<h2><SPAN name="ROSELLA" id="ROSELLA"></SPAN>ROSELLA</h2>
<p>"Rosella!"</p>
<p>"Yes, Mother?" And a dark-eyed little girl
looked down over the banisters into the hall.</p>
<p>"I want you to get ready quickly and go to the
Moat House, and persuade Grandfather to come
back with you this afternoon instead of waiting
until the evening."</p>
<p>"But if he invites me to tea with him?"</p>
<p>"Don't stay, dearie. I want you back before
dusk, and it gets dark so soon now; and you must
help me to tie the crackers on the Christmas-tree.
It's still sunny, so make haste."</p>
<p>In a few minutes the child was tripping downstairs,
smart and cosy in her red coat, hat, and
muff, with all the importance of her nine years.</p>
<p>"Go the shortest way—you know; keep to
the path across the moor," continued her mother,
"or you might fall over bits of rock under the
snow."</p>
<p>"Do you know, Mother, I always wonder, when
there's snow, where all the grass is and what's
underneath? All killed by the freeze?"<span class="pagenum">[207]</span></p>
<p>"Oh no. The snow keeps everything nice and
warm," replied her mother with a kiss.</p>
<p>Davis, the portly butler, advanced and opened
the front door.</p>
<p>"Being <i>above</i> the snow doesn't keep <i>me</i> nice and
warm, Mother," called back Rosella as she ran laughing
down the steps into the icy north wind, which
blew her dark hair out to its full length and
heightened the warm colour in her cheeks.</p>
<p>"Make haste, and you'll be there in half-an-hour."
Mrs. Silverton returned to her boudoir, and standing
at the bow-window followed with loving eyes the
graceful little red figure, until at a bend in the road it
turned, gaily waved a farewell, and was lost to sight.</p>
<p>When Rosella reached the moor the high wind
was against her, blowing her frock between her
knees and making her eyes water. "This way will
be very difficult and unpleasant," she thought to
herself. "I'd far rather go round by the hill, and
then, too, I could see if Grandfather has got the
Snow Castle on the top finished and ready for to-morrow—I
forgot about that when Mother said
to go across the moor. I should so like to see it—I
wonder if I might!"</p>
<p>She stood irresolute for a moment, then left the
straight path and started running, in order to save
time, in the other direction: thus making for the
hill which she intended to climb.<span class="pagenum">[208]</span></p>
<p>The sun became obscured, and what was worse,
down from the leaden yellow sky tiny snowflakes
began to flutter as though in play, rapidly increasing
in size and volume until, as if by magic, Rosella
found herself enveloped in a blinding snowstorm
that obscured the landscape, and decided her to return
home. But returning home was not so easy as
turning herself round, and she soon had the growing
conviction that no matter which way she turned
she was lost, utterly lost: for all that she could see
was that she no longer seemed to be dressed in red,
but was thickly coated in white.</p>
<p>Twice she tripped over the uneven ground, but
she stumbled along hopefully and bravely, and
even tried to sing, only the snowflakes got into
her mouth and made her shut it up tight.</p>
<p>Rosella had no idea where she was, and she
felt very tired. How she wished now she had
gone straight forward! There would have been
no difficulty about that. By good luck she came
close up to a large piece of overhanging rock; she
did not remember ever seeing it before, so she was
more than ever confused as to the whereabouts of
the hill or of anything; but it was good for shelter.
She placed her muff in a niche above her head, and
sat down to rest awhile and consider what she had
best do.</p>
<p>The wind howled around her only partially<span class="pagenum">[209]</span>
sheltered retreat, and myriads of snowflakes, drifting
in, fell softly about her, creeping closer and
closer, covering her boots, lying thickly on her
frock, on her shoulders, drifting, too, into her
eyes and making them blink, and powdering her
hair with white. And she felt too cold to think—too
cold to move.</p>
<hr class="tb">
<p>After a while Rosella exclaimed: "This won't
do. I must get up from here. It's such a dreadfully
cold place!" And she determined to try and
go on, if only to keep herself warm. So she shook
herself, took down her muff, and went forth.</p>
<p>It was snowing as much as ever, but Rosella
found that the ground was no longer flat. She
was on the hillside, and as she climbed she
wondered anxiously how she should know which
side to come down, once she was on the top, in
order to find the Moat House. Then she smiled
as it occurred to her how much she must now look
like the tiny, red-hooded, toy figure in the glass
paper weight at home which showed itself enveloped
in a miniature snowstorm when it was
shaken. She plodded on higher and higher.</p>
<p>The weather was clearing when Rosella stood
on the summit of the hill, and she was lost in
admiration as she gazed at the largest, grandest
Snow Castle she could never have imagined.<span class="pagenum">[210]</span>
Before it, too, stood a Snow Man splendidly
proportioned and set up. To her intense astonishment,
as she timidly approached he bowed
politely.</p>
<p>Rosella curtsied instinctively, then laughed as
she went round to see where he had broken.
