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THE SECRET GARDEN BY FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT
Author of
"The Shuttle," "The Making of a
Marchioness," "The Methods of Lady Walderhurst,"
"The Lass o' Lowries," "Through One Administration,"
"Little Lord Fauntleroy," "A Lady of Quality," etc.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER TITLE
I THERE IS NO ONE LEFT
II MISTRESS MARY QUITE
CONTRARY
III ACROSS THE MOOR
IV MARTHA
V THE CRY IN THE CORRIDOR
VI "THERE WAS SOME ONE
CRYING--THERE WAS!"
VII THE KEY TO THE GARDEN
VIII THE ROBIN WHO SHOWED THE
WAY
IX THE STRANGEST HOUSE ANY ONE
EVER LIVED IN
X DICKON
XI THE NEST OF THE MISSEL
THRUSH
XII "MIGHT I HAVE A BIT OF
EARTH?"
XIII "I AM COLIN"
XIV A YOUNG RAJAH XV NEST
BUILDING
XVI "I WON'T!" SAID
MARY
XVII A TANTRUM
XVIII "THA' MUNNOT WASTE NO
TIME"
XIX "IT HAS
COME!"
XX "I SHALL LIVE
FOREVER--AND EVER--AND EVER!"
XXI BEN WEATHERSTAFF
XXII WHEN THE SUN WENT
DOWN
XXIII MAGIC
XIV "LET THEM
LAUGH"
XXV THE CURTAIN
XXVI "IT'S
MOTHER!"
XXVII IN THE GARDEN
THE SECRET GARDEN BY FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT
CHAPTER I
THERE IS NO ONE LEFT
When Mary Lennox was sent to Misselthwaite Manor
to live with her uncle everybody said she was the most
disagreeable-looking child ever seen. It was true, too. She had a little
thin face and a little thin body, thin light hair and a sour expression.
Her hair was yellow, and her face was yellow because she had been born
in India and had always been ill in one way or another. Her father had
held a position under the English Government and had always been busy
and ill himself, and her mother had been a great beauty who cared only
to go to parties and amuse herself with gay people. She had not wanted a
little girl at all, and when Mary was born she handed her over to the
care of an Ayah, who was made to understand that if she wished to please
the Mem Sahib she must keep the child out of sight as much as possible.
So when she was a sickly, fretful, ugly little baby she was kept out of
the way, and when she became a sickly, fretful, toddling thing she was
kept out of the way also. She never remembered seeing familiarly
anything but the dark faces of her Ayah and the other native servants,
and as they always obeyed her and gave her her own way in everything,
because the Mem Sahib would be angry if she was disturbed by her crying,
by the time she was six years old she was as tyrannical and selfish a
little pig as ever lived. The young English governess who came to teach
her to read and write disliked her so much that she gave up her place in
three months, and when other governesses came to try to fill it they
always went away in a shorter time than the first one. So if Mary had
not chosen to really want to know how to read books she would never have
learned her letters at all.
One frightfully hot morning, when she was about
nine years old, she awakened feeling very cross, and she became crosser
still when she saw that the servant who stood by her bedside was not her
Ayah.
"Why did you come?" she said to the
strange woman. "I will not let you stay. Send my Ayah to me."
The woman looked frightened, but she only
stammered that the Ayah could not come and when Mary threw herself into
a passion and beat and kicked her, she looked only more frightened and
repeated that it was not possible for the Ayah to come to Missie Sahib.
There was something mysterious in the air that
morning. Nothing was done in its regular order and several of the native
servants seemed missing, while those whom Mary saw slunk or hurried
about with ashy and scared faces. But no one would tell her anything and
her Ayah did not come. She was actually left alone as the morning went
on, and at last she wandered out into the garden and began to play by
herself under a tree near the veranda. She pretended that she was making
a flower-bed, and she stuck big scarlet hibiscus blossoms into little
heaps of earth, all the time growing more and more angry and muttering
to herself the things she would say and the names she would call Saidie
when she returned.
"Pig! Pig! Daughter of Pigs!" she said,
because to call a native a pig is the worst insult of all.
She was grinding her teeth and saying this over
and over again when she heard her mother come out on the veranda with
some one. She was with a fair young man and they stood talking together
in low strange voices. Mary knew the fair young man who looked like a
boy. She had heard that he was a very young officer who had just come
from England. The child stared at him, but she stared most at her
mother. She always did this when she had a chance to see her, because
the Mem Sahib--Mary used to call her that oftener than anything
else--was such a tall, slim, pretty person and wore such lovely clothes.
Her hair was like curly silk and she had a delicate little nose which
seemed to be disdaining things, and she had large laughing eyes. All her
clothes were thin and floating, and Mary said they were "full of
lace." They looked fuller of lace than ever this morning, but her
eyes were not laughing at all. They were large and scared and lifted
imploringly to the fair boy officer's face.
"Is it so very bad? Oh, is it?" Mary
heard her say.
"Awfully," the young man answered in a
trembling voice. "Awfully, Mrs. Lennox. You ought to have gone to
the hills two weeks ago."
The Mem Sahib wrung her hands.
"Oh, I know I ought!" she cried. "I
only stayed to go to that silly dinner party. What a fool I was!"
At that very moment such a loud sound of wailing
broke out from the servants' quarters that she clutched the young man's
arm, and Mary stood shivering from head to foot. The wailing grew wilder
and wilder. "What is it? What is it?" Mrs. Lennox gasped.
"Some one has died," answered the boy
officer. "You did not say it had broken out among your
servants."
"I did not know!" the Mem Sahib cried.
"Come with me! Come with me!" and she turned and ran into the
house.
After that, appalling things happened, and the
mysteriousness of the morning was explained to Mary. The cholera had
broken out in its most fatal form and people were dying like flies. The
Ayah had been taken ill in the night, and it was because she had just
died that the servants had wailed in the huts. Before the next day three
other servants were dead and others had run away in terror. There was
panic on every side, and dying people in all the bungalows.
During the confusion and bewilderment of the
second day Mary hid herself in the nursery and was forgotten by
everyone. Nobody thought of her, nobody wanted her, and strange things
happened of which she knew nothing. Mary alternately cried and slept
through the hours. She only knew that people were ill and that she heard
mysterious and frightening sounds. Once she crept into the dining-room
and found it empty, though a partly finished meal was on the table and
chairs and plates looked as if they had been hastily pushed back when
the diners rose suddenly for some reason. The child ate some fruit and
biscuits, and being thirsty she drank a glass of wine which stood nearly
filled. It was sweet, and she did not know how strong it was. Very soon
it made her intensely drowsy, and she went back to her nursery and shut
herself in again, frightened by cries she heard in the huts and by the
hurrying sound of feet. The wine made her so sleepy that she could
scarcely keep her eyes open and she lay down on her bed and knew nothing
more for a long time.
Many things happened during the hours in which she
slept so heavily, but she was not disturbed by the wails and the sound
of things being carried in and out of the bungalow.
When she awakened she lay and stared at the wall.
The house was perfectly still. She had never known it to be so silent
before. She heard neither voices nor footsteps, and wondered if
everybody had got well of the cholera and all the trouble was over. She
wondered also who would take care of her now her Ayah was dead. There
would be a new Ayah, and perhaps she would know some new stories. Mary
had been rather tired of the old ones. She did not cry because her nurse
had died. She was not an affectionate child and had never cared much for
any one. The noise and hurrying about and wailing over the cholera had
frightened her, and she had been angry because no one seemed to remember
that she was alive. Everyone was too panic-stricken to think of a little
girl no one was fond of. When people had the cholera it seemed that they
remembered nothing but themselves. But if everyone had got well again,
surely some one would remember and come to look for her.
But no one came, and as she lay waiting the house
seemed to grow more and more silent. She heard something rustling on the
matting and when she looked down she saw a little snake gliding along
and watching her with eyes like jewels. She was not frightened, because
he was a harmless little thing who would not hurt her and he seemed in a
hurry to get out of the room. He slipped under the door as she watched
him.
"How queer and quiet it is," she said.
"It sounds as if there were no one in the bungalow but me and the
snake."
Almost the next minute she heard footsteps in the
compound, and then on the veranda. They were men's footsteps, and the
men entered the bungalow and talked in low voices. No one went to meet
or speak to them and they seemed to open doors and look into rooms.
"What desolation!" she heard one voice say. "That pretty,
pretty woman! I suppose the child, too. I heard there was a child,
though no one ever saw her."
Mary was standing in the middle of the nursery
when they opened the door a few minutes later. She looked an ugly, cross
little thing and was frowning because she was beginning to be hungry and
feel disgracefully neglected. The first man who came in was a large
officer she had once seen talking to her father. He looked tired and
troubled, but when he saw her he was so startled that he almost jumped
back.
"Barney!" he cried out. "There is a
child here! A child alone! In a place like this! Mercy on us, who is
she!"
"I am Mary Lennox," the little girl
said, drawing herself up stiffly. She thought the man was very rude to
call her father's bungalow "A place like this!" "I fell
asleep when everyone had the cholera and I have only just wakened up.
Why does nobody come?"
"It is the child no one ever saw!"
exclaimed the man, turning to his companions. "She has actually
been forgotten!"
"Why was I forgotten?" Mary said,
stamping her foot. "Why does nobody come?"
The young man whose name was Barney looked at her
very sadly. Mary even thought she saw him wink his eyes as if to wink
tears away.
"Poor little kid!" he said. "There
is nobody left to come."
It was in that strange and sudden way that Mary
found out that she had neither father nor mother left; that they had
died and been carried away in the night, and that the few native
servants who had not died also had left the house as quickly as they
could get out of it, none of them even remembering that there was a
Missie Sahib. That was why the place was so quiet. It was true that
there was no one in the bungalow but herself and the little rustling
snake.
Chapter II
MISTRESS MARY QUITE CONTRARY
Mary had liked to look at her mother from a
distance and she had thought her very pretty, but as she knew very
little of her she could scarcely have been expected to love her or to
miss her very much when she was gone. She did not miss her at all, in
fact, and as she was a self-absorbed child she gave her entire thought
to herself, as she had always done. If she had been older she would no
doubt have been very anxious at being left alone in the world, but she
was very young, and as she had always been taken care of, she supposed
she always would be. What she thought was that she would like to know if
she was going to nice people, who would be polite to her and give her
her own way as her Ayah and the other native servants had done.
She knew that she was not going to stay at the
English clergyman's house where she was taken at first. She did not want
to stay. The English clergyman was poor and he had five children nearly
all the same age and they wore shabby clothes and were always quarreling
and snatching toys from each other. Mary hated their untidy bungalow and
was so disagreeable to them that after the first day or two nobody would
play with her. By the second day they had given her a nickname which
made her furious.
It was Basil who thought of it first. Basil was a
little boy with impudent blue eyes and a turned-up nose, and Mary hated
him. She was playing by herself under a tree, just as she had been
playing the day the cholera broke out. She was making heaps of earth and
paths for a garden and Basil came and stood near to watch her. Presently
he got rather interested and suddenly made a suggestion.
"Why don't you put a heap of stones there and
pretend it is a rockery?" he said. "There in the middle,"
and he leaned over her to point.
"Go away!" cried Mary. "I don't
want boys. Go away!"
For a moment Basil looked angry, and then he began
to tease. He was always teasing his sisters. He danced round and round
her and made faces and sang and laughed.
"Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your
garden grow? With silver bells, and cockle shells, And marigolds all in
a row."
He sang it until the other children heard and
laughed, too; and the crosser Mary got, the more they sang
"Mistress Mary, quite contrary"; and after that as long as she
stayed with them they called her "Mistress Mary Quite
Contrary" when they spoke of her to each other, and often when they
spoke to her.
"You are going to be sent home," Basil
said to her, "at the end of the week. And we're glad of it."
"I am glad of it, too," answered Mary.
"Where is home?"
"She doesn't know where home is!" said
Basil, with seven-year-old scorn. "It's England, of course. Our
grandmama lives there and our sister Mabel was sent to her last year.
You are not going to your grandmama. You have none. You are going to
your uncle. His name is Mr. Archibald Craven."
"I don't know anything about him,"
snapped Mary.
"I know you don't," Basil answered.
"You don't know anything. Girls never do. I heard father and mother
talking about him. He lives in a great, big, desolate old house in the
country and no one goes near him. He's so cross he won't let them, and
they wouldn't come if he would let them. He's a hunchback, and he's
horrid." "I don't believe you," said Mary; and she turned
her back and stuck her fingers in her ears, because she would not listen
any more.
But she thought over it a great deal afterward;
and when Mrs. Crawford told her that night that she was going to sail
away to England in a few days and go to her uncle, Mr. Archibald Craven,
who lived at Misselthwaite Manor, she looked so stony and stubbornly
uninterested that they did not know what to think about her. They tried
to be kind to her, but she only turned her face away when Mrs. Crawford
attempted to kiss her, and held herself stiffly when Mr. Crawford patted
her shoulder.
"She is such a plain child," Mrs.
Crawford said pityingly, afterward. "And her mother was such a
pretty creature. She had a very pretty manner, too, and Mary has the
most unattractive ways I ever saw in a child. The children call her
`Mistress Mary Quite Contrary,' and though it's naughty of them, one
can't help understanding it."
"Perhaps if her mother had carried her pretty
face and her pretty manners oftener into the nursery Mary might have
learned some pretty ways too. It is very sad, now the poor beautiful
thing is gone, to remember that many people never even knew that she had
a child at all."
"I believe she scarcely ever looked at
her," sighed Mrs. Crawford. "When her Ayah was dead there was
no one to give a thought to the little thing. Think of the servants
running away and leaving her all alone in that deserted bungalow.
Colonel McGrew said he nearly jumped out of his skin when he opened the
door and found her standing by herself in the middle of the room."
Mary made the long voyage to England under the
care of an officer's wife, who was taking her children to leave them in
a boarding-school. She was very much absorbed in her own little boy and
girl, and was rather glad to hand the child over to the woman Mr.
Archibald Craven sent to meet her, in London. The woman was his
housekeeper at Misselthwaite Manor, and her name was Mrs. Medlock. She
was a stout woman, with very red cheeks and sharp black eyes. She wore a
very purple dress, a black silk mantle with jet fringe on it and a black
bonnet with purple velvet flowers which stuck up and trembled when she
moved her head. Mary did not like her at all, but as she very seldom
liked people there was nothing remarkable in that; besides which it was
very evident Mrs. Medlock did not think much of her.
"My word! she's a plain little piece of
goods!" she said. "And we'd heard that her mother was a
beauty. She hasn't handed much of it down, has she, ma'am?"
"Perhaps she will improve as she grows older," the officer's
wife said good-naturedly. "If she were not so sallow and had a
nicer expression, her features are rather good. Children alter so
much."
"She'll have to alter a good deal,"
answered Mrs. Medlock. "And, there's nothing likely to improve
children at Misselthwaite--if you ask me!" They thought Mary was
not listening because she was standing a little apart from them at the
window of the private hotel they had gone to. She was watching the
passing buses and cabs and people, but she heard quite well and was made
very curious about her uncle and the place he lived in. What sort of a
place was it, and what would he be like? What was a hunchback? She had
never seen one. Perhaps there were none in India.
Since she had been living in other people's houses
and had had no Ayah, she had begun to feel lonely and to think queer
thoughts which were new to her. She had begun to wonder why she had
never seemed to belong to anyone even when her father and mother had
been alive. Other children seemed to belong to their fathers and
mothers, but she had never seemed to really be anyone's little girl. She
had had servants, and food and clothes, but no one had taken any notice
of her. She did not know that this was because she was a disagreeable
child; but then, of course, she did not know she was disagreeable. She
often thought that other people were, but she did not know that she was
so herself.
She thought Mrs. Medlock the most disagreeable
person she had ever seen, with her common, highly colored face and her
common fine bonnet. When the next day they set out on their journey to
Yorkshire, she walked through the station to the railway carriage with
her head up and trying to keep as far away from her as she could,
because she did not want to seem to belong to her. It would have made
her angry to think people imagined she was her little girl.
But Mrs. Medlock was not in the least disturbed by
her and her thoughts. She was the kind of woman who would "stand no
nonsense from young ones." At least, that is what she would have
said if she had been asked. She had not wanted to go to London just when
her sister Maria's daughter was going to be married, but she had a
comfortable, well paid place as housekeeper at Misselthwaite Manor and
the only way in which she could keep it was to do at once what Mr.
Archibald Craven told her to do. She never dared even to ask a question.
"Captain Lennox and his wife died of the
cholera," Mr. Craven had said in his short, cold way. "Captain
Lennox was my wife's brother and I am their daughter's guardian. The
child is to be brought here. You must go to London and bring her
yourself."
So she packed her small trunk and made the
journey.
Mary sat in her corner of the railway carriage and
looked plain and fretful. She had nothing to read or to look at, and she
had folded her thin little black-gloved hands in her lap. Her black
dress made her look yellower than ever, and her limp light hair
straggled from under her black crepe hat.
"A more marred-looking young one I never saw
in my life," Mrs. Medlock thought. (Marred is a Yorkshire word and
means spoiled and pettish.) She had never seen a child who sat so still
without doing anything; and at last she got tired of watching her and
began to talk in a brisk, hard voice.
"I suppose I may as well tell you something
about where you are going to," she said. "Do you know anything
about your uncle?"
"No," said Mary.
"Never heard your father and mother talk
about him?"
"No," said Mary frowning. She frowned
because she remembered that her father and mother had never talked to
her about anything in particular. Certainly they had never told her
things.
"Humph," muttered Mrs. Medlock, staring
at her queer, unresponsive little face. She did not say any more for a
few moments and then she began again.
"I suppose you might as well be told
something--to prepare you. You are going to a queer place."
Mary said nothing at all, and Mrs. Medlock looked
rather discomfited by her apparent indifference, but, after taking a
breath, she went on.
"Not but that it's a grand big place in a
gloomy way, and Mr. Craven's proud of it in his way--and that's gloomy
enough, too. The house is six hundred years old and it's on the edge of
the moor, and there's near a hundred rooms in it, though most of them's
shut up and locked. And there's pictures and fine old furniture and
things that's been there for ages, and there's a big park round it and
gardens and trees with branches trailing to the ground--some of
them." She paused and took another breath. "But there's
nothing else," she ended suddenly.
Mary had begun to listen in spite of herself. It
all sounded so unlike India, and anything new rather attracted her. But
she did not intend to look as if she were interested. That was one of
her unhappy, disagreeable ways. So she sat still.
"Well," said Mrs. Medlock. "What do
you think of it?"
"Nothing," she answered. "I know
nothing about such places."
That made Mrs. Medlock laugh a short sort of
laugh.
"Eh!" she said, "but you are like
an old woman. Don't you care?"
"It doesn't matter" said Mary,
"whether I care or not."
"You are right enough there," said Mrs.
Medlock. "It doesn't. What you're to be kept at Misselthwaite Manor
for I don't know, unless because it's the easiest way. He's not going to
trouble himself about you, that's sure and certain. He never troubles
himself about no one."
She stopped herself as if she had just remembered
something in time.
"He's got a crooked back," she said.
"That set him wrong. He was a sour young man and got no good of all
his money and big place till he was married."
Mary's eyes turned toward her in spite of her
intention not to seem to care. She had never thought of the hunchback's
being married and she was a trifle surprised. Mrs. Medlock saw this, and
as she was a talkative woman she continued with more interest. This was
one way of passing some of the time, at any rate.
"She was a sweet, pretty thing and he'd have
walked the world over to get her a blade o' grass she wanted. Nobody
thought she'd marry him, but she did, and people said she married him
for his money. But she didn't--she didn't," positively. "When
she died--"
Mary gave a little involuntary jump.
"Oh! did she die!" she exclaimed, quite
without meaning to. She had just remembered a French fairy story she had
once read called "Riquet a la Houppe." It had been about a
poor hunchback and a beautiful princess and it had made her suddenly
sorry for Mr. Archibald Craven.
"Yes, she died," Mrs. Medlock answered.
"And it made him queerer than ever. He cares about nobody. He won't
see people. Most of the time he goes away, and when he is at
Misselthwaite he shuts himself up in the West Wing and won't let any one
but Pitcher see him. Pitcher's an old fellow, but he took care of him
when he was a child and he knows his ways."
It sounded like something in a book and it did not
make Mary feel cheerful. A house with a hundred rooms, nearly all shut
up and with their doors locked--a house on the edge of a
moor--whatsoever a moor was--sounded dreary. A man with a crooked back
who shut himself up also! She stared out of the window with her lips
pinched together, and it seemed quite natural that the rain should have
begun to pour down in gray slanting lines and splash and stream down the
window-panes. If the pretty wife had been alive she might have made
things cheerful by being something like her own mother and by running in
and out and going to parties as she had done in frocks "full of
lace." But she was not there any more.
"You needn't expect to see him, because ten
to one you won't," said Mrs. Medlock. "And you mustn't expect
that there will be people to talk to you. You'll have to play about and
look after yourself. You'll be told what rooms you can go into and what
rooms you're to keep out of. There's gardens enough. But when you're in
the house don't go wandering and poking about. Mr. Craven won't have
it."
"I shall not want to go poking about,"
said sour little Mary and just as suddenly as she had begun to be rather
sorry for Mr. Archibald Craven she began to cease to be sorry and to
think he was unpleasant enough to deserve all that had happened to him.
And she turned her face toward the streaming panes
of the window of the railway carriage and gazed out at the gray
rain-storm which looked as if it would go on forever and ever. She
watched it so long and steadily that the grayness grew heavier and
heavier before her eyes and she fell asleep.
CHAPTER III
ACROSS THE MOOR
She slept a long time, and when she awakened Mrs.
Medlock had bought a lunchbasket at one of the stations and they had
some chicken and cold beef and bread and butter and some hot tea. The
rain seemed to be streaming down more heavily than ever and everybody in
the station wore wet and glistening waterproofs. The guard lighted the
lamps in the carriage, and Mrs. Medlock cheered up very much over her
tea and chicken and beef. She ate a great deal and afterward fell asleep
herself, and Mary sat and stared at her and watched her fine bonnet slip
on one side until she herself fell asleep once more in the corner of the
carriage, lulled by the splashing of the rain against the windows. It
was quite dark when she awakened again. The train had stopped at a
station and Mrs. Medlock was shaking her.
"You have had a sleep!" she said.
"It's time to open your eyes! We're at Thwaite Station and we've
got a long drive before us."
Mary stood up and tried to keep her eyes open
while Mrs. Medlock collected her parcels. The little girl did not offer
to help her, because in India native servants always picked up or
carried things and it seemed quite proper that other people should wait
on one.
The station was a small one and nobody but
themselves seemed to be getting out of the train. The station-master
spoke to Mrs. Medlock in a rough, good-natured way, pronouncing his
words in a queer broad fashion which Mary found out afterward was
Yorkshire.
"I see tha's got back," he said.
"An' tha's browt th' young 'un with thee."
"Aye, that's her," answered Mrs. Medlock,
speaking with a Yorkshire accent herself and jerking her head over her
shoulder toward Mary. "How's thy Missus?"
"Well enow. Th' carriage is waitin' outside
for thee."
A brougham stood on the road before the little
outside platform. Mary saw that it was a smart carriage and that it was
a smart footman who helped her in. His long waterproof coat and the
waterproof covering of his hat were shining and dripping with rain as
everything was, the burly station-master included.
When he shut the door, mounted the box with the
coachman, and they drove off, the little girl found herself seated in a
comfortably cushioned corner, but she was not inclined to go to sleep
again. She sat and looked out of the window, curious to see something of
the road over which she was being driven to the queer place Mrs. Medlock
had spoken of. She was not at all a timid child and she was not exactly
frightened, but she felt that there was no knowing what might happen in
a house with a hundred rooms nearly all shut up--a house standing on the
edge of a moor.
"What is a moor?" she said suddenly to
Mrs. Medlock.
"Look out of the window in about ten minutes
and you'll see," the woman answered. "We've got to drive five
miles across Missel Moor before we get to the Manor. You won't see much
because it's a dark night, but you can see something."
Mary asked no more questions but waited in the
darkness of her corner, keeping her eyes on the window. The carriage
lamps cast rays of light a little distance ahead of them and she caught
glimpses of the things they passed. After they had left the station they
had driven through a tiny village and she had seen whitewashed cottages
and the lights of a public house. Then they had passed a church and a
vicarage and a little shop-window or so in a cottage with toys and
sweets and odd things set our for sale. Then they were on the highroad
and she saw hedges and trees. After that there seemed nothing different
for a long time--or at least it seemed a long time to her.
At last the horses began to go more slowly, as if
they were climbing up-hill, and presently there seemed to be no more
hedges and no more trees. She could see nothing, in fact, but a dense
darkness on either side. She leaned forward and pressed her face against
the window just as the carriage gave a big jolt.
"Eh! We're on the moor now sure enough,"
said Mrs. Medlock.
The carriage lamps shed a yellow light on a
rough-looking road which seemed to be cut through bushes and low-growing
things which ended in the great expanse of dark apparently spread out
before and around them. A wind was rising and making a singular, wild,
low, rushing sound.
"It's--it's not the sea, is it?" said
Mary, looking round at her companion.
"No, not it," answered Mrs. Medlock.
"Nor it isn't fields nor mountains, it's just miles and miles and
miles of wild land that nothing grows on but heather and gorse and
broom, and nothing lives on but wild ponies and sheep."
"I feel as if it might be the sea, if there
were water on it," said Mary. "It sounds like the sea just
now."
"That's the wind blowing through the
bushes," Mrs. Medlock said. "It's a wild, dreary enough place
to my mind, though there's plenty that likes it--particularly when the
heather's in bloom."
On and on they drove through the darkness, and
though the rain stopped, the wind rushed by and whistled and made
strange sounds. The road went up and down, and several times the
carriage passed over a little bridge beneath which water rushed very
fast with a great deal of noise. Mary felt as if the drive would never
come to an end and that the wide, bleak moor was a wide expanse of black
ocean through which she was passing on a strip of dry land.
"I don't like it," she said to herself.
"I don't like it," and she pinched her thin lips more tightly
together.
The horses were climbing up a hilly piece of road
when she first caught sight of a light. Mrs. Medlock saw it as soon as
she did and drew a long sigh of relief.
"Eh, I am glad to see that bit o' light
twinkling," she exclaimed. "It's the light in the lodge
window. We shall get a good cup of tea after a bit, at all events."
It was "after a bit," as she said, for
when the carriage passed through the park gates there was still two
miles of avenue to drive through and the trees (which nearly met
overhead) made it seem as if they were driving through a long dark
vault.
They drove out of the vault into a clear space and
stopped before an immensely long but low-built house which seemed to
ramble round a stone court. At first Mary thought that there were no
lights at all in the windows, but as she got out of the carriage she saw
that one room in a corner upstairs showed a dull glow.
The entrance door was a huge one made of massive,
curiously shaped panels of oak studded with big iron nails and bound
with great iron bars. It opened into an enormous hall, which was so
dimly lighted that the faces in the portraits on the walls and the
figures in the suits of armor made Mary feel that she did not want to
look at them. As she stood on the stone floor she looked a very small,
odd little black figure, and she felt as small and lost and odd as she
looked.
A neat, thin old man stood near the manservant who
opened the door for them.
"You are to take her to her room," he
said in a husky voice. "He doesn't want to see her. He's going to
London in the morning."
"Very well, Mr. Pitcher," Mrs. Medlock
answered. "So long as I know what's expected of me, I can
manage."
"What's expected of you, Mrs. Medlock,"
Mr. Pitcher said, "is that you make sure that he's not disturbed
and that he doesn't see what he doesn't want to see."
And then Mary Lennox was led up a broad staircase
and down a long corridor and up a short flight of steps and through
another corridor and another, until a door opened in a wall and she
found herself in a room with a fire in it and a supper on a table.
Mrs. Medlock said unceremoniously:
"Well, here you are! This room and the next
are where you'll live--and you must keep to them. Don't you forget
that!"
It was in this way Mistress Mary arrived at
Misselthwaite Manor and she had perhaps never felt quite so contrary in
all her life.
CHAPTER IV
MARTHA
When she opened her eyes in the morning it was
because a young housemaid had come into her room to light the fire and
was kneeling on the hearth-rug raking out the cinders noisily. Mary lay
and watched her for a few moments and then began to look about the room.
She had never seen a room at all like it and thought it curious and
gloomy. The walls were covered with tapestry with a forest scene
embroidered on it. There were fantastically dressed people under the
trees and in the distance there was a glimpse of the turrets of a
castle. There were hunters and horses and dogs and ladies. Mary felt as
if she were in the forest with them. Out of a deep window she could see
a great climbing stretch of land which seemed to have no trees on it,
and to look rather like an endless, dull, purplish sea.
"What is that?" she said, pointing out
of the window.
Martha, the young housemaid, who had just risen to
her feet, looked and pointed also. "That there?" she said.
"Yes."
"That's th' moor," with a good-natured
grin. "Does tha' like it?"
"No," answered Mary. "I hate
it."
"That's because tha'rt not used to it,"
Martha said, going back to her hearth. "Tha' thinks it's too big
an' bare now. But tha' will like it."
"Do you?" inquired Mary.
"Aye, that I do," answered Martha,
cheerfully polishing away at the grate. "I just love it. It's none
bare. It's covered wi' growin' things as smells sweet. It's fair lovely
in spring an' summer when th' gorse an' broom an' heather's in flower.
It smells o' honey an' there's such a lot o' fresh air--an' th' sky
looks so high an' th' bees an' skylarks makes such a nice noise hummin'
an' singin'. Eh! I wouldn't live away from th' moor for anythin'."
Mary listened to her with a grave, puzzled
expression. The native servants she had been used to in India were not
in the least like this. They were obsequious and servile and did not
presume to talk to their masters as if they were their equals. They made
salaams and called them "protector of the poor" and names of
that sort. Indian servants were commanded to do things, not asked. It
was not the custom to say "please" and "thank you"
and Mary had always slapped her Ayah in the face when she was angry. She
wondered a little what this girl would do if one slapped her in the
face. She was a round, rosy, good-natured-looking creature, but she had
a sturdy way which made Mistress Mary wonder if she might not even slap
back--if the person who slapped her was only a little girl.
"You are a strange servant," she said
from her pillows, rather haughtily.
Martha sat up on her heels, with her
blacking-brush in her hand, and laughed, without seeming the least out
of temper.
"Eh! I know that," she said. "If
there was a grand Missus at Misselthwaite I should never have been even
one of th' under house-maids. I might have been let to be scullerymaid
but I'd never have been let upstairs. I'm too common an' I talk too much
Yorkshire. But this is a funny house for all it's so grand. Seems like
there's neither Master nor Mistress except Mr. Pitcher an' Mrs. Medlock.
Mr. Craven, he won't be troubled about anythin' when he's here, an' he's
nearly always away. Mrs. Medlock gave me th' place out o' kindness. She
told me she could never have done it if Misselthwaite had been like
other big houses." "Are you going to be my servant?" Mary
asked, still in her imperious little Indian way.
Martha began to rub her grate again.
"I'm Mrs. Medlock's servant," she said
stoutly. "An' she's Mr. Craven's--but I'm to do the housemaid's
work up here an' wait on you a bit. But you won't need much waitin'
on."
"Who is going to dress me?" demanded
Mary.
Martha sat up on her heels again and stared. She
spoke in broad Yorkshire in her amazement.
"Canna' tha' dress thysen!" she said.
"What do you mean? I don't understand your
language," said Mary.
"Eh! I forgot," Martha said. "Mrs.
Medlock told me I'd have to be careful or you wouldn't know what I was
sayin'. I mean can't you put on your own clothes?"
"No," answered Mary, quite indignantly.
"I never did in my life. My Ayah dressed me, of course."
"Well," said Martha, evidently not in
the least aware that she was impudent, "it's time tha' should
learn. Tha' cannot begin younger. It'll do thee good to wait on thysen a
bit. My mother always said she couldn't see why grand people's children
didn't turn out fair fools--what with nurses an' bein' washed an'
dressed an' took out to walk as if they was puppies!"
"It is different in India," said
Mistress Mary disdainfully. She could scarcely stand this.
But Martha was not at all crushed.
"Eh! I can see it's different," she
answered almost sympathetically. "I dare say it's because there's
such a lot o' blacks there instead o' respectable white people. When I
heard you was comin' from India I thought you was a black too."
Mary sat up in bed furious.
"What!" she said. "What! You
thought I was a native. You--you daughter of a pig!"
Martha stared and looked hot.
"Who are you callin' names?" she said.
"You needn't be so vexed. That's not th' way for a young lady to
talk. I've nothin' against th' blacks. When you read about 'em in tracts
they're always very religious. You always read as a black's a man an' a
brother. I've never seen a black an' I was fair pleased to think I was
goin' to see one close. When I come in to light your fire this mornin' I
crep' up to your bed an' pulled th' cover back careful to look at you.
An' there you was," disappointedly, "no more black than
me--for all you're so yeller."
Mary did not even try to control her rage and
humiliation. "You thought I was a native! You dared! You don't know
anything about natives! They are not people--they're servants who must
salaam to you. You know nothing about India. You know nothing about
anything!"
She was in such a rage and felt so helpless before
the girl's simple stare, and somehow she suddenly felt so horribly
lonely and far away from everything she understood and which understood
her, that she threw herself face downward on the pillows and burst into
passionate sobbing. She sobbed so unrestrainedly that good-natured
Yorkshire Martha was a little frightened and quite sorry for her. She
went to the bed and bent over her.
"Eh! you mustn't cry like that there!"
she begged. "You mustn't for sure. I didn't know you'd be vexed. I
don't know anythin' about anythin'--just like you said. I beg your
pardon, Miss. Do stop cryin'."
There was something comforting and really friendly
in her queer Yorkshire speech and sturdy way which had a good effect on
Mary. She gradually ceased crying and became quiet. Martha looked
relieved.
"It's time for thee to get up now," she
said. "Mrs. Medlock said I was to carry tha' breakfast an' tea an'
dinner into th' room next to this. It's been made into a nursery for
thee. I'll help thee on with thy clothes if tha'll get out o' bed. If th'
buttons are at th' back tha' cannot button them up tha'self."
When Mary at last decided to get up, the clothes
Martha took from the wardrobe were not the ones she had worn when she
arrived the night before with Mrs. Medlock.
"Those are not mine," she said.
"Mine are black."
She looked the thick white wool coat and dress
over, and added with cool approval:
"Those are nicer than mine."
"These are th' ones tha' must put on,"
Martha answered. "Mr. Craven ordered Mrs. Medlock to get 'em in
London. He said `I won't have a child dressed in black wanderin' about
like a lost soul,' he said. `It'd make the place sadder than it is. Put
color on her.' Mother she said she knew what he meant. Mother always
knows what a body means. She doesn't hold with black hersel'."
"I hate black things," said Mary.
The dressing process was one which taught them
both something. Martha had "buttoned up" her little sisters
and brothers but she had never seen a child who stood still and waited
for another person to do things for her as if she had neither hands nor
feet of her own.
"Why doesn't tha' put on tha' own
shoes?" she said when Mary quietly held out her foot.
"My Ayah did it," answered Mary,
staring. "It was the custom."
She said that very often--"It was the
custom." The native servants were always saying it. If one told
them to do a thing their ancestors had not done for a thousand years
they gazed at one mildly and said, "It is not the custom" and
one knew that was the end of the matter.
It had not been the custom that Mistress Mary
should do anything but stand and allow herself to be dressed like a
doll, but before she was ready for breakfast she began to suspect that
her life at Misselthwaite Manor would end by teaching her a number of
things quite new to her--things such as putting on her own shoes and
stockings, and picking up things she let fall. If Martha had been a
well-trained fine young lady's maid she would have been more subservient
and respectful and would have known that it was her business to brush
hair, and button boots, and pick things up and lay them away. She was,
however, only an untrained Yorkshire rustic who had been brought up in a
moorland cottage with a swarm of little brothers and sisters who had
never dreamed of doing anything but waiting on themselves and on the
younger ones who were either babies in arms or just learning to totter
about and tumble over things.
If Mary Lennox had been a child who was ready to
be amused she would perhaps have laughed at Martha's readiness to talk,
but Mary only listened to her coldly and wondered at her freedom of
manner. At first she was not at all interested, but gradually, as the
girl rattled on in her good-tempered, homely way, Mary began to notice
what she was saying.
"Eh! you should see 'em all," she said.
"There's twelve of us an' my father only gets sixteen shilling a
week. I can tell you my mother's put to it to get porridge for 'em all.
They tumble about on th' moor an' play there all day an' mother says th'
air of th' moor fattens 'em. She says she believes they eat th' grass
same as th' wild ponies do. Our Dickon, he's twelve years old and he's
got a young pony he calls his own."
"Where did he get it?" asked Mary.
"He found it on th' moor with its mother when
it was a little one an' he began to make friends with it an' give it
bits o' bread an' pluck young grass for it. And it got to like him so it
follows him about an' it lets him get on its back. Dickon's a kind lad
an' animals likes him."
Mary had never possessed an animal pet of her own
and had always thought she should like one. So she began to feel a
slight interest in Dickon, and as she had never before been interested
in any one but herself, it was the dawning of a healthy sentiment. When
she went into the room which had been made into a nursery for her, she
found that it was rather like the one she had slept in. It was not a
child's room, but a grown-up person's room, with gloomy old pictures on
the walls and heavy old oak chairs. A table in the center was set with a
good substantial breakfast. But she had always had a very small
appetite, and she looked with something more than indifference at the
first plate Martha set before her.
"I don't want it," she said.
"Tha' doesn't want thy porridge!" Martha
exclaimed incredulously.
"No."
"Tha' doesn't know how good it is. Put a bit
o' treacle on it or a bit o' sugar."
"I don't want it," repeated Mary.
"Eh!" said Martha. "I can't abide
to see good victuals go to waste. If our children was at this table
they'd clean it bare in five minutes."
"Why?" said Mary coldly.
"Why!" echoed Martha. "Because they scarce ever had their
stomachs full in their lives. They're as hungry as young hawks an'
foxes."
"I don't know what it is to be hungry,"
said Mary, with the indifference of ignorance.
Martha looked indignant.
"Well, it would do thee good to try it. I can
see that plain enough," she said outspokenly. "I've no
patience with folk as sits an' just stares at good bread an' meat. My
word! don't I wish Dickon and Phil an' Jane an' th' rest of 'em had
what's here under their pinafores."
"Why don't you take it to them?"
suggested Mary.
