In a few moments every one in Lavender
House was made acquainted with Susan’s story.
At such a time ceremony was laid aside, dinner forgotten,
teachers, pupils, servants all congregated in the grounds,
all rushed to the spot where Nan’s withered
daisies still lay, all peered through the underwood,
and all, alas! looked in vain for the tall dark woman
and the little child. Little Nan, the baby of
the school, had been stolen there were
loud and terrified lamentations. Nan’s nurse
was almost tearing her hair, was rushing frantically
here, there, and everywhere. No one blamed the
nurse for leaving her little charge in apparent safety
for a few moments, but the poor woman’s own
distress was pitiable to see. Mrs. Willis took
Hester’s hand, and told the poor stunned girl
that she was sending to Sefton immediately for two
or three policemen, and that in the meantime every
man on the place should commence the search for the
woman and child.
“Without any doubt,” Mrs.
Willis added, “we shall soon have our little
Nan back again; it is quite impossible that the woman,
whoever she is, can have taken her so far away in
so short a time.”
In the meantime, Annie in her bedroom
heard the fuss and the noise. She leaned out
of her window and saw Phyllis in the distance; she
called to her. Phyllis ran up, the tears streaming
down her cheeks.
“Oh, something so dreadful!”
she gasped; “a wicked, wicked woman has stolen
little Nan Thornton. She ran off with her just
where the undergrowth is so thick at the end of the
shady walk. It happened to her half an hour ago,
and they are all looking, but they cannot find the
woman or little Nan anywhere. Oh, it is so dreadful!
Is that you, Mary?”
Phyllis ran off to join her sister,
and Annie put her head in again, and looked round
her pretty room.
“The gypsy,” she murmured,
“the tall, dark gypsy has taken little Nan!”
Her face was very white, her eyes
shone, her lips expressed a firm and almost obstinate
determination. With all her usual impulsiveness,
she decided on a course of action she snatched
up a piece of paper and scribbled a hasty line:
“DEAR MOTHER-FRIEND: However
badly you think of Annie, Annie loves you with all
her heart. Forgive me, I must go myself to look
for little Nan. That tall, dark woman is a
gypsy I have seen her before; her name
is Mother Rachel. Tell Hetty I won’t return
until I bring her little sister back. Your
repentant and sorrowful
ANNIE.”
Annie twisted up the note, directed
it to Mrs. Willis, and left it on her dressing-table.
Then, with a wonderful amount of forethought
for her, she emptied the contents of a little purse
into a tiny gingham bag, which she fastened inside
the front of her dress. She put on her shady hat,
and threw a shawl across her arm, and then, slipping
softly downstairs, she went out through the deserted
kitchens, down the back avenue, and past the laurel
bush, until she came to the stile which led into the
wood she was going straight to the gypsies’
encampment.
Annie, with some of the gypsy’s
characteristics in her own blood, had always taken
an extraordinary interest in these queer wandering
people. Gypsies had a fascination for her, she
loved stories about them; if a gypsy encampment was
near, she always begged the teachers to walk in that
direction. Annie had a very vivid imagination,
and in the days when she reigned as favorite in the
school she used to make up stories for the express
benefit of her companions. These stories, as a
rule, always turned upon the gypsies. Many and
many a time had the girls of Lavender House almost
gasped with horror as Annie described the queer ways
of these people. For her, personally, their wildness
and their freedom had a certain fascination, and she
was heard in her gayest moments to remark that she
would rather like to be stolen and adopted by a gypsy
tribe.
Whenever Annie had an opportunity,
she chatted with the gypsy wives, and allowed them
to tell her fortune, and listened eagerly to their
narratives. When a little child she had once for
several months been under the care of a nurse who
was a reclaimed gypsy, and this girl had given her
all kinds of information about them. Annie often
felt that she quite loved these wild people, and Mother
Rachel was the first gypsy she cordially shrank from
and disliked.
When the little girl started now on
her wild-goose chase after Nan, she was by no means
devoid of a plan of action. The knowledge she
had taken so many years to acquire came to her aid,
and she determined to use it for Nan’s benefit.
She knew that the gypsies, with all their wandering
and erratic habits, had a certain attachment, if not
for homes, at least for sites; she knew that as a
rule they encamped over and over again in the same
place; she knew that their wanderings were conducted
with method, and their apparently lawless lives governed
by strict self-made rules.
Annie made straight now for the encampment,
which stood in a little dell at the other side of
the fairies’ field. Here for weeks past
the gypsies’ tents had been seen; here the gypsy
children had played, and the men and women smoked
and lain about in the sun.
Annie entered the small field now,
but uttered no exclamation of surprise when she found
that all the tents, with the exception of one, had
been removed, and that this tent also was being rapidly
taken down by a man and a girl, while a tall boy stood
by, holding a donkey by the bridle.
Annie wasted no time in looking for
Nan here. Before the girl and the man could see
her, she darted behind a bush, and removing her little
bag of money, hid it carefully under some long grass;
then she pulled a very bright yellow sash out of her
pocket, tied it round her blue cotton dress, and leaving
her little shawl also on the ground, tripped gaily
up to the tent.
She saw with pleasure that the girl
who was helping the man was about her own size.
She went up and touched her on the shoulder.
“Look here,” she said,
“I want to make such a pretty play by-and-by I
want to play that I’m a gypsy girl. Will
you give me your clothes, if I give you mine?
See, mine are neat, and this sash is very handsome.
Will you have them? Do. I am so anxious
to play at being a gypsy.”
The girl turned and stared. Annie’s
pretty blue print and gay sash were certainly tempting
bait. She glanced at her father.
“The little lady wants to change,”
she said in an eager voice.
The man nodded acquiescence, and the
girl taking Annie’s hand, ran quickly with her
to the bottom of the field.
“You don’t mean it, surely?”
she said. “Eh, but I’m uncommon willing.”
“Yes, I certainly mean it,”
said Annie. “You are a dear, good, obliging
girl, and how nice you will look in my pretty blue
cotton! I like that striped petticoat of yours,
too, and that gay handkerchief you wear round your
shoulders. Thank you so very much. Now, do
I look like a real, real gypsy?”
“Your hair ain’t ragged enough, miss.”
“Oh, clip it, then; clip it
away. I want to be quite the real thing.
Have you got a pair of scissors?”
The girl ran back to the tent, and
presently returned to shear poor Annie’s beautiful
hair in truly rough fashion.
“Now, miss, you look much more
like, only your arms are a bit too white. Stay,
we has got some walnut-juice; we was just a-using of
it. I’ll touch you up fine, miss.”
So she did, darkening Annie’s
brown skin to a real gypsy tone.
“You’re a dear, good girl,”
said Annie, in conclusion; and as the girl’s
father called her roughly at this moment, she was obliged
to go away, looking ungainly enough in the English
child’s neat clothes.