<h2><SPAN name="png.224" id="png.224"></SPAN><b>VIII</b><br/>JUSTNOWLAND</h2>
<p>‘<span class="smcap">Auntie</span>! No, no, no! I will be good. Oh,
I will!’ The little weak voice came from the
other side of the locked attic door.</p>
<p>‘You should have thought of that before,’
said the strong, sharp voice outside.</p>
<p>‘I didn’t mean to be naughty. I didn’t,
truly.’</p>
<p>‘It’s not what you mean, miss, it’s what you
do. I’ll teach you not to mean, my lady.’</p>
<p>The bitter irony of the last words dried the
child’s tears. ‘Very well, then,’ she screamed,
‘I won’t be good; I won’t try to be good. I
thought you’d like your nasty old garden
weeded. I only did it to please you. How
was I to know it was turnips? It looked just
like weeds.’ Then came a pause, then another
shriek. ‘Oh, Auntie, don’t! Oh, let me out—let
me out!’</p>
<p>‘I’ll not let you out till I’ve broken your
spirit, my girl; you may rely on that.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.225" id="png.225"></SPAN>The sharp voice stopped abruptly on a high
note; determined feet in strong boots sounded
on the stairs—fainter, fainter; a door slammed
below with a dreadful definiteness, and Elsie
was left alone, to wonder how soon her spirit
would break—for at no less a price, it appeared,
could freedom be bought.</p>
<p>The outlook seemed hopeless. The martyrs
and heroines, with whom Elsie usually identified
herself, <em>their</em> spirit had never been broken;
not chains nor the rack nor the fiery stake
itself had even weakened them. Imprisonment
in an attic would to them have been luxury
compared with the boiling oil and the smoking
faggots and all the intimate cruelties of
mysterious instruments of steel and leather,
in cold dungeons, lit only by the dull flare of
torches and the bright, watchful eyes of
inquisitors.</p>
<p>A month in the house of ‘Auntie’ self-styled,
and really only an unrelated Mrs.
Staines, paid to take care of the child, had
held but one interest—Foxe’s Book of Martyrs.
It was a horrible book—the thick oleographs,
their guarding sheets of tissue paper sticking to
the prints like bandages to a wound…. Elsie
knew all about wounds: she had had one herself.
Only a scalded hand, it is true, but a
wound is a wound, all the world over. It was
<SPAN name="png.226" id="png.226"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>a book that made you afraid to go to bed; but
it was a book you could not help reading.
And now it seemed as though it might at last
help, and not merely sicken and terrify. But
the help was frail, and broke almost instantly
on the thought—‘<em>They</em> were brave because
they were good: how can I be brave when
there’s nothing to be brave about except me
not knowing the difference between turnips and
weeds?’</p>
<p>She sank down, a huddled black bunch on
the bare attic floor, and called wildly to some
one who could not answer her. Her frock was
black because the one who always used to
answer could not answer any more. And her
father was in India, where you cannot answer,
or even hear, your little girl, however much
she cries in England.</p>
<p>‘I won’t cry,’ said Elsie, sobbing as violently
as ever. ‘I can be brave, even if I’m not a
saint but only a turnip-mistaker. I’ll be a
Bastille prisoner, and tame a mouse!’ She
dried her eyes, though the bosom of the black
frock still heaved like the sea after a storm,
and looked about for a mouse to tame. One
could not begin too soon. But unfortunately
there seemed to be no mouse at liberty just
then. There were mouse-holes right enough,
all round the wainscot, and in the broad, time-worn
<SPAN name="png.227" id="png.227"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>boards of the old floor. But never a
mouse.</p>
<p>‘Mouse, mouse!’ Elsie called softly. ‘Mousie,
mousie, come and be tamed!’</p>
<p>Not a mouse replied.</p>
<p>The attic was perfectly empty and dreadfully
clean. The other attic, Elsie knew, had
lots of interesting things in it—old furniture
and saddles, and sacks of seed potatoes,—but
in this attic nothing. Not so much as a bit of
string on the floor that one could make knots
in, or twist round one’s finger till it made the
