About
half an hour afterward, when the schoolroom door opened and Sara walked in, the
entire seminary was struck dumb.
"My
word!" ejaculated Jessie, jogging Lavinia's
elbow. "Look at the Princess Sara!"
Everybody
was looking, and when Lavinia looked she turned quite
red.
It
was the Princess Sara indeed. At least, since the days when she had been a
princess, Sara had never looked as she did now. She did not seem the Sara they
had seen come down the back stairs a few hours ago. She was dressed in the kind
of frock Lavinia had been used to envying her the
possession of. It was deep and warm in color, and beautifully made. Her slender
feet looked as they had done when Jessie had admired them, and the hair, whose
heavy locks had made her look rather like a Shetland pony when it fell loose
about her small, odd face, was tied back with a ribbon.
"Perhaps
someone has left her a fortune," Jessie whispered. "I always thought
something would happen to her. She's so queer."
"Perhaps
the diamond mines have suddenly appeared again," said Lavinia,
scathingly. "Don't please her by staring at her in that way, you silly
thing."
"Sara,"
broke in Miss Minchin's deep voice, "come and sit here."
And
while the whole schoolroom stared and pushed with elbows, and scarcely made any
effort to conceal its excited curiosity, Sara went to her old seat of honor,
and bent her head over her books.
That
night, when she went to her room, after she and Becky had eaten their supper
she sat and looked at the fire seriously for a long time.
"Are
you making something up in your head, miss?" Becky inquired with
respectful softness. When Sara sat in silence and looked into the coals with
dreaming eyes it generally meant that she was making a new story. But this time
she was not, and she shook her head.
"No,"
she answered. "I am wondering what I ought to do."
Becky
stared--still respectfully. She was filled with something approaching reverence
for everything Sara did and said.
"I
can't help thinking about my friend," Sara explained. "If he wants to
keep himself a secret, it would be rude to try and find out who he is. But I do
so want him to know how thankful I am to him--and how happy he has made me.
Anyone who is kind wants to know when people have been made happy. They care
for that more than for being thanked. I wish--I do wish--"
She
stopped short because her eyes at that instant fell upon something standing on
a table in a corner. It was something she had found in the room when she came
up to it only two days before. It was a little writing-case fitted with paper
and envelopes and pens and ink.
"Oh,"
she exclaimed, "why did I not think of that before?"
She
rose and went to the corner and brought the case back to the fire.
"I
can write to him," she said joyfully, "and
leave it on the table. Then perhaps the person who takes the things away will
take it, too. I won't ask him anything. He won't mind my thanking him, I feel
sure."
So
she wrote a note. This is what she said:
I
hope you will not think it is impolite that I should write this note to you
when you wish to keep yourself a secret. Please believe I do not mean to be
impolite or try to find out anything at all; only I want to thank you for being
so kind to me--so heavenly kind--and making everything like a fairy story. I am
so grateful to you, and I am so happy--and so is Becky. Becky feels just as
thankful as I do--it is all just as beautiful and wonderful to her as it is to
me. We used to be so lonely and cold and hungry, and now--oh, just think what
you have done for us! Please let me say just these words. It seems as if I
ought to say them. Thank you--thank you--thank you!
The
next morning she left this on the little table, and in the evening it had been
taken away with the other things; so she knew the Magician had received it, and
she was happier for the thought. She was reading one of her new books to Becky
just before they went to their respective beds, when her attention was
attracted by a sound at the skylight. When she looked up from her page she saw
that Becky had heard the sound also, as she had turned her head to look and was
listening rather nervously.
"Something's
there, miss," she whispered.
"Yes,"
said Sara, slowly. "It sounds--rather like a cat--trying to get in."
She
left her chair and went to the skylight. It was a queer little sound she
heard--like a soft scratching. She suddenly remembered something and laughed.
She remembered a quaint little intruder who had made his way into the attic
once before. She had seen him that very afternoon, sitting disconsolately on a
table before a window in the Indian gentleman's house.
"Suppose,"
she whispered in pleased excitement--"just suppose it was the monkey who
got away again. Oh, I wish it was!"
