<h3><SPAN name="ch_8" id="ch_8"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
<h4>STEPPED OUT OF THE FRAME.</h4>
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<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="quote">
<tr><td align="left">"And, even as one on household stairs,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Who meets an angel unawares,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Might hold his breath; in silent awe</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> We stood."</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>We saw very little
of grandpapa
during this visit,
and not as much
of Mr. Truro as
we would have
liked. For it was
some very bothering
time about government things, and
everybody that had to do with them
was very busy. We came in to dessert, as
we always did, and grandpapa was kind in
his own way. He seemed pleased that we
were such good friends with Mr. Truro. I
remember he said something to him about
his having done already what <i>he</i>—grandpapa—had
not been able to do himself—"gained
our hearts," or something like that.
And Mr. Truro answered. "You could if
you would, sir, or probably you <i>have</i> if you
would but think so." But grandpapa only
shook his head, though he smiled a little in
a nice way.</p>
<p>And then they began talking again about
all the papers and writings they had to do,
and we got tired of sitting still, and fidgeted
with the wine glasses and things on the
table, so that grandpapa told us we had
better go to bed.</p>
<p>The next day, Sunday, was pouring wet.</p>
<p>We didn't see either grandpapa or our
cousin till we were sitting in church. We
had come with nurse in the one-horse fly,
which knew it always had to come for us
on wet Sundays, and we didn't hear
anything of the two gentlemen. We
couldn't bear the long drive in the stuffy
fly, and we did not like the church, for
the clergyman was old, and mumbled his
words, and the music wasn't nice nor
anything else.</p>
<p>"If we might only go to the pretty
church in the village!" we whispered to
each other, as we whispered every Sunday.
For this about the church was the thing
we disliked at Rosebuds, and at Ansdell
we loved going to church. It was so nice;
beautiful hummy music and lovely singing,
and all so pretty. And the clergyman with
a nice clear voice, and not too long
sermons. And—perhaps you will be shocked
at this—everybody at Ansdell knew us,
and there was always a little sort of rustle
when we went in, and I could almost hear
the school-girls talking in whispers about
"our young ladies' hats;" and if we
happened to see one of them we knew,
and gave her a little nod and smile, she
looked as proud as proud! It was just as
different as could be from this ugly, stupid
little church that grandpapa had taken it
into his head to make us go to here, and
we were very pleased when we saw Mr.
Truro coming up the aisle after grandpapa,
both of them looking so nice and grand,
even though in a way we felt ashamed for
our cousin to see what an ugly little church
it was.</p>
<p>"He'll see for himself," I whispered to
Tib, "and perhaps he'll say something to
grandpapa."</p>
<p>For we were beginning to think of Mr.
Truro as a sort of good fairy who was to
put everything right.</p>
<p>Grandpapa and he had driven over in
the dog-cart of course; they didn't mind
the rain, though I'm sure <i>we</i> didn't mind
it either, for that matter—we should only
have been too happy to drive over in the
dog-cart under waterproofs and mackintoshes;
and when we were getting into the
fly after church, Gerald looked so woebegone,
that Mr. Truro took pity on him,
and picked him out again.</p>
<p>"I'll find a corner for you where you
shan't get wet," he said, in his nice, bright
way.</p>
<p>Lucky Gerald! we heard him chattering
as he went off in Mr. Truro's arms. "You
know it <i>is</i> worstest for me, isn't it? for I'm
only seven, and it does make my head
ache so."</p>
<p>I suppose he had—what is it you call
it?—squeams of conscience, is that the word?
I must ask Re—oh, how stupid I am! that
it was selfish of him to desert us. He
always takes refuge in his being the
youngest and "only seven," as it was <i>then</i>,
when he is afraid he is going to be blamed.</p>
<p>But, after all, it was a good deal better
in the fly without him. Nurse doesn't
think it rude of us to whisper when we are
alone with her, so Tib and I could say anything
we liked to each other all the way
home, without Gerald's rosy round face
poking in between us every moment to
say, "<i>What</i> did you say, Tib?" "I can't
hear, Gussie!"</p>
<p>What we did keep saying to each other
was mostly about Mr. Truro. What was he
going to fix we should do? Would he
"think it over" till he found out we should
tell grandpapa at once; and if grandpapa
were worried, and said in a hurry we must
never go to our palace any more, how
horrible it would be!</p>
<p>"I don't <i>think</i> he will," said Tib. "He's
so very understanding. If he could only
see the place himself, he would quite understand
that we can't get any harm there, or
do any mischief."</p>
<p>"Yes," I said, "I wish we could have
shown it him. Besides, if he's our cousin,
and has heard about 'Reginas,' he <i>might</i>
find out something about our princess."</p>
<p>But Tib didn't care about this idea.</p>
<p>"I don't want it spoilt," she said; "I've
got used to her being just our princess, and
to there being a mystery. I don't want to
undo it."</p>
<p>It didn't look very like undoing it. We
never saw Mr. Truro all that afternoon, and
it was one of the longest I ever remember.
