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      It was pinned fast, and the table and chairs having been moved, the carpet simply and suddenly vanished, rather like a patch of water on a hearth under a fierce fire. The edges got smaller and smaller, and then it disappeared from sight.

      ‘It may take it some time to collect the beautiful and delightful things,’ said the Phoenix. ‘I should wash up – I mean wash down.’

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      So they did. There was plenty of hot water left in the kettle, and everyone helped – even the Phoenix, who took up cups by their handles with its clever claws and dipped them in the hot water, and then stood them on the table ready for Anthea to dry them. But the bird was rather slow, because, as it said, though it was not above any sort of honest work, messing about with dish-water was not exactly what it had been brought up to. Everything was nicely washed up, and dried, and put in its proper place, and the dish-cloth washed and hung on the edge of the copper to dry, and the tea-cloth was hung on the line that goes across the scullery. (If you are a duchess’s child, or a king’s, or a person of high social position’s child, you will perhaps not know the difference between a dish-cloth and a tea-cloth; but in that case your nurse has been better instructed than you, and she will tell you all about it.) And just as eight hands and one pair of claws were being dried on the roller-towel behind the scullery door there came a strange sound from the other side of the kitchen wall the side where the nursery was. It was a very strange sound, indeed – most odd, and unlike any other sounds the children had ever heard. At least, they had heard sounds as much like it as a toy engine’s whistle is like a steam siren’s.

      ‘The carpet’s come back,’ said Robert; and the others felt that he was right.

      ‘But what has it brought with it?’ asked Jane. ‘It sounds like Leviathan, that great beast—’

      ‘It couldn’t have been made in India, and have brought elephants? Even baby ones would be rather awful in that room,’ said Cyril. ‘I vote we take it in turns to squint through the keyhole.’

      They did – in the order of their ages. The Phoenix, being the eldest by some thousands of years, was entitled to the first peep. But—

      ‘Excuse me,’ it said, ruffling its golden feathers and sneezing softly; ‘looking through keyholes always gives me a cold in my golden eyes.’

      So Cyril looked.

      ‘I see something grey moving,’ said he.

      ‘It’s a zoological garden of some sort, I bet,’ said Robert, when he had taken his turn. And the soft rustling, bustling, ruffling, scuffling, shuffling, fluffling noise went on inside.

      ‘I can’t see anything,’ said Anthea, ‘my eye tickles so.’

      Then Jane’s turn came, and she put her eye to the keyhole.

      ‘It’s a giant kitty-cat,’ she said; ‘and it’s asleep all over the floor.’

      ‘Giant cats are tigers – Father said so.’

      ‘No, he didn’t. He said tigers were giant cats. It’s not at all the same thing.’

      ‘It’s no use sending the carpet to fetch precious things for you if you’re afraid to look at them when they come,’ said the Phoenix, sensibly. And Cyril, being the eldest, said:

      ‘Come on,’ and turned the handle.

      The gas had been left full on after tea, and everything in the room could be plainly seen by the ten eyes at the door. At least, not everything, for though the carpet was there it was invisible, because it was completely covered by the 199 beautiful objects which it had brought from its birthplace.

      ‘My hat!’ Cyril remarked. ‘I never thought about its being a Persian carpet.’

      Yet it was now plain that it was so, for the beautiful objects which it had brought back were cats – Persian cats, grey Persian cats, and there were, as I have said, 199 of them, and they were sitting on the carpet as close as they could get to each other. But the moment the children entered the room the cats rose and stretched, and spread and overflowed from the carpet to the floor, and in an instant the floor was a sea of moving, mewing pussishness, and the children with one accord climbed to the table, and gathered up their legs, and the people next door knocked on the wall – and, indeed, no wonder, for the mews were Persian and piercing.

      ‘This is pretty poor sport,’ said Cyril. ‘What’s the matter with the bounders?’

      ‘I imagine that they are hungry,’ said the Phoenix. ‘If you were to feed them—’

      ‘We haven’t anything to feed them with,’ said Anthea in despair, and she stroked the nearest Persian back. ‘Oh, pussies, do be quiet – we can’t hear ourselves think.’

      She had to shout this entreaty, for the mews were growing deafening, ‘and it would take pounds’ and pounds’ worth of cat’s-meat’.

      ‘Let’s ask the carpet to take them away,’ said Robert.

      But the girls said ‘No.’

      ‘They are so soft and pussy,’ said Jane.

      ‘And valuable,’ said Anthea, hastily. ‘We can sell them for lots and lots of money.’

      ‘Why not send the carpet to get food for them?’ suggested the Phoenix, and its golden voice became harsh and cracked with the effort it had to make to be heard above the increasing fierceness of the Persian mews.

      So it was written that the carpet should bring food for 199 Persian cats, and the paper was pinned to the carpet as before.

      The carpet seemed to gather itself together, and the cats dropped off it, as raindrops do from your mackintosh when you shake it. And the carpet disappeared.

      Unless you have had 199 well-grown Persian cats in one small room, all hungry, and all saying so in unmistakable mews, you can form but a poor idea of the noise that now deafened the children and the Phoenix. The cats did not seem to have been at all properly brought up. They seemed to have no idea of its being a mistake in manners to ask for meals in a strange house – let alone to howl for them – and they mewed, and they mewed, and they mewed, and they mewed, till the children poked their fingers into their ears and waited in silent agony, wondering why the whole of Camden Town did not come knocking at the door to ask what was the matter, and only hoping that the food for the cats would come before the neighbours did – and before all the secret of the carpet and the Phoenix had to be given away beyond recall to an indignant neighbourhood.

      The cats mewed and mewed and twisted their Persian forms in and out and unfolded their Persian tails, and the children and the Phoenix huddled together on the table.

      The Phoenix, Robert noticed suddenly, was trembling.

      ‘So many cats,’ it said, ‘and they might not know I was the Phoenix. These accidents happen so quickly. It quite un-mans me.’

      This was a danger of which the children had not thought.

      ‘Creep in,’ cried Robert, opening his jacket.

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      And the Phoenix crept in – only just in time, for green eyes had glared, pink noses had sniffed, white whiskers had twitched, and as Robert buttoned his coat he disappeared to the waist in a wave of eager grey Persian fur. And on the instant the good carpet slapped itself down on the floor. And it was covered with rats – 398 of them, I believe, two for each cat.

      ‘How horrible!’ cried Anthea. ‘Oh, take them away!’

      ‘Take yourself away,’ said the Phoenix, ‘and me.’

      ‘I wish we’d never had a carpet,’ said Anthea, in tears.

      They

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