"It's not mine," answered Martha
stoutly. "An' this isn't my day out. I get my day out once a month
same as th' rest. Then I go home an' clean up for mother an' give her a
day's rest."
Mary drank some tea and ate a little toast and
some marmalade.
"You wrap up warm an' run out an' play
you," said Martha. "It'll do you good and give you some
stomach for your meat."
Mary went to the window. There were gardens and
paths and big trees, but everything looked dull and wintry.
"Out? Why should I go out on a day like
this?" "Well, if tha' doesn't go out tha'lt have to stay in,
an' what has tha' got to do?"
Mary glanced about her. There was nothing to do.
When Mrs. Medlock had prepared the nursery she had not thought of
amusement. Perhaps it would be better to go and see what the gardens
were like.
"Who will go with me?" she inquired.
Martha stared.
"You'll go by yourself," she answered.
"You'll have to learn to play like other children does when they
haven't got sisters and brothers. Our Dickon goes off on th' moor by
himself an' plays for hours. That's how he made friends with th' pony.
He's got sheep on th' moor that knows him, an' birds as comes an' eats
out of his hand. However little there is to eat, he always saves a bit
o' his bread to coax his pets."
It was really this mention of Dickon which made
Mary decide to go out, though she was not aware of it. There would be,
birds outside though there would not be ponies or sheep. They would be
different from the birds in India and it might amuse her to look at
them.
Martha found her coat and hat for her and a pair
of stout little boots and she showed her her way downstairs.
"If tha' goes round that way tha'll come to
th' gardens," she said, pointing to a gate in a wall of shrubbery.
"There's lots o' flowers in summer-time, but there's nothin'
bloomin' now." She seemed to hesitate a second before she added,
"One of th' gardens is locked up. No one has been in it for ten
years."
"Why?" asked Mary in spite of herself.
Here was another locked door added to the hundred in the strange house.
"Mr. Craven had it shut when his wife died so
sudden. He won't let no one go inside. It was her garden. He locked th'
door an' dug a hole and buried th' key. There's Mrs. Medlock's bell
ringing--I must run."
After she was gone Mary turned down the walk which
led to the door in the shrubbery. She could not help thinking about the
garden which no one had been into for ten years. She wondered what it
would look like and whether there were any flowers still alive in it.
When she had passed through the shrubbery gate she found herself in
great gardens, with wide lawns and winding walks with clipped borders.
There were trees, and flower-beds, and evergreens clipped into strange
shapes, and a large pool with an old gray fountain in its midst. But the
flower-beds were bare and wintry and the fountain was not playing. This
was not the garden which was shut up. How could a garden be shut up? You
could always walk into a garden.
She was just thinking this when she saw that, at
the end of the path she was following, there seemed to be a long wall,
with ivy growing over it. She was not familiar enough with England to
know that she was coming upon the kitchen-gardens where the vegetables
and fruit were growing. She went toward the wall and found that there
was a green door in the ivy, and that it stood open. This was not the
closed garden, evidently, and she could go into it.
She went through the door and found that it was a
garden with walls all round it and that it was only one of several
walled gardens which seemed to open into one another. She saw another
open green door, revealing bushes and pathways between beds containing
winter vegetables. Fruit-trees were trained flat against the wall, and
over some of the beds there were glass frames. The place was bare and
ugly enough, Mary thought, as she stood and stared about her. It might
be nicer in summer when things were green, but there was nothing pretty
about it now.
Presently an old man with a spade over his
shoulder walked through the door leading from the second garden. He
looked startled when he saw Mary, and then touched his cap. He had a
surly old face, and did not seem at all pleased to see her--but then she
was displeased with his garden and wore her "quite contrary"
expression, and certainly did not seem at all pleased to see him.
"What is this place?" she asked.
"One o' th' kitchen-gardens," he
answered.
"What is that?" said Mary, pointing
through the other green door.
"Another of 'em," shortly. "There's
another on t'other side o' th' wall an' there's th' orchard t'other side
o' that."
"Can I go in them?" asked Mary.
"If tha' likes. But there's nowt to
see."
Mary made no response. She went down the path and
through the second green door. There, she found more walls and winter
vegetables and glass frames, but in the second wall there was another
green door and it was not open. Perhaps it led into the garden which no
one had seen for ten years. As she was not at all a timid child and
always did what she wanted to do, Mary went to the green door and turned
the handle. She hoped the door would not open because she wanted to be
sure she had found the mysterious garden--but it did open quite easily
and she walked through it and found herself in an orchard. There were
walls all round it also and trees trained against them, and there were
bare fruit-trees growing in the winter-browned grass--but there was no
green door to be seen anywhere. Mary looked for it, and yet when she had
entered the upper end of the garden she had noticed that the wall did
not seem to end with the orchard but to extend beyond it as if it
enclosed a place at the other side. She could see the tops of trees
above the wall, and when she stood still she saw a bird with a bright
red breast sitting on the topmost branch of one of them, and suddenly he
burst into his winter song--almost as if he had caught sight of her and
was calling to her.
She stopped and listened to him and somehow his
cheerful, friendly little whistle gave her a pleased feeling--even a
disagreeable little girl may be lonely, and the big closed house and big
bare moor and big bare gardens had made this one feel as if there was no
one left in the world but herself. If she had been an affectionate
child, who had been used to being loved, she would have broken her
heart, but even though she was "Mistress Mary Quite Contrary"
she was desolate, and the bright-breasted little bird brought a look
into her sour little face which was almost a smile. She listened to him
until he flew away. He was not like an Indian bird and she liked him and
wondered if she should ever see him again. Perhaps he lived in the
mysterious garden and knew all about it.
Perhaps it was because she had nothing whatever to
do that she thought so much of the deserted garden. She was curious
about it and wanted to see what it was like. Why had Mr. Archibald
Craven buried the key? If he had liked his wife so much why did he hate
her garden? She wondered if she should ever see him, but she knew that
if she did she should not like him, and he would not like her, and that
she should only stand and stare at him and say nothing, though she
should be wanting dreadfully to ask him why he had done such a queer
thing.
"People never like me and I never like
people," she thought. "And I never can talk as the Crawford
children could. They were always talking and laughing and making
noises."
She thought of the robin and of the way he seemed
to sing his song at her, and as she remembered the tree-top he perched
on she stopped rather suddenly on the path.
"I believe that tree was in the secret
garden--I feel sure it was," she said. "There was a wall round
the place and there was no door."
She walked back into the first kitchen-garden she
had entered and found the old man digging there. She went and stood
beside him and watched him a few moments in her cold little way. He took
no notice of her and so at last she spoke to him.
"I have been into the other gardens,"
she said.
"There was nothin' to prevent thee," he
answered crustily.
"I went into the orchard."
"There was no dog at th' door to bite
thee," he answered.
"There was no door there into the other
garden," said Mary.
"What garden?" he said in a rough voice,
stopping his digging for a moment.
"The one on the other side of the wall,"
answered Mistress Mary. "There are trees there--I saw the tops of
them. A bird with a red breast was sitting on one of them and he
sang."
To her surprise the surly old weather-beaten face
actually changed its expression. A slow smile spread over it and the
gardener looked quite different. It made her think that it was curious
how much nicer a person looked when he smiled. She had not thought of it
before.
He turned about to the orchard side of his garden
and began to whistle--a low soft whistle. She could not understand how
such a surly man could make such a coaxing sound. Almost the next moment
a wonderful thing happened. She heard a soft little rushing flight
through the air--and it was the bird with the red breast flying to them,
and he actually alighted on the big clod of earth quite near to the
gardener's foot.
"Here he is," chuckled the old man, and
then he spoke to the bird as if he were speaking to a child.
"Where has tha' been, tha' cheeky little
beggar?" he said. "I've not seen thee before today. Has tha,
begun tha' courtin' this early in th' season? Tha'rt too forrad."
The bird put his tiny head on one side and looked
up at him with his soft bright eye which was like a black dewdrop. He
seemed quite familiar and not the least afraid. He hopped about and
pecked the earth briskly, looking for seeds and insects. It actually
gave Mary a queer feeling in her heart, because he was so pretty and
cheerful and seemed so like a person. He had a tiny plump body and a
delicate beak, and slender delicate legs.
"Will he always come when you call him?"
she asked almost in a whisper.
"Aye, that he will. I've knowed him ever
since he was a fledgling. He come out of th' nest in th' other garden
an' when first he flew over th' wall he was too weak to fly back for a
few days an' we got friendly. When he went over th' wall again th' rest
of th' brood was gone an' he was lonely an' he come back to me."
"What kind of a bird is he?" Mary asked.
"Doesn't tha' know? He's a robin redbreast
an' they're th' friendliest, curiousest birds alive. They're almost as
friendly as dogs--if you know how to get on with 'em. Watch him peckin'
about there an' lookin' round at us now an' again. He knows we're talkin'
about him."
It was the queerest thing in the world to see the
old fellow. He looked at the plump little scarlet-waistcoated bird as if
he were both proud and fond of him.
"He's a conceited one," he chuckled.
"He likes to hear folk talk about him. An' curious--bless me, there
never was his like for curiosity an' meddlin'. He's always comin' to see
what I'm plantin'. He knows all th' things Mester Craven never troubles
hissel' to find out. He's th' head gardener, he is."
The robin hopped about busily pecking the soil and
now and then stopped and looked at them a little. Mary thought his black
dewdrop eyes gazed at her with great curiosity. It really seemed as if
he were finding out all about her. The queer feeling in her heart
increased. "Where did the rest of the brood fly to?" she
asked.
"There's no knowin'. The old ones turn 'em
out o' their nest an' make 'em fly an' they're scattered before you know
it. This one was a knowin' one an, he knew he was lonely."
Mistress Mary went a step nearer to the robin and
looked at him very hard.
"I'm lonely," she said.
She had not known before that this was one of the
things which made her feel sour and cross. She seemed to find it out
when the robin looked at her and she looked at the robin.
The old gardener pushed his cap back on his bald
head and stared at her a minute.
"Art tha' th' little wench from India?"
he asked.
Mary nodded.
"Then no wonder tha'rt lonely. Tha'lt be
lonlier before tha's done," he said.
He began to dig again, driving his spade deep into
the rich black garden soil while the robin hopped about very busily
employed.
"What is your name?" Mary inquired.
He stood up to answer her.
"Ben Weatherstaff," he answered, and
then he added with a surly chuckle, "I'm lonely mysel' except when
he's with me," and he jerked his thumb toward the robin. "He's
th' only friend I've got."
"I have no friends at all," said Mary.
"I never had. My Ayah didn't like me and I never played with any
one."
It is a Yorkshire habit to say what you think with
blunt frankness, and old Ben Weatherstaff was a Yorkshire moor man.
"Tha' an' me are a good bit alike," he
said. "We was wove out of th' same cloth. We're neither of us good
lookin' an' we're both of us as sour as we look. We've got the same
nasty tempers, both of us, I'll warrant."
This was plain speaking, and Mary Lennox had never
heard the truth about herself in her life. Native servants always
salaamed and submitted to you, whatever you did. She had never thought
much about her looks, but she wondered if she was as unattractive as Ben
Weatherstaff and she also wondered if she looked as sour as he had
looked before the robin came. She actually began to wonder also if she
was "nasty tempered." She felt uncomfortable.
Suddenly a clear rippling little sound broke out
near her and she turned round. She was standing a few feet from a young
apple-tree and the robin had flown on to one of its branches and had
burst out into a scrap of a song. Ben Weatherstaff laughed outright.
"What did he do that for?" asked Mary.
"He's made up his mind to make friends with
thee," replied Ben. "Dang me if he hasn't took a fancy to
thee."
"To me?" said Mary, and she moved toward
the little tree softly and looked up.
"Would you make friends with me?" she
said to the robin just as if she was speaking to a person. "Would
you?" And she did not say it either in her hard little voice or in
her imperious Indian voice, but in a tone so soft and eager and coaxing
that Ben Weatherstaff was as surprised as she had been when she heard
him whistle.
"Why," he cried out, "tha' said
that as nice an' human as if tha' was a real child instead of a sharp
old woman. Tha' said it almost like Dickon talks to his wild things on
th' moor."
"Do you know Dickon?" Mary asked,
turning round rather in a hurry.
"Everybody knows him. Dickon's wanderin'
about everywhere. Th' very blackberries an' heather-bells knows him. I
warrant th' foxes shows him where their cubs lies an' th' skylarks
doesn't hide their nests from him."
Mary would have liked to ask some more questions.
She was almost as curious about Dickon as she was about the deserted
garden. But just that moment the robin, who had ended his song, gave a
little shake of his wings, spread them and flew away. He had made his
visit and had other things to do.
"He has flown over the wall!" Mary cried
out, watching him. "He has flown into the orchard--he has flown
across the other wall--into the garden where there is no door!"
"He lives there," said old Ben. "He
came out o' th' egg there. If he's courtin', he's makin' up to some
young madam of a robin that lives among th' old rose-trees there."
"Rose-trees," said Mary. "Are there
rose-trees?"
Ben Weatherstaff took up his spade again and began
to dig.
"There was ten year' ago," he mumbled.
"I should like to see them," said Mary.
"Where is the green door? There must be a door somewhere."
Ben drove his spade deep and looked as
uncompanionable as he had looked when she first saw him.
"There was ten year' ago, but there isn't
now," he said.
"No door!" cried Mary. "There must
be." "None as any one can find, an' none as is any one's
business. Don't you be a meddlesome wench an' poke your nose where it's
no cause to go. Here, I must go on with my work. Get you gone an' play
you. I've no more time."
And he actually stopped digging, threw his spade
over his shoulder and walked off, without even glancing at her or saying
good-by.
CHAPTER V
THE CRY IN THE CORRIDOR
At first each day which passed by for Mary Lennox
was exactly like the others. Every morning she awoke in her tapestried
room and found Martha kneeling upon the hearth building her fire; every
morning she ate her breakfast in the nursery which had nothing amusing
in it; and after each breakfast she gazed out of the window across to
the huge moor which seemed to spread out on all sides and climb up to
the sky, and after she had stared for a while she realized that if she
did not go out she would have to stay in and do nothing--and so she went
out. She did not know that this was the best thing she could have done,
and she did not know that, when she began to walk quickly or even run
along the paths and down the avenue, she was stirring her slow blood and
making herself stronger by fighting with the wind which swept down from
the moor. She ran only to make herself warm, and she hated the wind
which rushed at her face and roared and held her back as if it were some
giant she could not see. But the big breaths of rough fresh air blown
over the heather filled her lungs with something which was good for her
whole thin body and whipped some red color into her cheeks and
brightened her dull eyes when she did not know anything about it.
But after a few days spent almost entirely out of
doors she wakened one morning knowing what it was to be hungry, and when
she sat down to her breakfast she did not glance disdainfully at her
porridge and push it away, but took up her spoon and began to eat it and
went on eating it until her bowl was empty.
"Tha' got on well enough with that this
mornin', didn't tha'?" said Martha.
"It tastes nice today," said Mary,
feeling a little surprised her self.
"It's th' air of th' moor that's givin' thee
stomach for tha' victuals," answered Martha. "It's lucky for
thee that tha's got victuals as well as appetite. There's been twelve in
our cottage as had th' stomach an' nothin' to put in it. You go on
playin' you out o' doors every day an' you'll get some flesh on your
bones an' you won't be so yeller."
"I don't play," said Mary. "I have
nothing to play with."
"Nothin' to play with!" exclaimed
Martha. "Our children plays with sticks and stones. They just runs
about an' shouts an' looks at things." Mary did not shout, but she
looked at things. There was nothing else to do. She walked round and
round the gardens and wandered about the paths in the park. Sometimes
she looked for Ben Weatherstaff, but though several times she saw him at
work he was too busy to look at her or was too surly. Once when she was
walking toward him he picked up his spade and turned away as if he did
it on purpose.
One place she went to oftener than to any other.
It was the long walk outside the gardens with the walls round them.
There were bare flower-beds on either side of it and against the walls
ivy grew thickly. There was one part of the wall where the creeping dark
green leaves were more bushy than elsewhere. It seemed as if for a long
time that part had been neglected. The rest of it had been clipped and
made to look neat, but at this lower end of the walk it had not been
trimmed at all.
A few days after she had talked to Ben
Weatherstaff, Mary stopped to notice this and wondered why it was so.
She had just paused and was looking up at a long spray of ivy swinging
in the wind when she saw a gleam of scarlet and heard a brilliant chirp,
and there, on the top of the wall, forward perched Ben Weatherstaff's
robin redbreast, tilting forward to look at her with his small head on
one side.
"Oh!" she cried out, "is it you--is
it you?" And it did not seem at all queer to her that she spoke to
him as if she were sure that he would understand and answer her.
He did answer. He twittered and chirped and hopped
along the wall as if he were telling her all sorts of things. It seemed
to Mistress Mary as if she understood him, too, though he was not
speaking in words. It was as if he said:
"Good morning! Isn't the wind nice? Isn't the
sun nice? Isn't everything nice? Let us both chirp and hop and twitter.
Come on! Come on!"
Mary began to laugh, and as he hopped and took
little flights along the wall she ran after him. Poor little thin,
sallow, ugly Mary--she actually looked almost pretty for a moment.
"I like you! I like you!" she cried out,
pattering down the walk; and she chirped and tried to whistle, which
last she did not know how to do in the least. But the robin seemed to be
quite satisfied and chirped and whistled back at her. At last he spread
his wings and made a darting flight to the top of a tree, where he
perched and sang loudly. That reminded Mary of the first time she had
seen him. He had been swinging on a tree-top then and she had been
standing in the orchard. Now she was on the other side of the orchard
and standing in the path outside a wall--much lower down--and there was
the same tree inside.
"It's in the garden no one can go into,"
she said to herself. "It's the garden without a door. He lives in
there. How I wish I could see what it is like!"
She ran up the walk to the green door she had
entered the first morning. Then she ran down the path through the other
door and then into the orchard, and when she stood and looked up there
was the tree on the other side of the wall, and there was the robin just
finishing his song and, beginning to preen his feathers with his beak.
"It is the garden," she said. "I am
sure it is."
She walked round and looked closely at that side
of the orchard wall, but she only found what she had found before--that
there was no door in it. Then she ran through the kitchen-gardens again
and out into the walk outside the long ivy-covered wall, and she walked
to the end of it and looked at it, but there was no door; and then she
walked to the other end, looking again, but there was no door.
"It's very queer," she said. "Ben
Weatherstaff said there was no door and there is no door. But there must
have been one ten years ago, because Mr. Craven buried the key."
This gave her so much to think of that she began
to be quite interested and feel that she was not sorry that she had come
to Misselthwaite Manor. In India she had always felt hot and too languid
to care much about anything. The fact was that the fresh wind from the
moor had begun to blow the cobwebs out of her young brain and to waken
her up a little.
She stayed out of doors nearly all day, and when
she sat down to her supper at night she felt hungry and drowsy and
comfortable. She did not feel cross when Martha chattered away. She felt
as if she rather liked to hear her, and at last she thought she would
ask her a question. She asked it after she had finished her supper and
had sat down on the hearth-rug before the fire.
"Why did Mr. Craven hate the garden?"
she said.
She had made Martha stay with her and Martha had
not objected at all. She was very young, and used to a crowded cottage
full of brothers and sisters, and she found it dull in the great
servants' hall downstairs where the footman and upper-housemaids made
fun of her Yorkshire speech and looked upon her as a common little
thing, and sat and whispered among themselves. Martha liked to talk, and
the strange child who had lived in India, and been waited upon by
"blacks," was novelty enough to attract her.
She sat down on the hearth herself without waiting
to be asked.
"Art tha' thinkin' about that garden
yet?" she said. "I knew tha' would. That was just the way with
me when I first heard about it."
"Why did he hate it?" Mary persisted.
Martha tucked her feet under her and made herself
quite comfortable.
"Listen to th' wind wutherin' round the
house," she said. "You could bare stand up on the moor if you
was out on it tonight."
Mary did not know what "wutherin'" meant
until she listened, and then she understood. It must mean that hollow
shuddering sort of roar which rushed round and round the house as if the
giant no one could see were buffeting it and beating at the walls and
windows to try to break in. But one knew he could not get in, and
somehow it made one feel very safe and warm inside a room with a red
coal fire.
"But why did he hate it so?" she asked,
after she had listened. She intended to know if Martha did.
Then Martha gave up her store of knowledge.
"Mind," she said, "Mrs. Medlock
said it's not to be talked about. There's lots o' things in this place
that's not to be talked over. That's Mr. Craven's orders. His troubles
are none servants' business, he says. But for th' garden he wouldn't be
like he is. It was Mrs. Craven's garden that she had made when first
they were married an' she just loved it, an' they used to 'tend the
flowers themselves. An' none o' th' gardeners was ever let to go in. Him
an' her used to go in an' shut th' door an' stay there hours an' hours,
readin' and talkin'. An, she was just a bit of a girl an' there was an
old tree with a branch bent like a seat on it. An' she made roses grow
over it an' she used to sit there. But one day when she was sittin'
there th' branch broke an' she fell on th' ground an' was hurt so bad
that next day she died. Th' doctors thought he'd go out o' his mind an'
die, too. That's why he hates it. No one's never gone in since, an' he
won't let any one talk about it."
Mary did not ask any more questions. She looked at
the red fire and listened to the wind "wutherin'." It seemed
to be "wutherin'" louder than ever. At that moment a very good
thing was happening to her. Four good things had happened to her, in
fact, since she came to Misselthwaite Manor. She had felt as if she had
understood a robin and that he had understood her; she had run in the
wind until her blood had grown warm; she had been healthily hungry for
the first time in her life; and she had found out what it was to be
sorry for some one.
But as she was listening to the wind she began to
listen to something else. She did not know what it was, because at first
she could scarcely distinguish it from the wind itself. It was a curious
sound--it seemed almost as if a child were crying somewhere. Sometimes
the wind sounded rather like a child crying, but presently Mistress Mary
felt quite sure this sound was inside the house, not outside it. It was
far away, but it was inside. She turned round and looked at Martha.
"Do you hear any one crying?" she said.
Martha suddenly looked confused.
"No," she answered. "It's th' wind.
Sometimes it sounds like as if some one was lost on th' moor an' wailin'.
It's got all sorts o' sounds."
"But listen," said Mary. "It's in
the house--down one of those long corridors."
And at that very moment a door must have been
opened somewhere downstairs; for a great rushing draft blew along the
passage and the door of the room they sat in was blown open with a
crash, and as they both jumped to their feet the light was blown out and
the crying sound was swept down the far corridor so that it was to be
heard more plainly than ever.
"There!" said Mary. "I told you so!
It is some one crying--and it isn't a grown-up person."
Martha ran and shut the door and turned the key,
but before she did it they both heard the sound of a door in some far
passage shutting with a bang, and then everything was quiet, for even
the wind ceased "wutherin'" for a few moments.
"It was th' wind," said Martha
stubbornly. "An' if it wasn't, it was little Betty Butterworth, th'
scullery-maid. She's had th' toothache all day."
But something troubled and awkward in her manner
made Mistress Mary stare very hard at her. She did not believe she was
speaking the truth.
CHAPTER VI
"THERE WAS SOME ONE CRYING--THERE WAS!"
The next day the rain poured down in torrents
again, and when Mary looked out of her window the moor was almost hidden
by gray mist and cloud. There could be no going out today.
"What do you do in your cottage when it rains
like this?" she asked Martha.
"Try to keep from under each other's feet
mostly," Martha answered. "Eh! there does seem a lot of us
then. Mother's a good-tempered woman but she gets fair moithered. The
biggest ones goes out in th' cow-shed and plays there. Dickon he doesn't
mind th' wet. He goes out just th' same as if th' sun was shinin'. He
says he sees things on rainy days as doesn't show when it's fair
weather. He once found a little fox cub half drowned in its hole and he
brought it home in th' bosom of his shirt to keep it warm. Its mother
had been killed nearby an' th' hole was swum out an' th' rest o' th'
litter was dead. He's got it at home now. He found a half-drowned young
crow another time an' he brought it home, too, an' tamed it. It's named
Soot because it's so black, an' it hops an' flies about with him
everywhere."
The time had come when Mary had forgotten to
resent Martha's familiar talk. She had even begun to find it interesting
and to be sorry when she stopped or went away. The stories she had been
told by her Ayah when she lived in India had been quite unlike those
Martha had to tell about the moorland cottage which held fourteen people
who lived in four little rooms and never had quite enough to eat. The
children seemed to tumble about and amuse themselves like a litter of
rough, good-natured collie puppies. Mary was most attracted by the
mother and Dickon. When Martha told stories of what "mother"
said or did they always sounded comfortable.
"If I had a raven or a fox cub I could play
with it," said Mary. "But I have nothing."
Martha looked perplexed.
"Can tha' knit?" she asked.
"No," answered Mary.
"Can tha'sew?"
"No."
"Can tha' read?"
"Yes."
"Then why doesn't tha, read somethin', or
learn a bit o' spellin'? Tha'st old enough to be learnin' thy book a
good bit now."
"I haven't any books," said Mary.
"Those I had were left in India."
"That's a pity," said Martha. "If
Mrs. Medlock'd let thee go into th' library, there's thousands o' books
there."
Mary did not ask where the library was, because
she was suddenly inspired by a new idea. She made up her mind to go and
find it herself. She was not troubled about Mrs. Medlock. Mrs. Medlock
seemed always to be in her comfortable housekeeper's sitting-room
downstairs. In this queer place one scarcely ever saw any one at all. In
fact, there was no one to see but the servants, and when their master
was away they lived a luxurious life below stairs, where there was a
huge kitchen hung about with shining brass and pewter, and a large
servants' hall where there were four or five abundant meals eaten every
day, and where a great deal of lively romping went on when Mrs. Medlock
was out of the way.
Mary's meals were served regularly, and Martha
waited on her, but no one troubled themselves about her in the least.
Mrs. Medlock came and looked at her every day or two, but no one
inquired what she did or told her what to do. She supposed that perhaps
this was the English way of treating children. In India she had always
been attended by her Ayah, who had followed her about and waited on her,
hand and foot. She had often been tired of her company. Now she was
followed by nobody and was learning to dress herself because Martha
looked as though she thought she was silly and stupid when she wanted to
have things handed to her and put on.
"Hasn't tha' got good sense?" she said
once, when Mary had stood waiting for her to put on her gloves for her.
"Our Susan Ann is twice as sharp as thee an' she's only four year'
old. Sometimes tha' looks fair soft in th' head."
Mary had worn her contrary scowl for an hour after
that, but it made her think several entirely new things.
She stood at the window for about ten minutes this
morning after Martha had swept up the hearth for the last time and gone
downstairs. She was thinking over the new idea which had come to her
when she heard of the library. She did not care very much about the
library itself, because she had read very few books; but to hear of it
brought back to her mind the hundred rooms with closed doors. She
wondered if they were all really locked and what she would find if she
could get into any of them. Were there a hundred really? Why shouldn't
she go and see how many doors she could count? It would be something to
do on this morning when she could not go out. She had never been taught
to ask permission to do things, and she knew nothing at all about
authority, so she would not have thought it necessary to ask Mrs.
Medlock if she might walk about the house, even if she had seen her.
She opened the door of the room and went into the
corridor, and then she began her wanderings. It was a long corridor and
it branched into other corridors and it led her up short flights of
steps which mounted to others again. There were doors and doors, and
there were pictures on the walls. Sometimes they were pictures of dark,
curious landscapes, but oftenest they were portraits of men and women in
queer, grand costumes made of satin and velvet. She found herself in one
long gallery whose walls were covered with these portraits. She had
never thought there could be so many in any house. She walked slowly
down this place and stared at the faces which also seemed to stare at
her. She felt as if they were wondering what a little girl from India
was doing in their house. Some were pictures of children--little girls
in thick satin frocks which reached to their feet and stood out about
them, and boys with puffed sleeves and lace collars and long hair, or
with big ruffs around their necks. She always stopped to look at the
children, and wonder what their names were, and where they had gone, and
why they wore such odd clothes. There was a stiff, plain little girl
rather like herself. She wore a green brocade dress and held a green
parrot on her finger. Her eyes had a sharp, curious look.
"Where do you live now?" said Mary aloud
to her. "I wish you were here."
Surely no other little girl ever spent such a
queer morning. It seemed as if there was no one in all the huge rambling
house but her own small self, wandering about upstairs and down, through
narrow passages and wide ones, where it seemed to her that no one but
herself had ever walked. Since so many rooms had been built, people must
have lived in them, but it all seemed so empty that she could not quite
believe it true.
It was not until she climbed to the second floor
that she thought of turning the handle of a door. All the doors were
shut, as Mrs. Medlock had said they were, but at last she put her hand
on the handle of one of them and turned it. She was almost frightened
for a moment when she felt that it turned without difficulty and that
when she pushed upon the door itself it slowly and heavily opened. It
was a massive door and opened into a big bedroom. There were embroidered
hangings on the wall, and inlaid furniture such as she had seen in India
stood about the room. A broad window with leaded panes looked out upon
the moor; and over the mantel was another portrait of the stiff, plain
little girl who seemed to stare at her more curiously than ever.
"Perhaps she slept here once," said
Mary. "She stares at me so that she makes me feel queer."
After that she opened more doors and more. She saw
so many rooms that she became quite tired and began to think that there
must be a hundred, though she had not counted them. In all of them there
were old pictures or old tapestries with strange scenes worked on them.
There were curious pieces of furniture and curious ornaments in nearly
all of them.
In one room, which looked like a lady's
sitting-room, the hangings were all embroidered velvet, and in a cabinet
were about a hundred little elephants made of ivory. They were of
different sizes, and some had their mahouts or palanquins on their
backs. Some were much bigger than the others and some were so tiny that
they seemed only babies. Mary had seen carved ivory in India and she
knew all about elephants. She opened the door of the cabinet and stood
on a footstool and played with these for quite a long time. When she got
tired she set the elephants in order and shut the door of the cabinet.
In all her wanderings through the long corridors
and the empty rooms, she had seen nothing alive; but in this room she
saw something. Just after she had closed the cabinet door she heard a
tiny rustling sound. It made her jump and look around at the sofa by the
fireplace, from which it seemed to come. In the corner of the sofa there
was a cushion, and in the velvet which covered it there was a hole, and
out of the hole peeped a tiny head with a pair of frightened eyes in it.
Mary crept softly across the room to look. The
bright eyes belonged to a little gray mouse, and the mouse had eaten a
hole into the cushion and made a comfortable nest there. Six baby mice
were cuddled up asleep near her. If there was no one else alive in the
hundred rooms there were seven mice who did not look lonely at all.
"If they wouldn't be so frightened I would
take them back with me," said Mary.
She had wandered about long enough to feel too
tired to wander any farther, and she turned back. Two or three times she
lost her way by turning down the wrong corridor and was obliged to
ramble up and down until she found the right one; but at last she
reached her own floor again, though she was some distance from her own
room and did not know exactly where she was.
"I believe I have taken a wrong turning
again," she said, standing still at what seemed the end of a short
passage with tapestry on the wall. "I don't know which way to go.
How still everything is!"
It was while she was standing here and just after
she had said this that the stillness was broken by a sound. It was
another cry, but not quite like the one she had heard last night; it was
only a short one, a fretful childish whine muffled by passing through
walls.
"It's nearer than it was," said Mary,
her heart beating rather faster. "And it is crying."
She put her hand accidentally upon the tapestry
near her, and then sprang back, feeling quite startled. The tapestry was
the covering of a door which fell open and showed her that there was
another part of the corridor behind it, and Mrs. Medlock was coming up
it with her bunch of keys in her hand and a very cross look on her face.
"What are you doing here?" she said, and
she took Mary by the arm and pulled her away. "What did I tell
you?"
"I turned round the wrong corner,"
explained Mary. "I didn't know which way to go and I heard some one
crying." She quite hated Mrs. Medlock at the moment, but she hated
her more the next.
"You didn't hear anything of the sort,"
said the housekeeper. "You come along back to your own nursery or
I'll box your ears."
And she took her by the arm and half pushed, half
pulled her up one passage and down another until she pushed her in at
the door of her own room.
"Now," she said, "you stay where
you're told to stay or you'll find yourself locked up. The master had
better get you a governess, same as he said he would. You're one that
needs some one to look sharp after you. I've got enough to do."
She went out of the room and slammed the door
after her, and Mary went and sat on the hearth-rug, pale with rage. She
did not cry, but ground her teeth.
"There was some one crying--there was--there
was!" she said to herself.
She had heard it twice now, and sometime she would
find out. She had found out a great deal this morning. She felt as if
she had been on a long journey, and at any rate she had had something to
amuse her all the time, and she had played with the ivory elephants and
had seen the gray mouse and its babies in their nest in the velvet
cushion.
CHAPTER VII
THE KEY TO THE GARDEN
Two days after this, when Mary opened her eyes she
sat upright in bed immediately, and called to Martha.
"Look at the moor! Look at the moor!"
The rainstorm had ended and the gray mist and
clouds had been swept away in the night by the wind. The wind itself had
ceased and a brilliant, deep blue sky arched high over the moorland.
Never, never had Mary dreamed of a sky so blue. In India skies were hot
and blazing; this was of a deep cool blue which almost seemed to sparkle
like the waters of some lovely bottomless lake, and here and there,
high, high in the arched blueness floated small clouds of snow-white
fleece. The far-reaching world of the moor itself looked softly blue
instead of gloomy purple-black or awful dreary gray.
"Aye," said Martha with a cheerful grin.
"Th' storm's over for a bit. It does like this at this time o' th'
year. It goes off in a night like it was pretendin' it had never been
here an' never meant to come again. That's because th' springtime's on
its way. It's a long way off yet, but it's comin'."
"I thought perhaps it always rained or looked
dark in England," Mary said.
"Eh! no!" said Martha, sitting up on her
heels among her black lead brushes. "Nowt o' th' soart!"
"What does that mean?" asked Mary
seriously. In India the natives spoke different dialects which only a
few people understood, so she was not surprised when Martha used words
she did not know.
Martha laughed as she had done the first morning.
"There now," she said. "I've talked
broad Yorkshire again like Mrs. Medlock said I mustn't. `Nowt o' th'
soart' means `nothin'-of-the-sort,'" slowly and carefully,
"but it takes so long to say it. Yorkshire's th' sunniest place on
earth when it is sunny. I told thee tha'd like th' moor after a bit.
Just you wait till you see th' gold-colored gorse blossoms an' th'
blossoms o' th' broom, an' th' heather flowerin', all purple bells, an'
hundreds o' butterflies flutterin' an' bees hummin' an' skylarks soarin'
up an' singin'. You'll want to get out on it as sunrise an' live out on
it all day like Dickon does." "Could I ever get there?"
asked Mary wistfully, looking through her window at the far-off blue. It
was so new and big and wonderful and such a heavenly color.
"I don't know," answered Martha. "Tha's
never used tha' legs since tha' was born, it seems to me. Tha' couldn't
walk five mile. It's five mile to our cottage."
"I should like to see your cottage."
Martha stared at her a moment curiously before she
took up her polishing brush and began to rub the grate again. She was
thinking that the small plain face did not look quite as sour at this
moment as it had done the first morning she saw it. It looked just a
trifle like little Susan Ann's when she wanted something very much.
"I'll ask my mother about it," she said.
"She's one o' them that nearly always sees a way to do things. It's
my day out today an' I'm goin' home. Eh! I am glad. Mrs. Medlock thinks
a lot o' mother. Perhaps she could talk to her."
"I like your mother," said Mary.
"I should think tha' did," agreed
Martha, polishing away.
"I've never seen her," said Mary.
"No, tha' hasn't," replied Martha.
She sat up on her heels again and rubbed the end
of her nose with the back of her hand as if puzzled for a moment, but
she ended quite positively.
"Well, she's that sensible an' hard workin'
an' goodnatured an' clean that no one could help likin' her whether
they'd seen her or not. When I'm goin' home to her on my day out I just
jump for joy when I'm crossin' the moor."
"I like Dickon," added Mary. "And
I've never seen him."
"Well," said Martha stoutly, "I've
told thee that th' very birds likes him an' th' rabbits an' wild sheep
an' ponies, an' th' foxes themselves. I wonder," staring at her
reflectively, "what Dickon would think of thee?"
"He wouldn't like me," said Mary in her
stiff, cold little way. "No one does."
Martha looked reflective again.
"How does tha' like thysel'?" she
inquired, really quite as if she were curious to know.
Mary hesitated a moment and thought it over.
"Not at all--really," she answered.
"But I never thought of that before."
Martha grinned a little as if at some homely
recollection.
"Mother said that to me once," she said.
"She was at her wash-tub an' I was in a bad temper an' talkin' ill
of folk, an' she turns round on me an' says: `Tha' young vixen, tha'!
There tha' stands sayin' tha' doesn't like this one an' tha' doesn't
like that one. How does tha' like thysel'?' It made me laugh an' it
brought me to my senses in a minute."
She went away in high spirits as soon as she had
given Mary her breakfast. She was going to walk five miles across the
moor to the cottage, and she was going to help her mother with the
washing and do the week's baking and enjoy herself thoroughly.
Mary felt lonelier than ever when she knew she was
no longer in the house. She went out into the garden as quickly as
possible, and the first thing she did was to run round and round the
fountain flower garden ten times. She counted the times carefully and
when she had finished she felt in better spirits. The sunshine made the
whole place look different. The high, deep, blue sky arched over
Misselthwaite as well as over the moor, and she kept lifting her face
and looking up into it, trying to imagine what it would be like to lie
down on one of the little snow-white clouds and float about. She went
into the first kitchen-garden and found Ben Weatherstaff working there
with two other gardeners. The change in the weather seemed to have done
him good. He spoke to her of his own accord. "Springtime's comin,'"
he said. "Cannot tha' smell it?"
Mary sniffed and thought she could.
"I smell something nice and fresh and
damp," she said.
"That's th' good rich earth," he
answered, digging away. "It's in a good humor makin' ready to grow
things. It's glad when plantin' time comes. It's dull in th' winter when
it's got nowt to do. In th' flower gardens out there things will be
stirrin' down below in th' dark. Th' sun's warmin' 'em. You'll see bits
o' green spikes stickin' out o' th' black earth after a bit."
"What will they be?" asked Mary.
"Crocuses an' snowdrops an' daffydowndillys.
Has tha' never seen them?"
"No. Everything is hot, and wet, and green
after the rains in India," said Mary. "And I think things grow
up in a night."
"These won't grow up in a night," said
Weatherstaff. "Tha'll have to wait for 'em. They'll poke up a bit
higher here, an' push out a spike more there, an' uncurl a leaf this day
an' another that. You watch 'em."
