1. Sara 3
2. A French Lesson 6
3. Ermengarde 23
4. Lottie 32
5. Becky 42
6. The Diamond Mines 55
7. The Diamond Mines
Again 67
8. In the Attic 90
9. Melchisedec 102
10. The Indian
Gentleman 115
11. Ram Dass 129
12. The Other Side of
the Wall 140
13. One of the Populace
149
14. What Melchisedec
Heard and Saw 162
15. The Magic 168
16. The Visitor 196
17. "It Is the
Child" 214
18. "I Tried Not
to Be" 223
19. Anne 237
Once on a dark winter's
day, when the yellow fog hung so thick and heavy in the streets of London that
the lamps were lighted and the shop windows blazed with gas as they do at
night, an odd-looking little girl sat in a cab with her father and was driven
rather slowly through the big thoroughfares.
She sat with her feet
tucked under her, and leaned against her father, who held her in his arm, as
she stared out of the window at the passing people with a queer old-fashioned
thoughtfulness in her big eyes.
She was such a little
girl that one did not expect to see such a look on her small face. It would
have been an old look for a child of twelve, and Sara Crewe was only seven.
The fact was, however,
that she was always dreaming and thinking odd things and could not herself
remember any time when she had not been thinking things about grown-up people
and the world they belonged to. She felt as if she had lived a long, long time.
At this moment she was
remembering the voyage she had just made from Bombay with her father, Captain
Crewe. She was thinking of the big ship, of the Lascars passing silently to and
fro on it, of the children playing about on the hot deck, and of some young
officers' wives who used to try to make her talk to them and laugh at the
things she said.
Principally, she was
thinking of what a queer thing it was that at one time one was in India in the
blazing sun, and then in the middle of the ocean, and then driving in a strange
vehicle through strange streets where the day was as dark as the night. She
found this so puzzling that she moved closer to her father.
"Papa," she
said in a low, mysterious little voice which was almost a whisper,
"papa."
"What is it,
darling?" Captain Crewe answered, holding her closer and looking down into
her face. "What is Sara thinking of?"
"Is this the
place?" Sara whispered, cuddling still closer to him. "Is it,
papa?"
"Yes, little Sara,
it is. We have reached it at last." And though she was only seven years
old, she knew that he felt sad when he said it.
It seemed to her many
years since he had begun to prepare her mind for "the place," as she
always called it. Her mother had died when she was born, so she had never known
or missed her. Her young, handsome, rich, petting father seemed to be the only
relation she had in the world. They had always played together and been fond of
each other. She only knew he was rich because she had heard people say so when
they thought she was not listening, and she had also heard them say that when
she grew up she would be rich, too. She did not know all that being rich meant.
She had always lived in a beautiful bungalow, and had been used to seeing many
servants who made salaams to her and called her "Missee Sahib," and
gave her her own way in everything. She had had toys and pets and an ayah who
worshipped her, and she had gradually learned that people who were rich had
these things. That, however, was all she knew about it.
During her short life
only one thing had troubled her, and that thing was "the place" she
was to be taken to some day. The climate of India was very bad for children,
and as soon as possible they were sent away from it--generally to England and
to school. She had seen other children go away, and had heard their fathers and
mothers talk about the letters they received from them. She had known that she
would be obliged to go also, and though sometimes her father's stories of the
voyage and the new country had attracted her, she had been troubled by the
thought that he could not stay with her.
"Couldn't you go
to that place with me, papa?" she had asked when she was five years old.
"Couldn't you go to school, too? I would help you with your lessons."
"But you will not
have to stay for a very long time, little Sara," he had always said.
"You will go to a nice house where there will be a lot of little girls,
and you will play together, and I will send you plenty of books, and you will
grow so fast that it will seem scarcely a year before you are big enough and
clever enough to come back and take care of papa."
She had liked to think
of that. To keep the house for her father; to ride with him, and sit at the
head of his table when he had dinner parties; to talk to him and read his
books--that would be what she would like most in the world, and if one must go
away to "the place" in England to attain it, she must make up her
mind to go. She did not care very much for other little girls, but if she had
plenty of books she could console herself. She liked books more than anything
else, and was, in fact, always inventing stories of beautiful things and
telling them to herself. Sometimes she had told them to her father, and he had
liked them as much as she did.
"Well, papa,"
she said softly, "if we are here I suppose we must be resigned."
He laughed at her
old-fashioned speech and kissed her. He was really not at all resigned himself,
though he knew he must keep that a secret. His quaint little Sara had been a
great companion to him, and he felt he should be a lonely fellow when, on his
return to India, he went into his bungalow knowing he need not expect to see
the small figure in its white frock come forward to meet him. So he held her
very closely in his arms as the cab rolled into the big, dull square in which
stood the house which was their destination.
It was a big, dull,
brick house, exactly like all the others in its row, but that on the front door
there shone a brass plate on which was engraved in black letters:
MISS MINCHIN,
Select Seminary for
Young Ladies.
"Here we are,
Sara," said Captain Crewe, making his voice sound as cheerful as possible.
Then he lifted her out of the cab and they mounted the steps and rang the bell.
Sara often thought afterward that the house was somehow exactly like Miss Minchin.
It was respectable and well furnished, but everything in it was ugly; and the
very armchairs seemed to have hard bones in them. In the hall everything was
hard and polished--even the red cheeks of the moon face on the tall clock in
the corner had a severe varnished look. The drawing room into which they were
ushered was covered by a carpet with a square pattern upon it, the chairs were
square, and a heavy marble timepiece stood upon the heavy marble mantel.
As she sat down in one
of the stiff mahogany chairs, Sara cast one of her quick looks about her.
"I don't like it,
papa," she said. "But then I dare say soldiers -- even brave ones --
don't really like going into battle."
Captain Crewe laughed
outright at this. He was young and full of fun, and he never tired of hearing
Sara's queer speeches.
"Oh, little
Sara," he said. "What shall I do when I have no one to say solemn
things to me? No one else is as solemn as you are."
"But why do solemn
things make you laugh so?" inquired Sara.
"Because you are
such fun when you say them," he answered, laughing still more. And then
suddenly he swept her into his arms and kissed her very hard, stopping laughing
all at once and looking almost as if tears had come into his eyes.
It was just then that
Miss Minchin entered the room. She was very like her house, Sara felt: tall and
dull, and respectable and ugly. She had large, cold, fishy eyes, and a large,
cold, fishy smile. It spread itself into a very large smile when she saw Sara
and Captain Crewe. She had heard a great many desirable things of the young
soldier from the lady who had recommended her school to him. Among other
things, she had heard that he was a rich father who was willing to spend a
great deal of money on his little daughter.
"It will be a
great privilege to have charge of such a beautiful and promising child, Captain
Crewe," she said, taking Sara's hand and stroking it. "Lady Meredith
has told me of her unusual cleverness. A clever child is a great treasure in an
establishment like mine."
Sara stood quietly,
with her eyes fixed upon Miss Minchin's face. She was thinking something odd,
as usual.
"Why does she say
I am a beautiful child?" she was thinking. "I am not beautiful at
all. Colonel Grange's little girl, Isobel, is beautiful. She has dimples and rose-colored
cheeks, and long hair the color of gold. I have short black hair and green
eyes; besides which, I am a thin child and not fair in the least. I am one of
the ugliest children I ever saw. She is beginning by telling a story."
She was mistaken, however,
in thinking she was an ugly child. She was not in the least like Isobel Grange,
who had been the beauty of the regiment, but she had an odd charm of her own.
She was a slim, supple creature, rather tall for her age, and had an intense,
attractive little face. Her hair was heavy and quite black and only curled at
the tips; her eyes were greenish gray, it is true, but they were big, wonderful
eyes with long, black lashes, and though she herself did not like the color of
them, many other people did. Still she was very firm in her belief that she was
an ugly little girl, and she was not at all elated by Miss Minchin's flattery.
"I should be
telling a story if I said she was beautiful," she thought; "and I
should know I was telling a story. I believe I am as ugly as she is--in my way.
What did she say that for?"
After she had known
Miss Minchin longer she learned why she had said it. She discovered that she
said the same thing to each papa and mamma who brought a child to her school.
Sara stood near her
father and listened while he and Miss Minchin talked. She had been brought to
the seminary because Lady Meredith's two little girls had been educated there,
and Captain Crewe had a great respect for Lady Meredith's experience. Sara was
to be what was known as "a parlor boarder," and she was to enjoy even
greater privileges than parlor boarders usually did. She was to have a pretty
bedroom and sitting room of her own; she was to have a pony and a carriage, and
a maid to take the place of the ayah who had been her nurse in India.
"I am not in the
least anxious about her education," Captain Crewe said, with his gay
laugh, as he held Sara's hand and patted it. "The difficulty will be to
keep her from learning too fast and too much. She is always sitting with her
little nose burrowing into books. She doesn't read them, Miss Minchin; she
gobbles them up as if she were a little wolf instead of a little girl. She is
always starving for new books to gobble, and she wants grown-up books--great,
big, fat ones--French and German as well as English--history and biography and
poets, and all sorts of things. Drag her away from her books when she reads too
much. Make her ride her pony in the Row or go out and buy a new doll. She ought
to play more with dolls."
"Papa," said
Sara, "you see, if I went out and bought a new doll every few days I
should have more than I could be fond of. Dolls ought to be intimate friends.
Emily is going to be my intimate friend."
Captain Crewe looked at
Miss Minchin and Miss Minchin looked at Captain Crewe.
"Who is
Emily?" she inquired.
"Tell her,
Sara," Captain Crewe said, smiling.
Sara's green-gray eyes
looked very solemn and quite soft as she answered.
"She is a doll I
haven't got yet," she said. "She is a doll papa is going to buy for me.
We are going out together to find her. I have called her Emily. She is going to
be my friend when papa is gone. I want her to talk to about him."
Miss Minchin's large,
fishy smile became very flattering indeed.
"What an original
child!" she said. "What a darling little creature!"
"Yes," said
Captain Crewe, drawing Sara close. "She is a darling little creature. Take
great care of her for me, Miss Minchin."
Sara stayed with her
father at his hotel for several days; in fact, she remained with him until he
sailed away again to India. They went out and visited many big shops together,
and bought a great many things. They bought, indeed, a great many more things
than Sara needed; but Captain Crewe was a rash, innocent young man and wanted
his little girl to have everything she admired and everything he admired
himself, so between them they collected a wardrobe much too grand for a child
of seven. There were velvet dresses trimmed with costly furs, and lace dresses,
and embroidered ones, and hats with great, soft ostrich feathers, and ermine
coats and muffs, and boxes of tiny gloves and handkerchiefs and silk stockings
in such abundant supplies that the polite young women behind the counters
whispered to each other that the odd little girl with the big, solemn eyes must
be at least some foreign princess--perhaps the little daughter of an Indian
rajah.
And at last they found
Emily, but they went to a number of toy shops and looked at a great many dolls
before they discovered her.
"I want her to
look as if she wasn't a doll really," Sara said. "I want her to look
as if she listens when I talk to her. The trouble with dolls, papa"--and
she put her head on one side and reflected as she said it--"the trouble
with dolls is that they never seem to hear." So they looked at big ones
and little ones--at dolls with black eyes and dolls with blue--at dolls with
brown curls and dolls with golden braids, dolls dressed and dolls undressed.
"You see,"
Sara said when they were examining one who had no clothes. "If, when I
find her, she has no frocks, we can take her to a dressmaker and have her
things made to fit. They will fit better if they are tried on."
After a number of
disappointments they decided to walk and look in at the shop windows and let
the cab follow them. They had passed two or three places without even going in,
when, as they were approaching a shop which was really not a very large one,
Sara suddenly started and clutched her father's arm.
"Oh, papa!"
she cried. "There is Emily!"
A flush had risen to
her face and there was an expression in her green-gray eyes as if she had just
recognized someone she was intimate with and fond of.
"She is actually
waiting there for us!" she said. "Let us go in to her."
"Dear me,"
said Captain Crewe, "I feel as if we ought to have someone to introduce
us."
"You must
introduce me and I will introduce you," said Sara. "But I knew her
the minute I saw her--so perhaps she knew me, too."
Perhaps she had known
her. She had certainly a very intelligent expression in her eyes when Sara took
her in her arms. She was a large doll, but not too large to carry about easily;
she had naturally curling golden-brown hair, which hung like a mantle about
her, and her eyes were a deep, clear, gray-blue, with soft, thick eyelashes
which were real eyelashes and not mere painted lines.
"Of course,"
said Sara, looking into her face as she held her on her knee, "of course
papa, this is Emily."
So Emily was bought and
actually taken to a children's outfitter's shop and measured for a wardrobe as
grand as Sara's own. She had lace frocks, too, and velvet and muslin ones, and
hats and coats and beautiful lace-trimmed underclothes, and gloves and
handkerchiefs and furs.
"I should like her
always to look as if she was a child with a good mother," said Sara.
"I'm her mother, though I am going to make a companion of her."
Captain Crewe would
really have enjoyed the shopping tremendously, but that a sad thought kept
tugging at his heart. This all meant that he was going to be separated from his
beloved, quaint little comrade.
He got out of his bed
in the middle of that night and went and stood looking down at Sara, who lay
asleep with Emily in her arms. Her black hair was spread out on the pillow and
Emily's golden-brown hair mingled with it, both of them had lace-ruffled
nightgowns, and both had long eyelashes which lay and curled up on their
cheeks. Emily looked so like a real child that Captain Crewe felt glad she was
there. He drew a big sigh and pulled his mustache with a boyish expression.
"Heigh-ho, little
Sara!" he said to himself "I don't believe you know how much your
daddy will miss you."
The next day he took
her to Miss Minchin's and left her there. He was to sail away the next morning.
He explained to Miss Minchin that his solicitors, Messrs. Barrow &
Skipworth, had charge of his affairs in England and would give her any advice
she wanted, and that they would pay the bills she sent in for Sara's expenses.
He would write to Sara twice a week, and she was to be given every pleasure she
asked for.
"She is a sensible
little thing, and she never wants anything it isn't safe to give her," he
said.
Then he went with Sara
into her little sitting room and they bade each other good-by. Sara sat on his
knee and held the lapels of his coat in her small hands, and looked long and
hard at his face.
"Are you learning
me by heart, little Sara?" he said, stroking her hair.
"No," she
answered. "I know you by heart. You are inside my heart." And they
put their arms round each other and kissed as if they would never let each
other go.
When the cab drove away
from the door, Sara was sitting on the floor of her sitting room, with her
hands under her chin and her eyes following it until it had turned the corner
of the square. Emily was sitting by her, and she looked after it, too. When
Miss Minchin sent her sister, Miss Amelia, to see what the child was doing, she
found she could not open the door.
"I have locked
it," said a queer, polite little voice from inside. "I want to be
quite by myself, if you please."
Miss Amelia was fat and
dumpy, and stood very much in awe of her sister. She was really the
better-natured person of the two, but she never disobeyed Miss Minchin. She
went downstairs again, looking almost alarmed.
"I never saw such
a funny, old-fashioned child, sister," she said. "She has locked
herself in, and she is not making the least particle of noise."
"It is much better
than if she kicked and screamed, as some of them do," Miss Minchin
answered. "I expected that a child as much spoiled as she is would set the
whole house in an uproar. If ever a child was given her own way in everything,
she is."
"I've been opening
her trunks and putting her things away," said Miss Amelia. "I never
saw anything like them--sable and ermine on her coats, and real Valenciennes
lace on her underclothing. You have seen some of her clothes. What do you think
of them?"
"I think they are
perfectly ridiculous," replied Miss Minchin, sharply; "but they will
look very well at the head of the line when we take the schoolchildren to
church on Sunday. She has been provided for as if she were a little
princess."
And upstairs in the
locked room Sara and Emily sat on the floor and stared at the corner round
which the cab had disappeared, while Captain Crewe looked backward, waving and
kissing his hand as if he could not bear to stop.
When Sara entered the
schoolroom the next morning everybody looked at her with wide, interested eyes.
By that time every pupil--from Lavinia Herbert, who was nearly thirteen and
felt quite grown up, to Lottie Legh, who was only just four and the baby of the
school--had heard a great deal about her. They knew very certainly that she was
Miss Minchin's show pupil and was considered a credit to the establishment. One
or two of them had even caught a glimpse of her French maid, Mariette, who had
arrived the evening before. Lavinia had managed to pass Sara's room when the
door was open, and had seen Mariette opening a box which had arrived late from
some shop.
"It was full of
petticoats with lace frills on them--frills and frills," she whispered to
her friend Jessie as she bent over her geography. "I saw her shaking them
out. I heard Miss Minchin say to Miss Amelia that her clothes were so grand
that they were ridiculous for a child. My mamma says that children should be
dressed simply. She has got one of those petticoats on now. I saw it when she
sat down."
"She has silk
stockings on!" whispered Jessie, bending over her geography also.
"And what little feet! I never saw such little feet."
"Oh," sniffed
Lavinia, spitefully, "that is the way her slippers are made. My mamma says
that even big feet can be made to look small if you have a clever shoemaker. I
don't think she is pretty at all. Her eyes are such a queer color."
"She isn't pretty
as other pretty people are," said Jessie, stealing a glance across the room;
"but she makes you want to look at her again. She has tremendously long
eyelashes, but her eyes are almost green."
Sara was sitting
quietly in her seat, waiting to be told what to do. She had been placed near
Miss Minchin's desk. She was not abashed at all by the many pairs of eyes
watching her. She was interested and looked back quietly at the children who
looked at her. She wondered what they were thinking of, and if they liked Miss
Minchin, and if they cared for their lessons, and if any of them had a papa at
all like her own. She had had a long talk with Emily about her papa that
morning.
"He is on the sea
now, Emily," she had said. "We must be very great friends to each
other and tell each other things. Emily, look at me. You have the nicest eyes I
ever saw--but I wish you could speak."
She was a child full of
imaginings and whimsical thoughts, and one of her fancies was that there would
be a great deal of comfort in even pretending that Emily was alive and really
heard and understood. After Mariette had dressed her in her dark-blue
schoolroom frock and tied her hair with a darkblue ribbon, she went to Emily,
who sat in a chair of her own, and gave her a book.
"You can read that
while I am downstairs," she said; and, seeing Mariette looking at her curiously,
she spoke to her with a serious little face.
"What I believe
about dolls," she said, "is that they can do things they will not let
us know about. Perhaps, really, Emily can read and talk and walk, but she will
only do it when people are out of the room. That is her secret. You see, if
people knew that dolls could do things, they would make them work. So, perhaps,
they have promised each other to keep it a secret. If you stay in the room,
Emily will just sit there and stare; but if you go out, she will begin to read,
perhaps, or go and look out of the window. Then if she heard either of us
coming, she would just run back and jump into her chair and pretend she had
been there all the time."
"Comme elle est
drole!" Mariette said to herself, and when she went downstairs she told
the head housemaid about it. But she had already begun to like this odd little
girl who had such an intelligent small face and such perfect manners. She had
taken care of children before who were not so polite. Sara was a very fine
little person, and had a gentle, appreciative way of saying, "If you
please, Mariette," "Thank you, Mariette," which was very
charming. Mariette told the head housemaid that she thanked her as if she was
thanking a lady.
"Elle a l'air
d'une princesse, cette petite, " she said. Indeed, she was very much
pleased with her new little mistress and liked her place greatly.
After Sara had sat in
her seat in the schoolroom for a few minutes, being looked at by the pupils,
Miss Minchin rapped in a dignified manner upon her desk.
"Young
ladies," she said, "I wish to introduce you to your new
companion." All the little girls rose in their places, and Sara rose also.
"I shall expect you all to be very agreeable to Miss Crewe; she has just
come to us from a great distance--in fact, from India. As soon as lessons are
over you must make each other's acquaintance."
The pupils bowed
ceremoniously, and Sara made a little curtsy, and then they sat down and looked
at each other again.
"Sara," said
Miss Minchin in her schoolroom manner, "come here to me."
She had taken a book
from the desk and was turning over its leaves. Sara went to her politely.
"As your papa has
engaged a French maid for you," she began, "I conclude that he wishes
you to make a special study of the French language."
Sara felt a little
awkward.
"I think he
engaged her," she said, "because he--he thought I would like her,
Miss Minchin."
"I am
afraid," said Miss Minchin, with a slightly sour smile, "that you
have been a very spoiled little girl and always imagine that things are done
because you like them. My impression is that your papa wished you to learn
French."
If Sara had been older
or less punctilious about being quite polite to people, she could have
explained herself in a very few words. But, as it was, she felt a flush rising
on her cheeks. Miss Minchin was a very severe and imposing person, and she
seemed so absolutely sure that Sara knew nothing whatever of French that she
felt as if it would be almost rude to correct her. The truth was that Sara
could not remember the time when she had not seemed to know French. Her father
had often spoken it to her when she had been a baby. Her mother had been a
French woman, and Captain Crewe had loved her language, so it happened that
Sara had always heard and been familiar with it.
"I--I have never
really learned French, but--but--" she began, trying shyly to make herself
clear.
One of Miss Minchin's
chief secret annoyances was that she did not speak French herself, and was
desirous of concealing the irritating fact. She, therefore, had no intention of
discussing the matter and laying herself open to innocent questioning by a new
little pupil.
"That is
enough," she said with polite tartness. "If you have not learned, you
must begin at once. The French master, Monsieur Dufarge, will be here in a few
minutes. Take this book and look at it until he arrives."
Sara's cheeks felt
warm. She went back to her seat and opened the book. She looked at the first
page with a grave face. She knew it would be rude to smile, and she was very
determined not to be rude. But it was very odd to find herself expected to
study a page which told her that "le pere" meant "the
father," and "la mere" meant "the mother."
Miss Minchin glanced
toward her scrutinizingly.
"You look rather
cross, Sara," she said. "I am sorry you do not like the idea of
learning French."
"I am very fond of
it," answered Sara, thinking she would try again; "but--"
"You must not say
'but' when you are told to do things," said Miss Minchin. "Look at
your book again."
And Sara did so, and
did not smile, even when she found that "le fils" meant "the
son," and "le frere" meant "the brother."
" When Monsieur
Dufarge comes," she thought, "I can make him understand."
Monsieur Dufarge
arrived very shortly afterward. He was a very nice, intelligent, middle-aged
Frenchman, and he looked interested when his eyes fell upon Sara trying
politely to seem absorbed in her little book of phrases.
"Is this a new
pupil for me, madame?" he said to Miss Minchin. "I hope that is my
good fortune."
"Her papa--Captain
Crewe--is very anxious that she should begin the language. But I am afraid she
has a childish prejudice against it. She does not seem to wish to learn,"
said Miss Minchin.
"I am sorry of
that, mademoiselle," he said kindly to Sara. "Perhaps, when we begin
to study together, I may show you that it is a charming tongue."
Little Sara rose in her
seat. She was beginning to feel rather desperate, as if she were almost in
disgrace. She looked up into Monsieur Dufarge's face with her big, green-gray
eyes, and they were quite innocently appealing. She knew that he would
understand as soon as she spoke. She began to explain quite simply in pretty
and fluent French. Madame had not understood. She had not learned French
exactly--not out of books--but her papa and other people had always spoken it
to her, and she had read it and written it as she had read and written English.
Her papa loved it, and she loved it because he did. Her dear mamma, who had
died when she was born, had been French. She would be glad to learn anything
monsieur would teach her, but what she had tried to explain to madame was that
she already knew the words in this book--and she held out the little book of
phrases.
When she began to speak
Miss Minchin started quite violently and sat staring at her over her
eyeglasses, almost indignantly, until she had finished. Monsieur Dufarge began
to smile, and his smile was one of great pleasure. To hear this pretty childish
voice speaking his own language so simply and charmingly made him feel almost
as if he were in his native land--which in dark, foggy days in London sometimes
seemed worlds away. When she had finished, he took the phrase book from her,
with a look almost affectionate. But he spoke to Miss Minchin.
"Ah, madame,"
he said, "there is not much I can teach her. She has not learned French;
she is French. Her accent is exquisite."
"You ought to have
told me," exclaimed Miss Minchin, much mortified, turning to Sara.
"I--I tried,"
said Sara. "I--I suppose I did not begin right."
Miss Minchin knew she
had tried, and that it had not been her fault that she was not allowed to
explain. And when she saw that the pupils had been listening and that Lavinia
and Jessie were giggling behind their French grammars, she felt infuriated.
"Silence, young
ladies!" she said severely, rapping upon the desk. "Silence at
once!"
And she began from that
minute to feel rather a grudge against her show pupil.
On that first morning,
when Sara sat at Miss Minchin's side, aware that the whole schoolroom was
devoting itself to observing her, she had noticed very soon one little girl,
about her own age, who looked at her very hard with a pair of light, rather
dull, blue eyes. She was a fat child who did not look as if she were in the
least clever, but she had a goodnaturedly pouting mouth. Her flaxen hair was
braided in a tight pigtail, tied with a ribbon, and she had pulled this pigtail
around her neck, and was biting the end of the ribbon, resting her elbows on
the desk, as she stared wonderingly at the new pupil. When Monsieur Dufarge
began to speak to Sara, she looked a little frightened; and when Sara stepped
forward and, looking at him with the innocent, appealing eyes, answered him,
without any warning, in French, the fat little girl gave a startled jump, and
grew quite red in her awed amazement. Having wept hopeless tears for weeks in
her efforts to remember that "la mere" meant "the mother,"
and "le pere," "the father,"--when one spoke sensible
English--it was almost too much for her suddenly to find herself listening to a
child her own age who seemed not only quite familiar with these words, but apparently
knew any number of others, and could mix them up with verbs as if they were
mere trifles.
She stared so hard and
bit the ribbon on her pigtail so fast that she attracted the attention of Miss
Minchin, who, feeling extremely cross at the moment, immediately pounced upon
her.
"Miss St.
John!" she exclaimed severely. "What do you mean by such conduct?
Remove your elbows! Take your ribbon out of your mouth! Sit up at once!"
Upon which Miss St.
John gave another jump, and when Lavinia and Jessie tittered she became redder
than ever--so red, indeed, that she almost looked as if tears were coming into
her poor, dull, childish eyes; and Sara saw her and was so sorry for her that
she began rather to like her and want to be her friend. It was a way of hers
always to want to spring into any fray in which someone was made uncomfortable
or unhappy.
"If Sara had been
a boy and lived a few centuries ago," her father used to say, "she
would have gone about the country with her sword drawn, rescuing and defending
everyone in distress. She always wants to fight when she sees people in
trouble."
So she took rather a
fancy to fat, slow, little Miss St. John, and kept glancing toward her through
the morning. She saw that lessons were no easy matter to her, and that there
was no danger of her ever being spoiled by being treated as a show pupil. Her
French lesson was a pathetic thing. Her pronunciation made even Monsieur
Dufarge smile in spite of himself, and Lavinia and Jessie and the more
fortunate girls either giggled or looked at her in wondering disdain. But Sara
did not laugh. She tried to look as if she did not hear when Miss St. John
called "le bon pain," "lee bong pang." She had a fine, hot
little temper of her own, and it made her feel rather savage when she heard the
titters and saw the poor, stupid, distressed child's face.
"It isn't funny,
really," she said between her teeth, as she bent over her book. "They
ought not to laugh."
When lessons were over
and the pupils gathered together in groups to talk, Sara looked for Miss St.
John, and finding her bundled rather disconsolately in a window-seat, she
walked over to her and spoke. She only said the kind of thing little girls
always say to each other by way of beginning an acquaintance, but there was
something friendly about Sara, and people always felt it.
"What is your
name?" she said.
To explain Miss St.
John's amazement one must recall that a new pupil is, for a short time, a
somewhat uncertain thing; and of this new pupil the entire school had talked
the night before until it fell asleep quite exhausted by excitement and
contradictory stories. A new pupil with a carriage and a pony and a maid, and a
voyage from India to discuss, was not an ordinary acquaintance.
"My name's
Ermengarde St. John," she answered.
"Mine is Sara
Crewe," said Sara. "Yours is very pretty. It sounds like a story
book."
"Do you like
it?" fluttered Ermengarde. "I--I like yours."
Miss St. John's chief
trouble in life was that she had a clever father. Sometimes this seemed to her
a dreadful calamity. If you have a father who knows everything, who speaks
seven or eight languages, and has thousands of volumes which he has apparently
learned by heart, he frequently expects you to be familiar with the contents of
your lesson books at least; and it is not improbable that he will feel you
ought to be able to remember a few incidents of history and to write a French
exercise. Ermengarde was a severe trial to Mr. St. John. He could not
understand how a child of his could be a notably and unmistakably dull creature
who never shone in anything.
"Good
heavens!" he had said more than once, as he stared at her, "there are
times when I think she is as stupid as her Aunt Eliza!"
If her Aunt Eliza had
been slow to learn and quick to forget a thing entirely when she had learned
it, Ermengarde was strikingly like her. She was the monumental dunce of the
school, and it could not be denied.
"She must be made
to learn," her father said to Miss Minchin.
Consequently Ermengarde
spent the greater part of her life in disgrace or in tears. She learned things
and forgot them; or, if she remembered them, she did not understand them. So it
was natural that, having made Sara's acquaintance, she should sit and stare at
her with profound admiration.
"You can speak
French, can't you?" she said respectfully.
Sara got on to the
window-seat, which was a big, deep one, and, tucking up her feet, sat with her
hands clasped round her knees.
"I can speak it
because I have heard it all my life," she answered. "You could speak
it if you had always heard it."
"Oh, no, I
couldn't," said Ermengarde. "I never could speak it!"
"Why?"
inquired Sara, curiously.
Ermengarde shook her
head so that the pigtail wobbled.
"You heard me just
now," she said. "I'm always like that. I can't say the words. They're
so queer."
She paused a moment,
and then added with a touch of awe in her voice, "You are clever, aren't
you?"
Sara looked out of the
window into the dingy square, where the sparrows were hopping and twittering on
the wet, iron railings and the sooty branches of the trees. She reflected a few
moments. She had heard it said very often that she was "clever," and
she wondered if she was--and if she was, how it had happened.
"I don't
know," she said. "I can't tell." Then, seeing a mournful look on
the round, chubby face, she gave a little laugh and changed the subject.
"Would you like to
see Emily?" she inquired.
"Who is
Emily?" Ermengarde asked, just as Miss Minchin had done.
"Come up to my
room and see," said Sara, holding out her hand.
They jumped down from
the window-seat together, and went upstairs.
"Is it true,"
Ermengarde whispered, as they went through the hall--"is it true that you
have a playroom all to yourself?"
"Yes," Sara
answered. "Papa asked Miss Minchin to let me have one, because--well, it
was because when I play I make up stories and tell them to myself, and I don't
like people to hear me. It spoils it if I think people listen."
They had reached the
passage leading to Sara's room by this time, and Ermengarde stopped short,
staring, and quite losing her breath.
"You make up
stories!" she gasped. "Can you do that--as well as speak French? Can
you?"
Sara looked at her in
simple surprise.
"Why, anyone can
make up things," she said. "Have you never tried?"
She put her hand
warningly on Ermengarde's.
"Let us go very
quietly to the door," she whispered, "and then I will open it quite
suddenly; perhaps we may catch her."
She was half laughing,
but there was a touch of mysterious hope in her eyes which fascinated
Ermengarde, though she had not the remotest idea what it meant, or whom it was
she wanted to "catch," or why she wanted to catch her. Whatsoever she
meant, Ermengarde was sure it was something delightfully exciting. So, quite
thrilled with expectation, she followed her on tiptoe along the passage. They
made not the least noise until they reached the door. Then Sara suddenly turned
the handle, and threw it wide open. Its opening revealed the room quite neat
and quiet, a fire gently burning in the grate, and a wonderful doll sitting in
a chair by it, apparently reading a book.
"Oh, she got back
to her seat before we could see her!" Sara explained. "Of course they
always do. They are as quick as lightning."
Ermengarde looked from
her to the doll and back again.
"Can
she--walk?" she asked breathlessly.
"Yes,"
answered Sara. "At least I believe she can. At least I pretend I believe
she can. And that makes it seem as if it were true. Have you never pretended
things?"
"No," said
Ermengarde. "Never. I--tell me about it."
She was so bewitched by
this odd, new companion that she actually stared at Sara instead of at
Emily--notwithstanding that Emily was the most attractive doll person she had
ever seen.
"Let us sit
down," said Sara, "and I will tell you. It's so easy that when you
begin you can't stop. You just go on and on doing it always. And it's
beautiful. Emily, you must listen. This is Ermengarde St. John, Emily. Ermengarde,
this is Emily. Would you like to hold her?"
"Oh, may I?"
said Ermengarde. "May I, really? She is beautiful!" And Emily was put
into her arms.
Never in her dull,
short life had Miss St. John dreamed of such an hour as the one she spent with
the queer new pupil before they heard the lunch-bell ring and were obliged to
go downstairs.
Sara sat upon the
hearth-rug and told her strange things. She sat rather huddled up, and her
green eyes shone and her cheeks flushed. She told stories of the voyage, and
stories of India; but what fascinated Ermengarde the most was her fancy about
the dolls who walked and talked, and who could do anything they chose when the
human beings were out of the room, but who must keep their powers a secret and
so flew back to their places "like lightning" when people returned to
the room.
"We couldn't do
it," said Sara, seriously. "You see, it's a kind of magic."
Once, when she was
relating the story of the search for Emily, Ermengarde saw her face suddenly
change. A cloud seemed to pass over it and put out the light in her shining
eyes. She drew her breath in so sharply that it made a funny, sad little sound,
and then she shut her lips and held them tightly closed, as if she was
determined either to do or not to do something. Ermengarde had an idea that if
she had been like any other little girl, she might have suddenly burst out
sobbing and crying. But she did not.
"Have you a--a
pain?" Ermengarde ventured.
"Yes," Sara
answered, after a moment's silence. "But it is not in my body." Then
she added something in a low voice which she tried to keep quite steady, and it
was this: "Do you love your father more than anything else in all the
whole world?"
Ermengarde's mouth fell
open a little. She knew that it would be far from behaving like a respectable
child at a select seminary to say that it had never occurred to you that you
could love your father, that you would do anything desperate to avoid being
left alone in his society for ten minutes. She was, indeed, greatly embarrassed.
"I--I scarcely
ever see him," she stammered. "He is always in the library--reading
things."
"I love mine more
than all the world ten times over," Sara said. "That is what my pain
is. He has gone away."
She put her head
quietly down on her little, huddled-up knees, and sat very still for a few
minutes.
"She's going to
cry out loud," thought Ermengarde, fearfully.
But she did not. Her
short, black locks tumbled about her ears, and she sat still. Then she spoke
without lifting her head.
"I promised him I
would bear it," she said. "And I will. You have to bear things. Think
what soldiers bear! Papa is a soldier. If there was a war he would have to bear
marching and thirstiness and, perhaps, deep wounds. And he would never say a
word--not one word."
Ermengarde could only
gaze at her, but she felt that she was beginning to adore her. She was so
wonderful and different from anyone else.
Presently, she lifted
her face and shook back her black locks, with a queer little smile.
"If I go on
talking and talking," she said, "and telling you things about
pretending, I shall bear it better. You don't forget, but you bear it
better."
Ermengarde did not know
why a lump came into her throat and her eyes felt as if tears were in them.
"Lavinia and
Jessie are 'best friends,'" she said rather huskily. "I wish we could
be 'best friends.' Would you have me for yours? You're clever, and I'm the
stupidest child in the school, but I--oh, I do so like you!"
"I'm glad of
that," said Sara. "It makes you thankful when you are liked. Yes. We
will be friends. And I'll tell you what"--a sudden gleam lighting her
face--"I can help you with your French lessons."
If Sara had been a
different kind of child, the life she led at Miss Minchin's Select Seminary for
the next few years would not have been at all good for her. She was treated
more as if she were a distinguished guest at the establishment than as if she were
a mere little girl. If she had been a self-opinionated, domineering child, she
might have become disagreeable enough to be unbearable through being so much
indulged and flattered. If she had been an indolent child, she would have
learned nothing. Privately Miss Minchin disliked her, but she was far too
worldly a woman to do or say anything which might make such a desirable pupil
wish to leave her school. She knew quite well that if Sara wrote to her papa to
tell him she was uncomfortable or unhappy, Captain Crewe would remove her at
once. Miss Minchin's opinion was that if a child were continually praised and
never forbidden to do what she liked, she would be sure to be fond of the place
where she was so treated. Accordingly, Sara was praised for her quickness at
her lessons, for her good manners, for her amiability to her fellow pupils, for
her generosity if she gave sixpence to a beggar out of her full little purse;
the simplest thing she did was treated as if it were a virtue, and if she had
not had a disposition and a clever little brain, she might have been a very
self-satisfied young person. But the clever little brain told her a great many
sensible and true things about herself and her circumstances, and now and then
she talked these things over to Ermengarde as time went on.
"Things happen to
people by accident," she used to say. "A lot of nice accidents have
happened to me. It just happened that I always liked lessons and books, and
could remember things when I learned them. It just happened that I was born
with a father who was beautiful and nice and clever, and could give me
everything I liked. Perhaps I have not really a good temper at all, but if you
have everything you want and everyone is kind to you, how can you help but be
good-tempered? I don't know"--looking quite serious--"how I shall
ever find out whether I am really a nice child or a horrid one. Perhaps I'm a
hideous child, and no one will ever know, just because I never have any
trials."
"Lavinia has no
trials," said Ermengarde, stolidly, "and she is horrid enough."
Sara rubbed the end of
her little nose reflectively, as she thought the matter over.
"Well," she
said at last, "perhaps--perhaps that is because Lavinia is growing."
This was the result of
a charitable recollection of having heard Miss Amelia say that Lavinia was
growing so fast that she believed it affected her health and temper.
Lavinia, in fact, was
spiteful. She was inordinately jealous of Sara. Until the new pupil's arrival,
she had felt herself the leader in the school. She had led because she was
capable of making herself extremely disagreeable if the others did not follow
her. She domineered over the little children, and assumed grand airs with those
big enough to be her companions. She was rather pretty, and had been the
best-dressed pupil in the procession when the Select Seminary walked out two by
two, until Sara's velvet coats and sable muffs appeared, combined with drooping
ostrich feathers, and were led by Miss Minchin at the head of the line. This,
at the beginning, had been bitter enough; but as time went on it became
apparent that Sara was a leader, too, and not because she could make herself
disagreeable, but because she never did.
