago," she said, "that it all happened. When I first
came to Rosebuds as a young girl to help in the cooking, there was
living here your grandpapa, then a little boy of ten, and his brother
Baldwin, and Miss Mary, with their mother, and their father, who was on
the point of going abroad with his regiment. Not long after he left,
Miss Regina was born; then came the news of your great-grandpapa's
death, and the shock affected your great-grandmamma so much that she
never recovered it. She died a year or two after, Master Baldwin being
by that time preparing for the army, for he was five years older than
Master Gerald, and Miss Mary older than he. Miss Mary took charge of
things with a lady to help her. You can fancy that everybody was devoted
to Miss Regina, Master Gerald especially. Some years later, Ansdell
Friars came to Master Baldwin, by his uncle's death. He came home from
time to time, and we used to spend a part of the year there, but it
never seemed home to us, like Rosebuds. Your grandpapa married young--he
was about twenty-four, and Miss Queenie was thirteen. Poor Miss Mary
died the year before his marriage; you have seen her tomb at Ansdell,
and it seemed well to him to marry, to have a lady at the head of
things, him having so much charge like, for his brother. And your papa
was born when Miss Queenie was about fifteen. Your grandpapa's marriage
was a very happy one; Mrs. Ansdell was a very sweet lady, and suited him
well. She had not half the spirit nor the cleverness of Miss Queenie,
and she gave in to her husband, and she joined with him in thinking
there never was so beautiful a creature as Miss Queenie. How they did
spoil her! Poor Master Gerald--your papa, my dears, seemed nobody
and nothing in the family, compared with his auntie, though he was a
dear little boy. Well, to explain--next door to Rosebuds, as you now
understand, is the Old House. It is a far finer and larger place than
this, and it has always belonged to the Mowbrays, who are cousins of
the Ansdells, by a Miss Regina Mowbray having married an Ansdell--your
grandpapa's grandmother she was, as well as I can remember. It is her
picture that hangs in the big drawing-room--"

"The old princess!" we exclaimed, at which Mrs. Munt smiled--"and," she
went on, "it is from her, they always say, that comes the beauty--the
dark hair and blue eyes, the Ansdells are, so to say, proud of.
Well,"--Mrs. Munt here hurried on a little, I think she thought it
not good for us to say much about family beauty; it didn't matter to
_me_, with my shaggy light hair, and browny-greeny eyes, but Tib is
different--"the families at the two houses were very intimate--that door
in the wall was made in the Old House conservatory as a short cut for
the young ladies to run in and out by--they and the rectory family, this
Mr. Lauriston's uncle it was then, but this one was a great deal there,
were all most friendly. At the Old House there were some sisters--one is
living still, being Mr. Truro's mother--and two brothers. The eldest
brother _was_ a nice gentleman, just everything a gentleman should be,
and your grandpapa was delighted when he spoke to him for Miss Queenie.
Miss Queenie laughed and made fun of it, but in the end she said 'yes,'
and all would have been well--for he was a gentleman no woman could have
failed to care for as a husband--had not the younger brother come home
on leave. He had not seen Miss Queenie since she was grown up, for he
was a sailor, and had been long away. He was handsome, and had a taking
way with him--a sort of dash about him, and he was selfish and false. He
fell in love with her, and persuaded her that she had fallen in love
with him, and rather than be open about it, bad as it was to have lured
her away from his brother, he made it worse by getting her to run away
with him, and not let any one know where they were, till he wrote to
say they were married. My dears, from that day till yesterday, your
grandpapa and she never met again."

"Was he so angry?" we asked.

"Anger is no word for it. He was turned to stone to her. The
deceitfulness--that was always his cry. Poor Mr. John Mowbray--his great
friend, the one who had really the most to complain of, was far gentler,
though it broke his heart. He never married, and at his death, two years
ago, all came to your auntie as his brother's widow, for Mr. Conrad, the
brother, was dead. That is how the Old House is now your auntie's, but
she has never lived there. She could not bear it, seeing her brother
would not forgive her, and she had made up her mind to sell it, and came
to stay at the Rectory to get it all arranged. It was partly hearing it
was going to be sold, made your grandpapa think of coming here again
at last--he thought it was all quite settled, and no fear of any one
coming about. For he has not even had any friendliness with the Rectory
folk all these years; the old rector spoke to him before he died, and
begged him to forgive Miss Queenie, but it only made him harder. He
would never hear her name--he scored it out wherever he came across it
in a book--"

"Oh, yes, we saw that in London," we interrupted.

"_Nothing_," continued Mrs. Munt, "but the sight of her poor, sweet,
worn face would have changed him, and to think that _she_ should have
been the one to tell him the good news last night--it is indeed
wonderful how it has come about."

"Was auntie very unhappy with that man--the one she married?" asked Tib
in a low voice. Mrs. Munt looked sad and grave.

"My dears," she said, solemnly, "no good comes of ill-doing. The man who
deceived his kind brother, who set himself to wile a girl away from her
truest and best friends, was not the man to make a good husband. She
must have suffered more than you--or we, maybe--could understand. But it
is past, and you need never think of it again, except as a warning. Your
dear auntie may tell you more herself as you grow older. But for me, I
think I have done my part; and, indeed, I could almost feel the work of
my life is near its end now I have lived to see my dear master and his
best-loved sister united again," and poor Mrs. Munt wiped her eyes as
she kissed us, and said we might get up now--we were to go to the
Rectory to luncheon.

You will be glad to hear that she is living still, and likely to live
for many peaceful years to come.

We were, of course, very much interested in all she had told us. It took
some time to get it quite straight and clear in our heads, especially as
we felt that we should not much like to talk over the saddest parts of
it with any one but ourselves: not even with Regina, for, of course, the
man who had brought so much misery to them all--Mr. Conrad Mowbray--was
her father (I am not going to let her read this last chapter if I can
help it); and even about dear auntie, we felt it would not be kind to
talk about it to Regina--though _now_ I can scarcely fancy even Regina
herself feeling more tender about anything and everything to do with her
mother than Tib and I, who are really only her grandnieces, do.

We were at the same time in a hurry to get dressed, and go down stairs,
and yet a little afraid.

"Last night I wasn't afraid of grandpapa," said Tib; "we seemed all
worked up, so that only the _realest_ feelings mattered. Little top
feelings, like being shy and all that, seemed pushed away."

I didn't answer for a moment. I was thinking over what she said.

"Do you think our being afraid of grandpapa and fancying we don't love
him is only a top feeling after all?" I said.

"Yes," said Tib, "I do. Anyway, _I'm_ going to love him now. Perhaps, if
he has so many to love him now--auntie and Regina, and you and me--all
at once, the lot of it will make up for his having had so little all
these years. Things come like that sometimes, I suppose."

While we were talking--we took a good while to dress, for we wanted to
be very neat to go to the Rectory--there came a tap at the door, and in
walked Gerald, as cool as a cucumber.

"I'm ready," he said, and indeed one could see by the scrubby look of
his cheeks that he had had an extra amount of soap. "I've got my best
suit on to go to the Rectory."

"But, Gerald," said Tib, "don't you want to hear all about how it's all
been. Gussie and I can tell you," for I forgot to say that Mrs. Munt had
told us we had better explain a little to him. "Don't you want to know
why the Old House that we called the palace was shut up, and how it
comes to be auntie's, and how she is our auntie, and--"

"No," interrupted Gerald. "I don't want to know anything. It puzzles me.
I'm only seven years old."

We looked at him in astonishment. Then we fairly burst out laughing.

"I never saw such a boy," said Tib. "You're so lazy, Gerald, you won't
even let your mind work enough to understand about your own family."

"I do understand all I need," said Gerald; "I understand that we've got
an auntie, and that she's very kind, and that Regina is a cousin, and
she's very nice too--so nice that I'm still going to think she's a
fairy. That's what I've settled, and I think it's quite enough when I'm
only seven."

And from that day to this I have never heard him express any curiosity
or make any inquiries as to all that had happened. I fancy Gerald will
get through life comfortably--though to do him justice he is working
very well at school, and doesn't seem to be considered lazy at all.

Tib and I had still enough questions to ask to make up for his not
asking any. We were in a fever to see Regina, and very glad when Gerald
ran up stairs again to say that she had just driven over in the
Lauristons' pony-carriage to fetch us, and was waiting downstairs, and
we hurried down as fast as we could.

"But what about grandpapa?" said Tib, as we got to the first landing.
"Should we not go to say good morning or something to him?"

I hesitated, but just at that moment we heard his voice. He was standing
in the porch talking to Regina. You can't think how funny it seemed.
When he heard us he came into the hall and met us at the foot of the
stairs. Then he kissed us each, in a way he had never kissed us before.
It was like saying, "You understand all now. Let us begin a new life
together;" though his _said_ words were only, "Good morning, my dear
children. Are you all quite well and not tired now?"

"Quite well, thank you, dear grandpapa," and I am sure he understood
"between the lines," as people say of a letter meaning more than it
shows.

"I wish you could come with us, Uncle Gerald," said Regina, as we were
driving off.

"Thank you, my dear, but I am very busy," he said. There was a look in
his eyes to her that I had never seen before.

"But Charlie will be here this afternoon, and he does help you, doesn't
he?" she said.

"Very much," grandpapa replied.

We looked back at him, standing there in the doorway.

"Grandpapa is changed since last night," said Tib.

"How?" said Regina, anxiously. "You don't think he's ill?"

"No," said Tib, "though he does look very pale. But his face seems older
and _yet_ younger. It has got a sort of softer look, as if at last he
wasn't going to fight against himself anymore, but that it has tired
him."

"Yes," said Regina, "I understand. Then _you_ understand now--you and
Gussie?"

"Yes," we answered. "Mrs. Munt has told us a great deal. But there are
some things only you can tell us, and we want dreadfully to ask you."

