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first netted. It was a curious sceneā ā€”rather like looking down on London at night from the top of St. Paulā€™s. Some bright things, like trams or omnibuses, were rushing along, and smaller lights, which looked mighty like cabs and carriages, dotted the expanse of blackness till, where they were thick set, the darkness disappeared in a blaze of silvery light.

Other light-bearers had rows of round lights like the portholes of great liners. One came sweeping toward them, and a wild idea came to Cathay that perhaps when ships sink they go on living and moving underwater just as she and the others had done. Perhaps they do. Anyhow, this was not one of them, for, as it came close, it was plainly to be perceived as a vast fish with phosphorescent lights in rows along its gigantic sides. It opened its jaws as it passed, and for an instant everyone shut their eyes and felt that all was over. When the eyes were opened again, the mighty fish was far away. Cathay, however, was discovered to be in tears.

ā€œI wish we hadnā€™t come,ā€ she said; and the others could not but feel that there was something in what she said. They comforted her and themselves as best they could by expressing a curious half-certainty which they had that everything would be all right in the end. As I said before, there are some things so horrible that if you can bring yourself to face them you see at once that they canā€™t be true. The barest idea of poetic justiceā ā€”which we all believe in at the bottom of our heartsā ā€”made it impossible to think that the children who had nobly (they couldnā€™t help feeling it was noble) defended their friends, the Mer Folk, should have anything really dreadful happen to them in consequence. And when Bernard talked about the fortunes of war he did it in an unconvinced sort of way and Francis told him to shut up.

ā€œBut what are we to do,ā€ sniffed Cathay for the twentieth time, and all the while the Infantryman was going steadily on, dragging the wretched netful after him.

ā€œPress our pearl buttons,ā€ suggested Francis hopefully. ā€œThen we shall be invisible and unfeelable and we can escape.ā€ He fumbled with the round marble-like pearl.

ā€œNo, no,ā€ said Bernard, catching at his hand, ā€œdonā€™t you see? If we do, we may never get out of the net. If they canā€™t see us or feel us theyā€™ll think the netā€™s empty, and perhaps hang it up on a hook or put it away in a box.ā€

ā€œAnd forget it while years roll by. I see,ā€ said Cathay.

ā€œBut we can undo them the minute weā€™re there. Canā€™t we?ā€ said Mavis.

ā€œYes, of course,ā€ said Bernard; but as a matter of fact they couldnā€™t.

At last the Infantryman, after threading his way through streets of enormous rocky palaces, passed through a colossal arch, and so into a hall as big as St. Paulā€™s and Westminster Abbey into one.

A crowd of Under Folk, who were seated on stone benches around rude tables, eating strange luminous food, rose up, and cried, ā€œWhat news?ā€

ā€œFour prisoners,ā€ said the Infantryman.

ā€œUpper Folk,ā€ the Colonel said; ā€œand my orders are to deliver them to the Queen herself.ā€

He passed to the end of the hall and up a long wide flight of steps made of something so green and clear that it was plainly either glass or emerald, and I donā€™t think it could have been glass, because how could they have made glass in the sea? There were lights below it which shone through the green transparency so clear and lovely that Francis said dreamilyā ā€”

ā€œā€Šā€˜Sabrina fair,
Listen where thou art sitting,
Under the glassie, cool, translucent waveā ā€”ā€™ā€Šā€

and quite suddenly there was much less room in the net, and they were being embraced all at once and with tears of relief and joy by the Princess Freiaā ā€”their own Mer Princess.

ā€œOh, I didnā€™t mean toā ā€”Princess dear, I didnā€™t,ā€ said Francis. ā€œIt was the emerald steps made me think of translucent.ā€

ā€œSo they are,ā€ she said, ā€œbut oh, if you knew what Iā€™ve feltā ā€”you, our guests, our knights-errant, our noble defendersā ā€”to be prisoners and all of us safe. I did so hope youā€™d call me. And Iā€™m so proud that you didnā€™tā ā€”that you were brave enough not to call for me until you did it by accident.ā€

ā€œWe never thought of doing it,ā€ said Mavis candidly, ā€œbut I hope we shouldnā€™t have, if we had thought of it.ā€

ā€œWhy havenā€™t you pressed your pearl buttons?ā€ she asked, and they told her why.

ā€œWise children,ā€ she said, ā€œbut at any rate we must all use the charm that prevents our losing our memories.ā€

ā€œI shanā€™t use mine,ā€ said Cathay. ā€œI donā€™t want to remember. If I didnā€™t remember I should forget to be frightened. Do please let me forget to remember.ā€ She clung pleadingly to the Princess, who whispered to Mavis, ā€œPerhaps it would be best,ā€ and they let Cathay have her way.

The others had only just time to swallow their charms before the Infantryman threw the net onto a great table, which seemed to be cut out of one vast diamond, and fell on his face on the ground. It was his way of saluting his sovereign.

ā€œPrisoners, your Majesty,ā€ he said when he had got up again. ā€œFour of the young of the Upper Folkā ā€”ā€ and he turned to the net as he spoke, and stopped shortā ā€”ā€œthereā€™s someone else,ā€ he said in an altered voice, ā€œsomeone as wasnā€™t there when we started, Iā€™ll swear.ā€

ā€œOpen the net,ā€ said a strong, sweet voice, ā€œand bid the prisoners stand up that I may look upon them.ā€

ā€œThey might escape, my love,ā€ said another voice anxiously, ā€œor perhaps they bite.ā€

ā€œSubmersia,ā€ said the first voice, ā€œdo you and four of my women stand ready. Take the prisoners one by one. Seize each a prisoner and hold them, awaiting my royal pleasure.ā€

The net was opened and large and strong hands took Bernard, who was nearest the mouth of the net back, and held him gently but

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