Part 14 (1/2)

And the world was growing darker and darker. And they were miles from home. And there was the soda-water syphon.

I shall not tell you whether anyone cried, nor, if so, how many cried, nor who cried. You will be better employed in making up your minds what you would have done if you had been in their place.

CHAPTER V

NO WINGS

Whether anyone cried or not, there was certainly an interval during which none of the party was quite itself. When they grew calmer, Anthea put her handkerchief in her pocket and her arm round Jane, and said--

”It can't be for more than one night. We can signal with our handkerchiefs in the morning. They'll be dry then. And someone will come up and let us out”--

”And find the syphon,” said Cyril gloomily; ”and we shall be sent to prison for stealing”--

”You said it wasn't stealing. You said you were sure it wasn't.”

”I'm not sure _now_” said Cyril shortly.

”Let's throw the thing away among the trees,” said Robert, ”then no one can do anything to us.”

”Oh yes,”--Cyril's laugh was not a light-hearted one,--”and hit some chap on the head, and be murderers as well as--as the other thing.”

”But we can't stay up here all night,” said Jane; ”and I want my tea.”

”You _can't_ want your tea,” said Robert; ”you've only just had your dinner.”

”But I _do_ want it,” she said; ”especially when you begin talking about stopping up here all night. Oh, Panther--I want to go home! I want to go home!”

”Hush, hush,” Anthea said. ”Don't, dear. It'll be all right, somehow.

Don't, don't”--

”Let her cry,” said Robert desperately; ”if she howls loud enough, someone may hear and come and let us out.”

”And see the soda-water thing,” said Anthea swiftly. ”Robert, don't be a brute. Oh, Jane, do try to be a man! It's just the same for all of us.”

Jane did try to ”be a man”--and reduced her howls to sniffs.

There was a pause. Then Cyril said slowly, ”Look here. We must risk that syphon. I'll b.u.t.ton it up inside my jacket--perhaps no one will notice it. You others keep well in front of me. There are lights in the clergyman's house. They've not gone to bed yet. We must just yell as loud as ever we can. Now all scream when I say three. Robert, you do the yell like a railway engine, and I'll do the coo-ee like father's. The girls can do as they please. One, two, three!”

A four-fold yell rent the silent peace of the evening, and a maid at one of the Vicarage windows paused with her hand on the blind-cord.

”One, two, three!” Another yell, piercing and complex, startled the owls and starlings to a flutter of feathers in the belfry below. The maid flew from the Vicarage window and ran down the Vicarage stairs and into the Vicarage kitchen, and fainted as soon as she had explained to the man-servant and the cook and the cook's cousin that she had seen a ghost. It was quite untrue, of course, but I suppose the girl's nerves were a little upset by the yelling.

”One, two, three!” The Vicar was on his doorstep by this time, and there was no mistaking the yell that greeted him.

”Goodness me,” he said to his wife, ”my dear, someone's being murdered in the church! Give me my hat and a thick stick, and tell Andrew to come after me. I expect it's the lunatic who stole the tongue.”

The children had seen the flash of light when the Vicar opened his front door. They had seen his dark form on his doorstep, and they had paused for breath, and also to see what he would do.

When he turned back for his hat, Cyril said hastily--