The Phoenix and the Carpet by E. Nesbit (that summer book .txt) đ
- Author: E. Nesbit
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âNo altar, no fire, no incense!â and then, before any of the children could even begin to think of stopping it, it spread its bright wings and swept round the theatre, brushing its gleaming feathers against delicate hangings and gilded woodwork.
It seemed to have made but one circular wing-sweep, such as you may see a gull make over grey water on a stormy day. Next moment it was perched again on the chair-backâand all round the theatre, where it had passed, little sparks shone like tinsel seeds, then little smoke wreaths curled up like growing plantsâlittle flames opened like flower-buds. People whisperedâthen people shrieked.
âFire! Fire!â The curtain went downâthe lights went up.
âFire!â cried every one, and made for the doors.
âA magnificent idea!â said the Phoenix, complacently. âAn enormous altarâfire supplied free of charge. Doesnât the incense smell delicious?â
The only smell was the stifling smell of smoke, of burning silk, or scorching varnish.
The little flames had opened now into great flame-flowers. The people in the theatre were shouting and pressing towards the doors.
âOh, how COULD you!â cried Jane. âLetâs get out.â
âFather said stay here,â said Anthea, very pale, and trying to speak in her ordinary voice.
âHe didnât mean stay and be roasted,â said Robert. âNo boys on burning decks for me, thank you.â
âNot much,â said Cyril, and he opened the door of the box.
But a fierce waft of smoke and hot air made him shut it again. It was not possible to get out that way.
They looked over the front of the box. Could they climb down?
It would be possible, certainly; but would they be much better off?
âLook at the people,â moaned Anthea; âwe couldnât get through.â
And, indeed, the crowd round the doors looked as thick as flies in the jam-making season.
âI wish weâd never seen the Phoenix,â cried Jane.
Even at that awful moment Robert looked round to see if the bird had overheard a speech which, however natural, was hardly polite or grateful.
The Phoenix was gone.
âLook here,â said Cyril, âIâve read about fires in papers; Iâm sure itâs all right. Letâs wait here, as father said.â
âWe canât do anything else,â said Anthea bitterly.
âLook here,â said Robert, âIâm NOT frightenedâno, Iâm not. The Phoenix has never been a skunk yet, and Iâm certain itâll see us through somehow. I believe in the Phoenix!â
âThe Phoenix thanks you, O Robert,â said a golden voice at his feet, and there was the Phoenix itself, on the Wishing Carpet.
âQuick!â it said. âStand on those portions of the carpet which are truly antique and authenticâandââ
A sudden jet of flame stopped its words. Alas! the Phoenix had unconsciously warmed to its subject, and in the unintentional heat of the moment had set fire to the paraffin with which that morning the children had anointed the carpet. It burned merrily. The children tried in vain to stamp it out. They had to stand back and let it burn itself out. When the paraffin had burned away it was found that it had taken with it all the darns of Scotch heather-mixture fingering. Only the fabric of the old carpet was leftâand that was full of holes.
âCome,â said the Phoenix, âIâm cool now.â
The four children got on to what was left of the carpet. Very careful they were not to leave a leg or a hand hanging over one of the holes. It was very hotâthe theatre was a pit of fire. Every one else had got out.
Jane had to sit on Antheaâs lap.
âHome!â said Cyril, and instantly the cool draught from under the nursery door played upon their legs as they sat. They were all on the carpet still, and the carpet was lying in its proper place on the nursery floor, as calm and unmoved as though it had never been to the theatre or taken part in a fire in its life.
Four long breaths of deep relief were instantly breathed. The draught which they had never liked before was for the moment quite pleasant. And they were safe. And every one else was safe. The theatre had been quite empty when they left. Every one was sure of that.
They presently found themselves all talking at once. Somehow none of their adventures had given them so much to talk about. None other had seemed so real.
âDid you noticeâ?â they said, and âDo you rememberâ?â
When suddenly Antheaâs face turned pale under the dirt which it had collected on it during the fire.
âOh,â she cried, âmother and father! Oh, how awful! Theyâll think weâre burned to cinders. Oh, letâs go this minute and tell them we arenât.â
âWe should only miss them,â said the sensible Cyril.
âWellâYOU go then,â said Anthea, âor I will. Only do wash your face first. Mother will be sure to think you are burnt to a cinder if she sees you as black as that, and sheâll faint or be ill or something. Oh, I wish weâd never got to know that Phoenix.â
âHush!â said Robert; âitâs no use being rude to the bird. I suppose it canât help its nature. Perhaps weâd better wash too. Now I come to think of it my hands are ratherââ
No one had noticed the Phoenix since it had bidden them to step on the carpet. And no one noticed that no one had noticed.
All were partially clean, and Cyril was just plunging into his great-coat to go and look for his parentsâhe, and not unjustly, called it looking for a needle in a bundle of hayâwhen the sound of fatherâs latchkey in the front door sent every one bounding up the stairs.
âAre you all safe?â cried motherâs voice; âare you all safe?â and the next moment she was kneeling on the linoleum of the hall, trying to kiss four damp children at once, and laughing and crying by turns, while father stood looking on and saying he was blessed or something.
âBut how did you guess weâd come home,â said Cyril, later, when every one was calm enough for talking.
âWell, it was rather a rum thing. We heard the Garrick was on fire, and of course we went straight there,â said father, briskly. âWe couldnât find you, of courseâand we couldnât get inâbut the firemen told us every one was safely out. And then I heard a voice at my ear say, âCyril, Anthea, Robert, and Janeââand something touched me on the shoulder. It was a great yellow pigeon, and it got in the way of my seeing whoâd spoken. It fluttered off, and then some one said in the other ear, âTheyâre safe at homeâ; and when I turned again, to see who it was
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