Enid Blyton Fullscreen The Magnificent Five (1946)

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"Then we could take the children down, come back, and do our own packing at leisure, and start off for Scotland on the Friday.

Yes— we'll arrange for Tuesday."

So Tuesday it was.

The children counted the days eagerly, and Anne marked one off the calendar each night.

The week seemed a very long time in going.

But at last Tuesday did come. Dick and Julian, who shared a room, woke up at about the same moment, and stared out of the nearby window.

"It's a lovely day, hurrah!" cried Julian, leaping out of bed.

"I don't know why, but it always seems very important that it should be sunny on the first day of a holiday.

Let's wake Anne."

Anne slept in the next room.

Julian ran in and shook her.

"Wake up!

It's Tuesday! And the sun's shining."

Anne woke up with a jump and stared at Julian joyfully.

"It's come at last!" she said.

"I thought it never would.

Oh, isn't it an exciting feeling to go away for a holiday!"

They started soon after breakfast.

Their car was a big one, so it held them all very comfortably.

Mother sat in front with Daddy, and the three children sat behind, their feet on two suitcases.

In the luggage-place at the back of the car were all kinds of odds and ends, and one small trunk.

Mother really thought they had remembered everything.

Along the crowded London roads they went, slowly at first, and then, as they left the town behind, more quickly.

Soon they were right into the open country, and the car sped along fast.

The children sang songs to themselves, as they always did when they were happy.

"Are we picnicking soon?" asked Anne, feeling hungry all of a sudden.

"Yes," said Mother. "But not yet. It's only eleven o'clock.

We shan't have lunch till at least half-past twelve, Anne."

"Oh, gracious!" said Anne.

"I know I can't last out till then!"

So her mother handed her some chocolate, and she and the boys munched happily, watching the hills, woods and fields as the car sped by.

The picnic was lovely.

They had it on the top of a hill, in a sloping field that looked down into a sunny valley.

Anne didn't very much like a big brown cow who came up close and stared at her, but it went away when Daddy told it to.

The children ate enormously, and Mother said that instead of having a tea-picnic at half-past four they would have to go to a tea-house somewhere, because they had eaten all the tea sandwiches as well as the lunch ones!

"What time shall we be at Aunt Fanny's?" asked Julian, finishing up the very last sandwich and wishing there were more.

"About six o'clock with luck," said Daddy.

"Now who wants to stretch their legs a bit?

We've another long spell in the car, you know."

The car seemed to eat up the miles as it purred along.

Tea-time came, and then the three children began to feel excited all over again.

"We must watch out for the sea," said Dick.

"I can smell it somewhere near!"

He was right.

The car suddenly topped a hill— and there, was the shining blue sea, calm and smooth in the evening sun.

The three children gave a yell.

"There it is!"

"Isn't it marvellous!"

"Oh, I want to bathe this very minute!"

"We shan't be more than twenty minutes now, before we're at Kirrin Bay," said Daddy.