Just then there was a tap at the door and Tinette put her head round it, snapped out, ‘Breakfast’s ready,’ and shut it again quickly. Heidi hadn’t the least idea what she meant, but she had sounded so fierce that Heidi thought she was being told to stay where she was. She found a little stool under the table and sat down, to see what would happen next. It was not long before Miss Rottenmeier came bustling in, very annoyed, and scolding all the time. ‘What’s the matter with you, Adelheid? Don’t you even know what breakfast is? Come along at once.’ This at least Heidi could understand, and she followed her obediently into the dining‐room. Clara had been waiting there for some time but gave her a friendly greeting. She looked more cheerful than usual, for she had an idea she was going to have quite an interesting day.
Breakfast passed without further incident. Heidi ate her bread and butter quite nicely, and when the meal was over Clara was wheeled into the study and Heidi was sent with her and told to wait there until Mr Usher arrived. As soon as the two girls were alone, Heidi asked, ‘How can I look out of the window and see what’s down below?’
‘First the window has to be opened,’ said Clara, with a smile.
‘But they won’t open,’ Heidi answered.
‘Oh yes, they will, but you can’t do it yourself and nor can I. But Sebastian will open one for you if you ask him.’
Heidi was relieved to hear that. Then Clara began to ask about her life at home and Heidi was soon chattering away merrily about the mountains and the goats and all the other things she loved so well.
While they talked the tutor arrived, but instead of coming straight to the study as usual, he was waylaid by Miss Rottenmeier who took him into the dining‐room to explain the awkward situation in which she found herself.
‘Some time ago when Mr Sesemann was in Paris on business,’ she began, ‘I wrote to tell him that Clara ought to have a companion of her own age. She wanted it, and so did I, for I thought she might work harder at her lessons if she had some competition, and also the companionship would be pleasant and good for her. It would also spare me the necessity to keep her amused all the time, which, believe me, is not easy. Her father agreed, but insisted that the other child should be treated exactly the same as his own daughter. He wrote he would not have any child in his house put upon in any way. A most uncalled‐for remark, I must say. No one here would be likely to do any such thing!’
She then told him of Heidi’s arrival and how utterly unsuitable she found her, in every way. ‘Fancy, she doesn’t even know her alphabet, and has no idea how to behave in polite society. There seems to me only one way out of this dreadful situation, and that is for you to say that it is impossible to teach these two children together without holding back Clara quite disastrously. That would surely be reason enough to persuade Mr Sesemann to send this Swiss girl home again.’
Mr Usher was a cautious man, who always tried to look at both sides of any problem, so after several politely consoling remarks, he went on to say that perhaps things might not be as bad as she feared. If the child was backward in some ways, she might be ahead in others, and with regular lessons it might be possible to bring her on quite quickly. Miss Rottenmeier saw that she was not likely to get the support she wanted from this quarter, for obviously the tutor did not at all mind teaching Heidi her ABC from the very beginning. She showed him to the study door, therefore, and watched him go inside, but the thought of having to watch Heidi at her letters was more than she could bear. She walked about the dining‐room restlessly, wondering how the servants had better address Adelheid, for Mr Sesemann’s instruction that the child was to be treated just like his daughter could only refer to them, she thought. She was not left for long with her thoughts, however. Suddenly there was a tremendous clatter in the study, as though a lot of things had fallen down, and she heard someone call for Sebastian. She hurried into the room and found the floor strewn with books, writing paper, an inkwell, and the tablecloth, from under which a stream of ink was flowing. Heidi was nowhere to be seen.
‘This is a fine to‐do,’ said Miss Rottenmeier, wringing her hands. ‘Books, carpet, tablecloth, all covered with ink. Never have I seen such a mess. Of course it’s all that wretched child!’
Mr Usher stood looking about him in dismay. Even he could not find anything consoling to say about what had happened, though Clara seemed greatly amused by it.
‘Yes, Heidi did it — quite by accident,’ she said. ‘You must not punish her. She just rushed across the room and caught the tablecloth as she went by, and swept everything on to the floor with it. There were a lot of carriages going by in the street and I expect she wanted to look at them. I daresay she has never seen such a thing in her life before.’
‘What did I tell you, Mr Usher? The child is quite impossible. She doesn’t even understand that she ought to sit still and listen during a lesson. And where has she got to now? I suppose she’s run out of the front door. Whatever would Mr Sesemann say?’
She hurried off downstairs and found Heidi by the open door, looking up and down the street with a puzzled expression.
‘What are you thinking of? What do you mean by running away from your lessons like that?’ scolded Miss Rottenmeier.
‘I heard the fir trees rustling, but I can’t see them anywhere. I can’t even hear them now,’ replied Heidi.
It was the passing of light carriage wheels which she had mistaken for the wind blowing through the trees and which had sent her rushing joyfully downstairs to investigate, but the carriages had gone by before she got there.
‘Fir trees indeed! Do you think Frankfurt is in the middle of a wood? Just you come with me and see what a mess you’ve made,’ and Heidi was led back to the study, where she was most surprised to see what havoc she had wrought in her headlong flight from the room.
‘Don’t you ever do such a thing again,’ said Miss Rotten‐meier, pointing to the floor. ‘You must sit still during lessons and pay attention. If you don’t, I shall have to tie you to your chair. Is that understood?’
‘Yes. I will sit still,’ replied Heidi, accepting this as another rule that she must obey.
Sebastian and Tinette were sent for to clear up the mess and Mr Usher bowed and took his leave, saying there would be no more lessons. Certainly no one had been bored that day!
Clara always had to rest in the afternoons and Miss Rottenmeier told Heidi she could do as she pleased during that time. So after dinner, when the little invalid had settled down to sleep and the housekeeper had gone to her room, Heidi felt the moment had come to carry out something she had been planning. But she needed help, so she waited in the passage outside the dining‐room for Sebastian who presently came upstairs from the kitchen with a big tray of silver to be put away in the dining‐room cupboard. She stepped forward as he reached the last stair and said, ‘You, there,’ for she was uncertain how to address him after what Miss Rottenmeier had told her.
‘What do you want, Miss?’ he asked, rather crossly.
‘I only want to ask you something. It’s nothing naughty like this morning,’ she added, for he seemed in rather a bad mood and she thought that might be because of the ink on the carpet.
‘All right,’ he said more pleasantly, ‘what is it, Miss?’
‘My name’s not Miss, it’s Heidi.’
‘Miss Rottenmeier told us to call you that,’ he replied.
‘Oh, well, I suppose you must then,’ she said in a small voice. She was quite aware that that lady’s orders had to be obeyed. ‘And in that case, I have three names,’ she added with a sigh.
‘What is it you want to ask, Miss?’ asked Sebastian, going into the dining‐room with his tray. Heidi followed.