<h2><SPAN name="png.263" id="png.263"></SPAN><b>X</b><br/>THE AUNT AND AMABEL</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is not pleasant to be a fish out of water. To
be a cat in water is not what any one would
desire. To be in a temper is uncomfortable.
And no one can fully taste the joys of life if he
is in a Little Lord Fauntleroy suit. But by
far the most uncomfortable thing to be in is
disgrace, sometimes amusingly called Coventry
by the people who are not in it.</p>
<p>We have all been there. It is a place where
the heart sinks and aches, where familiar faces
are clouded and changed, where any remark
that one may tremblingly make is received with
stony silence or with the assurance that nobody
wants to talk to such a naughty child. If you
are only in disgrace, and not in solitary confinement,
you will creep about a house that is like
the one you have had such jolly times in, and
yet as unlike it as a bad dream is to a June
morning. You will long to speak to people,
and be afraid to speak. You will wonder
<SPAN name="png.264" id="png.264"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>whether there is anything you can do that will
change things at all. You have said you are
sorry, and that has changed nothing. You will
wonder whether you are to stay for ever in
this desolate place, outside all hope and love
and fun and happiness. And though it has
happened before, and has always, in the
end, come to an end, you can never be quite
sure that this time it is not going to last for
ever.</p>
<p>‘It <em>is</em> going to last for ever,’ said Amabel,
who was eight. ‘What shall I do? Oh whatever
shall I do?’</p>
<p>What she <em>had</em> done ought to have formed the
subject of her meditations. And she had done
what had seemed to her all the time, and in
fact still seemed, a self-sacrificing and noble act.
She was staying with an aunt—measles or a
new baby, or the painters in the house, I forget
which, the cause of her banishment. And the
aunt, who was really a great-aunt and quite old
enough to know better, had been grumbling
about her head gardener to a lady who called
in blue spectacles and a beady bonnet with
violet flowers in it.</p>
<p>‘He hardly lets me have a plant for the table,’
said the aunt, ‘and that border in front of the
breakfast-room window—it’s just bare earth—and
I expressly ordered chrysanthemums to be
<SPAN name="png.265" id="png.265"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>planted there. He thinks of nothing but his
greenhouse.’</p>
<p>The beady-violet-blue-glassed lady snorted,
and said she didn’t know what we were coming
to, and she would have just half a cup, please, with
not quite so much milk, thank you very much.</p>
<p>Now what would you have done? Minded
your own business most likely, and not got into
trouble at all. Not so Amabel. Enthusiastically
anxious to do something which should make
the great-aunt see what a thoughtful, unselfish,
little girl she really was (the aunt’s opinion of
her being at present quite otherwise), she got
up very early in the morning and took the
cutting-out scissors from the work-room table
drawer and stole, ‘like an errand of mercy,’ she
told herself, to the greenhouse where she
busily snipped off every single flower she could
find. MacFarlane was at his breakfast. Then
with the points of the cutting-out scissors she
made nice deep little holes in the flower-bed
where the chrysanthemums ought to have been,
and struck the flowers in—chrysanthemums,
geraniums, primulas, orchids, and carnations. It
would be a lovely surprise for Auntie.</p>
<p>Then the aunt came down to breakfast and
saw the lovely surprise. Amabel’s world turned
upside down and inside out suddenly and
surprisingly, and there she was, in Coventry,
<SPAN name="png.266" id="png.266"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>and not even the housemaid would speak to
her. Her great-uncle, whom she passed in the
hall on her way to her own room, did indeed, as
he smoothed his hat, murmur, ‘Sent to Coventry,
eh? Never mind, it’ll soon be over,’ and
went off to the City banging the front door
behind him.</p>
<p>He meant well, but he did not understand.</p>
<p>Amabel understood, or she thought she did,
and knew in her miserable heart that she was
sent to Coventry for the last time, and that this
time she would stay there.</p>
<p>‘I don’t care,’ she said quite untruly. ‘I’ll
never try to be kind to any one again.’ And
that wasn’t true either. She was to spend the
whole day alone in the best bedroom, the one
with the four-post bed and the red curtains and
the large wardrobe with a looking-glass in it
that you could see yourself in to the very ends
of your strap-shoes.</p>
<p>The first thing Amabel did was to look at
herself in the glass. She was still sniffing and
sobbing, and her eyes were swimming in tears,
another one rolled down her nose as she
looked—that was very interesting. Another
rolled down, and that was the last, because as
soon as you get interested in watching your
tears they stop.</p>
<p>Next she looked out of the window, and saw
<SPAN name="png.267" id="png.267"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>the decorated flower-bed, just as she had left it,
very bright and beautiful.</p>
<p>‘Well, it <em>does</em> look nice,’ she said. ‘I don’t
care what they say.’</p>