"There's one thing
about Sara Crewe," Jessie had enraged her "best friend" by
saying honestly, "she's never 'grand' about herself the least bit, and you
know she might be, Lavvie. I believe I couldn't help being--just a little--if I
had so many fine things and was made such a fuss over. It's disgusting, the way
Miss Minchin shows her off when parents come."
"'Dear Sara must
come into the drawing room and talk to Mrs. Musgrave about India,'"
mimicked Lavinia, in her most highly flavored imitation of Miss Minchin.
"'Dear Sara must speak French to Lady Pitkin. Her accent is so perfect.'
She didn't learn her French at the Seminary, at any rate. And there's nothing
so clever in her knowing it. She says herself she didn't learn it at all. She
just picked it up, because she always heard her papa speak it. And, as to her
papa, there is nothing so grand in being an Indian officer."
"Well," said
Jessie, slowly, "he's killed tigers. He killed the one in the skin Sara
has in her room. That's why she likes it so. She lies on it and strokes its
head, and talks to it as if it was a cat."
"She's always
doing something silly," snapped Lavinia. "My mamma says that way of
hers of pretending things is silly. She says she will grow up eccentric."
lt was quite true that
Sara was never "grand." She was a friendly little soul, and shared
her privileges and belongings with a free hand. The little ones, who were
accustomed to being disdained and ordered out of the way by mature ladies aged
ten and twelve, were never made to cry by this most envied of them all. She was
a motherly young person, and when people fell down and scraped their knees, she
ran and helped them up and patted them, or found in her pocket a bonbon or some
other article of a soothing nature. She never pushed them out of her way or
alluded to their years as a humiliation and a blot upon their small characters.
"If you are four
you are four," she said severely to Lavinia on an occasion of her
having--it must be confessed--slapped Lottie and called her "a brat;"
"but you will be five next year, and six the year after that. And,"
opening large, convicting eyes, "it takes sixteen years to make you
twenty."
"Dear me,"
said Lavinia, "how we can calculate!" In fact, it was not to be
denied that sixteen and four made twenty--and twenty was an age the most daring
were scarcely bold enough to dream of.
So the younger children
adored Sara. More than once she had been known to have a tea party, made up of
these despised ones, in her own room. And Emily had been played with, and
Emily's own tea service used--the one with cups which held quite a lot of much-sweetened
weak tea and had blue flowers on them. No one had seen such a very real doll's
tea set before. From that afternoon Sara was regarded as a goddess and a queen
by the entire alphabet class.
Lottle Legh worshipped
her to such an extent that if Sara had not been a motherly person, she would
have found her tiresome. Lottie had been sent to school by a rather flighty
young papa who could not imagine what else to do with her. Her young mother had
died, and as the child had been treated like a favorite doll or a very spoiled
pet monkey or lap dog ever since the first hour of her life, she was a very
appalling little creature. When she wanted anything or did not want anything
she wept and howled; and, as she always wanted the things she could not have,
and did not want the things that were best for her, her shrill little voice was
usually to be heard uplifted in wails in one part of the house or another.
Her strongest weapon
was that in some mysterious way she had found out that a very small girl who had
lost her mother was a person who ought to be pitied and made much of. She had
probably heard some grown-up people talking her over in the early days, after
her mother's death. So it became her habit to make great use of this knowledge.
The first time Sara
took her in charge was one morning when, on passing a sitting room, she heard
both Miss Minchin and Miss Amelia trying to suppress the angry wails of some
child who, evidently, refused to be silenced. She refused so strenuously indeed
that Miss Minchin was obliged to almost shout--in a stately and severe
manner--to make herself heard.
"What is she
crying for?" she almost yelled.
"Oh--oh--oh!"
Sara heard; "I haven't got any mam--ma-a!"
"Oh, Lottie!"
screamed Miss Amelia. "Do stop, darling! Don't cry! Please don't!"
"Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh!
Oh!" Lottle howled tempestuously.
"Haven't--got--any--mam--ma-a!"
"She ought to be
whipped," Miss Minchin proclaimed. "You shall be whipped, you naughty
child!"
Lottle wailed more
loudly than ever. Miss Amelia began to cry. Miss Minchin's voice rose until it
almost thundered, then suddenly she sprang up from her chair in impotent
indignation and flounced out of the room, leaving Miss Amelia to arrange the
matter.
Sara had paused in the
hall, wondering if she ought to go into the room, because she had recently
begun a friendly acquaintance with Lottie and might be able to quiet her. When
Miss Minchin came out and saw her, she looked rather annoyed. She realized that
her voice, as heard from inside the room, could not have sounded either
dignified or amiable.
"Oh, Sara!"
she exclaimed, endeavoring to produce a suitable smile.
"I stopped,"
explained Sara, "because I knew it was Lottie--and I thought,
perhaps--just perhaps, I could make her be quiet. May I try, Miss
Minchin?"
"If you can, you
are a clever child," answered Miss Minchin, drawing in her mouth sharply.
Then, seeing that Sara looked slightly chilled by her asperity, she changed her
manner. "But you are clever in everything," she said in her approving
way. "I dare say you can manage her. Go in." And she left her.
When Sara entered the
room, Lottie was lying upon the floor, screaming and kicking her small fat legs
violently, and Miss Amelia was bending over her in consternation and despair,
looking quite red and damp with heat. Lottie had always found, when in her own
nursery at home, that kicking and screaming would always be quieted by any
means she insisted on. Poor plump Miss Amelia was trying first one method, and
then another.
"Poor
darling," she said one moment, "I know you haven't any mamma,
poor--" Then in quite another tone, "If you don't stop, Lottie, I
will shake you. Poor little angel! There--! You wicked, bad, detestable child,
I will smack you! I will!"
Sara went to them
quietly. She did not know at all what she was going to do, but she had a vague
inward conviction that it would be better not to say such different kinds of
things quite so helplessly and excitedly.
"Miss
Amelia," she said in a low voice, "Miss Minchin says I may try to
make her stop--may I?"
Miss Amelia turned and
looked at her hopelessly. "Oh, do you think you can?" she gasped.
"I don't know
whether I can," answered Sara, still in her half-whisper; "but I will
try."
Miss Amelia stumbled up
from her knees with a heavy sigh, and Lottie's fat little legs kicked as hard
as ever.
"If you will steal
out of the room," said Sara, "I will stay with her."
"Oh, Sara!"
almost whimpered Miss Amelia. "We never had such a dreadful child before.
I don't believe we can keep her."
But she crept out of
the room, and was very much relieved to find an excuse for doing it.
Sara stood by the
howling furious child for a few moments, and looked down at her without saying
anything. Then she sat down flat on the floor beside her and waited. Except for
Lottie's angry screams, the room was quite quiet. This was a new state of
affairs for little Miss Legh, who was accustomed, when she screamed, to hear
other people protest and implore and command and coax by turns. To lie and kick
and shriek, and find the only person near you not seeming to mind in the least,
attracted her attention. She opened her tight-shut streaming eyes to see who
this person was. And it was only another little girl. But it was the one who
owned Emily and all the nice things. And she was looking at her steadily and as
if she was merely thinking. Having paused for a few seconds to find this out,
Lottie thought she must begin again, but the quiet of the room and of Sara's
odd, interested face made her first howl rather half-hearted.
"I--haven't--any--ma--ma--ma-a!"
she announced; but her voice was not so strong.
Sara looked at her
still more steadily, but with a sort of understanding in her eyes.
"Neither have
I," she said.
This was so unexpected
that it was astounding. Lottie actually dropped her legs, gave a wriggle, and
lay and stared. A new idea will stop a crying child when nothing else will.
Also it was true that while Lottie disliked Miss Minchin, who was cross, and
Miss Amelia, who was foolishly indulgent, she rather liked Sara, little as she
knew her. She did not want to give up her grievance, but her thoughts were
distracted from it, so she wriggled again, and, after a sulky sob, said,
"Where is she?"
Sara paused a moment.
Because she had been told that her mamma was in heaven, she had thought a great
deal about the matter, and her thoughts had not been quite like those of other
people.
"She went to
heaven," she said. "But I am sure she comes out sometimes to see
me--though I don't see her. So does yours. Perhaps they can both see us now.
Perhaps they are both in this room."
Lottle sat bolt
upright, and looked about her. She was a pretty, little, curly-headed creature,
and her round eyes were like wet forget-me-nots. If her mamma had seen her
during the last half-hour, she might not have thought her the kind of child who
ought to be related to an angel.
Sara went on talking.
Perhaps some people might think that what she said was rather like a fairy
story, but it was all so real to her own imagination that Lottie began to
listen in spite of herself. She had been told that her mamma had wings and a
crown, and she had been shown pictures of ladies in beautiful white nightgowns,
who were said to be angels. But Sara seemed to be telling a real story about a
lovely country where real people were.
"There are fields
and fields of flowers," she said, forgetting herself, as usual, when she
began, and talking rather as if she were in a dream, "fields and fields of
lilies--and when the soft wind blows over them it wafts the scent of them into
the air--and everybody always breathes it, because the soft wind is always
blowing. And little children run about in the lily fields and gather armfuls of
them, and laugh and make little wreaths. And the streets are shining. And
people are never tired, however far they walk. They can float anywhere they
like. And there are walls made of pearl and gold all round the city, but they
are low enough for the people to go and lean on them, and look down on to the
earth and smile, and send beautiful messages."
Whatsoever story she
had begun to tell, Lottie would, no doubt, have stopped crying, and been
fascinated into listening; but there was no denying that this story was
prettier than most others. She dragged herself close to Sara, and drank in
every word until the end came--far too soon. When it did come, she was so sorry
that she put up her lip ominously.
"I want to go
there," she cried. "I--haven't any mamma in this school."
Sara saw the danger
signal, and came out of her dream. She took hold of the chubby hand and pulled
her close to her side with a coaxing little laugh.
"I will be your
mamma," she said. "We will play that you are my little girl. And
Emily shall be your sister."
Lottie's dimples all
began to show themselves.
"Shall she?"
she said.
"Yes,"
answered Sara, jumping to her feet. "Let us go and tell her. And then I
will wash your face and brush your hair."
To which Lottie agreed
quite cheerfully, and trotted out of the room and upstairs with her, without
seeming even to remember that the whole of the last hour's tragedy had been
caused by the fact that she had refused to be washed and brushed for lunch and
Miss Minchin had been called in to use her majestic authority.
And from that time Sara
was an adopted mother.
Of course the greatest
power Sara possessed and the one which gained her even more followers than her
luxuries and the fact that she was "the show pupil," the power that
Lavinia and certain other girls were most envious of, and at the same time most
fascinated by in spite of themselves, was her power of telling stories and of
making everything she talked about seem like a story, whether it was one or
not.
Anyone who has been at
school with a teller of stories knows what the wonder means--how he or she is
followed about and besought in a whisper to relate romances; how groups gather
round and hang on the outskirts of the favored party in the hope of being
allowed to join in and listen. Sara not only could tell stories, but she adored
telling them. When she sat or stood in the midst of a circle and began to
invent wonderful things, her green eyes grew big and shining, her cheeks
flushed, and, without knowing that she was doing it, she began to act and made
what she told lovely or alarming by the raising or dropping of her voice, the
bend and sway of her slim body, and the dramatic movement of her hands. She
forgot that she was talking to listening children; she saw and lived with the
fairy folk, or the kings and queens and beautiful ladies, whose adventures she
was narrating. Sometimes when she had finished her story, she was quite out of
breath with excitement, and would lay her hand on her thin, little,
quick-rising chest, and half laugh as if at herself.
"When I am telling
it," she would say, "it doesn't seem as if it was only made up. It
seems more real than you are--more real than the schoolroom. I feel as if I
were all the people in the story--one after the other. It is queer."
She had been at Miss
Minchin's school about two years when, one foggy winter's afternoon, as she was
getting out of her carriage, comfortably wrapped up in her warmest velvets and
furs and looking very much grander than she knew, she caught sight, as she
crossed the pavement, of a dingy little figure standing on the area steps, and
stretching its neck so that its wide-open eyes might peer at her through the
railings. Something in the eagerness and timidity of the smudgy face made her
look at it, and when she looked she smiled because it was her way to smile at
people.
But the owner of the
smudgy face and the wide-open eyes evidently was afraid that she ought not to
have been caught looking at pupils of importance. She dodged out of sight like
a jack-in-the-box and scurried back into the kitchen, disappearing so suddenly
that if she had not been such a poor little forlorn thing, Sara would have
laughed in spite of herself. That very evening, as Sara was sitting in the midst
of a group of listeners in a corner of the schoolroom telling one of her
stories, the very same figure timidly entered the room, carrying a coal box
much too heavy for her, and knelt down upon the hearth rug to replenish the
fire and sweep up the ashes.
She was cleaner than
she had been when she peeped through the area railings, but she looked just as
frightened. She was evidently afraid to look at the children or seem to be
listening. She put on pieces of coal cautiously with her fingers so that she
might make no disturbing noise, and she swept about the fire irons very softly.
But Sara saw in two minutes that she was deeply interested in what was going
on, and that she was doing her work slowly in the hope of catching a word here
and there. And realizing this, she raised her voice and spoke more clearly.
"The Mermaids swam
softly about in the crystal-green water, and dragged after them a fishing-net
woven of deep-sea pearls," she said. "The Princess sat on the white
rock and watched them."
It was a wonderful
story about a princess who was loved by a Prince Merman, and went to live with
him in shining caves under the sea.
The small drudge before
the grate swept the hearth once and then swept it again. Having done it twice,
she did it three times; and, as she was doing it the third time, the sound of
the story so lured her to listen that she fell under the spell and actually
forgot that she had no right to listen at all, and also forgot everything else.
She sat down upon her heels as she knelt on the hearth rug, and the brush hung
idly in her fingers. The voice of the storyteller went on and drew her with it
into winding grottos under the sea, glowing with soft, clear blue light, and
paved with pure golden sands. Strange sea flowers and grasses waved about her,
and far away faint singing and music echoed.
The hearth brush fell
from the work-roughened hand, and Lavinia Herbert looked round.
"That girl has
been listening," she said.
The culprit snatched up
her brush, and scrambled to her feet. She caught at the coal box and simply
scuttled out of the room like a frightened rabbit.
Sara felt rather
hot-tempered.
"I knew she was
listening," she said. "Why shouldn't she?"
Lavinia tossed her head
with great elegance.
"Well," she
remarked, "I do not know whether your mamma would like you to tell stories
to servant girls, but I know my mamma wouldn't like me to do it."
"My mamma!"
said Sara, looking odd. "I don't believe she would mind in the least. She
knows that stories belong to everybody."
"I thought,"
retorted Lavinia, in severe recollection, that your mamma was dead. How can she
know things?"
"Do you think she
doesn't know things?" said Sara, in her stern little voice. Sometimes she
had a rather stern little voice.
"Sara's mamma
knows everything," piped in Lottie. "So does my mamma--'cept Sara is
my mamma at Miss Minchin's--my other one knows everything. The streets are
shining, and there are fields and fields of lilies, and everybody gathers them.
Sara tells me when she puts me to bed."
"You wicked
thing," said Lavinia, turning on Sara; "making fairy stories about
heaven."
"There are much
more splendid stories in Revelation," returned Sara. "Just look and
see! How do you know mine are fairy stories? But I can tell you"--with a
fine bit of unheavenly temper--"you will never find out whether they are
or not if you're not kinder to people than you are now. Come along,
Lottie." And she marched out of the room, rather hoping that she might see
the little servant again somewhere, but she found no trace of her when she got
into the hall.
"Who is that
little girl who makes the fires?" she asked Mariette that night.
Mariette broke forth
into a flow of description.
Ah, indeed,
Mademoiselle Sara might well ask. She was a forlorn little thing who had just
taken the place of scullery maid--though, as to being scullery maid, she was
everything else besides. She blacked boots and grates, and carried heavy
coal-scuttles up and down stairs, and scrubbed floors and cleaned windows, and
was ordered about by everybody. She was fourteen years old, but was so stunted
in growth that she looked about twelve. In truth, Mariette was sorry for her.
She was so timid that if one chanced to speak to her it appeared as if her
poor, frightened eyes would jump out of her head.
"What is her
name?" asked Sara, who had sat by the table, with her chin on her hands,
as she listened absorbedly to the recital.
Her name was Becky.
Mariette heard everyone belowstairs calling, "Becky, do this," and
"Becky, do that," every five minutes in the day.
Sara sat and looked
into the fire, reflecting on Becky for some time after Mariette left her. She
made up a story of which Becky was the ill-used heroine. She thought she looked
as if she had never had quite enough to eat. Her very eyes were hungry. She
hoped she should see her again, but though she caught sight of her carrying
things up or down stairs on several occasions, she always seemed in such a hurry
and so afraid of being seen that it was impossible to speak to her.
But a few weeks later,
on another foggy afternoon, when she entered her sitting room she found herself
confronting a rather pathetic picture. In her own special and pet easy-chair
before the bright fire, Becky--with a coal smudge on her nose and several on
her apron, with her poor little cap hanging half off her head, and an empty
coal box on the floor near her--sat fast asleep, tired out beyond even the
endurance of her hard-working young body. She had been sent up to put the
bedrooms in order for the evening. There were a great many of them, and she had
been running about all day. Sara's rooms she had saved until the last. They
were not like the other rooms, which were plain and bare. Ordinary pupils were
expected to be satisfied with mere necessaries. Sara's comfortable sitting room
seemed a bower of luxury to the scullery maid, though it was, in fact, merely a
nice, bright little room. But there were pictures and books in it, and curious
things from India; there was a sofa and the low, soft chair; Emily sat in a
chair of her own, with the air of a presiding goddess, and there was always a
glowing fire and a polished grate. Becky saved it until the end of her
afternoon's work, because it rested her to go into it, and she always hoped to
snatch a few minutes to sit down in the soft chair and look about her, and
think about the wonderful good fortune of the child who owned such surroundings
and who went out on the cold days in beautiful hats and coats one tried to
catch a glimpse of through the area railing.
On this afternoon, when
she had sat down, the sensation of relief to her short, aching legs had been so
wonderful and delightful that it had seemed to soothe her whole body, and the
glow of warmth and comfort from the fire had crept over her like a spell,
until, as she looked at the red coals, a tired, slow smile stole over her
smudged face, her head nodded forward without her being aware of it, her eyes
drooped, and she fell fast asleep. She had really been only about ten minutes
in the room when Sara entered, but she was in as deep a sleep as if she had
been, like the Sleeping Beauty, slumbering for a hundred years. But she did not
look--poor Becky--like a Sleeping Beauty at all. She looked only like an ugly,
stunted, worn-out little scullery drudge.
Sara seemed as much
unlike her as if she were a creature from another world.
On this particular
afternoon she had been taking her dancing lesson, and the afternoon on which
the dancing master appeared was rather a grand occasion at the seminary, though
it occurred every week. The pupils were attired in their prettiest frocks, and
as Sara danced particularly well, she was very much brought forward, and
Mariette was requested to make her as diaphanous and fine as possible.
Today a frock the color
of a rose had been put on her, and Mariette had bought some real buds and made
her a wreath to wear on her black locks. She had been learning a new,
delightful dance in which she had been skimming and flying about the room, like
a large rose-colored butterfly, and the enjoyment and exercise had brought a
brilliant, happy glow into her face.
When she entered the
room, she floated in with a few of the butterfly steps--and there sat Becky,
nodding her cap sideways off her head.
"Oh!" cried
Sara, softly, when she saw her. "That poor thing!"
It did not occur to her
to feel cross at finding her pet chair occupied by the small, dingy figure. To
tell the truth, she was quite glad to find it there. When the ill-used heroine
of her story wakened, she could talk to her. She crept toward her quietly, and
stood looking at her. Becky gave a little snore.
"I wish she'd
waken herself," Sara said. "I don't like to waken her. But Miss
Minchin would be cross if she found out. I'll just wait a few minutes."
She took a seat on the
edge of the table, and sat swinging her slim, rose-colored legs, and wondering
what it would be best to do. Miss Amelia might come in at any moment, and if
she did, Becky would be sure to be scolded.
"But she is so
tired," she thought. "She is so tired!"
A piece of flaming coal
ended her perplexity for her that very moment. It broke off from a large lump
and fell on to the fender. Becky started, and opened her eyes with a frightened
gasp. She did not know she had fallen asleep. She had only sat down for one
moment and felt the beautiful glow--and here she found herself staring in wild
alarm at the wonderful pupil, who sat perched quite near her, like a
rose-colored fairy, with interested eyes.
She sprang up and
clutched at her cap. She felt it dangling over her ear, and tried wildly to put
it straight. Oh, she had got herself into trouble now with a vengeance! To have
impudently fallen asleep on such a young lady's chair! She would be turned out
of doors without wages.
She made a sound like a
big breathless sob.
"Oh, miss! Oh,
miss!" she stuttered. "I arst yer pardon, miss! Oh, I do, miss!"
Sara jumped down, and
came quite close to her.
"Don't be
frightened," she said, quite as if she had been speaking to a little girl
like herself. "It doesn't matter the least bit."
"I didn't go to do
it, miss," protested Becky. "It was the warm fire--an' me bein' so
tired. It--it wasn't imperence!"
Sara broke into a
friendly little laugh, and put her hand on her shoulder.
"You were
tired," she said; "you could not help it. You are not really awake
yet."
How poor Becky stared
at her! In fact, she had never heard such a nice, friendly sound in anyone's
voice before. She was used to being ordered about and scolded, and having her
ears boxed. And this one--in her rose-colored dancing afternoon splendor--was
looking at her as if she were not a culprit at all--as if she had a right to be
tired--even to fall asleep! The touch of the soft, slim little paw on her
shoulder was the most amazing thing she had ever known.
"Ain't--ain't yer
angry, miss?" she gasped. "Ain't yer goin' to tell the missus?"
"No," cried
out Sara. "Of course I'm not."
The woeful fright in
the coal-smutted face made her suddenly so sorry that she could scarcely bear
it. One of her queer thoughts rushed into her mind. She put her hand against
Becky's cheek.
"Why," she
said, "we are just the same--I am only a little girl like you. It's just
an accident that I am not you, and you are not me!"
Becky did not
understand in the least. Her mind could not grasp such amazing thoughts, and
"an accident" meant to her a calamity in which some one was run over
or fell off a ladder and was carried to "the 'orspital."
"A' accident,
miss," she fluttered respectfully. "Is it?"
"Yes," Sara
answered, and she looked at her dreamily for a moment. But the next she spoke
in a different tone. She realized that Becky did not know what she meant.
"Have you done
your work?" she asked. "Dare you stay here a few minutes?"
Becky lost her breath
again.
"Here, miss?
Me?"
Sara ran to the door,
opened it, and looked out and listened.
"No one is
anywhere about," she explained. "If your bedrooms are finished,
perhaps you might stay a tiny while. I thought--perhaps--you might like a piece
of cake."
The next ten minutes
seemed to Becky like a sort of delirium. Sara opened a cupboard, and gave her a
thick slice of cake. She seemed to rejoice when it was devoured in hungry
bites. She talked and asked questions, and laughed until Becky's fears actually
began to calm themselves, and she once or twice gathered boldness enough to ask
a question or so herself, daring as she felt it to be.
"Is that--"
she ventured, looking longingly at the rose-colored frock. And she asked it
almost in a whisper. "Is that there your best?"
"It is one of my
dancing-frocks," answered Sara. "I like it, don't you?"
For a few seconds Becky
was almost speechless with admiration. Then she said in an awed voice,
"Onct I see a princess. I was standin' in the street with the crowd
outside Covin' Garden, watchin' the swells go inter the operer. An' there was
one everyone stared at most. They ses to each other, 'That's the princess.' She
was a growed-up young lady, but she was pink all over--gownd an' cloak, an'
flowers an' all. I called her to mind the minnit I see you, sittin' there on
the table, miss. You looked like her."
"I've often
thought," said Sara, in her reflecting voice, "that I should like to
be a princess; I wonder what it feels like. I believe I will begin pretending I
am one."
Becky stared at her
admiringly, and, as before, did not understand her in the least. She watched
her with a sort of adoration. Very soon Sara left her reflections and turned to
her with a new question.
"Becky," she
said, "weren't you listening to that story?"
"Yes, miss,"
confessed Becky, a little alarmed again. "I knowed I hadn't orter, but it
was that beautiful I--I couldn't help it."
"I liked you to
listen to it," said Sara. "If you tell stories, you like nothing so
much as to tell them to people who want to listen. I don't know why it is.
Would you like to hear the rest?"
Becky lost her breath
again.
"Me hear it?"
she cried. "Like as if I was a pupil, miss! All about the Prince--and the
little white Mer-babies swimming about laughing--with stars in their
hair?"
Sara nodded.
"You haven't time
to hear it now, I'm afraid," she said; "but if you will tell me just
what time you come to do my rooms, I will try to be here and tell you a bit of
it every day until it is finished. It's a lovely long one--and I'm always
putting new bits to it."
"Then,"
breathed Becky, devoutly, "I wouldn't mind how heavy the coal boxes
was--or what the cook done to me, if--if I might have that to think of."
"You may,"
said Sara. "I'll tell it all to you."
When Becky went
downstairs, she was not the same Becky who had staggered up, loaded down by the
weight of the coal scuttle. She had an extra piece of cake in her pocket, and
she had been fed and warmed, but not only by cake and fire. Something else had
warmed and fed her, and the something else was Sara.
When she was gone Sara
sat on her favorite perch on the end of her table. Her feet were on a chair,
her elbows on her knees, and her chin in her hands.
"If I was a
princess--a real princess," she murmured, "I could scatter largess to
the populace. But even if I am only a pretend princess, I can invent little
things to do for people. Things like this. She was just as happy as if it was
largess. I'll pretend that to do things people like is scattering largess. I've
scattered largess."
Not very long after
this a very exciting thing happened. Not only Sara, but the entire school,
found it exciting, and made it the chief subject of conversation for weeks
after it occurred. In one of his letters Captain Crewe told a most interesting
story. A friend who had been at school with him when he was a boy had
unexpectedly come to see him in India. He was the owner of a large tract of
land upon which diamonds had been found, and he was engaged in developing the
mines. If all went as was confidently expected, he would become possessed of
such wealth as it made one dizzy to think of; and because he was fond of the
friend of his school days, he had given him an opportunity to share in this
enormous fortune by becoming a partner in his scheme. This, at least, was what
Sara gathered from his letters. It is true that any other business scheme,
however magnificent, would have had but small attraction for her or for the
schoolroom; but "diamond mines" sounded so like the Arabian Nights
that no one could be indifferent. Sara thought them enchanting, and painted
pictures, for Ermengarde and Lottie, of labyrinthine passages in the bowels of
the earth, where sparkling stones studded the walls and roofs and ceilings, and
strange, dark men dug them out with heavy picks. Ermengarde delighted in the
story, and Lottie insisted on its being retold to her every evening. Lavinia
was very spiteful about it, and told Jessie that she didn't believe such things
as diamond mines existed.
"My mamma has a
diamond ring which cost forty pounds," she said. "And it is not a big
one, either. If there were mines full of diamonds, people would be so rich it
would be ridiculous."
"Perhaps Sara will
be so rich that she will be ridiculous," giggled Jessie.
"She's ridiculous
without being rich," Lavinia sniffed.
"I believe you
hate her," said Jessie.
"No, I
don't," snapped Lavinia. "But I don't believe in mines full of
diamonds."
"Well, people have
to get them from somewhere," said Jessie. "Lavinia," with a new
giggle, "what do you think Gertrude says?"
"I don't know, I'm
sure; and I don't care if it's something more about that everlasting
Sara."
"Well, it is. One
of her 'pretends' is that she is a princess. She plays it all the time--even in
school. She says it makes her learn her lessons better. She wants Ermengarde to
be one, too, but Ermengarde says she is too fat."
"She is too
fat," said Lavinia. "And Sara is too thin."
Naturally, Jessie
giggled again.
"She says it has
nothing to do with what you look like, or what you have. It has only to do with
what you think of, and what you do."
"I suppose she
thinks she could be a princess if she was a beggar," said Lavinia.
"Let us begin to call her Your Royal Highness."
Lessons for the day
were over, and they were sitting before the schoolroom fire, enjoying the time
they liked best. It was the time when Miss Minchin and Miss Amelia were taking
their tea in the sitting room sacred to themselves. At this hour a great deal
of talking was done, and a great many secrets changed hands, particularly if
the younger pupils behaved themselves well, and did not squabble or run about
noisily, which it must be confessed they usually did. When they made an uproar
the older girls usually interfered with scolding and shakes. They were expected
to keep order, and there was danger that if they did not, Miss Minchin or Miss
Amelia would appear and put an end to festivities. Even as Lavinia spoke the
door opened and Sara entered with Lottie, whose habit was to trot everywhere
after her like a little dog.
"There she is,
with that horrid child!" exclaimed Lavinia in a whisper. "If she's so
fond of her, why doesn't she keep her in her own room? She will begin howling
about something in five minutes."
It happened that Lottie
had been seized with a sudden desire to play in the schoolroom, and had begged
her adopted parent to come with her. She joined a group of little ones who were
playing in a corner. Sara curled herself up in the window-seat, opened a book,
and began to read. It was a book about the French Revolution, and she was soon
lost in a harrowing picture of the prisoners in the Bastille--men who had spent
so many years in dungeons that when they were dragged out by those who rescued
them, their long, gray hair and beards almost hid their faces, and they had
forgotten that an outside world existed at all, and were like beings in a
dream.
She was so far away
from the schoolroom that it was not agreeable to be dragged back suddenly by a
howl from Lottie. Never did she find anything so difficult as to keep herself
from losing her temper when she was suddenly disturbed while absorbed in a
book. People who are fond of books know the feeling of irritation which sweeps
over them at such a moment. The temptation to be unreasonable and snappish is
one not easy to manage.
"It makes me feel
as if someone had hit me," Sara had told Ermengarde once in confidence.
"And as if I want to hit back. I have to remember things quickly to keep
from saying something ill-tempered."
She had to remember
things quickly when she laid her book on the window-seat and jumped down from
her comfortable corner.
Lottie had been sliding
across the schoolroom floor, and, having first irritated Lavinia and Jessie by
making a noise, had ended by falling down and hurting her fat knee. She was screaming
and dancing up and down in the midst of a group of friends and enemies, who
were alternately coaxing and scolding her.
"Stop this minute,
you cry-baby! Stop this minute!" Lavinia commanded.
"I'm not a
cry-baby . . . I'm not!" wailed Lottle. "Sara, Sara!"
"If she doesn't
stop, Miss Minchin will hear her," cried Jessie. "Lottie darling,
I'll give you a penny!"
"I don't want your
penny," sobbed Lottie; and she looked down at the fat knee, and, seeing a
drop of blood on it, burst forth again.
Sara flew across the
room and, kneeling down, put her arms round her.
"Now,
Lottie," she said. "Now, Lottie, you promised Sara."
"She said I was a
cry-baby," wept Lottie.
Sara patted her, but
spoke in the steady voice Lottie knew.
"But if you cry,
you will be one, Lottie pet. You promised."
Lottle remembered that
she had promised, but she preferred to lift up her voice.
"I haven't any
mamma," she proclaimed.
"Yes, you
have," said Sara, cheerfully. "Have you forgotten? Don't you know
that Sara is your mamma? Don't you want Sara for your mamma?"
Lottie cuddled up to
her with a consoled sniff.
"Come and sit in
the window-seat with me," Sara went on, "and I'll whisper a story to
you."
"Will you?"
whimpered Lottie. "Will you--tell me--about the diamond mines?"
"The diamond
mines?" broke out Lavinia. "Nasty, little spoiled thing, I should
like to slap her!"
Sara got up quickly on
her feet. It must be remembered that she had been very deeply absorbed in the
book about the Bastille, and she had had to recall several things rapidly when
she realized that she must go and take care of her adopted child. She was not
an angel, and she was not fond of Lavinia.
"Well," she
said, with some fire, "I should like to slap you--but I don't want to slap
you!" restraining herself. "At least I both want to slap you--and I
should like to slap you-- but I won't slap you. We are not little gutter
children. We are both old enough to know better."
Here was Lavinia's
opportunity.
"Ah, yes, your
royal highness," she said. "We are princesses, I believe. At least
one of us is. The school ought to be very fashionable now Miss Minchin has a
princess for a pupil."
Sara started toward
her. She looked as if she were going to box her ears. Perhaps she was. Her trick
of pretending things was the joy of her life. She never spoke of it to girls
she was not fond of. Her new "pretend" about being a princess was
very near to her heart, and she was shy and sensitive about it. She had meant
it to be rather a secret, and here was Lavinia deriding it before nearly all
the school. She felt the blood rush up into her face and tingle in her ears.
She only just saved herself. If you were a princess, you did not fly into
rages. Her hand dropped, and she stood quite still a moment. When she spoke it
was in a quiet, steady voice; she held her head up, and everybody listened to
her.
"It's true,"
she said. "Sometimes I do pretend I am a princess. I pretend I am a
princess, so that I can try and behave like one."
Lavinia could not think
of exactly the right thing to say. Several times she had found that she could
not think of a satisfactory reply when she was dealing with Sara. The reason
for this was that, somehow, the rest always seemed to be vaguely in sympathy
with her opponent. She saw now that they were pricking up their ears
interestedly. The truth was, they liked princesses, and they all hoped they
might hear something more definite about this one, and drew nearer Sara
accordingly.
Lavinia could only
invent one remark, and it fell rather flat.
"Dear me,"
she said, "I hope, when you ascend the throne, you won't forget us!"
"I won't,"
said Sara, and she did not utter another word, but stood quite still, and
stared at her steadily as she saw her take Jessie's arm and turn away.
After this, the girls
who were jealous of her used to speak of her as "Princess Sara"
whenever they wished to be particularly disdainful, and those who were fond of
her gave her the name among themselves as a term of affection. No one called her
"princess" instead of "Sara," but her adorers were much
pleased with the picturesqueness and grandeur of the title, and Miss Minchin,
hearing of it, mentioned it more than once to visiting parents, feeling that it
rather suggested a sort of royal boarding school.
To Becky it seemed the
most appropriate thing in the world. The acquaintance begun on the foggy
afternoon when she had jumped up terrified from her sleep in the comfortable
chair, had ripened and grown, though it must be confessed that Miss Minchin and
Miss Amelia knew very little about it. They were aware that Sara was
"kind" to the scullery maid, but they knew nothing of certain
delightful moments snatched perilously when, the upstairs rooms being set in
order with lightning rapidity, Sara's sitting room was reached, and the heavy
coal box set down with a sigh of joy. At such times stories were told by
installments, things of a satisfying nature were either produced and eaten or
hastily tucked into pockets to be disposed of at night, when Becky went upstairs
to her attic to bed.
"But I has to eat
'em careful, miss," she said once; "'cos if I leaves crumbs the rats
come out to get 'em."
"Rats!"
exclaimed Sara, in horror. "Are there rats there?"
"Lots of 'em,
miss," Becky answered in quite a matter-of-fact manner. "There mostly
is rats an' mice in attics. You gets used to the noise they makes scuttling
about. I've got so I don't mind 'em s' long as they don't run over my
piller."
"Ugh!" said
Sara.
"You gets used to
anythin' after a bit," said Becky. "You have to, miss, if you're born
a scullery maid. I'd rather have rats than cockroaches."
"So would I,"
said Sara; "I suppose you might make friends with a rat in time, but I
don't believe I should like to make friends with a cockroach."
Sometimes Becky did not
dare to spend more than a few minutes in the bright, warm room, and when this
was the case perhaps only a few words could be exchanged, and a small purchase
slipped into the old-fashioned pocket Becky carried under her dress skirt, tied
round her waist with a band of tape. The search for and discovery of satisfying
things to eat which could be packed into small compass, added a new interest to
Sara's existence. When she drove or walked out, she used to look into shop
windows eagerly. The first time it occurred to her to bring home two or three
little meat pies, she felt that she had hit upon a discovery. When she
exhibited them, Becky's eyes quite sparkled.
"Oh, miss!"
she murmured. "Them will be nice an' fillin.' It's fillin'ness that's
best. Sponge cake's a 'evenly thing, but it melts away like--if you understand,
miss. These'll just stay in yer stummick."
"Well,"
hesitated Sara, "I don't think it would be good if they stayed always, but
I do believe they will be satisfying."
They were
satisfying--and so were beef sandwiches, bought at a cook-shop--and so were
rolls and Bologna sausage. In time, Becky began to lose her hungry, tired
feeling, and the coal box did not seem so unbearably heavy.
However heavy it was,
and whatsoever the temper of the cook, and the hardness of the work heaped upon
her shoulders, she had always the chance of the afternoon to look forward
to--the chance that Miss Sara would be able to be in her sitting room. In fact,
the mere seeing of Miss Sara would have been enough without meat pies. If there
was time only for a few words, they were always friendly, merry words that put
heart into one; and if there was time for more, then there was an installment
of a story to be told, or some other thing one remembered afterward and
sometimes lay awake in one's bed in the attic to think over. Sara--who was only
doing what she unconsciously liked better than anything else, Nature having
made her for a giver--had not the least idea what she meant to poor Becky, and
how wonderful a benefactor she seemed. If Nature has made you for a giver, your
hands are born open, and so is your heart; and though there may be times when
your hands are empty, your heart is always full, and you can give things out of
that--warm things, kind things, sweet things--help and comfort and
laughter--and sometimes gay, kind laughter is the best help of all.
Becky had scarcely
known what laughter was through all her poor, little hard-driven life. Sara
made her laugh, and laughed with her; and, though neither of them quite knew
it, the laughter was as "fillin'" as the meat pies.
A few weeks before
Sara's eleventh birthday a letter came to her from her father, which did not
seem to be written in such boyish high spirits as usual. He was not very well,
and was evidently overweighted by the business connected with the diamond
mines.
