<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> ODD </h1>
<br/>
<h3> By </h3>
<h2> Amy Le Feuvre </h2>
<br/>
<SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER I </h3>
<h3> Caged Birds </h3>
<p>It was just four o'clock on a dull grey winter afternoon. The little
Stuarts' nursery looked the picture of cosiness and comfort with the
blazing fire that threw flickering lights over the bright-coloured
pictures on the walls, the warm carpet under foot, and the fair fresh
faces of the children gathered there.</p>
<p>Five of them there were, and they were alone, for the old nurse who had
brought them all up from their infancy was at present absent from the
room.</p>
<p>By one of the large square windows stood one of the little girls; she
was gazing steadily out into the fast darkening street below, her chin
resting on one of the bars that were fastened across the lower part of
the window. How the children disliked those bars! Marks of little
teeth were plainly discernible along them, and no prisoners could have
tried more perseveringly to shake them from their sockets than they
did. Betty, who stood there now, had received great applause one
afternoon when, after sundry twists and turns, she had successfully
thrust her little dark curly head through, and was able to have a
delightfully clear view of all the passers-by.</p>
<p>But the sequel was not so pleasant, for somehow or other Betty's head
would not come in so easily as it went out, and when nurse came to the
rescue with an angry hand, the poor little head was very much bruised
in consequence, and Betty's reward for such dexterity was an aching
head and dry bread for tea. She was a slight, slim little figure, with
big blue eyes, and long, black curved lashes and eyebrows, which made
her eyes the most beautiful feature in her face. Very soft, fine curly
hair surrounded a rather pathetic-looking little face; but her
movements were like quicksilver, and though all the little Stuarts were
noted for their mischievous ways and daring escapades, Betty eclipsed
them all.</p>
<p>She turned from the window soon with a sigh of relief.</p>
<p>'He's coming,' she said, 'old Bags is coming, and it's my turn to-day.'</p>
<p>There was no response. Bobby and Billy, the twins, little lads only
just promoted from petticoats to knickerbockers, were deeply engrossed
in one corner of the room over their bricks. Perched on the top of a
low chest of drawers were Douglas and Molly, and their heads were in
that close proximity that told that secret business was going on.</p>
<p>Betty's heart sank a little.</p>
<p>'Old Bags is coming,' she repeated; 'don't you hear his bell?'</p>
<p>'We're busy,' said Douglas, looking up; 'we won't have Bags' story
to-day.'</p>
<p>'You promised yesterday when you put it off that you would hear it
to-day. It isn't fair. I always listen to you.'</p>
<p>'Tell it to the babies; they'll like to hear.'</p>
<p>This was adding insult to injury, and when the twins trotted up to the
window Betty turned a defiant back upon them, tears of disappointment
dimming the blue eyes.</p>
<p>'She's cwying,' announced Bobby, twisting his head round to look up
into her face.</p>
<p>Betty turned round furiously; a sharp push sent Bobby to the ground,
and in falling he struck his head against one of the feet of the
nursery table. There was a howl, general confusion, and nurse
appeared, to discover and chastise the offender. Betty was led off in
disgrace to a little room on the nursery landing, known by the children
as 'Cells.' Their uncle, a young captain in the Guards, had given it
that name, but in reality it was nurse's storeroom, and was heated with
hot pipes, to air the linen kept there. It was a small, square room,
containing a table and one chair; the window was high above the
children's reach, and locked cupboards were on every side. Nurse
invariably used it for punishing small offences, and being a woman of
stern principles, she generally set the little culprit a text to learn
whilst there. A Bible was on the table, and Betty was led up to it.</p>
<p>'You will stay here till tea-time, and will not come out until you have
learnt a text, and said you are sorry for knocking down your little
brother in a fit of wicked temper. This is the fourth time I have had
to bring you here this week, and it is now only Tuesday. I have more
trouble with you than all the others put together, and you ought to be
ashamed of yourself.'</p>
<p>Betty was sobbing bitterly, and when nurse left the room and turned the