<p>Then she looked round the room for
something to read; there was nothing. The
old-fashioned best bedrooms never did have
anything. Only on the large dressing-table,
on the left-hand side of the oval swing-glass,
was one book covered in red velvet, and on it,
very twistily embroidered in yellow silk and
mixed up with misleading leaves and squiggles
were the letters, A.B.C.</p>
<p>‘Perhaps it’s a picture alphabet,’ said Mabel,
and was quite pleased, though of course she
was much too old to care for alphabets. Only
when one is very unhappy and very dull, anything
is better than nothing. She opened the
book.</p>
<p>‘Why, it’s only a time-table!’ she said. ‘I
suppose it’s for people when they want to go
away, and Auntie puts it here in case they
suddenly make up their minds to go, and feel
that they can’t wait another minute. I feel
like that, only it’s no good, and I expect other
people do too.’</p>
<p>She had learned how to use the dictionary,
and this seemed to go the same way. She
looked up the names of all the places she knew.—Brighton
<SPAN name="png.268" id="png.268"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>where she had once spent a month,
Rugby where her brother was at school, and
Home, which was Amberley—and she saw the
times when the trains left for these places, and
wished she could go by those trains.</p>
<p>And once more she looked round the best
bedroom which was her prison, and thought of
the Bastille, and wished she had a toad to tame,
like the poor Viscount, or a flower to watch
growing, like Picciola, and she was very sorry
for herself, and very angry with her aunt, and
very grieved at the conduct of her parents—she
had expected better things from them—and
now they had left her in this dreadful
place where no one loved her, and no one
understood her.</p>
<p>There seemed to be no place for toads or
flowers in the best room, it was carpeted all
over even in its least noticeable corners. It
had everything a best room ought to have—and
everything was of dark shining mahogany.
The toilet-table had a set of red and gold glass
things—a tray, candlesticks, a ring-stand,
many little pots with lids, and two bottles with
stoppers. When the stoppers were taken out
they smelt very strange, something like very old
scent, and something like cold cream also very
old, and something like going to the dentist’s.</p>
<p>I do not know whether the scent of those
<SPAN name="png.269" id="png.269"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>bottles had anything to do with what happened.
It certainly was a very extraordinary scent.
Quite different from any perfume that I smell
nowadays, but I remember that when I was a
little girl I smelt it quite often. But then there
are no best rooms now such as there used to be.
The best rooms now are gay with chintz and
mirrors, and there are always flowers and books,
and little tables to put your teacup on, and sofas,
and armchairs. And they smell of varnish and
new furniture.</p>
<p>When Amabel had sniffed at both bottles
and looked in all the pots, which were quite
clean and empty except for a pearl button and
two pins in one of them, she took up the
A.B.C. again to look for Whitby, where her
godmother lived. And it was then that she
saw the extraordinary name ‘<i>Whereyouwantogoto.</i>’
This was odd—but the name of the
station from which it started was still more
extraordinary, for it was not Euston or Cannon
Street or Marylebone.</p>
<p>The name of the station was ‘<i>Bigwardrobeinspareroom.</i>’
And below this name, really
quite unusual for a station, Amabel read in
small letters:</p>
<p>‘Single fares strictly forbidden. Return
tickets No Class Nuppence. Trains leave
<i>Bigwardrobeinspareroom</i> all the time.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.270" id="png.270"></SPAN>And under that in still smaller letters—</p>
<p>‘<i>You had better go now.</i>’</p>
<p>What would you have done? Rubbed
your eyes and thought you were dreaming?
Well, if you had, nothing more would have
happened. Nothing ever does when you
behave like that. Amabel was wiser. She
went straight to the Big Wardrobe and turned
its glass handle.</p>
<p>‘I expect it’s only shelves and people’s best
hats,’ she said. But she only said it. People
often say what they don’t mean, so that if
things turn out as they don’t expect, they can
say ‘I told you so,’ but this is most dishonest
to one’s self, and being dishonest to one’s self
is almost worse than being dishonest to other
people. Amabel would never have done it if
she had been herself. But she was out of
herself with anger and unhappiness.</p>
<p>Of course it wasn’t hats. It was, most
amazingly, a crystal cave, very oddly shaped
like a railway station. It seemed to be lighted
by stars, which is, of course, unusual in a
booking office, and over the station clock was a
full moon. The clock had no figures, only <i>Now</i>
in shining letters all round it, twelve times,
and the <i>Nows</i> touched, so the clock was bound
to be always right. How different from the
clock you go to school by!</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.271" id="png.271"></SPAN>A porter in white satin hurried forward to
take Amabel’s luggage. Her luggage was the
A.B.C. which she still held in her hand.</p>
<p>‘Lots of time, Miss,’ he said, grinning in a
most friendly way, ‘I <em>am</em> glad you’re going.