red ridges that are so interesting to look at
afterwards; not even a piece of paper in the
draughty, cold fireplace that one could make
paper boats of, or prick letters in with a pin or
the tag of one’s shoe-laces.</p>
<p>As she stooped to see whether under the
grate some old match-box or bit of twig might
have escaped the broom, she saw suddenly
what she had wanted most—a mouse. It was
lying on its side. She put out her hand very
slowly and gently, and whispered in her softest
tones, ‘Wake up, Mousie, wake up, and
come and be tamed.’ But the mouse never
moved. And when she took it in her hand
it was cold.</p>
<p>‘Oh,’ she moaned, ‘you’re dead, and now I
can never tame you’; and she sat on the cold
<SPAN name="png.228" id="png.228"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>hearth and cried again, with the dead mouse in
her lap.</p>
<p>‘Don’t cry,’ said somebody. ‘I’ll find you
something to tame—if you really want it.’</p>
<p>Elsie started and saw the head of a black
bird peering at her through the square opening
that leads to the chimney. The edges of him
looked ragged and rainbow-coloured, but that
was because she saw him through tears. To a
tearless eye he was black and very smooth and
sleek.</p>
<p>‘Oh!’ she said, and nothing more.</p>
<p>‘Quite so,’ said the bird politely. ‘You are
surprised to hear me speak, but your surprise
will be, of course, much less when I tell you
that I am really a Prime Minister condemned
by an Enchanter to wear the form of a crow
till … till I can get rid of it.’</p>
<p>‘Oh!’ said Elsie.</p>
<p>‘Yes, indeed,’ said the Crow, and suddenly
grew smaller till he could come comfortably
through the square opening. He did this,
perched on the top bar, and hopped to the
floor. And there he got bigger and bigger,
and bigger and bigger and bigger. Elsie had
scrambled to her feet, and then a black little girl
of eight and of the usual size stood face to face
with a crow as big as a man, and no doubt
as old. She found words then.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.229" id="png.229"></SPAN>‘Oh, don’t!’ she cried. ‘Don’t get any
bigger. I can’t bear it.’</p>
<p>‘<em>I</em> can’t <em>do</em> it,’ said the Crow kindly, ‘so
that’s all right. I thought you’d better get used
to seeing rather large crows before I take you
to Crownowland. We are all life-size there.’</p>
<p>‘But a crow’s life-size isn’t a man’s life-size,’
Elsie managed to say.</p>
<p>‘Oh yes, it is—when it’s an enchanted
Crow,’ the bird replied. ‘That makes all the
difference. Now you were saying you wanted
to tame something. If you’ll come with me to
Crownowland I’ll show you something worth
taming.’</p>
<p>‘Is Crow-what’s-its-name a nice place?’ <!-- Transcriber's note: endquote invisible in original -->
Elsie asked cautiously. She was, somehow,
not so very frightened now.</p>
<p>‘Very,’ said the Crow.</p>
<p>‘Then perhaps I shall like it so much I
sha’n’t want to be taming things.’</p>
<p>‘Oh yes, you will, when you know how
much depends on it.’</p>
<p>‘But I shouldn’t like,’ said Elsie, ‘to go up
the chimney. This isn’t my best frock, of
course, but still….’</p>
<p>‘Quite so,’ said the Crow. ‘I only came
that way for fun, and because I can fly. You
shall go in by the chief gate of the kingdom,
like a lady. Do come.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.230" id="png.230"></SPAN>But Elsie still hesitated. ‘What sort of
thing is it you want me to tame?’ she said
doubtfully.</p>
<p>The enormous crow hesitated. ‘A—a sort
of lizard,’ it said at last. ‘And if you can only
tame it so that it will do what you tell it to,
you’ll save the whole kingdom, and we’ll put
up a statue to you; but not in the People’s
Park, unless they wish it,’ the bird added
mysteriously.</p>
<p>‘I should like to save a kingdom,’ said Elsie,
‘and I like lizards. I’ve seen lots of them in
India.’</p>
<p>‘Then you’ll come?’ said the Crow.</p>
<p>‘Yes. But how do we go?’</p>
<p>‘There are only two doors out of this world
into another,’ said the Crow. ‘I’ll take you
through the nearest. Allow me!’ It put its
wing round her so that her face nestled against
the black softness of the under-wing feathers.
