10 minutes before ella washed up on shore as the rabbit returned to his house with doll things in his paws as he decorated the living room with a pink couch and other nesisties of home as he walked up stairs and speed built a vanity mirror and put it in the center of his room as he made a pink canopy bed with pink frilled sheats now i need to make a situation where that girl will come to my house preasent time

splash! she was up to her chin in salt water. Her first idea was that she had somehow fallen into the sea, "and in that case I can go back by railway," she said to herself. (cinderella had soon realized that she was in the pool of tears which she had wept when she was nine feet high.

"I wish I hadn't cried so much!" said cinderella, as she swam about, trying to find her way out. "I shall be punished for it now, I suppose, by being drowned in my own tears! That will be a queer thing, to be sure! However, everything is queer tonight."

Cinderella rang out her soaked dress and hair rr if iiiii neveer foowled that rabbit tthis wouldnt have happend she cried until suddnly she heard something it was the White Rabbit, trotting slowly back again, and looking anxiously about as it went, as if it had lost something; and she heard it muttering to itself "The Duchess! The Duchess! Oh my dear paws! Oh my fur and whiskers! She'll get me executed, as sure as ferrets are ferrets! Where can I have dropped them, I wonder?" Aurora guessed in a moment that it was looking for the fan and the pair of white kid gloves, and she very good-naturedly began hunting about for them, but they were nowhere to be seen—everything seemed to have changed since her swim in the pool, and the great hall, with the glass table and the little door, had vanished completely.

Very soon the Rabbit noticed Cinderella as she went hunting about, and called out to her in an angry tone, "Why, Mary Ann, what are you doing out here? Run home this moment, and fetch me a pair of gloves and a fan! Quick, now!" And cinderella was so much frightened and a little mad, but she ran off at once in the direction it pointed to, without trying to explain the mistake it had made.

"He took me for his housemaid," she said to herself as she ran. "How surprised he'll be when he finds out who I am! But I'd better take him his fan and gloves—that is, if I can find them." As she said this, she came upon a neat little house, on the door of which was a bright brass plate with the name "W. RABBIT," engraved upon it. She went in without knocking, and hurried upstairs, in great fear lest she should meet the real Mary Ann, and be turned out of the house before she had found the fan and gloves.

"How queer it seems going ,mesages for a rabbit, "Cinderella said to herself,

By this time she had found her way into a tidy little room with a table in the window, and on it (as she had hoped) a fan and two or three pairs of tiny white kid gloves: she took up the fan and a pair of the gloves, and was just going to leave the room, when her eye fell upon a dog house with a little door near the rabbits bed as she walked towards it she felt something sharp in her neck ow ella cried as ella fell to the ground and dropped the rabbits fan and gloves next to him as the rabbit picked up his fan and gloves and picked ella up and took her inside the dog house