"I am going to," answered Mary.
Very soon she heard the soft rustling flight of
wings again and she knew at once that the robin had come again. He was
very pert and lively, and hopped about so close to her feet, and put his
head on one side and looked at her so slyly that she asked Ben
Weatherstaff a question.
"Do you think he remembers me?" she
said.
"Remembers thee!" said Weatherstaff
indignantly. "He knows every cabbage stump in th' gardens, let
alone th' people. He's never seen a little wench here before, an' he's
bent on findin' out all about thee. Tha's no need to try to hide
anything from him."
"Are things stirring down below in the dark
in that garden where he lives?" Mary inquired.
"What garden?" grunted Weatherstaff,
becoming surly again.
"The one where the old rose-trees are."
She could not help asking, because she wanted so much to know. "Are
all the flowers dead, or do some of them come again in the summer? Are
there ever any roses?"
"Ask him," said Ben Weatherstaff,
hunching his shoulders toward the robin. "He's the only one as
knows. No one else has seen inside it for ten year'."
Ten years was a long time, Mary thought. She had
been born ten years ago.
She walked away, slowly thinking. She had begun to
like the garden just as she had begun to like the robin and Dickon and
Martha's mother. She was beginning to like Martha, too. That seemed a
good many people to like--when you were not used to liking. She thought
of the robin as one of the people. She went to her walk outside the
long, ivy-covered wall over which she could see the tree-tops; and the
second time she walked up and down the most interesting and exciting
thing happened to her, and it was all through Ben Weatherstaff's robin.
She heard a chirp and a twitter, and when she
looked at the bare flower-bed at her left side there he was hopping
about and pretending to peck things out of the earth to persuade her
that he had not followed her. But she knew he had followed her and the
surprise so filled her with delight that she almost trembled a little.
"You do remember me!" she cried out.
"You do! You are prettier than anything else in the world!"
She chirped, and talked, and coaxed and he hopped,
and flirted his tail and twittered. It was as if he were talking. His
red waistcoat was like satin and he puffed his tiny breast out and was
so fine and so grand and so pretty that it was really as if he were
showing her how important and like a human person a robin could be.
Mistress Mary forgot that she had ever been contrary in her life when he
allowed her to draw closer and closer to him, and bend down and talk and
try to make something like robin sounds.
Oh! to think that he should actually let her come
as near to him as that! He knew nothing in the world would make her put
out her hand toward him or startle him in the least tiniest way. He knew
it because he was a real person--only nicer than any other person in the
world. She was so happy that she scarcely dared to breathe.
The flower-bed was not quite bare. It was bare of
flowers because the perennial plants had been cut down for their winter
rest, but there were tall shrubs and low ones which grew together at the
back of the bed, and as the robin hopped about under them she saw him
hop over a small pile of freshly turned up earth. He stopped on it to
look for a worm. The earth had been turned up because a dog had been
trying to dig up a mole and he had scratched quite a deep hole.
Mary looked at it, not really knowing why the hole
was there, and as she looked she saw something almost buried in the
newly-turned soil. It was something like a ring of rusty iron or brass
and when the robin flew up into a tree nearby she put out her hand and
picked the ring up. It was more than a ring, however; it was an old key
which looked as if it had been buried a long time.
Mistress Mary stood up and looked at it with an
almost frightened face as it hung from her finger.
"Perhaps it has been buried for ten
years," she said in a whisper. "Perhaps it is the key to the
garden!"
CHAPTER VIII
THE ROBIN WHO SHOWED THE WAY
She looked at the key quite a long time. She
turned it over and over, and thought about it. As I have said before,
she was not a child who had been trained to ask permission or consult
her elders about things. All she thought about the key was that if it
was the key to the closed garden, and she could find out where the door
was, she could perhaps open it and see what was inside the walls, and
what had happened to the old rose-trees. It was because it had been shut
up so long that she wanted to see it. It seemed as if it must be
different from other places and that something strange must have
happened to it during ten years. Besides that, if she liked it she could
go into it every day and shut the door behind her, and she could make up
some play of her own and play it quite alone, because nobody would ever
know where she was, but would think the door was still locked and the
key buried in the earth. The thought of that pleased her very much.
Living as it were, all by herself in a house with
a hundred mysteriously closed rooms and having nothing whatever to do to
amuse herself, had set her inactive brain to working and was actually
awakening her imagination. There is no doubt that the fresh, strong,
pure air from the moor had a great deal to do with it. Just as it had
given her an appetite, and fighting with the wind had stirred her blood,
so the same things had stirred her mind. In India she had always been
too hot and languid and weak to care much about anything, but in this
place she was beginning to care and to want to do new things. Already
she felt less "contrary," though she did not know why.
She put the key in her pocket and walked up and
down her walk. No one but herself ever seemed to come there, so she
could walk slowly and look at the wall, or, rather, at the ivy growing
on it. The ivy was the baffling thing. Howsoever carefully she looked
she could see nothing but thickly growing, glossy, dark green leaves.
She was very much disappointed. Something of her contrariness came back
to her as she paced the walk and looked over it at the tree-tops inside.
It seemed so silly, she said to herself, to be near it and not be able
to get in. She took the key in her pocket when she went back to the
house, and she made up her mind that she would always carry it with her
when she went out, so that if she ever should find the hidden door she
would be ready.
Mrs. Medlock had allowed Martha to sleep all night
at the cottage, but she was back at her work in the morning with cheeks
redder than ever and in the best of spirits.
"I got up at four o'clock," she said.
"Eh! it was pretty on th' moor with th' birds gettin' up an' th'
rabbits scamperin' about an' th' sun risin'. I didn't walk all th' way.
A man gave me a ride in his cart an' I did enjoy myself."
She was full of stories of the delights of her day
out. Her mother had been glad to see her and they had got the baking and
washing all out of the way. She had even made each of the children a
doughcake with a bit of brown sugar in it.
"I had 'em all pipin' hot when they came in
from playin' on th' moor. An' th' cottage all smelt o' nice, clean hot
bakin' an' there was a good fire, an' they just shouted for joy. Our
Dickon he said our cottage was good enough for a king."
In the evening they had all sat round the fire,
and Martha and her mother had sewed patches on torn clothes and mended
stockings and Martha had told them about the little girl who had come
from India and who had been waited on all her life by what Martha called
"blacks" until she didn't know how to put on her own
stockings.
"Eh! they did like to hear about you,"
said Martha. "They wanted to know all about th' blacks an' about th'
ship you came in. I couldn't tell 'em enough."
Mary reflected a little.
"I'll tell you a great deal more before your
next day out," she said, "so that you will have more to talk
about. I dare say they would like to hear about riding on elephants and
camels, and about the officers going to hunt tigers."
"My word!" cried delighted Martha.
"It would set 'em clean off their heads. Would tha' really do that,
Miss? It would be same as a wild beast show like we heard they had in
York once."
"India is quite different from
Yorkshire," Mary said slowly, as she thought the matter over.
"I never thought of that. Did Dickon and your mother like to hear
you talk about me?"
"Why, our Dickon's eyes nearly started out o'
his head, they got that round," answered Martha. "But mother,
she was put out about your seemin' to be all by yourself like. She said,
'Hasn't Mr. Craven got no governess for her, nor no nurse?' and I said,
'No, he hasn't, though Mrs. Medlock says he will when he thinks of it,
but she says he mayn't think of it for two or three years.'"
"I don't want a governess," said Mary
sharply.
"But mother says you ought to be learnin'
your book by this time an' you ought to have a woman to look after you,
an' she says: `Now, Martha, you just think how you'd feel yourself, in a
big place like that, wanderin' about all alone, an' no mother. You do
your best to cheer her up,' she says, an' I said I would."
Mary gave her a long, steady look.
"You do cheer me up," she said. "I
like to hear you talk."
Presently Martha went out of the room and came
back with something held in her hands under her apron.
"What does tha' think," she said, with a
cheerful grin. "I've brought thee a present."
"A present!" exclaimed Mistress Mary.
How could a cottage full of fourteen hungry people give any one a
present!
"A man was drivin' across the moor peddlin',"
Martha explained. "An' he stopped his cart at our door. He had pots
an' pans an' odds an' ends, but mother had no money to buy anythin'.
Just as he was goin' away our 'Lizabeth Ellen called out, `Mother, he's
got skippin'-ropes with red an' blue handles.' An' mother she calls out
quite sudden, `Here, stop, mister! How much are they?' An' he says `Tuppence',
an' mother she began fumblin' in her pocket an' she says to me, `Martha,
tha's brought me thy wages like a good lass, an' I've got four places to
put every penny, but I'm just goin' to take tuppence out of it to buy
that child a skippin'-rope,' an' she bought one an' here it is."
She brought it out from under her apron and
exhibited it quite proudly. It was a strong, slender rope with a striped
red and blue handle at each end, but Mary Lennox had never seen a
skipping-rope before. She gazed at it with a mystified expression.
"What is it for?" she asked curiously.
"For!" cried out Martha. "Does tha'
mean that they've not got skippin'-ropes in India, for all they've got
elephants and tigers and camels! No wonder most of 'em's black. This is
what it's for; just watch me."
And she ran into the middle of the room and,
taking a handle in each hand, began to skip, and skip, and skip, while
Mary turned in her chair to stare at her, and the queer faces in the old
portraits seemed to stare at her, too, and wonder what on earth this
common little cottager had the impudence to be doing under their very
noses. But Martha did not even see them. The interest and curiosity in
Mistress Mary's face delighted her, and she went on skipping and counted
as she skipped until she had reached a hundred.
"I could skip longer than that," she
said when she stopped. "I've skipped as much as five hundred when I
was twelve, but I wasn't as fat then as I am now, an' I was in
practice."
Mary got up from her chair beginning to feel
excited herself.
"It looks nice," she said. "Your
mother is a kind woman. Do you think I could ever skip like that?"
"You just try it," urged Martha, handing
her the skipping-rope. "You can't skip a hundred at first, but if
you practice you'll mount up. That's what mother said. She says, `Nothin'
will do her more good than skippin' rope. It's th' sensiblest toy a
child can have. Let her play out in th' fresh air skippin' an' it'll
stretch her legs an' arms an' give her some strength in 'em.'"
It was plain that there was not a great deal of
strength in Mistress Mary's arms and legs when she first began to skip.
She was not very clever at it, but she liked it so much that she did not
want to stop.
"Put on tha' things and run an' skip out o'
doors," said Martha. "Mother said I must tell you to keep out
o' doors as much as you could, even when it rains a bit, so as tha' wrap
up warm."
Mary put on her coat and hat and took her
skipping-rope over her arm. She opened the door to go out, and then
suddenly thought of something and turned back rather slowly.
"Martha," she said, "they were your
wages. It was your two-pence really. Thank you." She said it
stiffly because she was not used to thanking people or noticing that
they did things for her. "Thank you," she said, and held out
her hand because she did not know what else to do.
Martha gave her hand a clumsy little shake, as if
she was not accustomed to this sort of thing either. Then she laughed.
"Eh! th' art a queer, old-womanish
thing," she said. "If tha'd been our 'Lizabeth Ellen tha'd
have given me a kiss."
Mary looked stiffer than ever.
"Do you want me to kiss you?"
Martha laughed again.
"Nay, not me," she answered. "If
tha' was different, p'raps tha'd want to thysel'. But tha' isn't. Run
off outside an' play with thy rope."
Mistress Mary felt a little awkward as she went
out of the room. Yorkshire people seemed strange, and Martha was always
rather a puzzle to her. At first she had disliked her very much, but now
she did not. The skipping-rope was a wonderful thing. She counted and
skipped, and skipped and counted, until her cheeks were quite red, and
she was more interested than she had ever been since she was born. The
sun was shining and a little wind was blowing--not a rough wind, but one
which came in delightful little gusts and brought a fresh scent of newly
turned earth with it. She skipped round the fountain garden, and up one
walk and down another. She skipped at last into the kitchen-garden and
saw Ben Weatherstaff digging and talking to his robin, which was hopping
about him. She skipped down the walk toward him and he lifted his head
and looked at her with a curious expression. She had wondered if he
would notice her. She wanted him to see her skip.
"Well!" he exclaimed. "Upon my
word. P'raps tha' art a young 'un, after all, an' p'raps tha's got
child's blood in thy veins instead of sour buttermilk. Tha's skipped red
into thy cheeks as sure as my name's Ben Weatherstaff. I wouldn't have
believed tha' could do it."
"I never skipped before," Mary said.
"I'm just beginning. I can only go up to twenty."
"Tha' keep on," said Ben. "Tha'
shapes well enough at it for a young 'un that's lived with heathen. Just
see how he's watchin' thee," jerking his head toward the robin.
"He followed after thee yesterday. He'll be at it again today.
He'll be bound to find out what th' skippin'-rope is. He's never seen
one. Eh!" shaking his head at the bird, "tha' curiosity will
be th' death of thee sometime if tha' doesn't look sharp."
Mary skipped round all the gardens and round the
orchard, resting every few minutes. At length she went to her own
special walk and made up her mind to try if she could skip the whole
length of it. It was a good long skip and she began slowly, but before
she had gone half-way down the path she was so hot and breathless that
she was obliged to stop. She did not mind much, because she had already
counted up to thirty. She stopped with a little laugh of pleasure, and
there, lo and behold, was the robin swaying on a long branch of ivy. He
had followed her and he greeted her with a chirp. As Mary had skipped
toward him she felt something heavy in her pocket strike against her at
each jump, and when she saw the robin she laughed again.
"You showed me where the key was
yesterday," she said. "You ought to show me the door today;
but I don't believe you know!"
The robin flew from his swinging spray of ivy on
to the top of the wall and he opened his beak and sang a loud, lovely
trill, merely to show off. Nothing in the world is quite as adorably
lovely as a robin when he shows off--and they are nearly always doing
it.
Mary Lennox had heard a great deal about Magic in
her Ayah's stories, and she always said that what happened almost at
that moment was Magic.
One of the nice little gusts of wind rushed down
the walk, and it was a stronger one than the rest. It was strong enough
to wave the branches of the trees, and it was more than strong enough to
sway the trailing sprays of untrimmed ivy hanging from the wall. Mary
had stepped close to the robin, and suddenly the gust of wind swung
aside some loose ivy trails, and more suddenly still she jumped toward
it and caught it in her hand. This she did because she had seen
something under it--a round knob which had been covered by the leaves
hanging over it. It was the knob of a door.
She put her hands under the leaves and began to
pull and push them aside. Thick as the ivy hung, it nearly all was a
loose and swinging curtain, though some had crept over wood and iron.
Mary's heart began to thump and her hands to shake a little in her
delight and excitement. The robin kept singing and twittering away and
tilting his head on one side, as if he were as excited as she was. What
was this under her hands which was square and made of iron and which her
fingers found a hole in?
It was the lock of the door which had been closed
ten years and she put her hand in her pocket, drew out the key and found
it fitted the keyhole. She put the key in and turned it. It took two
hands to do it, but it did turn.
And then she took a long breath and looked behind
her up the long walk to see if any one was coming. No one was coming. No
one ever did come, it seemed, and she took another long breath, because
she could not help it, and she held back the swinging curtain of ivy and
pushed back the door which opened slowly--slowly.
Then she slipped through it, and shut it behind
her, and stood with her back against it, looking about her and breathing
quite fast with excitement, and wonder, and delight.
She was standing inside the secret garden.
CHAPTER IX
THE STRANGEST HOUSE ANY ONE EVER LIVED IN
It was the sweetest, most mysterious-looking place
any one could imagine. The high walls which shut it in were covered with
the leafless stems of climbing roses which were so thick that they were
matted together. Mary Lennox knew they were roses because she had seen a
great many roses in India. All the ground was covered with grass of a
wintry brown and out of it grew clumps of bushes which were surely
rosebushes if they were alive. There were numbers of standard roses
which had so spread their branches that they were like little trees.
There were other trees in the garden, and one of the things which made
the place look strangest and loveliest was that climbing roses had run
all over them and swung down long tendrils which made light swaying
curtains, and here and there they had caught at each other or at a
far-reaching branch and had crept from one tree to another and made
lovely bridges of themselves. There were neither leaves nor roses on
them now and Mary did not know whether they were dead or alive, but
their thin gray or brown branches and sprays looked like a sort of hazy
mantle spreading over everything, walls, and trees, and even brown
grass, where they had fallen from their fastenings and run along the
ground. It was this hazy tangle from tree to tree which made it all look
so mysterious. Mary had thought it must be different from other gardens
which had not been left all by themselves so long; and indeed it was
different from any other place she had ever seen in her life.
"How still it is!" she whispered.
"How still!"
Then she waited a moment and listened at the
stillness. The robin, who had flown to his treetop, was still as all the
rest. He did not even flutter his wings; he sat without stirring, and
looked at Mary.
"No wonder it is still," she whispered
again. "I am the first person who has spoken in here for ten
years."
She moved away from the door, stepping as softly
as if she were afraid of awakening some one. She was glad that there was
grass under her feet and that her steps made no sounds. She walked under
one of the fairy-like gray arches between the trees and looked up at the
sprays and tendrils which formed them. "I wonder if they are all
quite dead," she said. "Is it all a quite dead garden? I wish
it wasn't."
If she had been Ben Weatherstaff she could have
told whether the wood was alive by looking at it, but she could only see
that there were only gray or brown sprays and branches and none showed
any signs of even a tiny leaf-bud anywhere.
But she was inside the wonderful garden and she
could come through the door under the ivy any time and she felt as if
she had found a world all her own.
The sun was shining inside the four walls and the
high arch of blue sky over this particular piece of Misselthwaite seemed
even more brilliant and soft than it was over the moor. The robin flew
down from his tree-top and hopped about or flew after her from one bush
to another. He chirped a good deal and had a very busy air, as if he
were showing her things. Everything was strange and silent and she
seemed to be hundreds of miles away from any one, but somehow she did
not feel lonely at all. All that troubled her was her wish that she knew
whether all the roses were dead, or if perhaps some of them had lived
and might put out leaves and buds as the weather got warmer. She did not
want it to be a quite dead garden. If it were a quite alive garden, how
wonderful it would be, and what thousands of roses would grow on every
side!
Her skipping-rope had hung over her arm when she
came in and after she had walked about for a while she thought she would
skip round the whole garden, stopping when she wanted to look at things.
There seemed to have been grass paths here and there, and in one or two
corners there were alcoves of evergreen with stone seats or tall
moss-covered flower urns in them.
As she came near the second of these alcoves she
stopped skipping. There had once been a flowerbed in it, and she thought
she saw something sticking out of the black earth--some sharp little
pale green points. She remembered what Ben Weatherstaff had said and she
knelt down to look at them.
"Yes, they are tiny growing things and they
might be crocuses or snowdrops or daffodils," she whispered.
She bent very close to them and sniffed the fresh
scent of the damp earth. She liked it very much.
"Perhaps there are some other ones coming up
in other places," she said. "I will go all over the garden and
look."
She did not skip, but walked. She went slowly and
kept her eyes on the ground. She looked in the old border beds and among
the grass, and after she had gone round, trying to miss nothing, she had
found ever so many more sharp, pale green points, and she had become
quite excited again.
"It isn't a quite dead garden," she
cried out softly to herself. "Even if the roses are dead, there are
other things alive."
She did not know anything about gardening, but the
grass seemed so thick in some of the places where the green points were
pushing their way through that she thought they did not seem to have
room enough to grow. She searched about until she found a rather sharp
piece of wood and knelt down and dug and weeded out the weeds and grass
until she made nice little clear places around them.
"Now they look as if they could
breathe," she said, after she had finished with the first ones.
"I am going to do ever so many more. I'll do all I can see. If I
haven't time today I can come tomorrow."
She went from place to place, and dug and weeded,
and enjoyed herself so immensely that she was led on from bed to bed and
into the grass under the trees. The exercise made her so warm that she
first threw her coat off, and then her hat, and without knowing it she
was smiling down on to the grass and the pale green points all the time.
The robin was tremendously busy. He was very much
pleased to see gardening begun on his own estate. He had often wondered
at Ben Weatherstaff. Where gardening is done all sorts of delightful
things to eat are turned up with the soil. Now here was this new kind of
creature who was not half Ben's size and yet had had the sense to come
into his garden and begin at once.
Mistress Mary worked in her garden until it was
time to go to her midday dinner. In fact, she was rather late in
remembering, and when she put on her coat and hat, and picked up her
skipping-rope, she could not believe that she had been working two or
three hours. She had been actually happy all the time; and dozens and
dozens of the tiny, pale green points were to be seen in cleared places,
looking twice as cheerful as they had looked before when the grass and
weeds had been smothering them.
"I shall come back this afternoon," she
said, looking all round at her new kingdom, and speaking to the trees
and the rose-bushes as if they heard her.
Then she ran lightly across the grass, pushed open
the slow old door and slipped through it under the ivy. She had such red
cheeks and such bright eyes and ate such a dinner that Martha was
delighted.
"Two pieces o' meat an' two helps o' rice
puddin'!" she said. "Eh! mother will be pleased when I tell
her what th' skippin'-rope's done for thee."
In the course of her digging with her pointed
stick Mistress Mary had found herself digging up a sort of white root
rather like an onion. She had put it back in its place and patted the
earth carefully down on it and just now she wondered if Martha could
tell her what it was.
"Martha," she said, "what are those
white roots that look like onions?"
"They're bulbs," answered Martha.
"Lots o' spring flowers grow from 'em. Th' very little ones are
snowdrops an' crocuses an' th' big ones are narcissuses an' jonquils and
daffydowndillys. Th' biggest of all is lilies an' purple flags. Eh! they
are nice. Dickon's got a whole lot of 'em planted in our bit o'
garden."
"Does Dickon know all about them?" asked
Mary, a new idea taking possession of her.
"Our Dickon can make a flower grow out of a
brick walk. Mother says he just whispers things out o' th' ground."
"Do bulbs live a long time? Would they live
years and years if no one helped them?" inquired Mary anxiously.
"They're things as helps themselves,"
said Martha. "That's why poor folk can afford to have 'em. If you
don't trouble 'em, most of 'em'll work away underground for a lifetime
an' spread out an' have little 'uns. There's a place in th' park woods
here where there's snowdrops by thousands. They're the prettiest sight
in Yorkshire when th' spring comes. No one knows when they was first
planted."
"I wish the spring was here now," said
Mary. "I want to see all the things that grow in England."
She had finished her dinner and gone to her
favorite seat on the hearth-rug.
"I wish--I wish I had a little spade,"
she said. "Whatever does tha' want a spade for?" asked Martha,
laughing. "Art tha' goin' to take to diggin'? I must tell mother
that, too."
Mary looked at the fire and pondered a little. She
must be careful if she meant to keep her secret kingdom. She wasn't
doing any harm, but if Mr. Craven found out about the open door he would
be fearfully angry and get a new key and lock it up forevermore. She
really could not bear that.
"This is such a big lonely place," she
said slowly, as if she were turning matters over in her mind. "The
house is lonely, and the park is lonely, and the gardens are lonely. So
many places seem shut up. I never did many things in India, but there
were more people to look at--natives and soldiers marching by--and
sometimes bands playing, and my Ayah told me stories. There is no one to
talk to here except you and Ben Weatherstaff. And you have to do your
work and Ben Weatherstaff won't speak to me often. I thought if I had a
little spade I could dig somewhere as he does, and I might make a little
garden if he would give me some seeds."
Martha's face quite lighted up.
"There now!" she exclaimed, "if
that wasn't one of th' things mother said. She says, `There's such a lot
o' room in that big place, why don't they give her a bit for herself,
even if she doesn't plant nothin' but parsley an' radishes? She'd dig
an' rake away an' be right down happy over it.' Them was the very words
she said."
"Were they?" said Mary. "How many
things she knows, doesn't she?"
"Eh!" said Martha. "It's like she
says: `A woman as brings up twelve children learns something besides her
A B C. Children's as good as 'rithmetic to set you findin' out
things.'"
"How much would a spade cost--a little
one?" Mary asked.
"Well," was Martha's reflective answer,
"at Thwaite village there's a shop or so an' I saw little garden
sets with a spade an' a rake an' a fork all tied together for two
shillings. An' they was stout enough to work with, too."
"I've got more than that in my purse,"
said Mary. "Mrs. Morrison gave me five shillings and Mrs. Medlock
gave me some money from Mr. Craven."
"Did he remember thee that much?"
exclaimed Martha.
"Mrs. Medlock said I was to have a shilling a
week to spend. She gives me one every Saturday. I didn't know what to
spend it on."
"My word! that's riches," said Martha.
"Tha' can buy anything in th' world tha' wants. Th' rent of our
cottage is only one an' threepence an' it's like pullin' eye-teeth to
get it. Now I've just thought of somethin'," putting her hands on
her hips.
"What?" said Mary eagerly.
"In the shop at Thwaite they sell packages o'
flower-seeds for a penny each, and our Dickon he knows which is th'
prettiest ones an, how to make 'em grow. He walks over to Thwaite many a
day just for th' fun of it. Does tha' know how to print letters?"
suddenly.
"I know how to write," Mary answered.
Martha shook her head.
"Our Dickon can only read printin'. If tha'
could print we could write a letter to him an' ask him to go an' buy th'
garden tools an' th' seeds at th' same time."
"Oh! you're a good girl!" Mary cried.
"You are, really! I didn't know you were so nice. I know I can
print letters if I try. Let's ask Mrs. Medlock for a pen and ink and
some paper."
"I've got some of my own," said Martha.
"I bought 'em so I could print a bit of a letter to mother of a
Sunday. I'll go and get it." She ran out of the room, and Mary
stood by the fire and twisted her thin little hands together with sheer
pleasure.
"If I have a spade," she whispered,
"I can make the earth nice and soft and dig up weeds. If I have
seeds and can make flowers grow the garden won't be dead at all--it will
come alive."
She did not go out again that afternoon because
when Martha returned with her pen and ink and paper she was obliged to
clear the table and carry the plates and dishes downstairs and when she
got into the kitchen Mrs. Medlock was there and told her to do
something, so Mary waited for what seemed to her a long time before she
came back. Then it was a serious piece of work to write to Dickon. Mary
had been taught very little because her governesses had disliked her too
much to stay with her. She could not spell particularly well but she
found that she could print letters when she tried. This was the letter
Martha dictated to her: "My Dear Dickon:
This comes hoping to find you well as it leaves me
at present. Miss Mary has plenty of money and will you go to Thwaite and
buy her some flower seeds and a set of garden tools to make a
flower-bed. Pick the prettiest ones and easy to grow because she has
never done it before and lived in India which is different. Give my love
to mother and every one of you. Miss Mary is going to tell me a lot more
so that on my next day out you can hear about elephants and camels and
gentlemen going hunting lions and tigers.
"Your loving sister, Martha Phoebe Sowerby."
"We'll put the money in th' envelope an' I'll
get th' butcher boy to take it in his cart. He's a great friend o'
Dickon's," said Martha.
"How shall I get the things when Dickon buys
them?"
"He'll bring 'em to you himself. He'll like
to walk over this way."
"Oh!" exclaimed Mary, "then I shall
see him! I never thought I should see Dickon."
"Does tha' want to see him?" asked
Martha suddenly, for Mary had looked so pleased.
"Yes, I do. I never saw a boy foxes and crows
loved. I want to see him very much."
Martha gave a little start, as if she remembered
something. "Now to think," she broke out, "to think o' me
forgettin' that there; an' I thought I was goin' to tell you first thing
this mornin'. I asked mother--and she said she'd ask Mrs. Medlock her
own self."
"Do you mean--" Mary began.
"What I said Tuesday. Ask her if you might be
driven over to our cottage some day and have a bit o' mother's hot oat
cake, an' butter, an' a glass o' milk."
It seemed as if all the interesting things were
happening in one day. To think of going over the moor in the daylight
and when the sky was blue! To think of going into the cottage which held
twelve children!
"Does she think Mrs. Medlock would let me
go?" she asked, quite anxiously.
"Aye, she thinks she would. She knows what a
tidy woman mother is and how clean she keeps the cottage."
"If I went I should see your mother as well
as Dickon," said Mary, thinking it over and liking the idea very
much. "She doesn't seem to be like the mothers in India."
Her work in the garden and the excitement of the
afternoon ended by making her feel quiet and thoughtful. Martha stayed
with her until tea-time, but they sat in comfortable quiet and talked
very little. But just before Martha went downstairs for the tea-tray,
Mary asked a question.
"Martha," she said, "has the
scullery-maid had the toothache again today?"
Martha certainly started slightly.
"What makes thee ask that?" she said.
"Because when I waited so long for you to
come back I opened the door and walked down the corridor to see if you
were coming. And I heard that far-off crying again, just as we heard it
the other night. There isn't a wind today, so you see it couldn't have
been the wind."
"Eh!" said Martha restlessly. "Tha'
mustn't go walkin' about in corridors an' listenin'. Mr. Craven would be
that there angry there's no knowin' what he'd do."
"I wasn't listening," said Mary. "I
was just waiting for you--and I heard it. That's three times."
"My word! There's Mrs. Medlock's bell,"
said Martha, and she almost ran out of the room.
"It's the strangest house any one ever lived
in," said Mary drowsily, as she dropped her head on the cushioned
seat of the armchair near her. Fresh air, and digging, and skipping-rope
had made her feel so comfortably tired that she fell asleep.
CHAPTER X
DICKON
The sun shone down for nearly a week on the secret
garden. The Secret Garden was what Mary called it when she was thinking
of it. She liked the name, and she liked still more the feeling that
when its beautiful old walls shut her in no one knew where she was. It
seemed almost like being shut out of the world in some fairy place. The
few books she had read and liked had been fairy-story books, and she had
read of secret gardens in some of the stories. Sometimes people went to
sleep in them for a hundred years, which she had thought must be rather
stupid. She had no intention of going to sleep, and, in fact, she was
becoming wider awake every day which passed at Misselthwaite. She was
beginning to like to be out of doors; she no longer hated the wind, but
enjoyed it. She could run faster, and longer, and she could skip up to a
hundred. The bulbs in the secret garden must have been much astonished.
Such nice clear places were made round them that they had all the
breathing space they wanted, and really, if Mistress Mary had known it,
they began to cheer up under the dark earth and work tremendously. The
sun could get at them and warm them, and when the rain came down it
could reach them at once, so they began to feel very much alive.
Mary was an odd, determined little person, and now
she had something interesting to be determined about, she was very much
absorbed, indeed. She worked and dug and pulled up weeds steadily, only
becoming more pleased with her work every hour instead of tiring of it.
It seemed to her like a fascinating sort of play. She found many more of
the sprouting pale green points than she had ever hoped to find. They
seemed to be starting up everywhere and each day she was sure she found
tiny new ones, some so tiny that they barely peeped above the earth.
There were so many that she remembered what Martha had said about the
"snowdrops by the thousands," and about bulbs spreading and
making new ones. These had been left to themselves for ten years and
perhaps they had spread, like the snowdrops, into thousands. She
wondered how long it would be before they showed that they were flowers.
Sometimes she stopped digging to look at the garden and try to imagine
what it would be like when it was covered with thousands of lovely
things in bloom. During that week of sunshine, she became more intimate
with Ben Weatherstaff. She surprised him several times by seeming to
start up beside him as if she sprang out of the earth. The truth was
that she was afraid that he would pick up his tools and go away if he
saw her coming, so she always walked toward him as silently as possible.
But, in fact, he did not object to her as strongly as he had at first.
Perhaps he was secretly rather flattered by her evident desire for his
elderly company. Then, also, she was more civil than she had been. He
did not know that when she first saw him she spoke to him as she would
have spoken to a native, and had not known that a cross, sturdy old
Yorkshire man was not accustomed to salaam to his masters, and be merely
commanded by them to do things.
"Tha'rt like th' robin," he said to her
one morning when he lifted his head and saw her standing by him. "I
never knows when I shall see thee or which side tha'll come from."
"He's friends with me now," said Mary.
"That's like him," snapped Ben
Weatherstaff. "Makin' up to th' women folk just for vanity an'
flightiness. There's nothin' he wouldn't do for th' sake o' showin' off
an' flirtin' his tail-feathers. He's as full o' pride as an egg's full
o' meat."
He very seldom talked much and sometimes did not
even answer Mary's questions except by a grunt, but this morning he said
more than usual. He stood up and rested one hobnailed boot on the top of
his spade while he looked her over.
"How long has tha' been here?" he jerked
out.
"I think it's about a month," she
answered.
"Tha's beginnin' to do Misselthwaite
credit," he said. "Tha's a bit fatter than tha' was an' tha's
not quite so yeller. Tha' looked like a young plucked crow when tha'
first came into this garden. Thinks I to myself I never set eyes on an
uglier, sourer faced young 'un."
Mary was not vain and as she had never thought
much of her looks she was not greatly disturbed.
"I know I'm fatter," she said. "My
stockings are getting tighter. They used to make wrinkles. There's the
robin, Ben Weatherstaff."
There, indeed, was the robin, and she thought he
looked nicer than ever. His red waistcoat was as glossy as satin and he
flirted his wings and tail and tilted his head and hopped about with all
sorts of lively graces. He seemed determined to make Ben Weatherstaff
admire him. But Ben was sarcastic.
"Aye, there tha' art!" he said. "Tha'
can put up with me for a bit sometimes when tha's got no one better.
Tha's been reddenin' up thy waistcoat an' polishin' thy feathers this
two weeks. I know what tha's up to. Tha's courtin' some bold young madam
somewhere tellin' thy lies to her about bein' th' finest cock robin on
Missel Moor an' ready to fight all th' rest of 'em."
"Oh! look at him!" exclaimed Mary.
The robin was evidently in a fascinating, bold
mood. He hopped closer and closer and looked at Ben Weatherstaff more
and more engagingly. He flew on to the nearest currant bush and tilted
his head and sang a little song right at him.
"Tha' thinks tha'll get over me by doin'
that," said Ben, wrinkling his face up in such a way that Mary felt
sure he was trying not to look pleased. "Tha' thinks no one can
stand out against thee--that's what tha' thinks."
The robin spread his wings--Mary could scarcely
believe her eyes. He flew right up to the handle of Ben Weatherstaff's
spade and alighted on the top of it. Then the old man's face wrinkled
itself slowly into a new expression. He stood still as if he were afraid
to breathe--as if he would not have stirred for the world, lest his
robin should start away. He spoke quite in a whisper.
"Well, I'm danged!" he said as softly as
if he were saying something quite different. "Tha' does know how to
get at a chap--tha' does! Tha's fair unearthly, tha's so knowin'."
And he stood without stirring--almost without
drawing his breath--until the robin gave another flirt to his wings and
flew away. Then he stood looking at the handle of the spade as if there
might be Magic in it, and then he began to dig again and said nothing
for several minutes.
But because he kept breaking into a slow grin now
and then, Mary was not afraid to talk to him.
"Have you a garden of your own?" she
asked.
"No. I'm bachelder an' lodge with Martin at
th' gate."
"If you had one," said Mary, "what
would you plant?"
"Cabbages an' 'taters an' onions."
"But if you wanted to make a flower
garden," persisted Mary, "what would you plant?"
"Bulbs an' sweet-smellin' things--but mostly
roses."
Mary's face lighted up.
"Do you like roses?" she said.
Ben Weatherstaff rooted up a weed and threw it
aside before he answered.
"Well, yes, I do. I was learned that by a
young lady I was gardener to. She had a lot in a place she was fond of,
an' she loved 'em like they was children--or robins. I've seen her bend
over an' kiss 'em." He dragged out another weed and scowled at it.
"That were as much as ten year' ago."
"Where is she now?" asked Mary, much
interested.
"Heaven," he answered, and drove his
spade deep into the soil, "'cording to what parson says."
"What happened to the roses?" Mary asked
again, more interested than ever.
"They was left to themselves."
Mary was becoming quite excited.
"Did they quite die? Do roses quite die when
they are left to themselves?" she ventured.
"Well, I'd got to like 'em--an' I liked
her--an' she liked 'em," Ben Weatherstaff admitted reluctantly.
"Once or twice a year I'd go an' work at 'em a bit--prune 'em an'
dig about th' roots. They run wild, but they was in rich soil, so some
of 'em lived."
"When they have no leaves and look gray and
brown and dry, how can you tell whether they are dead or alive?"
inquired Mary.
"Wait till th' spring gets at 'em--wait till
th' sun shines on th' rain and th' rain falls on th' sunshine an' then
tha'll find out."
"How--how?" cried Mary, forgetting to be
careful. "Look along th' twigs an' branches an' if tha' see a bit
of a brown lump swelling here an' there, watch it after th' warm rain
an' see what happens." He stopped suddenly and looked curiously at
her eager face. "Why does tha' care so much about roses an' such,
all of a sudden?" he demanded.
Mistress Mary felt her face grow red. She was
almost afraid to answer.
"I--I want to play that--that I have a garden
of my own," she stammered. "I--there is nothing for me to do.
I have nothing--and no one."
"Well," said Ben Weatherstaff slowly, as
he watched her, "that's true. Tha' hasn't."
He said it in such an odd way that Mary wondered
if he was actually a little sorry for her. She had never felt sorry for
herself; she had only felt tired and cross, because she disliked people
and things so much. But now the world seemed to be changing and getting
nicer. If no one found out about the secret garden, she should enjoy
herself always.
She stayed with him for ten or fifteen minutes
longer and asked him as many questions as she dared. He answered every
one of them in his queer grunting way and he did not seem really cross
and did not pick up his spade and leave her. He said something about
roses just as she was going away and it reminded her of the ones he had
said he had been fond of.
"Do you go and see those other roses
now?" she asked.
"Not been this year. My rheumatics has made
me too stiff in th' joints."
He said it in his grumbling voice, and then quite
suddenly he seemed to get angry with her, though she did not see why he
should.
"Now look here!" he said sharply.
"Don't tha' ask so many questions. Tha'rt th' worst wench for askin'
questions I've ever come a cross. Get thee gone an' play thee. I've done
talkin' for today."
And he said it so crossly that she knew there was
not the least use in staying another minute. She went skipping slowly
down the outside walk, thinking him over and saying to herself that,
queer as it was, here was another person whom she liked in spite of his
crossness. She liked old Ben Weatherstaff. Yes, she did like him. She
always wanted to try to make him talk to her. Also she began to believe
that he knew everything in the world about flowers.
There was a laurel-hedged walk which curved round
the secret garden and ended at a gate which opened into a wood, in the
park. She thought she would slip round this walk and look into the wood
and see if there were any rabbits hopping about. She enjoyed the
skipping very much and when she reached the little gate she opened it
and went through because she heard a low, peculiar whistling sound and
wanted to find out what it was.