"You see, little
Sara," he wrote, "your daddy is not a businessman at all, and figures
and documents bother him. He does not really understand them, and all this
seems so enormous. Perhaps, if I was not feverish I should not be awake,
tossing about, one half of the night and spend the other half in troublesome
dreams. If my little missus were here, I dare say she would give me some
solemn, good advice. You would, wouldn't you, Little Missus?"
One of his many jokes
had been to call her his "little missus" because she had such an
old-fashioned air.
He had made wonderful
preparations for her birthday. Among other things, a new doll had been ordered
in Paris, and her wardrobe was to be, indeed, a marvel of splendid perfection.
When she had replied to the letter asking her if the doll would be an
acceptable present, Sara had been very quaint.
"I am getting very
old," she wrote; "you see, I shall never live to have another doll given
me. This will be my last doll. There is something solemn about it. If I could
write poetry, I am sure a poem about 'A Last Doll' would be very nice. But I
cannot write poetry. I have tried, and it made me laugh. It did not sound like
Watts or Coleridge or Shakespeare at all. No one could ever take Emily's place,
but I should respect the Last Doll very much; and I am sure the school would
love it. They all like dolls, though some of the big ones--the almost fifteen
ones--pretend they are too grown up."
Captain Crewe had a
splitting headache when he read this letter in his bungalow in India. The table
before him was heaped with papers and letters which were alarming him and
filling him with anxious dread, but he laughed as he had not laughed for weeks.
"Oh," he
said, "she's better fun every year she lives. God grant this business may
right itself and leave me free to run home and see her. What wouldn't I give to
have her little arms round my neck this minute! What wouldn't I give!"
The birthday was to be
celebrated by great festivities. The schoolroom was to be decorated, and there
was to be a party. The boxes containing the presents were to be opened with
great ceremony, and there was to be a glittering feast spread in Miss Minchin's
sacred room. When the day arrived the whole house was in a whirl of excitement.
How the morning passed nobody quite knew, because there seemed such
preparations to be made. The schoolroom was being decked with garlands of
holly; the desks had been moved away, and red covers had been put on the forms
which were arrayed round the room against the wall.
When Sara went into her
sitting room in the morning, she found on the table a small, dumpy package,
tied up in a piece of brown paper. She knew it was a present, and she thought
she could guess whom it came from. She opened it quite tenderly. It was a
square pincushion, made of not quite clean red flannel, and black pins had been
stuck carefully into it to form the words, "Menny hapy returns."
"Oh!" cried
Sara, with a warm feeling in her heart. "What pains she has taken! I like
it so, it--it makes me feel sorrowful."
But the next moment she
was mystified. On the under side of the pincushion was secured a card, bearing
in neat letters the name "Miss Amelia Minchin."
Sara turned it over and
over.
"Miss
Amelia!" she said to herself "How can it be!"
And just at that very
moment she heard the door being cautiously pushed open and saw Becky peeping
round it.
There was an
affectionate, happy grin on her face, and she shuffled forward and stood
nervously pulling at her fingers.
"Do yer like it,
Miss Sara?" she said. "Do yer?"
"Like it?"
cried Sara. "You darling Becky, you made it all yourself."
Becky gave a hysteric
but joyful sniff, and her eyes looked quite moist with delight.
"It ain't nothin'
but flannin, an' the flannin ain't new; but I wanted to give yer somethin' an'
I made it of nights. I knew yer could pretend it was satin with diamond pins
in. I tried to when I was makin' it. The card, miss," rather doubtfully;
"'t warn't wrong of me to pick it up out o' the dust-bin, was it? Miss
'Meliar had throwed it away. I hadn't no card o' my own, an' I knowed it
wouldn't be a proper presink if I didn't pin a card on--so I pinned Miss
'Meliar's."
Sara flew at her and
hugged her. She could not have told herself or anyone else why there was a lump
in her throat.
"Oh, Becky!"
she cried out, with a queer little laugh, "I love you, Becky--I do, I
do!"
"Oh, miss!"
breathed Becky. "Thank yer, miss, kindly; it ain't good enough for that. The--the
flannin wasn't new."
When Sara entered the
holly-hung schoolroom in the afternoon, she did so as the head of a sort of
procession. Miss Minchin, in her grandest silk dress, led her by the hand. A
manservant followed, carrying the box containing the Last Doll, a housemaid
carried a second box, and Becky brought up the rear, carrying a third and
wearing a clean apron and a new cap. Sara would have much preferred to enter in
the usual way, but Miss Minchin had sent for her, and, after an interview in
her private sitting room, had expressed her wishes.
"This is not an
ordinary occasion," she said. "I do not desire that it should be
treated as one."
So Sara was led grandly
in and felt shy when, on her entry, the big girls stared at her and touched
each other's elbows, and the little ones began to squirm joyously in their
seats.
"Silence, young
ladies!" said Miss Minchin, at the murmur which arose. "James, place
the box on the table and remove the lid. Emma, put yours upon a chair.
Becky!" suddenly and severely.
Becky had quite
forgotten herself in her excitement, and was grinning at Lottie, who was
wriggling with rapturous expectation. She almost dropped her box, the
disapproving voice so startled her, and her frightened, bobbing curtsy of
apology was so funny that Lavinia and Jessie tittered.
"It is not your
place to look at the young ladies," said Miss Minchin. "You forget
yourself. Put your box down."
Becky obeyed with
alarmed haste and hastily backed toward the door.
"You may leave
us," Miss Minchin announced to the servants with a wave of her hand.
Becky stepped aside
respectfully to allow the superior servants to pass out first. She could not
help casting a longing glance at the box on the table. Something made of blue
satin was peeping from between the folds of tissue paper.
"If you please,
Miss Minchin," said Sara, suddenly, "mayn't Becky stay?"
It was a bold thing to
do. Miss Minchin was betrayed into something like a slight jump. Then she put
her eyeglass up, and gazed at her show pupil disturbedly.
"Becky!" she
exclaimed. "My dearest Sara!"
Sara advanced a step
toward her.
"I want her
because I know she will like to see the presents," she explained.
"She is a little girl, too, you know."
Miss Minchin was
scandalized. She glanced from one figure to the other.
"My dear
Sara," she said, "Becky is the scullery maid. Scullery maids--er--are
not little girls."
It really had not
occurred to her to think of them in that light. Scullery maids were machines
who carried coal scuttles and made fires.
"But Becky
is," said Sara. "And I know she would enjoy herself. Please let her
stay--because it is my birthday."
Miss Minchin replied
with much dignity:
"As you ask it as
a birthday favor--she may stay. Rebecca, thank Miss Sara for her great
kindness."
Becky had been backing
into the corner, twisting the hem of her apron in delighted suspense. She came
forward, bobbing curtsies, but between Sara's eyes and her own there passed a
gleam of friendly understanding, while her words tumbled over each other.
"Oh, if you
please, miss! I'm that grateful, miss! I did want to see the doll, miss, that I
did. Thank you, miss. And thank you, ma'am,"--turning and making an
alarmed bob to Miss Minchin--"for letting me take the liberty."
Miss Minchin waved her
hand again--this time it was in the direction of the corner near the door.
"Go and stand
there," she commanded. "Not too near the young ladies."
Becky went to her
place, grinning. She did not care where she was sent, so that she might have
the luck of being inside the room, instead of being downstairs in the scullery,
while these delights were going on. She did not even mind when Miss Minchin
cleared her throat ominously and spoke again.
"Now, young
ladies, I have a few words to say to you," she announced.
"She's going to
make a speech," whispered one of the girls. "I wish it was
over."
Sara felt rather
uncomfortable. As this was her party, it was probable that the speech was about
her. It is not agreeable to stand in a schoolroom and have a speech made about
you.
"You are aware,
young ladies," the speech began--for it was a speech--"that dear Sara
is eleven years old today."
"Dear Sara!"
murmured Lavinia.
"Several of you
here have also been eleven years old, but Sara's birthdays are rather different
from other little girls' birthdays. When she is older she will be heiress to a
large fortune, which it will be her duty to spend in a meritorious manner."
"The diamond
mines," giggled Jessie, in a whisper.
Sara did not hear her;
but as she stood with her green-gray eyes fixed steadily on Miss Minchin, she
felt herself growing rather hot. When Miss Minchin talked about money, she felt
somehow that she always hated her--and, of course, it was disrespectful to hate
grown-up people.
"When her dear
papa, Captain Crewe, brought her from India and gave her into my care,"
the speech proceeded, "he said to me, in a jesting way, 'I am afraid she
will be very rich, Miss Minchin.' My reply was, 'Her education at my seminary,
Captain Crewe, shall be such as will adorn the largest fortune.' Sara has
become my most accomplished pupil. Her French and her dancing are a credit to
the seminary. Her manners--which have caused you to call her Princess Sara--are
perfect. Her amiability she exhibits by giving you this afternoon's party. I
hope you appreciate her generosity. I wish you to express your appreciation of
it by saying aloud all together, 'Thank you, Sara!'"
The entire schoolroom
rose to its feet as it had done the morning Sara remembered so well.
"Thank you,
Sara!" it said, and it must be confessed that Lottie jumped up and down.
Sara looked rather shy for a moment. She made a curtsy--and it was a very nice
one.
"Thank you,"
she said, "for coming to my party."
"Very pretty,
indeed, Sara," approved Miss Minchin. "That is what a real princess
does when the populace applauds her. Lavinia"--scathingly--"the sound
you just made was extremely like a snort. If you are jealous of your
fellow-pupil, I beg you will express your feelings in some more ladylike
manner. Now I will leave you to enjoy yourselves."
The instant she had
swept out of the room the spell her presence always had upon them was broken.
The door had scarcely closed before every seat was empty. The little girls
jumped or tumbled out of theirs; the older ones wasted no time in deserting
theirs. There was a rush toward the boxes. Sara had bent over one of them with
a delighted face.
"These are books,
I know," she said.
The little children
broke into a rueful murmur, and Ermengarde looked aghast.
"Does your papa
send you books for a birthday present?" she exclaimed. "Why, he's as
bad as mine. Don't open them, Sara."
"I like
them," Sara laughed, but she turned to the biggest box. When she took out
the Last Doll it was so magnificent that the children uttered delighted groans
of joy, and actually drew back to gaze at it in breathless rapture.
"She is almost as
big as Lottie," someone gasped.
Lottie clapped her hands
and danced about, giggling.
"She's dressed for
the theater," said Lavinia. "Her cloak is lined with ermine."
"Oh," cried
Ermengarde, darting forward, "she has an opera-glass in her hand--a
blue-and-gold one!"
"Here is her
trunk," said Sara. "Let us open it and look at her things."
She sat down upon the
floor and turned the key. The children crowded clamoring around her, as she
lifted tray after tray and revealed their contents. Never had the schoolroom
been in such an uproar. There were lace collars and silk stockings and
handkerchiefs; there was a jewel case containing a necklace and a tiara which
looked quite as if they were made of real diamonds; there was a long sealskin
and muff, there were ball dresses and walking dresses and visiting dresses;
there were hats and tea gowns and fans. Even Lavinia and Jessie forgot that
they were too elderly to care for dolls, and uttered exclamations of delight
and caught up things to look at them.
"Suppose,"
Sara said, as she stood by the table, putting a large, black-velvet hat on the
impassively smiling owner of all these splendors--"suppose she understands
human talk and feels proud of being admired."
"You are always
supposing things," said Lavinia, and her air was very superior.
"I know I
am," answered Sara, undisturbedly. "I like it. There is nothing so
nice as supposing. It's almost like being a fairy. If you suppose anything hard
enough it seems as if it were real."
"It's all very
well to suppose things if you have everything," said Lavinia. "Could
you suppose and pretend if you were a beggar and lived in a garret?"
Sara stopped arranging
the Last Doll's ostrich plumes, and looked thoughtful.
"I believe I
could," she said. "If one was a beggar, one would have to suppose and
pretend all the time. But it mightn't be easy."
She often thought
afterward how strange it was that just as she had finished saying this--just at
that very moment--Miss Amelia came into the room.
"Sara," she
said, "your papa's solicitor, Mr. Barrow, has called to see Miss Minchin,
and, as she must talk to him alone and the refreshments are laid in her parlor,
you had all better come and have your feast now, so that my sister can have her
interview here in the schoolroom."
Refreshments were not
likely to be disdained at any hour, and many pairs of eyes gleamed. Miss Amelia
arranged the procession into decorum, and then, with Sara at her side heading
it, she led it away, leaving the Last Doll sitting upon a chair with the
glories of her wardrobe scattered about her; dresses and coats hung upon chair
backs, piles of lace-frilled petticoats lying upon their seats.
Becky, who was not
expected to partake of refreshments, had the indiscretion to linger a moment to
look at these beauties--it really was an indiscretion.
"Go back to your
work, Becky," Miss Amelia had said; but she had stopped to pick up
reverently first a muff and then a coat, and while she stood looking at them
adoringly, she heard Miss Minchin upon the threshold, and, being smitten with
terror at the thought of being accused of taking liberties, she rashly darted
under the table, which hid her by its tablecloth.
Miss Minchin came into
the room, accompanied by a sharp-featured, dry little gentleman, who looked
rather disturbed. Miss Minchin herself also looked rather disturbed, it must be
admitted, and she gazed at the dry little gentleman with an irritated and
puzzled expression.
She sat down with stiff
dignity, and waved him to a chair.
"Pray, be seated,
Mr. Barrow," she said.
Mr. Barrow did not sit
down at once. His attention seemed attracted by the Last Doll and the things
which surrounded her. He settled his eyeglasses and looked at them in nervous
disapproval. The Last Doll herself did not seem to mind this in the least. She
merely sat upright and returned his gaze indifferently.
"A hundred
pounds," Mr. Barrow remarked succinctly. "All expensive material, and
made at a Parisian modiste's. He spent money lavishly enough, that young
man."
Miss Minchin felt
offended. This seemed to be a disparagement of her best patron and was a
liberty.
Even solicitors had no
right to take liberties.
"I beg your
pardon, Mr. Barrow," she said stiffly. "I do not understand."
"Birthday
presents," said Mr. Barrow in the same critical manner, "to a child
eleven years old! Mad extravagance, I call it."
Miss Minchin drew
herself up still more rigidly.
"Captain Crewe is
a man of fortune," she said. "The diamond mines alone--"
Mr. Barrow wheeled
round upon her. "Diamond mines!" he broke out. "There are none!
Never were!"
Miss Minchin actually
got up from her chair.
"What!" she
cried. "What do you mean?"
"At any
rate," answered Mr. Barrow, quite snappishly, "it would have been
much better if there never had been any."
"Any diamond
mines?" ejaculated Miss Minchin, catching at the back of a chair and
feeling as if a splendid dream was fading away from her.
"Diamond mines
spell ruin oftener than they spell wealth," said Mr. Barrow. "When a
man is in the hands of a very dear friend and is not a businessman himself, he
had better steer clear of the dear friend's diamond mines, or gold mines, or
any other kind of mines dear friends want his money to put into. The late
Captain Crewe--"
Here Miss Minchin
stopped him with a gasp.
"The late Captain
Crewe!" she cried out. "The late! You don't come to tell me that
Captain Crewe is--"
"He's dead,
ma'am," Mr. Barrow answered with jerky brusqueness. "Died of jungle
fever and business troubles combined. The jungle fever might not have killed
him if he had not been driven mad by the business troubles, and the business
troubles might not have put an end to him if the jungle fever had not assisted.
Captain Crewe is dead!"
Miss Minchin dropped
into her chair again. The words he had spoken filled her with alarm.
"What were his
business troubles?" she said. "What were they?"
"Diamond
mines," answered Mr. Barrow, "and dear friends--and ruin."
Miss Minchin lost her
breath.
"Ruin!" she
gasped out.
"Lost every penny.
That young man had too much money. The dear friend was mad on the subject of
the diamond mine. He put all his own money into it, and all Captain Crewe's.
Then the dear friend ran away--Captain Crewe was already stricken with fever
when the news came. The shock was too much for him. He died delirious, raving
about his little girl--and didn't leave a penny."
Now Miss Minchin
understood, and never had she received such a blow in her life. Her show pupil,
her show patron, swept away from the Select Seminary at one blow. She felt as
if she had been outraged and robbed, and that Captain Crewe and Sara and Mr.
Barrow were equally to blame.
"Do you mean to
tell me," she cried out, "that he left nothing! That Sara will have
no fortune! That the child is a beggar! That she is left on my hands a little
pauper instead of an heiress?"
Mr. Barrow was a shrewd
businessman, and felt it as well to make his own freedom from responsibility
quite clear without any delay.
"She is certainly
left a beggar," he replied. "And she is certainly left on your hands,
ma'am--as she hasn't a relation in the world that we know of."
Miss Minchin started
forward. She looked as if she was going to open the door and rush out of the
room to stop the festivities going on joyfully and rather noisily that moment
over the refreshments.
"It is
monstrous!" she said. "She's in my sitting room at this moment,
dressed in silk gauze and lace petticoats, giving a party at my expense."
"She's giving it
at your expense, madam, if she's giving it," said Mr. Barrow, calmly.
"Barrow & Skipworth are not responsible for anything. There never was
a cleaner sweep made of a man's fortune. Captain Crewe died without paying our
last bill--and it was a big one."
Miss Minchin turned
back from the door in increased indignation. This was worse than anyone could
have dreamed of its being.
"That is what has
happened to me!" she cried. "I was always so sure of his payments
that I went to all sorts of ridiculous expenses for the child. I paid the bills
for that ridiculous doll and her ridiculous fantastic wardrobe. The child was
to have anything she wanted. She has a carriage and a pony and a maid, and I've
paid for all of them since the last cheque came."
Mr. Barrow evidently
did not intend to remain to listen to the story of Miss Minchin's grievances
after he had made the position of his firm clear and related the mere dry
facts. He did not feel any particular sympathy for irate keepers of boarding
schools.
"You had better
not pay for anything more, ma'am," he remarked, "unless you want to
make presents to the young lady. No one will remember you. She hasn't a brass
farthing to call her own."
"But what am I to
do?" demanded Miss Minchin, as if she felt it entirely his duty to make
the matter right. "What am I to do?"
"There isn't
anything to do," said Mr. Barrow, folding up his eyeglasses and slipping
them into his pocket. "Captain Crewe is dead. The child is left a pauper.
Nobody is responsible for her but you."
"I am not
responsible for her, and I refuse to be made responsible!"
Miss Minchin became
quite white with rage.
Mr. Barrow turned to
go.
"I have nothing to
do with that, madam," he said uninterestedly. "Barrow & Skipworth
are not responsible. Very sorry the thing has happened, of course."
"If you think she
is to be foisted off on me, you are greatly mistaken," Miss Minchin gasped.
"I have been robbed and cheated; I will turn her into the street!"
If she had not been so
furious, she would have been too discreet to say quite so much. She saw herself
burdened with an extravagantly brought-up child whom she had always resented,
and she lost all self-control.
Mr. Barrow
undisturbedly moved toward the door.
"I wouldn't do
that, madam," he commented; "it wouldn't look well. Unpleasant story
to get about in connection with the establishment. Pupil bundled out penniless
and without friends."
He was a clever
business man, and he knew what he was saying. He also knew that Miss Minchin
was a business woman, and would be shrewd enough to see the truth. She could
not afford to do a thing which would make people speak of her as cruel and
hard-hearted.
" Better keep her
and make use of her," he added. "She's a clever child, I believe. You
can get a good deal out of her as she grows older."
"I will get a good
deal out of her before she grows older!" exclaimed Miss Minchin.
"I am sure you
will, ma'am," said Mr. Barrow, with a little sinister smile. "I am
sure you will. Good morning!"
He bowed himself out
and closed the door, and it must be confessed that Miss Minchin stood for a few
moments and glared at it. What he had said was quite true. She knew it. She had
absolutely no redress. Her show pupil had melted into nothingness, leaving only
a friendless, beggared little girl. Such money as she herself had advanced was
lost and could not be regained.
And as she stood there
breathless under her sense of injury, there fell upon her ears a burst of gay
voices from her own sacred room, which had actually been given up to the feast.
She could at least stop this.
But as she started
toward the door it was opened by Miss Amelia, who, when she caught sight of the
changed, angry face, fell back a step in alarm.
"What is the
matter, sister?" she ejaculated.
Miss Minchin's voice
was almost fierce when she answered:
"Where is Sara
Crewe?"
Miss Amelia was
bewildered.
"Sara!" she
stammered. "Why, she's with the children in your room, of course."
"Has she a black
frock in her sumptuous wardrobe?"--in bitter irony.
"A black
frock?" Miss Amelia stammered again. "A black one?"
"She has frocks of
every other color. Has she a black one?"
Miss Amelia began to
turn pale.
"No--ye-es!"
she said. "But it is too short for her. She has only the old black velvet,
and she has outgrown it."
"Go and tell her
to take off that preposterous pink silk gauze, and put the black one on, whether
it is too short or not. She has done with finery!"
Then Miss Amelia began
to wring her fat hands and cry.
"Oh, sister!"
she sniffed. "Oh, sister! What can have happened?"
Miss Minchin wasted no
words.
"Captain Crewe is
dead," she said. "He has died without a penny. That spoiled,
pampered, fanciful child is left a pauper on my hands."
Miss Amelia sat down
quite heavily in the nearest chair.
"Hundreds of
pounds have I spent on nonsense for her. And I shall never see a penny of it.
Put a stop to this ridiculous party of hers. Go and make her change her frock
at once."
"I?" panted
Miss Amelia. "M-must I go and tell her now?"
"This
moment!" was the fierce answer. "Don't sit staring like a goose.
Go!"
Poor Miss Amelia was
accustomed to being called a goose. She knew, in fact, that she was rather a
goose, and that it was left to geese to do a great many disagreeable things. It
was a somewhat embarrassing thing to go into the midst of a room full of
delighted children, and tell the giver of the feast that she had suddenly been
transformed into a little beggar, and must go upstairs and put on an old black
frock which was too small for her. But the thing must be done. This was
evidently not the time when questions might be asked.
She rubbed her eyes with
her handkerchief until they looked quite red. After which she got up and went
out of the room, without venturing to say another word. When her older sister
looked and spoke as she had done just now, the wisest course to pursue was to
obey orders without any comment. Miss Minchin walked across the room. She spoke
to herself aloud without knowing that she was doing it. During the last year
the story of the diamond mines had suggested all sorts of possibilities to her.
Even proprietors of seminaries might make fortunes in stocks, with the aid of
owners of mines. And now, instead of looking forward to gains, she was left to
look back upon losses.
" The Princess
Sara, indeed!" she said. "The child has been pampered as if she were
a queen."
She was sweeping angrily
past the corner table as she said it, and the next moment she started at the
sound of a loud, sobbing sniff which issued from under the cover.
"What is
that!" she exclaimed angrily. The loud, sobbing sniff was heard again, and
she stooped and raised the hanging folds of the table cover.
"How dare
you!" she cried out. "How dare you! Come out immediately!"
It was poor Becky who
crawled out, and her cap was knocked on one side, and her face was red with
repressed crying.
"If you please,
'm--it's me, mum," she explained. "I know I hadn't ought to. But I
was lookin' at the doll, mum--an' I was frightened when you come in--an'
slipped under the table."
"You have been
there all the time, listening," said Miss Minchin.
"No, mum,"
Becky protested, bobbing curtsies. "Not listenin'--I thought I could slip
out without your noticin', but I couldn't an' I had to stay. But I didn't
listen, mum--I wouldn't for nothin'. But I couldn't help hearin'."
Suddenly it seemed
almost as if she lost all fear of the awful lady before her. She burst into
fresh tears.
"Oh, please,
'm," she said; "I dare say you'll give me warnin, mum--but I'm so
sorry for poor Miss Sara--I'm so sorry!"
"Leave the
room!" ordered Miss Minchin.
Becky curtsied again,
the tears openly streaming down her cheeks.
"Yes, 'm; I will,
'm," she said, trembling; "but oh, I just wanted to arst you: Miss
Sara--she's been such a rich young lady, an' she's been waited on, 'and and
foot; an' what will she do now, mum, without no maid? If--if, oh please, would
you let me wait on her after I've done my pots an' kettles? I'd do 'em that
quick--if you'd let me wait on her now she's poor. Oh," breaking out
afresh, "poor little Miss Sara, mum--that was called a princess."
Somehow, she made Miss
Minchin feel more angry than ever. That the very scullery maid should range
herself on the side of this child--whom she realized more fully than ever that
she had never liked--was too much. She actually stamped her foot.
"No--certainly
not," she said. "She will wait on herself, and on other people, too.
Leave the room this instant, or you'll leave your place."
Becky threw her apron
over her head and fled. She ran out of the room and down the steps into the
scullery, and there she sat down among her pots and kettles, and wept as if her
heart would break.
"It's exactly like
the ones in the stories," she wailed. "Them pore princess ones that
was drove into the world."
Miss Minchin had never
looked quite so still and hard as she did when Sara came to her, a few hours
later, in response to a message she had sent her.
Even by that time it
seemed to Sara as if the birthday party had either been a dream or a thing
which had happened years ago, and had happened in the life of quite another
little girl.
Every sign of the
festivities had been swept away; the holly had been removed from the schoolroom
walls, and the forms and desks put back into their places. Miss Minchin's
sitting room looked as it always did--all traces of the feast were gone, and
Miss Minchin had resumed her usual dress. The pupils had been ordered to lay
aside their party frocks; and this having been done, they had returned to the
schoolroom and huddled together in groups, whispering and talking excitedly.
"Tell Sara to come
to my room," Miss Minchin had said to her sister. "And explain to her
clearly that I will have no crying or unpleasant scenes."
"Sister,"
replied Miss Amelia, "she is the strangest child I ever saw. She has
actually made no fuss at all. You remember she made none when Captain Crewe
went back to India. When I told her what had happened, she just stood quite
still and looked at me without making a sound. Her eyes seemed to get bigger
and bigger, and she went quite pale. When I had finished, she still stood
staring for a few seconds, and then her chin began to shake, and she turned
round and ran out of the room and upstairs. Several of the other children began
to cry, but she did not seem to hear them or to be alive to anything but just
what I was saying. It made me feel quite queer not to be answered; and when you
tell anything sudden and strange, you expect people will say
something--whatever it is."
Nobody but Sara herself
ever knew what had happened in her room after she had run upstairs and locked
her door. In fact, she herself scarcely remembered anything but that she walked
up and down, saying over and over again to herself in a voice which did not
seem her own, "My papa is dead! My papa is dead!"
Once she stopped before
Emily, who sat watching her from her chair, and cried out wildly, "Emily!
Do you hear? Do you hear--papa is dead? He is dead in India--thousands of miles
away."
When she came into Miss
Minchin's sitting room in answer to her summons, her face was white and her
eyes had dark rings around them. Her mouth was set as if she did not wish it to
reveal what she had suffered and was suffering. She did not look in the least
like the rose-colored butterfly child who had flown about from one of her
treasures to the other in the decorated schoolroom. She looked instead a
strange, desolate, almost grotesque little figure.
She had put on, without
Mariette's help, the cast-aside black-velvet frock. It was too short and tight,
and her slender legs looked long and thin, showing themselves from beneath the
brief skirt. As she had not found a piece of black ribbon, her short, thick,
black hair tumbled loosely about her face and contrasted strongly with its
pallor. She held Emily tightly in one arm, and Emily was swathed in a piece of
black material.
"Put down your
doll," said Miss Minchin. "What do you mean by bringing her
here?"
"No," Sara
answered. "I will not put her down. She is all I have. My papa gave her to
me."
She had always made
Miss Minchin feel secretly uncomfortable, and she did so now. She did not speak
with rudeness so much as with a cold steadiness with which Miss Minchin felt it
difficult to cope--perhaps because she knew she was doing a heartless and
inhuman thing.
"You will have no
time for dolls in future," she said. "You will have to work and
improve yourself and make yourself useful."
Sara kept her big,
strange eyes fixed on her, and said not a word.
"Everything will
be very different now," Miss Minchin went on. "I suppose Miss Amelia
has explained matters to you."
"Yes,"
answered Sara. "My papa is dead. He left me no money. I am quite
poor."
"You are a
beggar," said Miss Minchin, her temper rising at the recollection of what
all this meant. "It appears that you have no relations and no home, and no
one to take care of you."
For a moment the thin,
pale little face twitched, but Sara again said nothing.
"What are you
staring at?" demanded Miss Minchin, sharply. "Are you so stupid that
you cannot understand? I tell you that you are quite alone in the world, and
have no one to do anything for you, unless I choose to keep you here out of
charity."
"I
understand," answered Sara, in a low tone; and there was a sound as if she
had gulped down something which rose in her throat. "I understand."
"That doll,"
cried Miss Minchin, pointing to the splendid birthday gift seated
near--"that ridiculous doll, with all her nonsensical, extravagant
things--I actually paid the bill for her!"
Sara turned her head
toward the chair.
"The Last
Doll," she said. "The Last Doll." And her little mournful voice
had an odd sound.
"The Last Doll,
indeed!" said Miss Minchin. "And she is mine, not yours. Everything
you own is mine."
"Please take it
away from me, then," said Sara. "I do not want it."
If she had cried and
sobbed and seemed frightened, Miss Minchin might almost have had more patience
with her. She was a woman who liked to domineer and feel her power, and as she
looked at Sara's pale little steadfast face and heard her proud little voice,
she quite felt as if her might was being set at naught.
"Don't put on
grand airs," she said. "The time for that sort of thing is past. You
are not a princess any longer. Your carriage and your pony will be sent
away--your maid will be dismissed. You will wear your oldest and plainest
clothes--your extravagant ones are no longer suited to your station. You are
like Becky--you must work for your living."
To her surprise, a
faint gleam of light came into the child's eyes--a shade of relief.
"Can I work?"
she said. "If I can work it will not matter so much. What can I do?"
"You can do
anything you are told," was the answer. "You are a sharp child, and
pick up things readily. If you make yourself useful I may let you stay here.
You speak French well, and you can help with the younger children."
"May I?"
exclaimed Sara. "Oh, please let me! I know I can teach them. I like them,
and they like me."
"Don't talk
nonsense about people liking you," said Miss Minchin. "You will have
to do more than teach the little ones. You will run errands and help in the
kitchen as well as in the schoolroom. If you don't please me, you will be sent
away. Remember that. Now go."
Sara stood still just a
moment, looking at her. In her young soul, she was thinking deep and strange things.
Then she turned to leave the room.
"Stop!" said
Miss Minchin. "Don't you intend to thank me?"
Sara paused, and all
the deep, strange thoughts surged up in her breast.
"What for?"
she said.
"For my kindness
to you," replied Miss Minchin. "For my kindness in giving you a
home."
Sara made two or three
steps toward her. Her thin little chest heaved up and down, and she spoke in a
strange unchildishly fierce way.
"You are not
kind," she said. "You are not kind, and it is not a home." And
she had turned and run out of the room before Miss Minchin could stop her or do
anything but stare after her with stony anger.
She went up the stairs
slowly, but panting for breath and she held Emily tightly against her side.
"I wish she could
talk," she said to herself. "If she could speak--if she could
speak!"
She meant to go to her
room and lie down on the tiger-skin, with her cheek upon the great cat's head,
and look into the fire and think and think and think. But just before she
reached the landing Miss Amelia came out of the door and closed it behind her,
and stood before it, looking nervous and awkward. The truth was that she felt
secretly ashamed of the thing she had been ordered to do.
"You--you are not
to go in there," she said.
"Not go in?"
exclaimed Sara, and she fell back a pace.
"That is not your
room now," Miss Amelia answered, reddening a little.
Somehow, all at once,
Sara understood. She realized that this was the beginning of the change Miss
Minchin had spoken of.
"Where is my
room?" she asked, hoping very much that her voice did not shake.
"You are to sleep
in the attic next to Becky."
Sara knew where it was.
Becky had told her about it. She turned, and mounted up two flights of stairs.
The last one was narrow, and covered with shabby strips of old carpet. She felt
as if she were walking away and leaving far behind her the world in which that
other child, who no longer seemed herself, had lived. This child, in her short,
tight old frock, climbing the stairs to the attic, was quite a different
creature.
When she reached the
attic door and opened it, her heart gave a dreary little thump. Then she shut
the door and stood against it and looked about her.
Yes, this was another
world. The room had a slanting roof and was whitewashed. The whitewash was
dingy and had fallen off in places. There was a rusty grate, an old iron
bedstead, and a hard bed covered with a faded coverlet. Some pieces of
furniture too much worn to be used downstairs had been sent up. Under the
skylight in the roof, which showed nothing but an oblong piece of dull gray
sky, there stood an old battered red footstool. Sara went to it and sat down.
She seldom cried. She did not cry now. She laid Emily across her knees and put
her face down upon her and her arms around her, and sat there, her little black
head resting on the black draperies, not saying one word, not making one sound.
And as she sat in this
silence there came a low tap at the door--such a low, humble one that she did
not at first hear it, and, indeed, was not roused until the door was timidly
pushed open and a poor tear-smeared face appeared peeping round it. It was
Becky's face, and Becky had been crying furtively for hours and rubbing her
eyes with her kitchen apron until she looked strange indeed.
"Oh, miss,"
she said under her breath. "Might I--would you allow me--jest to come
in?"
Sara lifted her head
and looked at her. She tried to begin a smile, and somehow she could not.
Suddenly--and it was all through the loving mournfulness of Becky's streaming
eyes--her face looked more like a child's not so much too old for her years.
She held out her hand and gave a little sob.
"Oh, Becky,"
she said. "I told you we were just the same--only two little girls--just
two little girls. You see how true it is. There's no difference now. I'm not a
princess anymore."
Becky ran to her and
caught her hand, and hugged it to her breast, kneeling beside her and sobbing
with love and pain.
"Yes, miss, you
are," she cried, and her words were all broken. "Whats'ever 'appens
to you--whats'ever--you'd be a princess all the same--an' nothin' couldn't make
you nothin' different."
The first night she
spent in her attic was a thing Sara never forgot. During its passing she lived
through a wild, unchildlike woe of which she never spoke to anyone about her.
There was no one who would have understood. It was, indeed, well for her that
as she lay awake in the darkness her mind was forcibly distracted, now and
then, by the strangeness of her surroundings. It was, perhaps, well for her
that she was reminded by her small body of material things. If this had not
been so, the anguish of her young mind might have been too great for a child to
bear. But, really, while the night was passing she scarcely knew that she had a
body at all or remembered any other thing than one.
"My papa is
dead!" she kept whispering to herself. "My papa is dead!"
It was not until long
afterward that she realized that her bed had been so hard that she turned over
and over in it to find a place to rest, that the darkness seemed more intense
than any she had ever known, and that the wind howled over the roof among the
chimneys like something which wailed aloud. Then there was something worse.
This was certain scufflings and scratchings and squeakings in the walls and
behind the skirting boards. She knew what they meant, because Becky had
described them. They meant rats and mice who were either fighting with each
otherï ()oï or playing together. Once or twice she even heard sharp-toed feet
scurrying across the floor, and she remembered in those after days, when she
recalled things, that when first she heard them she started up in bed and sat
trembling, and when she lay down again covered her head with the bedclothes.
The change in her life
did not come about gradually, but was made all at once.
"She must begin as
she is to go on," Miss Minchin said to Miss Amelia. "She must be
taught at once what she is to expect."
Mariette had left the
house the next morning. The glimpse Sara caught of her sitting room, as she
passed its open door, showed her that everything had been changed. Her
ornaments and luxuries had been removed, and a bed had been placed in a corner
to transform it into a new pupil's bedroom.
When she went down to
breakfast she saw that her seat at Miss Minchin's side was occupied by Lavinia,
and Miss Minchin spoke to her coldly.
"You will begin
your new duties, Sara," she said, "by taking your seat with the
younger children at a smaller table. You must keep them quiet, and see that
they behave well and do not waste their food. You ought to have been down
earlier. Lottie has already upset her tea."
That was the beginning,
and from day to day the duties given to her were added to. She taught the
younger children French and heard their other lessons, and these were the least
of her labors. It was found that she could be made use of in numberless
directions. She could be sent on errands at any time and in all weathers. She
could be told to do things other people neglected. The cook and the housemaids
took their tone from Miss Minchin, and rather enjoyed ordering about the
"young one" who had been made so much fuss over for so long. They
were not servants of the best class, and had neither good manners nor good
tempers, and it was frequently convenient to have at hand someone on whom blame
could be laid.
During the first month
or two, Sara thought that her willingness to do things as well as she could,
and her silence under reproof, might soften those who drove her so hard. In her
proud little heart she wanted them to see that she was trying to earn her
living and not accepting charity. But the time came when she saw that no one
was softened at all; and the more willing she was to do as she was told, the
more domineering and exacting careless housemaids became, and the more ready a
scolding cook was to blame her.
If she had been older,
Miss Minchin would have given her the bigger girls to teach and saved money by
dismissing an instructress; but while she remained and looked like a child, she
could be made more useful as a sort of little superior errand girl and maid of
all work. An ordinary errand boy would not have been so clever and reliable.
Sara could be trusted with difficult commissions and complicated messages. She
could even go and pay bills, and she combined with this the ability to dust a
room well and to set things in order.
Her own lessons became
things of the past. She was taught nothing, and only after long and busy days
spent in running here and there at everybody's orders was she grudgingly
allowed to go into the deserted schoolroom, with a pile of old books, and study
alone at night.
"If I do not
remind myself of the things I have learned, perhaps I may forget them,"
she said to herself. "I am almost a scullery maid, and if I am a scullery
maid who knows nothing, I shall be like poor Becky. I wonder if I could quite
forget and begin to drop my h's and not remember that Henry the Eighth had six
wives."
One of the most curious
things in her new existence was her changed position among the pupils. Instead
of being a sort of small royal personage among them, she no longer seemed to be
one of their number at all. She was kept so constantly at work that she
scarcely ever had an opportunity of speaking to any of them, and she could not
avoid seeing that Miss Minchin preferred that she should live a life apart from
that of the occupants of the schoolroom.
"I will not have
her forming intimacies and talking to the other children," that lady said.