It was warm and dark and sleepy there, and
very comfortable. For a moment she seemed
to swim easily in a soft sea of dreams. Then,
with a little shock, she found herself standing
on a marble terrace, looking out over a city far
more beautiful and wonderful than she had ever
seen or imagined. The great man-sized Crow
was by her side.</p>
<p>‘Now,’ it said, pointing with the longest of
<SPAN name="png.231" id="png.231"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>its long black wing-feathers, ‘you see this
beautiful city?’</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ said Elsie, ‘of course I do.’</p>
<p>‘Well … I hardly like to tell you the
story,’ said the Crow, ‘but it’s a long time ago,
and I hope you won’t think the worse of us—because
we’re really very sorry.’</p>
<p>‘If you’re really sorry,’ said Elsie primly,
‘of course it’s all right.’</p>
<p>‘Unfortunately it isn’t,’ said the Crow.
‘You see the great square down there?’</p>
<p>Elsie looked down on a square of green
trees, broken a little towards the middle.</p>
<p>‘Well, that’s where the … where <em>it</em> is—what
you’ve got to tame, you know.’</p>
<p>‘But what did you do that was wrong?’</p>
<p>‘We were unkind,’ said the Crow slowly,
‘and unjust, and ungenerous. We had servants
and workpeople doing everything for us; we had
nothing to do <em>but</em> be kind. And we weren’t.’</p>
<p>‘Dear me,’ said Elsie feebly.</p>
<p>‘We had several warnings,’ said the Crow.
‘There was an old parchment, and it said just
how you ought to behave and all that. But
we didn’t care what it said. I was Court
Magician as well as Prime Minister, and I
ought to have known better, but I didn’t. We
all wore frock-coats and high hats then,’ he
added sadly.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.232" id="png.232"></SPAN>‘Go on,’ said Elsie, her eyes wandering from
one beautiful building to another of the many
that nestled among the trees of the city.</p>
<p>‘And the old parchment said that if we
didn’t behave well our bodies would grow like
our souls. But we didn’t think so. And then
all in a minute they <em>did</em>—and we were crows,
and our bodies were as black as our souls.
Our souls are quite white now,’ it added
reassuringly.</p>
<p>‘But what was <em>the</em> dreadful thing you’d
done?’</p>
<p>‘We’d been unkind to the people who
worked for us—not given them enough food or
clothes or fire, and at last we took away even
their play. There was a big park that the
people played in, and we built a wall round it
and took it for ourselves, and the King was
going to set a statue of himself up in the middle.
And then before we could begin to enjoy it we
were turned into big black crows; and the
working people into big white pigeons—and
<em>they</em> can go where they like, but we have to
stay here till we’ve tamed the…. We never
can go into the park, until we’ve settled the
thing that guards it. And that thing’s a big
big lizard—in fact … it’s a <em>dragon</em>!’</p>
<p>‘<em>Oh!</em>’ cried Elsie; but she was not as
frightened as the Crow seemed to expect.
<SPAN name="png.233" id="png.233"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>Because every now and then she had felt sure
that she was really safe in her own bed, and
that this was a dream. It was not a dream, but
the belief that it was made her very brave,
and she felt quite sure that she could settle
a dragon, if necessary—a dream dragon, that
is. And the rest of the time she thought
about Foxe’s Book of Martyrs and what a
heroine she now had the chance to be.</p>
<p>‘You want me to kill it?’ she asked.</p>
<p>‘Oh no! To tame it,’ said the Crow.</p>
<p>‘We’ve tried all sorts of means—long whips,
like people tame horses with, and red-hot bars,
such as lion-tamers use—and it’s all been perfectly
useless; and there the dragon lives, and
will live till some one can tame him and get
him to follow them like a tame fawn, and eat
out of their hand.’</p>
<p>‘What does the dragon <em>like</em> to eat?’ Elsie
asked.</p>
<p>‘<em>Crows</em>,’ replied the other in an uncomfortable
whisper. ‘At least <em>I’ve</em> never known it
eat anything else!’</p>
<p>‘Am I to try to tame it <em>now</em>?’ Elsie asked.</p>
<p>‘Oh dear no,’ said the Crow. ‘We’ll have
a banquet in your honour, and you shall have
tea with the Princess.’</p>
<p>‘How do you know who is a princess and
who’s not, if you’re all crows?’ Elsie cried.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.234" id="png.234"></SPAN>‘How do you know one human being from
another?’ the Crow replied. ‘Besides …
Come on to the Palace.’</p>
<p>It led her along the terrace, and down some
marble steps to a small arched door. ‘The
tradesmen’s entrance,’ it explained. ‘Excuse
it—the courtiers are crowding in by the front
door.’ Then through long corridors and passages
they went, and at last into the throne-room.