It was a very strange thing indeed. She quite
caught her breath as she stopped to look at it. A boy was sitting under
a tree, with his back against it, playing on a rough wooden pipe. He was
a funny looking boy about twelve. He looked very clean and his nose
turned up and his cheeks were as red as poppies and never had Mistress
Mary seen such round and such blue eyes in any boy's face. And on the
trunk of the tree he leaned against, a brown squirrel was clinging and
watching him, and from behind a bush nearby a cock pheasant was
delicately stretching his neck to peep out, and quite near him were two
rabbits sitting up and sniffing with tremulous noses--and actually it
appeared as if they were all drawing near to watch him and listen to the
strange low little call his pipe seemed to make.
When he saw Mary he held up his hand and spoke to
her in a voice almost as low as and rather like his piping.
"Don't tha' move," he said. "It'd
flight 'em." Mary remained motionless. He stopped playing his pipe
and began to rise from the ground. He moved so slowly that it scarcely
seemed as though he were moving at all, but at last he stood on his feet
and then the squirrel scampered back up into the branches of his tree,
the pheasant withdrew his head and the rabbits dropped on all fours and
began to hop away, though not at all as if they were frightened.
"I'm Dickon," the boy said. "I know
tha'rt Miss Mary."
Then Mary realized that somehow she had known at
first that he was Dickon. Who else could have been charming rabbits and
pheasants as the natives charm snakes in India? He had a wide, red,
curving mouth and his smile spread all over his face.
"I got up slow," he explained,
"because if tha' makes a quick move it startles 'em. A body 'as to
move gentle an' speak low when wild things is about."
He did not speak to her as if they had never seen
each other before but as if he knew her quite well. Mary knew nothing
about boys and she spoke to him a little stiffly because she felt rather
shy.
"Did you get Martha's letter?" she
asked.
He nodded his curly, rust-colored head.
"That's why I come."
He stooped to pick up something which had been
lying on the ground beside him when he piped.
"I've got th' garden tools. There's a little
spade an' rake an' a fork an' hoe. Eh! they are good 'uns. There's a
trowel, too. An' th' woman in th' shop threw in a packet o' white poppy
an' one o' blue larkspur when I bought th' other seeds."
"Will you show the seeds to me?" Mary
said.
She wished she could talk as he did. His speech
was so quick and easy. It sounded as if he liked her and was not the
least afraid she would not like him, though he was only a common moor
boy, in patched clothes and with a funny face and a rough, rusty-red
head. As she came closer to him she noticed that there was a clean fresh
scent of heather and grass and leaves about him, almost as if he were
made of them. She liked it very much and when she looked into his funny
face with the red cheeks and round blue eyes she forgot that she had
felt shy.
"Let us sit down on this log and look at
them," she said.
They sat down and he took a clumsy little brown
paper package out of his coat pocket. He untied the string and inside
there were ever so many neater and smaller packages with a picture of a
flower on each one.
"There's a lot o' mignonette an'
poppies," he said. "Mignonette's th' sweetest smellin' thing
as grows, an' it'll grow wherever you cast it, same as poppies will.
Them as'll come up an' bloom if you just whistle to 'em, them's th'
nicest of all." He stopped and turned his head quickly, his
poppy-cheeked face lighting up.
"Where's that robin as is callin' us?"
he said.
The chirp came from a thick holly bush, bright
with scarlet berries, and Mary thought she knew whose it was.
"Is it really calling us?" she asked.
"Aye," said Dickon, as if it was the
most natural thing in the world, "he's callin' some one he's
friends with. That's same as sayin' `Here I am. Look at me. I wants a
bit of a chat.' There he is in the bush. Whose is he?"
"He's Ben Weatherstaff's, but I think he
knows me a little," answered Mary.
"Aye, he knows thee," said Dickon in his
low voice again. "An' he likes thee. He's took thee on. He'll tell
me all about thee in a minute."
He moved quite close to the bush with the slow
movement Mary had noticed before, and then he made a sound almost like
the robin's own twitter. The robin listened a few seconds, intently, and
then answered quite as if he were replying to a question.
"Aye, he's a friend o' yours," chuckled
Dickon.
"Do you think he is?" cried Mary
eagerly. She did so want to know. "Do you think he really likes
me?"
"He wouldn't come near thee if he
didn't," answered Dickon. "Birds is rare choosers an' a robin
can flout a body worse than a man. See, he's making up to thee now.
`Cannot tha' see a chap?' he's sayin'."
And it really seemed as if it must be true. He so
sidled and twittered and tilted as he hopped on his bush.
"Do you understand everything birds
say?" said Mary.
Dickon's grin spread until he seemed all wide,
red, curving mouth, and he rubbed his rough head.
"I think I do, and they think I do," he
said. "I've lived on th' moor with 'em so long. I've watched 'em
break shell an' come out an' fledge an' learn to fly an' begin to sing,
till I think I'm one of 'em. Sometimes I think p'raps I'm a bird, or a
fox, or a rabbit, or a squirrel, or even a beetle, an' I don't know
it."
He laughed and came back to the log and began to
talk about the flower seeds again. He told her what they looked like
when they were flowers; he told her how to plant them, and watch them,
and feed and water them.
"See here," he said suddenly, turning
round to look at her. "I'll plant them for thee myself. Where is
tha' garden?"
Mary's thin hands clutched each other as they lay
on her lap. She did not know what to say, so for a whole minute she said
nothing. She had never thought of this. She felt miserable. And she felt
as if she went red and then pale.
"Tha's got a bit o' garden, hasn't tha'?"
Dickon said.
It was true that she had turned red and then pale.
Dickon saw her do it, and as she still said nothing, he began to be
puzzled.
"Wouldn't they give thee a bit?" he
asked. "Hasn't tha' got any yet?"
She held her hands tighter and turned her eyes
toward him.
"I don't know anything about boys," she
said slowly. "Could you keep a secret, if I told you one? It's a
great secret. I don't know what I should do if any one found it out. I
believe I should die!" She said the last sentence quite fiercely.
Dickon looked more puzzled than ever and even
rubbed his hand over his rough head again, but he answered quite
good-humoredly. "I'm keepin' secrets all th' time," he said.
"If I couldn't keep secrets from th' other lads, secrets about
foxes' cubs, an' birds' nests, an' wild things' holes, there'd be naught
safe on th' moor. Aye, I can keep secrets."
Mistress Mary did not mean to put out her hand and
clutch his sleeve but she did it.
"I've stolen a garden," she said very
fast. "It isn't mine. It isn't anybody's. Nobody wants it, nobody
cares for it, nobody ever goes into it. Perhaps everything is dead in it
already. I don't know."
She began to feel hot and as contrary as she had
ever felt in her life.
"I don't care, I don't care! Nobody has any
right to take it from me when I care about it and they don't. They're
letting it die, all shut in by itself," she ended passionately, and
she threw her arms over her face and burst out crying-poor little
Mistress Mary.
Dickon's curious blue eyes grew rounder and
rounder. "Eh-h-h!" he said, drawing his exclamation out
slowly, and the way he did it meant both wonder and sympathy.
"I've nothing to do," said Mary.
"Nothing belongs to me. I found it myself and I got into it myself.
I was only just like the robin, and they wouldn't take it from the
robin." "Where is it?" asked Dickon in a dropped voice.
Mistress Mary got up from the log at once. She
knew she felt contrary again, and obstinate, and she did not care at
all. She was imperious and Indian, and at the same time hot and
sorrowful.
"Come with me and I'll show you," she
said.
She led him round the laurel path and to the walk
where the ivy grew so thickly. Dickon followed her with a queer, almost
pitying, look on his face. He felt as if he were being led to look at
some strange bird's nest and must move softly. When she stepped to the
wall and lifted the hanging ivy he started. There was a door and Mary
pushed it slowly open and they passed in together, and then Mary stood
and waved her hand round defiantly.
"It's this," she said. "It's a
secret garden, and I'm the only one in the world who wants it to be
alive."
Dickon looked round and round about it, and round
and round again.
"Eh!" he almost whispered, "it is a
queer, pretty place! It's like as if a body was in a dream."
CHAPTER XI
THE NEST OF THE MISSEL THRUSH
For two or three minutes he stood looking round
him, while Mary watched him, and then he began to walk about softly,
even more lightly than Mary had walked the first time she had found
herself inside the four walls. His eyes seemed to be taking in
everything--the gray trees with the gray creepers climbing over them and
hanging from their branches, the tangle on the walls and among the
grass, the evergreen alcoves with the stone seats and tall flower urns
standing in them.
"I never thought I'd see this place," he
said at last, in a whisper.
"Did you know about it?" asked Mary.
She had spoken aloud and he made a sign to her.
"We must talk low," he said, "or
some one'll hear us an' wonder what's to do in here."
"Oh! I forgot!" said Mary, feeling
frightened and putting her hand quickly against her mouth. "Did you
know about the garden?" she asked again when she had recovered
herself. Dickon nodded.
"Martha told me there was one as no one ever
went inside," he answered. "Us used to wonder what it was
like."
He stopped and looked round at the lovely gray
tangle about him, and his round eyes looked queerly happy.
"Eh! the nests as'll be here come
springtime," he said. "It'd be th' safest nestin' place in
England. No one never comin' near an' tangles o' trees an' roses to
build in. I wonder all th' birds on th' moor don't build here."
Mistress Mary put her hand on his arm again
without knowing it.
"Will there be roses?" she whispered.
"Can you tell? I thought perhaps they were all dead."
"Eh! No! Not them--not all of 'em!" he
answered. "Look here!"
He stepped over to the nearest tree--an old, old
one with gray lichen all over its bark, but upholding a curtain of
tangled sprays and branches. He took a thick knife out of his Pocket and
opened one of its blades.
"There's lots o' dead wood as ought to be cut
out," he said. "An' there's a lot o' old wood, but it made
some new last year. This here's a new bit," and he touched a shoot
which looked brownish green instead of hard, dry gray. Mary touched it
herself in an eager, reverent way.
"That one?" she said. "Is that one
quite alive quite?"
Dickon curved his wide smiling mouth.
"It's as wick as you or me," he said;
and Mary remembered that Martha had told her that "wick" meant
"alive" or "lively."
"I'm glad it's wick!" she cried out in
her whisper. "I want them all to be wick. Let us go round the
garden and count how many wick ones there are."
She quite panted with eagerness, and Dickon was as
eager as she was. They went from tree to tree and from bush to bush.
Dickon carried his knife in his hand and showed her things which she
thought wonderful.
"They've run wild," he said, "but
th' strongest ones has fair thrived on it. The delicatest ones has died
out, but th' others has growed an' growed, an' spread an' spread, till
they's a wonder. See here!" and he pulled down a thick gray,
dry-looking branch. "A body might think this was dead wood, but I
don't believe it is--down to th' root. I'll cut it low down an'
see."
He knelt and with his knife cut the
lifeless-looking branch through, not far above the earth.
"There!" he said exultantly. "I
told thee so. There's green in that wood yet. Look at it."
Mary was down on her knees before he spoke, gazing
with all her might.
"When it looks a bit greenish an' juicy like
that, it's wick," he explained. "When th' inside is dry an'
breaks easy, like this here piece I've cut off, it's done for. There's a
big root here as all this live wood sprung out of, an' if th' old wood's
cut off an' it's dug round, and took care of there'll be--" he
stopped and lifted his face to look up at the climbing and hanging
sprays above him--"there'll be a fountain o' roses here this
summer."
They went from bush to bush and from tree to tree.
He was very strong and clever with his knife and knew how to cut the dry
and dead wood away, and could tell when an unpromising bough or twig had
still green life in it. In the course of half an hour Mary thought she
could tell too, and when he cut through a lifeless-looking branch she
would cry out joyfully under her breath when she caught sight of the
least shade of moist green. The spade, and hoe, and fork were very
useful. He showed her how to use the fork while he dug about roots with
the spade and stirred the earth and let the air in.
They were working industriously round one of the
biggest standard roses when he caught sight of something which made him
utter an exclamation of surprise.
"Why!" he cried, pointing to the grass a
few feet away. "Who did that there?"
It was one of Mary's own little clearings round
the pale green points.
"I did it," said Mary.
"Why, I thought tha' didn't know nothin'
about gardenin'," he exclaimed.
"I don't," she answered, "but they
were so little, and the grass was so thick and strong, and they looked
as if they had no room to breathe. So I made a place for them. I don't
even know what they are."
Dickon went and knelt down by them, smiling his
wide smile.
"Tha' was right," he said. "A
gardener couldn't have told thee better. They'll grow now like Jack's
bean-stalk. They're crocuses an' snowdrops, an' these here is
narcissuses," turning to another patch, "an here's
daffydowndillys. Eh! they will be a sight."
He ran from one clearing to another.
"Tha' has done a lot o' work for such a
little wench," he said, looking her over.
"I'm growing fatter," said Mary,
"and I'm growing stronger. I used always to be tired. When I dig
I'm not tired at all. I like to smell the earth when it's turned
up."
"It's rare good for thee," he said,
nodding his head wisely. "There's naught as nice as th' smell o'
good clean earth, except th' smell o' fresh growin' things when th' rain
falls on 'em. I get out on th' moor many a day when it's rainin' an' I
lie under a bush an' listen to th' soft swish o' drops on th' heather
an, I just sniff an, sniff. My nose end fair quivers like a rabbit's,
mother says."
"Do you never catch cold?" inquired
Mary, gazing at him wonderingly. She had never seen such a funny boy, or
such a nice one.
"Not me," he said, grinning. "I
never ketched cold since I was born. I wasn't brought up nesh enough.
I've chased about th' moor in all weathers same as th' rabbits does.
Mother says I've sniffed up too much fresh air for twelve year' to ever
get to sniffin' with cold. I'm as tough as a white-thorn knobstick."
He was working all the time he was talking and
Mary was following him and helping him with her fork or the trowel.
"There's a lot of work to do here!" he
said once, looking about quite exultantly.
"Will you come again and help me to do
it?" Mary begged. "I'm sure I can help, too. I can dig and
pull up weeds, and do whatever you tell me. Oh! do come, Dickon!"
"I'll come every day if tha' wants me, rain
or shine," he answered stoutly. "It's the best fun I ever had
in my life--shut in here an' wakenin' up a garden."
"If you will come," said Mary, "if
you will help me to make it alive I'll--I don't know what I'll do,"
she ended helplessly. What could you do for a boy like that?
"I'll tell thee what tha'll do," said
Dickon, with his happy grin. "Tha'll get fat an' tha'll get as
hungry as a young fox an' tha'll learn how to talk to th' robin same as
I do. Eh! we'll have a lot o' fun."
He began to walk about, looking up in the trees
and at the walls and bushes with a thoughtful expression.
"I wouldn't want to make it look like a
gardener's garden, all clipped an' spick an' span, would you?" he
said. "It's nicer like this with things runnin' wild, an' swingin'
an' catchin' hold of each other."
"Don't let us make it tidy," said Mary
anxiously. "It wouldn't seem like a secret garden if it was
tidy."
Dickon stood rubbing his rusty-red head with a
rather puzzled look. "It's a secret garden sure enough," he
said, "but seems like some one besides th' robin must have been in
it since it was shut up ten year' ago."
"But the door was locked and the key was
buried," said Mary. "No one could get in."
"That's true," he answered. "It's a
queer place. Seems to me as if there'd been a bit o' prunin' done here
an' there, later than ten year' ago."
"But how could it have been done?" said
Mary.
He was examining a branch of a standard rose and
he shook his head.
"Aye! how could it!" he murmured.
"With th' door locked an' th' key buried."
Mistress Mary always felt that however many years
she lived she should never forget that first morning when her garden
began to grow. Of course, it did seem to begin to grow for her that
morning. When Dickon began to clear places to plant seeds, she
remembered what Basil had sung at her when he wanted to tease her.
"Are there any flowers that look like
bells?" she inquired.
"Lilies o' th' valley does," he
answered, digging away with the trowel, "an' there's Canterbury
bells, an' campanulas."
"Let's plant some," said Mary.
"There's lilies o' th, valley here already; I saw 'em. They'll have
growed too close an' we'll have to separate 'em, but there's plenty. Th'
other ones takes two years to bloom from seed, but I can bring you some
bits o' plants from our cottage garden. Why does tha' want 'em?"
Then Mary told him about Basil and his brothers
and sisters in India and of how she had hated them and of their calling
her "Mistress Mary Quite Contrary."
"They used to dance round and sing at me.
They sang--
`Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your
garden grow? With silver bells, and cockle shells, And marigolds all in
a row.'
I just remembered it and it made me wonder if
there were really flowers like silver bells."
She frowned a little and gave her trowel a rather
spiteful dig into the earth.
"I wasn't as contrary as they were."
But Dickon laughed.
"Eh!" he said, and as he crumbled the
rich black soil she saw he was sniffing up the scent of it. "There
doesn't seem to be no need for no one to be contrary when there's
flowers an' such like, an' such lots o' friendly wild things runnin'
about makin' homes for themselves, or buildin' nests an' singin' an'
whistlin', does there?"
Mary, kneeling by him holding the seeds, looked at
him and stopped frowning.
"Dickon," she said, "you are as
nice as Martha said you were. I like you, and you make the fifth person.
I never thought I should like five people."
Dickon sat up on his heels as Martha did when she
was polishing the grate. He did look funny and delightful, Mary thought,
with his round blue eyes and red cheeks and happy looking turned-up
nose.
"Only five folk as tha' likes?" he said.
"Who is th' other four?"
"Your mother and Martha," Mary checked
them off on her fingers, "and the robin and Ben Weatherstaff."
Dickon laughed so that he was obliged to stifle
the sound by putting his arm over his mouth.
"I know tha' thinks I'm a queer lad," he
said, "but I think tha' art th' queerest little lass I ever
saw."
Then Mary did a strange thing. She leaned forward
and asked him a question she had never dreamed of asking any one before.
And she tried to ask it in Yorkshire because that was his language, and
in India a native was always pleased if you knew his speech.
"Does tha' like me?" she said.
"Eh!" he answered heartily, "that I
does. I likes thee wonderful, an' so does th' robin, I do believe!"
"That's two, then," said Mary.
"That's two for me."
And then they began to work harder than ever and
more joyfully. Mary was startled and sorry when she heard the big clock
in the courtyard strike the hour of her midday dinner.
"I shall have to go," she said
mournfully. "And you will have to go too, won't you?"
Dickon grinned.
"My dinner's easy to carry about with
me," he said. "Mother always lets me put a bit o' somethin' in
my pocket."
He picked up his coat from the grass and brought
out of a pocket a lumpy little bundle tied up in a quite clean, coarse,
blue and white handkerchief. It held two thick pieces of bread with a
slice of something laid between them.
"It's oftenest naught but bread," he
said, "but I've got a fine slice o' fat bacon with it today."
Mary thought it looked a queer dinner, but he
seemed ready to enjoy it.
"Run on an' get thy victuals," he said.
"I'll be done with mine first. I'll get some more work done before
I start back home."
He sat down with his back against a tree.
"I'll call th' robin up," he said,
"and give him th' rind o' th' bacon to peck at. They likes a bit o'
fat wonderful."
Mary could scarcely bear to leave him. Suddenly it
seemed as if he might be a sort of wood fairy who might be gone when she
came into the garden again. He seemed too good to be true. She went
slowly half-way to the door in the wall and then she stopped and went
back.
"Whatever happens, you--you never would
tell?" she said.
His poppy-colored cheeks were distended with his
first big bite of bread and bacon, but he managed to smile
encouragingly.
"If tha' was a missel thrush an' showed me
where thy nest was, does tha' think I'd tell any one? Not me," he
said. "Tha' art as safe as a missel thrush."
And she was quite sure she was.
CHAPTER XII
"MIGHT I HAVE A BIT OF EARTH?"
Mary ran so fast that she was rather out of breath
when she reached her room. Her hair was ruffled on her forehead and her
cheeks were bright pink. Her dinner was waiting on the table, and Martha
was waiting near it.
"Tha's a bit late," she said.
"Where has tha' been?"
"I've seen Dickon!" said Mary.
"I've seen Dickon!"
"I knew he'd come," said Martha
exultantly. "How does tha' like him?"
"I think--I think he's beautiful!" said
Mary in a determined voice.
Martha looked rather taken aback but she looked
pleased, too.
"Well," she said, "he's th' best
lad as ever was born, but us never thought he was handsome. His nose
turns up too much."
"I like it to turn up," said Mary.
"An' his eyes is so round," said Martha,
a trifle doubtful. "Though they're a nice color." "I like
them round," said Mary. "And they are exactly the color of the
sky over the moor."
Martha beamed with satisfaction.
"Mother says he made 'em that color with
always lookin' up at th' birds an' th' clouds. But he has got a big
mouth, hasn't he, now?"
"I love his big mouth," said Mary
obstinately. "I wish mine were just like it."
Martha chuckled delightedly.
"It'd look rare an' funny in thy bit of a
face," she said. "But I knowed it would be that way when tha'
saw him. How did tha' like th' seeds an' th' garden tools?"
"How did you know he brought them?"
asked Mary.
"Eh! I never thought of him not bringin' 'em.
He'd be sure to bring 'em if they was in Yorkshire. He's such a trusty
lad."
Mary was afraid that she might begin to ask
difficult questions, but she did not. She was very much interested in
the seeds and gardening tools, and there was only one moment when Mary
was frightened. This was when she began to ask where the flowers were to
be planted.
"Who did tha' ask about it?" she
inquired.
"I haven't asked anybody yet," said
Mary, hesitating. "Well, I wouldn't ask th' head gardener. He's too
grand, Mr. Roach is."
"I've never seen him," said Mary.
"I've only seen undergardeners and Ben Weatherstaff."
"If I was you, I'd ask Ben Weatherstaff,"
advised Martha. "He's not half as bad as he looks, for all he's so
crabbed. Mr. Craven lets him do what he likes because he was here when
Mrs. Craven was alive, an' he used to make her laugh. She liked him.
Perhaps he'd find you a corner somewhere out o' the way."
"If it was out of the way and no one wanted
it, no one could mind my having it, could they?" Mary said
anxiously.
"There wouldn't be no reason," answered
Martha. "You wouldn't do no harm."
Mary ate her dinner as quickly as she could and
when she rose from the table she was going to run to her room to put on
her hat again, but Martha stopped her.
"I've got somethin' to tell you," she
said. "I thought I'd let you eat your dinner first. Mr. Craven came
back this mornin' and I think he wants to see you."
Mary turned quite pale.
"Oh!" she said. "Why! Why! He
didn't want to see me when I came. I heard Pitcher say he didn't."
"Well," explained Martha, "Mrs. Medlock says it's because
o' mother. She was walkin' to Thwaite village an' she met him. She'd
never spoke to him before, but Mrs. Craven had been to our cottage two
or three times. He'd forgot, but mother hadn't an' she made bold to stop
him. I don't know what she said to him about you but she said somethin'
as put him in th' mind to see you before he goes away again,
tomorrow."
"Oh!" cried Mary, "is he going away
tomorrow? I am so glad!"
"He's goin' for a long time. He mayn't come
back till autumn or winter. He's goin' to travel in foreign places. He's
always doin' it."
"Oh! I'm so glad--so glad!" said Mary
thankfully.
If he did not come back until winter, or even
autumn, there would be time to watch the secret garden come alive. Even
if he found out then and took it away from her she would have had that
much at least.
"When do you think he will want to
see--"
She did not finish the sentence, because the door
opened, and Mrs. Medlock walked in. She had on her best black dress and
cap, and her collar was fastened with a large brooch with a picture of a
man's face on it. It was a colored photograph of Mr. Medlock who had
died years ago, and she always wore it when she was dressed up. She
looked nervous and excited.
"Your hair's rough," she said quickly.
"Go and brush it. Martha, help her to slip on her best dress. Mr.
Craven sent me to bring her to him in his study."
All the pink left Mary's cheeks. Her heart began
to thump and she felt herself changing into a stiff, plain, silent child
again. She did not even answer Mrs. Medlock, but turned and walked into
her bedroom, followed by Martha. She said nothing while her dress was
changed, and her hair brushed, and after she was quite tidy she followed
Mrs. Medlock down the corridors, in silence. What was there for her to
say? She was obliged to go and see Mr. Craven and he would not like her,
and she would not like him. She knew what he would think of her.
She was taken to a part of the house she had not
been into before. At last Mrs. Medlock knocked at a door, and when some
one said, "Come in," they entered the room together. A man was
sitting in an armchair before the fire, and Mrs. Medlock spoke to him.
"This is Miss Mary, sir," she said.
"You can go and leave her here. I will ring
for you when I want you to take her away," said Mr. Craven.
When she went out and closed the door, Mary could
only stand waiting, a plain little thing, twisting her thin hands
together. She could see that the man in the chair was not so much a
hunchback as a man with high, rather crooked shoulders, and he had black
hair streaked with white. He turned his head over his high shoulders and
spoke to her.
"Come here!" he said.
Mary went to him.
He was not ugly. His face would have been handsome
if it had not been so miserable. He looked as if the sight of her
worried and fretted him and as if he did not know what in the world to
do with her.
"Are you well?" he asked.
"Yes," answered Mary.
"Do they take good care of you?"
"Yes."
He rubbed his forehead fretfully as he looked her
over.
"You are very thin," he said.
"I am getting fatter," Mary answered in
what she knew was her stiffest way.
What an unhappy face he had! His black eyes seemed
as if they scarcely saw her, as if they were seeing something else, and
he could hardly keep his thoughts upon her.
"I forgot you," he said. "How could
I remember you? I intended to send you a governess or a nurse, or some
one of that sort, but I forgot."
"Please," began Mary.
"Please--" and then the lump in her throat choked her.
"What do you want to say?" he inquired.
"I am--I am too big for a nurse," said
Mary. "And please--please don't make me have a governess yet."
He rubbed his forehead again and stared at her.
"That was what the Sowerby woman said,"
he muttered absentmindedly.
Then Mary gathered a scrap of courage.
"Is she--is she Martha's mother?" she
stammered.
"Yes, I think so," he replied.
"She knows about children," said Mary.
"She has twelve. She knows."
He seemed to rouse himself.
"What do you want to do?"
"I want to play out of doors," Mary
answered, hoping that her voice did not tremble. "I never liked it
in India. It makes me hungry here, and I am getting fatter."
He was watching her.
"Mrs. Sowerby said it would do you good.
Perhaps it will," he said. "She thought you had better get
stronger before you had a governess."
"It makes me feel strong when I play and the
wind comes over the moor," argued Mary.
"Where do you play?" he asked next.
"Everywhere," gasped Mary.
"Martha's mother sent me a skipping-rope. I skip and run--and I
look about to see if things are beginning to stick up out of the earth.
I don't do any harm."
"Don't look so frightened," he said in a
worried voice. "You could not do any harm, a child like you! You
may do what you like."
Mary put her hand up to her throat because she was
afraid he might see the excited lump which she felt jump into it. She
came a step nearer to him.
"May I?" she said tremulously.
Her anxious little face seemed to worry him more
than ever.
"Don't look so frightened," he
exclaimed. "Of course you may. I am your guardian, though I am a
poor one for any child. I cannot give you time or attention. I am too
ill, and wretched and distracted; but I wish you to be happy and
comfortable. I don't know anything about children, but Mrs. Medlock is
to see that you have all you need. I sent for you to-day because Mrs.
Sowerby said I ought to see you. Her daughter had talked about you. She
thought you needed fresh air and freedom and running about."
"She knows all about children," Mary
said again in spite of herself.
"She ought to," said Mr. Craven. "I
thought her rather bold to stop me on the moor, but she said--Mrs.
Craven had been kind to her." It seemed hard for him to speak his
dead wife's name. "She is a respectable woman. Now I have seen you
I think she said sensible things. Play out of doors as much as you like.
It's a big place and you may go where you like and amuse yourself as you
like. Is there anything you want?" as if a sudden thought had
struck him. "Do you want toys, books, dolls?"
"Might I," quavered Mary, "might I
have a bit of earth?"
In her eagerness she did not realize how queer the
words would sound and that they were not the ones she had meant to say.
Mr. Craven looked quite startled.
"Earth!" he repeated. "What do you
mean?"
"To plant seeds in--to make things grow--to
see them come alive," Mary faltered.
He gazed at her a moment and then passed his hand
quickly over his eyes.
"Do you--care about gardens so much," he
said slowly.
"I didn't know about them in India,"
said Mary. "I was always ill and tired and it was too hot. I
sometimes made littlebeds in the sand and stuck flowers in them. But
here it is different."
Mr. Craven got up and began to walk slowly across
the room.
"A bit of earth," he said to himself,
and Mary thought that somehow she must have reminded him of something.
When he stopped and spoke to her his dark eyes looked almost soft and
kind.
"You can have as much earth as you
want," he said. "You remind me of some one else who loved the
earth and things that grow. When you see a bit of earth you want,"
with something like a smile, "take it, child, and make it come
alive."
"May I take it from anywhere--if it's not
wanted?"
"Anywhere," he answered. "There!
You must go now, I am tired." He touched the bell to call Mrs.
Medlock. "Good-by. I shall be away all summer."
Mrs. Medlock came so quickly that Mary thought she
must have been waiting in the corridor.
"Mrs. Medlock," Mr. Craven said to her,
"now I have seen the child I understand what Mrs. Sowerby meant.
She must be less delicate before she begins lessons. Give her simple,
healthy food. Let her run wild in the garden. Don't look after her too
much. She needs liberty and fresh air and romping about. Mrs. Sowerby is
to come and see her now and then and she may sometimes go to the
cottage."
Mrs. Medlock looked pleased. She was relieved to
hear that she need not "look after" Mary too much. She had
felt her a tiresome charge and had indeed seen as little of her as she
dared. In addition to this she was fond of Martha's mother.
"Thank you, sir," she said. "Susan
Sowerby and me went to school together and she's as sensible and
good-hearted a woman as you'd find in a day's walk. I never had any
children myself and she's had twelve, and there never was healthier or
better ones. Miss Mary can get no harm from them. I'd always take Susan
Sowerby's advice about children myself. She's what you might call
healthy-minded--if you understand me."
"I understand," Mr. Craven answered.
"Take Miss Mary away now and send Pitcher to me."
When Mrs. Medlock left her at the end of her own
corridor Mary flew back to her room. She found Martha waiting there.
Martha had, in fact, hurried back after she had removed the dinner
service.
"I can have my garden!" cried Mary.
"I may have it where I like! I am not going to have a governess for
a long time! Your mother is coming to see me and I may go to your
cottage! He says a little girl like me could not do any harm and I may
do what I like--anywhere!"
"Eh!" said Martha delightedly,
"that was nice of him wasn't it?"
"Martha," said Mary solemnly, "he
is really a nice man, only his face is so miserable and his forehead is
all drawn together."
She ran as quickly as she could to the garden. She
had been away so much longer than she had thought she should and she
knew Dickon would have to set out early on his five-mile walk. When she
slipped through the door under the ivy, she saw he was not working where
she had left him. The gardening tools were laid together under a tree.
She ran to them, looking all round the place, but there was no Dickon to
be seen. He had gone away and the secret garden was empty--except for
the robin who had just flown across the wall and sat on a standard
rose-bush watching her. "He's gone," she said woefully.
"Oh! was he--was he--was he only a wood fairy?"
Something white fastened to the standard rose-bush
caught her eye. It was a piece of paper, in fact, it was a piece of the
letter she had printed for Martha to send to Dickon. It was fastened on
the bush with a long thorn, and in a minute she knew Dickon had left it
there. There were some roughly printed letters on it and a sort of
picture. At first she could not tell what it was. Then she saw it was
meant for a nest with a bird sitting on it. Underneath were the printed
letters and they said:
"I will cum bak."
CHAPTER XIII
"I AM COLIN"
Mary took the picture back to the house when she
went to her supper and she showed it to Martha.
"Eh!" said Martha with great pride.
"I never knew our Dickon was as clever as that. That there's a
picture of a missel thrush on her nest, as large as life an' twice as
natural."
Then Mary knew Dickon had meant the picture to be
a message. He had meant that she might be sure he would keep her secret.
Her garden was her nest and she was like a missel thrush. Oh, how she
did like that queer, common boy!
She hoped he would come back the very next day and
she fell asleep looking forward to the morning.
But you never know what the weather will do in
Yorkshire, particularly in the springtime. She was awakened in the night
by the sound of rain beating with heavy drops against her window. It was
pouring down in torrents and the wind was "wuthering" round
the corners and in the chimneys of the huge old house. Mary sat up in
bed and felt miserable and angry.
"The rain is as contrary as I ever was,"
she said. "It came because it knew I did not want it."
She threw herself back on her pillow and buried
her face. She did not cry, but she lay and hated the sound of the
heavily beating rain, she hated the wind and its "wuthering."
She could not go to sleep again. The mournful sound kept her awake
because she felt mournful herself. If she had felt happy it would
probably have lulled her to sleep. How it "wuthered" and how
the big raindrops poured down and beat against the pane!
"It sounds just like a person lost on the
moor and wandering on and on crying," she said.
She had been lying awake turning from side to side
for about an hour, when suddenly something made her sit up in bed and
turn her head toward the door listening. She listened and she listened.
"It isn't the wind now," she said in a
loud whisper. "That isn't the wind. It is different. It is that
crying I heard before."
The door of her room was ajar and the sound came
down the corridor, a far-off faint sound of fretful crying. She listened
for a few minutes and each minute she became more and more sure. She
felt as if she must find out what it was. It seemed even stranger than
the secret garden and the buried key. Perhaps the fact that she was in a
rebellious mood made her bold. She put her foot out of bed and stood on
the floor.
"I am going to find out what it is," she
said. "Everybody is in bed and I don't care about Mrs. Medlock--I
don't care!"
There was a candle by her bedside and she took it
up and went softly out of the room. The corridor looked very long and
dark, but she was too excited to mind that. She thought she remembered
the corners she must turn to find the short corridor with the door
covered with tapestry--the one Mrs. Medlock had come through the day she
lost herself. The sound had come up that passage. So she went on with
her dim light, almost feeling her way, her heart beating so loud that
she fancied she could hear it. The far-off faint crying went on and led
her. Sometimes it stopped for a moment or so and then began again. Was
this the right corner to turn? She stopped and thought. Yes it was. Down
this passage and then to the left, and then up two broad steps, and then
to the right again. Yes, there was the tapestry door.
She pushed it open very gently and closed it
behind her, and she stood in the corridor and could hear the crying
quite plainly, though it was not loud. It was on the other side of the
wall at her left and a few yards farther on there was a door. She could
see a glimmer of light coming from beneath it. The Someone was crying in
that room, and it was quite a young Someone.
So she walked to the door and pushed it open, and
there she was standing in the room!
It was a big room with ancient, handsome furniture
in it. There was a low fire glowing faintly on the hearth and a night
light burning by the side of a carved four-posted bed hung with brocade,
and on the bed was lying a boy, crying fretfully.
Mary wondered if she was in a real place or if she
had fallen asleep again and was dreaming without knowing it.
The boy had a sharp, delicate face the color of
ivory and he seemed to have eyes too big for it. He had also a lot of
hair which tumbled over his forehead in heavy locks and made his thin
face seem smaller. He looked like a boy who had been ill, but he was
crying more as if he were tired and cross than as if he were in pain.
Mary stood near the door with her candle in her
hand, holding her breath. Then she crept across the room, and, as she
drew nearer, the light attracted the boy's attention and he turned his
head on his pillow and stared at her, his gray eyes opening so wide that
they seemed immense.
"Who are you?" he said at last in a
half-frightened whisper. "Are you a ghost?"
"No, I am not," Mary answered, her own
whisper sounding half frightened. "Are you one?"
He stared and stared and stared. Mary could not
help noticing what strange eyes he had. They were agate gray and they
looked too big for his face because they had black lashes all round
them.
"No," he replied after waiting a moment
or so. "I am Colin."
"Who is Colin?" she faltered.
"I am Colin Craven. Who are you?"
"I am Mary Lennox. Mr. Craven is my
uncle."
"He is my father," said the boy.
"Your father!" gasped Mary. "No one
ever told me he had a boy! Why didn't they?"
"Come here," he said, still keeping his
strange eyes fixed on her with an anxious expression.
She came close to the bed and he put out his hand
and touched her.
"You are real, aren't you?" he said.
"I have such real dreams very often. You might be one of
them."
Mary had slipped on a woolen wrapper before she
left her room and she put a piece of it between his fingers.
"Rub that and see how thick and warm it
is," she said. "I will pinch you a little if you like, to show
you how real I am. For a minute I thought you might be a dream
too."
"Where did you come from?" he asked.
"From my own room. The wind wuthered so I
couldn't go to sleep and I heard some one crying and wanted to find out
who it was. What were you crying for?"
"Because I couldn't go to sleep either and my
head ached. Tell me your name again."
"Mary Lennox. Did no one ever tell you I had
come to live here?"
He was still fingering the fold of her wrapper,
but he began to look a little more as if he believed in her reality.
"No," he answered. "They daren't."
"Why?" asked Mary.
"Because I should have been afraid you would
see me. I won't let people see me and talk me over."
"Why?" Mary asked again, feeling more
mystified every moment.
"Because I am like this always, ill and
having to lie down. My father won't let people talk me over either. The
servants are not allowed to speak about me. If I live I may be a
hunchback, but I shan't live. My father hates to think I may be like
him."
"Oh, what a queer house this is!" Mary
said. "What a queer house! Everything is a kind of secret. Rooms
are locked up and gardens are locked up--and you! Have you been locked
up?"
"No. I stay in this room because I don't want
to be moved out of it. It tires me too much."
"Does your father come and see you?"
Mary ventured.
"Sometimes. Generally when I am asleep. He
doesn't want to see me."
"Why?" Mary could not help asking again.
A sort of angry shadow passed over the boy's face.
"My mother died when I was born and it makes
him wretched to look at me. He thinks I don't know, but I've heard
people talking. He almost hates me."
"He hates the garden, because she died,"
said Mary half speaking to herself.
"What garden?" the boy asked.
"Oh! just--just a garden she used to
like," Mary stammered. "Have you been here always?"
"Nearly always. Sometimes I have been taken to places at the
seaside, but I won't stay because people stare at me. I used to wear an
iron thing to keep my back straight, but a grand doctor came from London
to see me and said it was stupid. He told them to take it off and keep
me out in the fresh air. I hate fresh air and I don't want to go
out."
