<h3><SPAN name="ch_6" id="ch_6"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
<h4>OPEN, SESAME.</h4>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="quote">
<tr><td align="left">"I know thee not; but well my heart</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Interprets, darling, what thou art;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Light of some old ancestral hall,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Queen-gem of some proud coronal!</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> For, certes, such a perfect grace,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Such lustrous loveliness of face,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Such artless majesty as thine</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Proclaims thee of no sordid line!"</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right"><span class="ind2"> </span><i>The Unknown Portrait</i>—<span class="smallcaps">Sir Noel Paton.</span></td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>There was time
the next morning,
before Mr.
Markham came,
for coaxing a little
oil out of Mrs. Munt,
and fetching a feather
from the poultry-yard,
but for no more.
For Mrs. Munt, kind
as she was, very naturally objected to
giving us the oil in one of the best tea-cups,
which Gerald had brought for the
purpose, thinking it must be "an old
one," which it was indeed, though not in
his sense of the word. So Tib ran off to
the princess's tower for one of the doll ones,
and Gerald and I went in the other
direction for a long feather. And by the
time that we were ready for operations, it
was within a quarter of an hour of lessons,
and being rather sensible children in some
ways—we had early learnt experience and
responsibility in our own affairs, having no
one to advise or arrange for us in such
matters—we decided it was better to wait
till we were sure of plenty of, and uninterrupted,
time.</p>
<p>"You see, if Fanny came shouting for us
just as we had got into the tool-house, she
might see it, and it would be no longer a
private place of our own; we must keep it
quite for our own," I said.</p>
<p>"<i>Certainly</i>," said Tib. "You know I
asked grandpapa about it, and he didn't
seem to mind."</p>
<p>But lessons that morning did go very
slowly. Once or twice Mr. Markham had
to call us to attention, and there was even
a slight threat on his part of "extra work
to be done for to-morrow," if the rest of
our preparation should not prove better
done. It was not the fault of the preparation—which
had been done as well as
usual—it was that our heads were all agog
over the tool-house! But we pulled up
after this, and things ended fairly well.</p>
<p>And at last—though not till after our
dinner, for we were never allowed more
than "a run," and that well within view of
the schoolroom window, between lessons
and dinner—we found ourselves again in
safety before the door in the wall—oil-cup
and feather in hand.</p>
<p>We set to work methodically—with the
help of nurse's largest scissors and a
skewer—how Gerald had got the skewer I
don't know: we raked out all the little bits
of dirt and rubbish that had collected in
the lock; then we oiled it as thoroughly as
we knew how, though under the circumstances
this was certainly a process of
working in the dark. Then we carefully
inserted the key—it went in to perfection,
but we all looked at each other, and grew
hot with excitement when it came to the
moment for trying to turn it.</p>
<p>Tib as the eldest had the first try—a
barren honour; she hurt her hands over
it, but it would not move—not a hair's
breadth! Then it came to me. I have
larger hands than Tib, and stronger
muscles; I fancy I set to work in a more
business-like manner. With me the key
turned—with groans and grunts, it must
be allowed—but still it turned—half-way!
then I too looked blank. Fortunately it
did not refuse to turn back again, and then
I took it out and looked at it reproachfully.</p>
<p>Gerald laid hands on it. It was <i>his</i> turn,
but what I had failed in, it was not likely
his little, fat, stumpy paws would achieve.
But Gerald is sharp in some ways. He
first examined the key all over. Then he
took up the oily feather again.</p>
<p>"See here," he said, "some parts of the
key are quite oily, but some, inside, are
quite dry. We should have oiled the key
as well as the lock."</p>
<p>He was right; his small grasp did what
ours had failed in. Grunting and groaning
still, but forced to obey, the old key woke
from its sleep of thirty or forty years and
did the work it was made for. And in
another minute we had tugged at the door
till it moved on its rusty hinges—you will
understand afterwards how they came to be
no rustier—slowly opening and revealed—</p>
<p>What did it reveal? For a few minutes
we were too dazzled to tell—really dazzled—as
well as amazed. A perfect flood of light
seemed to pour out upon us, and instead of
the dingy, musty tool-house we had been
expecting, we found ourselves standing at
what at first sight appeared like the entrance
to some fairy palace of brightness and brilliance.