key behind her, the child flung herself down on the floor.</p>
<p>'It's a shame! It's all Douglas and Molly: they make promises and
don't keep them; and it was ever so much nicer a story than Molly's. I
know they'd have liked it if they'd heard it; they never think I can do
anything!'</p>
<p>To explain the cause of Betty's grievance, I must tell you that it was
a custom of the little Stuarts to await the muffin man's approach on
his rounds, and as his bell would sound, they would take it in turns
each day to relate to the others an account of the different houses he
had gone to, and who had been the fortunate individuals to receive the
muffins that had already disappeared from his tray. It was an idle
hour in the nursery from four to five, and if the gathering dusk kept
the active eyes still, the fertile brains were brought into
requisition. Telling stories was a constant delight, and the wonderful
adventures that befell the muffins on their daily rounds kept the
little gathering quiet and happy till tea appeared.</p>
<p>Betty's stories were not inferior to her elders, and it was her
childish sense of justice and consideration that was outraged. But
tears will come to an end, and soon the little maiden was perched up at
the table to learn the task before her. She turned over the pages till
she reached Revelation, that mysterious and mystical book that so
fascinates and contents a child's soul, though the wisest on earth read
it with perplexity and awe. And after a moment or two Betty had found
a text to learn, and when nurse appeared later on she repeated
unfalteringly with shining eyes and with a note of triumph in her tone
'And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me, These are
they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes,
and made them white in the blood of the Lamb' (Rev. vii. 14).</p>
<p>'That's a good child; are you sorry?'</p>
<p>'Yes,' was the reply, rather absently given, for Betty's mind was on
the white-robed throng; and how could she let nurse know all the
workings of her busy brain over the verse she had been taking into her
heart and soul?</p>
<p>'And remember,' said nurse gravely, 'that no naughty children who
quarrel and fight will ever be in heaven.'</p>
<p>'Not even if they've been through great tribulation?' quickly demanded
Betty.</p>
<p>But nurse did not hear, and Betty was received into the well-lighted
nursery with acclamation from the others, already seated at the round
table for tea.</p>
<p>'We've made a new game, Molly and I,' announced Douglas.</p>
<p>He was a fair, curly-headed boy with an innocent baby face, and a
talent for inventing the most mischievous plans that could ever be
concocted, with a will that made all the others bow before him. Molly
was also fair, with long golden hair that reached to her waist; extreme
self-possession and absence of all shyness were perhaps her chief
characteristics. 'I am the eldest of the family,' she was fond of
asserting, and she certainly claimed the eldest's privileges. Yet her
temper was sweet and obliging, and she could easily be swayed and led
by those around her.</p>
<p>'Is it one for outdoors or indoors?' asked Betty with interest.</p>
<p>'Indoors, of course; we'll tell you after tea.'</p>
<p>'Your mother wants you in the drawing-room after ten,' put in nurse;
'you and Miss Molly are to go down.'</p>
<p>Molly looked pleased, not so Douglas. At last, putting down his piece
of bread and butter, he looked up into nurse's face with one of his
sweetest looks.</p>
<p>'Why are grown-up people so very dull, nurse? They all are just the
same, except Uncle Harry. They are dreadfully heavy and dull.'</p>
<p>'They have so little to amuse them,' Molly said reflectively: 'no games
or toys; they never make believe, or pretend the lovely things we do.'</p>
<p>'And their legs get stiff, and their dresses trip them up if they try
to run.'</p>
<p>'But they never get punished, and they're never scolded, and they're
never wicked.'</p>
<p>This from Betty.</p>
<p>'It's their talk that is so stupid,' went on Douglas; 'they look nice
until they begin to talk; they make me dreadfully sleepy to listen to
them.'</p>
<p>'Shall I go down instead of you to-night?' asked Betty eagerly.</p>
<p>'Don't chatter such nonsense; it's strange times when children begin to
pick their elders to pieces. You weren't asked for, Miss Betty; and
Master Douglas is to go down and behave himself.'</p>
<p>'The three B's aren't big enough yet to leave the nursery.'</p>