"I didn't when first I came here," said
Mary. "Why do you keep looking at me like that?"
"Because of the dreams that are so
real," he answered rather fretfully. "Sometimes when I open my
eyes I don't believe I'm awake."
"We're both awake," said Mary. She
glanced round the room with its high ceiling and shadowy corners and dim
fire-light. "It looks quite like a dream, and it's the middle of
the night, and everybody in the house is asleep--everybody but us. We
are wide awake."
"I don't want it to be a dream," the boy
said restlessly.
Mary thought of something all at once.
"If you don't like people to see you,"
she began, "do you want me to go away?"
He still held the fold of her wrapper and he gave
it a little pull.
"No," he said. "I should be sure
you were a dream if you went. If you are real, sit down on that big
footstool and talk. I want to hear about you."
Mary put down her candle on the table near the bed
and sat down on the cushioned stool. She did not want to go away at all.
She wanted to stay in the mysterious hidden-away room and talk to the
mysterious boy.
"What do you want me to tell you?" she
said.
He wanted to know how long she had been at
Misselthwaite; he wanted to know which corridor her room was on; he
wanted to know what she had been doing; if she disliked the moor as he
disliked it; where she had lived before she came to Yorkshire. She
answered all these questions and many more and he lay back on his pillow
and listened. He made her tell him a great deal about India and about
her voyage across the ocean. She found out that because he had been an
invalid he had not learned things as other children had. One of his
nurses had taught him to read when he was quite little and he was always
reading and looking at pictures in splendid books.
Though his father rarely saw him when he was
awake, he was given all sorts of wonderful things to amuse himself with.
He never seemed to have been amused, however. He could have anything he
asked for and was never made to do anything he did not like to do.
"Everyone is obliged to do what pleases me," he said
indifferently. "It makes me ill to be angry. No one believes I
shall live to grow up."
He said it as if he was so accustomed to the idea
that it had ceased to matter to him at all. He seemed to like the sound
of Mary's voice. As she went on talking he listened in a drowsy,
interested way. Once or twice she wondered if he were not gradually
falling into a doze. But at last he asked a question which opened up a
new subject.
"How old are you?" he asked.
"I am ten," answered Mary, forgetting
herself for the moment, "and so are you."
"How do you know that?" he demanded in a
surprised voice.
"Because when you were born the garden door
was locked and the key was buried. And it has been locked for ten
years."
Colin half sat up, turning toward her, leaning on
his elbows.
"What garden door was locked? Who did it?
Where was the key buried?" he exclaimed as if he were suddenly very
much interested.
"It--it was the garden Mr. Craven
hates," said Mary nervously. "He locked the door. No one--no
one knew where he buried the key." "What sort of a garden is
it?" Colin persisted eagerly.
"No one has been allowed to go into it for
ten years," was Mary's careful answer.
But it was too late to be careful. He was too much
like herself. He too had had nothing to think about and the idea of a
hidden garden attracted him as it had attracted her. He asked question
after question. Where was it? Had she never looked for the door? Had she
never asked the gardeners?
"They won't talk about it," said Mary.
"I think they have been told not to answer questions."
"I would make them," said Colin.
"Could you?" Mary faltered, beginning to
feel frightened. If he could make people answer questions, who knew what
might happen!
"Everyone is obliged to please me. I told you
that," he said. "If I were to live, this place would sometime
belong to me. They all know that. I would make them tell me."
Mary had not known that she herself had been
spoiled, but she could see quite plainly that this mysterious boy had
been. He thought that the whole world belonged to him. How peculiar he
was and how coolly he spoke of not living.
"Do you think you won't live?" she
asked, partly because she was curious and partly in hope of making him
forget the garden.
"I don't suppose I shall," he answered
as indifferently as he had spoken before. "Ever since I remember
anything I have heard people say I shan't. At first they thought I was
too little to understand and now they think I don't hear. But I do. My
doctor is my father's cousin. He is quite poor and if I die he will have
all Misselthwaite when my father is dead. I should think he wouldn't
want me to live."
"Do you want to live?" inquired Mary.
"No," he answered, in a cross, tired
fashion. "But I don't want to die. When I feel ill I lie here and
think about it until I cry and cry."
"I have heard you crying three times,"
Mary said, "but I did not know who it was. Were you crying about
that?" She did so want him to forget the garden.
"I dare say," he answered. "Let us
talk about something else. Talk about that garden. Don't you want to see
it?"
"Yes," answered Mary, in quite a low
voice.
"I do," he went on persistently. "I
don't think I ever really wanted to see anything before, but I want to
see that garden. I want the key dug up. I want the door unlocked. I
would let them take me there in my chair. That would be getting fresh
air. I am going to make them open the door."
He had become quite excited and his strange eyes
began to shine like stars and looked more immense than ever.
"They have to please me," he said.
"I will make them take me there and I will let you go, too."
Mary's hands clutched each other. Everything would
be spoiled--everything! Dickon would never come back. She would never
again feel like a missel thrush with a safe-hidden nest.
"Oh, don't--don't--don't--don't do
that!" she cried out.
He stared as if he thought she had gone crazy!
"Why?" he exclaimed. "You said you
wanted to see it."
"I do," she answered almost with a sob
in her throat, "but if you make them open the door and take you in
like that it will never be a secret again."
He leaned still farther forward.
"A secret," he said. "What do you
mean? Tell me."
Mary's words almost tumbled over one another.
"You see--you see," she panted, "if
no one knows but ourselves--if there was a door, hidden somewhere under
the ivy--if there was--and we could find it; and if we could slip
through it together and shut it behind us, and no one knew any one was
inside and we called it our garden and pretended that--that we were
missel thrushes and it was our nest, and if we played there almost every
day and dug and planted seeds and made it all come alive--"
"Is it dead?" he interrupted her.
"It soon will be if no one cares for
it," she went on. "The bulbs will live but the roses--"
He stopped her again as excited as she was
herself.
"What are bulbs?" he put in quickly.
"They are daffodils and lilies and snowdrops.
They are working in the earth now--pushing up pale green points because
the spring is coming."
"Is the spring coming?" he said.
"What is it like? You don't see it in rooms if you are ill."
"It is the sun shining on the rain and the
rain falling on the sunshine, and things pushing up and working under
the earth," said Mary. "If the garden was a secret and we
could get into it we could watch the things grow bigger every day, and
see how many roses are alive. Don't you. see? Oh, don't you see how much
nicer it would be if it was a secret?"
He dropped back on his pillow and lay there with
an odd expression on his face.
"I never had a secret," he said,
"except that one about not living to grow up. They don't know I
know that, so it is a sort of secret. But I like this kind better."
"If you won't make them take you to the
garden," pleaded Mary, "perhaps--I feel almost sure I can find
out how to get in sometime. And then--if the doctor wants you to go out
in your chair, and if you can always do what you want to do,
perhaps--perhaps we might find some boy who would push you, and we could
go alone and it would always be a secret garden."
"I should--like--that," he said very
slowly, his eyes looking dreamy. "I should like that. I should not
mind fresh air in a secret garden."
Mary began to recover her breath and feel safer
because the idea of keeping the secret seemed to please him. She felt
almost sure that if she kept on talking and could make him see the
garden in his mind as she had seen it he would like it so much that he
could not bear to think that everybody might tramp in to it when they
chose.
"I'll tell you what I think it would be like,
if we could go into it," she said. "It has been shut up so
long things have grown into a tangle perhaps."
He lay quite still and listened while she went on
talking about the roses which might have clambered from tree to tree and
hung down--about the many birds which might have built their nests there
because it was so safe. And then she told him about the robin and Ben
Weatherstaff, and there was so much to tell about the robin and it was
so easy and safe to talk about it that she ceased to be afraid. The
robin pleased him so much that he smiled until he looked almost
beautiful, and at first Mary had thought that he was even plainer than
herself, with his big eyes and heavy locks of hair.
"I did not know birds could be like
that," he said. "But if you stay in a room you never see
things. What a lot of things you know. I feel as if you had been inside
that garden."
She did not know what to say, so she did not say
anything. He evidently did not expect an answer and the next moment he
gave her a surprise.
"I am going to let you look at
something," he said. "Do you see that rose-colored silk
curtain hanging on the wall over the mantel-piece?"
Mary had not noticed it before, but she looked up
and saw it. It was a curtain of soft silk hanging over what seemed to be
some picture.
"Yes," she answered.
"There is a cord hanging from it," said
Colin. "Go and pull it."
Mary got up, much mystified, and found the cord.
When she pulled it the silk curtain ran back on rings and when it ran
back it uncovered a picture. It was the picture of a girl with a
laughing face. She had bright hair tied up with a blue ribbon and her
gay, lovely eyes were exactly like Colin's unhappy ones, agate gray and
looking twice as big as they really were because of the black lashes all
round them.
"She is my mother," said Colin
complainingly. "I don't see why she died. Sometimes I hate her for
doing it."
"How queer!" said Mary.
"If she had lived I believe I should not have
been ill always," he grumbled. "I dare say I should have
lived, too. And my father would not have hated to look at me. I dare say
I should have had a strong back. Draw the curtain again."
Mary did as she was told and returned to her
footstool.
"She is much prettier than you," she
said, "but her eyes are just like yours--at least they are the same
shape and color. Why is the curtain drawn over her?"
He moved uncomfortably.
"I made them do it," he said.
"Sometimes I don't like to see her looking at me. She smiles too
much when I am ill and miserable. Besides, she is mine and I don't want
everyone to see her." There were a few moments of silence and then
Mary spoke.
"What would Mrs. Medlock do if she found out
that I had been here?" she inquired.
"She would do as I told her to do," he
answered. "And I should tell her that I wanted you to come here and
talk to me every day. I am glad you came."
"So am I," said Mary. "I will come
as often as I can, but"--she hesitated--"I shall have to look
every day for the garden door."
"Yes, you must," said Colin, "and
you can tell me about it afterward."
He lay thinking a few minutes, as he had done
before, and then he spoke again.
"I think you shall be a secret, too," he
said. "I will not tell them until they find out. I can always send
the nurse out of the room and say that I want to be by myself. Do you
know Martha?"
"Yes, I know her very well," said Mary.
"She waits on me."
He nodded his head toward the outer corridor.
"She is the one who is asleep in the other
room. The nurse went away yesterday to stay all night with her sister
and she always makes Martha attend to me when she wants to go out.
Martha shall tell you when to come here."
Then Mary understood Martha's troubled look when
she had asked questions about the crying.
"Martha knew about you all the time?"
she said.
"Yes; she often attends to me. The nurse
likes to get away from me and then Martha comes."
"I have been here a long time," said
Mary. "Shall I go away now? Your eyes look sleepy."
"I wish I could go to sleep before you leave
me," he said rather shyly.
"Shut your eyes," said Mary, drawing her
footstool closer, "and I will do what my Ayah used to do in India.
I will pat your hand and stroke it and sing something quite low."
"I should like that perhaps," he said
drowsily.
Somehow she was sorry for him and did not want him
to lie awake, so she leaned against the bed and began to stroke and pat
his hand and sing a very low little chanting song in Hindustani.
"That is nice," he said more drowsily
still, and she went on chanting and stroking, but when she looked at him
again his black lashes were lying close against his cheeks, for his eyes
were shut and he was fast asleep. So she got up softly, took her candle
and crept away without making a sound.
CHAPTER XIV
A YOUNG RAJAH
The moor was hidden in mist when the morning came,
and the rain had not stopped pouring down. There could be no going out
of doors. Martha was so busy that Mary had no opportunity of talking to
her, but in the afternoon she asked her to come and sit with her in the
nursery. She came bringing the stocking she was always knitting when she
was doing nothing else.
"What's the matter with thee?" she asked
as soon as they sat down. "Tha' looks as if tha'd somethin' to
say."
"I have. I have found out what the crying
was," said Mary.
Martha let her knitting drop on her knee and gazed
at her with startled eyes.
"Tha' hasn't!" she exclaimed.
"Never!"
"I heard it in the night," Mary went on.
"And I got up and went to see where it came from. It was Colin. I
found him."
Martha's face became red with fright.
"Eh! Miss Mary!" she said half crying.
"Tha' shouldn't have done it--tha' shouldn't! Tha'll get me in
trouble. I never told thee nothin' about him--but tha'll get me in
trouble. I shall lose my place and what'll mother do!"
"You won't lose your place," said Mary.
"He was glad I came. We talked and talked and he said he was glad I
came."
"Was he?" cried Martha. "Art tha'
sure? Tha' doesn't know what he's like when anything vexes him. He's a
big lad to cry like a baby, but when he's in a passion he'll fair scream
just to frighten us. He knows us daren't call our souls our own."
"He wasn't vexed," said Mary. "I
asked him if I should go away and he made me stay. He asked me questions
and I sat on a big footstool and talked to him about India and about the
robin and gardens. He wouldn't let me go. He let me see his mother's
picture. Before I left him I sang him to sleep."
Martha fairly gasped with amazement.
"I can scarcely believe thee!" she
protested. "It's as if tha'd walked straight into a lion's den. If
he'd been like he is most times he'd have throwed himself into one of
his tantrums and roused th' house. He won't let strangers look at
him."
"He let me look at him. I looked at him all
the time and he looked at me. We stared!" said Mary.
"I don't know what to do!" cried
agitated Martha. "If Mrs. Medlock finds out, she'll think I broke
orders and told thee and I shall be packed back to mother."
"He is not going to tell Mrs. Medlock
anything about it yet. It's to be a sort of secret just at first,"
said Mary firmly. "And he says everybody is obliged to do as he
pleases."
"Aye, that's true enough--th' bad lad!"
sighed Martha, wiping her forehead with her apron.
"He says Mrs. Medlock must. And he wants me
to come and talk to him every day. And you are to tell me when he wants
me."
"Me!" said Martha; "I shall lose my
place--I shall for sure!"
"You can't if you are doing what he wants you
to do and everybody is ordered to obey him," Mary argued.
"Does tha' mean to say," cried Martha
with wide open eyes, "that he was nice to thee!"
"I think he almost liked me," Mary
answered.
"Then tha' must have bewitched him!"
decided Martha, drawing a long breath.
"Do you mean Magic?" inquired Mary.
"I've heard about Magic in India, but I can't make it. I just went
into his room and I was so surprised to see him I stood and stared. And
then he turned round and stared at me. And he thought I was a ghost or a
dream and I thought perhaps he was. And it was so queer being there
alone together in the middle of the night and not knowing about each
other. And we began to ask each other questions. And when I asked him if
I must go away he said I must not."
"Th' world's comin' to a end!" gasped
Martha.
"What is the matter with him?" asked
Mary.
"Nobody knows for sure and certain,"
said Martha. "Mr. Craven went off his head like when he was born.
Th' doctors thought he'd have to be put in a 'sylum. It was because Mrs.
Craven died like I told you. He wouldn't set eyes on th' baby. He just
raved and said it'd be another hunchback like him and it'd better
die."
"Is Colin a hunchback?" Mary asked.
"He didn't look like one."
"He isn't yet," said Martha. "But
he began all wrong. Mother said that there was enough trouble and raging
in th' house to set any child wrong. They was afraid his back was weak
an' they've always been takin' care of it--keepin' him lyin' down and
not lettin' him walk. Once they made him wear a brace but he fretted so
he was downright ill. Then a big doctor came to see him an' made them
take it off. He talked to th' other doctor quite rough--in a polite way.
He said there'd been too much medicine and too much lettin' him have his
own way."
"I think he's a very spoiled boy," said
Mary.
"He's th' worst young nowt as ever was!"
said Martha. "I won't say as he hasn't been ill a good bit. He's
had coughs an' colds that's nearly killed him two or three times. Once
he had rheumatic fever an' once he had typhoid. Eh! Mrs. Medlock did get
a fright then. He'd been out of his head an' she was talkin' to th'
nurse, thinkin' he didn't know nothin', an' she said, `He'll die this
time sure enough, an' best thing for him an' for everybody.' An' she
looked at him an' there he was with his big eyes open, starin' at her as
sensible as she was herself. She didn't know wha'd happen but he just
stared at her an' says, `You give me some water an' stop talkin'.'"
"Do you think he will die?" asked Mary.
"Mother says there's no reason why any child
should live that gets no fresh air an' doesn't do nothin' but lie on his
back an' read picture-books an' take medicine. He's weak and hates th'
trouble o' bein' taken out o' doors, an' he gets cold so easy he says it
makes him ill."
Mary sat and looked at the fire. "I
wonder," she said slowly, "if it would not do him good to go
out into a garden and watch things growing. It did me good."
"One of th' worst fits he ever had,"
said Martha, "was one time they took him out where the roses is by
the fountain. He'd been readin' in a paper about people gettin' somethin'
he called `rose cold' an' he began to sneeze an' said he'd got it an'
then a new gardener as didn't know th' rules passed by an' looked at him
curious. He threw himself into a passion an' he said he'd looked at him
because he was going to be a hunchback. He cried himself into a fever
an' was ill all night."
"If he ever gets angry at me, I'll never go
and see him again," said Mary.
"He'll have thee if he wants thee," said
Martha. "Tha' may as well know that at th' start."
Very soon afterward a bell rang and she rolled up
her knitting.
"I dare say th' nurse wants me to stay with
him a bit," she said. "I hope he's in a good temper."
She was out of the room about ten minutes and then
she came back with a puzzled expression.
"Well, tha' has bewitched him," she
said. "He's up on his sofa with his picture-books. He's told the
nurse to stay away until six o'clock. I'm to wait in the next room. Th'
minute she was gone he called me to him an' says, `I want Mary Lennox to
come and talk to me, and remember you're not to tell any one.' You'd
better go as quick as you can."
Mary was quite willing to go quickly. She did not
want to see Colin as much as she wanted to see Dickon; but she wanted to
see him very much.
There was a bright fire on the hearth when she
entered his room, and in the daylight she saw it was a very beautiful
room indeed. There were rich colors in the rugs and hangings and
pictures and books on the walls which made it look glowing and
comfortable even in spite of the gray sky and falling rain. Colin looked
rather like a picture himself. He was wrapped in a velvet dressing-gown
and sat against a big brocaded cushion. He had a red spot on each cheek.
"Come in," he said. "I've been
thinking about you all morning."
"I've been thinking about you, too,"
answered Mary. "You don't know how frightened Martha is. She says
Mrs. Medlock will think she told me about you and then she will be sent
away."
He frowned.
"Go and tell her to come here," he said.
"She is in the next room."
Mary went and brought her back. Poor Martha was
shaking in her shoes. Colin was still frowning.
"Have you to do what I please or have you
not?" he demanded.
"I have to do what you please, sir,"
Martha faltered, turning quite red.
"Has Medlock to do what I please?"
"Everybody has, sir," said Martha.
"Well, then, if I order you to bring Miss
Mary to me, how can Medlock send you away if she finds it out?"
"Please don't let her, sir," pleaded
Martha.
"I'll send her away if she dares to say a
word about such a thing," said Master Craven grandly. "She
wouldn't like that, I can tell you."
"Thank you, sir," bobbing a curtsy,
"I want to do my duty, sir."
"What I want is your duty" said Colin
more grandly still. "I'll take care of you. Now go away."
When the door closed behind Martha, Colin found
Mistress Mary gazing at him as if he had set her wondering.
"Why do you look at me like that?" he
asked her. "What are you thinking about?"
"I am thinking about two things."
"What are they? Sit down and tell me."
"This is the first one," said Mary,
seating herself on the big stool. "Once in India I saw a boy who
was a Rajah. He had rubies and emeralds and diamonds stuck all over him.
He spoke to his people just as you spoke to Martha. Everybody had to do
everything he told them--in a minute. I think they would have been
killed if they hadn't."
"I shall make you tell me about Rajahs
presently," he said, "but first tell me what the second thing
was."
"I was thinking," said Mary, "how
different you are from Dickon."
"Who is Dickon?" he said. "What a
queer name!"
She might as well tell him, she thought she could
talk about Dickon without mentioning the secret garden. She had liked to
hear Martha talk about him. Besides, she longed to talk about him. It
would seem to bring him nearer.
"He is Martha's brother. He is twelve years
old," she explained. "He is not like any one else in the
world. He can charm foxes and squirrels and birds just as the natives in
India charm snakes. He plays a very soft tune on a pipe and they come
and listen."
There were some big books on a table at his side
and he dragged one suddenly toward him. "There is a picture of a
snake-charmer in this," he exclaimed. "Come and look at
it"
The book was a beautiful one with superb colored
illustrations and he turned to one of them.
"Can he do that?" he asked eagerly.
"He played on his pipe and they
listened," Mary explained. "But he doesn't call it Magic. He
says it's because he lives on the moor so much and he knows their ways.
He says he feels sometimes as if he was a bird or a rabbit himself, he
likes them so. I think he asked the robin questions. It seemed as if
they talked to each other in soft chirps."
Colin lay back on his cushion and his eyes grew
larger and larger and the spots on his cheeks burned.
"Tell me some more about him," he said.
"He knows all about eggs and nests,"
Mary went on. "And he knows where foxes and badgers and otters
live. He keeps them secret so that other boys won't find their holes and
frighten them. He knows about everything that grows or lives on the
moor."
"Does he like the moor?" said Colin.
"How can he when it's such a great, bare, dreary place?"
"It's the most beautiful place,"
protested Mary. "Thousands of lovely things grow on it and there
are thousands of little creatures all busy building nests and making
holes and burrows and chippering or singing or squeaking to each other.
They are so busy and having such fun under the earth or in the trees or
heather. It's their world."
"How do you know all that?" said Colin,
turning on his elbow to look at her.
"I have never been there once, really,"
said Mary suddenly remembering. "I only drove over it in the dark.
I thought it was hideous. Martha told me about it first and then Dickon.
When Dickon talks about it you feel as if you saw things and heard them
and as if you were standing in the heather with the sun shining and the
gorse smelling like honey--and all full of bees and butterflies."
"You never see anything if you are ill,"
said Colin restlessly. He looked like a person listening to a new sound
in the distance and wondering what it was.
"You can't if you stay in a room," said
Mary.
"I couldn't go on the moor," he said in
a resentful tone.
Mary was silent for a minute and then she said
something bold.
"You might--sometime."
He moved as if he were startled.
"Go on the moor! How could I? I am going to
die." "How do you know?" said Mary unsympathetically. She
didn't like the way he had of talking about dying. She did not feel very
sympathetic. She felt rather as if he almost boasted about it.
"Oh, I've heard it ever since I
remember," he answered crossly. "They are always whispering
about it and thinking I don't notice. They wish I would, too."
Mistress Mary felt quite contrary. She pinched her
lips together.
"If they wished I would," she said,
"I wouldn't. Who wishes you would?"
"The servants--and of course Dr. Craven
because he would get Misselthwaite and be rich instead of poor. He
daren't say so, but he always looks cheerful when I am worse. When I had
typhoid fever his face got quite fat. I think my father wishes it,
too."
"I don't believe he does," said Mary
quite obstinately.
That made Colin turn and look at her again.
"Don't you?" he said.
And then he lay back on his cushion and was still,
as if he were thinking. And there was quite a long silence. Perhaps they
were both of them thinking strange things children do not usually think.
"I like the grand doctor from London, because he made them take the
iron thing off," said Mary at last "Did he say you were going
to die?"
"No.".
"What did he say?"
"He didn't whisper," Colin answered.
"Perhaps he knew I hated whispering. I heard him say one thing
quite aloud. He said, 'The lad might live if he would make up his mind
to it. Put him in the humor.' It sounded as if he was in a temper."
"I'll tell you who would put you in the
humor, perhaps," said Mary reflecting. She felt as if she would
like this thing to be settled one way or the other. "I believe
Dickon would. He's always talking about live things. He never talks
about dead things or things that are ill. He's always looking up in the
sky to watch birds flying--or looking down at the earth to see something
growing. He has such round blue eyes and they are so wide open with
looking about. And he laughs such a big laugh with his wide mouth--and
his cheeks are as red--as red as cherries." She pulled her stool
nearer to the sofa and her expression quite changed at the remembrance
of the wide curving mouth and wide open eyes.
"See here," she said. "Don't let us
talk about dying; I don't like it. Let us talk about living. Let us talk
and talk about Dickon. And then we will look at your pictures."
It was the best thing she could have said. To talk
about Dickon meant to talk about the moor and about the cottage and the
fourteen people who lived in it on sixteen shillings a week--and the
children who got fat on the moor grass like the wild ponies. And about
Dickon's mother--and the skipping-rope--and the moor with the sun on
it--and about pale green points sticking up out of the black sod. And it
was all so alive that Mary talked more than she had ever talked
before--and Colin both talked and listened as he had never done either
before. And they both began to laugh over nothings as children will when
they are happy together. And they laughed so that in the end they were
making as much noise as if they had been two ordinary healthy natural
ten-year-old creatures--instead of a hard, little, unloving girl and a
sickly boy who believed that he was going to die.
They enjoyed themselves so much that they forgot
the pictures and they forgot about the time. They had been laughing
quite loudly over Ben Weatherstaff and his robin, and Colin was actually
sitting up as if he had forgotten about his weak back, when he suddenly
remembered something. "Do you know there is one thing we have never
once thought of," he said. "We are cousins."
It seemed so queer that they had talked so much
and never remembered this simple thing that they laughed more than ever,
because they had got into the humor to laugh at anything. And in the
midst of the fun the door opened and in walked Dr. Craven and Mrs.
Medlock.
Dr. Craven started in actual alarm and Mrs.
Medlock almost fell back because he had accidentally bumped against her.
"Good Lord!" exclaimed poor Mrs. Medlock
with her eyes almost starting out of her head. "Good Lord!"
"What is this?" said Dr. Craven, coming
forward. "What does it mean?"
Then Mary was reminded of the boy Rajah again.
Colin answered as if neither the doctor's alarm nor Mrs. Medlock's
terror were of the slightest consequence. He was as little disturbed or
frightened as if an elderly cat and dog had walked into the room.
"This is my cousin, Mary Lennox," he
said. "I asked her to come and talk to me. I like her. She must
come and talk to me whenever I send for her."
Dr. Craven turned reproachfully to Mrs. Medlock.
"Oh, sir" she panted. "I don't know how it's happened.
There's not a servant on the place tha'd dare to talk--they all have
their orders."
"Nobody told her anything," said Colin.
"She heard me crying and found me herself. I am glad she came.
Don't be silly, Medlock."
Mary saw that Dr. Craven did not look pleased, but
it was quite plain that he dare not oppose his patient. He sat down by
Colin and felt his pulse.
"I am afraid there has been too much
excitement. Excitement is not good for you, my boy," he said.
"I should be excited if she kept away,"
answered Colin, his eyes beginning to look dangerously sparkling.
"I am better. She makes me better. The nurse must bring up her tea
with mine. We will have tea together."
Mrs. Medlock and Dr. Craven looked at each other
in a troubled way, but there was evidently nothing to be done.
"He does look rather better, sir,"
ventured Mrs. Medlock. "But"--thinking the matter
over--"he looked better this morning before she came into the
room."
"She came into the room last night. She
stayed with me a long time. She sang a Hindustani song to me and it made
me go to sleep," said Colin. "I was better when I wakened up.
I wanted my breakfast. I want my tea now. Tell nurse, Medlock."
Dr. Craven did not stay very long. He talked to
the nurse for a few minutes when she came into the room and said a few
words of warning to Colin. He must not talk too much; he must not forget
that he was ill; he must not forget that he was very easily tired. Mary
thought that there seemed to be a number of uncomfortable things he was
not to forget.
Colin looked fretful and kept his strange
black-lashed eyes fixed on Dr. Craven's face.
"I want to forget it," he said at last.
"She makes me forget it. That is why I want her."
Dr. Craven did not look happy when he left the
room. He gave a puzzled glance at the little girl sitting on the large
stool. She had become a stiff, silent child again as soon as he entered
and he could not see what the attraction was. The boy actually did look
brighter, however--and he sighed rather heavily as he went down the
corridor.
"They are always wanting me to eat things
when I don't want to," said Colin, as the nurse brought in the tea
and put it on the table by the sofa. "Now, if you'll eat I will.
Those muffins look so nice and hot. Tell me about Rajahs."
CHAPTER XV
NEST BUILDING
After another week of rain the high arch of blue
sky appeared again and the sun which poured down was quite hot. Though
there had been no chance to see either the secret garden or Dickon,
Mistress Mary had enjoyed herself very much. The week had not seemed
long. She had spent hours of every day with Colin in his room, talking
about Rajahs or gardens or Dickon and the cottage on the moor. They had
looked at the splendid books and pictures and sometimes Mary had read
things to Colin, and sometimes he had read a little to her. When he was
amused and interested she thought he scarcely looked like an invalid at
all, except that his face was so colorless and he was always on the
sofa.
"You are a sly young one to listen and get
out of your bed to go following things up like you did that night,"
Mrs. Medlock said once. "But there's no saying it's not been a sort
of blessing to the lot of us. He's not had a tantrum or a whining fit
since you made friends. The nurse was just going to give up the case
because she was so sick of him, but she says she doesn't mind staying
now you've gone on duty with her," laughing a little.
In her talks with Colin, Mary had tried to be very
cautious about the secret garden. There were certain things she wanted
to find out from him, but she felt that she must find them out without
asking him direct questions. In the first place, as she began to like to
be with him, she wanted to discover whether he was the kind of boy you
could tell a secret to. He was not in the least like Dickon, but he was
evidently so pleased with the idea of a garden no one knew anything
about that she thought perhaps he could be trusted. But she had not
known him long enough to be sure. The second thing she wanted to find
out was this: If he could be trusted--if he really could--wouldn't it be
possible to take him to the garden without having any one find it out?
The grand doctor had said that he must have fresh air and Colin had said
that he would not mind fresh air in a secret garden. Perhaps if he had a
great deal of fresh air and knew Dickon and the robin and saw things
growing he might not think so much about dying. Mary had seen herself in
the glass sometimes lately when she had realized that she looked quite a
different creature from the child she had seen when she arrived from
India. This child looked nicer. Even Martha had seen a change in her.
"Th' air from th' moor has done thee good
already," she had said. "Tha'rt not nigh so yeller and tha'rt
not nigh so scrawny. Even tha' hair doesn't slamp down on tha' head so
flat. It's got some life in it so as it sticks out a bit."
"It's like me," said Mary. "It's
growing stronger and fatter. I'm sure there's more of it."
"It looks it, for sure," said Martha,
ruffling it up a little round her face. "Tha'rt not half so ugly
when it's that way an' there's a bit o' red in tha' cheeks."
If gardens and fresh air had been good for her
perhaps they would be good for Colin. But then, if he hated people to
look at him, perhaps he would not like to see Dickon.
"Why does it make you angry when you are
looked at?" she inquired one day.
"I always hated it," he answered,
"even when I was very little. Then when they took me to the seaside
and I used to lie in my carriage everybody used to stare and ladies
would stop and talk to my nurse and then they would begin to whisper and
I knew then they were saying I shouldn't live to grow up. Then sometimes
the ladies would pat my cheeks and say `Poor child!' Once when a lady
did that I screamed out loud and bit her hand. She was so frightened she
ran away."
"She thought you had gone mad like a
dog," said Mary, not at all admiringly.
"I don't care what she thought," said
Colin, frowning.
"I wonder why you didn't scream and bite me
when I came into your room?" said Mary. Then she began to smile
slowly.
"I thought you were a ghost or a dream,"
he said. "You can't bite a ghost or a dream, and if you scream they
don't care."
"Would you hate it if--if a boy looked at
you?" Mary asked uncertainly.
He lay back on his cushion and paused
thoughtfully.
"There's one boy," he said quite slowly,
as if he were thinking over every word, "there's one boy I believe
I shouldn't mind. It's that boy who knows where the foxes
live--Dickon."
"I'm sure you wouldn't mind him," said
Mary.
"The birds don't and other animals," he
said, still thinking it over, "perhaps that's why I shouldn't. He's
a sort of animal charmer and I am a boy animal."
Then he laughed and she laughed too; in fact it
ended in their both laughing a great deal and finding the idea of a boy
animal hiding in his hole very funny indeed.
What Mary felt afterward was that she need not
fear about Dickon.
On that first morning when the sky was blue again
Mary wakened very early. The sun was pouring in slanting rays through
the blinds and there was something so joyous in the sight of it that she
jumped out of bed and ran to the window. She drew up the blinds and
opened the window itself and a great waft of fresh, scented air blew in
upon her. The moor was blue and the whole world looked as if something
Magic had happened to it. There were tender little fluting sounds here
and there and everywhere, as if scores of birds were beginning to tune
up for a concert. Mary put her hand out of the window and held it in the
sun.
"It's warm--warm!" she said. "It
will make the green points push up and up and up, and it will make the
bulbs and roots work and struggle with all their might under the
earth."
She kneeled down and leaned out of the window as
far as she could, breathing big breaths and sniffing the air until she
laughed because she remembered what Dickon's mother had said about the
end of his nose quivering like a rabbit's. "It must be very
early," she said. "The little clouds are all pink and I've
never seen the sky look like this. No one is up. I don't even hear the
stable boys."
A sudden thought made her scramble to her feet.
"I can't wait! I am going to see the
garden!"
She had learned to dress herself by this time and
she put on her clothes in five minutes. She knew a small side door which
she could unbolt herself and she flew downstairs in her stocking feet
and put on her shoes in the hall. She unchained and unbolted and
unlocked and when the door was open she sprang across the step with one
bound, and there she was standing on the grass, which seemed to have
turned green, and with the sun pouring down on her and warm sweet wafts
about her and the fluting and twittering and singing coming from every
bush and tree. She clasped her hands for pure joy and looked up in the
sky and it was so blue and pink and pearly and white and flooded with
springtime light that she felt as if she must flute and sing aloud
herself and knew that thrushes and robins and skylarks could not
possibly help it. She ran around the shrubs and paths towards the secret
garden.
"It is all different already," she said.
"The grass is greener and things are sticking up everywhere and
things are uncurling and green buds of leaves are showing. This
afternoon I am sure Dickon will come."
The long warm rain had done strange things to the
herbaceous beds which bordered the walk by the lower wall. There were
things sprouting and pushing out from the roots of clumps of plants and
there were actually here and there glimpses of royal purple and yellow
unfurling among the stems of crocuses. Six months before Mistress Mary
would not have seen how the world was waking up, but now she missed
nothing.
When she had reached the place where the door hid
itself under the ivy, she was startled by a curious loud sound. It was
the caw--caw of a crow and it came from the top of the wall, and when
she looked up, there sat a big glossy-plumaged blue-black bird, looking
down at her very wisely indeed. She had never seen a crow so close
before and he made her a little nervous, but the next moment he spread
his wings and flapped away across the garden. She hoped he was not going
to stay inside and she pushed the door open wondering if he would. When
she got fairly into the garden she saw that he probably did intend to
stay because he had alighted on a dwarf apple-tree and under the
apple-tree was lying a little reddish animal with a Bushy tail, and both
of them were watching the stooping body and rust-red head of Dickon, who
was kneeling on the grass working hard.
Mary flew across the grass to him.
"Oh, Dickon! Dickon!" she cried out.
"How could you get here so early! How could you! The sun has only
just got up!"
He got up himself, laughing and glowing, and
tousled; his eyes like a bit of the sky.
"Eh!" he said. "I was up long
before him. How could I have stayed abed! Th' world's all fair begun
again this mornin', it has. An' it's workin' an' hummin' an' scratchin'
an' pipin' an' nest-buildin' an' breathin' out scents, till you've got
to be out on it 'stead o' lyin' on your back. When th' sun did jump up,
th' moor went mad for joy, an' I was in the midst of th' heather, an' I
run like mad myself, shoutin' an' singin'. An' I come straight here. I
couldn't have stayed away. Why, th' garden was lyin' here waitin'!"
Mary put her hands on her chest, panting, as if
she had been running herself.
"Oh, Dickon! Dickon!" she said.
"I'm so happy I can scarcely breathe!"
Seeing him talking to a stranger, the little
bushy-tailed animal rose from its place under the tree and came to him,
and the rook, cawing once, flew down from its branch and settled quietly
on his shoulder.
"This is th' little fox cub," he said,
rubbing the little reddish animal's head. "It's named Captain. An'
this here's Soot. Soot he flew across th' moor with me an' Captain he
run same as if th' hounds had been after him. They both felt same as I
did."
Neither of the creatures looked as if he were the
least afraid of Mary. When Dickon began to walk about, Soot stayed on
his shoulder and Captain trotted quietly close to his side.
"See here!" said Dickon. "See how
these has pushed up, an' these an' these! An' Eh! Look at these
here!"
He threw himself upon his knees and Mary went down
beside him. They had come upon a whole clump of crocuses burst into
purple and orange and gold. Mary bent her face down and kissed and
kissed them.
"You never kiss a person in that way,"
she said when she lifted her head. "Flowers are so different."
He looked puzzled but smiled.
"Eh!" he said, "I've kissed mother
many a time that way when I come in from th' moor after a day's roamin'
an' she stood there at th' door in th' sun, lookin' so glad an'
comfortable." They ran from one part of the garden to another and
found so many wonders that they were obliged to remind themselves that
they must whisper or speak low. He showed her swelling leafbuds on rose
branches which had seemed dead. He showed her ten thousand new green
points pushing through the mould. They put their eager young noses close
to the earth and sniffed its warmed springtime breathing; they dug and
pulled and laughed low with rapture until Mistress Mary's hair was as
tumbled as Dickon's and her cheeks were almost as poppy red as his.
There was every joy on earth in the secret garden
that morning, and in the midst of them came a delight more delightful
than all, because it was more wonderful. Swiftly something flew across
the wall and darted through the trees to a close grown corner, a little
flare of red-breasted bird with something hanging from its beak. Dickon
stood quite still and put his hand on Mary almost as if they had
suddenly found themselves laughing in a church.
"We munnot stir," he whispered in broad
Yorkshire. "We munnot scarce breathe. I knowed he was mate-huntin'
when I seed him last. It's Ben Weatherstaff's robin. He's buildin' his
nest. He'll stay here if us don't fight him." They settled down
softly upon the grass and sat there without moving.
"Us mustn't seem as if us was watchin' him
too close," said Dickon. "He'd be out with us for good if he
got th' notion us was interferin' now. He'll be a good bit different
till all this is over. He's settin' up housekeepin'. He'll be shyer an'
readier to take things ill. He's got no time for visitin' an' gossipin'.
Us must keep still a bit an' try to look as if us was grass an' trees
an' bushes. Then when he's got used to seein' us I'll chirp a bit an'
he'll know us'll not be in his way."
