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<h2> CHAPTER XIX. BY WAY OF THE STARS </h2>
<p>But for two of us the adventures of the night were not yet over. Silence
settled down over the old house—the eerie, whisperful, creeping
silence of night. Felix and Dan were already sound asleep; I was drifting
near the coast o' dreams when I was aroused by a light tap on the door.</p>
<p>"Bev, are you asleep?" came in the Story Girl's whisper.</p>
<p>"No, what is it?"</p>
<p>"S-s-h. Get up and dress and come out. I want you."</p>
<p>With a good deal of curiosity and some misgiving I obeyed. What was in the
wind now? Outside in the hall I found the Story Girl, with a candle in her
hand, and her hat and jacket.</p>
<p>"Where are you going?" I whispered in amazement.</p>
<p>"Hush. I've got to go to the school and you must come with me. I left my
coral necklace there. The clasp came loose and I was so afraid I'd lose it
that I took it off and put it in the bookcase. I was feeling so upset when
the concert was over that I forgot all about it."</p>
<p>The coral necklace was a very handsome one which had belonged to the Story
Girl's mother. She had never been permitted to wear it before, and it had
only been by dint of much coaxing that she had induced Aunt Janet to let
her wear it to the concert.</p>
<p>"But there's no sense in going for it in the dead of night," I objected.
"It will be quite safe. You can go for it in the morning."</p>
<p>"Lizzie Paxton and her daughter are going to clean the school tomorrow,
and I heard Lizzie say tonight she meant to be at it by five o'clock to
get through before the heat of the day. You know perfectly well what Liz
Paxton's reputation is. If she finds that necklace I'll never see it
again. Besides, if I wait till the morning, Aunt Janet may find out that I
left it there and she'd never let me wear it again. No, I'm going for it
now. If you're afraid," added the Story Girl with delicate scorn, "of
course you needn't come."</p>
<p>Afraid! I'd show her!</p>
<p>"Come on," I said.</p>
<p>We slipped out of the house noiselessly and found ourselves in the
unutterable solemnity and strangeness of a dark night. It was a new
experience, and our hearts thrilled and our nerves tingled to the charm of
it. Never had we been abroad before at such an hour. The world around us
was not the world of daylight. 'Twas an alien place, full of weird,
evasive enchantment and magicry.</p>
<p>Only in the country can one become truly acquainted with the night. There
it has the solemn calm of the infinite. The dim wide fields lie in
silence, wrapped in the holy mystery of darkness. A wind, loosened from
wild places far away, steals out to blow over dewy, star-lit, immemorial
hills. The air in the pastures is sweet with the hush of dreams, and one
may rest here like a child on its mother's breast.</p>
<p>"Isn't it wonderful?" breathed the Story Girl as we went down the long
hill. "Do you know, I can forgive Sara Ray now. I thought tonight I never
could—but now it doesn't matter any more. I can even see how funny
it was. Oh, wasn't it funny? 'DEAD' in that squeaky little voice of
Sara's! I'll just behave to her tomorrow as if nothing had happened. It
seems so long ago now, here in the night."</p>
<p>Neither of us ever forgot the subtle delight of that stolen walk. A spell
of glamour was over us. The breezes whispered strange secrets of
elf-haunted glens, and the hollows where the ferns grew were brimmed with
mystery and romance. Ghostlike scents crept out of the meadows to meet us,
and the fir wood before we came to the church was a living sweetness of
Junebells growing in abundance.</p>
<p>Junebells have another and more scientific name, of course. But who could
desire a better name than Junebells? They are so perfect in their way that
they seem to epitomize the very scent and charm of the forest, as if the
old wood's daintiest thoughts had materialized in blossom; and not all the
roses by Bendameer's stream are as fragrant as a shallow sheet of
Junebells under the boughs of fir.</p>
<p>There were fireflies abroad that night, too, increasing the gramarye of
it. There is certainly something a little supernatural about fireflies.
Nobody pretends to understand them. They are akin to the tribes of fairy,
survivals of the elder time when the woods and hills swarmed with the
little green folk. It is still very easy to believe in fairies when you
see those goblin lanterns glimmering among the fir tassels.</p>
<p>"Isn't it beautiful?" said the Story Girl in rapture. "I wouldn't have
missed it for anything. I'm glad I left my necklace. And I am glad you are
with me, Bev. The others wouldn't understand so well. I like you because I
don't have to talk to you all the time. It's so nice to walk with someone
you don't have to talk to. Here is the graveyard. Are you frightened to
pass it, Bev?"</p>
<p>"No, I don't think I'm frightened," I answered slowly, "but I have a queer
feeling."</p>
<p>"So have I. But it isn't fear. I don't know what it is. I feel as if
something was reaching out of the graveyard to hold me—something
that wanted life—I don't like it—let's hurry. But isn't it
strange to think of all the dead people in there who were once alive like
you and me. I don't feel as if I could EVER die. Do you?"</p>
<p>"No, but everybody must. Of course we go on living afterwards, just the
same. Don't let's talk of such things here," I said hurriedly.</p>
<p>When we reached the school I contrived to open a window. We scrambled in,
lighted a lamp and found the missing necklace. The Story Girl stood on the
platform and gave an imitation of the catastrophe of the evening that made
me shout with laughter. We prowled around for sheer delight over being
there at an unearthly hour when everybody supposed we were sound asleep in
our beds. It was with regret that we left, and we walked home as slowly as
we could to prolong the adventure.</p>
<p>"Let's never tell anyone," said the Story Girl, as we reached home. "Let's
just have it as a secret between us for ever and ever—something that
nobody else knows a thing about but you and me."</p>
<p>"We'd better keep it a secret from Aunt Janet anyhow," I whispered,
laughing. "She'd think we were both crazy."</p>
<p>"It's real jolly to be crazy once in a while," said the Story Girl.</p>
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