"Girls like a grievance, and if she begins to tell romantic stories about
herself, she will become an ill-used heroine, and parents will be given a wrong
impression. It is better that she should live a separate life--one suited to
her circumstances. I am giving her a home, and that is more than she has any
right to expect from me."
Sara did not expect
much, and was far too proud to try to continue to be intimate with girls who
evidently felt rather awkward and uncertain about her. The fact was that Miss
Minchin's pupils were a set of dull, matter-of-fact young people. They were
accustomed to being rich and comfortable, and as Sara's frocks grew shorter and
shabbier and queerer-looking, and it became an established fact that she wore
shoes with holes in them and was sent out to buy groceries and carry them
through the streets in a basket on her arm when the cook wanted them in a
hurry, they felt rather as if, when they spoke to her, they were addressing an
under servant.
"To think that she
was the girl with the diamond mines, Lavinia commented. "She does look an
object. And she's queerer than ever. I never liked her much, but I can't bear
that way she has now of looking at people without speaking--just as if she was
finding them out."
"I am," said
Sara, promptly, when she heard of this. "That's what I look at some people
for. I like to know about them. I think them over afterward."
The truth was that she
had saved herself annoyance several times by keeping her eye on Lavinia, who
was quite ready to make mischief, and would have been rather pleased to have
made it for the ex-show pupil.
Sara never made any
mischief herself, or interfered with anyone. She worked like a drudge; she
tramped through the wet streets, carrying parcels and baskets; she labored with
the childish inattention of the little ones' French lessons; as she became
shabbier and more forlorn-looking, she was told that she had better take her
meals downstairs; she was treated as if she was nobody's concern, and her heart
grew proud and sore, but she never told anyone what she felt.
"Soldiers don't
complain," she would say between her small, shut teeth, "I am not
going to do it; I will pretend this is part of a war."
But there were hours
when her child heart might almost have broken with loneliness but for three
people.
The first, it must be
owned, was Becky--just Becky. Throughout all that first night spent in the
garret, she had felt a vague comfort in knowing that on the other side of the
wall in which the rats scuffled and squeaked there was another young human creature.
And during the nights that followed the sense of comfort grew. They had little
chance to speak to each other during the day. Each had her own tasks to
perform, and any attempt at conversation would have been regarded as a tendency
to loiter and lose time. "Don't mind me, miss," Becky whispered
during the first morning, "if I don't say nothin' polite. Some un'd be
down on us if I did. I means 'please' an' 'thank you' an' 'beg pardon,' but I
dassn't to take time to say it."
But before daybreak she
used to slip into Sara's attic and button her dress and give her such help as
she required before she went downstairs to light the kitchen fire. And when
night came Sara always heard the humble knock at her door which meant that her
handmaid was ready to help her again if she was needed. During the first weeks
of her grief Sara felt as if she were too stupefied to talk, so it happened
that some time passed before they saw each other much or exchanged visits.
Becky's heart told her that it was best that people in trouble should be left
alone.
The second of the trio
of comforters was Ermengarde, but odd things happened before Ermengarde found
her place.
When Sara's mind seemed
to awaken again to the life about her, she realized that she had forgotten that
an Ermengarde lived in the world. The two had always been friends, but Sara had
felt as if she were years the older. It could not be contested that Ermengarde
was as dull as she was affectionate. She clung to Sara in a simple, helpless
way; she brought her lessons to her that she might be helped; she listened to
her every word and besieged her with requests for stories. But she had nothing
interesting to say herself, and she loathed books of every description. She
was, in fact, not a person one would remember when one was caught in the storm
of a great trouble, and Sara forgot her.
It had been all the
easier to forget her because she had been suddenly called home for a few weeks.
When she came back she did not see Sara for a day or two, and when she met her
for the first time she encountered her coming down a corridor with her arms
full of garments which were to be taken downstairs to be mended. Sara herself
had already been taught to mend them. She looked pale and unlike herself, and
she was attired in the queer, outgrown frock whose shortness showed so much
thin black leg.
Ermengarde was too slow
a girl to be equal to such a situation. She could not think of anything to say.
She knew what had happened, but, somehow, she had never imagined Sara could
look like this--so odd and poor and almost like a servant. It made her quite
miserable, and she could do nothing but break into a short hysterical laugh and
exclaim--aimlessly and as if without any meaning, "Oh, Sara, is that
you?"
" Yes,"
answered Sara, and suddenly a strange thought passed through her mind and made
her face flush. She held the pile of garments in her arms, and her chin rested
upon the top of it to keep it steady. Something in the look of her
straight-gazing eyes made Ermengarde lose her wits still more. She felt as if
Sara had changed into a new kind of girl, and she had never known her before.
Perhaps it was because she had suddenly grown poor and had to mend things and
work like Becky.
"Oh," she
stammered. "How--how are you?"
"I don't
know," Sara replied. "How are you?"
"I'm--I'm quite
well," said Ermengarde, overwhelmed with shyness. Then spasmodically she
thought of something to say which seemed more intimate. "Are you--are you
very unhappy?" she said in a rush.
Then Sara was guilty of
an injustice. Just at that moment her torn heart swelled within her, and she
felt that if anyone was as stupid as that, one had better get away from her.
"What do you
think?" she said. "Do you think I am very happy?" And she
marched past her without another word.
In course of time she
realized that if her wretchedness had not made her forget things, she would
have known that poor, dull Ermengarde was not to be blamed for her unready,
awkward ways. She was always awkward, and the more she felt, the more stupid
she was given to being.
But the sudden thought
which had flashed upon her had made her over-sensitive.
"She is like the
others," she had thought. "She does not really want to talk to me.
She knows no one does."
So for several weeks a
barrier stood between them. When they met by chance Sara looked the other way,
and Ermengarde felt too stiff and embarrassed to speak. Sometimes they nodded
to each other in passing, but there were times when they did not even exchange
a greeting.
"If she would
rather not talk to me," Sara thought, "I will keep out of her way.
Miss Minchin makes that easy enough."
Miss Minchin made it so
easy that at last they scarcely saw each other at all. At that time it was
noticed that Ermengarde was more stupid than ever, and that she looked listless
and unhappy. She used to sit in the window-seat, huddled in a heap, and stare
out of the window without speaking. Once Jessie, who was passing, stopped to
look at her curiously.
"What are you
crying for, Ermengarde?" she asked.
"I'm not crying,"
answered Ermengarde, in a muffled, unsteady voice.
"You are,"
said Jessie. "A great big tear just rolled down the bridge of your nose
and dropped off at the end of it. And there goes another."
"Well," said
Ermengarde, "I'm miserable--and no one need interfere." And she
turned her plump back and took out her handkerchief and boldly hid her face in
it.
That night, when Sara
went to her attic, she was later than usual. She had been kept at work until
after the hour at which the pupils went to bed, and after that she had gone to
her lessons in the lonely schoolroom. When she reached the top of the stairs,
she was surprised to see a glimmer of light coming from under the attic door.
"Nobody goes there
but myself," she thought quickly, "but someone has lighted a
candle."
Someone had, indeed,
lighted a candle, and it was not burning in the kitchen candlestick she was
expected to use, but in one of those belonging to the pupils' bedrooms. The
someone was sitting upon the battered footstool, and was dressed in her
nightgown and wrapped up in a red shawl. It was Ermengarde.
"Ermengarde!"
cried Sara. She was so startled that she was almost frightened. "You will
get into trouble."
Ermengarde stumbled up
from her footstool. She shuffled across the attic in her bedroom slippers,
which were too large for her. Her eyes and nose were pink with crying.
"I know I
shall--if I'm found out." she said. "But I don't care--I don't care a
bit. Oh, Sara, please tell me. What is the matter? Why don't you like me any
more?"
Something in her voice
made the familiar lump rise in Sara's throat. It was so affectionate and
simple--so like the old Ermengarde who had asked her to be "best
friends." It sounded as if she had not meant what she had seemed to mean
during these past weeks.
"I do like
you," Sara answered. "I thought--you see, everything is different
now. I thought you--were different.
Ermengarde opened her
wet eyes wide.
"Why, it was you
who were different!" she cried. "You didn't want to talk to me. I
didn't know what to do. It was you who were different after I came back."
Sara thought a moment.
She saw she had made a mistake.
"I am
different," she explained, "though not in the way you think. Miss
Minchin does not want me to talk to the girls. Most of them don't want to talk
to me. I thought--perhaps--you didn't. So I tried to keep out of your
way."
"Oh, Sara,"
Ermengarde almost wailed in her reproachful dismay. And then after one more
look they rushed into each other's arms. It must be confessed that Sara's small
black head lay for some minutes on the shoulder covered by the red shawl. When
Ermengarde had seemed to desert her, she had felt horribly lonely.
Afterward they sat down
upon the floor together, Sara clasping her knees with her arms, and Ermengarde
rolled up in her shawl. Ermengarde looked at the odd, big-eyed little face
adoringly.
"I couldn't bear
it any more," she said. "I dare say you could live without me, Sara;
but I couldn't live without you. I was nearly dead. So tonight, when I was
crying under the bedclothes, I thought all at once of creeping up here and just
begging you to let us be friends again."
"You are nicer
than I am," said Sara. "I was too proud to try and make friends. You
see, now that trials have come, they have shown that I am not a nice child. I
was afraid they would. Perhaps"--wrinkling her forehead wisely--"that
is what they were sent for."
"I don't see any
good in them," said Ermengarde stoutly.
"Neither do I--to
speak the truth," admitted Sara, frankly. "But I suppose there might
be good in things, even if we don't see it. There
might"--doubtfully--"be good in Miss Minchin."
Ermengarde looked round
the attic with a rather fearsome curiosity.
"Sara," she
said, "do you think you can bear living here?"
Sara looked round also.
"If I pretend it's
quite different, I can," she answered; "or if I pretend it is a place
in a story."
She spoke slowly. Her
imagination was beginning to work for her. It had not worked for her at all
since her troubles had come upon her. She had felt as if it had been stunned.
"Other people have
lived in worse places. Think of the Count of Monte Cristo in the dungeons of
the Chateau d'If. And think of the people in the Bastille!"
"The
Bastille," half whispered Ermengarde, watching her and beginning to be fascinated.
She remembered stories of the French Revolution which Sara had been able to fix
in her mind by her dramatic relation of them. No one but Sara could have done
it.
A well-known glow came
into Sara's eyes.
"Yes," she
said, hugging her knees, "that will be a good place to pretend about. I am
a prisoner in the Bastille. I have been here for years and years--and years;
and everybody has forgotten about me. Miss Minchin is the jailer--and
Becky"--a sudden light adding itself to the glow in her eyes--"Becky
is the prisoner in the next cell."
She turned to
Ermengarde, looking quite like the old Sara.
"I shall pretend
that," she said; "and it will be a great comfort."
Ermengarde was at once
enraptured and awed.
"And will you tell
me all about it?" she said. "May I creep up here at night, whenever
it is safe, and hear the things you have made up in the day? It will seem as if
we were more 'best friends' than ever."
"Yes,"
answered Sara, nodding. "Adversity tries people, and mine has tried you
and proved how nice you are."
The third person in the
trio was Lottie. She was a small thing and did not know what adversity meant,
and was much bewildered by the alteration she saw in her young adopted mother.
She had heard it rumored that strange things had happened to Sara, but she
could not understand why she looked different--why she wore an old black frock
and came into the schoolroom only to teach instead of to sit in her place of
honor and learn lessons herself. There had been much whispering among the
little ones when it had been discovered that Sara no longer lived in the rooms
in which Emily had so long sat in state. Lottie's chief difficulty was that
Sara said so little when one asked her questions. At seven mysteries must be
made very clear if one is to understand them.
"Are you very poor
now, Sara?" she had asked confidentially the first morning her friend took
charge of the small French class. "Are you as poor as a beggar?" She
thrust a fat hand into the slim one and opened round, tearful eyes. "I
don't want you to be as poor as a beggar."
She looked as if she
was going to cry. And Sara hurriedly consoled her.
"Beggars have
nowhere to live," she said courageously. "I have a place to live
in."
"Where do you
live?" persisted Lottle. "The new girl sleeps in your room, and it
isn't pretty any more."
"I live in another
room," said Sara.
"Is it a nice
one?" inquired Lottie. "I want to go and see it."
"You must not
talk," said Sara. "Miss Minchin is looking at us. She will be angry
with me for letting you whisper."
She had found out
already that she was to be held accountable for everything which was objected
to. If the children were not attentive, if they talked, if they were restless,
it was she who would be reproved.
But Lottie was a
determined little person. If Sara would not tell her where she lived, she would
find out in some other way. She talked to her small companions and hung about
the elder girls and listened when they were gossiping; and acting upon certain
information they had unconsciously let drop, she started late one afternoon on
a voyage of discovery, climbing stairs she had never known the existence of,
until she reached the attic floor. There she found two doors near each other,
and opening one, she saw her beloved Sara standing upon an old table and
looking out of a window.
"Sara!" she
cried, aghast. "Mamma Sara!" She was aghast because the attic was so
bare and ugly and seemed so far away from all the world. Her short legs had
seemed to have been mounting hundreds of stairs.
Sara turned round at
the sound of her voice. It was her turn to be aghast. What would happen now? If
Lottie began to cry and any one chanced to hear, they were both lost. She
jumped down from her table and ran to the child.
"Don't cry and
make a noise," she implored. "I shall be scolded if you do, and I
have been scolded all day. It's--it's not such a bad room, Lottie."
"Isn't it?"
gasped Lottie, and as she looked round it she bit her lip. She was a spoiled
child yet, but she was fond enough of her adopted parent to make an effort to
control herself for her sake. Then, somehow, it was quite possible that any
place in which Sara lived might turn out to be nice. "Why isn't it,
Sara?" she almost whispered.
Sara hugged her close
and tried to laugh. There was a sort of comfort in the warmth of the plump,
childish body. She had had a hard day and had been staring out of the windows
with hot eyes.
"You can see all
sorts of things you can't see downstairs," she said.
"What sort of
things?" demanded Lottie, with that cunosity Sara could always awaken even
in bigger girls.
"Chimneys--quite
close to us--with smoke curling up in wreaths and clouds and going up into the
sky--and sparrows hopping about and talking to each other just as if they were
people--and other attic windows where heads may pop out any minute and you can
wonder who they belong to. And it all feels as high up--as if it was another
world."
"Oh, let me see
it!" cried Lottie. "Lift me up!"
Sara lifted her up, and
they stood on the old table together and leaned on the edge of the flat window
in the roof, and looked out.
Anyone who has not done
this does not know what a different world they saw. The slates spread out on
either side of them and slanted down into the rain gutter-pipes. The sparrows,
being at home there, twittered and hopped about quite without fear. Two of them
perched on the chimney top nearest and quarrelled with each other fiercely
until one pecked the other and drove him away. The garret window next to theirs
was shut because the house next door was empty.
"I wish someone
lived there," Sara said. "It is so close that if there was a little
girl in the attic, we could talk to each other through the windows and climb
over to see each other, if we were not afraid of falling."
The sky seemed so much
nearer than when one saw it from the street, that Lottie was enchanted. From
the attic window, among the chimney pots, the things which were happening in
the world below seemed almost unreal. One scarcely believed in the existence of
Miss Minchin and Miss Amelia and the schoolroom, and the roll of wheels in the
square seemed a sound belonging to another existence.
"Oh, Sara!"
cried Lottie, cuddling in her guarding arm. "I like this attic--I like it!
It is nicer than downstairs!"
"Look at that
sparrow," whispered Sara. "I wish I had some crumbs to throw to
him."
"I have
some!" came in a little shriek from Lottie. "I have part of a bun in
my pocket; I bought it with my penny yesterday, and I saved a bit."
When they threw out a
few crumbs the sparrow jumped and flew away to an adjacent chimney top. He was
evidently not accustomed to intimates in attics, and unexpected crumbs startled
him. But when Lottie remained quite still and Sara chirped very softly--almost
as if she were a sparrow herself--he saw that the thing which had alarmed him
represented hospitality, after all. He put his head on one side, and from his
perch on the chimney looked down at the crumbs with twinkling eyes. Lottie
could scarcely keep still.
"Will he come?
Will he come?" she whispered.
"His eyes look as
if he would," Sara whispered back. "He is thinking and thinking
whether he dare. Yes, he will! Yes, he is coming!"
He flew down and hopped
toward the crumbs, but stopped a few inches away from them, putting his head on
one side again, as if reflecting on the chances that Sara and Lottie might turn
out to be big cats and jump on him. At last his heart told him they were really
nicer than they looked, and he hopped nearer and nearer, darted at the biggest
crumb with a lightning peck, seized it, and carried it away to the other side
of his chimney.
"Now he
knows," said Sara. "And he will come back for the others."
He did come back, and
even brought a friend, and the friend went away and brought a relative, and
among them they made a hearty meal over which they twittered and chattered and
exclaimed, stopping every now and then to put their heads on one side and
examine Lottie and Sara. Lottie was so delighted that she quite forgot her
first shocked impression of the attic. In fact, when she was lifted down from
the table and returned to earthly things, as it were, Sara was able to point
out to her many beauties in the room which she herself would not have suspected
the existence of.
"It is so little
and so high above everything," she said, "that it is almost like a
nest in a tree. The slanting ceiling is so funny. See, you can scarcely stand
up at this end of the room; and when the morning begins to come I can lie in
bed and look right up into the sky through that flat window in the roof. It is
like a square patch of light. If the sun is going to shine, little pink clouds
float about, and I feel as if I could touch them. And if it rains, the drops
patter and patter as if they were saying something nice. Then if there are
stars, you can lie and try to count how many go into the patch. It takes such a
lot. And just look at that tiny, rusty grate in the corner. If it was polished
and there was a fire in it, just think how nice it would be. You see, it's
really a beautiful little room."
She was walking round
the small place, holding Lottie's hand and making gestures which described all
the beauties she was making herself see. She quite made Lottie see them, too.
Lottie could always believe in the things Sara made pictures of.
"You see,"
she said, "there could be a thick, soft blue Indian rug on the floor; and
in that corner there could be a soft little sofa, with cushions to curl up on;
and just over it could be a shelf full of books so that one could reach them
easily; and there could be a fur rug before the fire, and hangings on the wall
to cover up the whitewash, and pictures. They would have to be little ones, but
they could be beautiful; and there could be a lamp with a deep rose-colored
shade; and a table in the middle, with things to have tea with; and a little
fat copper kettle singing on the hob; and the bed could be quite different. It
could be made soft and covered with a lovely silk coverlet. It could be
beautiful. And perhaps we could coax the sparrows until we made such friends
with them that they would come and peck at the window and ask to be let
in."
"Oh, Sara!"
cried Lottie. "I should like to live here!"
When Sara had persuaded
her to go downstairs again, and, after setting her on her way, had come back to
her attic, she stood in the middle of it and looked about her. The enchantment
of her imaginings for Lottie had died away. The bed was hard and covered with its
dingy quilt. The whitewashed wall showed its broken patches, the floor was cold
and bare, the grate was broken and rusty, and the battered footstool, tilted
sideways on its injured leg, the only seat in the room. She sat down on it for
a few minutes and let her head drop in her hands. The mere fact that Lottie had
come and gone away again made things seem a little worse--just as perhaps
prisoners feel a little more desolate after visitors come and go, leaving them
behind.
"It's a lonely
place," she said. "Sometimes it's the loneliest place in the
world."
She was sitting in this
way when her attention was attracted by a slight sound near her. She lifted her
head to see where it came from, and if she had been a nervous child she would
have left her seat on the battered footstool in a great hurry. A large rat was
sitting up on his hind quarters and sniffing the air in an interested manner.
Some of Lottie's crumbs had dropped upon the floor and their scent had drawn
him out of his hole.
He looked so queer and
so like a gray-whiskered dwarf or gnome that Sara was rather fascinated. He
looked at her with his bright eyes, as if he were asking a question. He was
evidently so doubtful that one of the child's queer thoughts came into her
mind.
"I dare say it is
rather hard to be a rat," she mused. "Nobody likes you. People jump
and run away and scream out, 'Oh, a horrid rat!' I shouldn't like people to
scream and jump and say, 'Oh, a horrid Sara!' the moment they saw me. And set
traps for me, and pretend they were dinner. It's so different to be a sparrow.
But nobody asked this rat if he wanted to be a rat when he was made. Nobody
said, 'Wouldn't you rather be a sparrow?'"
She had sat so quietly
that the rat had begun to take courage. He was very much afraid of her, but
perhaps he had a heart like the sparrow and it told him that she was not a
thing which pounced. He was very hungry. He had a wife and a large family in
the wall, and they had had frightfully bad luck for several days. He had left
the children crying bitterly, and felt he would risk a good deal for a few
crumbs, so he cautiously dropped upon his feet.
"Come on,"
said Sara; "I'm not a trap. You can have them, poor thing! Prisoners in
the Bastille used to make friends with rats. Suppose I make friends with
you."
How it is that animals
understand things I do not know, but it is certain that they do understand.
Perhaps there is a language which is not made of words and everything in the
world understands it. Perhaps there is a soul hidden in everything and it can
always speak, without even making a sound, to another soul. But whatsoever was
the reason, the rat knew from that moment that he was safe--even though he was
a rat. He knew that this young human being sitting on the red footstool would
not jump up and terrify him with wild, sharp noises or throw heavy objects at
him which, if they did not fall and crush him, would send him limping in his
scurry back to his hole. He was really a very nice rat, and did not mean the
least harm. When he had stood on his hind legs and sniffed the air, with his
bright eyes fixed on Sara, he had hoped that she would understand this, and
would not begin by hating him as an enemy. When the mysterious thing which
speaks without saying any words told him that she would not, he went softly
toward the crumbs and began to eat them. As he did it he glanced every now and
then at Sara, just as the sparrows had done, and his expression was so very
apologetic that it touched her heart.
She sat and watched him
without making any movement. One crumb was very much larger than the others--in
fact, it could scarcely be called a crumb. It was evident that he wanted that
piece very much, but it lay quite near the footstool and he was still rather
timid.
"I believe he
wants it to carry to his family in the wall," Sara thought. "If I do
not stir at all, perhaps he will come and get it."
She scarcely allowed
herself to breathe, she was so deeply interested. The rat shuffled a little
nearer and ate a few more crumbs, then he stopped and sniffed delicately,
giving a side glance at the occupant of the footstool; then he darted at the
piece of bun with something very like the sudden boldness of the sparrow, and
the instant he had possession of it fled back to the wall, slipped down a crack
in the skirting board, and was gone.
"I knew he wanted
it for his children," said Sara. "I do believe I could make friends
with him."
A week or so afterward,
on one of the rare nights when Ermengarde found it safe to steal up to the
attic, when she tapped on the door with the tips of her fingers Sara did not
come to her for two or three minutes. There was, indeed, such a silence in the
room at first that Ermengarde wondered if she could have fallen asleep. Then,
to her surprise, she heard her utter a little, low laugh and speak coaxingly to
someone.
"There!"
Ermengarde heard her say. "Take it and go home, Melchisedec! Go home to
your wife!"
Almost immediately Sara
opened the door, and when she did so she found Ermengarde standing with alarmed
eyes upon the threshold.
"Who--who are you
talking to, Sara?" she gasped out.
Sara drew her in
cautiously, but she looked as if something pleased and amused her.
"You must promise
not to be frightened--not to scream the least bit, or I can't tell you,"
she answered.
Ermengarde felt almost
inclined to scream on the spot, but managed to control herself. She looked all
round the attic and saw no one. And yet Sara had certainly been speaking to
someone. She thought of ghosts.
"Is it--something
that will frighten me?" she asked timorously.
"Some people are
afraid of them," said Sara. "I was at first--but I am not now."
"Was it--a
ghost?" quaked Ermengarde.
"No," said
Sara, laughing. "It was my rat."
Ermengarde made one
bound, and landed in the middle of the little dingy bed. She tucked her feet
under her nightgown and the red shawl. She did not scream, but she gasped with
fright.
"Oh! Oh!" she
cried under her breath. "A rat! A rat!"
"I was afraid you
would be frightened," said Sara. "But you needn't be. I am making him
tame. He actually knows me and comes out when I call him. Are you too
frightened to want to see him?"
The truth was that, as
the days had gone on and, with the aid of scraps brought up from the kitchen,
her curious friendship had developed, she had gradually forgotten that the
timid creature she was becoming familiar with was a mere rat.
At first Ermengarde was
too much alarmed to do anything but huddle in a heap upon the bed and tuck up
her feet, but the sight of Sara's composed little countenance and the story of
Melchisedec's first appearance began at last to rouse her curiosity, and she
leaned forward over the edge of the bed and watched Sara go and kneel down by
the hole in the skirting board.
"He--he won't run
out quickly and jump on the bed, will he?" she said.
"No,"
answered Sara. "He's as polite as we are. He is just like a person. Now
watch!"
She began to make a
low, whistling sound--so low and coaxing that it could only have been heard in
entire stillness. She did it several times, looking entirely absorbed in it.
Ermengarde thought she looked as if she were working a spell. And at last,
evidently in response to it, a gray-whiskered, bright-eyed head peeped out of
the hole. Sara had some crumbs in her hand. She dropped them, and Melchisedec
came quietly forth and ate them. A piece of larger size than the rest he took
and carried in the most businesslike manner back to his home.
"You see,"
said Sara, "that is for his wife and children. He is very nice. He only
eats the little bits. After he goes back I can always hear his family squeaking
for joy. There are three kinds of squeaks. One kind is the children's, and one
is Mrs. Melchisedec's, and one is Melchisedec's own."
Ermengarde began to
laugh.
"Oh, Sara!"
she said. "You are queer--but you are nice."
"I know I am
queer," admitted Sara, cheerfully; "and I try to be nice." She
rubbed her forehead with her little brown paw, and a puzzled, tender look came
into her face. "Papa always laughed at me," she said; "but I
liked it. He thought I was queer, but he liked me to make up things. I--I can't
help making up things. If I didn't, I don't believe I could live." She
paused and glanced around the attic. "I'm sure I couldn't live here,"
she added in a low voice.
Ermengarde was
interested, as she always was. "When you talk about things," she
said, "they seem as if they grew real. You talk about Melchisedec as if he
was a person."
"He is a
person," said Sara. "He gets hungry and frightened, just as we do;
and he is married and has children. How do we know he doesn't think things,
just as we do? His eyes look as if he was a person. That was why I gave him a
name."
She sat down on the
floor in her favorite attitude, holding her knees.
"Besides,"
she said, "he is a Bastille rat sent to be my friend. I can always get a
bit of bread the cook has thrown away, and it is quite enough to support
him."
"Is it the
Bastille yet?" asked Ermengarde, eagerly. "Do you always pretend it
is the Bastille?"
"Nearly
always," answered Sara. "Sometimes I try to pretend it is another
kind of place; but the Bastille is generally easiest--particularly when it is
cold."
Just at that moment
Ermengarde almost jumped off the bed, she was so startled by a sound she heard.
It was like two distinct knocks on the wall.
"What is
that?" she exclaimed.
Sara got up from the
floor and answered quite dramatically:
"It is the
prisoner in the next cell."
"Becky!"
cried Ermengarde, enraptured.
"Yes," said
Sara. "Listen; the two knocks meant, 'Prisoner, are you there?'"
She knocked three times
on the wall herself, as if in answer.
"That means, 'Yes,
I am here, and all is well.'"
Four knocks came from
Becky's side of the wall.
"That means,"
explained Sara, "'Then, fellow-sufferer, we will sleep in peace. Good
night.'"
Ermengarde quite beamed
with delight.
"Oh, Sara!"
she whispered joyfully. "It is like a story!"
"It is a
story," said Sara. "Everything's a story. You are a story--I am a
story. Miss Minchin is a story."
And she sat down again
and talked until Ermengarde forgot that she was a sort of escaped prisoner
herself, and had to be reminded by Sara that she could not remain in the
Bastille all night, but must steal noiselessly downstairs again and creep back
into her deserted bed.
But it was a perilous
thing for Ermengarde and Lottie to make pilgrimages to the attic. They could
never be quite sure when Sara would be there, and they could scarcely ever be
certain that Miss Amelia would not make a tour of inspection through the
bedrooms after the pupils were supposed to be asleep. So their visits were rare
ones, and Sara lived a strange and lonely life. It was a lonelier life when she
was downstairs than when she was in her attic. She had no one to talk to; and
when she was sent out on errands and walked through the streets, a forlorn
little figure carrying a basket or a parcel, trying to hold her hat on when the
wind was blowing, and feeling the water soak through her shoes when it was
raining, she felt as if the crowds hurrying past her made her loneliness
greater. When she had been the Princess Sara, driving through the streets in
her brougham, or walking, attended by Mariette, the sight of her bright, eager
little face and picturesque coats and hats had often caused people to look
after her. A happy, beautifully cared for little girl naturally attracts
attention. Shabby, poorly dressed children are not rare enough and pretty
enough to make people turn around to look at them and smile. No one looked at
Sara in these days, and no one seemed to see her as she hurried along the
crowded pavements. She had begun to grow very fast, and, as she was dressed
only in such clothes as the plainer remnants of her wardrobe would supply, she
knew she looked very queer, indeed. All her valuable garments had been disposed
of, and such as had been left for her use she was expected to wear so long as
she could put them on at all. Sometimes, when she passed a shop window with a
mirror in it, she almost laughed outright on catching a glimpse of herself, and
sometimes her face went red and she bit her lip and turned away.
In the evening, when
she passed houses whose windows were lighted up, she used to look into the warm
rooms and amuse herself by imagining things about the people she saw sitting
before the fires or about the tables. It always interested her to catch
glimpses of rooms before the shutters were closed. There were several families
in the square in which Miss Minchin lived, with which she had become quite
familiar in a way of her own. The one she liked best she called the Large
Family. She called it the Large Family not because the members of it were
big--for, indeed, most of them were little--but because there were so many of
them. There were eight children in the Large Family, and a stout, rosy mother,
and a stout, rosy father, and a stout, rosy grandmother, and any number of
servants. The eight children were always either being taken out to walk or to
ride in perambulators by comfortable nurses, or they were going to drive with
their mamma, or they were flying to the door in the evening to meet their papa
and kiss him and dance around him and drag off his overcoat and look in the
pockets for packages, or they were crowding about the nursery windows and
looking out and pushing each other and laughing--in fact, they were always
doing something enjoyable and suited to the tastes of a large family. Sara was
quite fond of them, and had given them names out of books--quite romantic
names. She called them the Montmorencys when she did not call them the Large
Family. The fat, fair baby with the lace cap was Ethelberta Beauchamp
Montmorency; the next baby was Violet Cholmondeley Montmorency; the little boy
who could just stagger and who had such round legs was Sydney Cecil Vivian
Montmorency; and then came Lilian Evangeline Maud Marion, Rosalind Gladys, Guy
Clarence, Veronica Eustacia, and Claude Harold Hector.
One evening a very
funny thing happened--though, perhaps, in one sense it was not a funny thing at
all.
Several of the
Montmorencys were evidently going to a children's party, and just as Sara was
about to pass the door they were crossing the pavement to get into the carriage
which was waiting for them. Veronica Eustacia and Rosalind Gladys, in
white-lace frocks and lovely sashes, had just got in, and Guy Clarence, aged
five, was following them. He was such a pretty fellow and had such rosy cheeks
and blue eyes, and such a darling little round head covered with curls, that
Sara forgot her basket and shabby cloak altogether--in fact, forgot everything
but that she wanted to look at him for a moment. So she paused and looked.
It was Christmas time,
and the Large Family had been hearing many stories about children who were poor
and had no mammas and papas to fill their stockings and take them to the
pantomime--children who were, in fact, cold and thinly clad and hungry. In the
stories, kind people--sometimes little boys and girls with tender
hearts--invariably saw the poor children and gave them money or rich gifts, or
took them home to beautiful dinners. Guy Clarence had been affected to tears
that very afternoon by the reading of such a story, and he had burned with a
desire to find such a poor child and give her a certain sixpence he possessed,
and thus provide for her for life. An entire sixpence, he was sure, would mean
affluence for evermore. As he crossed the strip of red carpet laid across the
pavement from the door to the carriage, he had this very sixpence in the pocket
of his very short man-o-war trousers; And just as Rosalind Gladys got into the
vehicle and jumped on the seat in order to feel the cushions spring under her,
he saw Sara standing on the wet pavement in her shabby frock and hat, with her
old basket on her arm, looking at him hungrily.
He thought that her
eyes looked hungry because she had perhaps had nothing to eat for a long time.
He did not know that they looked so because she was hungry for the warm, merry
life his home held and his rosy face spoke of, and that she had a hungry wish
to snatch him in her arms and kiss him. He only knew that she had big eyes and
a thin face and thin legs and a common basket and poor clothes. So he put his
hand in his pocket and found his sixpence and walked up to her benignly.
"Here, poor little
girl," he said. "Here is a sixpence. I will give it to you."
Sara started, and all
at once realized that she looked exactly like poor children she had seen, in
her better days, waiting on the pavement to watch her as she got out of her
brougham. And she had given them pennies many a time.
Her face went red and
then it went pale, and for a second she felt as if she could not take the dear
little sixpence.
"Oh, no!" she
said. "Oh, no, thank you; I mustn't take it, indeed! "
Her voice was so unlike
an ordinary street child's voice and her manner was so like the manner of a
well-bred little person that Veronica Eustacia (whose real name was Janet) and
Rosalind Gladys (who was really called Nora) leaned forward to listen.
But Guy Clarence was
not to be thwarted in his benevolence. He thrust the sixpence into her hand.
"Yes, you must
take it, poor little girl!" he insisted stoutly. "You can buy things
to eat with it. It is a whole sixpence!"
There was something so
honest and kind in his face, and he looked so likely to be heartbrokenly
disappointed if she did not take it, that Sara knew she must not refuse him. To
be as proud as that would be a cruel thing. So she actually put her pride in
her pocket, though it must be admitted her cheeks burned.
"Thank you,"
she said. "You are a kind, kind little darling thing." And as he
scrambled joyfully into the carriage she went away, trying to smile, though she
caught her breath quickly and her eyes were shining through a mist. She had known
that she looked odd and shabby, but until now she had not known that she might
be taken for a beggar.
As the Large Family's
carriage drove away, the children inside it were talking with interested
excitement.
"Oh, Donald,"
(this was Guy Clarence's name), Janet exclaimed alarmedly, "why did you
offer that little girl your sixpence? I'm sure she is not a beggar!"
"She didn't speak
like a beggar!" cried Nora. "And her face didn't really look like a
beggar's face!"
"Besides, she
didn't beg," said Janet. "I was so afraid she might be angry with
you. You know, it makes people angry to be taken for beggars when they are not
beggars."
"She wasn't
angry," said Donald, a trifle dismayed, but still firm. "She laughed
a little, and she said I was a kind, kind little darling thing. And I
was!"--stoutly. "It was my whole sixpence."
Janet and Nora
exchanged glances.
"A beggar girl
would never have said that," decided Janet. "She would have said,
'Thank yer kindly, little gentleman--thank yer, sir;' and perhaps she would
have bobbed a curtsy."
Sara knew nothing about
the fact, but from that time the Large Family was as profoundly interested in her
as she was in it. Faces used to appear at the nursery windows when she passed,
and many discussions concerning her were held round the fire.
"She is a kind of
servant at the seminary," Janet said. "I don't believe she belongs to
anybody. I believe she is an orphan. But she is not a beggar, however shabby
she looks."
And afterward she was
called by all of them, "The-little-girl-who-is-not-a-beggar," which
was, of course, rather a long name, and sounded very funny sometimes when the
youngest ones said it in a hurry.
Sara managed to bore a
hole in the sixpence and hung it on an old bit of narrow ribbon round her neck.
Her affection for the Large Family increased--as, indeed, her affection for
everything she could love increased. She grew fonder and fonder of Becky, and
she used to look forward to the two mornings a week when she went into the
schoolroom to give the little ones their French lesson. Her small pupils loved
her, and strove with each other for the privilege of standing close to her and
insinuating their small hands into hers. It fed her hungry heart to feel them
nestling up to her. She made such friends with the sparrows that when she stood
upon the table, put her head and shoulders out of the attic window, and
chirped, she heard almost immediately a flutter of wings and answering
twitters, and a little flock of dingy town birds appeared and alighted on the
slates to talk to her and make much of the crumbs she scattered. With
Melchisedec she had become so intimate that he actually brought Mrs. Melchisedec
with him sometimes, and now and then one or two of his children. She used to
talk to him, and, somehow, he looked quite as if he understood.
There had grown in her
mind rather a strange feeling about Emily, who always sat and looked on at
everything. It arose in one of her moments of great desolateness. She would
have liked to believe or pretend to believe that Emily understood and
sympathized with her. She did not like to own to herself that her only
companion could feel and hear nothing. She used to put her in a chair sometimes
and sit opposite to her on the old red footstool, and stare and pretend about
her until her own eyes would grow large with something which was almost like
fear--particularly at night when everything was so still, when the only sound
in the attic was the occasional sudden scurry and squeak of Melchisedec's
family in the wall. One of her "pretends" was that Emily was a kind
of good witch who could protect her. Sometimes, after she had stared at her
until she was wrought up to the highest pitch of fancifulness, she would ask
her questions and find herself almost feeling as if she would presently answer.
But she never did.
"As to answering,
though," said Sara, trying to console herself, "I don't answer very
often. I never answer when I can help it. When people are insulting you, there
is nothing so good for them as not to say a word--just to look at them and
think. Miss Minchin turns pale with rage when I do it, Miss Amelia looks
frightened, and so do the girls. When you will not fly into a passion people
know you are stronger than they are, because you are strong enough to hold in
your rage, and they are not, and they say stupid things they wish they hadn't
said afterward. There's nothing so strong as rage, except what makes you hold
it in--that's stronger. It's a good thing not to answer your enemies. I
scarcely ever do. Perhaps Emily is more like me than I am like myself. Perhaps
she would rather not answer her friends, even. She keeps it all in her
heart."
