"Light Horse Harry," said Trix.
"Yes; but Amy thought it would be a bother to keep up historical ways of talking—I mean old-fashioned ways—so we decided to take a name, and not a character; so now Jack is Sir Harry Hotspur, and Trix is Catharine Seyton, and I am the Lady Griselda of the Castle of the Lonely Lake, and Amy is Mrs. Peace Plenty, a philanthropist."
"Well done, Amy!" cried Miss Isabel, laughing heartily. "All but yours are just the names that I might have guessed they would have taken, and yet yours is, perhaps, the most suitable of all."
"What will you take, Miss Isabel?" asked Jack.
"Why, I can't answer such an important question without thought," said Miss Isabel. "Can you suggest a name?"
"I never could think of a name nice enough for you," said Amy lovingly.
"I think it ought to be something like Good Fairy," said Trix, "only that sounds silly."
The color had been mounting to Margery's dark hair, and Jack said:
"Margery's thought of something. Let's have it, Peggy."