"Wake up, auntie!" she cried.
And auntie woke up, very cross indeed.
"Look here, auntie," she said, "I"m certain there"s a secret place in that cabinet in my room, and the will"s in it; I know it is."
"You"ve been dreaming," said Aunt Maria severely; "go back to bed.
You"ll catch your death of cold paddling about barefoot like that."
Molly had to go, but after breakfast she began again.
"But why do you think so?" asked Aunt Maria.
And Molly, who thought she knew that n.o.body would believe her story, could only say:
"I don"t know, but I am quite sure."
"Nonsense!" said Aunt Maria.
"Aunty," Molly said, "don"t you think uncle might have given the will to Mr. Sheldon to take to Mr. Bates, and he may have put it in the secret place and forgotten?"
"What a head the child"s got--full of fancies!" said Aunt Maria.
"If he slept in that room--did he ever sleep in that room?"
"Always, whenever he stayed here."
"Was it long after the will-signing that poor Mr. Sheldon died?"
"Ten days," said Aunt Maria shortly; "run away and play. I"ve letters to write."
But because it seemed good to leave no stone unturned, one of those letters was to a cabinet-maker in Rochester, and the groom took it in the dog-cart, and the cabinet-maker came back with him.
And there _was_ a secret hiding-place behind the looking-gla.s.s in the little red lacquered cupboard in the old black and red and gold cabinet, and in that secret hiding-place was the missing will, and on it lay a brown flower that dropped to dust when it was moved.
"It"s a Christmas rose," said Molly.
"So, you see, really it was a very good thing the others pretended to have measles, because if they hadn"t I shouldn"t have come to you, and if I hadn"t come I shouldn"t have known there was a will missing, and if I hadn"t known that I shouldn"t have found it, should I, aunty, should I, uncle?" said Molly, wild with delight.
"No, dear," said Aunt Maria, patting her hand.
"Little girls," said Uncle Toodlethwaite, "should be seen and not heard.
But I admit that simulated measles may sometimes be a blessing in disguise."
All the young Carruthers thought so when they got the five pounds that Aunt Maria sent them. Miss Simpshall got five pounds too because it was owing to her that Molly was taken to the White House that day. Molly got a little pearl necklace as well as five pounds.
"Mr. Sheldon gave it to me," said Aunt Maria. "I wouldn"t give it to anyone but you."
Molly hugged her in silent rapture.
That just shows how different our Aunt Marias would prove to be if they would only let us know them as they really are. It really is not wise to conceal _everything_ from children.
You see, if Aunt Maria had not told Molly about Mr. Sheldon, she would never have thought about him enough to see his ghost. Now Molly is grown up she tells me it was only a dream. But even if it was it is just as wonderful, and served the purpose just as well.
Perhaps you would like to know what Aunt Maria said when the cabinet-maker opened the secret hiding-place and she saw the paper with the brown Christmas rose on it? Clements was there, as well as the cabinet-maker and Molly. She said right out before them all, "Oh, James, my dear!" and she picked up the flower before she opened the will. And it fell into brown dust in her hand.
BILLY AND WILLIAM
A HISTORICAL TALE FOR THE YOUNG
"_Have you found your prize essay?_"
"_No; but I have found the bicycle of the butcher"s boy._"
It is rather trying to have to walk three miles to the station, to say nothing of the three miles back, to meet a cousin you have never seen and never wish to see, especially if you have to leave a kite half made, and there is no proper lock to the shed you are making your kite in.
The road was flat and dusty, the sun felt much too warm on his back, the hill to the station was long and steep, and the train was nearly an hour late, because it was a train on the South-Eastern Railway. So William was exceedingly cross, and he would have been crosser still if he could have known that I should ever call him William, for though that happened to be his name, the one he "answered to" (as the stolen-dog advertis.e.m.e.nts say) was "Billy." So perhaps it would be kind of me to speak of him as Billy, because it is rather horrid to do things you know people won"t like, even if you think they"ll never know you"ve done them.
Well, the train came in, and it was annoying to Billy, very, that four or five boys should bundle out of the train, and he should have to go up to them one after the other and say:
"I say, is your name Harold St. Leger?"
He did not particularly like the look of any of the boys, and of course it happened that the very last one he spoke to was Harold, and that he was also the one whom Billy liked least particularly of the whole lot.
"Oh, you are, are you?" was all he could find to say when Harold had blushingly owned to his name. Then in manly tones Billy gave the order about Harold"s luggage and the carrier, said "Come along!" and Harold came.
Harold was a fattish boy with whitey-brown hair, and he was as soft and white as a silkworm. Billy did not admire him. He himself was hard and brown, with thin arms and legs and joints like the lumps of clay on branches that the gardener has grafted. And Harold did not admire _him_.
There was little conversation on the way home; when you don"t want to have a visitor and he doesn"t want to be one, talking is not much fun.
When they got home there was tea. Billy"s mother talked politely to Harold, but that did not make anyone any happier. Then Billy took his cousin round and showed him the farm and the stock, and Harold was less interested than you would think a boy could be. At last, weary of trying to behave nicely, Billy said:
"I suppose there must be _something_ you like, however much of a m.u.f.f you are. Well, you can jolly well find it out for yourself. I"m going to finish my kite."
The silkworm-soft face of Harold lighted up.
"Oh, _I_ can make kites," he said; "I"ve invented a new kind. I"ll help you if you"ll let me."
Harold, eager, quick fingered, skilful, in the shed among the string, and the glue, and the paper, and the bendable, breakable laths, was quite a different person from Harold, nervous and dull, among the farmyard beasts. Billy allowed him to help with the kite, and he began to respect his cousin a little more.
"Though it"s rather like a girl, being so neat with your fingers," he said disparagingly.
"I wish I"d got the proper sort of paper," Harold said, "then I"d make my new patent kite that I"ve invented; but it"s a very extra sort of kind of paper. I got some once at a b.u.t.ter-shop in Bermondsey, but that was in a dream."
Billy stared.