CHAPTER VI.
CARROTS "ALL RIGHT" AGAIN.
"When next the summer breeze comes by,
And waves the bush, the flower is dry."
Walter Scott.
Floss crept upstairs to the dressing-room door. It was locked. Though the key was in the lock, she knew she must not turn it; and even had it been open she would not have dared to go in, after her father's forbidding it. But she thought she might venture to speak to Carrots, to comfort him a little, through the door. She was dreadfully afraid that he might feel frightened in there alone if it got dark before he was released, for sometimes he was afraid of the dark—he was such a little boy, remember.
Floss tapped at the door.
"Carrots," she said, "are you there?"
Floss tapped at the door. "Carrots," she said, "are you there?"