Mistress Mary was not at all sure that she knew,
as Dickon seemed to, how to try to look like grass and trees and bushes.
But he had said the queer thing as if it were the simplest and most
natural thing in the world, and she felt it must be quite easy to him,
and indeed she watched him for a few minutes carefully, wondering if it
was possible for him to quietly turn green and put out branches and
leaves. But he only sat wonderfully still, and when he spoke dropped his
voice to such a softness that it was curious that she could hear him,
but she could.
"It's part o' th' springtime, this nest-buildin'
is," he said. "I warrant it's been goin' on in th' same way
every year since th' world was begun. They've got their way o' thinkin'
and doin' things an' a body had better not meddle. You can lose a friend
in springtime easier than any other season if you're too curious."
"If we talk about him I can't help looking at
him," Mary said as softly as possible. "We must talk of
something else. There is something I want to tell you."
"He'll like it better if us talks o' somethin'
else," said Dickon. "What is it tha's got to tell me?"
"Well--do you know about Colin?" she
whispered.
He turned his head to look at her.
"What does tha' know about him?" he
asked.
"I've seen him. I have been to talk to him
every day this week. He wants me to come. He says I'm making him forget
about being ill and dying," answered Mary.
Dickon looked actually relieved as soon as the
surprise died away from his round face.
"I am glad o' that," he exclaimed.
"I'm right down glad. It makes me easier. I knowed I must say
nothin' about him an' I don't like havin' to hide things."
"Don't you like hiding the garden?" said
Mary.
"I'll never tell about it," he answered.
"But I says to mother, `Mother,' I says, `I got a secret to keep.
It's not a bad 'un, tha' knows that. It's no worse than hidin' where a
bird's nest is. Tha' doesn't mind it, does tha'?'"
Mary always wanted to hear about mother.
"What did she say?" she asked, not at
all afraid to hear.
Dickon grinned sweet-temperedly.
"It was just like her, what she said,"
he answered. "She give my head a bit of a rub an' laughed an' she
says, 'Eh, lad, tha' can have all th' secrets tha' likes. I've knowed
thee twelve year'.'"
"How did you know about Colin?" asked
Mary.
"Everybody as knowed about Mester Craven
knowed there was a little lad as was like to be a cripple, an' they
knowed Mester Craven didn't like him to be talked about. Folks is sorry
for Mester Craven because Mrs. Craven was such a pretty young lady an'
they was so fond of each other. Mrs. Medlock stops in our cottage
whenever she goes to Thwaite an' she doesn't mind talkin' to mother
before us children, because she knows us has been brought up to be
trusty. How did tha' find out about him? Martha was in fine trouble th'
last time she came home. She said tha'd heard him frettin' an' tha' was
askin' questions an' she didn't know what to say."
Mary told him her story about the midnight
wuthering of the wind which had wakened her and about the faint far-off
sounds of the complaining voice which had led her down the dark
corridors with her candle and had ended with her opening of the door of
the dimly lighted room with the carven four-posted bed in the corner.
When she described the small ivory-white face and the strange
black-rimmed eyes Dickon shook his head.
"Them's just like his mother's eyes, only
hers was always laughin', they say," he said. "They say as Mr.
Craven can't bear to see him when he's awake an' it's because his eyes
is so like his mother's an' yet looks so different in his miserable bit
of a face."
"Do you think he wants to die?"
whispered Mary.
"No, but he wishes he'd never been born.
Mother she says that's th' worst thing on earth for a child. Them as is
not wanted scarce ever thrives. Mester Craven he'd buy anythin' as money
could buy for th' poor lad but he'd like to forget as he's on earth. For
one thing, he's afraid he'll look at him some day and find he's growed
hunchback."
"Colin's so afraid of it himself that he
won't sit up," said Mary. "He says he's always thinking that
if he should feel a lump coming he should go crazy and scream himself to
death."
"Eh! he oughtn't to lie there thinkin' things
like that," said Dickon. "No lad could get well as thought
them sort o' things."
The fox was lying on the grass close by him,
looking up to ask for a pat now and then, and Dickon bent down and
rubbed his neck softly and thought a few minutes in silence. Presently
he lifted his head and looked round the garden.
"When first we got in here," he said,
"it seemed like everything was gray. Look round now and tell me if
tha' doesn't see a difference."
Mary looked and caught her breath a little.
"Why!" she cried, "the gray wall is
changing. It is as if a green mist were creeping over it. It's almost
like a green gauze veil."
"Aye," said Dickon. "An' it'll be
greener and greener till th' gray's all gone. Can tha' guess what I was
thinkin'?"
"I know it was something nice," said
Mary eagerly. "I believe it was something about Colin."
"I was thinkin' that if he was out here he
wouldn't be watchin' for lumps to grow on his back; he'd be watchin' for
buds to break on th' rose-bushes, an' he'd likely be healthier,"
explained Dickon. "I was wonderin' if us could ever get him in th'
humor to come out here an' lie under th' trees in his carriage."
"I've been wondering that myself. I've
thought of it almost every time I've talked to him," said Mary.
"I've wondered if he could keep a secret and I've wondered if we
could bring him here without any one seeing us. I thought perhaps you
could push his carriage. The doctor said he must have fresh air and if
he wants us to take him out no one dare disobey him. He won't go out for
other people and perhaps they will be glad if he will go out with us. He
could order the gardeners to keep away so they wouldn't find out."
Dickon was thinking very hard as he scratched
Captain's back.
"It'd be good for him, I'll warrant," he
said. "Us'd not be thinkin' he'd better never been born. Us'd be
just two children watchin' a garden grow, an' he'd be another. Two lads
an' a little lass just lookin' on at th' springtime. I warrant it'd be
better than doctor's stuff."
"He's been lying in his room so long and he's
always been so afraid of his back that it has made him queer," said
Mary. "He knows a good many things out of books but he doesn't know
anything else. He says he has been too ill to notice things and he hates
going out of doors and hates gardens and gardeners. But he likes to hear
about this garden because it is a secret. I daren't tell him much but he
said he wanted to see it."
"Us'll have him out here sometime for
sure," said Dickon. "I could push his carriage well enough.
Has tha' noticed how th' robin an' his mate has been workin' while we've
been sittin' here? Look at him perched on that branch wonderin' where
it'd be best to put that twig he's got in his beak."
He made one of his low whistling calls and the
robin turned his head and looked at him inquiringly, still holding his
twig. Dickon spoke to him as Ben Weatherstaff did, but Dickon's tone was
one of friendly advice.
"Wheres'ever tha' puts it," he said,
"it'll be all right. Tha' knew how to build tha' nest before tha'
came out o' th' egg. Get on with thee, lad. Tha'st got no time to
lose."
"Oh, I do like to hear you talk to him!"
Mary said, laughing delightedly. "Ben Weatherstaff scolds him and
makes fun of him, and he hops about and looks as if he understood every
word, and I know he likes it. Ben Weatherstaff says he is so conceited
he would rather have stones thrown at him than not be noticed."
Dickon laughed too and went on talking.
"Tha' knows us won't trouble thee," he
said to the robin. "Us is near bein' wild things ourselves. Us is
nest-buildin' too, bless thee. Look out tha' doesn't tell on us."
And though the robin did not answer, because his
beak was occupied, Mary knew that when he flew away with his twig to his
own corner of the garden the darkness of his dew-bright eye meant that
he would not tell their secret for the world.
CHAPTER XVI
"I WON'T!" SAID MARY
They found a great deal to do that morning and
Mary was late in returning to the house and was also in such a hurry to
get back to her work that she quite forgot Colin until the last moment.
"Tell Colin that I can't come and see him
yet," she said to Martha. "I'm very busy in the garden."
Martha looked rather frightened.
"Eh! Miss Mary," she said, "it may
put him all out of humor when I tell him that."
But Mary was not as afraid of him as other people
were and she was not a self-sacrificing person.
"I can't stay," she answered. "Dickon's
waiting for me;" and she ran away.
The afternoon was even lovelier and busier than
the morning had been. Already nearly all the weeds were cleared out of
the garden and most of the roses and trees had been pruned or dug about.
Dickon had brought a spade of his own and he had taught Mary to use all
her tools, so that by this time it was plain that though the lovely wild
place was not likely to become a "gardener's garden" it would
be a wilderness of growing things before the springtime was over.
"There'll be apple blossoms an' cherry
blossoms overhead," Dickon said, working away with all his might.
"An' there'll be peach an' plum trees in bloom against th' walls,
an' th' grass'll be a carpet o' flowers."
The little fox and the rook were as happy and busy
as they were, and the robin and his mate flew backward and forward like
tiny streaks of lightning. Sometimes the rook flapped his black wings
and soared away over the tree-tops in the park. Each time he came back
and perched near Dickon and cawed several times as if he were relating
his adventures, and Dickon talked to him just as he had talked to the
robin. Once when Dickon was so busy that he did not answer him at first,
Soot flew on to his shoulders and gently tweaked his ear with his large
beak. When Mary wanted to rest a little Dickon sat down with her under a
tree and once he took his pipe out of his pocket and played the soft
strange little notes and two squirrels appeared on the wall and looked
and listened.
"Tha's a good bit stronger than tha'
was," Dickon said, looking at her as she was digging. "Tha's
beginning to look different, for sure."
Mary was glowing with exercise and good spirits.
"I'm getting fatter and fatter every
day," she said quite exultantly. "Mrs. Medlock will have to
get me some bigger dresses. Martha says my hair is growing thicker. It
isn't so flat and stringy."
The sun was beginning to set and sending deep
gold-colored rays slanting under the trees when they parted.
"It'll be fine tomorrow," said Dickon.
"I'll be at work by sunrise."
"So will I," said Mary.
She ran back to the house as quickly as her feet
would carry her. She wanted to tell Colin about Dickon's fox cub and the
rook and about what the springtime had been doing. She felt sure he
would like to hear. So it was not very pleasant when she opened the door
of her room, to see Martha standing waiting for her with a doleful face.
"What is the matter?" she asked.
"What did Colin say when you told him I couldn't come?"
"Eh!" said Martha, "I wish tha'd
gone. He was nigh goin' into one o' his tantrums. There's been a nice to
do all afternoon to keep him quiet. He would watch the clock all th'
time."
Mary's lips pinched themselves together. She was
no more used to considering other people than Colin was and she saw no
reason why an ill-tempered boy should interfere with the thing she liked
best. She knew nothing about the pitifulness of people who had been ill
and nervous and who did not know that they could control their tempers
and need not make other people ill and nervous, too. When she had had a
headache in India she had done her best to see that everybody else also
had a headache or something quite as bad. And she felt she was quite
right; but of course now she felt that Colin was quite wrong.
He was not on his sofa when she went into his
room. He was lying flat on his back in bed and he did not turn his head
toward her as she came in. This was a bad beginning and Mary marched up
to him with her stiff manner.
"Why didn't you get up?" she said.
"I did get up this morning when I thought you
were coming," he answered, without looking at her. "I made
them put me back in bed this afternoon. My back ached and my head ached
and I was tired. Why didn't you come?" "I was working in the
garden with Dickon," said Mary.
Colin frowned and condescended to look at her.
"I won't let that boy come here if you go and
stay with him instead of coming to talk to me," he said.
Mary flew into a fine passion. She could fly into
a passion without making a noise. She just grew sour and obstinate and
did not care what happened.
"If you send Dickon away, I'll never come
into this room again!" she retorted.
"You'll have to if I want you," said
Colin.
"I won't!" said Mary.
"I'll make you," said Colin. "They
shall drag you in."
"Shall they, Mr. Rajah!" said Mary
fiercely. "They may drag me in but they can't make me talk when
they get me here. I'll sit and clench my teeth and never tell you one
thing. I won't even look at you. I'll stare at the floor!"
They were a nice agreeable pair as they glared at
each other. If they had been two little street boys they would have
sprung at each other and had a rough-and-tumble fight. As it was, they
did the next thing to it.
"You are a selfish thing!" cried Colin.
"What are you?" said Mary. "Selfish
people always say that. Any one is selfish who doesn't do what they
want. You're more selfish than I am. You're the most selfish boy I ever
saw."
"I'm not!" snapped Colin. "I'm not
as selfish as your fine Dickon is! He keeps you playing in the dirt when
he knows I am all by myself. He's selfish, if you like!"
Mary's eyes flashed fire.
"He's nicer than any other boy that ever
lived!" she said. "He's--he's like an angel!" It might
sound rather silly to say that but she did not care.
"A nice angel!" Colin sneered
ferociously. "He's a common cottage boy off the moor!"
"He's better than a common Rajah!"
retorted Mary. "He's a thousand times better!"
Because she was the stronger of the two she was
beginning to get the better of him. The truth was that he had never had
a fight with any one like himself in his life and, upon the whole, it
was rather good for him, though neither he nor Mary knew anything about
that. He turned his head on his pillow and shut his eyes and a big tear
was squeezed out and ran down his cheek. He was beginning to feel
pathetic and sorry for himself--not for any one else.
"I'm not as selfish as you, because I'm
always ill, and I'm sure there is a lump coming on my back," he
said. "And I am going to die besides."
"You're not!" contradicted Mary
unsympathetically.
He opened his eyes quite wide with indignation. He
had never heard such a thing said before. He was at once furious and
slightly pleased, if a person could be both at one time.
"I'm not?" he cried. "I am! You
know I am! Everybody says so."
"I don't believe it!" said Mary sourly.
"You just say that to make people sorry. I believe you're proud of
it. I don't believe it! If you were a nice boy it might be true--but
you're too nasty!"
In spite of his invalid back Colin sat up in bed
in quite a healthy rage.
"Get out of the room!" he shouted and he
caught hold of his pillow and threw it at her. He was not strong enough
to throw it far and it only fell at her feet, but Mary's face looked as
pinched as a nutcracker.
"I'm going," she said. "And I won't
come back!" She walked to the door and when she reached it she
turned round and spoke again.
"I was going to tell you all sorts of nice
things," she said. "Dickon brought his fox and his rook and I
was going to tell you all about them. Now I won't tell you a single
thing!"
She marched out of the door and closed it behind
her, and there to her great astonishment she found the trained nurse
standing as if she had been listening and, more amazing still--she was
laughing. She was a big handsome young woman who ought not to have been
a trained nurse at all, as she could not bear invalids and she was
always making excuses to leave Colin to Martha or any one else who would
take her place. Mary had never liked her, and she simply stood and gazed
up at her as she stood giggling into her handkerchief..
"What are you laughing at?" she asked
her.
"At you two young ones," said the nurse.
"It's the best thing that could happen to the sickly pampered thing
to have some one to stand up to him that's as spoiled as himself;"
and she laughed into her handkerchief again. "If he'd had a young
vixen of a sister to fight with it would have been the saving of
him."
"Is he going to die?"
"I don't know and I don't care," said
the nurse. "Hysterics and temper are half what ails him."
"What are hysterics?" asked Mary.
"You'll find out if you work him into a
tantrum after this--but at any rate you've given him something to have
hysterics about, and I'm glad of it."
Mary went back to her room not feeling at all as
she had felt when she had come in from the garden. She was cross and
disappointed but not at all sorry for Colin. She had looked forward to
telling him a great many things and she had meant to try to make up her
mind whether it would be safe to trust him with the great secret. She
had been beginning to think it would be, but now she had changed her
mind entirely. She would never tell him and he could stay in his room
and never get any fresh air and die if he liked! It would serve him
right! She felt so sour and unrelenting that for a few minutes she
almost forgot about Dickon and the green veil creeping over the world
and the soft wind blowing down from the moor.
Martha was waiting for her and the trouble in her
face had been temporarily replaced by interest and curiosity. There was
a wooden box on the table and its cover had been removed and revealed
that it was full of neat packages.
"Mr. Craven sent it to you," said
Martha. "It looks as if it had picture-books in it."
Mary remembered what he had asked her the day she
had gone to his room. "Do you want anything--dolls--toys
--books?" She opened the package wondering if he had sent a doll,
and also wondering what she should do with it if he had. But he had not
sent one. There were several beautiful books such as Colin had, and two
of them were about gardens and were full of pictures. There were two or
three games and there was a beautiful little writing-case with a gold
monogram on it and a gold pen and inkstand.
Everything was so nice that her pleasure began to
crowd her anger out of her mind. She had not expected him to remember
her at all and her hard little heart grew quite warm.
"I can write better than I can print,"
she said, "and the first thing I shall write with that pen will be
a letter to tell him I am much obliged."
If she had been friends with Colin she would have
run to show him her presents at once, and they would have looked at the
pictures and read some of the gardening books and perhaps tried playing
the games, and he would have enjoyed himself so much he would never once
have thought he was going to die or have put his hand on his spine to
see if there was a lump coming. He had a way of doing that which she
could not bear. It gave her an uncomfortable frightened feeling because
he always looked so frightened himself. He said that if he felt even
quite a little lump some day he should know his hunch had begun to grow.
Something he had heard Mrs. Medlock whispering to the nurse had given
him the idea and he had thought over it in secret until it was quite
firmly fixed in his mind. Mrs. Medlock had said his father's back had
begun to show its crookedness in that way when he was a child. He had
never told any one but Mary that most of his "tantrums" as
they called them grew out of his hysterical hidden fear. Mary had been
sorry for him when he had told her.
"He always began to think about it when he
was cross or tired," she said to herself. "And he has been
cross today. Perhaps--perhaps he has been thinking about it all
afternoon."
She stood still, looking down at the carpet and
thinking.
"I said I would never go back again--"
she hesitated, knitting her brows--"but perhaps, just perhaps, I
will go and see--if he wants me--in the morning. Perhaps he'll try to
throw his pillow at me again, but--I think--I'll go."
CHAPTER XVII
A TANTRUM
She had got up very early in the morning and had
worked hard in the garden and she was tired and sleepy, so as soon as
Martha had brought her supper and she had eaten it, she was glad to go
to bed. As she laid her head on the pillow she murmured to herself:
"I'll go out before breakfast and work with
Dickon and then afterward--I believe--I'll go to see him."
She thought it was the middle of the night when
she was awakened by such dreadful sounds that she jumped out of bed in
an instant. What was it--what was it? The next minute she felt quite
sure she knew. Doors were opened and shut and there were hurrying feet
in the corridors and some one was crying and screaming at the same time,
screaming and crying in a horrible way.
"It's Colin," she said. "He's
having one of those tantrums the nurse called hysterics. How awful it
sounds."
As she listened to the sobbing screams she did not
wonder that people were so frightened that they gave him his own way in
everything rather than hear them. She put her hands over her ears and
felt sick and shivering.
"I don't know what to do. I don't know what
to do," she kept saying. "I can't bear it."
Once she wondered if he would stop if she dared go
to him and then she remembered how he had driven her out of the room and
thought that perhaps the sight of her might make him worse. Even when
she pressed her hands more tightly over her ears she could not keep the
awful sounds out. She hated them so and was so terrified by them that
suddenly they began to make her angry and she felt as if she should like
to fly into a tantrum herself and frighten him as he was frightening
her. She was not used to any one's tempers but her own. She took her
hands from her ears and sprang up and stamped her foot.
"He ought to be stopped! Somebody ought to
make him stop! Somebody ought to beat him!" she cried out.
Just then she heard feet almost running down the
corridor and her door opened and the nurse came in. She was not laughing
now by any means. She even looked rather pale.
"He's worked himself into hysterics,"
she said in a great hurry. "He'll do himself harm. No one can do
anything with him. You come and try, like a good child. He likes
you."
"He turned me out of the room this
morning," said Mary, stamping her foot with excitement.
The stamp rather pleased the nurse. The truth was
that she had been afraid she might find Mary crying and hiding her head
under the bed-clothes.
"That's right," she said. "You're
in the right humor. You go and scold him. Give him something new to
think of. Do go, child, as quick as ever you can."
It was not until afterward that Mary realized that
the thing had been funny as well as dreadful--that it was funny that all
the grown-up people were so frightened that they came to a little girl
just because they guessed she was almost as bad as Colin himself.
She flew along the corridor and the nearer she got
to the screams the higher her temper mounted. She felt quite wicked by
the time she reached the door. She slapped it open with her hand and ran
across the room to the four-posted bed.
"You stop!" she almost shouted.
"You stop! I hate you! Everybody hates you! I wish everybody would
run out of the house and let you scream yourself to death! You will
scream yourself to death in a minute, and I wish you would!" A nice
sympathetic child could neither have thought nor said such things, but
it just happened that the shock of hearing them was the best possible
thing for this hysterical boy whom no one had ever dared to restrain or
contradict.
He had been lying on his face beating his pillow
with his hands and he actually almost jumped around, he turned so
quickly at the sound of the furious little voice. His face looked
dreadful, white and red and swollen, and he was gasping and choking; but
savage little Mary did not care an atom.
"If you scream another scream," she
said, "I'll scream too --and I can scream louder than you can and
I'll frighten you, I'll frighten you!"
He actually had stopped screaming because she had
startled him so. The scream which had been coming almost choked him. The
tears were streaming down his face and he shook all over.
"I can't stop!" he gasped and sobbed.
"I can't--I can't!"
"You can!" shouted Mary. "Half that
ails you is hysterics and temper--just
hysterics--hysterics--hysterics!" and she stamped each time she
said it.
"I felt the lump--I felt it," choked out
Colin. "I knew I should. I shall have a hunch on my back and then I
shall die," and he began to writhe again and turned on his face and
sobbed and wailed but he didn't scream.
"You didn't feel a lump!" contradicted
Mary fiercely. "If you did it was only a hysterical lump. Hysterics
makes lumps. There's nothing the matter with your horrid back--nothing
but hysterics! Turn over and let me look at it!"
She liked the word "hysterics" and felt
somehow as if it had an effect on him. He was probably like herself and
had never heard it before.
"Nurse," she commanded, "come here
and show me his back this minute!"
The nurse, Mrs. Medlock and Martha had been
standing huddled together near the door staring at her, their mouths
half open. All three had gasped with fright more than once. The nurse
came forward as if she were half afraid. Colin was heaving with great
breathless sobs.
"Perhaps he--he won't let me," she
hesitated in a low voice.
Colin heard her, however, and he gasped out
between two sobs:
"Sh-show her! She-she'll see then!"
It was a poor thin back to look at when it was
bared. Every rib could be counted and every joint of the spine, though
Mistress Mary did not count them as she bent over and examined them with
a solemn savage little face. She looked so sour and old-fashioned that
the nurse turned her head aside to hide the twitching of her mouth.
There was just a minute's silence, for even Colin tried to hold his
breath while Mary looked up and down his spine, and down and up, as
intently as if she had been the great doctor from London.
"There's not a single lump there!" she
said at last. "There's not a lump as big as a pin--except backbone
lumps, and you can only feel them because you're thin. I've got backbone
lumps myself, and they used to stick out as much as yours do, until I
began to get fatter, and I am not fat enough yet to hide them. There's
not a lump as big as a pin! If you ever say there is again, I shall
laugh!"
No one but Colin himself knew what effect those
crossly spoken childish words had on him. If he had ever had any one to
talk to about his secret terrors--if he had ever dared to let himself
ask questions--if he had had childish companions and had not lain on his
back in the huge closed house, breathing an atmosphere heavy with the
fears of people who were most of them ignorant and tired of him, he
would have found out that most of his fright and illness was created by
himself. But he had lain and thought of himself and his aches and
weariness for hours and days and months and years. And now that an angry
unsympathetic little girl insisted obstinately that he was not as ill as
he thought he was he actually felt as if she might be speaking the
truth.
"I didn't know," ventured the nurse,
"that he thought he had a lump on his spine. His back is weak
because he won't try to sit up. I could have told him there was no lump
there." Colin gulped and turned his face a little to look at her.
"C-could you?" he said pathetically.
"Yes, sir."
"There!" said Mary, and she gulped too.
Colin turned on his face again and but for his
long-drawn broken breaths, which were the dying down of his storm of
sobbing, he lay still for a minute, though great tears streamed down his
face and wet the pillow. Actually the tears meant that a curious great
relief had come to him. Presently he turned and looked at the nurse
again and strangely enough he was not like a Rajah at all as he spoke to
her.
"Do you think--I could--live to grow
up?" he said.
The nurse was neither clever nor soft-hearted but
she could repeat some of the London doctor's words.
"You probably will if you will do what you
are told to do and not give way to your temper, and stay out a great
deal in the fresh air."
Colin's tantrum had passed and he was weak and
worn out with crying and this perhaps made him feel gentle. He put out
his hand a little toward Mary, and I am glad to say that, her own tantum
having passed, she was softened too and met him half-way with her hand,
so that it was a sort of making up.
"I'll--I'll go out with you, Mary," he
said. "I shan't hate fresh air if we can find--" He remembered
just in time to stop himself from saying "if we can find the secret
garden" and he ended, "I shall like to go out with you if
Dickon will come and push my chair. I do so want to see Dickon and the
fox and the crow."
The nurse remade the tumbled bed and shook and
straightened the pillows. Then she made Colin a cup of beef tea and gave
a cup to Mary, who really was very glad to get it after her excitement.
Mrs. Medlock and Martha gladly slipped away, and after everything was
neat and calm and in order the nurse looked as if she would very gladly
slip away also. She was a healthy young woman who resented being robbed
of her sleep and she yawned quite openly as she looked at Mary, who had
pushed her big footstool close to the four-posted bed and was holding
Colin's hand.
"You must go back and get your sleep
out," she said. "He'll drop off after a while--if he's not too
upset. Then I'll lie down myself in the next room."
"Would you like me to sing you that song I
learned from my Ayah?" Mary whispered to Colin.
His hand pulled hers gently and he turned his
tired eyes on her appealingly.
"Oh, yes!" he answered. "It's such
a soft song. I shall go to sleep in a minute."
"I will put him to sleep," Mary said to
the yawning nurse. "You can go if you like."
"Well," said the nurse, with an attempt
at reluctance. "If he doesn't go to sleep in half an hour you must
call me."
"Very well," answered Mary.
The nurse was out of the room in a minute and as
soon as she was gone Colin pulled Mary's hand again.
"I almost told," he said; "but I
stopped myself in time. I won't talk and I'll go to sleep, but you said
you had a whole lot of nice things to tell me. Have you--do you think
you have found out anything at all about the way into the secret
garden?"
Mary looked at his poor little tired face and
swollen eyes and her heart relented.
"Ye-es," she answered, "I think I
have. And if you will go to sleep I will tell you tomorrow." His
hand quite trembled.
"Oh, Mary!" he said. "Oh, Mary! If
I could get into it I think I should live to grow up! Do you suppose
that instead of singing the Ayah song--you could just tell me softly as
you did that first day what you imagine it looks like inside? I am sure
it will make me go to sleep."
"Yes," answered Mary. "Shut your
eyes."
He closed his eyes and lay quite still and she
held his hand and began to speak very slowly and in a very low voice.
"I think it has been left alone so long--that
it has grown all into a lovely tangle. I think the roses have climbed
and climbed and climbed until they hang from the branches and walls and
creep over the ground--almost like a strange gray mist. Some of them
have died but many--are alive and when the summer comes there will be
curtains and fountains of roses. I think the ground is full of daffodils
and snowdrops and lilies and iris working their way out of the dark. Now
the spring has begun--perhaps--perhaps--"
The soft drone of her voice was making him stiller
and stiller and she saw it and went on.
"Perhaps they are coming up through the
grass--perhaps there are clusters of purple crocuses and gold ones--even
now. Perhaps the leaves are beginning to break out and uncurl--and
perhaps--the gray is changing and a green gauze veil is creeping--and
creeping over--everything. And the birds are coming to look at
it--because it is--so safe and still. And
perhaps--perhaps--perhaps--" very softly and slowly indeed,
"the robin has found a mate--and is building a nest."
And Colin was asleep.
CHAPTER XVIII
"THA' MUNNOT WASTE NO TIME"
Of course Mary did not waken early the next
morning. She slept late because she was tired, and when Martha brought
her breakfast she told her that though. Colin was quite quiet he was ill
and feverish as he always was after he had worn himself out with a fit
of crying. Mary ate her breakfast slowly as she listened.
"He says he wishes tha' would please go and
see him as soon as tha' can," Martha said. "It's queer what a
fancy he's took to thee. Tha' did give it him last night for
sure--didn't tha? Nobody else would have dared to do it. Eh! poor lad!
He's been spoiled till salt won't save him. Mother says as th' two worst
things as can happen to a child is never to have his own way--or always
to have it. She doesn't know which is th' worst. Tha' was in a fine
temper tha'self, too. But he says to me when I went into his room,
`Please ask Miss Mary if she'll please come an, talk to me?' Think o'
him saying please! Will you go, Miss?" "I'll run and see
Dickon first," said Mary. "No, I'll go and see Colin first and
tell him--I know what I'll tell him," with a sudden inspiration.
She had her hat on when she appeared in Colin's
room and for a second he looked disappointed. He was in bed. His face
was pitifully white and there were dark circles round his eyes.
"I'm glad you came," he said. "My
head aches and I ache all over because I'm so tired. Are you going
somewhere?"
Mary went and leaned against his bed.
"I won't be long," she said. "I'm
going to Dickon, but I'll come back. Colin, it's--it's something about
the garden."
His whole face brightened and a little color came
into it.
"Oh! is it?" he cried out. "I
dreamed about it all night I heard you say something about gray changing
into green, and I dreamed I was standing in a place all filled with
trembling little green leaves--and there were birds on nests everywhere
and they looked so soft and still. I'll lie and think about it until you
come back."
In five minutes Mary was with Dickon in their
garden. The fox and the crow were with him again and this time he had
brought two tame squirrels. "I came over on the pony this mornin',"
he said. "Eh! he is a good little chap--Jump is! I brought these
two in my pockets. This here one he's called Nut an' this here other
one's called Shell."
When he said "Nut" one squirrel leaped
on to his right shoulder and when he said "Shell" the other
one leaped on to his left shoulder.
When they sat down on the grass with Captain
curled at their feet, Soot solemnly listening on a tree and Nut and
Shell nosing about close to them, it seemed to Mary that it would be
scarcely bearable to leave such delightfulness, but when she began to
tell her story somehow the look in Dickon's funny face gradually changed
her mind. She could see he felt sorrier for Colin than she did. He
looked up at the sky and all about him.
"Just listen to them birds--th' world seems
full of 'em--all whistlin' an' pipin'," he said. "Look at 'em
dartin' about, an' hearken at 'em callin' to each other. Come springtime
seems like as if all th' world's callin'. The leaves is uncurlin' so you
can see 'em--an', my word, th' nice smells there is about!"
sniffing with his happy turned-up nose. "An' that poor lad lyin'
shut up an' seein' so little that he gets to thinkin' o' things as sets
him screamin'. Eh! my! we mun get him out here--we mun get him watchin'
an listenin' an' sniffin' up th' air an' get him just soaked through wi'
sunshine. An' we munnot lose no time about it."
When he was very much interested he often spoke
quite broad Yorkshire though at other times he tried to modify his
dialect so that Mary could better understand. But she loved his broad
Yorkshire and had in fact been trying to learn to speak it herself. So
she spoke a little now.
"Aye, that we mun," she said (which
meant "Yes, indeed, we must"). "I'll tell thee what us'll
do first," she proceeded, and Dickon grinned, because when the
little wench tried to twist her tongue into speaking Yorkshire it amused
him very much. "He's took a graidely fancy to thee. He wants to see
thee and he wants to see Soot an' Captain. When I go back to the house
to talk to him I'll ax him if tha' canna' come an' see him tomorrow
mornin'--an'. bring tha' creatures wi' thee--an' then--in a bit, when
there's more leaves out, an' happen a bud or two, we'll get him to come
out an' tha' shall push him in his chair an' we'll bring him here an'
show him everything."
When she stopped she was quite proud of herself.
She had never made a long speech in Yorkshire before and she had
remembered very well.
"Tha' mun talk a bit o' Yorkshire like that
to Mester Colin," Dickon chuckled. "Tha'll make him laugh an'
there's nowt as good for ill folk as laughin' is. Mother says she
believes as half a hour's good laugh every mornin' 'ud cure a chap as
was makin' ready for typhus fever."
"I'm going to talk Yorkshire to him this very
day," said Mary, chuckling herself.
The garden had reached the time when every day and
every night it seemed as if Magicians were passing through it drawing
loveliness out of the earth and the boughs with wands. It was hard to go
away and leave it all, particularly as Nut had actually crept on to her
dress and Shell had scrambled down the trunk of the apple-tree they sat
under and stayed there looking at her with inquiring eyes. But she went
back to the house and when she sat down close to Colin's bed he began to
sniff as Dickon did though not in such an experienced way.
"You smell like flowers and--and fresh
things," he cried out quite joyously. "What is it you smell
of? It's cool and warm and sweet all at the same time."
"It's th' wind from th' moor," said
Mary. "It comes o' sittin' on th' grass under a tree wi' Dickon an'
wi' Captain an' Soot an' Nut an' Shell. It's th' springtime an' out o'
doors an' sunshine as smells so graidely."
She said it as broadly as she could, and you do
not know how broadly Yorkshire sounds until you have heard some one
speak it. Colin began to laugh.
"What are you doing?" he said. "I
never heard you talk like that before. How funny it sounds."
"I'm givin' thee a bit o' Yorkshire,"
answered Mary triumphantly. "I canna' talk as graidely as Dickon
an' Martha can but tha' sees I can shape a bit. Doesn't tha' understand
a bit o' Yorkshire when tha' hears it? An' tha' a Yorkshire lad thysel'
bred an' born! Eh! I wonder tha'rt not ashamed o' thy face."
And then she began to laugh too and they both
laughed until they could not stop themselves and they laughed until the
room echoed and Mrs. Medlock opening the door to come in drew back into
the corridor and stood listening amazed.
"Well, upon my word!" she said, speaking
rather broad Yorkshire herself because there was no one to hear her and
she was so astonished. "Whoever heard th' like! Whoever on earth
would ha' thought it!"
There was so much to talk about. It seemed as if
Colin could never hear enough of Dickon and Captain and Soot and Nut and
Shell and the pony whose name was Jump. Mary had run round into the wood
with Dickon to see Jump. He was a tiny little shaggy moor pony with
thick locks hanging over his eyes and with a pretty face and a nuzzling
velvet nose. He was rather thin with living on moor grass but he was as
tough and wiry as if the muscle in his little legs had been made of
steel springs. He had lifted his head and whinnied softly the moment he
saw Dickon and he had trotted up to him and put his head across his
shoulder and then Dickon had talked into his ear and Jump had talked
back in odd little whinnies and puffs and snorts. Dickon had made him
give Mary his small front hoof and kiss her on her cheek with his velvet
muzzle.
"Does he really understand everything Dickon
says?" Colin asked.
"It seems as if he does," answered Mary.
"Dickon says anything will understand if you're friends with it for
sure, but you have to be friends for sure."
Colin lay quiet a little while and his strange
gray eyes seemed to be staring at the wall, but Mary saw he was
thinking.
"I wish I was friends with things," he
said at last, "but I'm not. I never had anything to be friends
with, and I can't bear people."
"Can't you bear me?" asked Mary.
"Yes, I can," he answered. "It's
funny but I even like you."
"Ben Weatherstaff said I was like him,"
said Mary. "He said he'd warrant we'd both got the same nasty
tempers. I think you are like him too. We are all three alike--you and I
and Ben Weatherstaff. He said we were neither of us much to look at and
we were as sour as we looked. But I don't feel as sour as I used to
before I knew the robin and Dickon."
"Did you feel as if you hated people?"
"Yes," answered Mary without any
affectation. "I should have detested you if I had seen you before I
saw the robin and Dickon."
Colin put out his thin hand and touched her.
"Mary," he said, "I wish I hadn't
said what I did about sending Dickon away. I hated you when you said he
was like an angel and I laughed at you but--but perhaps he is."
"Well, it was rather funny to say it,"
she admitted frankly, "because his nose does turn up and he has a
big mouth and his clothes have patches all over them and he talks broad
Yorkshire, but--but if an angel did come to Yorkshire and live on the
moor--if there was a Yorkshire angel--I believe he'd understand the
green things and know how to make them grow and he would know how to
talk to the wild creatures as Dickon does and they'd know he was friends
for sure."
"I shouldn't mind Dickon looking at me,"
said Colin; "I want to see him."
"I'm glad you said that," answered Mary,
"because--because--"
Quite suddenly it came into her mind that this was
the minute to tell him. Colin knew something new was coming.
"Because what?" he cried eagerly.
Mary was so anxious that she got up from her stool
and came to him and caught hold of both his hands.
"Can I trust you? I trusted Dickon because
birds trusted him. Can I trust you--for sure--for sure?" she
implored.
Her face was so solemn that he almost whispered
his answer.
"Yes--yes!"
"Well, Dickon will come to see you tomorrow
morning, and he'll bring his creatures with him."
"Oh! Oh!" Colin cried out in delight.
"But that's not all," Mary went on,
almost pale with solemn excitement. "The rest is better. There is a
door into the garden. I found it. It is under the ivy on the wall."
If he had been a strong healthy boy Colin would
probably have shouted "Hooray! Hooray! Hooray!" but he was
weak and rather hysterical; his eyes grew bigger and bigger and he
gasped for breath.
"Oh! Mary!" he cried out with a half
sob. "Shall I see it? Shall I get into it? Shall I live to get into
it?" and he clutched her hands and dragged her toward him.
"Of course you'll see it!" snapped Mary
indignantly. "Of course you'll live to get into it! Don't be
silly!"
And she was so un-hysterical and natural and
childish that she brought him to his senses and he began to laugh at
himself and a few minutes afterward she was sitting on her stool again
telling him not what she imagined the secret garden to be like but what
it really was, and Colin's aches and tiredness were forgotten and he was
listening enraptured.
"It is just what you thought it would
be," he said at last. "It sounds just as if you had really
seen it. You know I said that when you told me first."
Mary hesitated about two minutes and then boldly
spoke the truth.
"I had seen it--and I had been in," she
said. "I found the key and got in weeks ago. But I daren't tell
you--I daren't because I was so afraid I couldn't trust you--for
sure!"
CHAPTER XIX
"IT HAS COME!"
Of course Dr. Craven had been sent for the morning
after Colin had had his tantrum. He was always sent for at once when
such a thing occurred and he always found, when he arrived, a white
shaken boy lying on his bed, sulky and still so hysterical that he was
ready to break into fresh sobbing at the least word. In fact, Dr. Craven
dreaded and detested the difficulties of these visits. On this occasion
he was away from Misselthwaite Manor until afternoon.