But he wasn't broken at all, for he turned too,
faced her, and said—</p>
<p>"I need hardly introduce myself, Rosella. I
presume you recognise King Frost when you
meet him in any guise. You wished to see
my Castle—and gave yourself a polite invitation.
You are welcome!"</p>
<p>She was so taken aback with the suddenness of
all this that she could find no words for reply.
So she made another, much lower, curtsey, which
she knew to be correct in the presence of Royalty,
then she took his proffered arm. And the tall
white figure and the little white figure mounted
the white steps, went through the massive gateway,
and proceeded down a long, narrow passage
lighted with a ruddy glow from the high windows,
which were glazed with something red, transparent,
and glistening. It was much warmer here, and
Rosella noticed that the snow had melted from
her clothes, and that her companion also appeared
to be dressed in red. His white face with its
white beard and white hair wore quite a jovial<span class="pagenum">[211]</span>
air, and on top of it was set a crown of carved
ice that reminded her of their chandelier in the
drawing-room.</p>
<p>He did the honours by offering her some snow
broth, which she declined. Then she thought she
ought to say something, so she remarked, with a
touch of family pride—</p>
<p>"I had no idea that Grandfather had built such
a fine place as this."</p>
<p>"<i>I</i> think the credit is entirely mine," protested
her companion with an amused chuckle. "<i>I</i>
provide the material, you see, or there would
have been no 'fine place' at all. See my
point?"</p>
<p>"Yes, your Majesty," she assented, for she knew
it wasn't polite to argue—especially with a royal
personage.</p>
<p>"This way!" he exclaimed, and led her down
another passage on the right, and halted to push
open a swing door of ice a little way, and genially
patted her on the cheek—which was kindly meant
no doubt, but his touch nipped her with cold so
that she shivered.</p>
<p>"I shall be on guard outside. If you want me,
call me!" Almost as soon as she heard the words
the heavy door swung to behind her, and she found
herself alone in a great, white, glistening hall with
high arches open to the air. Evidently it was<span class="pagenum">[212]</span>
scarcely snowing now, for only little isolated
flakes came fluttering in. But in their falling
they changed into little shadowy girls and boys
in white, who danced playfully around her, and
their cold white draperies swept lightly about her
face, reminding her of the blinding snowstorm she
had passed through. But she only wanted to get
away to her grandfather now.</p>
<p>Rosella sheltered her face with her muff and
ran the gauntlet of the persistent little snowflakes.
In a corner she espied a spiral staircase which
seemed to lead up into one of the battlemented
towers she had noticed outside, and she imagined
it a way of escape, so up she ran. The steps were
very slippery, but she got up to the top, where,
through a narrow loophole, she saw King Frost
down below, standing there just as she first saw
him when she thought him only a Snow Man.
More anxious than ever to know how to get to
her grandfather, she called out—</p>
<p>"Your Majesty!" and repeated loudly the two
words over and over again, for he either would not
or could not hear her. And what was very curious,
there was an echo which called back "Rosella!
Rosella!" in the same anxious tone.</p>
<p>Talking was clearly of no use; she must do something.
So she tried to squeeze her muff through
the aperture in order to drop it on his head and<span class="pagenum">[213]</span>
attract his attention—but it would not go through.