<p>Douglas said this with a sparkle of mischief in his eye. It was a sore
point with Betty to be ranked with the twins, for she was only a year
behind Douglas. Long ago he had seized hold of a laughing joke of his
father's, alluding to the names by which the three youngest children
were called, and had twitted her with it ever since.</p>
<p>'B for Baby—Baby Betty, Baby Bobby, and Baby Billy; babies must go to
bed,' he explained.</p>
<p>Betty gave an angry kick under the table, but did not speak.</p>
<p>She was very silent for the rest of that evening; but when she and
Molly were safely in bed, and the room was very quiet, she asked,—</p>
<p>'Molly, do you know what tribulation means?'</p>
<p>'I'm not sure that I do,' was the hesitating reply; 'I think it's
something dreadful. Why do you want to know?'</p>
<p>'Is it like the dark valley Christian went through in the <i>Pilgrim's
Progress</i>, or the goblin's cave we make up about?'</p>
<p>'I expect it is something like. Why?'</p>
<p>'It's on the way to heaven,' whispered Betty, in an awestruck tone;
'the Bible says so.'</p>
<p>There was silence, then Molly said,—</p>
<p>'There's a book in father's library will tell you about it. It tells
the meaning of every word; father said so. A dick something it is.'</p>
<p>'I'll ask Mr. Roper to get it for me.'</p>
<p>And Betty turned over on her pillow comforted by this thought, and fell
fast asleep.</p>
<p>Mr. Stuart was a Member of Parliament, and being a man who threw his
whole soul into everything he did, was too much engrossed with business
when in town to have much to do with his children. He spent a great
part of his day in the library with his secretary, a quiet young
fellow, who was looked upon by the children as an embodiment of wisdom
and learning. Mrs. Stuart saw as little of her children as her
husband; her time was fully occupied in attending committee meetings,
opening bazaars, and superintending numerous pet projects for ennobling
and raising the standard of social morality amongst the masses. She
was not an indifferent mother; she was only an active, busy woman, who,
after carefully selecting a thoroughly good and trustworthy woman as
her nurse, left the children's training with perfect confidence to her.
And between her social and charitable claims there was not much time
for having her little ones about her. A young governess came every day
for two hours to teach the three eldest ones, but their life was
essentially a nursery one. And when the House was closed, and the
husband and wife would go off to the Continent or to the Highlands, the
children would be sent to a quiet seaside town with their nurse and the
nursery maid.</p>
<p>The following afternoon a little figure stole quietly down to the
library door. Betty knew her father was out, and Mr. Roper never
repulsed any of the children. After a timid knock she passed in, and
made a little picture as she stood in the firelight, in her brown
velveteen frock and large white-frilled pinafore.</p>
<p>'Well,' said Mr. Roper, wheeling round from his writing-desk, 'what do
you want, Betty?'</p>
<p>'I want one of father's books,' the child said earnestly, 'one that
Dick Somebody wrote—a book that tells the meaning of everything.'</p>
<p>'I wish there was such a one in existence,' said the young man, smiling
a little sadly. 'Now what is in your little head, I wonder?'</p>
<p>'It's a word I want to find, please.'</p>
<p>'Oh, a word! Bless the child, she means a dictionary!' and Mr. Roper
laughed as he drew a fat volume out of a shelf, and placed it on a
table by the little girl.</p>
<p>'May I help you to find it?'</p>
<p>'It's tribulation. I don't know how it's spelt.'</p>
<p>He did not ask questions; that was one thing that attracted Betty
towards him. She was a curious mixture of frankness and reserve. She
would confide freely of her own free will, but if pressed by questions
would relapse at once into silence. He found the word for her, and she
read with difficulty, 'Trouble, distress, great affliction.'</p>
<p>'Do they all mean tribulation?' she asked.</p>
<p>'Tribulation means all of them,' was the answer.</p>
<p>'And can children have tribulation, Mr. Roper?'</p>
<p>'What do you think?'</p>
<p>'I must have it if I'm to get to heaven,' she said emphatically; and
then she left him, and the young man repeated her words to himself with
a sigh and a smile, as he replaced the book in its resting-place.</p>
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