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"I want," said d.i.c.kie, "to find the lost treasure of Arden, so that the old Castle can be built up again, and the old lands bought back, and the old cottages made pretty and good to live in. Will you please advise me?"
The Mouldierwarp in the magic-lantern picture seemed to scratch his nose thoughtfully with his fore paw.
"It can be done," he said, "but it will be hard. It is almost impossible to find the treasure without waking the Mouldiestwarp, who sits on the green-and-white checkered field of Ardens' s.h.i.+eld of arms.
And he can only be awakened by some n.o.ble deed. Yet n.o.ble deeds may chance at any time. And if you go to seek treasure of one kind you may find treasure of another. I have spoken."
It began to fade away, but Elfrida cried, "Oh, _don't_ go. You're just like the Greek oracles. Won't you tell us something plain and straightforward?"
"I will," said the Mouldierwarp, rather shortly.
"Great Arden's Lord no treasure shall regain Till Arden's Lord is lost and found again."
"And father _was_ lost and found again," said Edred, "so that's all right."
"Set forth to seek it with courageous face.
And seek it in the most unlikely place."
And with that it vanished altogether, and the darkness with it; and there were the three children and Tinkler and the white seal and the moon-seeds and the suns.h.i.+ne on the floor of the room in the tower.
"That's useful," said Edred scornfully. "As if it wasn't just as difficult to know the unlikely places as the likely ones."
"I'll tell you what," said d.i.c.kie. And then the dinner bell rang, and they had to go without d.i.c.kie's telling them what, and to eat roast mutton and plum-pie, and behave as though they were just ordinary children to whom no magic had ever happened. There was little chance of more talk that day.
Edred and Elfrida were to be taken to Cliffville immediately after dinner to be measured for new shoes, and d.i.c.kie was to go up to spend the afternoon with Beale and 'Melia and the dogs. Still, in the few moments when they were all dressed and waiting for the dog-cart to come round, d.i.c.kie found a chance to whisper to Elfrida--
"Let's all think of unlikely places as hard as ever we can. And to-morrow we'll decide on the unlikeliest and go there. Edred needn't be in it if he doesn't want to. _You're_ keen, aren't you?"
"Rather!" was all there was time for Elfrida to say.
The welcome that awaited d.i.c.kie at Beale's cottage from Beale, Amelia, and, not least, the dogs, was enough to drive all thoughts of unlikely places out of anybody's head. And besides, there were always so many interesting things to do at the cottage. He helped to wash True, cleaned the knives, and rinsed lettuce for tea; helped to dry the tea-things, and to fold the was.h.i.+ng when Mrs. Beale brought it in out of the yard in dry, sweet armfuls of white folds.
It was dusk when he bade them good-night, embracing each dog in turn, and set out to walk the little way to the crossroads, where the dog-cart returning from Cliffville would pick him up. But the dog-cart was a little late, because the pony had dropped a shoe and had had to be taken to the blacksmith's.
So when d.i.c.kie had waited a little while he began to think, as one always does when people don't keep their appointments, that perhaps he had mistaken the time, or that the clock at the cottage was slow. And when he had waited a little longer, it seemed simply silly to be waiting at all. So he picked up his crutch and got up from the milestone where he had been sitting and set off to walk down to the Castle.
As he went he thought many things, and one of the things he thought was that the memories of King James's time had grown dim and distant--he looked down on Arden Castle and loved it, and felt that he asked no better than to live there all his life with his cousins and their father, and that, after all, the magic of a dream-life was not needed, when life itself was so good and happy.
And just as he was thinking this a twig cracked sharply in the hedge.
Then a dozen twigs rustled and broke, and something like a great black bird seemed to fly out at him and fold him in its wings.
It was not a bird--he knew that the next moment--but a big, dark cloak, that some one had thrown over his head and shoulders, and through it strong hands were holding him.
"Hold yer noise!" said a voice; "if you so much as squeak it'll be the worse for you."
