"Oh, I see. And then — they're getting off? Well — Good-bye, Mary, and Bon Voyage!" Mr. Turvy raised his hat high above his head, very ceremoniously.
"Good-bye — and thank you for coming!" said Mary Poppins, bowing graciously to Mr. and Mrs. Turvy.
"What does Bon Voyage mean?" said Michael, looking over his shoulder at their retreating figures — Mrs. Turvy very fat and curly, Mr. Turvy very straight and thin.
"Good journey! Which is something you won't have unless you walk up!" snapped Mary Poppins. He hurried after her.
The music was louder now, beating and drumming on the air, drawing them all towards it.
Mary Poppins, almost running, turned the perambulator in at the Park Gates. But there a row of pavement pictures caught her eye and she pulled up suddenly.
"What is she stopping for now?" said Michael in an angry whisper to Jane. "We'll never get there at this rate!"
The Pavement Artist had just completed a set of fruit in coloured chalks — an Apple, a Pear, a Plum, and a Banana. Underneath them he was busy chalking the words—
TAKE ONE
"Ahem!" said Mary Poppins, with a lady-like cough.
The Pavement Artist leapt to his feet, and Jane and Michael saw that it was Mary Poppins' great friend, the Match Man.
"Mary! At last! I've been waiting all day!"
The Match Man seized her by both hands and gazed admiringly into her eyes.
Mary Poppins looked very shy and rather pleased.
"Well, Bert, we're off to the Merry-go-round," she said, blushing.
He nodded. "I thought you would be. They going with you?" he added, jerking his thumb at the children.
Mary Poppins shook her head mysteriously.
"Just for a ride," she said quickly.
"Oh—" He pursed up his mouth. "I see."
Michael stared. What else could they do on a Merry-go-round except go for a ride? He wondered.
"A nice set of pictures you've got!" Mary Poppins was saying admiringly, gazing down at the fruit.
"Help yourself!" said the Match Man airily.
And with that Mary Poppins, before their astonished eyes, bent down and picked the painted Plum from the pavement and took a bite out of it.
"Won't you take one?" said the Match Man, turning to Jane.
She stared at him. "But can I?" It seemed so impossible.
"Try!"
She bent towards the Apple and it leapt into her hand. She bit into the red side. It tasted very sweet.
"But how do you do it?" said Michael, staring.
"I don't," said the Match Man. "It's Her!" He nodded at Mary Poppins as she stood primly beside the perambulator. "It only happens when She's around, I assure you!"
Then he bent down and picked the pear clean out of the pavement and offered it to Michael.
"But what about you?" said Michael, for though he wanted the Pear, he also wanted to be polite.
"That's all right!" said the Match Man. "I can always paint more!" And with that he plucked the Banana, peeled it, and gave half each to the Twins.
A clear sweet strain of music came floating urgently to their ears.
"Now, Bert, we must really be going!" said Mary Poppins hurriedly, as she neatly hid her Plum-stone between two Park railings.
"Must you, Mary?" said the Match Man, very sadly. "Well, Good-bye, my Dear! And Good Luck!"
"But you'll see him again, won't you?" said Michael, as he followed Mary Poppins through the Gates.
"Maybe and maybe not!" she said shortly. "And it's no affair of yours!"
Jane turned and looked back. The Match Man was standing by his box of chalks, gazing with all his eyes after Mary Poppins.
"This is a curious day!" she said, frowning.
Mary Poppins glared at her.
"What's wrong with it, pray?"
"Well — everyone's saying Good-bye, and looking at you so strangely."
"Speech costs nothing!" snapped Mary Poppins. "And a Cat can look at a King, I suppose?"
Jane was silent. She knew it was no good saying anything to Mary Poppins because Mary Poppins never explained.
She sighed. And because she was not quite sure why she sighed, she began to run, streaking past Michael and Mary Poppins and the perambulator towards the thundering music.
"Wait for me! Wait for me!" screamed Michael, dashing after her. And behind him came the rumbling trundle of the perambulator as Mary Poppins hurried after them both.
There stood the Merry-go-round on a clear patch of lawn between the lime trees. It was a new one, very bright and shiny, with prancing horses going up and down on their brass poles. A striped flag fluttered from the top, and everywhere it was gorgeously decorated with golden scrolls and silver leaves and coloured birds and stars. It was, in fact, everything Miss Lark had said, and more.
The Merry-go-round slowed up and drew to a standstill as they arrived. The Park Keeper ran up officiously and held on to one of the brass poles.
"Come along, come along! Threepence a ride!" he called importantly.
"I know which horse I'll have!" said Michael, dashing up to one painted blue-and-scarlet with the name "Merry-Legs" on its gold collar. He clambered on to its back and seized the pole.
"No Litter Allowed and Observe the Bye-Laws," called the Keeper fussily as Jane sped past him.
"I'll have Twinkle!" she cried, climbing upon the back of a fiery white horse with its name on a red collar.
Then Mary Poppins lifted the Twins from the perambulator and put Barbara in front of Michael and John behind Jane.
"Penny, Tuppeny, Threepenny, Fourpenny or Fivepenny rides?" said the Merry-go-round Attendant, as he came to collect the money.
"Sixpenny," said Mary Poppins, handing him four sixpenny bits.
The children stared, amazed. They had never before had a sixpenny ride on a Merry-go-round.
"No Litter Allowed!" called the Keeper, his eye on the tickets in Mary Poppins' hands.
"But aren't you coming?" Michael called down to her.
"Hold tight, please! Hold tight! I'll take the next turn!" she replied snappily.
There was a hoot from the Merry-go-round's chimney. The music broke out again. And slowly, slowly the horses began to move.
"Hold on, please!" called Mary Poppins sternly.
They held on.
The trees were moving past them. The brass poles slipped up and down through the horses' backs. A dazzle of light fell on them from the rays of the setting sun.
"Sit tight!" came Mary Poppins' voice again.
They sat tight.
Now the trees were moving more swiftly, spinning about them as the Merry-go-round gathered speed. Michael tightened his arm about Barbara's body. Jane flung back her hand and held John firmly. On they rode, turning ever more quickly, with their hair blowing out behind them and the wind sharp on their faces. Round and round went Merry-Legs and Twinkle, with the children on their backs and the Park tipping and rocking, whirling and wheeling about them.
It seemed as if they would never stop, as if there were no such thing as Time, as if the world was nothing but a circle of light and a group of painted horses.
The sun died in the West and the dusk came fluttering down. But still they rode, faster and faster, till at last they could not distinguish tree from sky. The whole broad earth was spinning now about them with a deep, drumming sound like a humming top.
Never again would Jane and Michael and John and Barbara be so close to the centre of the world as they were on that whirling ride. And somehow, it seemed, they knew it.
"For— Never again! Never again!" was the thought in their hearts as the earth whirled about them and they rode through the dropping dusk.
Presently the trees ceased to be a circular green blur and their trunks again became visible. The sky moved away from the earth and the Park stopped spinning. Slower and slower went the horses. And at last the Merry-go-round stood still.