It stuck there and closed out her view. Try as
she would she could not release it; and with a gulp
in her throat she realised she would have to leave
it. Her hands grew terribly cold without it, and
it was too draughty to remain there.</p>
<p>From the landing on which she stood steps led
up higher, so she proceeded to explore, and found
herself in an octagonal turret chamber. "I suppose
it serves me right, and I <i>am</i> lost, <i>and</i> there's
no one to help me!" sighed Rosella.</p>
<p>"Oh yes there is!"</p>
<p>"Whose voice is that?" she asked. She could
see no one—but at the same moment a sunbeam
pierced through an aperture, pointed straight at
what appeared to be a lift behind a slender
column, and then faded away. It <i>was</i> a lift,
made of ice and snow, as was everything else in
the Castle. Rosella entered it and took a seat.
The lift at once began gently and slowly to go
down, down, first into the foundations of the Castle,
and then into the interior of the hill right down
under the snow, till it stopped in a Grotto lined
with cobwebs and suffused with a mysterious green
light. There was a soft, singing sound, as though
made by the wind. In front was a frozen lake, and
the ice of it was green from the same strange light.</p>
<p>"I must try and find my way to Grandfather,"<span class="pagenum">[214]</span>
said Rosella vaguely as she wandered about the
Grotto, looking about her for a way out.</p>
<hr class="tb">
<p>Mrs. Silverton kept glancing anxiously at the
clock and at the snowstorm. Davis entered.
"Madam," said he, with an usually solemn face,
"Mr. Silverton has telephoned again from the
Moat House that Miss Rosella hasn't arrived."</p>
<p>"Then she must have lost her way!" exclaimed
her mother, now thoroughly alarmed. "Though
I don't see how she could, keeping straight across
the moor to the Moat House gate at the end of the
path. We must set out, Davis, and find her."</p>
<p>"Difficult this weather, Madam, if our young
lady is lost on the moor."</p>
<p>"Is it still so bad?"</p>
<p>"The storm's not so thick as it was. I'll go
immediately. There's no time to be lost, to my
thinking, Madam."</p>
<p>"Yes, we'll go at once, Davis."</p>
<p>Mrs. Silverton, pale with anxiety, sent other
messengers in various directions, and then started
off herself. On the moor she met another search
party headed by old Mr. Silverton and his faithful
collie dog. And the moor rang with anxious cries
of "Rosella! Rosella!" uttered by whitened shadowy
figures that looked like phantoms in the falling snow.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[215]</span></p>
<hr class="tb">
<p>"I <i>must</i> try and find my way to Grandfather,"
repeated Rosella falteringly, realising that she didn't
know in the least how to proceed. She never had
a notion that a Snow Castle was so intricate inside,
with a hall, a lift, a grotto, and things; indeed, she
had always imagined for no particular reason that
it had no inside at all; "but of course," she now
argued, "if it has an outside it <i>must</i> have an inside,
or it wouldn't be an outside." But it was much
more startling when she looked up and found that
she was by no means alone: the cobwebs were all
inhabited. Inhabited—not by ugly spiders, but by
the wee-est little baby-fairies with the wee-est gossamer
wings, swaying in their cobweb hammocks
in all attitudes, fast asleep, soothed by the lullaby
hummed by the wind.</p>
<p>"This must be where they are bred!" cried
Rosella, in an ecstasy of admiration and delight.</p>
<p>"This is Fairy Spring's nursery," explained a
beautiful Sprite, appearing suddenly at her elbow
like a little bright sunbeam. "King Frost is the
ground landlord, you know, and allows all her
young things to sleep here and keep warm."</p>
<p>"And who are you, please?" inquired the Sprite's
young visitor.</p>
<p>"I am Love of Goodwill, and my father's name
is Christmas."</p>
<p>"I know you by name quite well, and am so<span class="pagenum">[216]</span>
glad to see you. Perhaps you would kindly help
me to find my way?"</p>
<p>"If you keep on going to the right, when you see
the snowdrops' mother, there you will find your
landmark."</p>
<p>"Oh, do please tell me more clearly. What did
you say? Tell me where I"—but Rosella was
again alone in the green grotto with the sleeping
baby-fairies in their swaying hammocks, and the
soft music of the wind. "Surely there can't be any
grown-up snowdrops at Christmas—it's too early!—and
I shall be losing my way for weeks!" continued
Rosella. Nevertheless, she kept on turning
to the right through upward passages first of rock,
then of sand, in which were embedded deep growing
roots, then of soil with its minerals, broken up
leaves, and corpses of insects which she didn't like
at all; then through a passage lined with true red
soil, where little grubs were lying fast asleep in
their nests.</p>
<p>"You ugly grubby little things!" remarked
Rosella as she passed them.</p>
<p>"They are only lying low at present. They will
be lovely Painted Ladies and visit the court of Fairy
Spring," replied Love of Goodwill, hovering again at
her side. "And look! There are the baby snowdrops
asleep in their earthy cots. They, too, will
awake soon and get up. I helped their mother to<span class="pagenum">[217]</span>
get up as she was in such a hurry to see the world.