We stood, dazed, rubbing our eyes
and looking at each other. <i>Was</i> it magic?
Had we chanced upon some such wonder of
old world times as our little heads were
stuffed with? Tib—and Gerald too, perhaps—would
have been ready to believe it. Had
the door there and then shut upon us, leaving
us but the remembrance of the vision,
they would have lived upon beautiful fancies
for the rest of their lives. But I—practical
I—did not long stand bewildered. A slight
creak of the door brought me back to common-place.</p>
<p>"Come inside, quick!" I said, pulling at
the others—we were all huddled together
on the steps—"shut the door, or else some
one will see the light through the trees,"
for I have told you how <i>very</i> dark the
tangle is, even on a bright day. "Stay—dare
we shut the door? Is there a keyhole
on the inside? Oh, yes; and not rusty at
all," and quick as thought I drew the key
out and fitted it in to the other side; it
turned now with ease. "That's right;"
and before Tib or Gerald had found out for
certain whether they were awake or dreaming,
we were all three safe inside the enchanted
palace, at liberty to look about us
and find out where we really were.</p>
<p>I feel in a way sorry to explain it. But
this is not a fairy story; and in the end I
think you will allow, when you have come to
know the whole, that it <i>is</i> very interesting,
perhaps more interesting than a fairy story
after all. So I will go on without leaving
you in perplexity any more.</p>
<p>The place where we found ourselves was
a conservatory: it was prettily built in a
high, round-roofed sort of way, so as to
catch all the light and sun-heat possible.
It was, to begin with, a very bright afternoon;
then the shrubbery on our side was
<i>very</i> dark; high up in the conservatory
there was a band of coloured glass, rich red,
and little bits of every colour at the edge,
like a strip of rainbow, through which the
light came in gleams of all sorts of beautiful
tints. You can easily see how startlingly
brilliant it had seemed to us; and besides
this, the conservatory itself was not at all in
a neglected state. There were few <i>pots</i> of
flowers; the shelves were mostly empty;
but there were plants growing in earth
borders along the sides, which were evidently
cared for, as they twined up the walls luxuriantly.
And the whole place was heated,
though not very much. <i>That</i>, you see, was
how the door and the lock remained in such
good condition.</p>
<p>We found out all these particulars for
ourselves by degrees; and gradually we
noticed other things. The conservatory
had evidently, at some time or other, been
a favourite place to sit in. There was a
little <i>very</i> old and shaky rustic table, and
two or three seats to match; there was a
little corner shelf on which still lay two or
three old books. After we had got over
our first surprise, we were conscious of
something about the whole place which
made the tears come to our eyes. But our
spirits soon rose again.</p>
<p>"<i>What</i> a bower for the princess!" exclaimed
Tib.</p>
<p>I felt quite out of patience with her.</p>
<p>"Rubbish!" I said, "I can't think any
more of the princess or any make-up things.
This is <i>far</i> more interesting. I want to
find out all about what place it is, and why
it is shut up and deserted, as it evidently
is."</p>
<p>"Perhaps it's been shut up for hundreds
of years," suggested Gerald.</p>
<p>"<i>That's</i> rubbish, if you like," answered
Tib. "It doesn't look as if anybody lived
here, but it's not dirty—scarcely even dusty."</p>
<p>"There must be some other way of getting
into it besides our door, then," I said,
"for certainly the <i>door</i> hasn't been opened
for a great many years. If we look about,
perhaps we'll find some other entrance."</p>
<p>At first sight there was no appearance of
any, and we began to think the conservatory
must, after all, belong to Rosebuds, and that
from time to time the gardener <i>did</i> open the
door and get in to clean it. Only why, then,
was it always locked up? Just as we were
feeling quite puzzled, Gerald called out—</p>
<p>"Oh! see here, Tib and Gussie, this is
another door—here in the glass; here's a
handle that turns. Why, see, it's a door
made of looking-glass!"</p>
<p>That was why we had not noticed it. It
was cleverly managed to imitate panes, like
the rest of the conservatory, and it was
somewhat in the shade in one corner. There
was no lock to this door; it opened at once,
and before us we saw a long, rather narrow,
covered passage, lighted by a skylight roof. It
was all growing more and more mysterious;
half frightened, but too eager and curious
to think of being afraid, on we ran. The
passage ended in a short flight of steps, at
the top of which was another door, a regular
proper door this time, with a handle and a
lock, but no key in the lock.</p>
<p>"Oh! supposing it's locked," I cried,
excitedly; "it will be too bad. We can't
find out any more."</p>
<p>But it wasn't. The key, as we afterwards
found, was inside, and not turned in the
lock. They were evidently not very afraid
of robbers. All the years the house had
stood empty, no one had ever broken into
it; we were the first intruders.</p>
<p>We pressed forward. First we found
ourselves in a sort of little ante-room, very
small, hardly bigger than a closet, and out
of this, through another door, opened a
very large and handsome drawing-room.