"How is he?" he asked Mrs. Medlock
rather irritably when he arrived. "He will break a blood-vessel in
one of those fits some day. The boy is half insane with hysteria and
self-indulgence."
"Well, sir," answered Mrs. Medlock,
"you'll scarcely believe your eyes when you see him. That plain
sour-faced child that's almost as bad as himself has just bewitched him.
How she's done it there's no telling. The Lord knows she's nothing to
look at and you scarcely ever hear her speak, but she did what none of
us dare do. She just flew at him like a little cat last night, and
stamped her feet and ordered him to stop screaming, and somehow she
startled him so that he actually did stop, and this afternoon--well just
come up and see, sir. It's past crediting."
The scene which Dr. Craven beheld when he entered
his patient's room was indeed rather astonishing to him. As Mrs. Medlock
opened the door he heard laughing and chattering. Colin was on his sofa
in his dressing-gown and he was sitting up quite straight looking at a
picture in one of the garden books and talking to the plain child who at
that moment could scarcely be called plain at all because her face was
so glowing with enjoyment.
"Those long spires of blue ones--we'll have a
lot of those," Colin was announcing. "They're called Del-phin-iums."
"Dickon says they're larkspurs made big and
grand," cried Mistress Mary. "There are clumps there
already."
Then they saw Dr. Craven and stopped. Mary became
quite still and Colin looked fretful.
"I am sorry to hear you were ill last night,
my boy," Dr. Craven said a trifle nervously. He was rather a
nervous man.
"I'm better now--much better," Colin
answered, rather like a Rajah. "I'm going out in my chair in a day
or two if it is fine. I want some fresh air."
Dr. Craven sat down by him and felt his pulse and
looked at him curiously.
"It must be a very fine day," he said,
"and you must be very careful not to tire yourself."
"Fresh air won't tire me," said the
young Rajah.
As there had been occasions when this same young
gentleman had shrieked aloud with rage and had insisted that fresh air
would give him cold and kill him, it is not to be wondered at that his
doctor felt somewhat startled.
"I thought you did not like fresh air,"
he said.
"I don't when I am by myself," replied
the Rajah; "but my cousin is going out with me."
"And the nurse, of course?" suggested
Dr. Craven.
"No, I will not have the nurse," so
magnificently that Mary could not help remembering how the young native
Prince had looked with his diamonds and emeralds and pearls stuck all
over him and the great rubies on the small dark hand he had waved to
command his servants to approach with salaams and receive his orders.
"My cousin knows how to take care of me. I am
always better when she is with me. She made me better last night. A very
strong boy I know will push my carriage."
Dr. Craven felt rather alarmed. If this tiresome
hysterical boy should chance to get well he himself would lose all
chance of inheriting Misselthwaite; but he was not an unscrupulous man,
though he was a weak one, and he did not intend to let him run into
actual danger.
"He must be a strong boy and a steady
boy," he said. "And I must know something about him. Who is
he? What is his name?"
"It's Dickon," Mary spoke up suddenly.
She felt somehow that everybody who knew the moor must know Dickon. And
she was right, too. She saw that in a moment Dr. Craven's serious face
relaxed into a relieved smile.
"Oh, Dickon," he said. "If it is
Dickon you will be safe enough. He's as strong as a moor pony, is
Dickon."
"And he's trusty," said Mary. "He's
th' trustiest lad i' Yorkshire." She had been talking Yorkshire to
Colin and she forgot herself.
"Did Dickon teach you that?" asked Dr.
Craven, laughing outright.
"I'm learning it as if it was French,"
said Mary rather coldly. "It's like a native dialect in India. Very
clever people try to learn them. I like it and so does Colin."
"Well, well," he said. "If it amuses you perhaps it won't
do you any harm. Did you take your bromide last night, Colin?"
"No," Colin answered. "I wouldn't
take it at first and after Mary made me quiet she talked me to sleep--in
a low voice--about the spring creeping into a garden."
"That sounds soothing," said Dr. Craven,
more perplexed than ever and glancing sideways at Mistress Mary sitting
on her stool and looking down silently at the carpet. "You are
evidently better, but you must remember--"
"I don't want to remember," interrupted
the Rajah, appearing again. "When I lie by myself and remember I
begin to have pains everywhere and I think of things that make me begin
to scream because I hate them so. If there was a doctor anywhere who
could make you forget you were ill instead of remembering it I would
have him brought here." And he waved a thin hand which ought really
to have been covered with royal signet rings made of rubies. "It is
because my cousin makes me forget that she makes me better."
Dr. Craven had never made such a short stay after
a "tantrum"; usually he was obliged to remain a very long time
and do a great many things. This afternoon he did not give any medicine
or leave any new orders and he was spared any disagreeable scenes. When
he went downstairs he looked very thoughtful and when he talked to Mrs.
Medlock in the library she felt that he was a much puzzled man.
"Well, sir," she ventured, "could
you have believed it?"
"It is certainly a new state of
affairs," said the doctor. "And there's no denying it is
better than the old one."
"I believe Susan Sowerby's right--I do
that," said Mrs. Medlock. "I stopped in her cottage on my way
to Thwaite yesterday and had a bit of talk with her. And she says to me,
'Well, Sarah Ann, she mayn't be a good child, an' she mayn't be a pretty
one, but she's a child, an' children needs children.' We went to school
together, Susan Sowerby and me."
"She's the best sick nurse I know," said
Dr. Craven. "When I find her in a cottage I know the chances are
that I shall save my patient."
Mrs. Medlock smiled. She was fond of Susan Sowerby.
"She's got a way with her, has Susan,"
she went on quite volubly. "I've been thinking all morning of one
thing she said yesterday. She says, `Once when I was givin' th' children
a bit of a preach after they'd been fightin' I ses to 'em all,
"When I was at school my jography told as th' world was shaped like
a orange an' I found out before I was ten that th' whole orange doesn't
belong to nobody. No one owns more than his bit of a quarter an' there's
times it seems like there's not enow quarters to go round. But don't
you--none o' you--think as you own th' whole orange or you'll find out
you're mistaken, an' you won't find it out without hard knocks."
`What children learns from children,' she says, 'is that there's no
sense in grabbin' at th' whole orange--peel an' all. If you do you'll
likely not get even th' pips, an' them's too bitter to eat.'"
"She's a shrewd woman," said Dr. Craven,
putting on his coat.
"Well, she's got a way of saying
things," ended Mrs. Medlock, much pleased. "Sometimes I've
said to her, 'Eh! Susan, if you was a different woman an' didn't talk
such broad Yorkshire I've seen the times when I should have said you was
clever.'"
That night Colin slept without once awakening and
when he opened his eyes in the morning he lay still and smiled without
knowing it--smiled because he felt so curiously comfortable. It was
actually nice to be awake, and he turned over and stretched his limbs
luxuriously. He felt as if tight strings which had held him had loosened
themselves and let him go. He did not know that Dr. Craven would have
said that his nerves had relaxed and rested themselves. Instead of lying
and staring at the wall and wishing he had not awakened, his mind was
full of the plans he and Mary had made yesterday, of pictures of the
garden and of Dickon and his wild creatures. It was so nice to have
things to think about. And he had not been awake more than ten minutes
when he heard feet running along the corridor and Mary was at the door.
The next minute she was in the room and had run across to his bed,
bringing with her a waft of fresh air full of the scent of the morning.
"You've been out! You've been out! There's
that nice smell of leaves!" he cried.
She had been running and her hair was loose and
blown and she was bright with the air and pink-cheeked, though he could
not see it.
"It's so beautiful!" she said, a little
breathless with her speed. "You never saw anything so beautiful! It
has come! I thought it had come that other morning, but it was only
coming. It is here now! It has come, the Spring! Dickon says so!"
"Has it?" cried Colin, and though he
really knew nothing about it he felt his heart beat. He actually sat up
in bed.
"Open the window!" he added, laughing
half with joyful excitement and half at his own fancy. "Perhaps we
may hear golden trumpets!"
And though he laughed, Mary was at the window in a
moment and in a moment more it was opened wide and freshness and
softness and scents and birds' songs were pouring through.
"That's fresh air," she said. "Lie
on your back and draw in long breaths of it. That's what Dickon does
when he's lying on the moor. He says he feels it in his veins and it
makes him strong and he feels as if he could live forever and ever.
Breathe it and breathe it."
She was only repeating what Dickon had told her,
but she caught Colin's fancy.
"`Forever and ever'! Does it make him feel
like that?" he said, and he did as she told him, drawing in long
deep breaths over and over again until he felt that something quite new
and delightful was happening to him.
Mary was at his bedside again.
"Things are crowding up out of the
earth," she ran on in a hurry. "And there are flowers
uncurling and buds on everything and the green veil has covered nearly
all the gray and the birds are in such a hurry about their nests for
fear they may be too late that some of them are even fighting for places
in the secret garden. And the rose-bushes look as wick as wick can be,
and there are primroses in the lanes and woods, and the seeds we planted
are up, and Dickon has brought the fox and the crow and the squirrels
and a new-born lamb."
And then she paused for breath. The new-born lamb
Dickon had found three days before lying by its dead mother among the
gorse bushes on the moor. It was not the first motherless lamb he had
found and he knew what to do with it. He had taken it to the cottage
wrapped in his jacket and he had let it lie near the fire and had fed it
with warm milk. It was a soft thing with a darling silly baby face and
legs rather long for its body. Dickon had carried it over the moor in
his arms and its feeding bottle was in his pocket with a squirrel, and
when Mary had sat under a tree with its limp warmness huddled on her lap
she had felt as if she were too full of strange joy to speak. A lamb--a
lamb! A living lamb who lay on your lap like a baby!
She was describing it with great joy and Colin was
listening and drawing in long breaths of air when the nurse entered. She
started a little at the sight of the open window. She had sat stifling
in the room many a warm day because her patient was sure that open
windows gave people cold.
"Are you sure you are not chilly, Master
Colin?" she inquired.
"No," was the answer. "I am
breathing long breaths of fresh air. It makes you strong. I am going to
get up to the sofa for breakfast. My cousin will have breakfast with
me."
The nurse went away, concealing a smile, to give
the order for two breakfasts. She found the servants' hall a more
amusing place than the invalid's chamber and just now everybody wanted
to hear the news from upstairs. There was a great deal of joking about
the unpopular young recluse who, as the cook said, "had found his
master, and good for him." The servants' hall had been very tired
of the tantrums, and the butler, who was a man with a family, had more
than once expressed his opinion that the invalid would be all the better
"for a good hiding."
When Colin was on his sofa and the breakfast for
two was put upon the table he made an announcement to the nurse in his
most Rajah-like manner.
"A boy, and a fox, and a crow, and two
squirrels, and a new-born lamb, are coming to see me this morning. I
want them brought upstairs as soon as they come," he said.
"You are not to begin playing with the animals in the servants'
hall and keep them there. I want them here." The nurse gave a
slight gasp and tried to conceal it with a cough.
"Yes, sir," she answered.
"I'll tell you what you can do," added
Colin, waving his hand. "You can tell Martha to bring them here.
The boy is Martha's brother. His name is Dickon and he is an animal
charmer."
"I hope the animals won't bite, Master
Colin," said the nurse.
"I told you he was a charmer," said
Colin austerely. "Charmers' animals never bite."
"There are snake-charmers in India,"
said Mary. "and they can put their snakes' heads in their
mouths."
"Goodness!" shuddered the nurse.
They ate their breakfast with the morning air
pouring in upon them. Colin's breakfast was a very good one and Mary
watched him with serious interest.
"You will begin to get fatter just as I
did," she said. "I never wanted my breakfast when I was in
India and now I always want it."
"I wanted mine this morning," said
Colin. "Perhaps it was the fresh air. When do you think Dickon will
come?"
He was not long in coming. In about ten minutes
Mary held up her hand.
"Listen!" she said. "Did you hear a
caw?"
Colin listened and heard it, the oddest sound in
the world to hear inside a house, a hoarse "caw-caw."
"Yes," he answered.
"That's Soot," said Mary. "Listen
again. Do you hear a bleat--a tiny one?"
"Oh, yes!" cried Colin, quite flushing.
"That's the new-born lamb," said Mary.
"He's coming."
Dickon's moorland boots were thick and clumsy and
though he tried to walk quietly they made a clumping sound as he walked
through the long corridors. Mary and Colin heard him marching--marching,
until he passed through the tapestry door on to the soft carpet of
Colin's own passage.
"If you please, sir," announced Martha,
opening the door, "if you please, sir, here's Dickon an' his
creatures."
Dickon came in smiling his nicest wide smile. The
new-born lamb was in his arms and the little red fox trotted by his
side. Nut sat on his left shoulder and Soot on his right and Shell's
head and paws peeped out of his coat pocket.
Colin slowly sat up and stared and stared--as he
had stared when he first saw Mary; but this was a stare of wonder and
delight. The truth was that in spite of all he had heard he had not in
the least understood what this boy would be like and that his fox and
his crow and his squirrels and his lamb were so near to him and his
friendliness that they seemed almost to be part of himself. Colin had
never talked to a boy in his life and he was so overwhelmed by his own
pleasure and curiosity that he did not even think of speaking.
But Dickon did not feel the least shy or awkward.
He had not felt embarrassed because the crow had not known his language
and had only stared and had not spoken to him the first time they met.
Creatures were always like that until they found out about you. He
walked over to Colin's sofa and put the new-born lamb quietly on his
lap, and immediately the little creature turned to the warm velvet
dressing-gown and began to nuzzle and nuzzle into its folds and butt its
tight-curled head with soft impatience against his side. Of course no
boy could have helped speaking then.
"What is it doing?" cried Colin.
"What does it want?"
"It wants its mother," said Dickon,
smiling more and more. "I brought it to thee a bit hungry because I
knowed tha'd like to see it feed."
He knelt down by the sofa and took a
feeding-bottle from his pocket.
"Come on, little 'un," he said, turning
the small woolly white head with a gentle brown hand. "This is what
tha's after. Tha'll get more out o' this than tha' will out o' silk
velvet coats. There now," and he pushed the rubber tip of the
bottle into the nuzzling mouth and the lamb began to suck it with
ravenous ecstasy.
After that there was no wondering what to say. By
the time the lamb fell asleep questions poured forth and Dickon answered
them all. He told them how he had found the lamb just as the sun was
rising three mornings ago. He had been standing on the moor listening to
a skylark and watching him swing higher and higher into the sky until he
was only a speck in the heights of blue.
"I'd almost lost him but for his song an' I
was wonderin' how a chap could hear it when it seemed as if he'd get out
o' th' world in a minute--an' just then I heard somethin' else far off
among th' gorse bushes. It was a weak bleatin' an' I knowed it was a new
lamb as was hungry an' I knowed it wouldn't be hungry if it hadn't lost
its mother somehow, so I set off searchin'. Eh! I did have a look for
it. I went in an' out among th' gorse bushes an' round an' round an' I
always seemed to take th' wrong turnin'. But at last I seed a bit o'
white by a rock on top o' th' moor an' I climbed up an' found th' little
'un half dead wi' cold an' clemmin'." While he talked, Soot flew
solemnly in and out of the open window and cawed remarks about the
scenery while Nut and Shell made excursions into the big trees outside
and ran up and down trunks and explored branches. Captain curled up near
Dickon, who sat on the hearth-rug from preference.
They looked at the pictures in the gardening books
and Dickon knew all the flowers by their country names and knew exactly
which ones were already growing in the secret garden.
"I couldna' say that there name," he
said, pointing to one under which was written "Aquilegia,"
"but us calls that a columbine, an' that there one it's a
snapdragon and they both grow wild in hedges, but these is garden ones
an' they're bigger an' grander. There's some big clumps o' columbine in
th' garden. They'll look like a bed o' blue an' white butterflies
flutterin' when they're out."
"I'm going to see them," cried Colin.
"I am going to see them!"
"Aye, that tha' mun," said Mary quite
seriously. "An' tha' munnot lose no time about it."
CHAPTER XX
"I SHALL LIVE FOREVER--AND EVER--AND
EVER!"
But they were obliged to wait more than a week
because first there came some very windy days and then Colin was
threatened with a cold, which two things happening one after the other
would no doubt have thrown him into a rage but that there was so much
careful and mysterious planning to do and almost every day Dickon came
in, if only for a few minutes, to talk about what was happening on the
moor and in the lanes and hedges and on the borders of streams. The
things he had to tell about otters' and badgers' and water-rats' houses,
not to mention birds' nests and field-mice and their burrows, were
enough to make you almost tremble with excitement when you heard all the
intimate details from an animal charmer and realized with what thrilling
eagerness and anxiety the whole busy underworld was working.
"They're same as us," said Dickon,
"only they have to build their homes every year. An' it keeps 'em
so busy they fair scuffle to get 'em done."
The most absorbing thing, however, was the
preparations to be made before Colin could be transported with
sufficient secrecy to the garden. No one must see the chair-carriage and
Dickon and Mary after they turned a certain corner of the shrubbery and
entered upon the walk outside the ivied walls. As each day passed, Colin
had become more and more fixed in his feeling that the mystery
surrounding the garden was one of its greatest charms. Nothing must
spoil that. No one must ever suspect that they had a secret. People must
think that he was simply going out with Mary and Dickon because he liked
them and did not object to their looking at him. They had long and quite
delightful talks about their route. They would go up this path and down
that one and cross the other and go round among the fountain flower-beds
as if they were looking at the "bedding-out plants" the head
gardener, Mr. Roach, had been having arranged. That would seem such a
rational thing to do that no one would think it at all mysterious. They
would turn into the shrubbery walks and lose themselves until they came
to the long walls. It was almost as serious and elaborately thought out
as the plans of march made by geat generals in time of war.
Rumors of the new and curious things which were
occurring in the invalid's apartments had of course filtered through the
servants' hall into the stable yards and out among the gardeners, but
notwithstanding this, Mr. Roach was startled one day when he received
orders from Master Colin's room to the effect that he must report
himself in the apartment no outsider had ever seen, as the invalid
himself desired to speak to him.
"Well, well," he said to himself as he
hurriedly changed his coat, "what's to do now? His Royal Highness
that wasn't to be looked at calling up a man he's never set eyes
on."
Mr. Roach was not without curiosity. He had never
caught even a glimpse of the boy and had heard a dozen exaggerated
stories about his uncanny looks and ways and his insane tempers. The
thing he had heard oftenest was that he might die at any moment and
there had been numerous fanciful descriptions of a humped back and
helpless limbs, given by people who had never seen him.
"Things are changing in this house, Mr.
Roach," said Mrs. Medlock, as she led him up the back staircase to
the corridor on to which opened the hitherto mysterious chamber.
"Let's hope they're changing for the better,
Mrs. Medlock," he answered.
"They couldn't well change for the
worse," she continued; "and queer as it all is there's them as
finds their duties made a lot easier to stand up under. Don't you be
surprised, Mr. Roach, if you find yourself in the middle of a menagerie
and Martha Sowerby's Dickon more at home than you or me could ever
be."
There really was a sort of Magic about Dickon, as
Mary always privately believed. When Mr. Roach heard his name he smiled
quite leniently.
"He'd be at home in Buckingham Palace or at
the bottom of a coal mine," he said. "And yet it's not
impudence, either. He's just fine, is that lad."
It was perhaps well he had been prepared or he
might have been startled. When the bedroom door was opened a large crow,
which seemed quite at home perched on the high back of a carven chair,
announced the entrance of a visitor by saying "Caw--Caw" quite
loudly. In spite of Mrs. Medlock's warning, Mr. Roach only just escaped
being sufficiently undignified to jump backward.
The young Rajah was neither in bed nor on his
sofa. He was sitting in an armchair and a young lamb was standing by him
shaking its tail in feeding-lamb fashion as Dickon knelt giving it milk
from its bottle. A squirrel was perched on Dickon's bent back
attentively nibbling a nut. The little girl from India was sitting on a
big footstool looking on.
"Here is Mr. Roach, Master Colin," said
Mrs. Medlock.
The young Rajah turned and looked his servitor
over--at least that was what the head gardener felt happened.
"Oh, you are Roach, are you?" he said.
"I sent for you to give you some very important orders."
"Very good, sir," answered Roach,
wondering if he was to receive instructions to fell all the oaks in the
park or to transform the orchards into water-gardens.
"I am going out in my chair this
afternoon," said Colin. "If the fresh air agrees with me I may
go out every day. When I go, none of the gardeners are to be anywhere
near the Long Walk by the garden walls. No one is to be there. I shall
go out about two o'clock and everyone must keep away until I send word
that they may go back to their work."
"Very good, sir," replied Mr. Roach,
much relieved to hear that the oaks might remain and that the orchards
were safe. "Mary," said Colin, turning to her, "what is
that thing you say in India when you have finished talking and want
people to go?"
"You say, `You have my permission to
go,'" answered Mary.
The Rajah waved his hand.
"You have my permission to go, Roach,"
he said. "But, remember, this is very important."
"Caw--Caw!" remarked the crow hoarsely
but not impolitely.
"Very good, sir. Thank you, sir," said
Mr. Roach, and Mrs. Medlock took him out of the room.
Outside in the corridor, being a rather
good-natured man, he smiled until he almost laughed.
"My word!" he said, "he's got a
fine lordly way with him, hasn't he? You'd think he was a whole Royal
Family rolled into one--Prince Consort and all.".
"Eh!" protested Mrs. Medlock,
"we've had to let him trample all over every one of us ever since
he had feet and he thinks that's what folks was born for."
"Perhaps he'll grow out of it, if he
lives," suggested Mr. Roach.
"Well, there's one thing pretty sure,"
said Mrs. Medlock. "If he does live and that Indian child stays
here I'll warrant she teaches him that the whole orange does not belong
to him, as Susan Sowerby says. And he'll be likely to find out the size
of his own quarter."
Inside the room Colin was leaning back on his
cushions.
"It's all safe now," he said. "And
this afternoon I shall see it--this afternoon I shall be in it!"
Dickon went back to the garden with his creatures
and Mary stayed with Colin. She did not think he looked tired but he was
very quiet before their lunch came and he was quiet while they were
eating it. She wondered why and asked him about it.
"What big eyes you've got, Colin," she
said. "When you are thinking they get as big as saucers. What are
you thinking about now?"
"I can't help thinking about what it will
look like," he answered.
"The garden?" asked Mary.
"The springtime," he said. "I was
thinking that I've really never seen it before. I scarcely ever went out
and when I did go I never looked at it. I didn't even think about
it."
"I never saw it in India because there wasn't
any," said Mary.
Shut in and morbid as his life had been, Colin had
more imagination than she had and at least he had spent a good deal of
time looking at wonderful books and pictures.
"That morning when you ran in and said `It's
come! It's come!, you made me feel quite queer. It sounded as if things
were coming with a great procession and big bursts and wafts of music.
I've a picture like it in one of my books--crowds of lovely people and
children with garlands and branches with blossoms on them, everyone
laughing and dancing and crowding and playing on pipes. That was why I
said, `Perhaps we shall hear golden trumpets' and told you to throw open
the window."
"How funny!" said Mary. "That's
really just what it feels like. And if all the flowers and leaves and
green things and birds and wild creatures danced past at once, what a
crowd it would be! I'm sure they'd dance and sing and flute and that
would be the wafts of music."
They both laughed but it was not because the idea
was laughable but because they both so liked it.
A little later the nurse made Colin ready. She
noticed that instead of lying like a log while his clothes were put on
he sat up and made some efforts to help himself, and he talked and
laughed with Mary all the time.
"This is one of his good days, sir," she
said to Dr. Craven, who dropped in to inspect him. "He's in such
good spirits that it makes him stronger."
"I'll call in again later in the afternoon,
after he has come in," said Dr. Craven. "I must see how the
going out agrees with him. I wish," in a very low voice, "that
he would let you go with him."
"I'd rather give up the case this moment,
sir, than even stay here while it's suggested," answered the nurse.
With sudden firmness.
"I hadn't really decided to suggest it,"
said the doctor, with his slight nervousness. "We'll try the
experiment. Dickon's a lad I'd trust with a new-born child."
The strongest footman in the house carried Colin
down stairs and put him in his wheeled chair near which Dickon waited
outside. After the manservant had arranged his rugs and cushions the
Rajah waved his hand to him and to the nurse.
"You have my permission to go," he said,
and they both disappeared quickly and it must be confessed giggled when
they were safely inside the house.
Dickon began to push the wheeled chair slowly and
steadily. Mistress Mary walked beside it and Colin leaned back and
lifted his face to the sky. The arch of it looked very high and the
small snowy clouds seemed like white birds floating on outspread wings
below its crystal blueness. The wind swept in soft big breaths down from
the moor and was strange with a wild clear scented sweetness. Colin kept
lifting his thin chest to draw it in, and his big eyes looked as if it
were they which were listening--listening, instead of his ears.
"There are so many sounds of singing and
humming and calling out," he said. "What is that scent the
puffs of wind bring?"
"It's gorse on th' moor that's openin'
out," answered Dickon. "Eh! th' bees are at it wonderful
today."
Not a human creature was to be caught sight of in
the paths they took. In fact every gardener or gardener's lad had been
witched away. But they wound in and out among the shrubbery and out and
round the fountain beds, following their carefully planned route for the
mere mysterious pleasure of it. But when at last they turned into the
Long Walk by the ivied walls the excited sense of an approaching thrill
made them, for some curious reason they could not have explained, begin
to speak in whispers.
"This is it," breathed Mary. "This
is where I used to walk up and down and wonder and wonder."
"Is it?" cried Colin, and his eyes began to search the ivy
with eager curiousness. "But I can see nothing," he whispered.
"There is no door."
"That's what I thought," said Mary.
Then there was a lovely breathless silence and the
chair wheeled on.
"That is the garden where Ben Weatherstaff
works," said Mary.
"Is it?" said Colin.
A few yards more and Mary whispered again.
"This is where the robin flew over the
wall," she said.
"Is it?" cried Colin. "Oh! I wish
he'd come again!"
"And that," said Mary with solemn
delight, pointing under a big lilac bush, "is where he perched on
the little heap of earth and showed me the key."
Then Colin sat up.
"Where? Where? There?" he cried, and his
eyes were as big as the wolf's in Red Riding-Hood, when Red Riding-Hood
felt called upon to remark on them. Dickon stood still and the wheeled
chair stopped.
"And this," said Mary, stepping on to
the bed close to the ivy, "is where I went to talk to him when he
chirped at me from the top of the wall. And this is the ivy the wind
blew back," and she took hold of the hanging green curtain.
"Oh! is it--is it!" gasped Colin.
"And here is the handle, and here is the
door. Dickon push him in--push him in quickly!"
And Dickon did it with one strong, steady,
splendid push.
But Colin had actually dropped back against his
cushions, even though he gasped with delight, and he had covered his
eyes with his hands and held them there shutting out everything until
they were inside and the chair stopped as if by magic and the door was
closed. Not till then did he take them away and look round and round and
round as Dickon and Mary had done. And over walls and earth and trees
and swinging sprays and tendrils the fair green veil of tender little
leaves had crept, and in the grass under the trees and the gray urns in
the alcoves and here and there everywhere were touches or splashes of
gold and purple and white and the trees were showing pink and snow above
his head and there were fluttering of wings and faint sweet pipes and
humming and scents and scents. And the sun fell warm upon his face like
a hand with a lovely touch. And in wonder Mary and Dickon stood and
stared at him. He looked so strange and different because a pink glow of
color had actually crept all over him--ivory face and neck and hands and
all.
"I shall get well! I shall get well!" he
cried out. "Mary! Dickon! I shall get well! And I shall live
forever and ever and ever!"
CHAPTER XXI
BEN WEATHERSTAFF
One of the strange things about living in the
world is that it is only now and then one is quite sure one is going to
live forever and ever and ever. One knows it sometimes when one gets up
at the tender solemn dawn-time and goes out and stands alone and throws
one's head far back and looks up and up and watches the pale sky slowly
changing and flushing and marvelous unknown things happening until the
East almost makes one cry out and one's heart stands still at the
strange unchanging majesty of the rising of the sun--which has been
happening every morning for thousands and thousands and thousands of
years. One knows it then for a moment or so. And one knows it sometimes
when one stands by oneself in a wood at sunset and the mysterious deep
gold stillness slanting through and under the branches seems to be
saying slowly again and again something one cannot quite hear, however
much one tries. Then sometimes the immense quiet of the dark blue at
night with millions of stars waiting and watching makes one sure; and
sometimes a sound of far-off music makes it true; and sometimes a look
in some one's eyes.
And it was like that with Colin when he first saw
and heard and felt the Springtime inside the four high walls of a hidden
garden. That afternoon the whole world seemed to devote itself to being
perfect and radiantly beautiful and kind to one boy. Perhaps out of pure
heavenly goodness the spring came and crowned everything it possibly
could into that one place. More than once Dickon paused in what he was
doing and stood still with a sort of growing wonder in his eyes, shaking
his head softly.
"Eh! it is graidely," he said. "I'm
twelve goin' on thirteen an' there's a lot o' afternoons in thirteen
years, but seems to me like I never seed one as graidely as this
'ere."
"Aye, it is a graidely one," said Mary,
and she sighed for mere joy. "I'll warrant it's the graidelest one
as ever was in this world."
"Does tha' think," said Colin with
dreamy carefulness, "as happen it was made loike this 'ere all o'
purpose for me?"
"My word!" cried Mary admiringly,
"that there is a bit o' good Yorkshire. Tha'rt shapin'
first-rate--that tha' art."
And delight reigned. They drew the chair under the
plum-tree, which was snow-white with blossoms and musical with bees. It
was like a king's canopy, a fairy king's. There were flowering
cherry-trees near and apple-trees whose buds were pink and white, and
here and there one had burst open wide. Between the blossoming branches
of the canopy bits of blue sky looked down like wonderful eyes.
Mary and Dickon worked a litle here and there and
Colin watched them. They brought him things to look at--buds which were
opening, buds which were tight closed, bits of twig whose leaves were
just showing green, the feather of a woodpecker which had dropped on the
grass, the empty shell of some bird early hatched. Dickon pushed the
chair slowly round and round the garden, stopping every other moment to
let him look at wonders springing out of the earth or trailing down from
trees. It was like being taken in state round the country of a magic
king and queen and shown all the mysterious riches it contained.
"I wonder if we shall see the robin?"
said Colin.
"Tha'll see him often enow after a bit,"
answered Dickon. "When th' eggs hatches out th' little chap he'll
be kep' so busy it'll make his head swim. Tha'll see him flyin' backward
an' for'ard carryin' worms nigh as big as himsel' an' that much noise
goin' on in th' nest when he gets there as fair flusters him so as he
scarce knows which big mouth to drop th' first piece in. An' gapin'
beaks an' squawks on every side. Mother says as when she sees th' work a
robin has to keep them gapin' beaks filled, she feels like she was a
lady with nothin' to do. She says she's seen th' little chaps when it
seemed like th' sweat must be droppin' off 'em, though folk can't see
it."
This made them giggle so delightedly that they
were obliged to cover their mouths with their hands, remembering that
they must not be heard. Colin had been instructed as to the law of
whispers and low voices several days before. He liked the mysteriousness
of it and did his best, but in the midst of excited enjoyment it is
rather difficult never to laugh above a whisper.
Every moment of the afternoon was full of new
things and every hour the sunshine grew more golden. The wheeled chair
had been drawn back under the canopy and Dickon had sat down on the
grass and had just drawn out his pipe when Colin saw something he had
not had time to notice before.
"That's a very old tree over there, isn't
it?" he said. Dickon looked across the grass at the tree and Mary
looked and there was a brief moment of stillness.
"Yes," answered Dickon, after it, and
his low voice had a very gentle sound.
Mary gazed at the tree and thought.
"The branches are quite gray and there's not
a single leaf anywhere," Colin went on. "It's quite dead,
isn't it?"
"Aye," admitted Dickon. "But them
roses as has climbed all over it will near hide every bit o' th' dead
wood when they're full o' leaves an' flowers. It won't look dead then.
It'll be th' prettiest of all."
Mary still gazed at the tree and thought.
"It looks as if a big branch had been broken
off," said Colin. "I wonder how it was done."
"It's been done many a year," answered
Dickon. "Eh!" with a sudden relieved start and laying his hand
on Colin. "Look at that robin! There he is! He's been foragin' for
his mate."
Colin was almost too late but he just caught sight
of him, the flash of red-breasted bird with something in his beak. He
darted through the greenness and into the close-grown corner and was out
of sight. Colin leaned back on his cushion again, laughing a little.
"He's taking her tea to her. Perhaps it's five o'clock. I think I'd
like some tea myself."
And so they were safe.
"It was Magic which sent the robin,"
said Mary secretly to Dickon afterward. "I know it was Magic."
For both she and Dickon had been afraid Colin might ask something about
the tree whose branch had broken off ten years ago and they had talked
it over together and Dickon had stood and rubbed his head in a troubled
way.
"We mun look as if it wasn't no different
from th' other trees," he had said. "We couldn't never tell
him how it broke, poor lad. If he says anything about it we mun--we mun
try to look cheerful."
"Aye, that we mun," had answered Mary.
But she had not felt as if she looked cheerful
when she gazed at the tree. She wondered and wondered in those few
moments if there was any reality in that other thing Dickon had said. He
had gone on rubbing his rust-red hair in a puzzled way, but a nice
comforted look had begun to grow in his blue eyes.
"Mrs. Craven was a very lovely young
lady," he had gone on rather hesitatingly. "An' mother she
thinks maybe she's about Misselthwaite many a time lookin' after Mester
Colin, same as all mothers do when they're took out o' th' world. They
have to come back, tha' sees. Happen she's been in the garden an' happen
it was her set us to work, an' told us to bring him here."
Mary had thought he meant something about Magic.
She was a great believer in Magic. Secretly she quite believed that
Dickon worked Magic, of course good Magic, on everything near him and
that was why people liked him so much and wild creatures knew he was
their friend. She wondered, indeed, if it were not possible that his
gift had brought the robin just at the right moment when Colin asked
that dangerous question. She felt that his Magic was working all the
afternoon and making Colin look like an entirely different boy. It did
not seem possible that he could be the crazy creature who had screamed
and beaten and bitten his pillow. Even his ivory whiteness seemed to
change. The faint glow of color which had shown on his face and neck and
hands when he first got inside the garden really never quite died away.
He looked as if he were made of flesh instead of ivory or wax.
They saw the robin carry food to his mate two or
three times, and it was so suggestive of afternoon tea that Colin felt
they must have some.
"Go and make one of the men servants bring
some in a basket to the rhododendron walk," he said. "And then
you and Dickon can bring it here."
It was an agreeable idea, easily carried out, and
when the white cloth was spread upon the grass, with hot tea and
buttered toast and crumpets, a delightfully hungry meal was eaten, and
several birds on domestic errands paused to inquire what was going on
and were led into investigating crumbs with great activity. Nut and
Shell whisked up trees with pieces of cake and Soot took the entire half
of a buttered crumpet into a corner and pecked at and examined and
turned it over and made hoarse remarks about it until he decided to
swallow it all joyfully in one gulp.
The afternoon was dragging towards its mellow
hour. The sun was deepening the gold of its lances, the bees were going
home and the birds were flying past less often. Dickon and Mary were
sitting on the grass, the tea-basket was repacked ready to be taken back
to the house, and Colin was lying against his cushions with his heavy
locks pushed back from his forehead and his face looking quite a natural
color.
"I don't want this afternoon to go," he
said; "but I shall come back tomorrow, and the day after, and the
day after, and the day after."
"You'll get plenty of fresh air, won't
you?" said Mary. "I'm going to get nothing else," he
answered. "I've seen the spring now and I'm going to see the
summer. I'm going to see everything grow here. I'm going to grow here
myself."
"That tha' will," said Dickon. "Us'll
have thee walkin' about here an' diggin' same as other folk afore
long."
Colin flushed tremendously.
"Walk!" he said. "Dig! Shall
I?"
Dickon's glance at him was delicately cautious.
Neither he nor Mary had ever asked if anything was the matter with his
legs.
"For sure tha' will," he said stoutly.
"Tha--tha's got legs o' thine own, same as other folks!"
Mary was rather frightened until she heard Colin's
answer.
"Nothing really ails them," he said,
"but they are so thin and weak. They shake so that I'm afraid to
try to stand on them."
Both Mary and Dickon drew a relieved breath.
"When tha' stops bein' afraid tha'lt stand on
'em," Dickon said with renewed cheer. "An' tha'lt stop bein'
afraid in a bit."
"I shall?" said Colin, and he lay still
as if he were wondering about things.
They were really very quiet for a little while.
The sun was dropping lower. It was that hour when everything stills
itself, and they really had had a busy and exciting afternoon. Colin
looked as if he were resting luxuriously. Even the creatures had ceased
moving about and had drawn together and were resting near them. Soot had
perched on a low branch and drawn up one leg and dropped the gray film
drowsily over his eyes. Mary privately thought he looked as if he might
snore in a minute.
In the midst of this stillness it was rather
startling when Colin half lifted his head and exclaimed in a loud
suddenly alarmed whisper:
"Who is that man?" Dickon and Mary
scrambled to their feet.
"Man!" they both cried in low quick
voices.
Colin pointed to the high wall. "Look!"
he whispered excitedly. "Just look!"
Mary and Dickon wheeled about and looked. There
was Ben Weatherstaff's indignant face glaring at them over the wall from
the top of a ladder! He actually shook his fist at Mary.
"If I wasn't a bachelder, an' tha' was a
wench o' mine," he cried, "I'd give thee a hidin'!"
He mounted another step threateningly as if it
were his energetic intention to jump down and deal with her; but as she
came toward him he evidently thought better of it and stood on the top
step of his ladder shaking his fist down at her.
"I never thowt much o' thee!" he
harangued. "I couldna' abide thee th' first time I set eyes on
thee. A scrawny buttermilk-faced young besom, allus askin' questions an'
pokin' tha' nose where it wasna, wanted. I never knowed how tha' got so
thick wi' me. If it hadna' been for th' robin-- Drat him--"
"Ben Weatherstaff," called out Mary,
finding her breath. She stood below him and called up to him with a sort
of gasp. "Ben Weatherstaff, it was the robin who showed me the
way!"
Then it did seem as if Ben really would scramble
down on her side of the wall, he was so outraged.
"Tha' young bad 'un!" he called down at
her. "Layin' tha' badness on a robin--not but what he's impidint
enow for anythin'. Him showin' thee th' way! Him! Eh! tha' young nowt"--she
could see his next words burst out because he was overpowered by
curiosity--"however i' this world did tha' get in?"
"It was the robin who showed me the
way," she protested obstinately. "He didn't know he was doing
it but he did. And I can't tell you from here while you're shaking your
fist at me."