You <em>will</em> enjoy yourself! What a nice little
girl you are!’</p>
<p>This was cheering. Amabel smiled.</p>
<p>At the pigeon-hole that tickets come out of,
another person, also in white satin, was ready
with a mother-of-pearl ticket, round, like a
card counter.</p>
<p>‘Here you are, Miss,’ he said with the
kindest smile, ‘price nothing, and refreshments
free all the way. It’s a pleasure,’ he added, ‘to
issue a ticket to a nice little lady like you.’
The train was entirely of crystal, too, and the
cushions were of white satin. There were
little buttons such as you have for electric
bells, and on them ‘<i>Whatyouwantoeat</i>,’ ‘<i>Whatyouwantodrink</i>,’
‘<i>Whatyouwantoread</i>,’ in silver
letters.</p>
<p>Amabel pressed all the buttons at once, and
instantly felt obliged to blink. The blink over,
she saw on the cushion by her side a silver
tray with vanilla ice, boiled chicken and white
sauce, almonds (blanched), peppermint creams,
and mashed potatoes, and a long glass of
lemonade—beside the tray was a book. It was
<SPAN name="png.272" id="png.272"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>Mrs. Ewing’s <cite>Bad-tempered Family</cite>, and it
was bound in white vellum.</p>
<p>There is nothing more luxurious than eating
while you read—unless it be reading while you
eat. Amabel did both: they are not the same
thing, as you will see if you think the matter
over.</p>
<p>And just as the last thrill of the last spoonful
of ice died away, and the last full stop of the
<cite>Bad-tempered Family</cite> met Amabel’s eye,
the train stopped, and hundreds of railway
officials in white velvet shouted, ‘<i>Whereyouwantogoto!</i>
Get out!’</p>
<p>A velvety porter, who was somehow like a
silkworm as well as like a wedding handkerchief
sachet, opened the door.</p>
<p>‘Now!’ he said, ‘come on out, Miss Amabel,
unless you want to go to <i>Whereyoudon’twantogoto</i>.’</p>
<p>She hurried out, on to an ivory platform.</p>
<p>‘Not on the ivory, if you please,’ said the
porter, ‘the white Axminster carpet—it’s laid
down expressly for you.’</p>
<p>Amabel walked along it and saw ahead of
her a crowd, all in white.</p>
<p>‘What’s all that?’ she asked the friendly
porter.</p>
<p>‘It’s the Mayor, dear Miss Amabel,’ he said, <!-- Transcriber's note: original shows a period in place of comma -->
‘with your address.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.273" id="png.273"></SPAN>‘My address is The Old Cottage, Amberley,’
she said, ‘at least it used to be’—and found
herself face to face with the Mayor. He was
very like Uncle George, but he bowed low to
her, which was not Uncle George’s habit, and
said:</p>
<p>‘Welcome, dear little Amabel. Please accept
this admiring address from the Mayor and
burgesses and apprentices and all the rest of it,
of Whereyouwantogoto.’</p>
<p>The address was in silver letters, on white
silk, and it said:</p>
<p>‘Welcome, dear Amabel. We know you
meant to please your aunt. It was very clever
of you to think of putting the greenhouse
flowers in the bare flower-bed. You couldn’t
be expected to know that you ought to ask
leave before you touch other people’s things.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, but,’ said Amabel quite confused. ‘I
did….’</p>
<p>But the band struck up, and drowned her
words. The instruments of the band were
all of silver, and the bandsmen’s clothes of
white leather. The tune they played was
‘Cheero!’</p>
<p>Then Amabel found that she was taking
part in a procession, hand in hand with the
Mayor, and the band playing like mad all the
time. The Mayor was dressed entirely in cloth
<SPAN name="png.274" id="png.274"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>of silver, and as they went along he kept
saying, close to her ear.</p>
<p>‘You have our sympathy, you have our
sympathy,’ till she felt quite giddy.</p>
<p>There was a flower show—all the flowers
were white. There was a concert—all the
tunes were old ones. There was a play called
<cite>Put yourself in her place</cite>. And there was a
banquet, with Amabel in the place of honour.</p>
<p>They drank her health in white wine whey,
and then through the Crystal Hall of a thousand
gleaming pillars, where thousands of guests, all
in white, were met to do honour to Amabel,
the shout went up—‘Speech, speech!’</p>
<p>I cannot explain to you what had been
going on in Amabel’s mind. Perhaps you
know. Whatever it was it began like a very
tiny butterfly in a box, that could not keep
quiet, but fluttered, and fluttered, and fluttered.
