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Wet Magic "They seemed to think so. I expect he's exactly like an ancestor or something, and you know how the Queen took to him from the first."

And then the oblivion-cup took effect—and they forgot, and forgot forever, the wonderful world that they had known underseas, and Sabrina fair and the circus and the Mermaid whom they had rescued.

But Reuben, curiously enough, they did not forget: they went home to tea with a pleasant story for their father and mother of a Spangled Boy at the circus who had run away and found his father and mother. And two days after a motor stopped at their gate and Reuben got out.

"I say," he said, "I've found my father and mother, and we've come to thank you for the plum pie and things. Did you ever get the plate and spoon out of the bush? Come and see my father and mother," he ended proudly.

The children went, and looked once more in the faces of the King and Queen of the Under Folk, but now they did not know those faces, which seemed to them only the faces of some very nice strangers.

"I think Reuben's jolly lucky, don't you?" said Mavis.

"Yes," said Bernard.

"So do I," said Cathay.

"I wish Aunt Enid had let me bring the aquarium," said Francis.

"Never mind," said Mavis, "it will be something to live for when we come back from the sea, and everything is beastly."

And it was.

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