He stopped shaking his fist very suddenly at that
very moment and his jaw actually dropped as he stared over her head at
something he saw coming over the grass toward him.
At the first sound of his torrent of words Colin
had been so surprised that he had only sat up and listened as if he were
spellbound. But in the midst of it he had recovered himself and beckoned
imperiously to Dickon.
"Wheel me over there!" he commanded.
"Wheel me quite close and stop right in front of him!"
And this, if you please, this is what Ben
Weatherstaff beheld and which made his jaw drop. A wheeled chair with
luxurious cushions and robes which came toward him looking rather like
some sort of State Coach because a young Rajah leaned back in it with
royal command in his great black-rimmed eyes and a thin white hand
extended haughtily toward him. And it stopped right under Ben
Weatherstaff's nose. It was really no wonder his mouth dropped open.
"Do you know who I am?" demanded the
Rajah.
How Ben Weatherstaff stared! His red old eyes
fixed themselves on what was before him as if he were seeing a ghost. He
gazed and gazed and gulped a lump down his throat and did not say a
word. "Do you know who I am?" demanded Colin still more
imperiously. "Answer!"
Ben Weatherstaff put his gnarled hand up and
passed it over his eyes and over his forehead and then he did answer in
a queer shaky voice.
"Who tha' art?" he said. "Aye, that
I do--wi' tha' mother's eyes starin' at me out o' tha' face. Lord knows
how tha' come here. But tha'rt th' poor cripple."
Colin forgot that he had ever had a back. His face
flushed scarlet and he sat bolt upright.
"I'm not a cripple!" he cried out
furiously. "I'm not!"
"He's not!" cried Mary, almost shouting
up the wall in her fierce indignation. "He's not got a lump as big
as a pin! I looked and there was none there--not one!"
Ben Weatherstaff passed his hand over his forehead
again and gazed as if he could never gaze enough. His hand shook and his
mouth shook and his voice shook. He was an ignorant old man and a
tactless old man and he could only remember the things he had heard.
"Tha'--tha' hasn't got a crooked back?"
he said hoarsely.
"No!" shouted Colin.
"Tha'--tha' hasn't got crooked legs?"
quavered Ben more hoarsely yet. It was too much. The strength which
Colin usually threw into his tantrums rushed through him now in a new
way. Never yet had he been accused of crooked legs--even in
whispers--and the perfectly simple belief in their existence which was
revealed by Ben Weatherstaff's voice was more than Rajah flesh and blood
could endure. His anger and insulted pride made him forget everything
but this one moment and filled him with a power he had never known
before, an almost unnatural strength.
"Come here!" he shouted to Dickon, and
he actually began to tear the coverings off his lower limbs and
disentangle himself. "Come here! Come here! This minute!"
Dickon was by his side in a second. Mary caught
her breath in a short gasp and felt herself turn pale.
"He can do it! He can do it! He can do it! He
can!" she gabbled over to herself under her breath as fast as ever
she could.
There was a brief fierce scramble, the rugs were
tossed on the ground, Dickon held Colin's arm, the thin legs were out,
the thin feet were on the grass. Colin was standing upright--upright--as
straight as an arrow and looking strangely tall--his head thrown back
and his strange eyes flashing lightning. "Look at me!" he
flung up at Ben Weatherstaff. "Just look at me--you! Just look at
me!"
"He's as straight as I am!" cried
Dickon. "He's as straight as any lad i' Yorkshire!"
What Ben Weatherstaff did Mary thought queer
beyond measure. He choked and gulped and suddenly tears ran down his
weather-wrinkled cheeks as he struck his old hands together.
"Eh!" he burst forth, "th' lies
folk tells! Tha'rt as thin as a lath an' as white as a wraith, but
there's not a knob on thee. Tha'lt make a mon yet. God bless thee!"
Dickon held Colin's arm strongly but the boy had
not begun to falter. He stood straighter and straighter and looked Ben
Weatherstaff in the face.
"I'm your master," he said, "when
my father is away. And you are to obey me. This is my garden. Don't dare
to say a word about it! You get down from that ladder and go out to the
Long Walk and Miss Mary will meet you and bring you here. I want to talk
to you. We did not want you, but now you will have to be in the secret.
Be quick!"
Ben Weatherstaff's crabbed old face was still wet
with that one queer rush of tears. It seemed as if he could not take his
eyes from thin straight Colin standing on his feet with his head thrown
back.
"Eh! lad," he almost whispered.
"Eh! my lad!" And then remembering himself he suddenly touched
his hat gardener fashion and said, "Yes, sir! Yes, sir!" and
obediently disappeared as he descended the ladder.
CHAPTER XXII
WHEN THE SUN WENT DOWN
When his head was out of sight Colin turned to
Mary.
"Go and meet him," he said; and Mary
flew across the grass to the door under the ivy.
Dickon was watching him with sharp eyes. There
were scarlet spots on his cheeks and he looked amazing, but he showed no
signs of falling.
"I can stand," he said, and his head was
still held up and he said it quite grandly.
"I told thee tha' could as soon as tha'
stopped bein' afraid," answered Dickon. "An' tha's
stopped."
"Yes, I've stopped," said Colin.
Then suddenly he remembered something Mary had
said.
"Are you making Magic?" he asked
sharply.
Dickon's curly mouth spread in a cheerful grin.
"Tha's doin' Magic thysel'," he said.
"It's same Magic as made these 'ere work out o' th' earth,"
and he touched with his thick boot a clump of crocuses in the grass.
Colin looked down at them.
"Aye," he said slowly, "there
couldna' be bigger Magic than that there--there couldna' be."
He drew himself up straighter than ever.
"I'm going to walk to that tree," he
said, pointing to one a few feet away from him. "I'm going to be
standing when Weatherstaff comes here. I can rest against the tree if I
like. When I want to sit down I will sit down, but not before. Bring a
rug from the chair."
He walked to the tree and though Dickon held his
arm he was wonderfully steady. When he stood against the tree trunk it
was not too plain that he supported himself against it, and he still
held himself so straight that he looked tall.
When Ben Weatherstaff came through the door in the
wall he saw him standing there and he heard Mary muttering something
under her breath.
"What art sayin'?" he asked rather
testily because he did not want his attention distracted from the long
thin straight boy figure and proud face.
But she did not tell him. What she was saying was
this:
"You can do it! You can do it! I told you you
could! You can do it! You can do it! You can!" She was saying it to
Colin because she wanted to make Magic and keep him on his feet looking
like that. She could not bear that he should give in before Ben
Weatherstaff. He did not give in. She was uplifted by a sudden feeling
that he looked quite beautiful in spite of his thinness. He fixed his
eyes on Ben Weatherstaff in his funny imperious way.
"Look at me!" he commanded. "Look
at me all over! Am I a hunchback? Have I got crooked legs?"
Ben Weatherstaff had not quite got over his
emotion, but he had recovered a little and answered almost in his usual
way.
"Not tha'," he said. "Nowt o' th'
sort. What's tha' been doin' with thysel'--hidin' out o' sight an'
lettin' folk think tha' was cripple an' half-witted?"
"Half-witted!" said Colin angrily.
"Who thought that?"
"Lots o' fools," said Ben. "Th'
world's full o' jackasses brayin' an' they never bray nowt but lies.
What did tha' shut thysel' up for?"
"Everyone thought I was going to die,"
said Colin shortly. "I'm not!"
And he said it with such decision Ben Weatherstaff
looked him over, up and down, down and up.
"Tha' die!" he said with dry exultation.
"Nowt o' th' sort! Tha's got too much pluck in thee. When I seed
thee put tha' legs on th' ground in such a hurry I knowed tha' was all
right. Sit thee down on th' rug a bit young Mester an' give me thy
orders."
There was a queer mixture of crabbed tenderness
and shrewd understanding in his manner. Mary had poured out speech as
rapidly as she could as they had come down the Long Walk. The chief
thing to be remembered, she had told him, was that Colin was getting
well--getting well. The garden was doing it. No one must let him
remember about having humps and dying.
The Rajah condescended to seat himself on a rug
under the tree.
"What work do you do in the gardens,
Weatherstaff?" he inquired.
"Anythin' I'm told to do," answered old
Ben. "I'm kep' on by favor--because she liked me."
"She?" said Colin.
"Tha' mother," answered Ben Weatherstaff.
"My mother?" said Colin, and he looked
about him quietly. "This was her garden, wasn't it?"
"Aye, it was that!" and Ben Weatherstaff
looked about him too. "She were main fond of it."
"It is my garden now. I am fond of it. I
shall come here every day," announced Colin. "But it is to be
a secret. My orders are that no one is to know that we come here. Dickon
and my cousin have worked and made it come alive. I shall send for you
sometimes to help--but you must come when no one can see you."
Ben Weatherstaff's face twisted itself in a dry
old smile.
"I've come here before when no one saw
me," he said.
"What!" exclaimed Colin.
"When?"
"Th' last time I was here," rubbing his
chin and looking round, "was about two year' ago."
"But no one has been in it for ten
years!" cried Colin.
"There was no door!"
"I'm no one," said old Ben dryly.
"An' I didn't come through th' door. I come over th' wall. Th'
rheumatics held me back th' last two year'."
"Tha' come an' did a bit o' prunin'!"
cried Dickon. "I couldn't make out how it had been done."
"She was so fond of it--she was!" said
Ben Weatherstaff slowly. "An' she was such a pretty young thing.
She says to me once, `Ben,' says she laughin', `if ever I'm ill or if I
go away you must take care of my roses.' When she did go away th' orders
was no one was ever to come nigh. But I come," with grumpy
obstinacy. "Over th' wall I come--until th' rheumatics stopped
me--an' I did a bit o' work once a year. She'd gave her order
first."
"It wouldn't have been as wick as it is if
tha' hadn't done it," said Dickon. "I did wonder."
"I'm glad you did it, Weatherstaff,"
said Colin. "You'll know how to keep the secret."
"Aye, I'll know, sir," answered Ben.
"An, it'll be easier for a man wi' rheumatics to come in at th'
door."
On the grass near the tree Mary had dropped her
trowel. Colin stretched out his hand and took it up. An odd expression
came into his face and he began to scratch at the earth. His thin hand
was weak enough but presently as they watched him--Mary with quite
breathless interest--he drove the end of the trowel into the soil and
turned some over.
"You can do it! You can do it!" said
Mary to herself. "I tell you, you can!"
Dickon's round eyes were full of eager curiousness
but he said not a word. Ben Weatherstaff looked on with interested face.
Colin persevered. After he had turned a few
trowelfuls of soil he spoke exultantly to Dickon in his best Yorkshire.
"Tha' said as tha'd have me walkin' about
here same as other folk--an' tha' said tha'd have me diggin'. I thowt
tha' was just leein' to please me. This is only th' first day an' I've
walked--an' here I am diggin'."
Ben Weatherstaff's mouth fell open again when he
heard him, but he ended by chuckling.
"Eh!" he said, "that sounds as if
tha'd got wits enow. Tha'rt a Yorkshire lad for sure. An' tha'rt diggin',
too. How'd tha' like to plant a bit o' somethin'? I can get thee a rose
in a pot."
"Go and get it!" said Colin, digging
excitedly. "Quick! Quick!"
It was done quickly enough indeed. Ben
Weatherstaff went his way forgetting rheumatics. Dickon took his spade
and dug the hole deeper and wider than a new digger with thin white
hands could make it. Mary slipped out to run and bring back a
watering-can. When Dickon had deepened the hole Colin went on turning
the soft earth over and over. He looked up at the sky, flushed and
glowing with the strangely new exercise, slight as it was.
"I want to do it before the sun goes
quite--quite down," he said.
Mary thought that perhaps the sun held back a few
minutes just on purpose. Ben Weatherstaff brought the rose in its pot
from the greenhouse. He hobbled over the grass as fast as he could. He
had begun to be excited, too. He knelt down by the hole and broke the
pot from the mould.
"Here, lad," he said, handing the plant
to Colin. "Set it in the earth thysel' same as th' king does when
he goes to a new place."
The thin white hands shook a little and Colin's
flush grew deeper as he set the rose in the mould and held it while old
Ben made firm the earth. It was filled in and pressed down and made
steady. Mary was leaning forward on her hands and knees. Soot had flown
down and marched forward to see what was being done. Nut and Shell
chattered about it from a cherry-tree.
"It's planted!" said Colin at last.
"And the sun is only slipping over the edge. Help me up, Dickon. I
want to be standing when it goes. That's part of the Magic."
And Dickon helped him, and the Magic--or whatever
it was--so gave him strength that when the sun did slip over the edge
and end the strange lovely afternoon for them there he actually stood on
his two feet--laughing.
CHAPTER XXIII
MAGIC
Dr. Craven had been waiting some time at the house
when they returned to it. He had indeed begun to wonder if it might not
be wise to send some one out to explore the garden paths. When Colin was
brought back to his room the poor man looked him over seriously.
"You should not have stayed so long," he
said. "You must not overexert yourself."
"I am not tired at all," said Colin.
"It has made me well. Tomorrow I am going out in the morning as
well as in the afternoon."
"I am not sure that I can allow it,"
answered Dr. Craven. "I am afraid it would not be wise."
"It would not be wise to try to stop
me," said Colin quite seriously. "I am going."
Even Mary had found out that one of Colin's chief
peculiarities was that he did not know in the least what a rude little
brute he was with his way of ordering people about. He had lived on a
sort of desert island all his life and as he had been the king of it he
had made his own manners and had had no one to compare himself with.
Mary had indeed been rather like him herself and since she had been at
Misselthwaite had gradually discovered that her own manners had not been
of the kind which is usual or popular. Having made this discovery she
naturally thought it of enough interest to communicate to Colin. So she
sat and looked at him curiously for a few minutes after Dr. Craven had
gone. She wanted to make him ask her why she was doing it and of course
she did.
"What are you looking at me for?" he
said.
"I'm thinking that I am rather sorry for Dr.
Craven."
"So am I," said Colin calmly, but not
without an air of some satisfaction. "He won't get Misselthwaite at
all now I'm not going to die."
"I'm sorry for him because of that, of
course," said Mary, "but I was thinking just then that it must
have been very horrid to have had to be polite for ten years to a boy
who was always rude. I would never have done it."
"Am I rude?" Colin inquired
undisturbedly.
"If you had been his own boy and he had been
a slapping sort of man," said Mary, "he would have slapped
you."
"But he daren't," said Colin.
"No, he daren't," answered Mistress
Mary, thinking the thing out quite without prejudice. "Nobody ever
dared to do anything you didn't like--because you were going to die and
things like that. You were such a poor thing."
"But," announced Colin stubbornly,
"I am not going to be a poor thing. I won't let people think I'm
one. I stood on my feet this afternoon."
"It is always having your own way that has
made you so queer," Mary went on, thinking aloud.
Colin turned his head, frowning.
"Am I queer?" he demanded.
"Yes," answered Mary, "very. But
you needn't be cross," she added impartially, "because so am I
queer--and so is Ben Weatherstaff. But I am not as queer as I was before
I began to like people and before I found the garden."
"I don't want to be queer," said Colin.
"I am not going to be," and he frowned again with
determination.
He was a very proud boy. He lay thinking for a
while and then Mary saw his beautiful smile begin and gradually change
his whole face.
"I shall stop being queer," he said,
"if I go every day to the garden. There is Magic in there--good
Magic, you know, Mary. I am sure there is." "So am I,"
said Mary.
"Even if it isn't real Magic," Colin
said, "we can pretend it is. Something is there--something!"
"It's Magic," said Mary, "but not
black. It's as white as snow."
They always called it Magic and indeed it seemed
like it in the months that followed--the wonderful months--the radiant
months--the amazing ones. Oh! the things which happened in that garden!
If you have never had a garden you cannot understand, and if you have
had a garden you will know that it would take a whole book to describe
all that came to pass there. At first it seemed that green things would
never cease pushing their way through the earth, in the grass, in the
beds, even in the crevices of the walls. Then the green things began to
show buds and the buds began to unfurl and show color, every shade of
blue, every shade of purple, every tint and hue of crimson. In its happy
days flowers had been tucked away into every inch and hole and corner.
Ben Weatherstaff had seen it done and had himself scraped out mortar
from between the bricks of the wall and made pockets of earth for lovely
clinging things to grow on. Iris and white lilies rose out of the grass
in sheaves, and the green alcoves filled themselves with amazing armies
of the blue and white flower lances of tall delphiniums or columbines or
campanulas.
"She was main fond o' them--she was,"
Ben Weatherstaff said. "She liked them things as was allus pointin'
up to th' blue sky, she used to tell. Not as she was one o' them as
looked down on th' earth--not her. She just loved it but she said as th'
blue sky allus looked so joyful."
The seeds Dickon and Mary had planted grew as if
fairies had tended them. Satiny poppies of all tints danced in the
breeze by the score, gaily defying flowers which had lived in the garden
for years and which it might be confessed seemed rather to wonder how
such new people had got there. And the roses--the roses! Rising out of
the grass, tangled round the sun-dial, wreathing the tree trunks and
hanging from their branches, climbing up the walls and spreading over
them with long garlands falling in cascades--they came alive day by day,
hour by hour. Fair fresh leaves, and buds--and buds--tiny at first but
swelling and working Magic until they burst and uncurled into cups of
scent delicately spilling themselves over their brims and filling the
garden air.
Colin saw it all, watching each change as it took
place. Every morning he was brought out and every hour of each day when
it didn't rain he spent in the garden. Even gray days pleased him. He
would lie on the grass "watching things growing," he said. If
you watched long enough, he declared, you could see buds unsheath
themselves. Also you could make the acquaintance of strange busy insect
things running about on various unknown but evidently serious errands,
sometimes carrying tiny scraps of straw or feather or food, or climbing
blades of grass as if they were trees from whose tops one could look out
to explore the country. A mole throwing up its mound at the end of its
burrow and making its way out at last with the long-nailed paws which
looked so like elfish hands, had absorbed him one whole morning. Ants'
ways, beetles' ways, bees' ways, frogs' ways, birds' ways, plants' ways,
gave him a new world to explore and when Dickon revealed them all and
added foxes' ways, otters' ways, ferrets' ways, squirrels' ways, and
trout' and water-rats' and badgers' ways, there was no end to the things
to talk about and think over.
And this was not the half of the Magic. The fact
that he had really once stood on his feet had set Colin thinking
tremendously and when Mary told him of the spell she had worked he was
excited and approved of it greatly. He talked of it constantly.
"Of course there must be lots of Magic in the
world," he said wisely one day, "but people don't know what it
is like or how to make it. Perhaps the beginning is just to say nice
things are going to happen until you make them happen. I am going to try
and experiment"
The next morning when they went to the secret
garden he sent at once for Ben Weatherstaff. Ben came as quickly as he
could and found the Rajah standing on his feet under a tree and looking
very grand but also very beautifully smiling.
"Good morning, Ben Weatherstaff," he
said. "I want you and Dickon and Miss Mary to stand in a row and
listen to me because I am going to tell you something very
important."
"Aye, aye, sir!" answered Ben
Weatherstaff, touching his forehead. (One of the long concealed charms
of Ben Weatherstaff was that in his boyhood he had once run away to sea
and had made voyages. So he could reply like a sailor.)
"I am going to try a scientific
experiment," explained the Rajah. "When I grow up I am going
to make great scientific discoveries and I am going to begin now with
this experiment"
"Aye, aye, sir!" said Ben Weatherstaff
promptly, though this was the first time he had heard of great
scientific discoveries.
It was the first time Mary had heard of them,
either, but even at this stage she had begun to realize that, queer as
he was, Colin had read about a great many singular things and was
somehow a very convincing sort of boy. When he held up his head and
fixed his strange eyes on you it seemed as if you believed him almost in
spite of yourself though he was only ten years old--going on eleven. At
this moment he was especially convincing because he suddenly felt the
fascination of actually making a sort of speech like a grown-up person.
"The great scientific discoveries I am going
to make," he went on, "will be about Magic. Magic is a great
thing and scarcely any one knows anything about it except a few people
in old books--and Mary a little, because she was born in India where
there are fakirs. I believe Dickon knows some Magic, but perhaps he
doesn't know he knows it. He charms animals and people. I would never
have let him come to see me if he had not been an animal charmer--which
is a boy charmer, too, because a boy is an animal. I am sure there is
Magic in everything, only we have not sense enough to get hold of it and
make it do things for us--like electricity and horses and steam."
This sounded so imposing that Ben Weatherstaff
became quite excited and really could not keep still. "Aye, aye,
sir," he said and he began to stand up quite straight.
"When Mary found this garden it looked quite
dead," the orator proceeded. "Then something began pushing
things up out of the soil and making things out of nothing. One day
things weren't there and another they were. I had never watched things
before and it made me feel very curious. Scientific people are always
curious and I am going to be scientific. I keep saying to myself, `What
is it? What is it?' It's something. It can't be nothing! I don't know
its name so I call it Magic. I have never seen the sun rise but Mary and
Dickon have and from what they tell me I am sure that is Magic too.
Something pushes it up and draws it. Sometimes since I've been in the
garden I've looked up through the trees at the sky and I have had a
strange feeling of being happy as if something were pushing and drawing
in my chest and making me breathe fast. Magic is always pushing and
drawing and making things out of nothing. Everything is made out of
Magic, leaves and trees, flowers and birds, badgers and foxes and
squirrels and people. So it must be all around us. In this garden--in
all the places. The Magic in this garden has made me stand up and know I
am going to live to be a man. I am going to make the scientific
experiment of trying to get some and put it in myself and make it push
and draw me and make me strong. I don't know how to do it but I think
that if you keep thinking about it and calling it perhaps it will come.
Perhaps that is the first baby way to get it. When I was going to try to
stand that first time Mary kept saying to herself as fast as she could,
`You can do it! You can do it!' and I did. I had to try myself at the
same time, of course, but her Magic helped me--and so did Dickon's.
Every morning and evening and as often in the daytime as I can remember
I am going to say, 'Magic is in me! Magic is making me well! I am going
to be as strong as Dickon, as strong as Dickon!' And you must all do it,
too. That is my experiment Will you help, Ben Weatherstaff?"
"Aye, aye, sir!" said Ben Weatherstaff.
"Aye, aye!"
"If you keep doing it every day as regularly
as soldiers go through drill we shall see what will happen and find out
if the experiment succeeds. You learn things by saying them over and
over and thinking about them until they stay in your mind forever and I
think it will be the same with Magic. If you keep calling it to come to
you and help you it will get to be part of you and it will stay and do
things." "I once heard an officer in India tell my mother that
there were fakirs who said words over and over thousands of times,"
said Mary.
"I've heard Jem Fettleworth's wife say th'
same thing over thousands o' times--callin' Jem a drunken brute,"
said Ben Weatherstaff dryly. "Summat allus come o' that, sure
enough. He gave her a good hidin' an' went to th' Blue Lion an' got as
drunk as a lord."
Colin drew his brows together and thought a few
minutes. Then he cheered up.
"Well," he said, "you see something
did come of it. She used the wrong Magic until she made him beat her. If
she'd used the right Magic and had said something nice perhaps he
wouldn't have got as drunk as a lord and perhaps--perhaps he might have
bought her a new bonnet."
Ben Weatherstaff chuckled and there was shrewd
admiration in his little old eyes.
"Tha'rt a clever lad as well as a
straight-legged one, Mester Colin," he said. "Next time I see
Bess Fettleworth I'll give her a bit of a hint o' what Magic will do for
her. She'd be rare an' pleased if th' sinetifik 'speriment worked --an'
so 'ud Jem."
Dickon had stood listening to the lecture, his
round eyes shining with curious delight. Nut and Shell were on his
shoulders and he held a long-eared white rabbit in his arm and stroked
and stroked it softly while it laid its ears along its back and enjoyed
itself.
"Do you think the experiment will work?"
Colin asked him, wondering what he was thinking. He so often wondered
what Dickon was thinking when he saw him looking at him or at one of his
"creatures" with his happy wide smile.
He smiled now and his smile was wider than usual.
"Aye," he answered, "that I do.
It'll work same as th' seeds do when th' sun shines on 'em. It'll work
for sure. Shall us begin it now?"
Colin was delighted and so was Mary. Fired by
recollections of fakirs and devotees in illustrations Colin suggested
that they should all sit cross-legged under the tree which made a
canopy.
"It will be like sitting in a sort of
temple," said Colin. "I'm rather tired and I want to sit
down."
"Eh!" said Dickon, "tha' mustn't
begin by sayin' tha'rt tired. Tha' might spoil th' Magic."
Colin turned and looked at him--into his innocent
round eyes.
"That's true," he said slowly. "I
must only think of the Magic." It all seemed most majestic and
mysterious when they sat down in their circle. Ben Weatherstaff felt as
if he had somehow been led into appearing at a prayer-meeting.
Ordinarily he was very fixed in being what he called "agen' prayer-meetin's"
but this being the Rajah's affair he did not resent it and was indeed
inclined to be gratified at being called upon to assist. Mistress Mary
felt solemnly enraptured. Dickon held his rabbit in his arm, and perhaps
he made some charmer's signal no one heard, for when he sat down,
cross-legged like the rest, the crow, the fox, the squirrels and the
lamb slowly drew near and made part of the circle, settling each into a
place of rest as if of their own desire.
"The `creatures' have come," said Colin
gravely. "They want to help us."
Colin really looked quite beautiful, Mary thought.
He held his head high as if he felt like a sort of priest and his
strange eyes had a wonderful look in them. The light shone on him
through the tree canopy.
"Now we will begin," he said.
"Shall we sway backward and forward, Mary, as if we were
dervishes?"
"I canna' do no swayin' back'ard and for'ard,"
said Ben Weatherstaff. "I've got th' rheumatics."
"The Magic will take them away," said
Colin in a High Priest tone, "but we won't sway until it has done
it. We will only chant."
"I canna' do no chantin'" said Ben
Weatherstaff a trifle testily. "They turned me out o' th' church
choir th' only time I ever tried it."
No one smiled. They were all too much in earnest.
Colin's face was not even crossed by a shadow. He was thinking only of
the Magic.
"Then I will chant," he said. And he
began, looking like a strange boy spirit. "The sun is shining--the
sun is shining. That is the Magic. The flowers are growing--the roots
are stirring. That is the Magic. Being alive is the Magic--being strong
is the Magic. The Magic is in me--the Magic is in me. It is in me--it is
in me. It's in every one of us. It's in Ben Weatherstaff's back. Magic!
Magic! Come and help!"
He said it a great many times--not a thousand
times but quite a goodly number. Mary listened entranced. She felt as if
it were at once queer and beautiful and she wanted him to go on and on.
Ben Weatherstaff began to feel soothed into a sort of dream which was
quite agreeable. The humming of the bees in the blossoms mingled with
the chanting voice and drowsily melted into a doze. Dickon sat
cross-legged with his rabbit asleep on his arm and a hand resting on the
lamb's back. Soot had pushed away a squirrel and huddled close to him on
his shoulder, the gray film dropped over his eyes. At last Colin
stopped.
"Now I am going to walk round the
garden," he announced.
Ben Weatherstaff's head had just dropped forward
and he lifted it with a jerk.
"You have been asleep," said Colin.
"Nowt o' th' sort," mumbled Ben. "Th'
sermon was good enow--but I'm bound to get out afore th'
collection."
He was not quite awake yet.
"You're not in church," said Colin.
"Not me," said Ben, straightening
himself. "Who said I were? I heard every bit of it. You said th'
Magic was in my back. Th' doctor calls it rheumatics."
The Rajah waved his hand.
"That was the wrong Magic," he said.
"You will get better. You have my permission to go to your work.
But come back tomorrow."
"I'd like to see thee walk round the
garden," grunted Ben.
It was not an unfriendly grunt, but it was a
grunt. In fact, being a stubborn old party and not having entire faith
in Magic he had made up his mind that if he were sent away he would
climb his ladder and look over the wall so that he might be ready to
hobble back if there were any stumbling.
The Rajah did not object to his staying and so the
procession was formed. It really did look like a procession. Colin was
at its head with Dickon on one side and Mary on the other. Ben
Weatherstaff walked behind, and the "creatures" trailed after
them, the lamb and the fox cub keeping close to Dickon, the white rabbit
hopping along or stopping to nibble and Soot following with the
solemnity of a person who felt himself in charge.
It was a procession which moved slowly but with
dignity. Every few yards it stopped to rest. Colin leaned on Dickon's
arm and privately Ben Weatherstaff kept a sharp lookout, but now and
then Colin took his hand from its support and walked a few steps alone.
His head was held up all the time and he looked very grand.
"The Magic is in me!" he kept saying.
"The Magic is making me strong! I can feel it! I can feel it!"
It seemed very certain that something was
upholding and uplifting him. He sat on the seats in the alcoves, and
once or twice he sat down on the grass and several times he paused in
the path and leaned on Dickon, but he would not give up until he had
gone all round the garden. When he returned to the canopy tree his
cheeks were flushed and he looked triumphant.
"I did it! The Magic worked!" he cried.
"That is my first scientific discovery.".
"What will Dr. Craven say?" broke out
Mary.
"He won't say anything," Colin answered,
"because he will not be told. This is to be the biggest secret of
all. No one is to know anything about it until I have grown so strong
that I can walk and run like any other boy. I shall come here every day
in my chair and I shall be taken back in it. I won't have people
whispering and asking questions and I won't let my father hear about it
until the experiment has quite succeeded. Then sometime when he comes
back to Misselthwaite I shall just walk into his study and say `Here I
am; I am like any other boy. I am quite well and I shall live to be a
man. It has been done by a scientific experiment.'"
"He will think he is in a dream," cried
Mary. "He won't believe his eyes."
Colin flushed triumphantly. He had made himself
believe that he was going to get well, which was really more than half
the battle, if he had been aware of it. And the thought which stimulated
him more than any other was this imagining what his father would look
like when he saw that he had a son who was as straight and strong as
other fathers' sons. One of his darkest miseries in the unhealthy morbid
past days had been his hatred of being a sickly weak-backed boy whose
father was afraid to look at him.
"He'll be obliged to believe them," he
said.
"One of the things I am going to do, after
the Magic works and before I begin to make scientific discoveries, is to
be an athlete."
"We shall have thee takin' to boxin' in a
week or so," said Ben Weatherstaff. "Tha'lt end wi' winnin' th'
Belt an' bein' champion prize-fighter of all England."
Colin fixed his eyes on him sternly.
"Weatherstaff," he said, "that is
disrespectful. You must not take liberties because you are in the
secret. However much the Magic works I shall not be a prize-fighter. I
shall be a Scientific Discoverer."
"Ax pardon--ax pardon, sir" answered
Ben, touching his forehead in salute. "I ought to have seed it
wasn't a jokin' matter," but his eyes twinkled and secretly he was
immensely pleased. He really did not mind being snubbed since the
snubbing meant that the lad was gaining strength and spirit.
CHAPTER XXIV
"LET THEM LAUGH"
The secret garden was not the only one Dickon
worked in. Round the cottage on the moor there was a piece of ground
enclosed by a low wall of rough stones. Early in the morning and late in
the fading twilight and on all the days Colin and Mary did not see him,
Dickon worked there planting or tending potatoes and cabbages, turnips
and carrots and herbs for his mother. In the company of his
"creatures" he did wonders there and was never tired of doing
them, it seemed. While he dug or weeded he whistled or sang bits of
Yorkshire moor songs or talked to Soot or Captain or the brothers and
sisters he had taught to help him.
"We'd never get on as comfortable as we
do," Mrs. Sowerby said, "if it wasn't for Dickon's garden.
Anything'll grow for him. His 'taters and cabbages is twice th' size of
any one else's an' they've got a flavor with 'em as nobody's has."
When she found a moment to spare she liked to go
out and talk to him. After supper there was still a long clear twilight
to work in and that was her quiet time. She could sit upon the low rough
wall and look on and hear stories of the day. She loved this time. There
were not only vegetables in this garden. Dickon had bought penny
packages of flower seeds now and then and sown bright sweet-scented
things among gooseberry bushes and even cabbages and he grew borders of
mignonette and pinks and pansies and things whose seeds he could save
year after year or whose roots would bloom each spring and spread in
time into fine clumps. The low wall was one of the prettiest things in
Yorkshire because he had tucked moorland foxglove and ferns and
rock-cress and hedgerow flowers into every crevice until only here and
there glimpses of the stones were to be seen.
"All a chap's got to do to make 'em thrive,
mother," he would say, "is to be friends with 'em for sure.
They're just like th' `creatures.' If they're thirsty give 'em drink and
if they're hungry give 'em a bit o' food. They want to live same as we
do. If they died I should feel as if I'd been a bad lad and somehow
treated them heartless."
It was in these twilight hours that Mrs. Sowerby
heard of all that happened at Misselthwaite Manor. At first she was only
told that "Mester Colin" had taken a fancy to going out into
the grounds with Miss Mary and that it was doing him good. But it was
not long before it was agreed between the two children that Dickon's
mother might "come into the secret." Somehow it was not
doubted that she was "safe for sure."
So one beautiful still evening Dickon told the
whole story, with all the thrilling details of the buried key and the
robin and the gray haze which had seemed like deadness and the secret
Mistress Mary had planned never to reveal. The coming of Dickon and how
it had been told to him, the doubt of Mester Colin and the final drama
of his introduction to the hidden domain, combined with the incident of
Ben Weatherstaff's angry face peering over the wall and Mester Colin's
sudden indignant strength, made Mrs. Sowerby's nice-looking face quite
change color several times.
"My word!" she said. "It was a good
thing that little lass came to th' Manor. It's been th' makin' o' her
an' th' savin, o' him. Standin' on his feet! An' us all thinkin' he was
a poor half-witted lad with not a straight bone in him."
She asked a great many questions and her blue eyes
were full of deep thinking.
"What do they make of it at th' Manor--him
being so well an' cheerful an' never complainin'?" she inquired.
"They don't know what to make of it," answered Dickon.
"Every day as comes round his face looks different. It's fillin'
out and doesn't look so sharp an' th' waxy color is goin'. But he has to
do his bit o' complainin'," with a highly entertained grin.
"What for, i' Mercy's name?" asked Mrs.
Sowerby.
Dickon chuckled.
"He does it to keep them from guessin' what's
happened. If the doctor knew he'd found out he could stand on his feet
he'd likely write and tell Mester Craven. Mester Colin's savin' th'
secret to tell himself. He's goin' to practise his Magic on his legs
every day till his father comes back an' then he's goin' to march into
his room an' show him he's as straight as other lads. But him an' Miss
Mary thinks it's best plan to do a bit o' groanin' an' frettin' now an'
then to throw folk off th' scent."
Mrs. Sowerby was laughing a low comfortable laugh
long before he had finished his last sentence.
"Eh!" she said, "that pair's
enjoyin' their-selves I'll warrant. They'll get a good bit o' actin' out
of it an' there's nothin' children likes as much as play actin'. Let's
hear what they do, Dickon lad." Dickon stopped weeding and sat up
on his heels to tell her. His eyes were twinkling with fun.
"Mester Colin is carried down to his chair
every time he goes out," he explained. "An' he flies out at
John, th' footman, for not carryin' him careful enough. He makes himself
as helpless lookin' as he can an' never lifts his head until we're out
o' sight o' th' house. An' he grunts an' frets a good bit when he's bein'
settled into his chair. Him an' Miss Mary's both got to enjoyin' it an'
when he groans an' complains she'll say, `Poor Colin! Does it hurt you
so much? Are you so weak as that, poor Colin?'--but th' trouble is that
sometimes they can scarce keep from burstin' out laughin'. When we get
safe into the garden they laugh till they've no breath left to laugh
with. An' they have to stuff their faces into Mester Colin's cushions to
keep the gardeners from hearin', if any of, 'em's about."
"Th' more they laugh th' better for 'em!"
said Mrs. Sowerby, still laughing herself. "Good healthy child
laughin's better than pills any day o' th' year. That pair'll plump up
for sure."
"They are plumpin' up," said Dickon.
"They're that hungry they don't know how to get enough to eat
without makin' talk. Mester Colin says if he keeps sendin' for more food
they won't believe he's an invalid at all. Miss Mary says she'll let him
eat her share, but he says that if she goes hungry she'll get thin an'
they mun both get fat at once."
Mrs. Sowerby laughed so heartily at the revelation
of this difficulty that she quite rocked backward and forward in her
blue cloak, and Dickon laughed with her.
"I'll tell thee what, lad," Mrs. Sowerby
said when she could speak. "I've thought of a way to help 'em. When
tha' goes to 'em in th' mornin's tha' shall take a pail o' good new milk
an' I'll bake 'em a crusty cottage loaf or some buns wi' currants in 'em,
same as you children like. Nothin's so good as fresh milk an' bread.
Then they could take off th' edge o' their hunger while they were in
their garden an' th, fine food they get indoors 'ud polish off th'
corners."
"Eh! mother!" said Dickon admiringly,
"what a wonder tha' art! Tha' always sees a way out o' things. They
was quite in a pother yesterday. They didn't see how they was to manage
without orderin' up more food--they felt that empty inside."
"They're two young 'uns growin' fast, an'
health's comin' back to both of 'em. Children like that feels like young
wolves an' food's flesh an' blood to 'em," said Mrs. Sowerby. Then
she smiled Dickon's own curving smile. "Eh! but they're enjoyin'
theirselves for sure," she said.
She was quite right, the comfortable wonderful
mother creature--and she had never been more so than when she said their
"play actin'" would be their joy. Colin and Mary found it one
of their most thrilling sources of entertainment. The idea of protecting
themselves from suspicion had been unconsciously suggested to them first
by the puzzled nurse and then by Dr. Craven himself.
"Your appetite. Is improving very much,
Master Colin," the nurse had said one day. "You used to eat
nothing, and so many things disagreed with you."
"Nothing disagrees with me now" replied
Colin, and then seeing the nurse looking at him curiously he suddenly
remembered that perhaps he ought not to appear too well just yet.
"At least things don't so often disagree with me. It's the fresh
air."
"Perhaps it is," said the nurse, still
looking at him with a mystified expression. "But I must talk to Dr.
Craven about it."
"How she stared at you!" said Mary when
she went away. "As if she thought there must be something to find
out."
"I won't have her finding out things,"
said Colin. "No one must begin to find out yet." When Dr.
Craven came that morning he seemed puzzled, also. He asked a number of
questions, to Colin's great annoyance.
"You stay out in the garden a great
deal," he suggested. "Where do you go?"
Colin put on his favorite air of dignified
indifference to opinion.
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