The Enchanted Castle E. Nesbit (books to read fiction .txt) đ
- Author: E. Nesbit
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âElizaâs indoors,â said Mabel. âShe canât come out to meet anybody today.â
âYou wonât tell her about me carrying on this way, will you, miss? It might set her against me if she thought I was liable to fits, which I never was from a child.â
âWe wonât tell Eliza anything about you.â
âAnd youâll overlook the liberty?â
âOf course. We know you couldnât help it,â said Kathleen. âYou go home and lie down. Iâm sure you must need it. Good afternoon.â
âGood afternoon, Iâm sure, miss,â he said dreamily. âAll the same I can feel the print of her finger-bones on my hand while Iâm saying it. And you wonât let it get round to my bossâ âmy employer I mean? Fits of all sorts are against a man in any trade.â
âNo, no, no, itâs all rightâ âgoodbye,â said everyone. And a silence fell as he went slowly round the water-butt and the green yard-gate shut behind him. The silence was broken by Eliza.
âGive me up!â she said. âGive me up to break my heart in a prison cell!â
There was a sudden splash, and a round wet drop lay on the doorstep.
âThunder shower,â said Jimmy; but it was a tear from Eliza.
âGive me up,â she went on, âgive me upââ âsplashâ ââbut donât let me be took here in the town where Iâm known and respectedââ âsplash. âIâll walk ten miles to be took by a strange policeâ ânot Johnson as keeps company with my own cousinââ âsplash. âBut I do thank you for one thing. You didnât tell Elf as Iâd stolen the ring. And I didnâtââ âsplashâ ââI only sort of borrowed it, it being my day out, and my gentleman friend such a toff, like you can see for yourselves.â
The children had watched, spellbound, the interesting tears that became visible as they rolled off the invisible nose of the miserable Eliza. Now Gerald roused himself, and spoke.
âItâs no use your talking,â he said. âWe canât see you!â
âThatâs what he said,â said Elizaâs voice, âbutâ ââ
âYou canât see yourself,â Gerald went on. âWhereâs your hand?â
Eliza, no doubt, tried to see it, and of course failed; for instantly, with a shriek that might have brought the police if there had been any about, she went into a violent fit of hysterics. The children did what they could, everything that they had read of in books as suitable to such occasions, but it is extremely difficult to do the right thing with an invisible housemaid in strong hysterics and her best clothes. That was why the best hat was found, later on, to be completely ruined, and why the best blue dress was never quite itself again. And as they were burning bits of the feather dusting-brush as nearly under Elizaâs nose as they could guess, a sudden spurt of flame and a horrible smell, as the flame died between the quick hands of Gerald, showed but too plainly that Elizaâs feather boa had tried to help.
It did help. Eliza âcame toâ with a deep sob and said, âDonât burn me real ostrich stole; Iâm better now.â
They helped her up and she sat down on the bottom step, and the children explained to her very carefully and quite kindly that she really was invisible, and that if you stealâ âor even borrowâ ârings you can never be sure what will happen to you.
âBut âave I got to go on stopping like this,â she moaned, when they had fetched the little mahogany looking-glass from its nail over the kitchen sink, and convinced her that she was really invisible, âforever and ever? Anâ we was to a bin married come Easter. No one wonât marry a gell as âe canât see. It ainât likely.â
âNo, not forever and ever,â said Mabel kindly, âbut youâve got to go through with itâ âlike measles. I expect youâll be all right tomorrow.â
âTonight, I think,â said Gerald.
âWeâll help you all we can, and not tell anyone,â said Kathleen.
âNot even the police,â said Jimmy.
âNow letâs get Mademoiselleâs tea ready,â said Gerald.
âAnd ours,â said Jimmy.
âNo,â said Gerald, âweâll have our tea out. Weâll have a picnic and weâll take Eliza. Iâll go out and get the cakes.â
âI shanât eat no cake, Master Jerry,â said Elizaâs voice, âso donât you think it. Youâd see it going down inside my chest. It wouldnât be what I should call nice of me to have cake showing through me in the open air. Oh, itâs a dreadful judgmentâ âjust for a borrow!â
They reassured her, set the tea, deputed Kathleen to let in Mademoiselleâ âwho came home tired and a little sad, it seemedâ âwaited for her and Gerald and the cakes, and started off for Yalding Towers.
âPicnic parties arenât allowed,â said Mabel.
âOurs will be,â said Gerald briefly. âNow, Eliza, you catch on to Kathleenâs arm and Iâll walk behind to conceal your shadow. My aunt! take your hat off; it makes your shadow look like I donât know what. People will think weâre the county lunatic asylum turned loose.â
It was then that the hat, becoming visible in Kathleenâs hand, showed how little of the sprinkled water had gone where it was meant to goâ âon Elizaâs face.
âMe best âat,â said Eliza, and there was a silence with sniffs in it.
âLook here,â said Mabel, âyou cheer up. Just you think this is all a dream. Itâs just the kind of thing you might dream if your conscience bad got pains in it about the ring.â
âBut will I wake up again?â
âOh yes, youâll wake up again. Now weâre going to bandage your eyes and take you through a very small door, and donât you resist, or weâll bring a policeman into the dream like a shot.â
I have not time to describe Elizaâs entrance into the cave. She went head first: the girls propelled and the boys received her. If Gerald had not thought of tying her hands someone would certainly have been scratched. As it was Mabelâs hand was scraped between the cold rock and a passionate boot-heel. Nor
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