It cleared up about tea-time, and we went
three times round the lawn, on the gravel
path, of course, and we saw grandpapa at
the drawing-room window, which he had
thrown open for some air, as we came in,
and he asked us if we had seen Mr. Truro.
And when we said no, he turned away,
saying, rather crossly, "I wish he'd be
quick; I'm sure it's not a very tempting day
for a long walk," and Tib and I rather
agreed with Gerald that we shouldn't much
care to be grandpapa's "Scretchetary."</p>
<p>But late that evening—near bed-time it
was—we heard a quick step coming to the
schoolroom door.</p>
<p>"May I come in?" said Mr. Truro's
voice.</p>
<p>We all jumped up to welcome him, and
nurse discreetly retired.</p>
<p>"I can't stay long, dears," he said, "and
we are off first thing to-morrow morning.
But listen; I don't think you need speak to
your grandfather about your discovery just
now. Wait till he comes back the next
time, a fortnight hence. I shall come with
him, and he will not then be nearly so busy.
I have satisfied myself that you cannot
come to any harm in your palace, and I am
sure you will do no mischief there."</p>
<p>"No; and <i>perhaps</i> grandpapa knew of
it—what do you think?—the day he said
we might go through the door in the wall
if we could. And he only forbade us
making friends with people."</p>
<p>"Not with portraits," said Mr. Truro,
with a smile. "Well, good-bye, my dear
little cousins. I can't tell you how pleased
I am to have made friends with you."</p>
<p>He stooped and kissed us all, hurriedly,
for we heard doors opening, and a voice in
the distance, which we were quite sure was
grandpapa's, "Where is Mr. Truro?" and
then he was gone, and we didn't see him
again the next morning.</p>
<p>It almost seemed like a dream his having
been at Rosebuds at all, especially when we
again found ourselves in the saloon that
afternoon, our dear princess smiling down
at us as usual.</p>
<p>"You don't know, princess, what a nice
new cousin we have got," we said to her, for
we had got into the way of telling her
everything that interested us; "I'm sure
you'd like him, and I'm sure he'd like <i>you</i>,"
Tib went on, and we really could have
fancied the sweet, proud face gave a little
amused smile. "I think he was very sorry
not to come to see you, but perhaps he will
the next time he's here."</p>
<p>Then we went on with some of our usual
plays, and we were as happy as could be.
It seemed somehow a good long while since
we had been in the palace, though in reality
it was only three days, and we were
tempted to stay a little later than usual.
But just as we were thinking we must go,
a rather queer thing happened. You remember
my telling you that the other door
of the saloon, the real big door, which must
have been the regular way of coming into
the room from the rest of the house—if
there was a house—I don't think we had
really ever thought seriously if there was a
house, or if the saloon was a sort of pavilion
in a garden all by itself—well, this door
was locked, firmly locked; we had tried it
two or three times, but it was quite fast.
Not stuck or stiff, or anything like that,
but quite locked. But this day, just as we
were coming away, we heard a little, very
little, faint squeak, like some one trying to
open or shut a door very, very softly, and
looking at the big heavy gilt handles—it
was a double door, with two sets of
handles and all that, you understand—we
distinctly saw one of them turn,
and then all was quiet and motionless
again.</p>
<p>We looked at each other, and then we all
darted forward—I think it <i>was</i> rather brave
of us—and seized <i>the</i> handle. It turned
certainly, easily enough, as door handles
generally do, but that was all. The door
didn't open; it was as firmly fastened as
before.</p>
<p>"If we hadn't <i>all</i> seen it," said Tib, "I
should have thought it was fancy."</p>
<p>But we were satisfied that it wasn't.</p>
<p>"Whoever turned the handle must have
locked the door again on the other side as
quick as thought," I said. "They must
have been peeping in at us without our
hearing, and then when they heard the
squeak the handle made as they were
closing the door again, they must have
quietly locked it, expecting us to come to see
who was there. I wonder who it was!"</p>
<p>We all wondered, but in vain.</p>
<p>"It <i>may</i> have only been the person who
comes in to dust," said Tib; "there
must be such a person, unless the princess
herself comes out of her frame in the
night to do it. Only if it were that
person, most likely she'd have come
in and asked us who we were, and
what business we had there; it's very
queer."</p>
<p>We decided when we went home that the
next day we should make our way in as
quietly as we possibly could, so that if any
one were there, they shouldn't hear us in
time to run away.</p>
<p>"And we'll sit quite still all the afternoon,"
said Gerald; "we won't make the
least bit of noise, so that they'll think we're
not there, and then they'll come straight
in."</p>
<p>"They must have known we were there
to-day; it's not likely they'll come straight
in if they don't want us to see them," said
Tib. "I can't make it out; whoever they
are, they've more right there than we have.
