NORA’S GRANDCHILDREN
One afternoon Eric and Ivra started
out for the Forest Children’s moss village to
play with them. But when they got there they found
all the little houses deserted: not a Forest
Child was to be found. They must have gone into
some other part of the forest to play. So Ivra
and Eric wandered on and on, a little lonely, a little
tired of just each other for comrades, till at last
they came to the very edge of the forest, and
there was Nora’s farm, a rambling red brick house,
with a barn twice its size behind it. Down in
the pasture by the house half a dozen Snow Witches
were dancing in a circle, now near, now far, all over
the pasture, and sometimes right up to the farm-house
windows.
Ivra clapped her hands and bounded
forward. Eric did not follow. He stood to
watch. When the Snow Witches saw Ivra running
to them they rushed to meet her. For a minute
she was lost in a cloud of blown snow, and then there
she was dancing in their circle back and forth across
the pasture, and then away, away, away! But before
she frolicked quite out of sight she turned to look
for her playfellow, and beckoned to him.
“Come on,” she called.
“We’re going to slide on the brook below
the cornfield.”
But Eric did not follow. He did
not like the Snow Witches. And just as Ivra and
the Witches drifted out of sight, he thought he heard
the Forest Children laughing. The sound came
from the barn. So Eric ran to the door.
It was a big sliding door, and now stood open on a
crack just large enough for a child to slip through.
Eric went in.
The barn was tremendously big, a great
dusty place full of the smell of hay. Ahead of
him were two stalls, with a horse in one. But
Eric was most interested in the empty stall, for it
was from there the laughter seemed to come. He
stood looking and listening, and then right down through
the ceiling of the stall shot a child, and landed laughing
and squealing in the hay in the manger. She sat
up, saw Eric and stared. She was a little girl
about his own age, freckle-faced, snub-nosed and red-haired.
She had the jolliest, the nicest face in the world.
Eric opened his mouth to say, “Hello,”
but kept it open, silent in amazement, for another
child had shot through the ceiling and landed beside
the girl. This was a boy. He was red-headed,
too, freckle-faced and snub-nosed. He looked
even jollier than the girl.
Before Eric had closed his mouth on
his amazement, “Whoop!” and down came
another boy. This boy was red-haired, freckle-faced
and snub-nosed, and he looked jollier than the other
two put together, if that were possible, for his red
hair curled in saucy, tight little ringlets, and his
mouth was wide with smiles.
It was this last one who said, “Hello, who are
you?”
“Eric, who are you?”
“Nora’s grandchildren, of course.
Come up. We’re having sport.”
The three children ran across the
barn to a ladder and scrambled up and disappeared
through a trap door at the top. Eric followed.
The attic was full of hay in mountains and little
hills, hay and hay and hay. He followed
the children around the biggest mountain, through a
tunnel and there they vanished!
He found the hole in the stable ceiling
and looked down. Not very far below him was the
manger full of hay and red-headed children. “Look
out down there! Whoop!” cried Eric, and
dropped, landing among them.
Then the four laughed heartily together
and ran across the barn again, up the ladder, around
the hay mountain and dropped down the hole. They
did that dozens of times until they were tired of it.
Then they played hide-and-go-seek
in the hay country, and after that Blind Man’s
Buff in the barn below. The little girl was Blind
Man first. They tied a red handkerchief tight
over her eyes. Then they ran about, dodging her,
calling her, laughing at her groping hands and hesitating
steps. But after a few minutes she became accustomed
to the darkness and ran and jumped about after them
until they had to be very wary and swift indeed.
Soon she caught Eric and then he was Blind Man.
By and by they played tag, just plain
tag, and Eric liked that best of all. Back and
forth across the great room they raced, up
the ladder, over the hay, through the hole into the
stable, round and round, in and out, up and down until
they were too tired and hot for any more.
Then they lay up in the hay where
there was a little window, looking far out across
the meadows.
Eric saw Ivra out there in the first
field, wandering around alone and now and then looking
up at the barn. She must have heard their shouts
and laughter. He pointed her out to the other
children. “That is my playmate out there,”
he said. “Let’s open the window and
call to her to come up. She’ll tell us
stories.”
The children looked out eagerly.
“But there’s nobody there,” they
said.
Eric laughed. “No, look!”
He pointed with his finger. “Over there
by the white birch. Look! She sees us.”
He waved. “Quick, help me open the window.”
He could not find the catch.
The window was draped with cobwebs and dusty with
the dust of years. It looked as though it had
never been opened.
The little red-headed girl put her
hand on his arm. She was laughing. “Don’t
be silly,” she said. “There’s
no one by the white birch. You’re imagining.”
“Why, look! Of course she’s
there!” Eric was impatient. “She’s
moving now, waving to us. Of course you see her!”
“Yes,” said the jolliest
of the boys. “We do see it faintly.
We’ve seen it before too, a kind
of a shadow on the snow. But father says it’s
nothing to mind. Imaginings. Nothing real,
just spots in our eyes or something.”
