The Cuckoo Tree (6 page)

Read The Cuckoo Tree Online

Authors: Joan Aiken

Tags: #Action & Adventure, #General, #Juvenile Fiction, #England, #Conspiracies, #Humorous Stories, #Europe, #People & Places

BOOK: The Cuckoo Tree
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"Who are you?" he brought out presently.

"I'm Dido Twite. I'm stopping in one o' those Dogkennel Cottages with a hurt chap—Mrs. Lubbage is tending him."

"Please," said the boy earnestly, "
please
don't tell Mrs. Lubbage that you saw me!"

"
Course
I won't." Dido was affronted. "I ain't a blobtongue. What'd happen—would she beat you?"

"I don't mind being beaten. She does worse things than that."

He looked as if he would rather not discuss it. Dido asked instead,

"Is she your auntie Daisy?"

"Not really. All my family are dead. I used to live with another old woman in Suffolk—I think she was Auntie Daisy's cousin. She wasn't any kin of mine. Then she died—that was last year—and Auntie Daisy fetched me here. She said no one must ever find out I was living with her. I don't much like it here. It was better in Suffolk. Sometimes the rector used to teach me."

"Why mustn't anyone find out?"

"I don't know. Maybe she's not allowed to have children because she's a witch."

"Is she
really
a witch?" Dido asked.

"
She
thinks she is."

"Are you scared of her?"

The boy pondered, his gray eyes fixed on the distance. "I'm more scared of the other one," he said at length.

"Which?"

"Her friend. Tante Sannie." He looked a little impatient—as if, Dido suddenly thought, he expected her to know all this already. She glanced around her at the bushy little dark-green tree, which could have held about two more people as well as themselves, but did not, and asked,

"Who were you a-talking to when I climbed up?"

He looked still more surprised. "I was talking to Aswell, of course."

"Who's Aswell?"

"My friend. Can't you hear him? He's talking now."

"No I can't," Dido said crossly. Was the boy touched in the upper works?

"No you can't," the boy agreed, after listening again. "Aswell says I'm the only one who can hear him."

"Where is he?" Dido asked rather disbelievingly.

The boy frowned, getting his thought into words."In a way he seems to be here. Sometimes when we first start talking I can feel him—feel him put his hands between mine. But it's hard for him to do that—it only lasts a minute.
Really
he's thousands of miles away."

"Where—in the
sky?
"

"I suppose so. He'll come when I call. Not always but sometimes. And more often here in the Cuckoo Tree than back in the loft."

Dido was suddenly enlightened.

"You fetches him by singing that funny rhyme—canarack, stanarack?"

"Of course." He seemed as if he found Dido dreadfully slow-witted, and she felt a little forlorn.

"What's your name?" she asked.

"Cris."

"Well, Cris, why don't you run away from Auntie Daisy? Croopus, I would, if I had to live in the loft all the time."

"They'd find me," Cris said. "Even if Auntie Daisy couldn't, Tante Sannie would be sure to find me, wherever I went. And I couldn't bear that. She can do things." He shivered. "Besides, Aswell says it's better if I stay. Aswell
knows much more than I do. And I can help the old man—Mr. Firkin."

"Does he know you're there?"

"He doesn't
let
himself know—I expect he guesses Auntie Daisy would be angry," Cris said, thinking again. Dido suddenly realized that he was not at all
used
to having a conversation—it took him a minute to translate her questions into his thoughts and back again. "But I think he does know. He leaves food for me. And Toby knows, of course."

Dido nodded. "Don't you see
no
one else?"

Cris looked puzzled. "Who could I see? I'm supposed to stay in the loft while it's light. But Auntie Daisy's too fat to come up, so most days I come here."

"It's nice." Dido leaned back against a spicy, springy cushion of yew. "Reckon you could just about
live
in this tree. Can you eat the berries?"

"The red squashy part you can—but it's not very nice, it's sickly. The green seed in the middle is poisonous."

"Do cuckoos build their nests here?" asked ignorant Dido.

"Cuckoos don't build. They lay their eggs in other birds' nests."

"Then why's it called the Cuckoo Tree?"

Cris listened a minute.

"Aswell says it's always been called that—since Charles the First's time. Because it's such a funny shape."

At this moment the sun, which had been battling with
the mist for the last ten minutes, suddenly burst through. The clouds lifted in a great spongy, steamy mass, melting skyward into the blue.

"Saints save us!" exclaimed Dido.

She had not realized how high up they were. Below the Cuckoo Tree the wooded hill shot steeply down for six hundred feet, and at its foot flat country began which stretched away—field after field, wood after wood—into the far blue distance. There were villages, churches, a town with a tall steeple, a pair of lakes not far off, reflecting the color of the sky. On either hand the downs rolled away, one behind the other, like green grassy waves. And the beech trees in the woods down below blazed red and gold in their autumn plumage.

"Where's London?"

"You can't see that from here—it's over fifty miles."

"Not that town there?" Dido was disappointed.

"No, that's Petworth."

The name reminded Dido of Captain Hughes and his Dispatch.

"I'd best be getting back," she said regretfully. "What about you?"

"I daren't come back now the mist's lifted. I'll have to wait till it's dark."

"Don't you get hungry?"

"Used to it. Maybe I'll find some blackberries or nuts left."

Dido felt in her pockets and discovered a couple of eggs
which she had picked up in Auntie Daisy's hen house. One of the eggs had broken.

"Ugh!" She pulled out her fingers slimy and dripping. "Lucky the other one ain't bust. Sposing it's not addled, that is. You could build a little fire and roast it."

"Thanks." Cris took the egg. His thin, serious face broke into a smile which made Dido wonder if he had ever smiled before.

"My stars!" She suddenly remembered. "The doc's sposed to be coming at noon to look at my Cap'n. I'd best scarper. Tooralooral, Cris. See you in the loft, maybe."

Cris turned rather pale. "You'll be careful? If Auntie Daisy heard you up there—"

"Mum as a mouse in a mad cat's ear," Dido promised, and climbed nimbly backward down the trunk. It was like going down the companionway of a ship.

At the foot she noticed an odd thing: a corkscrew, which somebody had screwed several turns into the reddish, flaky bark. A small piece of green ribbon was tied to the handle.

"Daffy idea to leave a corkscrew in a tree trunk!" Dido thought. "No bottles hereabouts? Wonder why Cris has it there?"

It was not until she had started the steady jog trot back to Dogkennel Cottages that she remembered Yan, Tan, Tethera, and the rest. They too had been planning to come to the Cuckoo Tree. Could the corkscrew belong to them, rather than to Cris? And did Cris know about them?

She reached the top of the hill and started running down the slope toward the little row of cottages. Away to her left she could see Mr. Firkin, with his dog Toby, sitting in the middle of a huge flock of sheep.

"Ask me," said Dido to herself, "Mr. Firkin and Toby are about the only two around here that ain't muxed up in some kind of havey-cavey business. Blight it, there comes old Sawbones Subito on his nag; I'd best hustle."

3

The doctor's verdict on his patient was favorable.

"Another two weeks," he declared, "and we shall have him
con moto, allegro assai!
It is a strong constitution, fortunately—
fortissimo!
Continue with the treatment along the lines I have laid down. The
signora
Lubbage—she has seen him?"

"Yes," said Dido, "she put these here cobwebs on him. She ain't home just now."

"Ah, that is good—I mean, that is good she has seen him.
Eccolo,
I will return on Friday," said Dr. Subito, and made off at top speed, casting wary glances along the road in either direction.

Captain Hughes was wakeful, after the doctor's inspection, and somewhat fretful.

"I could eat a sturgeon, bones and all," he announced, and Dido glanced around the bare little room.

"We're clean out of prog, Cap," she said. "Wait a couple o' minutes and I'll see what I can fetch in."

Mr. Firkin still sat out in the hillside with his sheep, a
couple of miles away, but the basket from Tegleaze Manor was close at hand, temptingly in view through Mrs. Lubbage's kitchen window.

"I spose she did lock the door?" Dido said to herself.

She walked along to the witch's cottage carrying Captain Hughes's clasp knife, with which she thought it would be easy enough to force the door. She tried it to make certain: yes, locked. Just as she was about to insert the knife blade between door and doorpost she experienced a curious prickling sensation in her hands; at the same time a small buzzing voice—where? inside her head perhaps—said, faintly but audibly,

"This is a hoodoo lock. Beware. Do not touch it."

"Eh?" Dido looked sharply behind her. Nobody was there. "Have I got a screw loose?" she wondered, and approached the knife blade to the crack once more.

Again she heard the voice, distant but distinct, impossible to locate, like the drone of a loud mosquito:

"This is a hoodoo lock. Beware. Do not touch it."

"Rabbit me!" Dido, thoroughly discomposed and uneasy, stepped back, eying the door as if it might fly open and thump her. "This is a right mirksy set-out! Talking doors—I spose when I goes to lay hands on the basket of grub it'll get up and walk away! Well, the old crone may have hoodoo'd her front door, but I'll lay she didn't think to set one o' her spooky booby traps in the attic—blow me if I don't fetch the vittles out that way just to serve her right for her nasty suspicious nature."

Somewhat to the surprise of the Captain she returned to
his room, piled up their luggage, and climbed into the loft. Then she made her way along through the series of lofts until she reached that of Mrs. Lubbage, whose trap door was open. Jamming a broomstick across the hole, Dido tied a length of cord to it, and slid down.

Mrs. Lubbage's kitchen smelt even worse with the door shut; the smell was like a solid, threatening presence in the room.

Just our luck if it's turned the grub sour, Dido thought, moving carefully and warily across the greasy bricks toward the table on which stood the hamper of provisions. A label on the handle reinforced her courage: it said in large clear print:

FOR THE SICK GENTLEMAN
AT DOGKENNEL COTTAGES

Bet we wouldn't a-seen a crumb of it if I hadn't come to fetch it, Dido thought, grasping the handle. Next moment, with a startled gasp, she almost dropped the whole supply on the bricks for, sitting on the table close by and revealed when she picked the basket up, was the largest rat she had ever seen, brindled, with a tail that must have been fully two feet long. It did not scurry away, as an ordinary rat would have done, but turned its head slowly and gave her a steady look; Dido felt a cold sensation between her shoulderblades.

However she returned the look boldly.

"
You'll
know me again, Frederick, that's for sure," she
said to it. "And I just hope you've kept your long whiskery nose out o' the Cap'n's cheese. Now, how'm I going to get yon basket up the rope?"

She solved this problem by attaching the basket to the end of the rope and pulling it up after her; watched, meanwhile, by the rat, "as if," thought Dido, "he was learning how so he could do it himself next time."

The rat was not the only creature that seemed to be watching her; she noticed, in a corner of Mrs. Lubbage's kitchen, a small carved wooden table exactly like the one she had seen at Tegleaze Manor, with little black faces and white-painted eyes that seemed to follow her.

"If I never go back into that boggarty place again it'll be soon enough," she thought, scrambling back into her own loft; "blest if I know how Cris can stand
living
there. No wonder he seems a bit out o' the common.

"Anyways, we got the grub."

She lowered it down into Captain Hughes's sickroom, jumped down herself, and unpacked the hamper with exclamations of satisfaction.

"Bread—butter—cold roast chicken—flask o' soup—cheese—red currant jelly—grapes—oranges—and a bottle o' wine. Couldn't a done you better if you'd been Admiral o' the Fleet," she told the Captain, and proceeded to heat up some of the soup for him and toast some of the bread.

"I've poured in a dram o' wine as well, so it's right stin-go stuff," she said, giving him a bowlful. She herself ate an orange and a leg of chicken to hearten her for the scene
which she felt certain must follow Mrs. Lubbage's return and discovery that the basket was missing.

Sure enough, at about sunset there was a tremendous thump on the door.

"Hush! You'll wake the Cap'n!" Dido hissed, opening it.

Outside stood Mrs. Lubbage, brawny arms akimbo, little black eyes snapping with rage.

"Evening, missus," Dido greeted her politely, slipping out and closing the door. "Guess you was wanting to ask about the basket o' prog Lady Tegleaze sent down for us. Cap'n Hughes was fair clemmed wi' hunger, and you hadn't left word when you'd be back, so I jist nipped along and helped myself—hope that was all hunky-dory."

The witch stared at her for a moment, started to say something, and then changed her mind.

"How did you get in?" she asked at length, in a surly tone.

Dido could not mention the loft, because of Cris, so she opened her eyes wide and innocently replied,

"Why, how d'you think? Down the chimbley?"

Mrs. Lubbage seemed annoyed but baffled by this answer and was about to ask another question; luckily at that moment a distant bleating, which had been drawing closer, became so loud that no further conversation was possible; Mr. Firkin had arrived home with his flock. Mrs. Lubbage stumped off angrily to her own cottage; Dido ran to help Mr. Firkin and Toby persuade the sheep to file through a gap between two hurdles and so into the pasture at the rear of the farmyard.

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