Wiggs looked puzzled. She had been dusting the books in the library; and when you dust books you simply _must_ stop every now and then to take just one little peep inside, and then you look inside another one and another one, and by the time you have finished dusting, your head is so full of things you have seen that you have to be asked questions very slowly indeed.
"I"m pretty, aren"t I?" went on Hyacinth.
That was an easy one.
"Lovely!" said Wiggs, with a deep breath.
"And I"m not unkind to anybody?"
"Unkind!" said Wiggs indignantly.
"Then why--oh, Wiggs, I know it"s silly of me, but it _hurts_ me that my people are so much fonder of the Countess than of me."
"Oh, I"m sure they"re not, your Royal Highness."
"Well, they cheer her much louder than they cheer me."
Wiggs tried to think of a way of comforting her mistress, but her head was still full of the last book she had dusted.
"Why should they be so fond of her?" demanded Hyacinth.
"Perhaps because she"s so funny," said Wiggs.
"Funny! Is she funny?" said the Princess coldly. "She doesn"t make _me_ laugh."
"Well, it _was_ funny of her to make Woggs march round and round that tree like that, _wasn"t_ it?"
"Like what? You don"t mean----" The Princess"s eyes were wide open with astonishment. "Was that Woggs all the time?"
"Yes, your Royal Highness. Wasn"t it lovely and funny of her?"
The Princess looked across to the forest and nodded to herself.
"Yes. That"s it. Wiggs, I don"t believe there has ever been an Army at all. . . . And I pay them every week!" She added solemnly, "There are moments when I don"t believe that woman is quite honest."
"Do you mean she isn"t good?" asked Wiggs in awe.
Hyacinth nodded.
"I"m _never_ good," said Wiggs firmly.
"What do you mean, silly? You"re the best little girl in Euralia."
"I"m _not_. I do awful things sometimes. Do you know what I did yesterday?"
"Something terrible!" smiled Hyacinth.
"I tore my ap.r.o.n."
"You baby! That isn"t being bad," said Hyacinth absently. She was still thinking of that awful review.
"The Countess says it is."
"The Countess!"
"Do you know why I want to be _very_ good?" said Wiggs, coming up close to the Princess.
"Why, dear?"
"Because then I could dance like a fairy."
"Is that how it"s done?" asked the Princess, rather amused. "The Countess must dance _very_ heavily." She suddenly remembered something and added: "Why, of course, child, you were going to tell me about a fairy you met, weren"t you? That was weeks ago, though.
Tell me now. It will help me to forget things which make me rather angry."
It was a simple little story. There must have been many like it in the books which Wiggs had been dusting; but these were simple times, and the oldest story always seemed new.
Wiggs had been by herself in the forest. A baby rabbit had run past her, terrified; a ferret in pursuit. Wiggs had picked the little fluffy thing up in her arms and comforted it; the ferret had slowed down, walked past very indifferently with its hands, as it were, in its pockets, hesitated a moment, and then remembered an important letter which it had forgotten to post. Wiggs was left alone with the baby rabbit, and before she knew where she was, the rabbit was gone and there was a fairy in front of her.
[Ill.u.s.tration: _The rabbit was gone, and there was a fairy in front of her_]
"You have saved my life," said the fairy. "That was a wicked magician after me, and if he had caught me then, he would have killed me."
"Please, your Fairiness, I didn"t know fairies _could_ die," said Wiggs.
"They can when they take on animal shape or human shape. He could not hurt me now, but before----" She shuddered.
"I"m so glad you"re all right now," said Wiggs politely.
"Thanks to you, my child. I must reward you. Take this ring. When you have been good for a whole day, you can have one good wish; when you have been bad for a whole day, you can have one bad wish. One good wish and one bad wish--that is all it will allow anybody to have."
With these words she vanished and left Wiggs alone with the ring.
So, ever after that, Wiggs tried desperately hard to be good and have the good wish, but it was difficult work. Something always went wrong; she tore her ap.r.o.n or read books when she ought to have been dusting, or---- Well, you or I would probably have given it up at once, and devoted ourselves to earning the bad wish. But Wiggs was a nice little girl.
"And, oh, I _do_ so want to be good," said Wiggs earnestly to the Princess, "so that I could wish to dance like a fairy." She had a sudden anxiety. "That _is_ a good wish, _isn"t_ it?"
"It"s a lovely wish; but I"m sure you could dance now if you tried."
"I can"t," said Wiggs. "I always dance like this."
She jumped up and danced a few steps. Wiggs was a dear little girl, but her dancing reminded you of a very dusty road going up-hill all the way, with nothing but suet-puddings waiting for you on the top.
Something like that.
"It isn"t _really_ graceful, is it?" she said candidly, as she came to rest.
"Well, I suppose the fairies _do_ dance better than that."
"So that"s why I want to be good, so as I can have my wish."