Part 11 (1/2)

But the baby struggled down from her mother's arms and ran after him crying,--”No, no! Do not go away, dear, beautiful Fairy! Mother! Father!

It is the friend whom we all love. I have heard you praise him. Do not send him away.”

”The Fairy!” cried the father, running to capture her.

”It is no Fairy, child!” said the mother. ”It is one of the ugly, wicked Gnomes who do only evil. Let him go!”

But the child struggled and shrieked. ”He shall not go! It is the beautiful Fairy who helps us. I have watched him doing all the kind things you say the Fairy does, and I love him dearly. He shall not go!”

The father and mother looked at each other, then at the shrinking Gnome.

”Is this true?” they demanded, ”or is this some wicked Gnome-trick which has bewitched our child?”

The Old Gnome bowed meekly. ”Alas! I am no Fairy, as I fain would be,”

he confessed. ”But I loved to hear you call me so. I am a Gnome; but I have done no evil, only good, so far as my skill went. The happy days are over now. The child knows the truth. No one will ever again think me beautiful or good. I had forgotten how old I was; I had almost grown to feel young again in the merry, busy days of service. But now the time has come indeed for me to lie down in the long sleep. I will go away and find a new cell, and curl me up in a happy dream which will last forever.”

Once more he turned to go. The father and mother were silent.

But the baby burst into violent weeping. ”Oh, he is beautiful, beautiful, the kind, dear Fairy! Do you not see how beautiful he is, Mother, Father?” she cried.

The Old Gnome turned and looked at her, smiling sadly and shaking his head with a tender light in his eyes. ”No, no!” he said, ”not beautiful; only loving!”

”But yes!” cried the mother, staring amazedly. ”Think, David, of all he has done for us. He does, he does look beautiful to me!”

David stared also. ”From the day my foot was wounded,” he said, ”only good has befallen me here. And if he has done it, the kind little fellow!--Yes, yes! He does, indeed, look beautiful to me!”

”Ah!” cried the child, laughing and clapping her hands. ”I was right! I knew he was our kind Fairy, all the time. If he is good, he is no Gnome.

It is only a name. If he seems beautiful to us, then he is beautiful, indeed. He is a Fairy! He shall live here with us and we will love him forever.”

And lo, as she spoke, the Old Gnome looked wonderingly down at his body.

He seemed to have changed. He was no longer crooked and old, but light and airy and beautiful. Over his head arched gauzy wings and his dress sparkled like dew. Also he felt young and full of power to do things he had never done before.

”I believe I am a Fairy!” he cried joyously. ”And I may live and love and serve forever, and never be tired or sleepy!”

So it fell out as they all wished. And the hermit's cell became a Fairy palace.

XIII: HAROLD'S LUNCHEON

When Harold finished reading the story of the Hermit Gnome to the Red King, he looked up to see how his listener had enjoyed the tale. And lo and behold! Red Rex was fast asleep! He lay on his back in the afternoon suns.h.i.+ne, and a noise came from his half-open mouth rather like the _Gr-r!_ of the lion-doll, when its tail was screwed.

”Well!” said Harold to himself; ”I cannot return to the city until His Majesty wakes up; for that would not be polite, and his bodyguard would not allow it. I may as well make myself comfortable and be patient. The longer he sleeps the longer time we shall have in safety to wait for help from our King.”

Harold opened the little covered basket to replace the green-and-gold volume from which he had just been reading, and in doing so caught sight of the luncheon which his thoughtful mother had packed, in the fear that he might be hungry ere his return. He took out the folded napkin and peered eagerly below. There was a huge wedge of apple pie! Harold licked his lips and his eyes sparkled, for there was nothing of which he was so fond as apple pie. ”I must have at least a bite this minute!” he said to himself, and opening his mouth very wide he prepared to bite into the juicy wedge.

Just at this moment Red Rex opened his eyes.

”Pitikins!” he cried, ”what is going on? Is this part of the story?” For at first he did not know that he had been asleep.