Many crows stood about in respectful
attitudes. On the golden throne, leaning a
gloomy head upon the first joint of his right
wing, the Sovereign of Crownowland was
musing dejectedly. A little girl of about
Elsie’s age sat on the steps of the throne nursing
a handsome doll.</p>
<p>‘Who is the little girl?’ Elsie asked.</p>
<p>‘<em>Curtsey!</em> That’s the Princess,’ the Prime
Minister Crow whispered; and Elsie made the
best curtsey she could think of in such a hurry.
‘She wasn’t wicked enough to be turned into a
crow, or poor enough to be turned into a pigeon,
so she remains a dear little girl, just as she
always was.’</p>
<p>The Princess dropped her doll and ran down
the steps of the throne to meet Elsie.</p>
<p>‘You dear!’ she said. ‘You’ve come to
play with me, haven’t you? All the little girls
I used to play with have turned into crows, and
<SPAN name="png.235" id="png.235"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>their beaks are <em>so</em> awkward at doll’s tea-parties,
and wings are no good to nurse dollies with.
Let’s have a doll’s tea-party <em>now</em>, shall we?’</p>
<p>‘May we?’ Elsie looked at the Crow King,
who nodded his head hopelessly. So, hand in
hand, they went.</p>
<p>I wonder whether you have ever had the
run of a perfectly beautiful palace and a nursery
absolutely crammed with all the toys you ever
had or wanted to have: dolls’ houses, dolls’
china tea-sets, rocking-horses, bricks, nine-pins,
paint-boxes, conjuring tricks, pewter dinner-services,
and any number of dolls—all most
agreeable and distinguished. If you have, you
may perhaps be able faintly to imagine Elsie’s
happiness. And better than all the toys was
the Princess Perdona—so gentle and kind and
jolly, full of ideas for games, and surrounded by
the means for playing them. Think of it, after
that bare attic, with not even a bit of string to
play with, and no company but the poor little
dead mouse!</p>
<p>There is no room in this story to tell you
of all the games they had. I can only say
that the time went by so quickly that they
never noticed it going, and were amazed when
the Crown nursemaid brought in the royal
tea-tray. Tea was a beautiful meal—with pink
iced cake in it.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.236" id="png.236"></SPAN>Now, all the time that these glorious games
had been going on, and this magnificent tea,
the wisest crows of Crownowland had been
holding a council. They had decided that
there was no time like the present, and that
Elsie had better try to tame the dragon soon
as late. ‘But,’ the King said, ‘she mustn’t
run any risks. A guard of fifty stalwart crows
must go with her, and if the dragon shows the
least temper, fifty crows must throw themselves
between her and danger, even if it cost fifty-one
crow-lives. For I myself will lead that
band. Who will volunteer?’</p>
<p>Volunteers, to the number of some thousands,
instantly stepped forward, and the Field
Marshal selected fifty of the strongest crows.</p>
<p>And then, in the pleasant pinkness of the
sunset, Elsie was led out on to the palace
steps, where the King made a speech and said
what a heroine she was, and how like Joan of
Arc. And the crows who had gathered from
all parts of the town cheered madly. Did you
ever hear crows cheering? It is a wonderful
sound.</p>
<p>Then Elsie got into a magnificent gilt coach,
drawn by eight white horses, with a crow at
the head of each horse. The Princess sat
with her on the blue velvet cushions and held
her hand.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.237" id="png.237"></SPAN>‘I <em>know</em> you’ll do it,’ said she; ‘you’re so
brave and clever, Elsie!’</p>
<p>And Elsie felt braver than before, although
now it did not seem so like a dream. But she
thought of the martyrs, and held Perdona’s
hand very tight.</p>
<p>At the gates of the green park the Princess
kissed and hugged her new friend—her state
crown, which she had put on in honour of the
occasion, got pushed quite on one side in the
warmth of her embrace—and Elsie stepped
out of the carriage. There was a great crowd
of crows round the park gates, and every one
cheered and shouted ‘Speech, speech!’</p>
<p>Elsie got as far as ‘Ladies and gentlemen—Crows,
I mean,’ and then she could not
think of anything more, so she simply added,
‘Please, I’m ready.’</p>
<p>I wish you could have heard those crows
cheer.</p>
<p>But Elsie wouldn’t have the escort.</p>
<p>‘It’s very kind,’ she said, ‘but the dragon
only eats crows, and I’m not a crow, thank
goodness—I mean I’m not a crow—and if
I’ve got to be brave I’d like to <em>be</em> brave, and
none of you to get eaten. If only some one
will come with me to show me the way and
then run back as hard as he can when we get
near the dragon. <em>Please!</em>’</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.238" id="png.238"></SPAN>‘If only one goes <em>I</em> shall be the one,’ said
the King. And he and Elsie went through
the great gates side by side. She held the
end of his wing, which was the nearest they
could get to hand in hand.</p>
<p>The crowd outside waited in breathless
silence. Elsie and the King went on through
the winding paths of the People’s Park. And
by the winding paths they came at last to the
Dragon. He lay very peacefully on a great
stone slab, his enormous bat-like wings spread
out on the grass and his goldy-green scales
glittering in the pretty pink sunset light.</p>
<p>‘Go back!’ said Elsie.</p>
<p>‘No,’ said the King.</p>
<p>‘If you don’t,’ said Elsie, ‘<em>I</em> won’t go <em>on</em>.