But though she tried to
satisfy herself with these arguments, she did not find it easy. When, after a
long, hard day, in which she had been sent here and there, sometimes on long
errands through wind and cold and rain, she came in wet and hungry, and was
sent out again because nobody chose to remember that she was only a child, and
that her slim legs might be tired and her small body might be chilled; when she
had been given only harsh words and cold, slighting looks for thanks; when the
cook had been vulgar and insolent; when Miss Minchin had been in her worst
mood, and when she had seen the girls sneering among themselves at her
shabbiness--then she was not always able to comfort her sore, proud, desolate
heart with fancies when Emily merely sat upright in her old chair and stared.
One of these nights,
when she came up to the attic cold and hungry, with a tempest raging in her
young breast, Emily's stare seemed so vacant, her sawdust legs and arms so
inexpressive, that Sara lost all control over herself. There was nobody but
Emily--no one in the world. And there she sat.
"I shall die
presently," she said at first.
Emily simply stared.
"I can't bear
this," said the poor child, trembling. "I know I shall die. I'm cold;
I'm wet; I'm starving to death. I've walked a thousand miles today, and they
have done nothing but scold me from morning until night. And because I could
not find that last thing the cook sent me for, they would not give me any
supper. Some men laughed at me because my old shoes made me slip down in the
mud. I'm covered with mud now. And they laughed. Do you hear?"
She looked at the
staring glass eyes and complacent face, and suddenly a sort of heartbroken rage
seized her. She lifted her little savage hand and knocked Emily off the chair,
bursting into a passion of sobbing--Sara who never cried.
"You are nothing
but a doll!" she cried. "Nothing but a doll--doll--doll! You care for
nothing. You are stuffed with sawdust. You never had a heart. Nothing could
ever make you feel. You are a doll!"
Emily lay on the floor,
with her legs ignominiously doubled up over her head, and a new flat place on
the end of her nose; but she was calm, even dignified. Sara hid her face in her
arms. The rats in the wall began to fight and bite each other and squeak and
scramble. Melchisedec was chastising some of his family.
Sara's sobs gradually
quieted themselves. It was so unlike her to break down that she was surprised
at herself. After a while she raised her face and looked at Emily, who seemed
to be gazing at her round the side of one angle, and, somehow, by this time
actually with a kind of glassy-eyed sympathy. Sara bent and picked her up.
Remorse overtook her. She even smiled at herself a very little smile.
"You can't help
being a doll," she said with a resigned sigh, "any more than Lavinia
and Jessie can help not having any sense. We are not all made alike. Perhaps
you do your sawdust best." And she kissed her and shook her clothes
straight, and put her back upon her chair.
She had wished very
much that some one would take the empty house next door. She wished it because
of the attic window which was so near hers. It seemed as if it would be so nice
to see it propped open someday and a head and shoulders rising out of the
square aperture.
"If it looked a
nice head," she thought, "I might begin by saying, 'Good morning,'
and all sorts of things might happen. But, of course, it's not really likely
that anyone but under servants would sleep there."
One morning, on turning
the corner of the square after a visit to the grocer's, the butcher's, and the
baker's, she saw, to her great delight, that during her rather prolonged
absence, a van full of furniture had stopped before the next house, the front
doors were thrown open, and men in shirt sleeves were going in and out carrying
heavy packages and pieces of furniture.
"It's taken!"
she said. "It really is taken! Oh, I do hope a nice head will look out of
the attic window!"
She would almost have
liked to join the group of loiterers who had stopped on the pavement to watch
the things carried in. She had an idea that if she could see some of the
furniture she could guess something about the people it belonged to.
"Miss Minchin's
tables and chairs are just like her," she thought; "I remember
thinking that the first minute I saw her, even though I was so little. I told
papa afterward, and he laughed and said it was true. I am sure the Large Family
have fat, comfortable armchairs and sofas, and I can see that their red-flowery
wallpaper is exactly like them. It's warm and cheerful and kind-looking and
happy."
She was sent out for
parsley to the greengrocer's later in the day, and when she came up the area
steps her heart gave quite a quick beat of recognition. Several pieces of
furniture had been set out of the van upon the pavement. There was a beautiful
table of elaborately wrought teakwood, and some chairs, and a screen covered
with rich Oriental embroidery. The sight of them gave her a weird, homesick
feeling. She had seen things so like them in India. One of the things Miss Minchin
had taken from her was a carved teakwood desk her father had sent her.
"They are
beautiful things," she said; "they look as if they ought to belong to
a nice person. All the things look rather grand. I suppose it is a rich
family."
The vans of furniture
came and were unloaded and gave place to others all the day. Several times it
so happened that Sara had an opportunity of seeing things carried in. It became
plain that she had been right in guessing that the newcomers were people of
large means. All the furniture was rich and beautiful, and a great deal of it
was Oriental. Wonderful rugs and draperies and ornaments were taken from the
vans, many pictures, and books enough for a library. Among other things there
was a superb god Buddha in a splendid shrine.
"Someone in the
family must have been in India," Sara thought. "They have got used to
Indian things and like them. I am glad. I shall feel as if they were friends,
even if a head never looks out of the attic window."
When she was taking in
the evening's milk for the cook (there was really no odd job she was not called
upon to do), she saw something occur which made the situation more interesting
than ever. The handsome, rosy man who was the father of the Large Family walked
across the square in the most matter-of-fact manner, and ran up the steps of
the next-door house. He ran up them as if he felt quite at home and expected to
run up and down them many a time in the future. He stayed inside quite a long
time, and several times came out and gave directions to the workmen, as if he
had a right to do so. It was quite certain that he was in some intimate way
connected with the newcomers and was acting for them.
"If the new people
have children," Sara speculated, "the Large Family children will be
sure to come and play with them, and they might come up into the attic just for
fun."
At night, after her
work was done, Becky came in to see her fellow prisoner and bring her news.
"It's a' Nindian
gentleman that's comin' to live next door, miss," she said. "I don't
know whether he's a black gentleman or not, but he's a Nindian one. He's very
rich, an' he's ill, an' the gentleman of the Large Family is his lawyer. He's
had a lot of trouble, an' it's made him ill an' low in his mind. He worships
idols, miss. He's an 'eathen an' bows down to wood an' stone. I seen a' idol
bein' carried in for him to worship. Somebody had oughter send him a trac'. You
can get a trac' for a penny."
Sara laughed a little.
"I don't believe
he worships that idol," she said; "some people like to keep them to
look at because they are interesting. My papa had a beautiful one, and he did
not worship it."
But Becky was rather
inclined to prefer to believe that the new neighbor was "an 'eathen."
It sounded so much more romantic than that he should merely be the ordinary
kind of gentleman who went to church with a prayer book. She sat and talked
long that night of what he would be like, of what his wife would be like if he
had one, and of what his children would be like if they had children. Sara saw
that privately she could not help hoping very much that they would all be
black, and would wear turbans, and, above all, that--like their parent--they
would all be "'eathens."
"I never lived
next door to no 'eathens, miss," she said; "I should like to see what
sort o' ways they'd have."
It was several weeks
before her curiosity was satisfied, and then it was revealed that the new
occupant had neither wife nor children. He was a solitary man with no family at
all, and it was evident that he was shattered in health and unhappy in mind.
A carriage drove up one
day and stopped before the house. When the footman dismounted from the box and
opened the door the gentleman who was the father of the Large Family got out
first. After him there descended a nurse in uniform, then came down the steps
two men-servants. They came to assist their master, who, when he was helped out
of the carriage, proved to be a man with a haggard, distressed face, and a
skeleton body wrapped in furs. He was carried up the steps, and the head of the
Large Family went with him, looking very anxious. Shortly afterward a doctor's
carriage arrived, and the doctor went in--plainly to take care of him.
"There is such a
yellow gentleman next door, Sara," Lottie whispered at the French class
afterward. "Do you think he is a Chinee? The geography says the Chinee men
are yellow."
"No, he is not
Chinese," Sara whispered back; "he is very ill. Go on with your exercise,
Lottie. 'Non, monsieur. Je n'ai pas le canif de mon oncle.'"
That was the beginning
of the story of the Indian gentleman.
There were fine sunsets
even in the square, sometimes. One could only see parts of them, however,
between the chimneys and over the roofs. From the kitchen windows one could not
see them at all, and could only guess that they were going on because the
bricks looked warm and the air rosy or yellow for a while, or perhaps one saw a
blazing glow strike a particular pane of glass somewhere. There was, however,
one place from which one could see all the splendor of them: the piles of red
or gold clouds in the west; or the purple ones edged with dazzling brightness;
or the little fleecy, floating ones, tinged with rose-color and looking like
flights of pink doves scurrying across the blue in a great hurry if there was a
wind. The place where one could see all this, and seem at the same time to
breathe a purer air, was, of course, the attic window. When the square suddenly
seemed to begin to glow in an enchanted way and look wonderful in spite of its
sooty trees and railings, Sara knew something was going on in the sky; and when
it was at all possible to leave the kitchen without being missed or called
back, she invariably stole away and crept up the flights of stairs, and,
climbing on the old table, got her head and body as far out of the window as
possible. When she had accomplished this, she always drew a long breath and
looked all round her. It used to seem as if she had all the sky and the world
to herself. No one else ever looked out of the other attics. Generally the
skylights were closed; but even if they were propped open to admit air, no one
seemed to come near them. And there Sara would stand, sometimes turning her face
upward to the blue which seemed so friendly and near--just like a lovely
vaulted ceiling--sometimes watching the west and all the wonderful things that
happened there: the clouds melting or drifting or waiting softly to be changed
pink or crimson or snow-white or purple or pale dove-gray. Sometimes they made
islands or great mountains enclosing lakes of deep turquoise-blue, or liquid
amber, or chrysoprase-green; sometimes dark headlands jutted into strange, lost
seas; sometimes slender strips of wonderful lands joined other wonderful lands
together. There were places where it seemed that one could run or climb or
stand and wait to see what next was coming--until, perhaps, as it all melted,
one could float away. At least it seemed so to Sara, and nothing had ever been
quite so beautiful to her as the things she saw as she stood on the table--her
body half out of the skylight--the sparrows twittering with sunset softness on
the slates. The sparrows always seemed to her to twitter with a sort of subdued
softness just when these marvels were going on.
There was such a sunset
as this a few days after the Indian gentleman was brought to his new home; and,
as it fortunately happened that the afternoon's work was done in the kitchen
and nobody had ordered her to go anywhere or perform any task, Sara found it
easier than usual to slip away and go upstairs.
She mounted her table
and stood looking out. lt was a wonderful moment. There were floods of molten
gold covering the west, as if a glorious tide was sweeping over the world. A
deep, rich yellow light filled the air; the birds flying across the tops of the
houses showed quite black against it.
"It's a Splendid
one," said Sara, softly, to herself. "It makes me feel almost
afraid--as if something strange was just going to happen. The Splendid ones
always make me feel like that."
She suddenly turned her
head because she heard a sound a few yards away from her. It was an odd sound
like a queer little squeaky chattering. It came from the window of the next
attic. Someone had come to look at the sunset as she had. There was a head and
a part of a body emerging from the skylight, but it was not the head or body of
a little girl or a housemaid; it was the picturesque white-swathed form and
dark-faced, gleaming-eyed, white-turbaned head of a native Indian
man-servant--"a Lascar," Sara said to herself quickly--and the sound
she had heard came from a small monkey he held in his arms as if he were fond
of it, and which was snuggling and chattering against his breast.
As Sara looked toward
him he looked toward her. The first thing she thought was that his dark face
looked sorrowful and homesick. She felt absolutely sure he had come up to look
at the sun, because he had seen it so seldom in England that he longed for a
sight of it. She looked at him interestedly for a second, and then smiled
across the slates. She had learned to know how comforting a smile, even from a
stranger, may be.
Hers was evidently a
pleasure to him. His whole expression altered, and he showed such gleaming
white teeth as he smiled back that it was as if a light had been illuminated in
his dusky face. The friendly look in Sara's eyes was always very effective when
people felt tired or dull.
It was perhaps in
making his salute to her that he loosened his hold on the monkey. He was an
impish monkey and always ready for adventure, and it is probable that the sight
of a little girl excited him. He suddenly broke loose, jumped on to the slates,
ran across them chattering, and actually leaped on to Sara's shoulder, and from
there down into her attic room. It made her laugh and delighted her; but she
knew he must be restored to his master--if the Lascar was his master--and she
wondered how this was to be done. Would he let her catch him, or would he be
naughty and refuse to be caught, and perhaps get away and run off over the
roofs and be lost? That would not do at all. Perhaps he belonged to the Indian
gentleman, and the poor man was fond of him.
She turned to the
Lascar, feeling glad that she remembered still some of the Hindustani she had
learned when she lived with her father. She could make the man understand. She
spoke to him in the language he knew.
"Will he let me
catch him?" she asked.
She thought she had
never seen more surprise and delight than the dark face expressed when she
spoke in the familiar tongue. The truth was that the poor fellow felt as if his
gods had intervened, and the kind little voice came from heaven itself. At once
Sara saw that he had been accustomed to European children. He poured forth a
flood of respectful thanks. He was the servant of Missee Sahib. The monkey was
a good monkey and would not bite; but, unfortunately, he was difficult to
catch. He would flee from one spot to another, like the lightning. He was
disobedient, though not evil. Ram Dass knew him as if he were his child, and
Ram Dass he would sometimes obey, but not always. If Missee Sahib would permit
Ram Dass, he himself could cross the roof to her room, enter the windows, and
regain the unworthy little animal. But he was evidently afraid Sara might think
he was taking a great liberty and perhaps would not let him come.
But Sara gave him leave
at once.
"Can you get
across?" she inquired.
"In a
moment," he answered her.
"Then come,"
she said; "he is flying from side to side of the room as if he was
frightened."
Ram Dass slipped
through his attic window and crossed to hers as steadily and lightly as if he
had walked on roofs all his life. He slipped through the skylight and dropped
upon his feet without a sound. Then he turned to Sara and salaamed again. The
monkey saw him and uttered a little scream. Ram Dass hastily took the
precaution of shutting the skylight, and then went in chase of him. It was not
a very long chase. The monkey prolonged it a few minutes evidently for the mere
fun of it, but presently he sprang chattering on to Ram Dass's shoulder and sat
there chattering and clinging to his neck with a weird little skinny arm.
Ram Dass thanked Sara
profoundly. She had seen that his quick native eyes had taken in at a glance
all the bare shabbiness of the room, but he spoke to her as if he were speaking
to the little daughter of a rajah, and pretended that he observed nothing. He
did not presume to remain more than a few moments after he had caught the
monkey, and those moments were given to further deep and grateful obeisance to
her in return for her indulgence. This little evil one, he said, stroking the
monkey, was, in truth, not so evil as he seemed, and his master, who was ill,
was sometimes amused by him. He would have been made sad if his favorite had run
away and been lost. Then he salaamed once more and got through the skylight and
across the slates again with as much agility as the monkey himself had
displayed.
When he had gone Sara
stood in the middle of her attic and thought of many things his face and his
manner had brought back to her. The sight of his native costume and the
profound reverence of his manner stirred all her past memories. It seemed a
strange thing to remember that she--the drudge whom the cook had said insulting
things to an hour ago--had only a few years ago been surrounded by people who
all treated her as Ram Dass had treated her; who salaamed when she went by,
whose foreheads almost touched the ground when she spoke to them, who were her
servants and her slaves. It was like a sort of dream. It was all over, and it
could never come back. It certainly seemed that there was no way in which any
change could take place. She knew what Miss Minchin intended that her future
should be. So long as she was too young to be used as a regular teacher, she
would be used as an errand girl and servant and yet expected to remember what
she had learned and in some mysterious way to learn more. The greater number of
her evenings she was supposed to spend at study, and at various indefinite
intervals she was examined and knew she would have been severely admonished if
she had not advanced as was expected of her. The truth, indeed, was that Miss
Minchin knew that she was too anxious to learn to require teachers. Give her
books, and she would devour them and end by knowing them by heart. She might be
trusted to be equal to teaching a good deal in the course of a few years. This
was what would happen: when she was older she would be expected to drudge in
the schoolroom as she drudged now in various parts of the house; they would be
obliged to give her more respectable clothes, but they would be sure to be
plain and ugly and to make her look somehow like a servant. That was all there
seemed to be to look forward to, and Sara stood quite still for several minutes
and thought it over.
Then a thought came
back to her which made the color rise in her cheek and a spark light itself in
her eyes. She straightened her thin little body and lifted her head.
"Whatever
comes," she said, "cannot alter one thing. If I am a princess in rags
and tatters, I can be a princess inside. It would be easy to be a princess if I
were dressed in cloth of gold, but it is a great deal more of a triumph to be
one all the time when no one knows it. There was Marie Antoinette when she was
in prison and her throne was gone and she had only a black gown on, and her
hair was white, and they insulted her and called her Widow Capet. She was a
great deal more like a queen then than when she was so gay and everything was
so grand. I like her best then. Those howling mobs of people did not frighten
her. She was stronger than they were, even when they cut her head off."
This was not a new
thought, but quite an old one, by this time. It had consoled her through many a
bitter day, and she had gone about the house with an expression in her face
which Miss Minchin could not understand and which was a source of great
annoyance to her, as it seemed as if the child were mentally living a life
which held her above he rest of the world. It was as if she scarcely heard the
rude and acid things said to her; or, if she heard them, did not care for them
at all. Sometimes, when she was in the midst of some harsh, domineering speech,
Miss Minchin would find the still, unchildish eyes fixed upon her with
something like a proud smile in them. At such times she did not know that Sara
was saying to herself:
"You don't know
that you are saying these things to a princess, and that if I chose I could
wave my hand and order you to execution. I only spare you because I am a princess,
and you are a poor, stupid, unkind, vulgar old thing, and don't know any
better."
This used to interest
and amuse her more than anything else; and queer and fanciful as it was, she
found comfort in it and it was a good thing for her. While the thought held
possession of her, she could not be made rude and malicious by the rudeness and
malice of those about her.
"A princess must
be polite," she said to herself.
And so when the
servants, taking their tone from their mistress, were insolent and ordered her
about, she would hold her head erect and reply to them with a quaint civility
which often made them stare at her.
"She's got more
airs and graces than if she come from Buckingham Palace, that young one,"
said the cook, chuckling a little sometimes. "I lose my temper with her
often enough, but I will say she never forgets her manners. 'If you please,
cook'; 'Will you be so kind, cook?' 'I beg your pardon, cook'; 'May I trouble
you, cook?' She drops 'em about the kitchen as if they was nothing."
The morning after the
interview with Ram Dass and his monkey, Sara was in the schoolroom with her
small pupils. Having finished giving them their lessons, she was putting the
French exercise-books together and thinking, as she did it, of the various
things royal personages in disguise were called upon to do: Alfred the Great,
for instance, burning the cakes and getting his ears boxed by the wife of the
neat-herd. How frightened she must have been when she found out what she had
done. If Miss Minchin should find out that she--Sara, whose toes were almost
sticking out of her boots--was a princess--a real one! The look in her eyes was
exactly the look which Miss Minchin most disliked. She would not have it; she
was quite near her and was so enraged that she actually flew at her and boxed
her ears--exactly as the neat- herd's wife had boxed King Alfred's. It made
Sara start. She wakened from her dream at the shock, and, catching her breath,
stood still a second. Then, not knowing she was going to do it, she broke into
a little laugh.
"What are you
laughing at, you bold, impudent child?" Miss Minchin exclaimed.
It took Sara a few
seconds to control herself sufficiently to remember that she was a princess.
Her cheeks were red and smarting from the blows she had received.
"I was
thinking," she answered.
"Beg my pardon
immediately," said Miss Minchin.
Sara hesitated a second
before she replied.
"I will beg your
pardon for laughing, if it was rude," she said then; "but I won't beg
your pardon for thinking."
"What were you
thinking?" demanded Miss Minchin.
"How dare you
think? What were you thinking?"
Jessie tittered, and
she and Lavinia nudged each other in unison. All the girls looked up from their
books to listen. Really, it always interested them a little when Miss Minchin
attacked Sara. Sara always said something queer, and never seemed the least bit
frightened. She was not in the least frightened now, though her boxed ears were
scarlet and her eyes were as bright as stars.
"I was
thinking," she answered grandly and politely, "that you did not know
what you were doing."
"That I did not
know what I was doing?" Miss Minchin fairly gasped.
"Yes," said
Sara, "and I was thinking what would happen if I were a princess and you
boxed my ears--what I should do to you. And I was thinking that if I were one,
you would never dare to do it, whatever I said or did. And I was thinking how
surprised and frightened you would be if you suddenly found out--"
She had the imagined
future so clearly before her eyes that she spoke in a manner which had an
effect even upon Miss Minchin. It almost seemed for the moment to her narrow,
unimaginative mind that there must be some real power hidden behind this candid
daring.
"What?" she
exclaimed. "Found out what?"
"That I really was
a princess," said Sara, "and could do anything--anything I
liked."
Every pair of eyes in
the room widened to its full limit. Lavinia leaned forward on her seat to look.
"Go to your
room," cried Miss Minchin, breathlessly, "this instant! Leave the
schoolroom! Attend to your lessons, young ladies!"
Sara made a little bow.
"Excuse me for
laughing if it was impolite," she said, and walked out of the room,
leaving Miss Minchin struggling with her rage, and the girls whispering over
their books.
"Did you see her?
Did you see how queer she looked?" Jessie broke out. "I shouldn't be
at all surprised if she did turn out to be something. Suppose she should!"
When one lives in a row
of houses, it is interesting to think of the things which are being done and
said on the other side of the wall of the very rooms one is living in. Sara was
fond of amusing herself by trying to imagine the things hidden by the wall which
divided the Select Seminary from the Indian gentleman's house. She knew that
the schoolroom was next to the Indian gentleman's study, and she hoped that the
wall was thick so that the noise made sometimes after lesson hours would not
disturb him.
"I am growing
quite fond of him," she said to Ermengarde; "I should not like him to
be disturbed. I have adopted him for a friend. You can do that with people you
never speak to at all. You can just watch them, and think about them and be
sorry for them, until they seem almost like relations. I'm quite anxious
sometimes when I see the doctor call twice a day."
"I have very few
relations," said Ermengarde, reflectively, "and I'm very glad of it.
I don't like those I have. My two aunts are always saying, 'Dear me,
Ermengarde! You are very fat. You shouldn't eat sweets,' and my uncle is always
asking me things like, 'When did Edward the Third ascend the throne?' and, 'Who
died of a surfeit of lampreys?'"
Sara laughed.
"People you never
speak to can't ask you questions like that," she said; "and I'm sure
the Indian gentleman wouldn't even if he was quite intimate with you. I am fond
of him."
She had become fond of
the Large Family because they looked happy; but she had become fond of the
Indian gentleman because he looked unhappy. He had evidently not fully
recovered from some very severe illness. In the kitchen--where, of course, the
servants, through some mysterious means, knew everything--there was much
discussion of his case. He was not an Indian gentleman really, but an
Englishman who had lived in India. He had met with great misfortunes which had
for a time so imperilled his whole fortune that he had thought himself ruined
and disgraced forever. The shock had been so great that he had almost died of
brain fever; and ever since he had been shattered in health, though his
fortunes had changed and all his possessions had been restored to him. His
trouble and peril had been connected with mines.
"And mines with
diamonds in 'em!" said the cook. "No savin's of mine never goes into
no mines--particular diamond ones"--with a side glance at Sara. "We
all know somethin' of them."
"He felt as my
papa felt," Sara thought. "He was ill as my papa was; but he did not
die."
So her heart was more
drawn to him than before. When she was sent out at night she used sometimes to
feel quite glad, because there was always a chance that the curtains of the
house next door might not yet be closed and she could look into the warm room
and see her adopted friend. When no one was about she used sometimes to stop,
and, holding to the iron railings, wish him good night as if he could hear her.
"Perhaps you can
feel if you can't hear," was her fancy. "Perhaps kind thoughts reach
people somehow, even through windows and doors and walls. Perhaps you feel a
little warm and comforted, and don't know why, when I am standing here in the
cold and hoping you will get well and happy again. I am so sorry for you,"
she would whisper in an intense little voice. "I wish you had a 'Little Missus'
who could pet you as I used to pet papa when he had a headache. I should like
to be your 'Little Missus' myself, poor dear! Good night--good night. God bless
you!"
She would go away,
feeling quite comforted and a little warmer herself. Her sympathy was so strong
that it seemed as if it must reach him somehow as he sat alone in his armchair
by the fire, nearly always in a great dressing gown, and nearly always with his
forehead resting in his hand as he gazed hopelessly into the fire. He looked to
Sara like a man who had a trouble on his mind still, not merely like one whose
troubles lay all in the past.
"He always seems
as if he were thinking of something that hurts him now," she said to
herself, "but he has got his money back and he will get over his brain
fever in time, so he ought not to look like that. I wonder if there is
something else."
If there was something
else--something even servants did not hear of--she could not help believing
that the father of the Large Family knew it--the gentleman she called Mr.
Montmorency. Mr. Montmorency went to see him often, and Mrs. Montmorency and
all the little Montmorencys went, too, though less often. He seemed
particularly fond of the two elder little girls--the Janet and Nora who had
been so alarmed when their small brother Donald had given Sara his sixpence. He
had, in fact, a very tender place in his heart for all children, and
particularly for little girls. Janet and Nora were as fond of him as he was of
them, and looked forward with the greatest pleasure to the afternoons when they
were allowed to cross the square and make their well-behaved little visits to
him. They were extremely decorous little visits because he was an invalid.
"He is a poor
thing," said Janet, "and he says we cheer him up. We try to cheer him
up very quietly."
Janet was the head of
the family, and kept the rest of it in order. It was she who decided when it
was discreet to ask the Indian gentleman to tell stories about India, and it
was she who saw when was tired and it was the time to steal quietly away and
tell Ram Dass to go to him. They were very fond of Ram Dass. He could have told
any number of stories if he had been able to speak anything but Hindustani. The
Indian gentleman's real name was Mr. Carrisford, and Janet told Mr. Carrisford about
the encounter with the little-girl-who-was-not-a-beggar. He was very much
interested, and all the more so when he heard from Ram Dass of the adventure of
the monkey on the roof. Ram Dass made for him a very clear picture of the attic
and its desolateness--of the bare floor and broken plaster, the rusty, empty
grate, and the hard, narrow bed.
"Carmichael,"
he said to the father of the Large Family, after he had heard this description,
"I wonder how many of the attics in this square are like that one, and how
many wretched little servant girls sleep on such beds, while I toss on my down
pillows, loaded and harassed by wealth that is, most of it--not mine."
"My dear
fellow," Mr. Carmichael answered cheerily, "the sooner you cease
tormenting yourself the better it will be for you. If you possessed all the
wealth of all the Indies, you could not set right all the discomforts in the
world, and if you began to refurnish all the attics in this square, there would
still remain all the attics in all the other squares and streets to put in
order. And there you are!"
Mr. Carrisford sat and
bit his nails as he looked into the glowing bed of coals in the grate.
"Do you
suppose," he said slowly, after a pause--"do you think it is possible
that the other child--the child I never cease thinking of, I believe--could
be--could possibly be reduced to any such condition as the poor little soul
next door?"
Mr. Carmichael looked
at him uneasily. He knew that the worst thing the man could do for himself, for
his reason and his health, was to begin to think in the particular way of this
particular subject.
"If the child at
Madame Pascal's school in Paris was the one you are in search of," he
answered soothingly, "she would seem to be in the hands of people who can
afford to take care of her. They adopted her because she had been the favorite
companion of their little daughter who died. They had no other children, and
Madame Pascal said that they were extremely well-to-do Russians."
"And the wretched
woman actually did not know where they had taken her!" exclaimed Mr.
Carrisford.
Mr. Carmichael shrugged
his shoulders.
"She was a shrewd,
worldly Frenchwoman, and was evidently only too glad to get the child so
comfortably off her hands when the father's death left her totally unprovided
for. Women of her type do not trouble themselves about the futures of children who
might prove burdens. The adopted parents apparently disappeared and left no
trace."
"But you say 'if'
the child was the one I am in search of. You say 'if.' We are not sure. There
was a difference in the name."
"Madame Pascal
pronounced it as if it were Carew instead of Crewe--but that might be merely a
matter of pronunciation. The circumstances were curiously similar. An English
officer in India had placed his motherless little girl at the school. He had
died suddenly after losing his fortune." Mr. Carmichael paused a moment,
as if a new thought had occurred to him. "Are you sure the child was left
at a school in Paris? Are you sure it was Paris?"
"My dear
fellow," broke forth Carrisford, with restless bitterness, "I am sure
of nothing. I never saw either the child or her mother. Ralph Crewe and I loved
each other as boys, but we had not met since our school days, until we met in
India. I was absorbed in the magnificent promise of the mines. He became
absorbed, too. The whole thing was so huge and glittering that we half lost our
heads. When we met we scarcely spoke of anything else. I only knew that the
child had been sent to school somewhere. I do not even remember, now, how I
knew it."
He was beginning to be
excited. He always became excited when his still weakened brain was stirred by
memories of the catastrophes of the past.
Mr. Carmichael watched
him anxiously. It was necessary to ask some questions, but they must be put
quietly and with caution.
"But you had
reason to think the school was in Paris?"
"Yes," was
the answer, "because her mother was a Frenchwoman, and I had heard that
she wished her child to be educated in Paris. It seemed only likely that she
would be there."
"Yes," Mr.
Carmichael said, "it seems more than probable."
The Indian gentleman
leaned forward and struck the table with a long, wasted hand.
"Carmichael,"
he said, "I must find her. If she is alive, she is somewhere. If she is
friendless and penniless, it is through my fault. How is a man to get back his
nerve with a thing like that on his mind? This sudden change of luck at the
mines has made realities of all our most fantastic dreams, and poor Crewe's
child may be begging in the street!"
"No, no,"
said Carmichael. "Try to be calm. Console yourself with the fact that when
she is found you have a fortune to hand over to her."
"Why was I not man
enough to stand my ground when things looked black?" Carrisford groaned in
petulant misery. "I believe I should have stood my ground if I had not
been responsible for other people's money as well as my own. Poor Crewe had put
into the scheme every penny that he owned. He trusted me--he loved me. And he
died thinking I had ruined him--I--Tom Carrisford, who played cricket at Eton
with him. What a villain he must have thought me!"
"Don't reproach
yourself so bitterly."
"I don't reproach
myself because the speculation threatened to fail--I reproach myself for losing
my courage. I ran away like a swindler and a thief, because I could not face my
best friend and tell him I had ruined him and his child."
The good-hearted father
of the Large Family put his hand on his shoulder comfortingly.
"You ran away
because your brain had given way under the strain of mental torture," he
said. "You were half delirious already. If you had not been you would have
stayed and fought it out. You were in a hospital, strapped down in bed, raving
with brain fever, two days after you left the place. Remember that."
Carrisford dropped his
forehead in his hands.
"Good God!
Yes," he said. "I was driven mad with dread and horror. I had not
slept for weeks. The night I staggered out of my house all the air seemed full
of hideous things mocking and mouthing at me."
"That is
explanation enough in itself," said Mr. Carmichael. "How could a man
on the verge of brain fever judge sanely!"
Carrisford shook his
drooping head.
"And when I
returned to consciousness poor Crewe was dead--and buried. And I seemed to
remember nothing. I did not remember the child for months and months. Even when
I began to recall her existence everything seemed in a sort of haze."
He stopped a moment and
rubbed his forehead. "It sometimes seems so now when I try to remember.
Surely I must sometime have heard Crewe speak of the school she was sent to.
Don't you think so?"
"He might not have
spoken of it definitely. You never seem even to have heard her real name."
"He used to call
her by an odd pet name he had invented. He called her his 'Little Missus.' But
the wretched mines drove everything else out of our heads. We talked of nothing
else. If he spoke of the school, I forgot--I forgot. And now I shall never
remember."
"Come, come,"
said Carmichael. "We shall find her yet. We will continue to search for
Madame Pascal's good-natured Russians. She seemed to have a vague idea that
they lived in Moscow. We will take that as a clue. I will go to Moscow."
"If I were able to
travel, I would go with you," said Carrisford; "but I can only sit
here wrapped in furs and stare at the fire. And when I look into it I seem to
see Crewe's gay young face gazing back at me. He looks as if he were asking me
a question. Sometimes I dream of him at night, and he always stands before me
and asks the same question in words. Can you guess what he says,
Carmichael?"
Mr. Carmichael answered
him in a rather low voice.
"Not
exactly," he said.
"He always says,
'Tom, old man--Tom--where is the Little Missus?'" He caught at
Carmichael's hand and clung to it. "I must be able to answer him--I
must!" he said. "Help me to find her. Help me."
On the other side of
the wall Sara was sitting in her garret talking to Melchisedec, who had come
out for his evening meal.
"It has been hard
to be a princess today, Melchisedec," she said. "It has been harder
than usual. It gets harder as the weather grows colder and the streets get more
sloppy. When Lavinia laughed at my muddy skirt as I passed her in the hall, I
thought of something to say all in a flash--and I only just stopped myself in
time. You can't sneer back at people like that--if you are a princess. But you
have to bite your tongue to hold yourself in. I bit mine. It was a cold
afternoon, Melchisedec. And it's a cold night."
Quite suddenly she put
her black head down in her arms, as she often did when she was alone.
"Oh, papa,"
she whispered, "what a long time it seems since I was your 'Little
Missus'!"
This was what happened
that day on both sides of the wall.
The winter was a
wretched one. There were days on which Sara tramped through snow when she went
on her errands; there were worse days when the snow melted and combined itself
with mud to form slush; there were others when the fog was so thick that the
lamps in the street were lighted all day and London looked as it had looked the
afternoon, several years ago, when the cab had driven through the thoroughfares
with Sara tucked up on its seat, leaning against her father's shoulder. On such
days the windows of the house of the Large Family always looked delightfully
cozy and alluring, and the study in which the Indian gentleman sat glowed with
warmth and rich color. But the attic was dismal beyond words. There were no
longer sunsets or sunrises to look at, and scarcely ever any stars, it seemed
to Sara. The clouds hung low over the skylight and were either gray or
mud-color, or dropping heavy rain. At four o'clock in the afternoon, even when
there was no special fog, the daylight was at an end. If it was necessary to go
to her attic for anything, Sara was obliged to light a candle. The women in the
kitchen were depressed, and that made them more illtempered than ever. Becky
was driven like a little slave.
"'Twarn't for you,
miss," she said hoarsely to Sara one night when she had crept into the
attic--"'twarn't for you, an' the Bastille, an' bein' the prisoner in the
next cell, I should die. That there does seem real now, doesn't it? The missus
is more like the head jailer every day she lives. I can jest see them big keys
you say she carries. The cook she's like one of the under-jailers. Tell me some
more, please, miss--tell me about the subt'ranean passage we've dug under the
walls."
"I'll tell you
something warmer," shivered Sara. "Get your coverlet and wrap it
round you, and I'll get mine, and we will huddle close together on the bed, and
I'll tell you about the tropical forest where the Indian gentleman's monkey
used to live. When I see him sitting on the table near the window and looking
out into the street with that mournful expression, I always feel sure he is
thinking about the tropical forest where he used to swing by his tail from
coconut trees. I wonder who caught him, and if he left a family behind who had
depended on him for coconuts."
"That is warmer,
miss," said Becky, gratefully; "but, someways, even the Bastille is
sort of heatin' when you gets to tellin' about it."
"That is because
it makes you think of something else," said Sara, wrapping the coverlet
round her until only her small dark face was to be seen looking out of it.
"I've noticed this. What you have to do with your mind, when your body is
miserable, is to make it think of something else."
"Can you do it,
miss?" faltered Becky, regarding her with admiring eyes.
Sara knitted her brows
a moment.
"Sometimes I can
and sometimes I can't," she said stoutly. "But when I can I'm all
right. And what I believe is that we always could--if we practiced enough. I've
been practicing a good deal lately, and it's beginning to be easier than it
used to be. When things are horrible--just horrible--I think as hard as ever I
can of being a princess. I say to myself, 'I am a princess, and I am a fairy
one, and because I am a fairy nothing can hurt me or make me uncomfortable.'
You don't know how it makes you forget"--with a laugh.
She had many
opportunities of making her mind think of something else, and many
opportunities of proving to herself whether or not she was a princess. But one
of the strongest tests she was ever put to came on a certain dreadful day
which, she often thought afterward, would never quite fade out of her memory
even in the years to come.
For several days it had
rained continuously; the streets were chilly and sloppy and full of dreary,
cold mist; there was mud everywhere--sticky London mud--and over everything the
pall of drizzle and fog. Of course there were several long and tiresome errands
to be done--there always were on days like this--and Sara was sent out again
and again, until her shabby clothes were damp through. The absurd old feathers
on her forlorn hat were more draggled and absurd than ever, and her downtrodden
shoes were so wet that they could not hold any more water. Added to this, she
had been deprived of her dinner, because Miss Minchin had chosen to punish her.
She was so cold and hungry and tired that her face began to have a pinched
look, and now and then some kind-hearted person passing her in the street
glanced at her with sudden sympathy. But she did not know that. She hurried on,
trying to make her mind think of something else. It was really very necessary.
Her way of doing it was to "pretend" and "suppose" with all
the strength that was left in her. But really this time it was harder than she
had ever found it, and once or twice she thought it almost made her more cold
and hungry instead of less so. But she persevered obstinately, and as the muddy
water squelched through her broken shoes and the wind seemed trying to drag her
thin jacket from her, she talked to herself as she walked, though she did not
speak aloud or even move her lips.
"Suppose I had dry
clothes on," she thought. "Suppose I had good shoes and a long, thick
coat and merino stockings and a whole umbrella. And suppose--suppose--just when
I was near a baker's where they sold hot buns, I should find sixpence--which
belonged to nobody. Suppose, if I did, I should go into the shop and buy six of
the hottest buns and eat them all without stopping."
Some very odd things
happen in this world sometimes.
It certainly was an odd
thing that happened to Sara. She had to cross the street just when she was
saying this to herself The mud was dreadful--she almost had to wade. She picked
her way as carefully as she could, but she could not save herself much; only,
in picking her way, she had to look down at her feet and the mud, and in
looking down--just as she reached the pavement--she saw something shining in
the gutter. It was actually a piece of silver--a tiny piece trodden upon by
many feet, but still with spirit enough left to shine a little. Not quite a
sixpence, but the next thing to it--a fourpenny piece.