I'm afraid she will have got nipped by King Frost
for her impatience. Farewell—I must go and see
what is happening."</p>
<p>Rosella followed the sunbeam—into which the
Sprite had vanished—and at once felt the keen air
blowing on her face, and knew she was above ground
once more. Everything was all white again. She
sat down upon a piece of rock to rest, and noticed
the sunbeam pointing straight at a little woe-begone
snowdrop sticking up out of the snow before her.
And to her joy the Snow Man was close by calling
"Rosella! Rosella!" in the echo's anxious tone she
had heard before—so he must have wanted her then,
badly.</p>
<p>"Yes, your Majesty!" she murmured.</p>
<p>He bent over her kindly. "There, little lady,"
he continued, "drink some of this now!" and something
cold yet stinging was poured gently down her
throat.</p>
<p>"Thank you, your Majesty. I did feel tired and
queer, but your snow broth has made me all right."
She said it quite gratefully. Then her eyes opened
wide and she cried in amazement—</p>
<p>"Grandfather! Why it's <i>you</i>! You were the
Snow Man all the time! And look! there's my
muff up there that I left in the wall!"</p>
<p>"But for that sticking up we might never have<span class="pagenum">[218]</span>
found our little treasure," replied old Mr. Silverton.
He picked her up and, holding her aloft, showed her
to her anxious mother, who came hurrying on the
scene.</p>
<p>"Don't shiver so, dearie," exclaimed Mrs. Silverton,
passionately embracing the child, as hot tears
dropped on her daughter's face. "You must be
perished with cold, but this nice sunshine which has
come out now will do you good."</p>
<p>"I didn't feel cold. It was quite nice and warm
under the snow as you said, Mother—and so
wonderful!"</p>
<p>Davis carried her home in triumph at the head of
the procession; and after precautionary remedies
had been taken, Rosella sat cosily tucked up in the
big arm-chair in front of the huge log fire, thinking
over all she had seen. Of course she confessed to
her temptation to go astray, and was readily forgiven.
Then, as Mr. Silverton insisted he had never in his
life been any one else but himself, Rosella gaily recounted
her meeting with the Snow Man at his
Snow Castle. "And King Frost said, Grandfather,"
concluded Rosella, "that the credit of the Castle
was his for providing the snow and not yours."</p>
<p>"Bless my soul!" cried old Mr. Silverton. "And
he was right there, because I've had nothing to do
with any Snow Castle or any Snow Man—there was
some talk, but nothing came of it."<span class="pagenum">[219]</span></p>
<p>"But I was King Frost's visitor there, don't you
see," insisted Rosella, smiling. "So I know that's
only one of your jokes, Grandfather."</p>
<p>He smiled too and wiped his spectacles.</p>
<p>The next morning Rosella volunteered to fetch
her grandfather and introduce him to King Frost.
So the two climbed the hill. But no vestige of
Snow Castle or Snow Man was there.</p>
<p>"There, you see!" said her grandfather, laughing,
as he genially patted her on the cheek. How cold
his hand felt! It nipped her with cold, so that she
shivered. Yet the weather had changed, and it was
more like a sunny day in spring than in midwinter.</p>
<p>She left old Mr. Silverton at his gate, and he
assured her with a kiss that he wasn't a bit disappointed
at the wonderful disappearance, but that it
was all certainly a very remarkable affair indeed.</p>
<p>Rosella thought so too. Then she turned and
walked thoughtfully home.</p>
<hr class="chapter">
<span class="pagenum">[220]</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />