Aunt Maria (17 page)

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Authors: Diana Wynne Jones

BOOK: Aunt Maria
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He was standing in the middle of it, ears pricked, waiting for me. I knelt down and hugged him. He wasn't as wet as I expected. He must have found a place to shelter. He put one paw awkwardly across my shoulder to show he was glad to see me, too.

“Oh, Chris!” I said. “That was so stupid with the Baghdads! But it was wonderfully funny, too. Did you see Adele Taylor tread in the cake?”

Chris sort of panted with his tongue lolling. He was laughing.

“But I have to warn you,” I said. “They're saying there's a wild wolf escaped from a zoo and it savaged one of the clones. Did you bite a clone?” I put both hands on his furry shoulder blades and looked him in the eyes. “Did you?”

Chris shook his face and stared at me. He meant no, and I knew it was the truth.

“Yes. But they think you're dangerous,” I said. “They're going to look for you—try and trap you—tomorrow, I think, maybe both days of the weekend. Promise me you won't do anything like the Baghdads then. Promise me you'll hide. I can't do anything to turn you back if they put you in a zoo.”

Chris's ears pricked up at that.

“I'm trying to find out how,” I said. “I've been stupid and only just started to try, but I
promise
I'll get you turned back. But you have to be sensible.”

Chris nodded. He put his nose near mine with a rather sad snuffle.

“I know you hate it,” I said. “I hate her for doing it. Come downstairs and get some food now.”

We went to the kitchen, and Chris ate everything I'd put out. He was starving again. I'm not sure that things like bread and mushroom paté and jam are good for a wolf's digestion, but he ate them. And even though he was starving, he ate neatly and sort of politely. That wasn't Chris. It was wolf. Wolves are very clean, precise creatures, in spite of all the stories. I watched him as he ate, and I thought of all the books that say a person takes on the nature of beast if he's turned into one for too long, and that worried me. I must get him turned back
soon
.

Then we went upstairs again and sat by candlelight on Chris's bed, talking. I mean, I talked. Chris looked and moved his ears and his jaw to show he understood. It was almost just like talking usually—except it wasn't, and I knew Chris was truly miserable.

Next thing I knew, the candle was out, and I was waking out of the dream again, after years of horrible struggling underground. I remember I thought as I woke, I wouldn't like to be that ghost! I didn't know being dead was so awful! And there he was, standing in the middle of the room, faintly lit up. I was sorry for him. The odd thing was, he was looking at us as if he was sorry for
us
. We were in a sort of heap, because we'd both been needing comforting.

I looked up at the funny quirked face of the ghost. Chris looked up with his ears up. Funny! I thought. He looks more old-fashioned than twenty years ago. And he did. The pushed-back mane of hair was like something hundreds of years ago, and the tattered green robe was a bit like a highwayman's coat or something. It was a feeling of king as well as scarecrow and jester he gave you—of someone important dead hundreds of years and half crumbled away. I really did wonder if Dad had told me right.

I said, in rather a wavering voice, “You—you're Antony Green, aren't you? Won't you please speak to us, and tell us how to turn Chris back?”

His face turned to me quite seriously. I got the feeling that he was wondering what he
could
say. But he didn't speak.

“You spoke to Chris and to Dad,” I said. “Do you only speak to men? No… ,” I said, because a sudden idea came to me. “I think you spoke to Lavinia, too. Didn't you? She was downstairs here. She left her nightdress.”

He nodded, just a bit humorously, with a sort of comic sadness.

“You mean, everyone you speak to gets done for, don't they?” I said. “Even after Chris rescued your green box, he got done for. Do you know Mr. Phelps has the green box now? He won't speak to me, either.”

He started to smile his wide smile at that. I think the idea of Mr. Phelps with the green box amused him, but I thought it meant he was going away, and I hurried on.

“Oh,
please
!” I said. “I—I think you're in trouble, too. I know you feel awful being dead and buried. If you want your spirit laid to rest or something, I'll do that if you like, in exchange for getting Chris back.”

His smile became widely sad at that. He shook his head slightly and seemed to shrug his shoulders, as if he meant, “I give up!” But the smile went quite kind as he faded out.

“Oh, Chris!” I said. “I got it wrong again! I wish you could tell me what he really wants when he comes here. Do you think he'll go and haunt Mr. Phelps now?”

Poor Chris. He can only make gestures just like the ghost. He flapped his tongue against my cheek and went down off the bed, draggingly, ready to jump out the window.

“Remember!” I cried. “You promised. Be careful when they all start looking for you.”

I saw his narrow dog-shaped head turn in a sort of nod to me as he jumped.
Thump
went the coal bin. It was a much better jump than last time. He's getting too good at being a wolf.

Ten

S
aturday. It seems centuries since I wrote the last bit. It is only three days. It's going to take ages to write down.

Saturday was the day of the hunt.

All the time we were getting Aunt Maria dressed she was saying, over and over, “Now, Betty, you're to stay here with me, dear.”

“I always do, don't I?” Mum said, a bit sourly. “What about the kids?”

“I'll let little Naomi go with Elaine and Larry, if she promises to be very good and careful,” Aunt Maria said.

Nobody mentioned Chris, I noticed.

Shortly after that, Elaine came tramping in, wearing great green boots below her black mac and a black scarf tied over her head. “We're ready to go,” she said. She gave me her two-line smile. “I gather you're coming, too,” she said. “You'll need Wellingtons.”

How's that for a welcoming invitation?, I thought as I ran and got my things.

Larry was waiting at the wheel of his car out in the street. It is one of the glossy expensive cars I remember seeing at the station. He didn't say anything of course. And the only thing Elaine said, all the way, was, “I've got a bag of food for you with ours in the back. This may take all day.”

Mind you, it wasn't a long way, only to the station car park. I could have walked it. The car park was full when we got there. Someone had opened the gate into the field on the other side of the road, and Larry drove gently, squelchily through it and stopped in a row of cars at the end. There were cars of all shapes and colors, vans, Land Rovers, motorbikes, bicycles. All the cars had their backs open and men were deedily bending over them. I've never seen so many green Wellingtons together in my life. Larry had green Wellingtons, too, and a little tweed hat on. He went and opened the back of his glossy car. When he turned round from it, he was carefully carrying two long guns.

Gray and pink Dr. Bailey came hurrying up to him, also carrying a gun. “We've got a man every fifty feet, all along the fields beyond the station,” he said to Larry. “It can't get through a cordon like that. I hope you're in good shooting form.”

Larry's mousy little face lit up in a merry grin. “Never better,” he said. “Women and children are acting as beaters, right?”

“Nat Phelps is seeing to that,” said Dr. Bailey. “I've saved you the most likely post. Come and see.”

The two of them went squelching out through the gate again, leaving me standing with Elaine, feeling sick. Elaine didn't look too happy, either. But she went striding away to give someone orders, and I just stood there.

It was a lovely spring day, that was the worst of it. The sun came up and up, bright and mild and warm, as people kept arriving. Everyone was there. I saw Mr. A.C. Taylor the druggist, hurrying across the field with a gun, and the men in boots from the boats, the postman, the milkman, and the booted porter from the station. They all had guns. Benita Wallins was handing out paper cups of tea from the back of an old van. Adele Taylor and Corinne West were strolling about in expensive trousers and pretty anoraks. I saw most of the Mrs. Urs sooner or later, including Phyllis Forbes, who came marshaling a crowd of orphans through the gate. One of the clone boys had his arm in a very white sling. There were crowds of other people, too, all trampling the dandelions in the grass of the field. Almost the only people I
didn't
see were Dad and Zenobia Bailey.

I wondered resentfully why they kept Dad away. I still do.

Mr. Phelps drove in through the gate in a little high black car with an open top. He parpled the horn noisily and began shouting orders before he had stopped the car.

“All women and children assemble by me. Come on. No slacking.”

Nobody seemed to take much notice of the orders, but everybody slowly did seem to get more businesslike. Men ran or walked into the distance to make a long line that seemed to stretch right up to Cranbury Head. A lot of them went out the gate, like Larry and Dr. Bailey, and I supposed they were making a line the other way, right up to the orphanage and maybe beyond that.

Mr. Phelps was marching up and down shouting things like, “Everyone got their lunch packs? The lunch pack of Notre Dame—ha, ha! Come on, get organized. We want to catch this beastie napping!”

I think it was Elaine who did the organizing. With a white contemptuous look at Mr. Phelps every so often, she got the orphans into two Land Rovers and a van, and all the other females into a procession of smaller cars. I ended up sitting beside Hester Bailey in her Land Rover full of orphans. She kept turning to me and smiling as she drove and saying sensible things like, “You mustn't be scared. Safety in numbers. We have to drive it down on the guns, you know.”

I thought resentfully of Dad and her two-foot-high daughter Zenobia. I said, “Why do they have to shoot it?”

“It's dangerous, dear,” Hester Bailey said briskly. “Possibly even rabid.”

We drove right up into the hills, into a high field above the goblin woods. We all piled out with our lunch packs, and my heart was banging in my throat. I looked at the fields and hills and farms stretching inland behind us, and I hoped Chris had had the sense to get out into those and stay there.

Mr. Phelps made us a Jerry-is-here speech then. I couldn't terribly listen. It was all about the wings doubling back on the main body and our
cordon sanitaire
and choosing the spot for the engagement and avoiding cross fire. I think he meant that men with guns were going to be on the hills on either side of Cranbury Bay. They were going to close in, and we were all going to fill in the middle. Then he began passing out sticks, thick ones, from the backseat of his car and telling us very carefully what we were to do.

I thought, Chris can easily get past a line of orphans with sticks.

But then a tractor came chugging up across the high field, towing a cart full of more men with guns. “Ah, here comes the farm contingent,” said Mr. Phelps. He was delighted. “My reinforcements. One armed man to every ten beaters. That will make absolutely sure the brute can't double back.”

The men with guns had caps and ferrety faces. You couldn't tell whether they were young or old. They all came leaping down from the cart in a businesslike way, but there was a sort of swing to their movements that showed they were as pleased as Larry had been at the thought of shooting a real wild animal. “It's in there,” they said. “Seen it this morning.”

Then we were ready to go at last. While we were milling about, being shared out between the farm men, someone took hold of my shoulder in a policeman's grip. I whirled round. It was Elaine. She was gray-white.

“I hope you warned him,” she said in a growling whisper. “He's not going to escape this in a hurry.”

I stared up at her, twisted round. She knew. She must have heard Chris howl in the garden that night. “Yes, I did,” I said.

“Good,” she said. “I wouldn't have let you get away with it for anyone else.” She let go of me and strode off to go with Benita Wallins.

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