Seeing a crow might rouse him to fury, or
give him an appetite, or something. Do—do
go!’</p>
<p>So he went, but not far. He hid behind a
tree, and from its shelter he watched.</p>
<p>Elsie drew a long breath. Her heart was
thumping under the black frock. ‘Suppose,’
she thought, ‘he takes me for a crow!’ But
she thought how yellow her hair was, and
decided that the dragon would be certain to
notice that.</p>
<p>‘Quick march!’ she said to herself, ‘remember
Joan of Arc,’ and walked right up to
<SPAN name="png.239" id="png.239"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>the dragon. It never moved, but watched her
suspiciously out of its bright green eyes.</p>
<p>‘Dragon dear!’ she said in her clear little
voice.</p>
<p>‘<em>Eh?</em>’ said the dragon, in tones of extreme
astonishment.</p>
<p>‘Dragon dear,’ she repeated, ‘do you like
sugar?’</p>
<p>‘<em>Yes</em>,’ said the dragon.</p>
<p>‘Well, I’ve brought you some. You won’t
hurt me if I bring it to you?’</p>
<p>The dragon violently shook its vast head.</p>
<p>‘It’s not much,’ said Elsie, ‘but I saved it
at tea-time. Four lumps. Two for each of
my mugs of milk.’</p>
<p>She laid the sugar on the stone slab by the
dragon’s paw.</p>
<p>It turned its head towards the sugar. The
pinky sunset light fell on its face, and Elsie
saw that it was weeping! Great fat tears as
big as prize pears were coursing down its
wrinkled cheeks.</p>
<p>‘Oh, don’t,’ said Elsie, ‘<em>don’t</em> cry! Poor
dragon, what’s the matter?’</p>
<p>‘Oh!’ sobbed the dragon, ‘I’m only so glad
you’ve come. I—I’ve been so lonely. No
one to love me. You <em>do</em> love me, don’t you?’</p>
<p>‘I—I’m sure I shall when I know you
better,’ said Elsie kindly.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.240" id="png.240"></SPAN>‘Give me a kiss, dear,’ said the dragon,
sniffing.</p>
<p>It is no joke to kiss a dragon. But Elsie
did it—somewhere on the hard green wrinkles
of its forehead.</p>
<p>‘Oh, <em>thank</em> you,’ said the dragon, brushing
away its tears with the tip of its tail. ‘That
breaks the charm. I can move now. And
I’ve got back all my lost wisdom. Come along—I
<em>do</em> want my tea!’</p>
<p>So, to the waiting crowd at the gate came
Elsie and the dragon side by side. And at
sight of the dragon, tamed, a great shout went
up from the crowd; and at that shout each
one in the crowd turned quickly to the next
one—for it was the shout of men, and not of
crows. Because at the first sight of the dragon,
tamed, they had left off being crows for ever
and ever, and once again were men.</p>
<p>The King came running through the gates,
his royal robes held high, so that he shouldn’t
trip over them, and he too was no longer a
crow, but a man.</p>
<p>And what did Elsie feel after being so
brave? Well, she felt that she would like to
cry, and also to laugh, and she felt that she
loved not only the dragon, but every man,
woman, and child in the whole world—even
Mrs. Staines.</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.241" id="png.241"></SPAN>She rode back to the Palace on the dragon’s
back.</p>
<p>And as they went the crowd of citizens who
had been crows met the crowd of citizens who
had been pigeons, and these were poor men
in poor clothes.</p>
<p>It would have done you good to see how the
ones who had been rich and crows ran to meet
the ones who had been pigeons and poor.</p>
<p>‘Come and stay at my house, brother,’ they
cried to those who had no homes. ‘Brother, I
have many coats, come and choose some,’ they
cried to the ragged. ‘Come and feast with
me!’ they cried to all. And the rich and the
poor went off arm in arm to feast and be glad
that night, and the next day to work side by
side. ‘For,’ said the King, speaking with his
hand on the neck of the tamed dragon, ‘our
land has been called Crownowland. But we are
no longer crows. We are men: and we will be
Just men. And our country shall be called