It had a row of windows at one side looking
out upon a terrace, and a large bow window
at one end, with closely-drawn blinds—we
could not see what it looked on to; the floor
was of beautifully polished wood, inlaid in
a pattern such as you see more often in
French houses than in English ones; the
two mantelpieces were very high, and beautifully
carved, and from the centre of the
ceiling hung an immense gilt and crystal
chandelier, covered up in muslin. There
was not much furniture in the room, and
what there was looked stiff and cold: two
or three great cabinets against the walls,
and some gilt consol-tables, and in one
corner a group of sofas, and chairs, and
arm-chairs all drawn together, and all in
white linen covers. Everything was handsome,
and stately, and melancholy; the
very feeling of the room told you it
had not been really lived in for many
a day.</p>
<p>But the one thing which caught our
attention was a life-size portrait hanging
at the end of the room opposite the bow
window. It was the only picture of any
kind, and even though we were ignorant
children, we could see in a moment that it
was a very beautiful one. It represented a
young girl, richly dressed in the fashion of
a hundred years ago or more, with long-waisted
bodice, and skirt of white satin,
looped up over an under-one of rose-coloured
brocade. She was standing on a
terrace—this very terrace we afterwards
found—her hat hanging on her arm, and a
greyhound beside her. It was all pretty
much the same as one often sees in portraits
of that time, but her face was <i>so</i> charming!
And immediately we saw it, both Gerald
and I exclaimed—</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/img145.jpg" height-obs="400" alt="LOOKING AT THE PORTRAIT" />
<p>"Oh, Tib, she is exactly like you!" and
going close to examine it more particularly,
I saw some letters in one corner, and, to
my immense surprise, they were those of
the name scored out in the old book,
"Ornaments Discovered," and of Tib's
second name also—"Regina." The initials
of the artist—"L.K.," I think—were there
also.</p>
<p>"It is my name," said Tib, opening her
eyes in astonishment; "how very strange!
Can it be the picture of some great-great-grandmother
of ours, I wonder?
But this is not grandpapa's house.
How could any portrait of our family
be here?"</p>
<p>We were completely puzzled, but, children-like,
we did not think very much more about
it. It was such fun to slide up and down
the polished floor, or to climb over among
the shrouded chairs and sofas, and make
ourselves a comfortable nest among them.
For it was plain that our discoveries were
not to go further—the large double doors
of this drawing-room were securely locked
from the outside.</p>
<p>We went close up to this door, putting
our ears to the keyhole even, and listened,
but not the least sound was to be heard.</p>
<p>"The house must be shut up," I said.
"There is certainly no one moving about
in it."</p>
<p>"Perhaps it is enchanted," said Gerald,
in an awe-struck tone. "Perhaps that lady
is <i>really</i> alive, and the fairies have fastened
her up into that picture till—till—" and he
hesitated; his imagination had come to an
end of its flight.</p>
<p>Tib and I looked at each other without
speaking. We did not snub Gerald as we
often did for such speeches—somehow it
didn't seem so very impossible! Everything
was so strange; the room itself so
unlike anything we had ever seen, the
mysterious way into it, the silence and
desertedness, yet the signs of care; above
all, the portrait so wonderfully like Tib, and
actually bearing her name. There was no
explaining it by anything we could think
of or imagine.</p>
<p>"We may as well use it all to make a
play of," said Tib, at last, returning to her
favourite idea. "We can pretend that the
lady in the portrait <i>is</i> the princess something,
as Gerald says. Yes, it would be
still nicer to make her be enchanted instead
of only shut up, and then, Gussie, you
must help me to plan how she's to be got
out."</p>
<p>"But, Tib," I said, "do you think we can
come here again? Don't you think grandpapa
would mind, after all he said to us
about not making friends, or going into any
houses in the village?"</p>
<p>"And are we making friends?" said Tib.
