Once there was a very beautiful doll鈥檚 house. The walls were made of tiny red bricks; lace curtains fluttered behind little white windows and it had a proper front door and a tall chimney.
The doll鈥檚 house belonged to two dolls named Lucinda and Jane. Jane was the cook, though she never did any cooking because the meals were always ready to eat on the table. There was a whole chicken and a ham and a fish and some pears and oranges in a bowl. The food wasn鈥檛 real but it looked real. It looked delicious.
One morning Lucinda and Jane had gone out for a ride in the doll鈥檚 pram and the room was very quiet. Suddenly, there was a scuffling, scratching noise near the replace, and a little mouse popped his head out of a hole at the bottom of the wall. Just as quickly, he popped it in again.
The little mouse鈥檚 name was Tom Thumb. A minute later, Tom Thumb鈥檚 wife, Hunka Munka, popped her head out too and when she saw the room was empty, she and Tom squeezed through the hole and went over to the coal box by the fire.
On the other side of the replace was the beautiful doll鈥檚 house. The two mice tip-toed cautiously across the rug in front of the fire to take a closer look.
They pushed at the front door. It was not locked and opened easily. The two mice scampered inside and peeped into the first room they came to, which was the dining room. They squeaked with pleasure with what they saw. A lovely dinner had been laid out on the table and there were plates, spoons, knives and forks to eat it with. There was even two doll鈥檚 chairs tucked under the table - it was perfect!
Tom Thumb began to carve the ham but the knife was only a toy and it broke, hurting him. He put the hurt finger in his mouth.
鈥楾his ham is too hard,鈥 he complained to Hunka Munka. 鈥業t鈥檚 not cooked enough. You try, Hunka Munka.鈥
Hunka Munka stood on her chair and chopped at the ham with another toy knife. 鈥業t鈥檚 harder than wood!鈥 she agreed.
The ham broke off the plate with a jerk and rolled under the table. 鈥楲eave it,鈥 said Tom Thumb. 鈥楲et鈥檚 have some fish instead.鈥
Hunka Munka tried every knife, fork and spoon, one after another, but the fish was stuck fast to the dish. Then Tom Thumb really lost his temper. He put the ham in the middle of the floor and hit it with the fire tongs and the shovel - bang, bang, smash, smash!
The ham broke into tiny pieces. Underneath the shiny pink paint it was made of nothing but plaster!
Tom Thumb and Hunka Munka became even angrier. They smashed the pudding, the chicken and the bowl of pears and oranges. They took the fish and threw it in the fire. But the fire wasn鈥檛 real. It was just red crinkly paper pretending to be a fire. So of course the fish couldn鈥檛 burn.
Then the two naughty mice set to work to cause as much mischief as they could - especially Tom Thumb. He took Jane鈥檚 clothes out of all the drawers in her bedroom and threw them out of the top floor window.
Hunka Munka was not so wasteful. After pulling out half the feathers from Lucinda鈥檚 pillows she decided that she needed a feather bed and, with Tom Thumb鈥檚 help, carried the pillows downstairs and across the rug. It was difficult squeezing them into the mouse-hole, but they managed it somehow.
After that, Hunka Munka went back to fetch a chair, a book case, a bird cage and other bits and pieces. The book case and the bird cage were too big for the mouse hole, so Hunka Munka left them behind the coal box.
Suddenly she heard talking outside and the two mice rushed back inside their hole just as the dolls came into the room. What a sight for Jane and Lucinda to come home to! Lucinda sat on the upside-down kitchen stove and stared at all the mess.
They found the book case and the bird cage by the coal box, but they never found the pots and pans or the baby鈥檚 cradle. And Lucinda never found her missing clothes. Hunka Munka had kept them for herself.
Later, Tom Thumb felt guilty for the things he and Hunka Munka had done. So one day, when he found some money under the rug, instead of keeping it, he left it in the doll鈥檚 house to pay for all the things they had broken or stolen.