I went inside; it was time.
"Have you any luggage?" I admitted that I had. "Perhaps it had better be brought in."
"Perhaps it had."
"Do you think that you could manage, Tidy?"
"The mare, she"ll stand still enough. I should think I could, miss."
CHAPTER II.
AND THE PERFORMANCE.
By degrees my belongings were borne into the hall, hidden under an envelope of snow. The girl seemed surprised at their number. The driver was paid, the cart disappeared, the door was shut; the girl and I were alone together.
"We didn"t expect that you would come."
"Not expect me? But it was all arranged; I wrote to say that I would come. Did you not receive my letter?"
"We thought that you were joking."
"Joking! Why should you imagine that?"
"We were joking."
"You were? Then I am to gather that I have been made the subject of a practical joke, and that I am an intruder here?"
"Well, it"s quite true that we did not think you were in earnest. You see, it"s this way, we"re alone."
"Alone? Who are "we"?"
"Well, it will take a good while to explain, and you look tired and cold."
"I am both."
"Perhaps you"re hungry?"
"I am."
"I don"t know what you can have to eat, unless it"s to-morrow"s dinner."
"To-morrow"s dinner!" I stared. "Can I see Mrs. Wilson?"
"Mrs. Wilson? That"s mamma. She"s dead."
"I beg your pardon. Can I see your father?"
"Oh, father"s been dead for years."
"Then to whom have I the pleasure of speaking?"
"I"m Madge. I"m mother now."
"You are--mother now?"
"The trouble will be about where you are to sleep--unless it"s with the boys. The rooms are all anyhow, and I"m sure I don"t know where the beds are."
"I suppose there are servants in the house?"
She shook her head.
"No. The boys thought that they were nuisances so we got rid of them.
The last went yesterday. She wouldn"t do any work, so we thought she"d better go."
"Under those circ.u.mstances I think it probable that you were right.
Then am I to understand that there are children?"
"Rather!"
As she spoke there came a burst of laughter from the other end of the pa.s.sage. I spun round. No one was in sight. She explained.
"They"re waiting round the corner. Perhaps we"d better have them here.
You people, you"d better come and let me introduce you to Mr.
Christopher."
A procession began to appear from round the corner of boys and girls.
In front was a girl of about sixteen. She advanced with outstretched hand and an air of self-possession which took me at a disadvantage.
"I"m Bessie. I"m sorry we kept you waiting at the door, but the fact is that we thought it was Eliza"s brother who had come to insult us again."
"Pray, don"t mention it. I am glad that it was not Eliza"s brother."
"So am I. He is a dreadful man."
I shook hands with the rest of them. There were six more, four boys and two girls. They formed a considerable congregation as they stood eyeing me with inquiring glances. Madge was the first to speak.
"I wondered all along if he would take it as a joke or not, and you see he hasn"t. I thought all the time that it was a risky thing to do."
"I like that! You keep your thoughts to yourself then. It was you proposed it. You said you"d been reading about something of the kind in a story, and you voted for our advertising ourselves for a lark."
The speaker was the biggest boy, a good-looking youngster, with sallow cheeks and shrewd black eyes.
"But, Rupert, I never meant it to go so far as this."
"How far did you mean it to go then? It was your idea all through. You sent in the advertis.e.m.e.nt, you wrote the letters, and now he"s here.
If you didn"t mean it, why didn"t you stop his coming?"