"Help!" shouted d.i.c.kie instantly.
He was thrown on to the ground. Hands fumbled, his face was cleared of the cloak, and a handkerchief with a round pebble in it was stuffed into his mouth so that he could not speak. Then he was dragged behind a hedge and held there, while two voices whispered above him. The cloak was over his head again now, and he could see nothing, but he could hear. He heard one of the voices say, "Hus.h.!.+ they're coming." And then he heard the sound of hoofs and wheels, and Lord Arden's jolly voice saying, "He must have walked on; we shall catch him up all right." Then the sound of wheels and hoofs died away, and hard hands pulled him to his feet and thrust the crutch under his arm.
"Step out!" said one of the voices, "and step out sharp--see?--or I'll l'arn you! There's a carriage awaiting for you."
He stepped out; there was nothing else to be done. They had taken the cloak from his eyes now, and he saw presently that they were nearing a coster's barrow.
They laid him in the barrow, covered him with the cloak, and put vegetable marrows and cabbages on that. They only left him a little room to breathe.
"Now lie still for your life!" said the second voice. "If you stir a inch I'll lick you till you can't stand! And now you know."
So he lay still, rigid with misery and despair. For neither of these voices was strange to him. He knew them both only too well.
CHAPTER X
THE n.o.bLE DEED
WHEN Lord Arden and Elfrida and Edred reached the castle and found that d.i.c.kie had not come back, the children concluded that Beale had persuaded him to stay the night at the cottage. And Lord Arden thought that the children must be right. He was extremely annoyed both with Beale and with d.i.c.kie for making such an arrangement without consulting him.
"It is impertinent of Beale and thoughtless of the boy," he said; "and I shall speak a word to them both in the morning."
But when Edred and Elfrida were gone to bed Lord Arden found that he could not feel quite sure or quite satisfied. Suppose d.i.c.kie was not at Beale's? He strolled up to the cottage to see. Everything was dark at the cottage. He hesitated, then knocked at the door. At the third knock Beale, very sleepy, put his head out of the window.
"Who's there?" said he.
"I am here," said Lord Arden. "Richard is asleep, I suppose?"
"I suppose so, my lord," said Beale, sleepy and puzzled.
"You have given me some anxiety. I had to come up to make sure he was here."
"But 'e _ain't_ 'ere," said Beale. "Didn't you pick 'im up with the dog-cart, same as you said you would?"
"No," shouted Lord Arden. "Come down, Beale, and get a lantern. There must have been an accident."
The bedroom window showed a square of light, and Lord Arden below heard Beale blundering about above.
"'Ere's your coat," Mrs. Beale's voice sounded; "never mind lacing up of your boots. You orter gone a bit of the way with 'im."
"Well, I offered for to go, didn't I?" Beale growled, blundered down the stairs and out through the wash-house, and came round the corner of the house with a stable lantern in his hand. He came close to where Lord Arden stood--a tall, dark figure in the starlight--and spoke in a voice that trembled.
"The little nipper," he said; and again, "the little nipper. If anything's happened to 'im! Swelp me! gov'ner--my lord, I mean. What I meanter say, if anything's 'appened to _'im_! One of the best!"
The two men went quickly towards the gate. As they pa.s.sed down the quiet, dusty road Beale spoke again.
"I wasn't no good--I don't deceive you, guv'ner--a no account man I was, swelp me! And the little 'un, 'e tidied me up and told me tales and kep' me straight. It was 'is doing me and 'Melia come together. An' the dogs an' all. An' the little one. An' 'e got me to chuck the cadgin'.
An' worse. 'E don't know what I was like when I met 'im. Why, I set out to make a blighted burglar of 'im--you wouldn't believe!"
And out the whole story came as Lord Arden and he went along the gray road, looking to right and left where no bushes were nor stones, only the smooth curves of the down, so that it was easy to see that no little boy was there either.