Part 50 (1/2)
Sarre was sitting at his desk when the children knocked on the door, and although he had said that they were to go to bed some hours earlier, he didn't look surprised.
His ”Hullo there,” was cheerfully welcoming as he waved them to a big armchair opposite the desk.
But the children refused.
”We must stand.
Papa,” declared Jacomina.
”We have things to tell you.
' ”T thought perhaps you might.
' Sarre switched to Dutch.
”Go ahead, then.
Sarel.
' ”It's about Alethea.
It was our fault that she was with us in the old cottage.
You see, we wanted to frighten her.
' He paused and his father begged him to go on with an impa.s.sive
face.
”And suppose you begin at the beginning,” he suggested.
”We didn't want a mama.
We thought that we were quite happy without one.
Papa, and when you told us about Alethea we said that we wouldn't like her, so we did not try to be friends with her.
' He added in a small voice, ”We were not rude exactly, but she wanted to be friends and we did not allow ourselves to like her.
Only then she didn't mind about Caesar in her bed and she didn't tell anyone either, and she found Neptune for us and she was kind, but we still did not want her for our mother.
Anyway, she wasn't like a real mother, more like a visitor, for she sleeps always alone, not like our friends' mothers and fathers, and they kiss good morning and laugh together and.
' He stopped because Sarre was looking so grim.
”Go on, Sarel.
' ”And then we made this plan--to frighten her just a little so that
she would go away, although I think we didn't really want her to go,
only we'd said that we weren't going to like her.
So we went to Nanny's old cottage and left a note for her and of course she came after us.
We thought we'd just lock her in for a little--just for fun.
' He faltered under his father's eye.
”But when we got inside it was dark and the floor gave way and we fell
into that cellar.
' He s.h.i.+vered.
”It was so very dark.
Papa.
And then Alethea came and she didn't make a fuss or tell us we'd been
naughty, but tried to get us out, and when she couldn't she said she would go for help, only she'd left the key on the outside of the door and it banged shut so that she couldn't get out.
So she said she'd climb down to us and see if she could get us out.
She found an old chair, but it broke when she tried to stand on it and she said that would be no use, so she jumped down.