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A Lost Wand
by
“No,” said the little girl, “I don’t think I have got anything of the kind. Oh, yes! to be sure, I have got somewhere up-stairs a little gold wand, which I was told not to give away; but I’m afraid she who gave it me must have been dead a long while, and it is of no use keeping it any longer.”
Now this pedlar was the fairy’s enemy. He had long suspected that the wand must be concealed somewhere in that region, and near the sea, and he had disguised himself, and gone out wandering among the farmhouses and huts and castles to try if he could hear some tidings of it, and get it if possible into his power. The moment he heard Hulda mention her gold wand, he became excessively anxious to see it. He was a gnome, and when his malicious eyes gleamed with delight they shot out a burning ray, which scorched the hound who was lying asleep close at hand, and he sprang up and barked at him.
“Peace, peace, Rhan!” cried little Hulda; “lie down, you unmannerly hound!” The dog shrank back again growling, and the pedlar said in a careless tone to Hulda:
“Well, lady, I have no objection just to look at the little gold wand, and see if it is worth anything.”
“But I am not sure that I could part with it,” said Hulda.
“Very well,” replied the pedlar, “as you please; but I may as well look at it. I should hope these beautiful things need not go begging.” As he spoke he began carefully to lock up some of the jewels in their little boxes, as if he meant to go away.
“Oh, don’t go,” cried Hulda. “I am going up-stairs to fetch my wand. I shall not be long; pray wait for me.”
Nothing was further from the pedlar’s thought than to go away, and while little Hulda was running up to look for the wand he panted so hard for fear that after all he might not be able to get it that he woke the other hound, who came up to him, and smelt his leg.
“What sort of a creature is this?” said the old hound to his companion, speaking, of course, in the dogs’ language.
“I’m sure I can’t say,” answered the other. “I wonder what he is made of,–he smells of mushrooms! quite earthy, I declare! as if he had lived underground all his life.”
“Let us stand one on each side of him, and watch that he doesn’t steal anything.”
So the two dogs stood staring at him; but the pedlar was too cunning for them. He looked out of the window, and said, “I think I see the master coming,” upon which they both turned to look across the heath, and the pedlar snatched up the opal ring, and hid it in his vest. When they turned around he was folding up his trinkets again as calmly as possible. “One cannot be too careful to count one’s goods,” he said, gravely. “Honest people often get cheated in houses like these, and honest as these two dogs look, I know where one of them hid that leg-of-mutton bone that he stole yesterday!” Upon hearing this the dogs sneaked under the table ashamed of themselves. “I would not have it on my conscience that I robbed my master for the best bone in the world,” continued the pedlar, and as he said this he took up a little silver horn belonging to the lord of the castle, and, having tapped it with his knuckle to see whether the metal was pure, folded it up in cotton, and put it in his pack with the rest of his curiosities.
Presently Hulda came down with a little box in her hand, out of which she took the fairy’s wand.
The pedlar was so transported at the sight of it that he could scarcely conceal his joy; but he knew that unless he could get it by fair means it would be of no use to him.