And when the Mayor rose and said:</p>
<p>‘Dear Amabel, you whom we all love and
understand; dear Amabel, you who were so
unjustly punished for trying to give pleasure to
an unresponsive aunt; poor, ill-used, ill-treated,
innocent Amabel; blameless, suffering Amabel,
we await your words,’ that fluttering, tiresome
butterfly-thing inside her seemed suddenly to
swell to the size and strength of a fluttering
albatross, and Amabel got up from her seat of
<SPAN name="png.275" id="png.275"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>honour on the throne of ivory and silver and
pearl, and said, choking a little, and extremely
red about the ears—</p>
<p>‘Ladies and gentlemen, I don’t want to
make a speech, I just want to say, “Thank
you,” and to say—to say—to say….’</p>
<p>She stopped, and all the white crowd cheered.</p>
<p>‘To say,’ she went on as the cheers died
down, ‘that I wasn’t blameless, and innocent,
and all those nice things. I ought to have
thought. And they <em>were</em> Auntie’s flowers. But
I did want to please her. It’s all so mixed.
Oh, I wish Auntie was here!’</p>
<p>And instantly Auntie <em>was</em> there, very tall
and quite nice-looking, in a white velvet dress
and an ermine cloak.</p>
<p>‘Speech,’ cried the crowd. ‘Speech from
Auntie!’</p>
<p>Auntie stood on the step of the throne
beside Amabel, and said:</p>
<p>‘I think, perhaps, I was hasty. And I
think Amabel meant to please me. But all the
flowers that were meant for the winter …
well—I was annoyed. I’m sorry.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, Auntie, so am I—so am I,’ cried
Amabel, and the two began to hug each other
on the ivory step, while the crowd cheered like
mad, and the band struck up that well-known
air, ‘If you only understood!’</p>
<p><SPAN name="png.276" id="png.276"></SPAN>‘Oh, Auntie,’ said Amabel among hugs,
‘This is such a lovely place, come and see
everything, we may, mayn’t we?’ she asked
the Mayor.</p>
<p>‘The place is yours,’ he said, ‘and now you
can see many things that you couldn’t see
before. We are The People who Understand.
And now you are one of Us. And your aunt
is another.’</p>
<p>I must not tell you all that they saw because
these things are secrets only known to The
People who Understand, and perhaps you do
not yet belong to that happy nation. And if
you do, you will know without my telling you.</p>
<p>And when it grew late, and the stars
were drawn down, somehow, to hang among
the trees, Amabel fell asleep in her aunt’s
arms beside a white foaming fountain on a
marble terrace, where white peacocks came to
drink.</p>
<div class="blockq fivestar">* * * * *</div>
<p>She awoke on the big bed in the spare
room, but her aunt’s arms were still round her.</p>
<p>‘Amabel,’ she was saying, ‘Amabel!’</p>
<p>‘Oh, Auntie,’ said Amabel sleepily, ‘I am so
sorry. It <em>was</em> stupid of me. And I did mean
to please you.’</p>
<p>‘It <em>was</em> stupid of you,’ said the aunt, ‘but I
am sure you meant to please me. Come down
<SPAN name="png.277" id="png.277"></SPAN><span class="ns">
</span>to supper.’ And Amabel has a confused
recollection of her aunt’s saying that she was
sorry, adding, ‘Poor little Amabel.’</p>
<p>If the aunt really did say it, it was fine of
her. And Amabel is quite sure that she did
say it.</p>
<div class="blockq fivestar">* * * * *</div>
<p>Amabel and her great-aunt are now the
best of friends. But neither of them has ever
spoken to the other of the beautiful city called
‘<i>Whereyouwantogoto.</i>’ Amabel is too shy to
be the first to mention it, and no doubt the
aunt has her own reasons for not broaching
the subject.</p>
<p>But of course they both know that they have
been there together, and it is easy to get on
with people when you and they alike belong to
the <i>Peoplewhounderstand</i>.</p>
<div class="blockq fivestar">* * * * *</div>
<p class="pgbrk">If you look in the A.B.C. that your people
have you will not find ‘<i>Whereyouwantogoto.</i>’
It is only in the red velvet bound copy that
Amabel found in her aunt’s best bedroom.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />