children's heads as they wrapped themselves in the rug.
'We're a parcel!' cried Michael excitedly. 'Tie us up with string, Mary Poppins, and send us through the post!'
'Run!' she commanded, taking no notice. And away they hurried, stumbling and tumbling, over the rainy grass.
The dogs came barking along beside them and, forgetting their promise to Mary Poppins, shook themselves over her skirt.
'All that sun and all this rain! One after another! Who'd 'ave thought it?'
The Park Keeper shook his head in bewilderment. He could still hardly believe it.
'An explorer would!' snapped Mary Poppins. She gave her head a satisfied toss. 'And so would I — so there!'
'Too big for your boots — that's what you are!' The Park Keeper's words were worse than they sounded. For he whispered them into his coat-collar in case she should overhear. But, even so, perhaps she guessed them, for she flung at him a smile of conceit and triumph as she hurried after the children.
Off she tripped through the streaming Park, picking her way among the puddles. Neat and trim as a fashion- plate she crossed Cherry Tree Lane and flitted up the garden path of Number Seventeen….
Jane emerged from the plaid bundle and patted her soaking hair.
'Oh, bother!' she said. 'I've lost my feather.'
'That settles it, then,' said Michael calmly. 'You can't be Minnehaha!'
He unwound himself and felt in his pocket. 'Ah, here's my ant! I've got him safely!'
'Oh, I don't mean Minnehaha, really — but somebody,' persisted Jane, 'somebody else inside me. I know. I always have the feeling.'
The black ant hurried across the table.
'I don't,' Michael said, as he gazed at it. 'I don't feel anything inside me but my dinner and Michael Banks.'
But jane was thinking her own thoughts.
'And Mary Poppins,' she went on. 'She's somebody in disguise, too. Everybody is.'
'Oh, no, she's not!' said Michael stoutly. 'I'm absolutely certain!'
A light step sounded on the landing.
'Who's not what?' enquired a voice.
'You, Mary Poppins!' Michael cried. 'Jane says you're somebody in disguise. And
Her head went up with a quick jerk and her eyes had a hint of danger.
'I hope,' she said, with awful calmness, 'that I did not hear what I
'Yes! I mean — no!' He tried again. 'I really meant to say, Mary Poppins, that you're not really
'Oh, indeed?' Her eyes were now as black as a boot-button. 'If I'm not anybody, Michael, who
'Oh, dear!' he wailed. 'I'm all muddled. You're not
Not somebody in her tulip hat! Not somebody in her fine blue skirt! Her reflection gazed at her from the mirror, assuring her that she and it were an elegant pair of somebodies.
'Well!' She drew a deep breath and seemed to grow taller as she spoke. 'You have often insulted me, Michael Banks. But I never thought I would see the day when you'd tell me I wasn't somebody. What am I, then, a painted portrait?'
She took a step towards him.
'I m-m-mean—' he stammered, clutching at Jane. Her hand was warm and reassuring and the words he was looking for leapt to his lips.
'I don't mean somebody, Mary Poppins! I mean not somebody
'Humph!' she said, disbelievingly. But the fierceness faded away from her face.
With a laugh of relief he sprang towards her, embracing her wet blue skirt.
'Don't grab me like that, Michael Banks. I am not a Dutch Doll, thank you!'
'You are!' he shouted. 'No, you're not! You only look like one. Oh, Mary Poppins, tell me truly! You aren't anybody in disguise? I want you just as you are!'
A faint, pleased smile puckered her mouth. Her head gave a prideful toss.
'Me! Disguised! Certainly not!'
With a loud sniff at the mere idea, she disengaged his hands.
'But, Mary Poppins—' Jane persisted. 'Supposing you weren't Mary Poppins, who would you choose to be?'
The blue eyes under the tulip hat turned to her in surprise.
There was only one answer to such a question.
'Mary Poppins!' she said.
CHAPTER TWO
The Faithful Friends
Faster, please!' said Mary Poppins, tapping on the glass panel with the beak of her parrot-headed umbrella.
Jane and Michael had spent the morning at the Barber's shop, and the Dentist's, and because it was late, as a great treat, they were taking a taxi home.
The Taxi Man stared straight before him and gave his head a shake.
'If I go any faster,' he shouted, 'it'll make me late for me dinner.'
'Why?' demanded Jane, through the window. It seemed such a silly thing to say. Surely, the quicker a Taxi Man drove the earlier he would arrive!
'Why?' echoed the Taxi Man, keeping his eye on the wheel. 'A Naccident — that's why! If I go any faster, I'll run into something — and that'll be a Naccident. And a Naccident — it's plain enough! — will make me late for me dinner. Oh, dear!' he exclaimed, as he put on the brake. 'Red again, I see!'
He turned and put his head through the window. His bulgy eyes and drooping whiskers made him look like a seal.
'There's always trouble at these 'ere signals!' He waved his hand at the stream of cars all waiting for the lights to change.
And now it was Michael who asked him why.
'Don't you know
He pointed to the signal-box, where a helmeted figure, with his head on his hand, was gazing into the distance.
'Absent-minded — that's what 'e is. Always staring and moping. And 'alf the time 'e forgets the lights. I've known them stay red for a whole morning. If it's goin' to be like that today I'll never get me dinner. You 'aven't got a sangwidge on you?' He looked at Michael, hopefully. 'No? Nor yet a chocolate drop?' Jane smiled and shook her head.
The Taxi Man sighed despondently.