CHAPTER XIV
"WHY CAN"T YOU BE LIKE WIGGS?"
Hyacinth was with Udo in the library. Udo spent much of his time in the library nowadays; for surely in one of those many books was to be found some Advice to a Gentleman in Temporary Difficulties suitable to a case like his. Hyacinth kept him company sadly. It had been such a brilliant idea inviting him to Euralia; how she wished now that she had never done it.
"Well, Wiggs," she said, with a gentle smile, "what have you been doing with yourself all the morning?"
Udo looked up from his mat and nodded to her.
"I"ve found out," said Wiggs excitedly; "it was the _Countess_ who did it."
Udo surveyed her with amazement.
"The Princess Hyacinth," he said, "has golden hair. One discovers these things gradually." And he returned to his book.
Wiggs looked bewildered.
"He means, dear," said Hyacinth, "that it is quite obvious that the Countess did it, and we have known about it for days."
Udo wore, as far as his face would permit, the slightly puffy expression of one who has just said something profoundly ironical and is feeling self-conscious about it.
"Oh--h," said Wiggs in such a disappointed voice that it seemed as if she were going to cry.
Hyacinth, like the dear that she was, made haste to comfort her.
"We didn"t really _know_," she said; "we only guessed it. But now that you have found out, I shall be able to punish her properly. No, don"t come with me," she said, as she rose and moved towards the door; "stay here and help his Royal Highness. Perhaps you can find the book that he wants; you"ve read more of them than I have, I expect."
Left alone with the Prince, Wiggs was silent for a little, looking at him rather anxiously.
"Do you know _all_ about the Countess?" she asked at last.
"If there"s anything I don"t know, it must be _very_ bad."
"Then you know that it"s all my fault that you are like this? Oh, dear Prince Udo, I am so dreadfully sorry."
"What do you mean--_your_ fault?"
"Because it was my ring that did it."
Udo scratched his head in a slightly puzzled but quite a nice way.
"Tell me all about it from the beginning," he said. "You have found out something after all, I believe."
So Wiggs told her story from the beginning. How the fairy had given her a ring; how the Countess had taken it from her for five minutes and had a bad wish on it; and how Wiggs had found her out that very morning.
Udo was intensely excited by the story. He trotted up and down the library, muttering to himself. He stopped in front of Wiggs as soon as she had finished.
"Is the ring still going?" he asked. "I mean, can you have another wish on it?"
"Yes, just one."
"Then wish her to be turned into a----" He tried to think of something that would meet the case. "What about a spider?" he said thoughtfully.
"But that"s a _bad_ wish," said Wiggs.
"Yes, but it"s _her_ turn."
"Oh, but I"m only allowed a good wish now." She added rapturously, "And I know what it"s going to be."
So did Udo. At least he thought he did.
"Oh, you dear," he said, casting an affectionate look on her.
"Yes, that"s it. That I might be able to dance like a fairy."
Udo could hardly believe his ears, and they were adequate enough for most emergencies.
"But how is that going to help _me?_" he said, tapping his chest with his paw.
"But it"s _my_ ring," said Wiggs. "And so of course I"m going to wish that I can dance like a fairy. I"ve always meant to, as soon as I"ve been good for a day first."
The child was absurdly selfish. Udo saw that he would have to appeal to her in another way.
"Of course," he began, "I"ve nothing to say against dancing _as_ dancing, but I think you"ll get tired of it. Just as I shall get tired of--lettuce."
Wiggs understood now.
"You mean that I might wish you to be a Prince again?"
"Well," said Udo casually, "it just occurred to me as an example of what might be called the Good Wish."
"Then I shall never be able to dance like a fairy?"
"Neither shall I, if it comes to that," said Udo. Really, the child was very stupid.
"Oh, it"s too cruel," said Wiggs, stamping her foot. "I did so want to be able to dance."
Udo glanced gloomily into the future.
"To live for ever behind wire netting," he mused; "to be eternally frightened by pink-eyed ferrets; to be offered bran-mash--bran-mash--bran-mash wherever one visited week after week, month after month, year after year, century after--how long _do_ rabbits live?"
But Wiggs was not to be moved.
"I _won"t_ give up my wish," she said pa.s.sionately.
Udo got on to his four legs with dignity.
"Keep your wish," he said. "There are plenty of other ways of getting out of enchantments. I"ll learn up a piece of poetry by our Court Poet Sacharino, and recite it backwards when the moon is new.
Something like that. I can do this quite easily by myself. Keep your wish."