"Heh! Heh! Heh! What's this?" demanded a thin, cracked voice.
Jane stared and drew back against Christina. For at the far end of the room, on a seat by the fire, sat a figure that filled her with terror. The firelight flickered over a very old man, so old that he looked more like a shadow than a human being. From his thin mouth a thin grey beard straggled and, though he wore a smoking cap, Jane could see that he was as bald as an egg. He was dressed in a long old-fashioned dressing-gown of faded silk, and a pair of embroidered slippers hung on his thin feet.
"So!" said the shadowy figure, taking a long curved pipe from his mouth. "Jane has arrived at last."
He rose and came towards her smiling frighteningly, his eyes burning in their sockets with a bright steely fire.
"I hope you had a good journey, my dear!" he croaked. And drawing Jane to him with a bony hand he kissed her cheek. At the touch of his grey beard Jane started back with a cry.
"Heh! Heh! Heh!" He laughed his cackling, terrifying laugh.
"She came through the alder wood with the boys, Great-Grandfather," said Christina.
"Ah? How did they catch her?"
"She was cross at being the eldest. So she threw her paint-box at the Bowl and cracked Val's knee."
"So!" the horrible old voice whistled. "It was temper, was it? Well, well—" he laughed thinly, "now you'll be the youngest, my dear! My youngest Great-Granddaughter. But I shan't allow any tempers here! Heh! Heh! Heh! Oh, dear, no. Well, come along and sit by the fire. Will you take tea or cherry-wine?"
"No, no!" Jane burst out. "I'm afraid there's been a mistake. I must go home now. I live at Number Seventeen Cherry Tree Lane."
"Used to, you mean," corrected Val triumphantly. "You live here now."
"But you don't understand!" Jane said desperately. "I don't want to live here. I want to go home."
"Nonsense!" croaked the Great-Grandfather. "Number Seventeen is a horrible place, mean and stuffy and modern. Besides you're not happy there. Heh! Heh! Heh! I know what it's like being the eldest — all the work and none of the fun. Heh! Heh! But here—" he waved his pipe, "here you'll be the Spoilt One, the Darling, the Treasure, and never go back any more!"
"Never!" echoed William and Everard dancing round her.
"Oh, I must. I will!" Jane cried, the tears springing to her eyes.
The Great-Grandfather smiled his horrible toothless smile.
"Do you think we will let you go?" he enquired, his bright eyes burning. "You cracked our Bowl. You must take the consequences. Christina, Valentine, William and Everard want you for their youngest sister. I want you for my youngest Great-Grandchild.
"Do you think we will let you go?" he enquired
Besides, you owe us something. You hurt Valentine's knee."
"I will make up to him. I will give him my paint-box."
"He has one."
"My hoop."
"He has out-grown hoops."
"Well—" faltered Jane. "I will marry him when I grow up."
The Great-Grandfather cackled with laughter.
Jane turned imploringly to Valentine. He shook his head.
"I'm afraid it's too late for that," he said sadly. "I grew up long ago."
"Then why, then what — oh, I don't understand. Where am I?" cried Jane, gazing about her in terror.
"Far from home, my child, far from home," croaked the Great-Grandfather. "You are back in the Past — back where Christina and the boys were young sixty years ago!"
Through her tears Jane saw his old eyes burning fiercely.
"Then — how can I get home?" she whispered.
"You cannot. You will stay here. There is no other place for you. You are back in the Past, remember! The Twins and Michael, even your Father and Mother, are not yet born; Number Seventeen is not even built. You cannot go home!"
"No, no!" cried Jane. "It's not true! It can't be!" Her heart was thumping inside her. Never to see Michael again, nor the Twins, nor her Father and Mother and Mary Poppins!
And suddenly she began to shout, lifting her voice so that it echoed wildly through the stone corridors.
"Mary Poppins! I'm sorry I was cross! Oh, Mary Poppins, help me, help me!"
"Quick! Hold her close! Surround her!"
She heard the Great-Grandfather's sharp command. She felt the four children pressing close about her.
She shut her eyes tight. "Mary Poppins!" she cried again, "Mary Poppins!"
A hand caught hers and pulled her away from the circling arms of Christina, Valentine, William and Everard.
"Heh! Heh! Heh!"
The Great-Grandfather's cackling laugh echoed through the room. The grasp on her hand tightened and she felt herself being drawn away. She dared not look for fear of those frightening eyes but she pulled fiercely against the tugging hand.
"Heh! Heh! Heh!"
The laugh sounded again and the hand drew her on, down stone stairs and echoing corridors.
She had no hope now. Behind her the voices of Christina and the Triplets faded away. No help would come from them.
She stumbled desperately after the flying footsteps and felt, though her eyes were closed, dark shadows above her head and damp earth under her feet.
What was happening to her? Where, oh, where was she going? If only she hadn't been so cross — if only!
The strong hand pulled her onwards and presently she felt the warmth of sunlight on her cheeks and sharp grass scratched her legs as she was dragged along. Then suddenly a pair of arms, like bands of iron, closed about her, lifted her up and swung her through the air.
"Oh, help, help!" She cried, frantically twisting and turning against those arms. She would not give in without a struggle, she would kick and kick and kick and—
"I'll thank you to remember," said a familiar voice in her ear, "that this is my best skirt and it has to last me the Summer!"
Jane opened her eyes. A pair of fierce blue eyes looked steadily into hers.
The arms that folded her so closely were Mary Poppins' arms and the legs she was kicking so furiously were the legs of Mary Poppins.
"Oh!" she faltered. "It was you! I thought you hadn't heard me, Mary Poppins! I thought I should be kept there forever. I thought—"
"Some people," remarked Mary Poppins, putting her gently down, "think a great deal too much. Of that I'm sure. Wipe your face, please!"
She thrust her blue handkerchief into Jane's hand and began to get the Nursery ready for the evening.
Jane watched her, drying her tear-stained face on the large blue handkerchief. She glanced round the well-known room. There were the ragged carpet and the toy-cupboard and Mary Poppins' arm-chair. At the sight of them she felt safe and warm and comforted. She listened to the familiar sounds as Mary Poppins went about her work, and her terror died away. A tide of happiness swept over her.
"It couldn't have been I who was cross!" she said wonderingly to herself. "It must have been somebody else."
Mary Poppins went to a drawer and took out the Twins' clean nightgowns.
Jane ran to her.
"Shall I air them, Mary Poppins?"
Mary Poppins sniffed.
"Don't trouble, thank you. You're much too busy, I'm sure! I'll get Michael to help me when he comes up."
Jane blushed.
"Please let me," she said. "I like helping. Besides I'm the eldest."
Mary Poppins put her hands on her hips and regarded Jane thoughtfully for a moment.
"Humph!" she said at last. "Don't burn them, then! I've enough holes to mend as it is."
And she handed Jane the nightgowns.
"But it couldn't really have happened!" scoffed Michael a little later when he heard of Jane's adventure. "You'd be much too big for the Bowl."
She thought for a moment. Somehow, as she told the story, it did seem rather impossible.