In one second it was in
her cold little red-and-blue hand.
"Oh," she
gasped, "it is true! It is true!"
And then, if you will
believe me, she looked straight at the shop directly facing her. And it was a
baker's shop, and a cheerful, stout, motherly woman with rosy cheeks was
putting into the window a tray of delicious newly baked hot buns, fresh from
the oven--large, plump, shiny buns, with currants in them.
It almost made Sara
feel faint for a few seconds--the shock, and the sight of the buns, and the
delightful odors of warm bread floating up through the baker's cellar window.
She knew she need not
hesitate to use the little piece of money. It had evidently been lying in the
mud for some time, and its owner was completely lost in the stream of passing
people who crowded and jostled each other all day long.
"But I'll go and
ask the baker woman if she has lost anything," she said to herself, rather
faintly. So she crossed the pavement and put her wet foot on the step. As she
did so she saw something that made her stop.
It was a little figure
more forlorn even than herself--a little figure which was not much more than a
bundle of rags, from which small, bare, red muddy feet peeped out, only because
the rags with which their owner was trying to cover them were not long enough.
Above the rags appeared a shock head of tangled hair, and a dirty face with
big, hollow, hungry eyes.
Sara knew they were
hungry eyes the moment she saw them, and she felt a sudden sympathy.
"This," she
said to herself, with a little sigh, "is one of the populace--and she is
hungrier than I am."
The child--this
"one of the populace"--stared up at Sara, and shuffled herself aside
a little, so as to give her room to pass. She was used to being made to give
room to everybody. She knew that if a policeman chanced to see her he would
tell her to "move on."
Sara clutched her
little fourpenny piece and hesitated for a few seconds. Then she spoke to her.
"Are you
hungry?" she asked.
The child shuffled
herself and her rags a little more.
"Ain't I
jist?" she said in a hoarse voice. "Jist ain't I?"
"Haven't you had
any dinner?" said Sara.
"No dinner,"
more hoarsely still and with more shuffling. "Nor yet no bre'fast--nor yet
no supper. No nothin'.
"Since when?"
asked Sara.
"Dunno. Never got
nothin' today--nowhere. I've axed an' axed."
Just to look at her
made Sara more hungry and faint. But those queer little thoughts were at work
in her brain, and she was talking to herself, though she was sick at heart.
"If I'm a
princess," she was saying, "if I'm a princess--when they were poor
and driven from their thrones--they always shared--with the populace--if they
met one poorer and hungrier than themselves. They always shared. Buns are a
penny each. If it had been sixpence I could have eaten six. It won't be enough
for either of us. But it will be better than nothing."
"Wait a
minute," she said to the beggar child.
She went into the shop.
It was warm and smelled deliciously. The woman was just going to put some more
hot buns into the window.
"If you
please," said Sara, "have you lost fourpence--a silver fourpence?"
And she held the forlorn little piece of money out to her.
The woman looked at it
and then at her--at her intense little face and draggled, once fine clothes.
"Bless us,
no," she answered. "Did you find it?"
"Yes," said
Sara. "In the gutter."
"Keep it,
then," said the woman. "It may have been there for a week, and
goodness knows who lost it. You could never find out."
"I know
that," said Sara, "but I thought I would ask you."
"Not many
would," said the woman, looking puzzled and interested and good-natured
all at once.
"Do you want to
buy something?" she added, as she saw Sara glance at the buns.
"Four buns, if you
please," said Sara. "Those at a penny each."
The woman went to the
window and put some in a paper bag.
Sara noticed that she put
in six.
"I said four, if
you please," she explained. "I have only fourpence."
"I'll throw in two
for makeweight," said the woman with her good-natured look. "I dare
say you can eat them sometime. Aren't you hungry?"
A mist rose before
Sara's eyes.
"Yes," she
answered. "I am very hungry, and I am much obliged to you for your
kindness; and"--she was going to add--"there is a child outside who
is hungrier than I am." But just at that moment two or three customers
came in at once, and each one seemed in a hurry, so she could only thank the
woman again and go out.
The beggar girl was
still huddled up in the corner of the step. She looked frightful in her wet and
dirty rags. She was staring straight before her with a stupid look of
suffering, and Sara saw her suddenly draw the back of her roughened black hand
across her eyes to rub away the tears which seemed to have surprised her by
forcing their way from under her lids. She was muttering to herself.
Sara opened the paper
bag and took out one of the hot buns, which had already warmed her own cold
hands a little.
"See," she
said, putting the bun in the ragged lap, "this is nice and hot. Eat it,
and you will not feel so hungry."
The child started and
stared up at her, as if such sudden, amazing good luck almost frightened her;
then she snatched up the bun and began to cram it into her mouth with great
wolfish bites.
"Oh, my! Oh,
my!" Sara heard her say hoarsely, in wild delight. "Oh, my!"
Sara took out three
more buns and put them down.
The sound in the
hoarse, ravenous voice was awful.
"She is hungrier
than I am," she said to herself. "She's starving." But her hand
trembled when she put down the fourth bun. "I'm not starving," she
said--and she put down the fifth.
The little ravening
London savage was still snatching and devouring when she turned away. She was
too ravenous to give any thanks, even if she had ever been taught
politeness--which she had not. She was only a poor little wild animal.
"Good-bye,"
said Sara.
When she reached the
other side of the street she looked back. The child had a bun in each hand and
had stopped in the middle of a bite to watch her. Sara gave her a little nod,
and the child, after another stare--a curious lingering stare--jerked her
shaggy head in response, and until Sara was out of sight she did not take
another bite or even finish the one she had begun.
At that moment the
baker-woman looked out of her shop window.
"Well, I
never!" she exclaimed. "If that young un hasn't given her buns to a
beggar child! It wasn't because she didn't want them, either. Well, well, she
looked hungry enough. I'd give something to know what she did it for."
She stood behind her
window for a few moments and pondered. Then her curiosity got the better of
her. She went to the door and spoke to the beggar child.
"Who gave you
those buns?" she asked her. The child nodded her head toward Sara's
vanishing figure.
"What did she
say?" inquired the woman.
"Axed me if I was
'ungry," replied the hoarse voice.
"What did you
say?"
"Said I was jist."
"And then she came
in and got the buns, and gave them to you, did she?"
The child nodded.
"How many?"
"Five."
The woman thought it
over.
"Left just one for
herself," she said in a low voice. "And she could have eaten the
whole six--I saw it in her eyes."
She looked after the
little draggled far-away figure and felt more disturbed in her usually
comfortable mind than she had felt for many a day.
"I wish she hadn't
gone so quick," she said. "I'm blest if she shouldn't have had a
dozen." Then she turned to the child.
"Are you hungry
yet?" she said.
"I'm allus
hungry," was the answer, "but 't ain't as bad as it was."
"Come in
here," said the woman, and she held open the shop door.
The child got up and
shuffled in. To be invited into a warm place full of bread seemed an incredible
thing. She did not know what was going to happen. She did not care, even.
"Get yourself
warm," said the woman, pointing to a fire in the tiny back room. "And
look here; when you are hard up for a bit of bread, you can come in here and
ask for it. I'm blest if I won't give it to you for that young one's
sake."
Sara found some comfort
in her remaining bun. At all events, it was very hot, and it was better than
nothing. As she walked along she broke off small pieces and ate them slowly to
make them last longer.
"Suppose it was a
magic bun," she said, "and a bite was as much as a whole dinner. I
should be overeating myself if I went on like this."
It was dark when she
reached the square where the Select Seminary was situated. The lights in the
houses were all lighted. The blinds were not yet drawn in the windows of the
room where she nearly always caught glimpses of members of the Large Family.
Frequently at this hour she could see the gentleman she called Mr. Montmorency
sitting in a big chair, with a small swarm round him, talking, laughing,
perching on the arms of his seat or on his knees or leaning against them. This
evening the swarm was about him, but he was not seated. On the contrary, there
was a good deal of excitement going on. It was evident that a journey was to be
taken, and it was Mr. Montmorency who was to take it. A brougham stood before
the door, and a big portmanteau had been strapped upon it. The children were
dancing about, chattering and hanging on to their father. The pretty rosy
mother was standing near him, talking as if she was asking final questions.
Sara paused a moment to see the little ones lifted up and kissed and the bigger
ones bent over and kissed also.
"I wonder if he
will stay away long," she thought. "The portmanteau is rather big.
Oh, dear, how they will miss him! I shall miss him myself--even though he
doesn't know I am alive."
When the door opened
she moved away--remembering the sixpence--but she saw the traveler come out and
stand against the background of the warmly-lighted hall, the older children
still hovering about him.
"Will Moscow be
covered with snow?" said the little girl Janet. "Will there be ice
everywhere?"
"Shall you drive
in a drosky?" cried another. "Shall you see the Czar?"
"I will write and
tell you all about it," he answered, laughing. "And I will send you
pictures of muzhiks and things. Run into the house. It is a hideous damp night.
I would rather stay with you than go to Moscow. Good night! Good night,
duckies! God bless you!" And he ran down the steps and jumped into the
brougham.
"If you find the
little girl, give her our love," shouted Guy Clarence, jumping up and down
on the door mat.
Then they went in and
shut the door.
"Did you
see," said Janet to Nora, as they went back to the room--"the
little-girl-who-is-not-a-beggar was passing? She looked all cold and wet, and I
saw her turn her head over her shoulder and look at us. Mamma says her clothes
always look as if they had been given her by someone who was quite
rich--someone who only let her have them because they were too shabby to wear.
The people at the school always send her out on errands on the horridest days
and nights there are."
Sara crossed the square
to Miss Minchin's area steps, feeling faint and shaky.
"I wonder who the
little girl is," she thought--"the little girl he is going to look
for."
And she went down the
area steps, lugging her basket and finding it very heavy indeed, as the father
of the Large Family drove quickly on his way to the station to take the train
which was to carry him to Moscow, where he was to make his best efforts to
search for the lost little daughter of Captain Crewe.
On this very afternoon,
while Sara was out, a strange thing happened in the attic. Only Melchisedec saw
and heard it; and he was so much alarmed and mystified that he scuttled back to
his hole and hid there, and really quaked and trembled as he peeped out furtively
and with great caution to watch what was going on.
The attic had been very
still all the day after Sara had left it in the early morning. The stillness
had only been broken by the pattering of the rain upon the slates and the
skylight. Melchisedec had, in fact, found it rather dull; and when the rain
ceased to patter and perfect silence reigned, he decided to come out and
reconnoiter, though experience taught him that Sara would not return for some
time. He had been rambling and sniffing about, and had just found a totally
unexpected and unexplained crumb left from his last meal, when his attention
was attracted by a sound on the roof. He stopped to listen with a palpitating
heart. The sound suggested that something was moving on the roof. It was approaching
the skylight; it reached the skylight. The skylight was being mysteriously
opened. A dark face peered into the attic; then another face appeared behind
it, and both looked in with signs of caution and interest. Two men were outside
on the roof, and were making silent preparations to enter through the skylight
itself. One was Ram Dass and the other was a young man who was the Indian
gentleman's secretary; but of course Melchisedec did not know this. He only
knew that the men were invading the silence and privacy of the attic; and as
the one with the dark face let himself down through the aperture with such
lightness and dexterity that he did not make the slightest sound, Melchisedec
turned tail and fled precipitately back to his hole. He was frightened to
death. He had ceased to be timid with Sara, and knew she would never throw
anything but crumbs, and would never make any sound other than the soft, low,
coaxing whistling; but strange men were dangerous things to remain near. He lay
close and flat near the entrance of his home, just managing to peep through the
crack with a bright, alarmed eye. How much he understood of the talk he heard I
am not in the least able to say; but, even if he had understood it all, he
would probably have remained greatly mystified.
The secretary, who was
light and young, slipped through the skylight as noiselessly as Ram Dass had
done; and he caught a last glimpse of Melchisedec's vanishing tail.
"Was that a
rat?" he asked Ram Dass in a whisper.
"Yes; a rat,
Sahib," answered Ram Dass, also whispering. "There are many in the
walls."
"Ugh!"
exclaimed the young man. "It is a wonder the child is not terrified of
them."
Ram Dass made a gesture
with his hands. He also smiled respectfully. He was in this place as the
intimate exponent of Sara, though she had only spoken to him once.
"The child is the
little friend of all things, Sahib," he answered. "She is not as
other children. I see her when she does not see me. I slip across the slates
and look at her many nights to see that she is safe. I watch her from my window
when she does not know I am near. She stands on the table there and looks out
at the sky as if it spoke to her. The sparrows come at her call. The rat she
has fed and tamed in her loneliness. The poor slave of the house comes to her
for comfort. There is a little child who comes to her in secret; there is one
older who worships her and would listen to her forever if she might. This I
have seen when I have crept across the roof. By the mistress of the house--who
is an evil woman--she is treated like a pariah; but she has the bearing of a
child who is of the blood of kings!"
"You seem to know
a great deal about her," the secretary said.
"All her life each
day I know," answered Ram Dass. "Her going out I know, and her coming
in; her sadness and her poor joys; her coldness and her hunger. I know when she
is alone until midnight, learning from her books; I know when her secret
friends steal to her and she is happier--as children can be, even in the midst
of poverty--because they come and she may laugh and talk with them in whispers.
If she were ill I should know, and I would come and serve her if it might be
done."
"You are sure no
one comes near this place but herself, and that she will not return and
surprise us. She would be frightened if she found us here, and the Sahib
Carrisford's plan would be spoiled."
Ram Dass crossed
noiselessly to the door and stood close to it.
"None mount here but
herself, Sahib," he said. "She has gone out with her basket and may
be gone for hours. If I stand here I can hear any step before it reaches the
last flight of the stairs."
The secretary took a
pencil and a tablet from his breast pocket.
"Keep your ears
open," he said; and he began to walk slowly and softly round the miserable
little room, making rapid notes on his tablet as he looked at things.
First he went to the
narrow bed. He pressed his hand upon the mattress and uttered an exclamation.
"As hard as a
stone," he said. "That will have to be altered some day when she is
out. A special journey can be made to bring it across. It cannot be done
tonight." He lifted the covering and examined the one thin pillow.
"Coverlet dingy
and worn, blanket thin, sheets patched and ragged," he said. "What a
bed for a child to sleep in--and in a house which calls itself respectable!
There has not been a fire in that grate for many a day," glancing at the
rusty fireplace.
"Never since I
have seen it," said Ram Dass. "The mistress of the house is not one
who remembers that another than herself may be cold."
The secretary was
writing quickly on his tablet. He looked up from it as he tore off a leaf and
slipped it into his breast pocket.
"It is a strange
way of doing the thing," he said. "Who planned it?"
Ram Dass made a
modestly apologetic obeisance.
"It is true that
the first thought was mine, Sahib," he said; "though it was naught
but a fancy. I am fond of this child; we are both lonely. It is her way to
relate her visions to her secret friends. Being sad one night, I lay close to
the open skylight and listened. The vision she related told what this miserable
room might be if it had comforts in it. She seemed to see it as she talked, and
she grew cheered and warmed as she spoke. Then she came to this fancy; and the
next day, the Sahib being ill and wretched, I told him of the thing to amuse
him. It seemed then but a dream, but it pleased the Sahib. To hear of the
child's doings gave him entertainment. He became interested in her and asked
questions. At last he began to please himself with the thought of making her
visions real things."
"You think that it
can be done while she sleeps? Suppose she awakened," suggested the
secretary; and it was evident that whatsoever the plan referred to was, it had
caught and pleased his fancy as well as the Sahib Carrisford's.
"I can move as if
my feet were of velvet," Ram Dass replied; "and children sleep
soundly--even the unhappy ones. I could have entered this room in the night many
times, and without causing her to turn upon her pillow. If the other bearer
passes to me the things through the window, I can do all and she will not stir.
When she awakens she will think a magician has been here."
He smiled as if his
heart warmed under his white robe, and the secretary smiled back at him.
"It will be like a
story from the Arabian Nights," he said. "Only an Oriental could have
planned it. It does not belong to London fogs."
They did not remain
very long, to the great relief of Melchisedec, who, as he probably did not
comprehend their conversation, felt their movements and whispers ominous. The
young secretary seemed interested in everything. He wrote down things about the
floor, the fireplace, the broken footstool, the old table, the walls--which
last he touched with his hand again and again, seeming much pleased when he
found that a number of old nails had been driven in various places.
"You can hang
things on them," he said.
Ram Dass smiled
mysteriously.
"Yesterday, when
she was out," he said, "I entered, bringing with me small, sharp
nails which can be pressed into the wall without blows from a hammer. I placed
many in the plaster where I may need them. They are ready."
The Indian gentleman's
secretary stood still and looked round him as he thrust his tablets back into
his pocket.
"I think I have
made notes enough; we can go now," he said. "The Sahib Carrisford has
a warm heart. It is a thousand pities that he has not found the lost
child."
"If he should find
her his strength would be restored to him," said Ram Dass. "His God
may lead her to him yet."
Then they slipped
through the skylight as noiselessly as they had entered it. And, after he was
quite sure they had gone, Melchisedec was greatly relieved, and in the course
of a few minutes felt it safe to emerge from his hole again and scuffle about
in the hope that even such alarming human beings as these might have chanced to
carry crumbs in their pockets and drop one or two of them.
When Sara had passed
the house next door she had seen Ram Dass closing the shutters, and caught her
glimpse of this room also.
"It is a long time
since I saw a nice place from the inside," was the thought which crossed
her mind.
There was the usual
bright fire glowing in the grate, and the Indian gentleman was sitting before
it. His head was resting in his hand, and he looked as lonely and unhappy as
ever.
"Poor man!"
said Sara. "I wonder what you are supposing."
And this was what he
was "supposing" at that very moment.
"Suppose," he
was thinking, "suppose--even if Carmichael traces the people to
Moscow--the little girl they took from Madame Pascal's school in Paris is not
the one we are in search of. Suppose she proves to be quite a different child.
What steps shall I take next?"
When Sara went into the
house she met Miss Minchin, who had come downstairs to scold the cook.
"Where have you
wasted your time?" she demanded. "You have been out for hours."
"It was so wet and
muddy," Sara answered, "it was hard to walk, because my shoes were so
bad and slipped about."
"Make no
excuses," said Miss Minchin, "and tell no falsehoods."
Sara went in to the
cook. The cook had received a severe lecture and was in a fearful temper as a
result. She was only too rejoiced to have someone to vent her rage on, and Sara
was a convenience, as usual.
"Why didn't you
stay all night?" she snapped.
Sara laid her purchases
on the table.
"Here are the
things," she said.
The cook looked them
over, grumbling. She was in a very savage humor indeed.
"May I have
something to eat?" Sara asked rather faintly.
"Tea's over and
done with," was the answer. "Did you expect me to keep it hot for
you?"
Sara stood silent for a
second.
"I had no
dinner," she said next, and her voice was quite low. She made it low
because she was afraid it would tremble.
"There's some
bread in the pantry," said the cook. "That's all you'll get at this
time of day."
Sara went and found the
bread. It was old and hard and dry. The cook was in too vicious a humor to give
her anything to eat with it. It was always safe and easy to vent her spite on
Sara. Really, it was hard for the child to climb the three long flights of
stairs leading to her attic. She often found them long and steep when she was
tired; but tonight it seemed as if she would never reach the top. Several times
she was obliged to stop to rest. When she reached the top landing she was glad
to see the glimmer of a light coming from under her door. That meant that
Ermengarde had managed to creep up to pay her a visit. There was some comfort
in that. It was better than to go into the room alone and find it empty and
desolate. The mere presence of plump, comfortable Ermengarde, wrapped in her
red shawl, would warm it a little.
Yes; there Ermengarde was
when she opened the door. She was sitting in the middle of the bed, with her
feet tucked safely under her. She had never become intimate with Melchisedec
and his family, though they rather fascinated her. When she found herself alone
in the attic she always preferred to sit on the bed until Sara arrived. She
had, in fact, on this occasion had time to become rather nervous, because
Melchisedec had appeared and sniffed about a good deal, and once had made her
utter a repressed squeal by sitting up on his hind legs and, while he looked at
her, sniffing pointedly in her direction.
"Oh, Sara,"
she cried out, "I am glad you have come. Melchy would sniff about so. I
tried to coax him to go back, but he wouldn't for such a long time. I like him,
you know; but it does frighten me when he sniffs right at me. Do you think he
ever would jump?"
"No,"
answered Sara.
Ermengarde crawled
forward on the bed to look at her.
"You do look
tired, Sara," she said; "you are quite pale."
"I am tired,"
said Sara, dropping on to the lopsided footstool. "Oh, there's
Melchisedec, poor thing. He's come to ask for his supper."
Melchisedec had come
out of his hole as if he had been listening for her footstep. Sara was quite
sure he knew it. He came forward with an affectionate, expectant expression as
Sara put her hand in her pocket and turned it inside out, shaking her head.
"I'm very
sorry," she said. "I haven't one crumb left. Go home, Melchisedec,
and tell your wife there was nothing in my pocket. I'm afraid I forgot because
the cook and Miss Minchin were so cross."
Melchisedec seemed to
understand. He shuffled resignedly, if not contentedly, back to his home.
"I did not expect
to see you tonight, Ermie," Sara said. Ermengarde hugged herself in the
red shawl.
"Miss Amelia has
gone out to spend the night with her old aunt," she explained. "No
one else ever comes and looks into the bedrooms after we are in bed. I could
stay here until morning if I wanted to."
She pointed toward the
table under the skylight. Sara had not looked toward it as she came in. A
number of books were piled upon it. Ermengarde's gesture was a dejected one.
"Papa has sent me
some more books, Sara," she said. "There they are."
Sara looked round and
got up at once. She ran to the table, and picking up the top volume, turned
over its leaves quickly. For the moment she forgot her discomforts.
"Ah," she cried
out, "how beautiful! Carlyle's French Revolution. I have so wanted to read
that!"
"I haven't,"
said Ermengarde. "And papa will be so cross if I don't. He'll expect me to
know all about it when I go home for the holidays. What shall I do?"
Sara stopped turning
over the leaves and looked at her with an excited flush on her cheeks.
"Look here,"
she cried, "if you'll lend me these books, I'll read them--and tell you
everything that's in them afterward--and I'll tell it so that you will remember
it, too."
"Oh,
goodness!" exclaimed Ermengarde. "Do you think you can?"
"I know I
can," Sara answered. "The little ones always remember what I tell
them."
"Sara," said
Ermengarde, hope gleaming in her round face, "if you'll do that, and make
me remember, I'll--I'll give you anything."
"I don't want you
to give me anything," said Sara. "I want your books--I want
them!" And her eyes grew big, and her chest heaved.
"Take them,
then," said Ermengarde. "I wish I wanted them--but I don't. I'm not
clever, and my father is, and he thinks I ought to be."
Sara was opening one
book after the other. "What are you going to tell your father?" she
asked, a slight doubt dawning in her mind.
"Oh, he needn't
know," answered Ermengarde. "He'll think I've read them."
Sara put down her book
and shook her head slowly. "That's almost like telling lies," she
said. "And lies--well, you see, they are not only wicked--they're vulgar.
Sometimes"--reflectively--"I've thought perhaps I might do something
wicked--I might suddenly fly into a rage and kill Miss Minchin, you know, when
she was ill-treating me--but I couldn't be vulgar. Why can't you tell your
father I read them?"
"He wants me to
read them," said Ermengarde, a little discouraged by this unexpected turn
of affairs.
"He wants you to
know what is in them," said Sara. "And if I can tell it to you in an
easy way and make you remember it, I should think he would like that."
"He'll like it if
I learn anything in any way," said rueful Ermengarde. "You would if
you were my father."
"It's not your
fault that--" began Sara. She pulled herself up and stopped rather
suddenly. She had been going to say, "It's not your fault that you are
stupid."
"That what?"
Ermengarde asked.
"That you can't
learn things quickly," amended Sara. "If you can't, you can't. If I
can--why, I can; that's all."
She always felt very
tender of Ermengarde, and tried not to let her feel too strongly the difference
between being able to learn anything at once, and not being able to learn
anything at all. As she looked at her plump face, one of her wise,
old-fashioned thoughts came to her.
"Perhaps,"
she said, "to be able to learn things quickly isn't everything. To be kind
is worth a great deal to other people. If Miss Minchin knew everything on earth
and was like what she is now, she'd still be a detestable thing, and everybody
would hate her. Lots of clever people have done harm and have been wicked. Look
at Robespierre--"
She stopped and
examined Ermengarde's countenance, which was beginning to look bewildered. "Don't
you remember?" she demanded. "I told you about him not long ago. I
believe you've forgotten."
"Well, I don't
remember all of it," admitted Ermengarde.
"Well, you wait a
minute," said Sara, "and I'll take off my wet things and wrap myself
in the coverlet and tell you over again."
She took off her hat
and coat and hung them on a nail against the wall, and she changed her wet
shoes for an old pair of slippers. Then she jumped on the bed, and drawing the
coverlet about her shoulders, sat with her arms round her knees. "Now,
listen," she said.
She plunged into the
gory records of the French Revolution, and told such stories of it that
Ermengarde's eyes grew round with alarm and she held her breath. But though she
was rather terrified, there was a delightful thrill in listening, and she was
not likely to forget Robespierre again, or to have any doubts about the
Princesse de Lamballe.
"You know they put
her head on a pike and danced round it," Sara explained. "And she had
beautiful floating blonde hair; and when I think of her, I never see her head
on her body, but always on a pike, with those furious people dancing and
howling."
It was agreed that Mr.
St. John was to be told the plan they had made, and for the present the books
were to be left in the attic.
"Now let's tell
each other things," said Sara. "How are you getting on with your
French lessons?"
"Ever so much
better since the last time I came up here and you explained the conjugations.
Miss Minchin could not understand why I did my exercises so well that first
morning."
Sara laughed a little
and hugged her knees.
"She doesn't
understand why Lottie is doing her sums so well," she said; "but it
is because she creeps up here, too, and I help her." She glanced round the
room. "The attic would be rather nice--if it wasn't so dreadful," she
said, laughing again. "It's a good place to pretend in."
The truth was that
Ermengarde did not know anything of the sometimes almost unbearable side of
life in the attic and she had not a sufficiently vivid imagination to depict it
for herself. On the rare occasions that she could reach Sara's room she only
saw the side of it which was made exciting by things which were
"pretended" and stories which were told. Her visits partook of the
character of adventures; and though sometimes Sara looked rather pale, and it
was not to be denied that she had grown very thin, her proud little spirit
would not admit of complaints. She had never confessed that at times she was
almost ravenous with hunger, as she was tonight. She was growing rapidly, and
her constant walking and running about would have given her a keen appetite
even if she had had abundant and regular meals of a much more nourishing nature
than the unappetizing, inferior food snatched at such odd times as suited the
kitchen convenience. She was growing used to a certain gnawing feeling in her
young stomach.
"I suppose
soldiers feel like this when they are on a long and weary march," she
often said to herself. She liked the sound of the phrase, "long and weary
march." It made her feel rather like a soldier. She had also a quaint
sense of being a hostess in the attic.
"If I lived in a
castle," she argued, "and Ermengarde was the lady of another castle,
and came to see me, with knights and squires and vassals riding with her, and
pennons flying, when I heard the clarions sounding outside the drawbridge I
should go down to receive her, and I should spread feasts in the banquet hall
and call in minstrels to sing and play and relate romances. When she comes into
the attic I can't spread feasts, but I can tell stories, and not let her know
disagreeable things. I dare say poor chatelaines had to do that in time of
famine, when their lands had been pillaged." She was a proud, brave little
chatelaine, and dispensed generously the one hospitality she could offer--the
dreams she dreamed--the visions she saw--the imaginings which were her joy and
comfort.
So, as they sat
together, Ermengarde did not know that she was faint as well as ravenous, and
that while she talked she now and then wondered if her hunger would let her
sleep when she was left alone. She felt as if she had never been quite so
hungry before.
"I wish I was as
thin as you, Sara," Ermengarde said suddenly. "I believe you are
thinner than you used to be. Your eyes look so big, and look at the sharp
little bones sticking out of your elbow!"
Sara pulled down her
sleeve, which had pushed itself up.
"I always was a
thin child," she said bravely, "and I always had big green
eyes."
"I love your queer
eyes," said Ermengarde, looking into them with affectionate admiration.
"They always look as if they saw such a long way. I love them--and I love
them to be green--though they look black generally."
"They are cat's
eyes," laughed Sara; "but I can't see in the dark with them--because
I have tried, and I couldn't--I wish I could."
It was just at this
minute that something happened at the skylight which neither of them saw. If
either of them had chanced to turn and look, she would have been startled by
the sight of a dark face which peered cautiously into the room and disappeared
as quickly and almost as silently as it had appeared. Not quite as silently,
however. Sara, who had keen ears, suddenly turned a little and looked up at the
roof.
"That didn't sound
like Melchisedec," she said. "It wasn't scratchy enough."
"What?" said
Ermengarde, a little startled.
"Didn't you think
you heard something?" asked Sara.
"N-no,"
Ermengarde faltered. "Did you?"
"Perhaps I
didn't," said Sara; "but I thought I did. It sounded as if something
was on the slates--something that dragged softly."
"What could it
be?" said Ermengarde. "Could it be--robbers?"
"No," Sara
began cheerfully. "There is nothing to steal--"
She broke off in the
middle of her words. They both heard the sound that checked her. It was not on
the slates, but on the stairs below, and it was Miss Minchin's angry voice.
Sara sprang off the bed, and put out the candle.
"She is scolding
Becky," she whispered, as she stood in the darkness. "She is making
her cry."
"Will she come in
here?" Ermengarde whispered back, panic-stricken.
"No. She will
think I am in bed. Don't stir."
It was very seldom that
Miss Minchin mounted the last flight of stairs. Sara could only remember that
she had done it once before. But now she was angry enough to be coming at least
part of the way up, and it sounded as if she was driving Becky before her.
"You impudent,
dishonest child!" they heard her say. "Cook tells me she has missed
things repeatedly."
"'T warn't me,
mum," said Becky sobbing. "I was 'ungry enough, but 't warn't
me--never!"
"You deserve to be
sent to prison," said Miss Minchin's voice. "Picking and stealing!
Half a meat pie, indeed!"
"'T warn't
me," wept Becky. "I could 'ave eat a whole un--but I never laid a
finger on it."
Miss Minchin was out of
breath between temper and mounting the stairs. The meat pie had been intended
for her special late supper. It became apparent that she boxed Becky's ears.
"Don't tell
falsehoods," she said. "Go to your room this instant."
Both Sara and
Ermengarde heard the slap, and then heard Becky run in her slipshod shoes up
the stairs and into her attic. They heard her door shut, and knew that she
threw herself upon her bed.
"I could 'ave e't
two of 'em," they heard her cry into her pillow. "An' I never took a
bite. 'T was cook give it to her policeman."
Sara stood in the
middle of the room in the darkness. She was clenching her little teeth and
opening and shutting fiercely her outstretched hands. She could scarcely stand
still, but she dared not move until Miss Minchin had gone down the stairs and
all was still.
"The wicked, cruel
thing!" she burst forth. "The cook takes things herself and then says
Becky steals them. She doesn't! She doesn't! She's so hungry sometimes that she
eats crusts out of the ash barrel!" She pressed her hands hard against her
face and burst into passionate little sobs, and Ermengarde, hearing this
unusual thing, was overawed by it. Sara was crying! The unconquerable Sara! It
seemed to denote something new--some mood she had never known.
Suppose--suppose--a new dread possibility presented itself to her kind, slow,
little mind all at once. She crept off the bed in the dark and found her way to
the table where the candle stood. She struck a match and lit the candle. When
she had lighted it, she bent forward and looked at Sara, with her new thought
growing to definite fear in her eyes.
"Sara," she
said in a timid, almost awe-stricken voice, are--are--you never told me--I
don't want to be rude, but--are you ever hungry?"
It was too much just at
that moment. The barrier broke down. Sara lifted her face from her hands.
"Yes," she said
in a new passionate way. "Yes, I am. I'm so hungry now that I could almost
eat you. And it makes it worse to hear poor Becky. She's hungrier than I
am."
Ermengarde gasped.
"Oh, oh!" she
cried woefully. "And I never knew!"
"I didn't want you
to know," Sara said. "It would have made me feel like a street
beggar. I know I look like a street beggar."
"No, you
don't--you don't!" Ermengarde broke in. "Your clothes are a little
queer--but you couldn't look like a street beggar. You haven't a street-beggar
face."
"A little boy once
gave me a sixpence for charity," said Sara, with a short little laugh in
spite of herself. "Here it is." And she pulled out the thin ribbon
from her neck. "He wouldn't have given me his Christmas sixpence if I hadn't
looked as if I needed it."
Somehow the sight of
the dear little sixpence was good for both of them. It made them laugh a
little, though they both had tears in their eyes.
"Who was he?"
asked Ermengarde, looking at it quite as if it had not been a mere ordinary silver
sixpence.
"He was a darling
little thing going to a party," said Sara. " He was one of the Large
Family, the little one with the round legs--the one I call Guy Clarence. I
suppose his nursery was crammed with Christmas presents and hampers full of cakes
and things, and he could see I had nothing."
Ermengarde gave a
little jump backward. The last sentences had recalled something to her troubled
mind and given her a sudden inspiration.
"Oh, Sara!"
she cried. "What a silly thing I am not to have thought of it!"
"Of what?"
"Something
splendid!" said Ermengarde, in an excited hurry. "This very afternoon
my nicest aunt sent me a box. It is full of good things. I never touched it, I
had so much pudding at dinner, and I was so bothered about papa's books." Her
words began to tumble over each other. "It's got cake in it, and little
meat pies, and jam tarts and buns, and oranges and red-currant wine, and figs
and chocolate. I'll creep back to my room and get it this minute, and we'll eat
it now."
Sara almost reeled.
When one is faint with hunger the mention of food has sometimes a curious
effect. She clutched Ermengarde's arm.
"Do you think--you
could?" she ejaculated.
"I know I
could," answered Ermengarde, and she ran to the door--opened it
softly--put her head out into the darkness, and listened. Then she went back to
Sara. "The lights are out. Everybody's in bed. I can creep--and creep--and
no one will hear."
It was so delightful
that they caught each other's hands and a sudden light sprang into Sara's eyes.
"Ermie!" she
said. "Let us pretend! Let us pretend it's a party! And oh, won't you
invite the prisoner in the next cell?"
"Yes! Yes! Let us
knock on the wall now. The jailer won't hear."
Sara went to the wall.
Through it she could hear poor Becky crying more softly. She knocked four
times.
"That means, 'Come
to me through the secret passage under the wall,' she explained. 'I have
something to communicate.'"
Five quick knocks
answered her.
"She is
coming," she said.
Almost immediately the
door of the attic opened and Becky appeared. Her eyes were red and her cap was
sliding off, and when she caught sight of Ermengarde she began to rub her face
nervously with her apron.
"Don't mind me a
bit, Becky!" cried Ermengarde.
"Miss Ermengarde
has asked you to come in," said Sara, "because she is going to bring
a box of good things up here to us."
Becky's cap almost fell
off entirely, she broke in with such excitement.
"To eat,
miss?" she said. "Things that's good to eat?"
"Yes,"
answered Sara, "and we are going to pretend a party."
"And you shall
have as much as you want to eat," put in Ermengarde. "I'll go this
minute!"
She was in such haste
that as she tiptoed out of the attic she dropped her red shawl and did not know
it had fallen. No one saw it for a minute or so. Becky was too much overpowered
by the good luck which had befallen her.
"Oh, miss! oh,
miss!" she gasped; "I know it was you that asked her to let me come.
It--it makes me cry to think of it." And she went to Sara's side and stood
and looked at her worshipingly.
But in Sara's hungry
eyes the old light had begun to glow and transform her world for her. Here in
the attic--with the cold night outside--with the afternoon in the sloppy
streets barely passed--with the memory of the awful unfed look in the beggar
child's eyes not yet faded--this simple, cheerful thing had happened like a
thing of magic.
She caught her breath.
"Somehow,
something always happens," she cried, "just before things get to the
very worst. It is as if the Magic did it. If I could only just remember that
always. The worst thing never quite comes."
She gave Becky a little
cheerful shake.
"No, no! You
mustn't cry!" she said. "We must make haste and set the table."
"Set the table,
miss?" said Becky, gazing round the room. "What'll we set it
with?"
Sara looked round the
attic, too.
"There doesn't
seem to be much," she answered, half laughing.
That moment she saw
something and pounced upon it. It was Ermengarde's red shawl which lay upon the
floor.
"Here's the
shawl," she cried. "I know she won't mind it. It will make such a
nice red tablecloth."
They pulled the old
table forward, and threw the shawl over it. Red is a wonderfully kind and
comfortable color. It began to make the room look furnished directly.
"How nice a red
rug would look on the floor!" exclaimed Sara. "We must pretend there
is one!"
Her eye swept the bare
boards with a swift glance of admiration. The rug was laid down already.
"How soft and
thick it is!" she said, with the little laugh which Becky knew the meaning
of; and she raised and set her foot down again delicately, as if she felt
something under lt.
"Yes, miss,"
answered Becky, watching her with serious rapture. She was always quite
serious.
"What next,
now?" said Sara, and she stood still and put her hands over her eyes.
"Something will come if I think and wait a little"--in a soft,
expectant voice. "The Magic will tell me."
One of her favorite
fancies was that on "the outside," as she called it, thoughts were
waiting for people to call them. Becky had seen her stand and wait many a time
before, and knew that in a few seconds she would uncover an enlightened,
laughing face.
In a moment she did.
"There!" she
cried. "It has come! I know now! I must look among the things in the old
trunk I had when I was a princess."
She flew to its corner
and kneeled down. It had not been put in the attic for her benefit, but because
there was no room for it elsewhere. Nothing had been left in it but rubbish.
But she knew she should find something. The Magic always arranged that kind of
thing in one way or another.
In a corner lay a
package so insignificant-looking that it had been overlooked, and when she
herself had found it she had kept it as a relic. It contained a dozen small
white handkerchiefs. She seized them joyfully and ran to the table. She began
to arrange them upon the red table-cover, patting and coaxing them into shape
with the narrow lace edge curling outward, her Magic working its spells for her
as she did it.
"These are the
plates," she said. "They are golden plates. These are the richly
embroidered napkins. Nuns worked them in convents in Spain."
"Did they,
miss?" breathed Becky, her very soul uplifted by the information.
"You must pretend
it," said Sara. "If you pretend it enough, you will see them."
"Yes, miss,"
said Becky; and as Sara returned to the trunk she devoted herself to the effort
of accomplishing an end so much to be desired.
Sara turned suddenly to
find her standing by the table, looking very queer indeed. She had shut her
eyes, and was twisting her face in strange convulsive contortions, her hands
hanging stiffly clenched at her sides. She looked as if she was trying to lift
some enormous weight.
"What is the
matter, Becky?" Sara cried. "What are you doing?"
Becky opened her eyes
with a start.
I was a-'pretendin','
miss," she answered a little sheepishly; "I was tryin' to see it like
you do. I almost did," with a hopeful grin. "But it takes a lot o'
stren'th."
"Perhaps it does
if you are not used to it," said Sara, with friendly sympathy; "but
you don't know how easy it is when you've done it often. I wouldn't try so hard
just at first. It will come to you after a while. I'll just tell you what
things are. Look at these."
She held an old summer
hat in her hand which she had fished out of the bottom of the trunk. There was
a wreath of flowers on it. She pulled the wreath off.
"These are
garlands for the feast," she said grandly. "They fill all the air
with perfume. There's a mug on the wash-stand, Becky. Oh--and bring the soap
dish for a centerpiece."
Becky handed them to
her reverently.
"What are they now,
miss?" she inquired. "You'd think they was made of crockery--but I
know they ain't."
"This is a carven
flagon," said Sara, arranging tendrils of the wreath about the mug.
"And this"--bending tenderly over the soap dish and heaping it with
roses--"is purest alabaster encrusted with gems."
She touched the things
gently, a happy smile hovering about her lips which made her look as if she
were a creature in a dream.
"My, ain't it
lovely!" whispered Becky.
"If we just had
something for bonbon dishes," Sara murmured. "There!"--darting
to the trunk again. "I remember I saw something this minute."
It was only a bundle of
wool wrapped in red and white tissue paper, but the tissue paper was soon
twisted into the form of little dishes, and was combined with the remaining
flowers to ornament the candlestick which was to light the feast. Only the
Magic could have made it more than an old table covered with a red shawl and
set with rubbish from a long-unopened trunk. But Sara drew back and gazed at
it, seeing wonders; and Becky, after staring in delight, spoke with bated
breath.
"This 'ere,"
she suggested, with a glance round the attic--"is it the Bastille now--or
has it turned into somethin' different?"
"Oh, yes,
yes!" said Sara. "Quite different. It is a banquet hall!"
"My eye,
miss!" ejaculated Becky. "A blanket 'all!" and she turned to
view the splendors about her with awed bewilderment.
"A banquet
hall," said Sara. "A vast chamber where feasts are given. It has a
vaulted roof, and a minstrels' gallery, and a huge chimney filled with blazing
oaken logs, and it is brilliant with waxen tapers twinkling on every
side."
"My eye, Miss
Sara!" gasped Becky again.
Then the door opened,
and Ermengarde came in, rather staggering under the weight of her hamper. She
started back with an exclamation of joy. To enter from the chill darkness
outside, and find one's self confronted by a totally unanticipated festal
board, draped with red, adorned with white napery, and wreathed with flowers,
was to feel that the preparations were brilliant indeed.
"Oh, Sara!"
she cried out. "You are the cleverest girl I ever saw!"
"Isn't it
nice?" said Sara. "They are things out of my old trunk. I asked my
Magic, and it told me to go and look."
"But oh,
miss," cried Becky, "wait till she's told you what they are! They
ain't just--oh, miss, please tell her," appealing to Sara.
So Sara told her, and
because her Magic helped her she made her almost see it all: the golden
platters--the vaulted spaces--the blazing logs--the twinkling waxen tapers. As
the things were taken out of the hamper--the frosted cakes--the fruits--the
bonbons and the wine--the feast became a splendid thing.
"It's like a real
party!" cried Ermengarde.
"It's like a
queen's table," sighed Becky.
Then Ermengarde had a
sudden brilliant thought.
"I'll tell you
what, Sara," she said. "Pretend you are a princess now and this is a
royal feast."
"But it's your
feast," said Sara; "you must be the princess, and we will be your
maids of honor."
"Oh, I
can't," said Ermengarde. "I'm too fat, and I don't know how. You be
her."
"Well, if you want
me to," said Sara.
But suddenly she
thought of something else and ran to the rusty grate.
"There is a lot of
paper and rubbish stuffed in here!" she exclaimed. "If we light it,
there will be a bright blaze for a few minutes, and we shall feel as if it was
a real fire." She struck a match and lighted it up with a great specious
glow which illuminated the room.
"By the time it
stops blazing," Sara said, "we shall forget about its not being
real."
She stood in the
dancing glow and smiled.
"Doesn't it look
real?" she said. "Now we will begin the party."
She led the way to the
table. She waved her hand graciously to Ermengarde and Becky. She was in the
midst of her dream.
"Advance, fair
damsels," she said in her happy dream-voice, "and be seated at the
banquet table. My noble father, the king, who is absent on a long journey, has
commanded me to feast you." She turned her head slightly toward the corner
of the room. "What, ho, there, minstrels! Strike up with your viols and
bassoons. Princesses," she explained rapidly to Ermengarde and Becky,
"always had minstrels to play at their feasts. Pretend there is a minstrel
gallery up there in the corner. Now we will begin."
They had barely had
time to take their pieces of cake into their hands--not one of them had time to
do more, when--they all three sprang to their feet and turned pale faces toward
the door--listening--listening.
Someone was coming up
the stairs. There was no mistake about it. Each of them recognized the angry,
mounting tread and knew that the end of all things had come.
"It's--the
missus!" choked Becky, and dropped her piece of cake upon the floor.
"Yes," said
Sara, her eyes growing shocked and large in her small white face. "Miss
Minchin has found us out."
Miss Minchin struck the
door open with a blow of her hand. She was pale herself, but it was with rage.
She looked from the frightened faces to the banquet table, and from the banquet
table to the last flicker of the burnt paper in the grate.
"I have been
suspecting something of this sort," she exclaimed; "but I did not
dream of such audacity. Lavinia was telling the truth."
So they knew that it
was Lavinia who had somehow guessed their secret and had betrayed them. Miss
Minchin strode over to Becky and boxed her ears for a second time.
"You impudent
creature!" she said. "You leave the house in the morning!"
Sara stood quite still,
her eyes growing larger, her face paler. Ermengarde burst into tears.
"Oh, don't send
her away," she sobbed. "My aunt sent me the hamper.
We're--only--having a party."
"So I see,"
said Miss Minchin, witheringly. "With the Princess Sara at the head of the
table." She turned fiercely on Sara. "It is your doing, I know,"
she cried. "Ermengarde would never have thought of such a thing. You
decorated the table, I suppose--with this rubbish." She stamped her foot
at Becky. "Go to your attic!" she commanded, and Becky stole away,
her face hidden in her apron, her shoulders shaking.
Then it was Sara's turn
again.
"I will attend to
you tomorrow. You shall have neither breakfast, dinner, nor supper!"
"I have not had
either dinner or supper today, Miss Minchin," said Sara, rather faintly.
"Then all the
better. You will have something to remember. Don't stand there. Put those
things into the hamper again."
She began to sweep them
off the table into the hamper herself, and caught sight of Ermengarde's new books.
"And you"--to
Ermengarde--"have brought your beautiful new books into this dirty attic.
Take them up and go back to bed. You will stay there all day tomorrow, and I
shall write to your papa. What would he say if he knew where you are tonight?"
Something she saw in
Sara's grave, fixed gaze at this moment made her turn on her fiercely.
"What are you
thinking of?" she demanded. "Why do you look at me like that?"
"I was
wondering," answered Sara, as she had answered that notable day in the
schoolroom.
"What were you
wondering?"
It was very like the
scene in the schoolroom. There was no pertness in Sara's manner. It was only
sad and quiet.
"I was
wondering," she said in a low voice, "what my papa would say if he
knew where I am tonight."
Miss Minchin was
infuriated just as she had been before and her anger expressed itself, as
before, in an intemperate fashion. She flew at her and shook her.
"You insolent,
unmanageable child!" she cried. "How dare you! How dare you!"
She picked up the
books, swept the rest of the feast back into the hamper in a jumbled heap,
thrust it into Ermengarde's arms, and pushed her before her toward the door.
"I will leave you
to wonder," she said. "Go to bed this instant." And she shut the
door behind herself and poor stumbling Ermengarde, and left Sara standing quite
alone.
The dream was quite at
an end. The last spark had died out of the paper in the grate and left only
black tinder; the table was left bare, the golden plates and richly embroidered
napkins, and the garlands were transformed again into old handkerchiefs, scraps
of red and white paper, and discarded artificial flowers all scattered on the
floor; the minstrels in the minstrel gallery had stolen away, and the viols and
bassoons were still. Emily was sitting with her back against the wall, staring
very hard. Sara saw her, and went and picked her up with trembling hands.
"There isn't any
banquet left, Emily," she said. "And there isn't any princess. There
is nothing left but the prisoners in the Bastille." And she sat down and
hid her face.
What would have
happened if she had not hidden it just then, and if she had chanced to look up
at the skylight at the wrong moment, I do not know--perhaps the end of this
chapter might have been quite different--because if she had glanced at the
skylight she would certainly have been startled by what she would have seen.
She would have seen exactly the same face pressed against the glass and peering
in at her as it had peered in earlier in the evening when she had been talking
to Ermengarde.
But she did not look
up. She sat with her little black head in her arms for some time. She always
sat like that when she was trying to bear something in silence. Then she got up
and went slowly to the bed.
"I can't pretend
anything else--while I am awake," she said. "There wouldn't be any
use in trying. If I go to sleep, perhaps a dream will come and pretend for
me."
She suddenly felt so
tired--perhaps through want of food--that she sat down on the edge of the bed
quite weakly.
"Suppose there was
a bright fire in the grate, with lots of little dancing flames," she
murmured. "Suppose there was a comfortable chair before it--and suppose
there was a small table near, with a little hot--hot supper on it. And
suppose"--as she drew the thin coverings over her--"suppose this was
a beautiful soft bed, with fleecy blankets and large downy pillows.
Suppose---suppose--" And her very weariness was good to her, for her eyes
closed and she fell fast asleep.
She did not know how
long she slept. But she had been tired enough to sleep deeply and
profoundly--too deeply and soundly to be disturbed by anything, even by the
squeaks and scamperings of Melchisedec's entire family, if all his sons and
daughters had chosen to come out of their hole to fight and tumble and play.
When she awakened it
was rather suddenly, and she did not know that any particular thing had called
her out of her sleep. The truth was, however, that it was a sound which had
called her back--a real sound--the click of the skylight as it fell in closing
after a lithe white figure which slipped through it and crouched down close by
upon the slates of the roof--just near enough to see what happened in the
attic, but not near enough to be seen.
At first she did not
open her eyes. She felt too sleepy and--curiously enough--too warm and
comfortable. She was so warm and comfortable, indeed, that she did not believe
she was really awake. She never was as warm and cozy as this except in some
lovely vision.
"What a nice
dream!" she murmured. "I feel quite warm. I--don't--want--to--wake--up."
Of course it was a
dream. She felt as if warm, delightful bedclothes were heaped upon her. She
could actually feel blankets, and when she put out her hand it touched
something exactly like a satin-covered eider-down quilt. She must not awaken
from this delight--she must be quite still and make it last.
But she could not--even
though she kept her eyes closed tightly, she could not. Something was forcing
her to awaken--something in the room. It was a sense of light, and a sound--the
sound of a crackling, roaring little fire.
"Oh, I am
awakening," she said mournfully. "I can't help it--I can't."
Her eyes opened in
spite of herself. And then she actually smiled--for what she saw she had never
seen in the attic before, and knew she never should see.
"Oh, I haven't
awakened," she whispered, daring to rise on her elbow and look all about
her. "I am dreaming yet." She knew it must be a dream, for if she
were awake such things could not--could not be.
Do you wonder that she
felt sure she had not come back to earth? This is what she saw. In the grate
there was a glowing, blazing fire; on the hob was a little brass kettle hissing
and boiling; spread upon the floor was a thick, warm crimson rug; before the
fire a folding-chair, unfolded, and with cushions on it; by the chair a small
folding-table, unfolded, covered with a white cloth, and upon it spread small
covered dishes, a cup, a saucer, a teapot; on the bed were new warm coverings
and a satin-covered down quilt; at the foot a curious wadded silk robe, a pair
of quilted slippers, and some books. The room of her dream seemed changed into
fairyland--and it was flooded with warm light, for a bright lamp stood on the
table covered with a rosy shade.
She sat up, resting on
her elbow, and her breathing came short and fast.
"It does not--melt
away," she panted. "Oh, I never had such a dream before." She
scarcely dared to stir; but at last she pushed the bedclothes aside, and put
her feet on the floor with a rapturous smile.
"I am dreaming--I
am getting out of bed," she heard her own voice say; and then, as she
stood up in the midst of it all, turning slowly from side to side--"I am
dreaming it stays--real! I'm dreaming it feels real. It's bewitched--or I'm
bewitched. I only think I see it all." Her words began to hurry
themselves. "If I can only keep on thinking it," she cried, "I
don't care! I don't care!"
She stood panting a
moment longer, and then cried out again.
"Oh, it isn't
true!" she said. "It can't be true! But oh, how true it seems!"
The blazing fire drew
her to it, and she knelt down and held out her hands close to it--so close that
the heat made her start back.
"A fire I only
dreamed wouldn't be hot," she cried.
She sprang up, touched
the table, the dishes, the rug; she went to the bed and touched the blankets.
She took up the soft wadded dressing-gown, and suddenly clutched it to her
breast and held it to her cheek.
"It's warm. It's
soft!" she almost sobbed. "It's real. It must be!"
She threw it over her
shoulders, and put her feet into the slippers.
"They are real,
too. It's all real!" she cried. "I am not--I am not dreaming!"
She almost staggered to
the books and opened the one which lay upon the top. Something was written on
the flyleaf--just a few words, and they were these:
"To the little
girl in the attic. From a friend."
When she saw
that--wasn't it a strange thing for her to do--she put her face down upon the
page and burst into tears.
"I don't know who
it is," she said; "but somebody cares for me a little. I have a
friend."
She took her candle and
stole out of her own room and into Becky's, and stood by her bedside.
"Becky,
Becky!" she whispered as loudly as she dared. "Wake up!"
When Becky wakened, and
she sat upright staring aghast, her face still smudged with traces of tears,
beside her stood a little figure in a luxurious wadded robe of crimson silk.
The face she saw was a shining, wonderful thing. The Princess Sara--as she
remembered her--stood at her very bedside, holding a candle in her hand.
"Come," she
said. "Oh, Becky, come!"
Becky was too
frightened to speak. She simply got up and followed her, with her mouth and
eyes open, and without a word.
And when they crossed
the threshold, Sara shut the door gently and drew her into the warm, glowing
midst of things which made her brain reel and her hungry senses faint.
"It's true! It's true!" she cried. "I've touched them all. They
are as real as we are. The Magic has come and done it, Becky, while we were
asleep--the Magic that won't let those worst things ever quite happen."
Imagine, if you can,
what the rest of the evening was like. How they crouched by the fire which
blazed and leaped and made so much of itself in the little grate. How they
removed the covers of the dishes, and found rich, hot, savory soup, which was a
meal in itself, and sandwiches and toast and muffins enough for both of them.
The mug from the washstand was used as Becky's tea cup, and the tea was so
delicious that it was not necessary to pretend that it was anything but tea.
They were warm and full-fed and happy, and it was just like Sara that, having
found her strange good fortune real, she should give herself up to the
enjoyment of it to the utmost. She had lived such a life of imaginings that she
was quite equal to accepting any wonderful thing that happened, and almost to
cease, in a short time, to find it bewildering.
"I don't know
anyone in the world who could have done it," she said; "but there has
been someone. And here we are sitting by their fire--and--and--it's true! And
whoever it is--wherever they are--I have a friend, Becky--someone is my
friend."
It cannot be denied
that as they sat before the blazing fire, and ate the nourishing, comfortable
food, they felt a kind of rapturous awe, and looked into each other's eyes with
something like doubt.
"Do you
think," Becky faltered once, in a whisper, "do you think it could
melt away, miss? Hadn't we better be quick?" And she hastily crammed her
sandwich into her mouth. If it was only a dream, kitchen manners would be
overlooked.
"No, it won't melt
away," said Sara. "I am eating this muffin, and I can taste it. You
never really eat things in dreams. You only think you are going to eat them.
Besides, I keep giving myself pinches; and I touched a hot piece of coal just
now, on purpose."
The sleepy comfort
which at length almost overpowered them was a heavenly thing. It was the
drowsiness of happy, well-fed childhood, and they sat in the fire glow and
luxuriated in it until Sara found herself turning to look at her transformed
bed.
There were even
blankets enough to share with Becky. The narrow couch in the next attic was
more comfortable that night than its occupant had ever dreamed that it could
be.
As she went out of the
room, Becky turned upon the threshold and looked about her with devouring eyes.
"If it ain't here
in the mornin', miss," she said, "it's been here tonight, anyways,
an' I shan't never forget it." She looked at each particular thing, as if
to commit it to memory. "The fire was there," pointing with her
finger, "an' the table was before it; an' the lamp was there, an' the
light looked rosy red; an' there was a satin cover on your bed, an' a warm rug
on the floor, an' everythin' looked beautiful; an'"--she paused a second,
and laid her hand on her stomach tenderly--"there was soup an' sandwiches
an' muffins--there was." And, with this conviction a reality at least, she
went away.
Through the mysterious
agency which works in schools and among servants, it was quite well known in
the morning that Sara Crewe was in horrible disgrace, that Ermengarde was under
punishment, and that Becky would have been packed out of the house before
breakfast, but that a scullery maid could not be dispensed with at once. The
servants knew that she was allowed to stay because Miss Minchin could not
easily find another creature helpless and humble enough to work like a bounden
slave for so few shillings a week. The elder girls in the schoolroom knew that
if Miss Minchin did not send Sara away it was for practical reasons of her own.
"She's growing so
fast and learning such a lot, somehow," said Jessie to Lavinia, "that
she will be given classes soon, and Miss Minchin knows she will have to work
for nothing. It was rather nasty of you, Lavvy, to tell about her having fun in
the garret. How did you find it out?"
"I got it out of
Lottie. She's such a baby she didn't know she was telling me. There was nothing
nasty at all in speaking to Miss Minchin. I felt it my duty"--priggishly.
"She was being deceitful. And it's ridiculous that she should look so
grand, and be made so much of, in her rags and tatters!"
"What were they
doing when Miss Minchin caught them?"
"Pretending some
silly thing. Ermengarde had taken up her hamper to share with Sara and Becky.
She never invites us to share things. Not that I care, but it's rather vulgar
of her to share with servant girls in attics. I wonder Miss Minchin didn't turn
Sara out--even if she does want her for a teacher."
"If she was turned
out where would she go?" inquired Jessie, a trifle anxiously.
"How do I
know?" snapped Lavinia. "She'll look rather queer when she comes into
the schoolroom this morning, I should think--after what's happened. She had no
dinner yesterday, and she's not to have any today."
Jessie was not as
ill-natured as she was silly. She picked up her book with a little jerk.
"Well, I think
it's horrid," she said. "They've no right to starve her to
death."
When Sara went into the
kitchen that morning the cook looked askance at her, and so did the housemaids;
but she passed them hurriedly. She had, in fact, overslept herself a little,
and as Becky had done the same, neither had had time to see the other, and each
had come downstairs in haste.
Sara went into the
scullery. Becky was violently scrubbing a kettle, and was actually gurgling a
little song in her throat. She looked up with a wildly elated face.
"It was there when
I wakened, miss--the blanket," she whispered excitedly. "It was as
real as it was last night."
"So was
mine," said Sara. "It is all there now--all of it. While I was
dressing I ate some of the cold things we left."
"Oh, laws! Oh,
laws!" Becky uttered the exclamation in a sort of rapturous groan, and
ducked her head over her kettle just in time, as the cook came in from the
kitchen.
Miss Minchin had
expected to see in Sara, when she appeared in the schoolroom, very much what
Lavinia had expected to see. Sara had always been an annoying puzzle to her,
because severity never made her cry or look frightened. When she was scolded
she stood still and listened politely with a grave face; when she was punished
she performed her extra tasks or went without her meals, making no complaint or
outward sign of rebellion. The very fact that she never made an impudent answer
seemed to Miss Minchin a kind of impudence in itself. But after yesterday's
deprivation of meals, the violent scene of last night, the prospect of hunger
today, she must surely have broken down. It would be strange indeed if she did
not come downstairs with pale cheeks and red eyes and an unhappy, humbled face.
Miss Minchin saw her
for the first time when she entered the schoolroom to hear the little French
class recite its lessons and superintend its exercises. And she came in with a
springing step, color in her cheeks, and a smile hovering about the corners of
her mouth. It was the most astonishing thing Miss Minchin had ever known. It
gave her quite a shock. What was the child made of? What could such a thing
mean? She called her at once to her desk.
"You do not look
as if you realize that you are in disgrace," she said. "Are you
absolutely hardened?"
The truth is that when
one is still a child--or even if one is grown up--and has been well fed, and
has slept long and softly and warm; when one has gone to sleep in the midst of
a fairy story, and has wakened to find it real, one cannot be unhappy or even
look as if one were; and one could not, if one tried, keep a glow of joy out of
one's eyes. Miss Minchin was almost struck dumb by the look of Sara's eyes when
she made her perfectly respectful answer.
"I beg your
pardon, Miss Minchin," she said; "I know that I am in disgrace."
"Be good enough
not to forget it and look as if you had come into a fortune. It is an
impertinence. And remember you are to have no food today."
"Yes, Miss
Minchin," Sara answered; but as she turned away her heart leaped with the
memory of what yesterday had been. "If the Magic had not saved me just in
time," she thought, "how horrible it would have been!"
"She can't be very
hungry," whispered Lavinia. "Just look at her. Perhaps she is
pretending she has had a good breakfast"--with a spiteful laugh.
"She's different
from other people," said Jessie, watching Sara with her class.
"Sometimes I'm a bit frightened of her."
"Ridiculous
thing!" ejaculated Lavinia.
All through the day the
light was in Sara's face, and the color in her cheek. The servants cast puzzled
glances at her, and whispered to each other, and Miss Amelia's small blue eyes
wore an expression of bewilderment. What such an audacious look of well-being,
under august displeasure could mean she could not understand. It was, however,
just like Sara's singular obstinate way. She was probably determined to brave
the matter out.
One thing Sara had
resolved upon, as she thought things over. The wonders which had happened must
be kept a secret, if such a thing were possible. If Miss Minchin should choose
to mount to the attic again, of course all would be discovered. But it did not
seem likely that she would do so for some time at least, unless she was led by
suspicion. Ermengarde and Lottie would be watched with such strictness that
they would not dare to steal out of their beds again. Ermengarde could be told
the story and trusted to keep it secret. If Lottie made any discoveries, she
could be bound to secrecy also. Perhaps the Magic itself would help to hide its
own marvels.
"But whatever
happens," Sara kept saying to herself all day--"whatever happens,
somewhere in the world there is a heavenly kind person who is my friend--my
friend. If I never know who it is--if I never can even thank him--I shall never
feel quite so lonely. Oh, the Magic was good to me!"
If it was possible for
weather to be worse than it had been the day before, it was worse this
day--wetter, muddier, colder. There were more errands to be done, the cook was
more irritable, and, knowing that Sara was in disgrace, she was more savage.
But what does anything matter when one's Magic has just proved itself one's
friend. Sara's supper of the night before had given her strength, she knew that
she should sleep well and warmly, and, even though she had naturally begun to
be hungry again before evening, she felt that she could bear it until
breakfast-time on the following day, when her meals would surely be given to
her again. It was quite late when she was at last allowed to go upstairs. She
had been told to go into the schoolroom and study until ten o'clock, and she
had become interested in her work, and remained over her books later.
When she reached the
top flight of stairs and stood before the attic door, it must be confessed that
her heart beat rather fast.
"Of course it
might all have been taken away," she whispered, trying to be brave.
"It might only have been lent to me for just that one awful night. But it
was lent to me--I had it. It was real."
She pushed the door
open and went in. Once inside, she gasped slightly, shut the door, and stood
with her back against it looking from side to side.
The Magic had been
there again. It actually had, and it had done even more than before. The fire
was blazing, in lovely leaping flames, more merrily than ever. A number of new
things had been brought into the attic which so altered the look of it that if
she had not been past doubting she would have rubbed her eyes. Upon the low
table another supper stood--this time with cups and plates for Becky as well as
herself; a piece of bright, heavy, strange embroidery covered the battered
mantel, and on it some ornaments had been placed. All the bare, ugly things
which could be covered with draperies had been concealed and made to look quite
pretty. Some odd materials of rich colors had been fastened against the wall
with fine, sharp tacks--so sharp that they could be pressed into the wood and
plaster without hammering. Some brilliant fans were pinned up, and there were
several large cushions, big and substantial enough to use as seats. A wooden
box was covered with a rug, and some cushions lay on it, so that it wore quite
the air of a sofa.
Sara slowly moved away
from the door and simply sat down and looked and looked again.
"It is exactly
like something fairy come true," she said. "There isn't the least
difference. I feel as if I might wish for anything--diamonds or bags of
gold--and they would appear! That wouldn't be any stranger than this. Is this
my garret? Am I the same cold, ragged, damp Sara? And to think I used to pretend
and pretend and wish there were fairies! The one thing I always wanted was to
see a fairy story come true. I am living in a fairy story. I feel as if I might
be a fairy myself, and able to turn things into anything else."
She rose and knocked
upon the wall for the prisoner in the next cell, and the prisoner came.
When she entered she
almost dropped in a heap upon the floor. For a few seconds she quite lost her
breath.
"Oh, laws!"
she gasped. "Oh, laws, miss!"
"You see,"
said Sara.
On this night Becky sat
on a cushion upon the hearth rug and had a cup and saucer of her own.
When Sara went to bed
she found that she had a new thick mattress and big downy pillows. Her old
mattress and pillow had been removed to Becky's bedstead, and, consequently,
with these additions Becky had been supplied with unheard-of comfort.
"Where does it all
come from?" Becky broke forth once. "Laws, who does it, miss?"
"Don't let us even
ask," said Sara. "If it were not that I want to say, 'Oh, thank you,'
I would rather not know. It makes it more beautiful."
From that time life
became more wonderful day by day. The fairy story continued. Almost every day
something new was done. Some new comfort or ornament appeared each time Sara
opened the door at night, until in a short time the attic was a beautiful
little room full of all sorts of odd and luxurious things. The ugly walls were
gradually entirely covered with pictures and draperies, ingenious pieces of
folding furniture appeared, a bookshelf was hung up and filled with books, new
comforts and conveniences appeared one by one, until there seemed nothing left
to be desired. When Sara went downstairs in the morning, the remains of the
supper were on the table; and when she returned to the attic in the evening,
the magician had removed them and left another nice little meal. Miss Minchin
was as harsh and insulting as ever, Miss Amelia as peevish, and the servants
were as vulgar and rude. Sara was sent on errands in all weathers, and scolded
and driven hither and thither; she was scarcely allowed to speak to Ermengarde
and Lottie; Lavinia sneered at the increasing shabbiness of her clothes; and
the other girls stared curiously at her when she appeared in the schoolroom.
But what did it all matter while she was living in this wonderful mysterious
story? It was more romantic and delightful than anything she had ever invented
to comfort her starved young soul and save herself from despair. Sometimes,
when she was scolded, she could scarcely keep from smiling.
"If you only
knew!" she was saying to herself. "If you only knew!"
The comfort and
happiness she enjoyed were making her stronger, and she had them always to look
forward to. If she came home from her errands wet and tired and hungry, she
knew she would soon be warm and well fed after she had climbed the stairs.
During the hardest day she could occupy herself blissfully by thinking of what
she should see when she opened the attic door, and wondering what new delight
had been prepared for her. In a very short time she began to look less thin.
Color came into her cheeks, and her eyes did not seem so much too big for her
face.
"Sara Crewe looks
wonderfully well," Miss Minchin remarked disapprovingly to her sister.
"Yes,"
answered poor, silly Miss Amelia. "She is absolutely fattening. She was
beginning to look like a little starved crow."
"Starved!"
exclaimed Miss Minchin, angrily. "There was no reason why she should look
starved. She always had plenty to eat!"
"Of--of
course," agreed Miss Amelia, humbly, alarmed to find that she had, as
usual, said the wrong thing.
"There is
something very disagreeable in seeing that sort of thing in a child of her
age," said Miss Minchin, with haughty vagueness.
"What--sort of thing?"
Miss Amelia ventured.
"It might almost
be called defiance," answered Miss Minchin, feeling annoyed because she
knew the thing she resented was nothing like defiance, and she did not know
what other unpleasant term to use. "The spirit and will of any other child
would have been entirely humbled and broken by--by the changes she has had to
submit to. But, upon my word, she seems as little subdued as if--as if she were
a princess."
"Do you
remember," put in the unwise Miss Amelia, "what she said to you that
day in the schoolroom about what you would do if you found out that she
was--"
"No, I
don't," said Miss Minchin. "Don't talk nonsense." But she
remembered very clearly indeed.
Very naturally, even
Becky was beginning to look plumper and less frightened. She could not help it.
She had her share in the secret fairy story, too. She had two mattresses, two
pillows, plenty of bed-covering, and every night a hot supper and a seat on the
cushions by the fire. The Bastille had melted away, the prisoners no longer
existed. Two comforted children sat in the midst of delights. Sometimes Sara
read aloud from her books, sometimes she learned her own lessons, sometimes she
sat and looked into the fire and tried to imagine who her friend could be, and
wished she could say to him some of the things in her heart.
Then it came about that
another wonderful thing happened. A man came to the door and left several
parcels. All were addressed in large letters, "To the Little Girl in the
right-hand attic."
Sara herself was sent
to open the door and take them in. She laid the two largest parcels on the hall
table, and was looking at the address, when Miss Minchin came down the stairs
and saw her.
"Take the things
to the young lady to whom they belong," she said severely. "Don't
stand there staring at them.
"They belong to
me," answered Sara, quietly.
"To you?"
exclaimed Miss Minchin. "What do you mean?"
"I don't know
where they come from," said Sara, "but they are addressed to me. I
sleep in the right-hand attic. Becky has the other one."
Miss Minchin came to
her side and looked at the parcels with an excited expression.
"What is in
them?" she demanded.
"I don't
know," replied Sara.
"Open them,"
she ordered.
Sara did as she was
told. When the packages were unfolded Miss Minchin's countenance wore suddenly
a singular expression. What she saw was pretty and comfortable
clothing--clothing of different kinds: shoes, stockings, and gloves, and a warm
and beautiful coat. There were even a nice hat and an umbrella. They were all
good and expensive things, and on the pocket of the coat was pinned a paper, on
which were written these words: "To be worn every day. Will be replaced by
others when necessary."
Miss Minchin was quite
agitated. This was an incident which suggested strange things to her sordid
mind. Could it be that she had made a mistake, after all, and that the
neglected child had some powerful though eccentric friend in the
background--perhaps some previously unknown relation, who had suddenly traced
her whereabouts, and chose to provide for her in this mysterious and fantastic
way? Relations were sometimes very odd--particularly rich old bachelor uncles,
who did not care for having children near them. A man of that sort might prefer
to overlook his young relation's welfare at a distance. Such a person, however,
would be sure to be crotchety and hot-tempered enough to be easily offended. It
would not be very pleasant if there were such a one, and he should learn all
the truth about the thin, shabby clothes, the scant food, and the hard work.
She felt very queer indeed, and very uncertain, and she gave a side glance at
Sara.
"Well," she
said, in a voice such as she had never used since the little girl lost her
father, "someone is very kind to you. As the things have been sent, and
you are to have new ones when they are worn out, you may as well go and put
them on and look respectable. After you are dressed you may come downstairs and
learn your lessons in the schoolroom. You need not go out on any more errands
today."
About half an hour
afterward, when the schoolroom door opened and Sara walked in, the entire
seminary was struck dumb.
"My word!"
ejaculated Jessie, jogging Lavinia's elbow. "Look at the Princess
Sara!"
Everybody was looking,
and when Lavinia looked she turned quite red.
It was the Princess
Sara indeed. At least, since the days when she had been a princess, Sara had
never looked as she did now. She did not seem the Sara they had seen come down
the back stairs a few hours ago. She was dressed in the kind of frock Lavinia
had been used to envying her the possession of. It was deep and warm in color,
and beautifully made. Her slender feet looked as they had done when Jessie had
admired them, and the hair, whose heavy locks had made her look rather like a Shetland
pony when it fell loose about her small, odd face, was tied back with a ribbon.
"Perhaps someone
has left her a fortune," Jessie whispered. "I always thought
something would happen to her. She's so queer."
"Perhaps the
diamond mines have suddenly appeared again," said Lavinia, scathingly.
"Don't please her by staring at her in that way, you silly thing."
"Sara," broke
in Miss Minchin's deep voice, "come and sit here."
And while the whole
schoolroom stared and pushed with elbows, and scarcely made any effort to
conceal its excited curiosity, Sara went to her old seat of honor, and bent her
head over her books.
That night, when she
went to her room, after she and Becky had eaten their supper she sat and looked
at the fire seriously for a long time.
"Are you making
something up in your head, miss?" Becky inquired with respectful softness.
When Sara sat in silence and looked into the coals with dreaming eyes it
generally meant that she was making a new story. But this time she was not, and
she shook her head.
"No," she
answered. "I am wondering what I ought to do."
Becky stared--still
respectfully. She was filled with something approaching reverence for
everything Sara did and said.
"I can't help
thinking about my friend," Sara explained. "If he wants to keep
himself a secret, it would be rude to try and find out who he is. But I do so
want him to know how thankful I am to him--and how happy he has made me. Anyone
who is kind wants to know when people have been made happy. They care for that
more than for being thanked. I wish--I do wish--"
She stopped short
because her eyes at that instant fell upon something standing on a table in a
corner. It was something she had found in the room when she came up to it only
two days before. It was a little writing-case fitted with paper and envelopes
and pens and ink.
"Oh," she
exclaimed, "why did I not think of that before?"
She rose and went to
the corner and brought the case back to the fire.
"I can write to
him," she said joyfully, "and leave it on the table. Then perhaps the
person who takes the things away will take it, too. I won't ask him anything.
He won't mind my thanking him, I feel sure."
So she wrote a note.
This is what she said:
I hope you will not
think it is impolite that I should write this note to you when you wish to keep
yourself a secret. Please believe I do not mean to be impolite or try to find
out anything at all; only I want to thank you for being so kind to me--so
heavenly kind--and making everything like a fairy story. I am so grateful to
you, and I am so happy--and so is Becky. Becky feels just as thankful as I
do--it is all just as beautiful and wonderful to her as it is to me. We used to
be so lonely and cold and hungry, and now--oh, just think what you have done
for us! Please let me say just these words. It seems as if I ought to say them.
Thank you--thank you--thank you!
The next morning she
left this on the little table, and in the evening it had been taken away with
the other things; so she knew the Magician had received it, and she was happier
for the thought. She was reading one of her new books to Becky just before they
went to their respective beds, when her attention was attracted by a sound at
the skylight. When she looked up from her page she saw that Becky had heard the
sound also, as she had turned her head to look and was listening rather
nervously.
"Something's
there, miss," she whispered.
"Yes," said
Sara, slowly. "It sounds--rather like a cat--trying to get in."
She left her chair and
went to the skylight. It was a queer little sound she heard--like a soft
scratching. She suddenly
remembered something
and laughed. She remembered a quaint little intruder who had made his way into
the attic once before. She had seen him that very afternoon, sitting
disconsolately on a table before a window in the Indian gentleman's house.
"Suppose,"
she whispered in pleased excitement--"just suppose it was the monkey who
got away again. Oh, I wish it was!"
She climbed on a chair,
very cautiously raised the skylight, and peeped out. It had been snowing all
day, and on the snow, quite near her, crouched a tiny, shivering figure, whose
small black face wrinkled itself piteously at sight of her.
"It is the
monkey," she cried out. "He has crept out of the Lascar's attic, and
he saw the light."
Becky ran to her side.
"Are you going to
let him in, miss?" she said.
"Yes," Sara
answered joyfully. "It's too cold for monkeys to be out. They're delicate.
I'll coax him in."
She put a hand out
delicately, speaking in a coaxing voice--as she spoke to the sparrows and to
Melchisedec--as if she were some friendly little animal herself.
"Come along,
monkey darling," she said. "I won't hurt you."
He knew she would not
hurt him. He knew it before she laid her soft, caressing little paw on him and
drew him towards her. He had felt human love in the slim brown hands of Ram
Dass, and he felt it in hers. He let her lift him through the skylight, and
when he found himself in her arms he cuddled up to her breast and looked up
into her face.
"Nice monkey! Nice
monkey!" she crooned, kissing his funny head. "Oh, I do love little
animal things."
He was evidently glad
to get to the fire, and when she sat down and held him on her knee he looked
from her to Becky with mingled interest and appreciation.
"He is
plain-looking, miss, ain't he?" said Becky.
"He looks like a
very ugly baby," laughed Sara. "I beg your pardon, monkey; but I'm
glad you are not a baby. Your mother couldn't be proud of you, and no one would
dare to say you looked like any of your relations. Oh, I do like you!"
She leaned back in her
chair and reflected.
"Perhaps he's
sorry he's so ugly," she said, "and it's always on his mind. I wonder
if he has a mind. Monkey, my love, have you a mind?"
But the monkey only put
up a tiny paw and scratched his head.
"What shall you do
with him?" Becky asked.
"I shall let him
sleep with me tonight, and then take him back to the Indian gentleman tomorrow.
I am sorry to take you back, monkey; but you must go. You ought to be fondest
of your own family; and I'm not a real relation."
And when she went to
bed she made him a nest at her feet, and he curled up and slept there as if he
were a baby and much pleased with his quarters.
The next afternoon
three members of the Large Family sat in the Indian gentleman's library, doing
their best to cheer him up. They had been allowed to come in to perform this
office because he had specially invited them. He had been living in a state of
suspense for some time, and today he was waiting for a certain event very
anxiously. This event was the return of Mr. Carmichael from Moscow. His stay
there had been prolonged from week to week. On his first arrival there, he had
not been able satisfactorily to trace the family he had gone in search of. When
he felt at last sure that he had found them and had gone to their house, he had
been told that they were absent on a journey. His efforts to reach them had
been unavailing, so he had decided to remain in Moscow until their return. Mr.
Carrisford sat in his reclining chair, and Janet sat on the floor beside him.
He was very fond of Janet. Nora had found a footstool, and Donald was astride
the tiger's head which ornamented the rug made of the animal's skin. It must be
owned that he was riding it rather violently.
"Don't chirrup so
loud, Donald," Janet said. "When you come to cheer an ill person up
you don't cheer him up at the top of your voice. Perhaps cheering up is too
loud, Mr. Carrisford?" turning to the Indian gentleman.
But he only patted her
shoulder.
"No, it
isn't," he answered. "And it keeps me from thinking too much."
"I'm going to be
quiet," Donald shouted. "We'll all be as quiet as mice."
"Mice don't make a
noise like that," said Janet.
Donald made a bridle of
his handkerchief and bounced up and down on the tiger's head.
"A whole lot of
mice might," he said cheerfully. "A thousand mice might."
"I don't believe
fifty thousand mice would," said Janet, severely; "and we have to be
as quiet as one mouse."
Mr. Carrisford laughed
and patted her shoulder again.
"Papa won't be
very long now," she said. "May we talk about the lost little
girl?"
"I don't think I
could talk much about anything else just now," the Indian gentleman
answered, knitting his forehead with a tired look.
"We like her so
much," said Nora. "We call her the little un-fairy princess."
"Why?" the Indian
gentleman inquired, because the fancies of the Large Family always made him
forget things a little.
It was Janet who
answered.
"It is because,
though she is not exactly a fairy, she will be so rich when she is found that
she will be like a princess in a fairy tale. We called her the fairy princess
at first, but it didn't quite suit."
"Is it true,"
said Nora, "that her papa gave all his money to a friend to put in a mine
that had diamonds in it, and then the friend thought he had lost it all and ran
away because he felt as if he was a robber?"
"But he wasn't
really, you know," put in Janet, hastily.
The Indian gentleman
took hold of her hand quickly.
"No, he wasn't
really," he said.
"I am sorry for
the friend," Janet said; "I can't help it. He didn't mean to do it,
and it would break his heart. I am sure it would break his heart."
"You are an
understanding little woman, Janet," the Indian gentleman said, and he held
her hand close.
"Did you tell Mr.
Carrisford," Donald shouted again, "about the
little-girl-who-is-n't-a-beggar? Did you tell him she has new nice clothes?
P'r'aps she's been found by somebody when she was lost."
"There's a
cab!" exclaimed Janet. "It's stopping before the door. It is
papa!"
They all ran to the
windows to look out.
"Yes, it's
papa," Donald proclaimed. "But there is no little girl."
All three of them
incontinently fled from the room and tumbled into the hall. It was in this way
they always welcomed their father. They were to be heard jumping up and down,
clapping their hands, and being caught up and kissed.
Mr. Carrisford made an
effort to rise and sank back again.
"It is no
use," he said. "What a wreck I am!"
Mr. Carmichael's voice
approached the door.
"No,
children," he was saying; "you may come in after I have talked to Mr.
Carrisford. Go and play with Ram Dass."
Then the door opened
and he came in. He looked rosier than ever, and brought an atmosphere of
freshness and health with him; but his eyes were disappointed and anxious as
they met the invalid's look of eager question even as they grasped each other's
hands.
"What news?"
Mr. Carrisford asked. "The child the Russian people adopted?"
"She is not the
child we are looking for," was Mr. Carmichael's answer. "She is much
younger than Captain Crewe's little girl. Her name is Emily Carew. I have seen
and talked to her. The Russians were able to give me every detail."
How wearied and
miserable the Indian gentleman looked! His hand dropped from Mr. Carmichael's.
"Then the search
has to be begun over again," he said. "That is all. Please sit
down."
Mr. Carmichael took a
seat. Somehow, he had gradually grown fond of this unhappy man. He was himself
so well and happy, and so surrounded by cheerfulness and love, that desolation
and broken health seemed pitifully unbearable things. If there had been the
sound of just one gay little high-pitched voice in the house, it would have
been so much less forlorn. And that a man should be compelled to carry about in
his breast the thought that he had seemed to wrong and desert a child was not a
thing one could face.
"Come, come,"
he said in his cheery voice; "we'll find her yet."
"We must begin at
once. No time must be lost," Mr. Carrisford fretted. "Have you any
new suggestion to make--any whatsoever?"
Mr. Carmichael felt
rather restless, and he rose and began to pace the room with a thoughtful,
though uncertain face.
"Well,
perhaps," he said. "I don't know what it may be worth. The fact is,
an idea occurred to me as I was thinking the thing over in the train on the
journey from Dover."
"What was it? If
she is alive, she is somewhere."
"Yes; she is
somewhere. We have searched the schools in Paris. Let us give up Paris and
begin in London. That was my idea--to search London."
"There are schools
enough in London," said Mr. Carrisford. Then he slightly started, roused
by a recollection. "By the way, there is one next door."
"Then we will
begin there. We cannot begin nearer than next door."
"No," said
Carrisford. "There is a child there who interests me; but she is not a
pupil. And she is a little dark, forlorn creature, as unlike poor Crewe as a
child could be."
Perhaps the Magic was
at work again at that very moment--the beautiful Magic. It really seemed as if
it might be so. What was it that brought Ram Dass into the room--even as his
master spoke--salaaming respectfully, but with a scarcely concealed touch of
excitement in his dark, flashing eyes?
"Sahib," he
said, "the child herself has come--the child the sahib felt pity for. She
brings back the monkey who had again run away to her attic under the roof. I
have asked that she remain. lt was my thought that it would please the sahib to
see and speak with her."
"Who is she?"
inquired Mr. Carmichael.
"God knows,"
Mr. Carrrisford answered. "She is the child I spoke of. A little drudge at
the school." He waved his hand to Ram Dass, and addressed him. "Yes,
I should like to see her. Go and bring her in." Then he turned to Mr.
Carmichael. "While you have been away," he explained, "I have
been desperate. The days were so dark and long. Ram Dass told me of this
child's miseries, and together we invented a romantic plan to help her. I suppose
it was a childish thing to do; but it gave me something to plan and think of.
Without the help of an agile, soft-footed Oriental like Ram Dass, however, it
could not have been done."
Then Sara came into the
room. She carried the monkey in her arms, and he evidently did not intend to
part from her, if it could be helped. He was clinging to her and chattering,
and the interesting excitement of finding herself in the Indian gentleman's
room had brought a flush to Sara's cheeks.
"Your monkey ran
away again," she said, in her pretty voice. "He came to my garret
window last night, and I took him in because it was so cold. I would have
brought him back if it had not been so late. I knew you were ill and might not
like to be disturbed."
The Indian gentleman's
hollow eyes dwelt on her with curious interest.
"That was very
thoughtful of you," he said.
Sara looked toward Ram
Dass, who stood near the door.
"Shall I give him
to the Lascar?" she asked.
"How do you know
he is a Lascar?" said the Indian gentleman, smiling a little.
"Oh, I know
Lascars," Sara said, handing over the reluctant monkey. "I was born
in India."
The Indian gentleman
sat upright so suddenly, and with such a change of expression, that she was for
a moment quite startled.
"You were born in
India," he exclaimed, "were you? Come here." And he held out his
hand.
Sara went to him and
laid her hand in his, as he seemed to want to take it. She stood still, and her
green-gray eyes met his wonderingly. Something seemed to be the matter with
him.
"You live next
door?" he demanded.
"Yes; I live at
Miss Minchin's seminary."
"But you are not
one of her pupils?"
A strange little smile
hovered about Sara's mouth. She hesitated a moment.
"I don't think I
know exactly what I am," she replied.
"Why not?"
"At first I was a
pupil, and a parlor boarder; but now--"
"You were a pupil!
What are you now?"
The queer little sad
smile was on Sara's lips again.
"I sleep in the
attic, next to the scullery maid," she said. "I run errands for the
cook--I do anything she tells me; and I teach the little ones their
lessons."
"Question her,
Carmichael," said Mr. Carrisford, sinking back as if he had lost his
strength. "Question her; I cannot."
The big, kind father of
the Large Family knew how to question little girls. Sara realized how much
practice he had had when he spoke to her in his nice, encouraging voice.
"What do you mean
by 'At first,' my child?" he inquired.
"When I was first
taken there by my papa."
"Where is your
papa?"
"He died,"
said Sara, very quietly. "He lost all his money and there was none left
for me. There was no one to take care of me or to pay Miss Minchin."
"Carmichael!"
the Indian gentleman cried out loudly. "Carmichael!"
"We must not
frighten her," Mr. Carmichael said aside to him in a quick, low voice. And
he added aloud to Sara, "So you were sent up into the attic, and made into
a little drudge. That was about it, wasn't it?"
"There was no one
to take care of me," said Sara. "There was no money; I belong to
nobody."
"How did your
father lose his money?" the Indian gentleman broke in breathlessly.
"He did not lose
it himself," Sara answered, wondering still more each moment. "He had
a friend he was very fond of--he was very fond of him. It was his friend who
took his money. He trusted his friend too much."
The Indian gentleman's
breath came more quickly.
"The friend might
have meant to do no harm," he said. "It might have happened through a
mistake."
Sara did not know how
unrelenting her quiet young voice sounded as she answered. If she had known,
she would surely have tried to soften it for the Indian gentleman's sake.
"The suffering was
just as bad for my papa," she said. It killed him."
"What was your
father's name?" the Indian gentleman said. "Tell me."
"His name was
Ralph Crewe," Sara answered, feeling startled. "Captain Crewe. He
died in India."
The haggard face
contracted, and Ram Dass sprang to his master's side.
"Carmichael,"
the invalid gasped, "it is the child--the child!"
For a moment Sara
thought he was going to die. Ram Dass poured out drops from a bottle, and held
them to his lips. Sara stood near, trembling a little. She looked in a
bewildered way at Mr. Carmichael.
"What child am
I?" she faltered.
"He was your
father's friend," Mr. Carmichael answered her. "Don't be frightened.
We have been looking for you for two years."
Sara put her hand up to
her forehead, and her mouth trembled. She spoke as if she were in a dream.
"And I was at Miss
Minchin's all the while," she half whispered. "Just on the other side
of the wall."
It was pretty,
comfortable Mrs. Carmichael who explained everything. She was sent for at once,
and came across the square to take Sara into her warm arms and make clear to
her all that had happened. The excitement of the totally unexpected discovery
had been temporarily almost overpowering to Mr. Carrisford in his weak
condition.
"Upon my
word," he said faintly to Mr. Carmichael, when it was suggested that the
little girl should go into another room. "I feel as if I do not want to
lose sight of her."
"I will take care
of her," Janet said, "and mamma will come in a few minutes." And
it was Janet who led her away.
"We're so glad you
are found," she said. "You don't know how glad we are that you are
found."
Donald stood with his
hands in his pockets, and gazed at Sara with reflecting and self-reproachful
eyes.
"If I'd just asked
what your name was when I gave you my sixpence," he said, "you would
have told me it was Sara Crewe, and then you would have been found in a
minute." Then Mrs. Carmichael came in. She looked very much moved, and
suddenly took Sara in her arms and kissed her.
"You look
bewildered, poor child," she said. "And it is not to be wondered
at."
Sara could only think
of one thing.
"Was he," she
said, with a glance toward the closed door of the library--"was he the
wicked friend? Oh, do tell me!"
Mrs. Carmichael was
crying as she kissed her again. She felt as if she ought to be kissed very
often because she had not been kissed for so long.
"He was not
wicked, my dear," she answered. "He did not really lose your papa's
money. He only thought he had lost it; and because he loved him so much his
grief made him so ill that for a time he was not in his right mind. He almost
died of brain fever, and long before he began to recover your poor papa was
dead."
"And he did not
know where to find me," murmured Sara. "And I was so near."
Somehow, she could not forget that she had been so near.
"He believed you
were in school in France," Mrs. Carmichael explained. "And he was
continually misled by false clues. He has looked for you everywhere. When he
saw you pass by, looking so sad and neglected, he did not dream that you were
his friend's poor child; but because you were a little girl, too, he was sorry
for you, and wanted to make you happier. And he told Ram Dass to climb into
your attic window and try to make you comfortable."
Sara gave a start of
joy; her whole look changed.
"Did Ram Dass
bring the things?" she cried out. "Did he tell Ram Dass to do it? Did
he make the dream that came true?"
"Yes, my
dear--yes! He is kind and good, and he was sorry for you, for little lost Sara
Crewe's sake."
The library door opened
and Mr. Carmichael appeared, calling Sara to him with a gesture.
"Mr. Carrisford is
better already," he said. "He wants you to come to him."
Sara did not wait. When
the Indian gentleman looked at her as she entered, he saw that her face was all
alight.
She went and stood
before his chair, with her hands clasped together against her breast.
"You sent the
things to me," she said, in a joyful emotional little voice, "the
beautiful, beautiful things? You sent them!"
"Yes, poor, dear
child, I did," he answered her. He was weak and broken with long illness
and trouble, but he looked at her with the look she remembered in her father's
eyes--that look of loving her and wanting to take her in his arms. It made her
kneel down by him, just as she used to kneel by her father when they were the
dearest friends and lovers in the world.
"Then it is you
who are my friend," she said; "it is you who are my friend!" And
she dropped her face on his thin hand and kissed it again and again.
"The man will be
himself again in three weeks," Mr. Carmichael said aside to his wife.
"Look at his face already."
In fact, he did look
changed. Here was the "Little Missus," and he had new things to think
of and plan for already. In the first place, there was Miss Minchin. She must
be interviewed and told of the change which had taken place in the fortunes of
her pupil.
Sara was not to return
to the seminary at all. The Indian gentleman was very determined upon that
point. She must remain where she was, and Mr. Carmichael should go and see Miss
Minchin himself
"I am glad I need
not go back," said Sara. "She will be very angry. She does not like
me; though perhaps it is my fault, because I do not like her."
But, oddly enough, Miss
Minchin made it unnecessary for Mr. Carmichael to go to her, by actually coming
in search of her pupil herself. She had wanted Sara for something, and on
inquiry had heard an astonishing thing. One of the housemaids had seen her
steal out of the area with something hidden under her cloak, and had also seen
her go up the steps of the next door and enter the house.
"What does she
mean!" cried Miss Minchin to Miss Amelia.
"I don't know, I'm
sure, sister," answered Miss Amelia. "Unless she has made friends
with him because he has lived in India."
"It would be just
like her to thrust herself upon him and try to gain his sympathies in some such
impertinent fashion," said Miss Minchin. "She must have been in the
house for two hours. I will not allow such presumption. I shall go and inquire
into the matter, and apologize for her intrusion."
Sara was sitting on a
footstool close to Mr. Carrisford's knee, and listening to some of the many
things he felt it necessary to try to explain to her, when Ram Dass announced
the visitor's arrival.
Sara rose
involuntarily, and became rather pale; but Mr. Carrisford saw that she stood
quietly, and showed none of the ordinary signs of child terror.
Miss Minchin entered
the room with a sternly dignified manner. She was correctly and well dressed,
and rigidly polite.
"I am sorry to
disturb Mr. Carrisford," she said; "but I have explanations to make.
I am Miss Minchin, the proprietress of the Young Ladies' Seminary next
door."
The Indian gentleman
looked at her for a moment in silent scrutiny. He was a man who had naturally a
rather hot temper, and he did not wish it to get too much the better of him.
"So you are Miss
Minchin?" he said.
"I am, sir."
"In that
case," the Indian gentleman replied, "you have arrived at the right
time. My solicitor, Mr. Carmichael, was just on the point of going to see
you."
Mr. Carmichael bowed
slightly, and Miiss Minchin looked from him to Mr. Carrisford in amazement.
"Your
solicitor!" she said. "I do not understand. I have come here as a
matter of duty. I have just discovered that you have been intruded upon through
the forwardness of one of my pupils--a charity pupil. I came to explain that
she intruded without my knowledge." She turned upon Sara. "Go home at
once," she commanded indignantly. "You shall be severely punished. Go
home at once."
The Indian gentleman
drew Sara to his side and patted her hand.
"She is not
going."
Miss Minchin felt
rather as if she must be losing her senses.
"Not going!"
she repeated.
"No," said
Mr. Carrisford. "She is not going home--if you give your house that name.
Her home for the future will be with me."
Miss Minchin fell back
in amazed indignation.
"With you! With
you, sir! What does this mean?"
"Kindly explain
the matter, Carmichael," said the Indian gentleman; "and get it over
as quickly as possible." And he made Sara sit down again, and held her
hands in his--which was another trick of her papa's.
Then Mr. Carmichael
explained--in the quiet, leveltoned, steady manner of a man who knew his
subject, and all its legal significance, which was a thing Miss Minchin
understood as a business woman, and did not enjoy.
"Mr. Carrisford,
madam," he said, "was an intimate friend of the late Captain Crewe.
He was his partner in certain large investments. The fortune which Captain
Crewe supposed he had lost has been recovered, and is now in Mr. Carrisford's
hands."
"The
fortune!" cried Miss Minchin; and she really lost color as she uttered the
exclamation. "Sara's fortune!"
"It will be Sara's
fortune," replied Mr. Carmichael, rather coldly. "It is Sara's
fortune now, in fact. Certain events have increased it enormously. The diamond
mines have retrieved themselves."
"The diamond
mines!" Miss Minchin gasped out. If this was true, nothing so horrible,
she felt, had ever happened to her since she was born.
"The diamond
mines," Mr. Carmichael repeated, and he could not help adding, with a
rather sly, unlawyer-like smile, "There are not many princesses, Miss
Minchin, who are richer than your little charity pupil, Sara Crewe, will be.
Mr. Carrisford has been searching for her for nearly two years; he has found
her at last, and he will keep her."
After which he asked
Miss Minchin to sit down while he explained matters to her fully, and went into
such detail as was necessary to make it quite clear to her that Sara's future
was an assured one, and that what had seemed to be lost was to be restored to
her tenfold; also, that she had in Mr. Carrisford a guardian as well as a
friend.
Miss Minchin was not a
clever woman, and in her excitement she was silly enough to make one desperate
effort to regain what she could not help seeing she had lost through her
worldly folly.
"He found her
under my care," she protested. "I have done everything for her. But
for me she should have starved in the streets."
Here the Indian
gentleman lost his temper.
"As to starving in
the streets," he said, "she might have starved more comfortably there
than in your attic."
"Captain Crewe
left her in my charge," Miss Minchin argued. "She must return to it
until she is of age. She can be a parlor boarder again. She must finish her education.
The law will interfere in my behalf"
"Come, come, Miss
Minchin," Mr. Carmichael interposed, "the law will do nothing of the
sort. If Sara herself wishes to return to you, I dare say Mr. Carrisford might
not refuse to allow it. But that rests with Sara."
"Then," said
Miss Minchin, "I appeal to Sara. I have not spoiled you, perhaps,"
she said awkwardly to the little girl; "but you know that your papa was
pleased with your progress. And--ahem--I have always been fond of you."
Sara's green-gray eyes
fixed themselves on her with the quiet, clear look Miss Minchin particularly
disliked.
"Have you, Miss
Minchin?" she said. "I did not know that."
Miss Minchin reddened
and drew herself up.
"You ought to have
known it," said she; "but children, unfortunately, never know what is
best for them. Amelia and I always said you were the cleverest child in the
school. Will you not do your duty to your poor papa and come home with
me?"
Sara took a step toward
her and stood still. She was thinking of the day when she had been told that
she belonged to nobody, and was in danger of being turned into the street; she
was thinking of the cold, hungry hours she had spent alone with Emily and
Melchisedec in the attic. She looked Miss Minchin steadily in the face.
"You know why I
will not go home with you, Miss Minchin," she said; "you know quite
well."
A hot flush showed
itself on Miss Minchin's hard, angry face.
"You will never
see your companions again," she began. "I will see that Ermengarde
and Lottie are kept away--"
Mr. Carmichael stopped
her with polite firmness.
"Excuse me,"
he said; "she will see anyone she wishes to see. The parents of Miss
Crewe's fellow-pupils are not likely to refuse her invitations to visit her at
her guardian's house. Mr. Carrisford will attend to that."
It must be confessed
that even Miss Minchin flinched. This was worse than the eccentric bachelor
uncle who might have a peppery temper and be easily offended at the treatment
of his niece. A woman of sordid mind could easily believe that most people
would not refuse to allow their children to remain friends with a little
heiress of diamond mines. And if Mr. Carrisford chose to tell certain of her
patrons how unhappy Sara Crewe had been made, many unpleasant things might happen.
"You have not
undertaken an easy charge," she said to the Indian gentleman, as she
turned to leave the room; "you will discover that very soon. The child is
neither truthful nor grateful. I suppose"--to Sara--"that you feel
now that you are a princess again."
Sara looked down and
flushed a little, because she thought her pet fancy might not be easy for
strangers--even nice ones--to understand at first.
"I--tried not to
be anything else," she answered in a low voice--"even when I was
coldest and hungriest--I tried not to be."
"Now it will not
be necessary to try," said Miss Minchin, acidly, as Ram Dass salaamed her
out of the room.
She returned home and,
going to her sitting room, sent at once for Miss Amelia. She sat closeted with
her all the rest of the afternoon, and it must be admitted that poor Miss
Amelia passed through more than one bad quarter of an hour. She shed a good
many tears, and mopped her eyes a good deal. One of her unfortunate remarks
almost caused her sister to snap her head entirely off, but it resulted in an
unusual manner.
"I'm not as clever
as you, sister," she said, "and I am always afraid to say things to
you for fear of making you angry. Perhaps if I were not so timid it would be
better for the school and for both of us. I must say I've often thought it
would have been better if you had been less severe on Sara Crewe, and had seen
that she was decently dressed and more comfortable. I know she was worked too
hard for a child of her age, and I know she was only half fed--"
"How dare you say
such a thing!" exclaimed Miss Minchin.
"I don't know how
I dare," Miss Amelia answered, with a kind of reckless courage; "but
now I've begun I may as well finish, whatever happens to me. The child was a
clever child and a good child--and she would have paid you for any kindness you
had shown her. But you didn't show her any. The fact was, she was too clever
for you, and you always disliked her for that reason. She used to see through
us both--"
"Amelia!"
gasped her infuriated elder, looking as if she would box her ears and knock her
cap off, as she had often done to Becky.
But Miss Amelia's
disappointment had made her hysterical enough not to care what occurred next.
"She did! She
did!" she cried. "She saw through us both. She saw that you were a
hard-hearted, worldly woman, and that I was a weak fool, and that we were both
of us vulgar and mean enough to grovel on our knees for her money, and behave
ill to her because it was taken from her--though she behaved herself like a
little princess even when she was a beggar. She did--she did--like a little
princess!" And her hysterics got the better of the poor woman, and she
began to laugh and cry both at once, and rock herself backward and forward.
"And now you've
lost her," she cried wildly; "and some other school will get her and
her money; and if she were like any other child she'd tell how she's been
treated, and all our pupils would be taken away and we should be ruined. And it
serves us right; but it serves you right more than it does me, for you are a
hard woman, Maria Minchin, you're a hard, selfish, worldly woman!"
And she was in danger
of making so much noise with her hysterical chokes and gurgles that her sister
was obliged to go to her and apply salts and sal volatile to quiet her, instead
of pouring forth her indignation at her audacity.
And from that time
forward, it may be mentioned, the elder Miss Minchin actually began to stand a
little in awe of a sister who, while she looked so foolish, was evidently not
quite so foolish as she looked, and might, consequently, break out and speak
truths people did not want to hear.
That evening, when the
pupils were gathered together before the fire in the schoolroom, as was their
custom before going to bed, Ermengarde came in with a letter in her hand and a
queer expression on her round face. It was queer because, while it was an
expression of delighted excitement, it was combined with such amazement as
seemed to belong to a kind of shock just received.
"What is the
matter?" cried two or three voices at once.
"Is it anything to
do with the row that has been going on?" said Lavinia, eagerly.
"There has been such a row in Miss Minchin's room, Miss Amelia has had
something like hysterics and has had to go to bed."
Ermengarde answered
them slowly as if she were half stunned.
"I have just had
this letter from Sara," she said, holding it out to let them see what a
long letter it was.
"From Sara!"
Every voice joined in that exclamation.
"Where is
she?" almost shrieked Jessie.
"Next door,"
said Ermengarde, "with the Indian gentleman."
"Where? Where? Has
she been sent away? Does Miss Minchin know? Was the row about that? Why did she
write? Tell us! Tell us!"
There was a perfect
babel, and Lottie began to cry plaintively.
Ermengarde answered
them slowly as if she were half plunged out into what, at the moment, seemed
the most important and self-explaining thing.
"There were
diamond mines," she said stoutly; "there were!"
Open mouths and open
eyes confronted her.
"They were real,"
she hurried on. "It was all a mistake about them. Something happened for a
time, and Mr. Carrisford thought they were ruined--"
"Who is Mr.
Carrisford?" shouted Jessie.
"The Indian
gentleman. And Captain Crewe thought so, too--and he died; and Mr. Carrisford
had brain fever and ran away, and he almost died. And he did not know where
Sara was. And it turned out that there were millions and millions of diamonds
in the mines; and half of them belong to Sara; and they belonged to her when
she was living in the attic with no one but Melchisedec for a friend, and the
cook ordering her about. And Mr. Carrisford found her this afternoon, and he
has got her in his home--and she will never come back--and she will be more a
princess than she ever was--a hundred and fifty thousand times more. And I am
going to see her tomorrow afternoon. There!"
Even Miss Minchin
herself could scarcely have controlled the uproar after this; and though she
heard the noise, she did not try. She was not in the mood to face anything more
than she was facing in her room, while Miss Amelia was weeping in bed. She knew
that the news had penetrated the walls in some mysterious manner, and that
every servant and every child would go to bed talking about it.
So until almost
midnight the entire seminary, realizing somehow that all rules were laid aside,
crowded round Ermengarde in the schoolroom and heard read and re-read the
letter containing a story which was quite as wonderful as any Sara herself had
ever invented, and which had the amazing charm of having happened to Sara
herself and the mystic Indian gentleman in the very next house.
Becky, who had heard it
also, managed to creep up stairs earlier than usual. She wanted to get away
from people and go and look at the little magic room once more. She did not
know what would happen to it. It was not likely that it would be left to Miss
Minchin. It would be taken away, and the attic would be bare and empty again.
Glad as she was for Sara's sake, she went up the last flight of stairs with a lump
in her throat and tears blurring her sight. There would be no fire tonight, and
no rosy lamp; no supper, and no princess sitting in the glow reading or telling
stories--no princess!
She choked down a sob
as she pushed the attic door open, and then she broke into a low cry.
The lamp was flushing
the room, the fire was blazing, the supper was waiting; and Ram Dass was
standing smiling into her startled face.
"Missee sahib
remembered," he said. "She told the sahib all. She wished you to know
the good fortune which has befallen her. Behold a letter on the tray. She has
written. She did not wish that you should go to sleep unhappy. The sahib
commands you to come to him tomorrow. You are to be the attendant of missee
sahib. Tonight I take these things back over the roof."
And having said this
with a beaming face, he made a little salaam and slipped through the skylight
with an agile silentness of movement which showed Becky how easily he had done
it before.
Never had such joy
reigned in the nursery of the Large Family. Never had they dreamed of such
delights as resulted from an intimate acquaintance with the
little-girl-who-was-not-a-beggar. The mere fact of her sufferings and
adventures made her a priceless possession. Everybody wanted to be told over
and over again the things which had happened to her. When one was sitting by a
warm fire in a big, glowing room, it was quite delightful to hear how cold it
could be in an attic. It must be admitted that the attic was rather delighted
in, and that its coldness and bareness quite sank into insignificance when
Melchisedec was remembered, and one heard about the sparrows and things one
could see if one climbed on the table and stuck one's head and shoulders out of
the skylight.
Of course the thing
loved best was the story of the banquet and the dream which was true. Sara told
it for the first time the day after she had been found. Several members of the
Large Family came to take tea with her, and as they sat or curled up on the
hearth-rug she told the story in her own way, and the Indian gentleman listened
and watched her. When she had finished she looked up at him and put her hand on
his knee.
"That is my
part," she said. "Now won't you tell your part of it, Uncle
Tom?" He had asked her to call him always "Uncle Tom." "I
don't know your part yet, and it must be beautiful."
So he told them how,
when he sat alone, ill and dull and irritable, Ram Dass had tried to distract
him by describing the passers by, and there was one child who passed oftener
than any one else; he had begun to be interested in her--partly perhaps because
he was thinking a great deal of a little girl, and partly because Ram Dass had
been able to relate the incident of his visit to the attic in chase of the
monkey. He had described its cheerless look, and the bearing of the child, who
seemed as if she was not of the class of those who were treated as drudges and
servants. Bit by bit, Ram Dass had made discoveries concerning the wretchedness
of her life. He had found out how easy a matter it was to climb across the few
yards of roof to the skylight, and this fact had been the beginning of all that
followed.
"Sahib," he
had said one day, "I could cross the slates and make the child a fire when
she is out on some errand. When she returned, wet and cold, to find it blazing,
she would think a magician had done it."
The idea had been so
fanciful that Mr. Carrisford's sad face had lighted with a smile, and Ram Dass
had been so filled with rapture that he had enlarged upon it and explained to
his master how simple it would be to accomplish numbers of other things. He had
shown a childlike pleasure and invention, and the preparations for the carrying
out of the plan had filled many a day with interest which would otherwise have
dragged wearily. On the night of the frustrated banquet Ram Dass had kept
watch, all his packages being in readiness in the attic which was his own; and
the person who was to help him had waited with him, as interested as himself in
the odd adventure. Ram Dass had been lying flat upon the slates, looking in at
the skylight, when the banquet had come to its disastrous conclusion; he had
been sure of the profoundness of Sara's wearied sleep; and then, with a dark
lantern, he had crept into the room, while his companion remained outside and
handed the things to him. When Sara had stirred ever so faintly, Ram Dass had
closed the lanternslide and lain flat upon the floor. These and many other
exciting things the children found out by asking a thousand questions.
"I am so
glad," Sara said, "it was you who were my friend!"
There never were such
friends as these two became. Somehow, they seemed to suit each other in a
wonderful way. The Indian gentleman had never had a companion he liked quite as
much as he liked Sara. In a month's time he was, as Mr. Carmichael had
prophesied he would be, a new man. He was always amused and interested, and he
began to find an actual pleasure in the possession of the wealth he had
imagined that he loathed the burden of. There were so many charming things to
plan for Sara. There was a little joke between them that he was a magician, and
it was one of his pleasures to invent things to surprise her. She found
beautiful new flowers growing in her room, whimsical little gifts tucked under
pillows, and once, as they sat together in the evening, they heard the scratch
of a heavy paw on the door, and when Sara went to find out what it was, there
stood a great dog--a splendid Russian boarhound--with a grand silver and gold
collar bearing an inscription. "I am Boris," it read; "I serve
the Princess Sara."
There was nothing the
Indian gentleman loved more than the recollection of the little princess in
rags and tatters. The afternoons in which the Large Family, or Ermengarde and
Lottie, gathered to rejoice together were very delightful. But the hours when
Sara and the Indian gentleman sat alone and read or talked had a special charm
of their own. During their passing many interesting things occurred.
One evening, Mr.
Carrisford, looking up from his book, noticed that his companion had not
stirred for some time, but sat gazing into the fire.
"What are you
'supposing,' Sara?" he asked.
Sara looked up, with a
bright color on her cheek.
"I was supposing,"
she said; "I was remembering that hungry day, and a child I saw."
"But there were a
great many hungry days," said the Indian gentleman, with rather a sad tone
in his voice. "Which hungry day was it?"
"I forgot you
didn't know," said Sara. "It was the day the dream came true."
Then she told him the
story of the bun shop, and the fourpence she picked up out of the sloppy mud,
and the child who was hungrier than herself. She told it quite simply, and in
as few words as possible; but somehow the Indian gentleman found it necessary
to shade his eyes with his hand and look down at the carpet.
"And I was
supposing a kind of plan," she said, when she had finished. "I was
thinking I should like to do something."
"What was
it?" said Mr. Carrisford, in a low tone. "You may do anything you
like to do, princess."
"I was
wondering," rather hesitated Sara--"you know, you say I have so much
money--I was wondering if I could go to see the bun-woman, and tell her that
if, when hungry children--particularly on those dreadful days--come and sit on
the steps, or look in at the window, she would just call them in and give them
something to eat, she might send the bills to me. Could I do that?"
"You shall do it
tomorrow morning," said the Indian gentleman.
"Thank you,"
said Sara. "You see, I know what it is to be hungry, and it is very hard
when one cannot even pretend it away."
"Yes, yes, my
dear," said the Indian gentleman. "Yes, yes, it must be. Try to
forget it. Come and sit on this footstool near my knee, and only remember you
are a princess."
"Yes," said
Sara, smiling; "and I can give buns and bread to the populace." And
she went and sat on the stool, and the Indian gentleman (he used to like her to
call him that, too, sometimes) drew her small dark head down on his knee and
stroked her hair.
The next morning, Miss
Minchin, in looking out of her window, saw the things she perhaps least enjoyed
seeing. The Indian gentleman's carriage, with its tall horses, drew up before
the door of the next house, and its owner and a little figure, warm with soft,
rich furs, descended the steps to get into it. The little figure was a familiar
one, and reminded Miss Minchin of days in the past. It was followed by another
as familiar--the sight of which she found very irritating. It was Becky, who,
in the character of delighted attendant, always accompanied her young mistress
to her carriage, carrying wraps and belongings. Already Becky had a pink, round
face.
A little later the
carriage drew up before the door of the baker's shop, and its occupants got
out, oddly enough, just as the bun-woman was putting a tray of smoking-hot buns
into the window.
When Sara entered the
shop the woman turned and looked at her, and, leaving the buns, came and stood
behind the counter. For a moment she looked at Sara very hard indeed, and then
her good-natured face lighted up.
"I'm sure that I
remember you, miss," she said. "And yet--"
"Yes," said
Sara; "once you gave me six buns for fourpence, and--"
"And you gave five
of 'em to a beggar child," the woman broke in on her. "I've always
remembered it. I couldn't make it out at first." She turned round to the
Indian gentleman and spoke her next words to him. "I beg your pardon, sir,
but there's not many young people that notices a hungry face in that way; and
I've thought of it many a time. Excuse the liberty, miss,"--to
Sara--"but you look rosier and--well, better than you did
that--that--"
"I am better,
thank you," said Sara. "And--I am much happier--and I have come to
ask you to do something for me."
"Me, miss!"
exclaimed the bun-woman, smiling cheerfully. "Why, bless you! Yes, miss.
What can I do?"
And then Sara, leaning
on the counter, made her little proposal concerning the dreadful days and the
hungry waifs and the buns.
The woman watched her,
and listened with an astonished face.
"Why, bless
me!" she said again when she had heard it all; it'll be a pleasure to me
to do it. I am a working-woman myself and cannot afford to do much on my own
account, and there's sights of trouble on every side; but, if you'll excuse me,
I'm bound to say I've given away many a bit of bread since that wet afternoon,
just along o' thinking of you--an' how wet an' cold you was, an' how hungry you
looked; an' yet you gave away your hot buns as if you was a princess."
The Indian gentleman
smiled involuntarily at this, and Sara smiled a little, too, remembering what
she had said to herself when she put the buns down on the ravenous child's
ragged lap.
"She looked so
hungry," she said. "She was even hungrier than I was."
"She was
starving," said the woman. "Many's the time she's told me of it
since--how she sat there in the wet, and felt as if a wolf was a-tearing at her
poor young insides."
"Oh, have you seen
her since then?" exclaimed Sara. "Do you know where she is?"
"Yes, I do,"
answered the woman, smiling more goodnaturedly than ever. "Why, she's in
that there back room, miss, an' has been for a month; an' a decent,
well-meanin' girl she's goin' to turn out, an' such a help to me in the shop
an' in the kitchen as you'd scarce believe, knowin' how she's lived."
She stepped to the door
of the little back parlor and spoke; and the next minute a girl came out and
followed her behind the counter. And actually it was the beggar-child, clean
and neatly clothed, and looking as if she had not been hungry for a long time.
She looked shy, but she had a nice face, now that she was no longer a savage,
and the wild look had gone from her eyes. She knew Sara in an instant, and
stood and looked at her as if she could never look enough.
"You see,"
said the woman, "I told her to come when she was hungry, and when she'd
come I'd give her odd jobs to do; an' I found she was willing, and somehow I
got to like her; and the end of it was, I've given her a place an' a home, and she
helps me, an' behaves well, an' is as thankful as a girl can be. Her name's
Anne. She has no other."
The children stood and
looked at each other for a few minutes; and then Sara took her hand out of her
muff and held it out across the counter, and Anne took it, and they looked
straight into each other's eyes.
"I am so
glad," Sara said. "And I have just thought of something. Perhaps Mrs.
Brown will let you be the one to give the buns and bread to the children.
Perhaps you would like to do it because you know what it is to be hungry, too.
"Yes, miss,"
said the girl.
And, somehow, Sara felt
as if she understood her, though she said so little, and only stood still and
looked and looked after her as she went out of the shop with the Indian
gentleman, and they got into the carriage and drove away.