"Fire away," said Regina, and she did so laugh when we didn't understand
her; for, of course, though she had never had any brothers or sisters,
she hadn't lived the shut-up way we had done.

"We want to know," we began, "how you knew about us going to the--the
Old House, and how you knew our names and about us altogether."

"It was Charlie Truro that told me about you," she said. "He is my
cousin as much--no, a good deal more--than he is yours, and we have
always been a great deal together. He has known what a terrible sorrow
it was to mamma to be estranged from her only brother, and he and I have
often planned what we could do. We were very glad when Uncle Gerald
agreed to take him as a sort of secretary for a while--it seemed a sort
of beginning."

"I wonder grandpapa ever did," I said. "Wasn't it rather a wonder? For
he knew he was a near cousin of yours, I suppose?"

"Yes," said Regina, "but it came about naturally enough, through some
friends who had no connection with us. And once he had seen Charlie,
Uncle Gerald seems to have taken a fancy to him. We came down here to
stay at the Rectory, not knowing any one was at Rosebuds. Your coming
was kept very quiet. Then Charlie told us of it, when he wrote, and
when he came down here he managed to come to see us one day--a Sunday it
was--at the Rectory, and told us all about you. And to me, though to no
one else, he told of your funny trouble, about having got into the Old
House and wondering if it was naughty, and then we planned together--he
and I--that I should meet you there. I don't know exactly what I hoped
for--I think Charlie had a vague idea that some day Uncle Gerald might
see me, and that--with me being so like mamma--it might do some good.
But we hadn't fixed anything, we meant to talk it all over the next time
he came--to-day, that is. He little thought he would find it all done
when he came."

"Won't he be surprised!" I said.

"Mamma sent him a telegram this morning," she said. "He deserved it."

But by this time we were at the Rectory.

We couldn't help feeling rather shy; we had really never been out
anywhere before except once, in London, when we had gone to have tea
with a niece of nurse's, who had a shop in one of the big streets, and
we had tea in the parlour behind. So that was _quite_ different, of
course. At the Rectory it was very nice except for our being shy. But
after luncheon, when we went out into the garden with auntie, she soon
sent away the shyness. She was just as kind and understanding as she
could be, as she has been ever since--such a _perfect_ auntie that our
only wonder now is how we ever did without her all those years.

We had to tell her all _our_ story over again, all from the beginning of
grandpapa's telling us we were to come to Rosebuds, and the book with
the name scored through; we _had_ to tell her, though we were afraid of
making her cry, down to our finding the key and getting into the house,
and the old princess, and the new princess, and all. She asked us
questions, too, about Ansdell Friars, and in what ways it was changed
since she had seen it.

"I should like to see it again," she said; "though it would never seem
as much home to me as here," and she sighed a little.

"But you're not going away from here now, auntie," we said, "You're not
going to sell the Old House?"

Auntie smiled.

"I hope not," she said. "They all think I am in no way bound to Jackman.
Indeed, it was his haggling so about the price that brought me down here
this summer. But one thing I have already given orders for: those horrid
pools are to be filled up at once. I won't have dear Gerald's peace of
mind disturbed by any anxiety _I_ can do away with."

We stared--it wasn't for a minute or two that we understood whom she was
talking of. It was so funny to hear grandpapa spoken of as "Gerald"--and
when we found out whom she meant, we all burst out laughing. And while
we were still laughing we heard wheels, and there was Mr. Truro, who had
looked in for a moment on his way from the station. I don't think I ever
saw any one's face look so happy and pleased as his did!

We all went back together to Rosebuds. Auntie and Regina said they were
going to have afternoon tea with grandpapa, and you don't know how nice
it looked, all neatly put out in the pretty old drawing-room, and poor
auntie kept giving little cries of mixed pleasure and pain as she
recognised one old friend after another among the china and the silver,
and even the _cakes_, which were a secret of Mrs. Munt's that no one
could make but herself.

And after tea we had a great treat. Auntie persuaded grandpapa that the
air would do him good, and so she coaxed him out into the garden and
then down the lane, and so on into the Old House grounds. And then she
and Regina took us all over it--"It is best to get over the first seeing
it again at once," I heard auntie whisper to grandpapa, "and the
children's pleasure will make it seem different."

It _is_ such a beautiful old house. I could write almost another book
about it, and it was so strange to get into the big drawing-room by the
double doors through which Regina used to disappear, to see our old
princess smiling down at us in our happiness just exactly as she had
done in our trouble!

Poor old, ever young princess! We shall always love you, but nothing,
_nothing_ like our own dear bright living fairy who has brought such new
joy and good into our lives. We have seldom been parted from her and
her mother since that day; we are almost always together, grandpapa
and auntie and Regina and we children, and very often Mr. Truro too.
Grandpapa says he is getting very old, but he _really_ doesn't look so,
and even when he _does_ get "very old," we shall all only love him the
better.


THE END.


RICHARD CLAY AND SONS, LONDON AND BUNGAY.





End of Project Gutenberg's The Palace in the Garden, by Mary Louisa Molesworth