"Now that I am a real boy," Colin had said, "my legs and arms and all my body are so full of Magic that I can't keep them still.They want to be doing things all the time.
Do you know that when I waken in the morning, Mary, when it's quite early and the birds are just shouting outside and everything seems just shouting for joy--even the trees and things we can't really hear--I feel as if Imust jump out of bed and shout myself.If I did it, just think what would happen!"Mary giggled inordinately.
"The nurse would come running and Mrs.Medlock would come running and they would be sure you had gone crazy and they'd send for the doctor," she said.
Colin giggled himself.He could see how they would all look--how horrified by his outbreak and how amazed to see him standing upright.
"I wish my father would come home," he said."I want to tell him myself.I'm always thinking about it--but we couldn't go on like this much longer.I can't stand lying still and pretending, and besides I look too different.
I wish it wasn't raining today."
It was then Mistress Mary had her inspiration.
"Colin," she began mysteriously, "do you know how many rooms there are in this house?""About a thousand, I suppose," he answered.
"There's about a hundred no one ever goes into," said Mary.
"And one rainy day I went and looked into ever so many of them.
No one ever knew, though Mrs.Medlock nearly found me out.
I lost my way when I was coming back and I stopped at the end of your corridor.That was the second time Iheard you crying."
Colin started up on his sofa.
"A hundred rooms no one goes into," he said."It sounds almost like a secret garden.Suppose we go and look at them.
wheel me in my chair and nobody would know we went""That's what I was thinking," said Mary."No one would dare to follow us.There are galleries where you could run.
We could do our exercises.There is a little Indian room where there is a cabinet full of ivory elephants.
There are all sorts of rooms."
"Ring the bell," said Colin.
When the nurse came in he gave his orders.
"I want my chair," he said."Miss Mary and I are going to look at the part of the house which is not used.
John can push me as far as the picture-gallery because there are some stairs.Then he must go away and leave us alone until I send for him again."Rainy days lost their terrors that morning.When the footman had wheeled the chair into the picture-gallery and left the two together in obedience to orders, Colin and Mary looked at each other delighted.As soon as Mary had made sure that John was really on his way back to his own quarters below stairs, Colin got out of his chair.
"I am going to run from one end of the gallery to the other,"he said, "and then I am going to jump and then we will do Bob Haworth's exercises."And they did all these things and many others.They looked at the portraits and found the plain little girl dressed in green brocade and holding the parrot on her finger.
"All these," said Colin, "must be my relations.