Then Eric remembered all that Ivra
had told him. She was half fairy. People
could see her if they looked hard enough. But
they were not apt to believe their own eyes when they
had looked. That was dreadful for her. She
had not said so, but he had guessed it from her face
when she told him. Well, well, now he understood
a little better. These were Earth Children, with
shadows in their eyes. Ivra could never be their
playmate.
But he could see her well enough
because his eyes were clear. And presently he
would run out to her and they would go home together.
But just now it was jolly and cozy here in the barn,
and these Earth Children were good fun. He hoped
she would wait for him, but if she did not he would
find his way alone easily enough.
“You don’t really believe
in it, do you?” the red-headed girl was asking.
“If you do, better not. Grown-ups
will laugh at you.”
“Nora, your grandmother, won’t
laugh,” said Eric. “She knows Ivra
well enough, and Helma, too.”
“Oh, yes,” said the jolliest
boy. “But she is queer. We love her,
and she’s a fine grandmother, I can tell you.
And she tells the best stories. But she’s
queer just the same, and she can’t fool us.”
“Let’s go in and get some
cookies from her,” said the other boy. “They
must be done by now.”
So up they hopped, and without another
look towards the shadow out on the snow by the white
birch, jumped down the hole, and ran out of the barn
into the kitchen.
Nora was there knitting by a table,
two big pans of cookies just out of the oven cooling
in front of her.
How good they smelled! Eric had
never tasted hot ginger cookies before, and when Nora
gave him one, a big round one all for his own, he almost
danced with delight. He perched on the edge of
the table and ate that one and many another before
he was done.
“This boy, grandma,” began the red-headed
girl.
“His name is Eric,” interrupted
Nora, handing him another cookie. “I know
him very well.”
“Well, he saw It while we were
looking out of the barn window! And he said It
was real and his playmate, and he wanted to call It
in to tell us stories!”
“Don’t say ‘It,’”
said Nora. “Her name is ‘Ivra.’
But of course you can’t play with her.
She isn’t an Earth Child. She’s a
fairy. So don’t say anything about it to
your father when he comes home to-night. It would
make him cross.”
“But it doesn’t make you
cross,” laughed the jolliest boy. “And
so won’t you tell us some stories about it now.
You know, the little house in the wood,
the Tree Man, the Forest Children, Helma, Ivra and
all the rest of it.”
“Do tell us a story,” begged the other
two.
So Nora put down her knitting, and
taking the cat on her lap, a great sleepy white fellow
who had been purring by the stove, she began to tell
them stories.
She told stories about Helma and Ivra,
the Wind Creatures, the Snow Witches and many more.
The children listened eagerly, clapping their hands
now and then, and at the end of every story asking
for more.
But Eric was lost in wonder.
The children thought the stories were not true, just
fairy stories told them by a grandmother. And
Nora had evidently long ago given up expecting them
to believe. Her black eyes twinkled knowingly
when they met Eric’s puzzled ones.
And all the time Eric had only to
turn his head to see Ivra walking out there around
in the field, looking at the farm house, waiting for
him. But gradually, as the stories went on the
little figure out there grew more and more to look
like just a blue shadow on the snow, paler and paler.
Finally he had to strain his eyes to see it at all.
Then he jumped down from the table
and said he must go home. His heart was beating
a little wildly. For he was afraid Ivra might
fade away from him altogether. These red-headed
children were fine playfellows. He liked them, oh,
so much! He wished he could stay and play with
them for a week. Yes. But he
must go now. That blue shadow on the snow seemed
lonely.
“Take her some cookies,”
said Nora, filling his pockets. The children
laughed at the top of their voices. “Yes,
take some cookies to the fairy. But you can eat
them yourself and pretend it is the fairy eating them,”
they cried.
Nora laughed with them, and so after
a minute Eric joined in. But he and Nora looked
at each other through their laughter and nodded understanding.
When Ivra saw him at last come out
of the farm house door, she didn’t wait longer,
but ran away into the wood. He overtook her a
long way in, walking rapidly.
“Did you have a good time with the witches?”
he asked.
“Why didn’t you come, too?” she
said
“Oh, it was too cold. Nora’s
grandchildren are awfully good fun. We played
hide-and-go-seek, just as we played it at the Tree
Man’s party.”
“Did they laugh at me?”
" . . . No, they laughed at me.
They thought I was a funny boy.”
“To have me for a playmate?”
Then Eric began to think that Ivra
was not very happy. Perhaps she had been lonely.
“You’re always running
off with the Snow Witches,” he said. “But
I won’t play with Nora’s grandchildren
any more unless they’ll let you play too.
I won’t, truly!”
Ivra laughed. And it was like
spring coming into winter. “Yes, play with
them all you like! I love them, too. I’ve
often watched them. The littlest boy, the one
with the funny curls, laughs at me and stares and
stares. But the other two . . . they just give
me a glance and then forget all about me. They
don’t think I’m real. But they are
awfully jolly. You play with them and when you
tell me about it afterwards I’ll pretend I was
there playing too.”
Then the two clasped hands and went skipping home.