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There was a little break in Betty's voice; she slid down from her corner, and rolled over on the floor, her face hidden from the others.
Then in a second she called out, 'I see a mouse! Let us catch him!'
The children were on their feet directly, and a regular scramble ensued, Betty the most boisterous of them all. And when nurse came in a little later, she found the little story-teller in the act of crawling across the oaken beam in the centre of the room, to the intense delight of those watching her below.
Nurse caught her breath at the daring feat, but waited till she had accomplished it in safety, then caught her in her arms, and taking her off, gave her a good whipping, and Betty's spirits totally subsided for the rest of the evening.
CHAPTER IV
Adventures
The visit to the wood came off the day after. Nurse arrayed all her little charges in large holland overalls, and sent them out into the fields for the afternoon. And the little party set out in good spirits, Bobby and Billy tramping st.u.r.dily along, under the firm conviction that they were going to meet with wild beasts, and go through the most harrowing adventures.
It was a long walk, but they reached it at last, and came to a standstill when they saw the ditch and the thick hedge that surrounded it.
'There's a castle and a princess inside, so they don't like people to come in,' a.s.serted Douglas; 'but we'll find a hole somewhere and creep through.'
And this was soon done. The children looked round them with delight at the little winding paths, the banks of green moss, and the thick overhanging bushes and trees, that seemed so full of life and interest.
Douglas was in his element.
'We'll find a place we must call home first, and then we'll see what food we've got.'
The foot of an old oak tree was chosen. Bits of cake, pudding, some biscuits, and a few lumps of sugar were then produced from different pockets, and these were given over to Douglas, who, wrapping them in paper, deposited them inside the hollow trunk of the tree.
'Now,' he said, 'we must all divide, and go in search for adventures; and when we've found them, we can come back and tell the others here, and then we'll have a feast.'
'And if we don't find any?' questioned Betty doubtfully.
'Then you must go on till you do. Why, of course a wood is full of dangers. I mean to have an _awful_ time. We must go two and two; Molly and I will take this path, and the twins can take that one, and you, Betty, must go by yourself, because you're the odd one.'
'I always have to go alone,' murmured Betty; 'it isn't fair.'
Bobby and Billy stood clasping each other's hands, and looking with anxious though determined faces along the path mapped out for them.
'And if we should meet a cwocodile?' Billy asked, lifting his blue eyes to those of his big brother.
'Then you must either kill it or run away,' said Douglas. 'And crocodiles don't live in woods.'
'And if we lose ourselves in the wood?' questioned Bobby.
'If you're frightened, you needn't go, but stay here till we come back,'
put in Molly, her conscience a little uneasy with turning such little fellows loose on their own resources.
But this gave the twins courage. Frightened! Not a bit of it! And they trotted off, calling out they were going to kill every one they met.
Betty likewise started on her journey. She was feeling rather depressed with the truth of which she was always being reminded--namely, that she was the odd one.
'I wish there had just been one more of us,' she kept saying to herself; 'I'm either one too many or one too few, and it's very dull to be always alone.'
But her thoughts soon left herself when she saw some rabbits scudding away in the distance; and the flowers on her path, and the strangeness of her surroundings, were quite enough to occupy her mind. She soon found that her path was coming to an end; right across it was some fine wire netting, and for a moment she hesitated, then, deciding to go straight on, clambered over it with great difficulty. The gra.s.s was smoother here, and the path a wide one; a little distance farther was an iron seat, and then she came to a long, straight gra.s.s walk, with trees on either side, and at the end a gate, in an old stone wall.
'I shall have to get through that gate,' she mused, 'or else I must climb the wall. I wonder what is inside! It might be anything--a castle, with an ogre or giant, or a prince and princess--and I can't go back till I find out. My adventures have come. But I'm very tired. I'll just sit down for a little before I go on.'
A few moments after Betty's little body was lying full length on the gra.s.sy path, and she was counting over a cl.u.s.ter of primroses with great care and precision.
'Twenty-one, twenty-two, twenty-three--ah, what a pity! there is a little odd one, just like me!'
'What are you doing, child?'
Betty started to her feet. Looking down upon her was a tall old lady, dressed in a shady straw hat and black lace shawl; her black silk dress rustled as she moved. One hand was resting on a stick, the other was holding a sunshade. Her face was as still and cold-looking as some of the figures on the monuments in the little village church, and her voice stern and peremptory.
Wild thoughts flashed through Betty's brain. Was this a fairy G.o.dmother, a queen, a princess? Or might it possibly be the old governess that Mr.
Roper loved so much?
Again the question was repeated, in the same stern tone, and Betty gazed up in awe, as she answered simply,--
'I was counting the primroses, to see if they were even or odd.'
'And what business have you to be trespa.s.sing in my private grounds?'
'I didn't know this was trespa.s.sing,' Betty faltered; 'a wood belongs to anybody in the country, and I haven't got inside your gate yet, though I was going to try.'
'And pray what were you coming inside my gate to do?'
'I'm--I'm looking for adventures; I have to do something before I go back.'
'I think you had better explain to me who you are.'
The voice was gentler, and Betty took courage. The lady listened to her attentively, and seemed interested; she even smiled when Betty, looking up, asked innocently, 'I suppose you are not a princess, are you?'
'No, I'm not a princess,' she said; 'but this is a private wood, and I cannot allow children to run wild all over it.'
'And mustn't we ever come here again?' asked Betty, with a grave face.
'We should be ever so careful, and we won't pick a flower if you'll only let us walk about. We've never seen a wood before, only read about one in our story-books; and children always go through woods in books without being stopped, unless it's an ogre or a giant that stops them.'
The lady did not speak for a minute, then she said,--
'How many are there of you?'
'Five with me; there's Molly and Douglas, and there's Bobby and Billy--I'm the odd one.'
'Why should you be the odd one?'
'Because Molly and Douglas are the eldest ones, and they always go together, and Bobby and Billy are the babies. Mother always calls them the babies, and I come in between, and I belong to no one. You see, in our games it's generally two and two; I always make everything odd, and Molly and Douglas are always having secrets, and that only leaves me the babies to play with, and they're only just four years old--much too small for me.'
'I suppose you have a doll or something to comfort yourself with? I remember I used to when I was a little girl.'