She
climbed on a chair, very cautiously raised the skylight, and peeped out. It had
been snowing all day, and on the snow, quite near her, crouched a tiny,
shivering figure, whose small black face wrinkled itself piteously at sight of
her.
"It
is the monkey," she cried out. "He has crept out of the Lascar's
attic, and he saw the light."
Becky
ran to her side.
"Are
you going to let him in, miss?" she said.
"Yes,"
Sara answered joyfully. "It's too cold for monkeys to be out. They're
delicate. I'll coax him in."
She
put a hand out delicately, speaking in a coaxing voice--as she spoke to the
sparrows and to Melchisedec--as if she were some
friendly little animal herself.
"Come
along, monkey darling," she said. "I won't hurt you."
He
knew she would not hurt him. He knew it before she laid her soft, caressing
little paw on him and drew him towards her. He had felt human love in the slim
brown hands of Ram Dass, and he felt it in hers. He
let her lift him through the skylight, and when he found himself in her arms he
cuddled up to her breast and looked up into her face.
"Nice
monkey! Nice monkey!" she crooned, kissing his funny head. "Oh, I do
love little animal things."
He
was evidently glad to get to the fire, and when she sat down and held him on
her knee he looked from her to Becky with mingled interest and appreciation.
"He
is plain-looking, miss, ain't he?" said Becky.
"He
looks like a very ugly baby," laughed Sara. "I beg your pardon,
monkey; but I'm glad you are not a baby. Your mother couldn't be proud of you,
and no one would dare to say you looked like any of your relations. Oh, I do
like you!"
She
leaned back in her chair and reflected.
"Perhaps
he's sorry he's so ugly," she said, "and it's always on his mind. I
wonder if he has a mind. Monkey, my love, have you a mind?"
But
the monkey only put up a tiny paw and scratched his head.
"What
shall you do with him?" Becky asked.
"I
shall let him sleep with me tonight, and then take him back to the Indian
gentleman tomorrow. I am sorry to take you back, monkey; but you must go. You
ought to be fondest of your own family; and I'm not a real relation."
And
when she went to bed she made him a nest at her feet, and he curled up and
slept there as if he were a baby and much pleased with his quarters.
"It Is the Child!"
The
next afternoon three members of the Large Family sat in the Indian gentleman's
library, doing their best to cheer him up. They had been allowed to come in to
perform this office because he had specially invited them. He had been living
in a state of suspense for some time, and today he was waiting for a certain
event very anxiously. This event was the return of Mr. Carmichael from Moscow.
His stay there had been prolonged from week to week. On his first arrival
there, he had not been able satisfactorily to trace the family he had gone in
search of. When he felt at last sure that he had found them and had gone to
their house, he had been told that they were absent on a journey. His efforts
to reach them had been unavailing, so he had decided to remain in Moscow until
their return. Mr. Carrisford sat in his reclining
chair, and Janet sat on the floor beside him. He was very fond of Janet. Nora
had found a footstool, and Donald was astride the tiger's head which ornamented
the rug made of the animal's skin. It must be owned that he was riding it
rather violently.
"Don't
chirrup so loud, Donald," Janet said. "When you come to cheer an ill
person up you don't cheer him up at the top of your voice. Perhaps cheering up
is too loud, Mr. Carrisford?" turning to the
Indian gentleman.
But
he only patted her shoulder.
"No,
it isn't," he answered. "And it keeps me from thinking too
much."
"I'm
going to be quiet," Donald shouted. "We'll all be as quiet as
mice."
"Mice
don't make a noise like that," said Janet.
Donald
made a bridle of his handkerchief and bounced up and down on the tiger's head.
"A
whole lot of mice might," he said cheerfully. "A thousand mice
might."
"I
don't believe fifty thousand mice would," said
Janet, severely; "and we have to be as quiet as one mouse."
Mr.
Carrisford laughed and patted her shoulder again.
"Papa
won't be very long now," she said. "May we talk about the lost little
girl?"
"I
don't think I could talk much about anything else just now," the Indian
gentleman answered, knitting his forehead with a tired look.
"We
like her so much," said Nora. "We call her the little un-fairy
princess."
"Why?"
the Indian gentleman inquired, because the fancies of the Large Family always
made him forget things a little.
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