I think the only way is to take our
books to-day and sit quietly reading; and
we had better hide ourselves as much as we
can, so that we shouldn't be seen all at
once."</p>
<p>"Aren't you at all frightened?" said
Gerald. "S'pose it was some kind of robbers?"</p>
<p>"Nonsense," said I. "Mr. Truro said
he was satisfied we couldn't come to any
harm there: I believe what he said.
I'm not going to be frightened—are you
Tib?"</p>
<p>"N—no. I don't think so," she
replied, rather doubtfully. "Any way,
I shouldn't at all like never to go there
again."</p>
<p>But we all three did feel very excited the
next afternoon, and I think all our hearts
were beating a good deal faster than usual
as we noiselessly made our way out of
the conservatory and along the passage
now so familiar to us, through the little
anteroom, and then, as quietly as possible,
opened the door into the saloon.
And then—</p>
<p>You know, I dare say—big people must
know all about these things better than
children—how <i>very</i> quickly thoughts, or
feelings, or something not exactly either—since
I wrote that, a big person has told
me that the word that best says what I
mean is <i>impressions</i>: I am not sure that
it says it to me; but that is, perhaps,
because I have never thought of the word
in that way before—You must know
how <i>very</i> quickly one seems to know a
thing sometimes, before there could have
been time, even, to get to know it by any
regular way of hearing or seeing. Well,
that was how it was with us that day.
The very instant the door opened we knew
there was something different in the room—it
seemed warmer, more alive, there was
more feeling in it; and yet it was darker
than we had ever seen it before—at least,
that end of the room where our princess
was had got into the shade somehow. <i>Her</i>
face was not the first thing that caught
our eyes, as it usually was; or <i>was</i> it her
face?</p>
<ANTIMG class="figleft" src="images/img200b.jpg" height-obs="400" alt="THERE SHE STOOD" />
<p>I dare say you will think us too silly
when I tell you that for about half a
second we <i>did</i> think the princess had
really stepped down out of the frame. It
was <i>so</i> like her. There she stood, quite
still, but smiling at us as if she had expected
us. Her hair was dark—like Tib's
and like the picture's—her eyes just the
same as both of theirs; but she was far,
far prettier than
either! She was
dressed in something
white, and
there was some
pink about it,
too; and
though of
course it
wasn't
really
made the
same way
as the
dress in
the picture,
it
was like
enough to give a confused feeling at the first
of being the same. And she was standing
a little in the same way, and a hat—a
black hat with drooping feathers—was slung
on her arm.</p>
<p>We three just stood and gaped, and
stared as if our eyes would come out of our
heads. And she stood, still smiling, but
perfectly motionless.</p>
<p>Gerald was the first to come to his senses.
He ran forward a little towards the end of
the room where the portrait was—it was
still there; it was only that one of the
blinds had been drawn down so as to cast it
into shade—and glancing up at the wall, he
called out,</p>
<p>"It's still there—it isn't <i>it</i>. It's another
princess."</p>
<p>And at his words a peal of laughter—not
very loud, but such pretty clear
laughter, I wish you could hear it!—rang
through the room, and the new
princess, the living, moving princess,
came forward to us, holding out her
hands.</p>
<p>"So you have come at last," she said;
"I expected you this morning. I knew
you heard me at the door yesterday, and I
thought your curiosity would bring you
early."</p>
<p>I didn't quite like her calling us "curious."
It wasn't quite the right word to use for all
our pretty fancies about the princess, and
even about the mystery.</p>
<p>"We never can come in the morning,"
I said, "because of our lessons. And—it
wasn't <i>curiosity</i>."</p>
<p>"Indeed!" she replied, a tiny little bit
mockingly; "not curiosity. What shall I
call it, then, your inquiring minds, eh?"</p>
<p>I felt my face get red, and I felt that
Tib's was getting red too.</p>
<p>"I don't know who you are," I burst out,
"and if you don't choose to tell us, I am
not going to ask. <i>That</i> isn't curiosity. But
I wish you hadn't come; you've spoilt it
all. Our own princess," and I glanced up
at the portrait, looking, I could not but
confess, like a washed-out doll beside the
brilliant living beauty of the girl beside us,
"our own princess is much nicer than you.
And if we had been so curious we might
have tried to find out things in pokey
ways. We've never done that."</p>
<p>I looked, I suppose ready to cry. The
lady's face changed, and then I knew that
while she had been talking in that half
teasing way, something in her voice and
smile had reminded me of grandpapa—of
grandpapa, I mean, when he was in that
sort of laughing-at-us way that we couldn't
bear. Perhaps this had made us all feel
more vexed at her than she really deserved
us to be. But when her face changed, and
a soft, sorry look came over it, she reminded
me of <i>more</i> than any real face I had ever
seen—she reminded me of all the prettiest
and nicest fancies I had ever had; the
sweet look in her eyes was <i>so</i> sweet, that
I wished I might put my arms round her
and kiss her. And Tib told me afterwards
that she had felt exactly the same.</p>
<p>"I'm very sorry," she said, simply; "I
didn't come here to hurt your feelings.
Good fairies never do that, unless to very
naughty children, whose feelings need to
be hurt. And yours don't need to be hurt,
for I know you're not naughty children—very
far from it. Of course you wouldn't
try to find out things in any way that
wasn't nice, I know that. But wouldn't you
like to know my name?"</p>
<p>"If you like to tell it," we said, smiling
up at her.</p>
<p>"Or would you rather count me a sort of
a fairy?" she went on.</p>
<p>"<i>Are</i> you one?" said Gerald, softly
stroking the pretty soft stuff of which her
dress was made.</p>
<p>"Perhaps," she said, smiling again. "I
shouldn't wonder if you could decide that
better than I can. Try to find out—think
of some things I couldn't know unless I were
a fairy."</p>
<p>"I know," said Gerald; "<i>our</i> names.
You <i>couldn't</i> know them if you weren't a
fairy, or—or if perhaps you knowed some
fairies who had told you them," he added,
getting a little muddled.</p>
<p>"If I had a fairy godmother, for instance,
who had told me them," she said.</p>
<p>"Yes—that might be it," said Gerald.</p>
<p>"Well, then—dear me, I mustn't make
any mistake, or my godmother would be
very angry, after all her teaching," she said,
pretending to look very trying-to-remember,
like Gerald when he stops at "eight times
nine," and screws up his mouth and knits
his brows. "Well, to begin with, the
eldest. This is Tib—but her real name is
Mercedes Regina; this is Gustava; and this
is Gerald Charles. And Gustava is generally
called 'Gussie.' Now, have I said my
lesson rightly?"</p>
<p>We all stared at her.</p>
<p>"You must be a fairy," said Gerald. But
Tib and I felt too puzzled to say anything.</p>
<p>"What shall we call you?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Anything you like. I've got a lot of
names. One of them, curious to say, is the
same as the name scribbled on the portrait
just above the name of the painter. Did
you ever notice it?"</p>
<p>"Do you mean the same name as Tib's
second one?" I asked; "Regina?"</p>
<p>The young lady nodded her head.</p>
<p>"That's very funny," we said. "That's
the name in the book in London too."</p>
<p>"What book?" she asked, quickly.</p>
<p>I hesitated a moment. Then I thought
as I had said so much it would be stupid
not to explain. So I told her. She looked
sad and thoughtful as she listened.</p>
<p>"It was scored out, you said?" she
asked.</p>
<p>"Yes, with a thick black stroke, as
if somebody had been very angry when
they did it," I said. "If we hadn't
known the name, from its being Tib's,
I don't think we could ever have made
it out."</p>
<p>"Ah," said the young lady, and it sounded
like a sigh. But in a moment she smiled
again.</p>
<p>"I didn't come here to make you sad,"
she said. "Won't you tell me about
the games you play, and let me play
with you. Perhaps my fairy godmother
has taught me some that you
don't know and that you would like to
learn."</p>
<p>But we didn't feel quite ready for playing
games yet. There were two or three things
on our minds. The new princess saw that
we looked uncertain.</p>
<p>"What is it?" she said. "You look as
if you were afraid of me."</p>
<p>"No," said Tib, and "No," said I. "It
isn't that, but there are some things we
want to ask you."</p>
<p>"Ask them. I won't call you curious, I
prom<span class="nowrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>But just that moment a bell rang—not
loudly, but she heard it at once, and
started up. She had been sitting on one of
the old couches, with us all about her. "I
must go," she said. "Come to-morrow and
I will tell you all I can. Good-bye; good-bye
till to-morrow," and in half an instant—I
never saw any one move so quick—she
had gone. We heard a key turn in the
lock of the double door outside, and that
was all!</p>
<p>We looked at each other again without
speaking. Surely she must be a fairy of
some kind, after all!</p>
<p> </p>
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