"Unless the portrait comes out of its
frame some day, and begins talking to
us, there's certainly nobody else to talk
to here."</p>
<p>"Do you think there's nobody living in
the house?" I said, doubtfully.</p>
<p>"I'm sure there's not. Most likely some
one comes to dust it every now and then."</p>
<p>"And don't you remember," said Gerald,
"that last Sunday I asked grandpapa if we
might come through the door in the wall if
we <i>could</i>, and he said 'yes'? P'r'aps he
knew about this place, and didn't mind if
we did come here to play."</p>
<p>"Perhaps," I said; "anyway we can ask
him the next time he comes."</p>
<p>"We needn't say anything about it to
Mrs. Munt, or nurse," said Tib, decidedly.
"As long as we haven't been told <i>not</i> to
come, we're not disobeying, and it's much
nicer not to ask any one but grandpapa
himself."</p>
<p>With that I quite agreed, especially as I
felt sure grandpapa himself would like
it better. We knew we were doing no
mischief; there was nobody to speak to, as
Tib had said, so we felt quite at ease, and
spent a most agreeable afternoon. When
we had examined everything there was in
the big drawing-room, or saloon, as Tib
preferred to call it—and that did not take
us very long; there were no curiosities or
small ornaments about, as in the Rosebuds
drawing-room—we began to plan again
about our play story. We arranged it most
beautifully, and the portrait was a great
help, for it almost gave us another actor, as
we could always pretend it was the princess,
when Tib was wanted for another person.
And it was such a wonderfully life-like
picture—you could really have fancied its
expression changed as we talked to it.</p>
<p>But at last we began to get frightened
that we should be missed at home if we
stayed any longer.</p>
<p>"We must go, Gussie," said Tib, "let us
all say good-night to the princess. It is
sad to leave you alone here, princess," she
went on, turning to the portrait, and
speaking in the tone of one of the ladies in
the play, who were going to help her to
escape, "but, alas, there is no other way to
do. If we stayed longer we should only be
suspected of plotting, so we must resign
ourselves."</p>
<p>"And I dare say you're pretty well
accustomed to being left alone by this time.
You must be nearly a hundred years old,
though you look so young," said Gerald, as
he bowed to her. I could not help laughing,
though Tib was rather vexed.</p>
<p>"I wish you wouldn't think it clever to
turn everything into ridicule, Gerald," but he
looked up with such a surprised face that
we saw he hadn't been in fun at all.</p>
<p>"There's one thing we'd better do if we
want ever to get in here again," I said.
"We must hide the key of the door leading
from the passage. I dare say the person
who comes to dust will never notice it's
not there. They can't be in the habit of
locking it regularly; but it's as well to
hide it," and so saying, I took the key out
of the lock and slipped it inside a drawer
of one of the big cabinets, where it may be
lying still, for all I know (I must look, by
the by: writing this all out has reminded
me of several things I had forgotten).</p>
<p>Then we closed the door carefully and
ran down the passage to the conservatory
again, where we found everything just as
we had left it—<i>our</i> key, as we called it,
sticking in the lock inside. It was still
rather stiff to turn—and the next morning
we oiled it again—but we managed to unlock
it, and then to lock the door again on
the outside.</p>
<p>And Gerald ran off with the key to hide
it again in the summer-house; only we
wrapped it up in paper before burying it in
the fir dust.</p>
<p>"Who would have thought," said Tib,
as we ran in, "who <i>could</i> have thought,
what we should find this afternoon?"</p>
<p>But our surprises, as you shall hear, were
not yet at an end.</p>
<p> </p>
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