Justnowland for ever and ever. And for the
future we shall not be rich and poor, but fellow-workers,
and each will do his best for his
brothers and his own city. And your King
shall be your servant!’</p>
<p>I don’t know how they managed this, but
no one seemed to think that there would be
any difficulty about it when the King
<SPAN name="png.242" id="png.242"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>mentioned it; and when people really make up
their minds to do anything, difficulties do most
oddly disappear.</p>
<p>Wonderful rejoicings there were. The
city was hung with flags and lamps. Bands
played—the performers a little out of practice,
because, of course, crows can’t play the flute or
the violin or the trombone—but the effect was
very gay indeed. Then came the time—it was
quite dark—when the King rose up on his
throne and spoke; and Elsie, among all her
new friends, listened with them to his words.</p>
<p>‘Our deliverer Elsie,’ he said, ‘was brought
hither by the good magic of our Chief Mage
and Prime Minister. She has removed the enchantment
that held us; and the dragon, now
that he has had his tea and recovered from the
shock of being kindly treated, turns out to be
the second strongest magician in the world,—and
he will help us and advise us, so long as
we remember that we are all brothers and
fellow-workers. And now comes the time
when our Elsie must return to her own place,
or another go in her stead. But we cannot
send back our heroine, our deliverer.’ (<i>Long,
loud cheering.</i>) ‘So one shall take her place.
My <span class="nw">daughter——’</span></p>
<p>The end of the sentence was lost in shouts
of admiration. But Elsie stood up, small and
<SPAN name="png.243" id="png.243"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>white in her black frock, and said, ‘No thank
you. Perdona would simply hate it. And she
doesn’t know my daddy. He’ll fetch me away
from Mrs. Staines some day….’</p>
<p>The thought of her daddy, far away in India,
of the loneliness of Willow Farm, where now it
would be night in that horrible bare attic where
the poor dead untameable little mouse was,
nearly choked Elsie. It was so bright and
light and good and kind here. And India was
so far away. Her voice stayed a moment on a
broken note.</p>
<p>‘I—I….’ Then she spoke firmly.</p>
<p>‘Thank you all so much,’ she said—‘so very
much. I do love you all, and it’s lovely here.
But, please, I’d like to go home now.’</p>
<p>The Prime Minister, in a silence full of love
and understanding, folded his dark cloak round
her.</p>
<div class="blockq fivestar">* * * * *</div>
<p>It was dark in the attic. Elsie crouching
alone in the blackness by the fireplace where
the dead mouse had been, put out her hand to
touch its cold fur.</p>
<div class="blockq fivestar">* * * * *</div>
<p>There were wheels on the gravel outside—the
knocker swung strongly—‘<em>Rat</em>-tat-tat-tat—<em>Tat</em>!
<em>Tat</em>!’ A pause—voices—hasty feet in
strong boots sounded on the stairs, the key
<SPAN name="png.244" id="png.244"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>turned in the lock. The door opened a dazzling
crack, then fully, to the glare of a lamp carried
by Mrs. Staines.</p>
<p>‘Come down at once. I’m sure you’re good
now,’ she said, in a great hurry and in a new
honeyed voice.</p>
<p>But there were other feet on the stairs—a
step that Elsie knew. ‘Where’s my girl?’ the
voice she knew cried cheerfully. But under the
cheerfulness Elsie heard something other and
dearer. ‘Where’s my girl?’</p>
<p>After all, it takes less than a month to come
from India to the house in England where one’s
heart is.</p>
<p class="pgbrk">Out of the bare attic and the darkness Elsie
leapt into light, into arms she knew. ‘Oh, my
daddy, my daddy!’ she cried. ‘How glad I
am I came back!’</p>
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