Jinny
went out of the room without replying. But the idea had taken root
in her mind. During recess on Monday morning she talked to Miss
Johnson about the kitten.
Miss
Johnson's character made her a certain ally. She had shocked the
appointments board by declaring that it was as important to teach
children to love animals as to teach them to read and write, and she
had made some unheard-of innovations, not all of which were
successful. She encouraged the children to keep unusual pets and
to bring them into school. Jackdaws, leverets, a ferret, a white rat
and a tame fox cub romped and rampaged through the classroom during
nature hour - which naturally was the favourite hour of the week
with the pupils but not with the school cleaners.
Now
she sat listening attentively to Jinny Reece's plea, as she listened
to all the problems her children brought her. When Jinny had
finished she said, `I should like to adopt it myself, but I can't.'
`Why
can't you?'
'My
landlady won't allow it. No pets. That's her rule.'
`Not
even a budgie?' Jinny was shocked.
`Not
even a budgie. Anyway I wouldn't want that. Birds were meant to fly
about, not to be shut up in cages.'
`It'd
learn to talk and be company for you.'
`I
assure you I have to listen to enough silly chatter from human
beings, let alone from parakeets.'
'Well,
I think it's a daft rule.'
'No,
it isn't daft. But even if it were, she has a right to make it. If I
choose to live in her house I must keep her rules, just as you must
keep mine when you're in school.'
`What
can we do about the kitten, Miss Johnson? One of us got to do
something or it'll die.'
`I'll
think of something. Go into the playground now while I make some
phone calls.'
After
about twenty minutes Miss Johnson rapped on the window and beckoned
Jinny in.
'I
tried the pet shop, but they have enough kittens in stock. I tried
the cats' home in Mulcaster. They have a case of flu and are
refusing admissions. But I think I may have drawn lucky at the
police station. The sergeant tells me that a white cat wearing a
little collar with a bell was picked up dead in the road last week,
outside the supermarket.'
`That's
Granny Oddams' cat!'
`Yes,
sad to say. They identified it easily. Poor Granny must be grieving
and she might be glad to have another cat. I shall go to see her
this evening. I owe her a visit anyway.'
Jinny
went blithely home that day and told her mother that everything was
going to be all right now that Miss Johnson had taken the matter in
hand.
True
to her promise, the schoolmistress set out that evening for the
cottage at the end of the lane opposite the post office. When she
had last seen Granny Oddams the old lady was energetically gardening
and feeling, as she said, fit as a spring chicken despite her
eighty-odd years. But now the garden, once so neat, wore a neglected
look. Curtains were drawn over the front windows. Granny had taken
to her bed, her neighbours said.
Miss
Johnson climbed up to the small stuffy bedroom. One look was
enough to convince her that Granny Oddams would never get up again,
that she had already forgotten her lost pet and would have no need
of another. She stooped and kissed the dry sunken cheek, then she
went away.
COLD & LONELY
The
kitten, meanwhile, had taken up its daily vigil outside the Mostyns'
cottage. It was not seeking food so much as companionship, the
friendly sounds and smells of human dwellings. Nor did it yet suffer
from cold, for its coat was thick and it caught an occasional
fieldmouse to supplement the food put out for it. There was a heavy
frost each night, but with the old straw mattress for a bed the cold
did not matter.
So
long as the rain held off the kitten fared reasonably well, but the
fine spell was coming to an end. Mr. Trim's barometer had been
falling steadily for twenty-four hours and the elms along the lane
had begun to tremble and creak. Starlings stayed close to their
roosts. Whirling gusts whipped up the last of the leaves and flung
them about. Fowls went early to bed. The cottage women fetched in
coal and kindling, sensing the coming storm. Miss Coker made the
rounds of her casement windows.
The
striped kitten was restless, aware of the need to find shelter but
reluctant to leave the campsite. The mattress and the rubbish strewn
around it were the last relics of its haven. Also, from this point
it could look across the green to the row of cottages and watch
their windows light up at twilight. It stood now, in the rising
wind, uncertain whether to go or stay. It had learned the futility
of seeking shelter at the cottages. There was not a shed, outhouse
or privy whose door was left unlocked at night. While the lighted
windows shone out in the dusk it stayed, as fascinated as a child by
a row of bright beads. But the pleasure was short-lived. When the
darkness fell the curtains were drawn and it was only when a door
opened to let someone in or out, or a curtain hung askew, that a
yellow shaft broke the black dark.
It
settled down in the lee of the broken stone wall - a wise choice,
for the wind was blowing from the east and the wall gave what
shelter was to be had. But during the night the wind veered to the
north and increased in force. When dawn came the hills were blotted
out behind a sullen grey blanket of rain and sleet. By the time full
daylight came the ground was soaked and the kitten also. It got up
but could scarcely stand against the wind.
Half
trotting, half blown along, it made its way over to the campsite to
see if there was anything left to eat in the pie dish. The dish was
no longer there, having been whirled into the pond along with the
mattress and most of the rubbish.
The
kitten crouched on the spot where the pie dish had been and waited
hour after hour for Mrs. Reece to appear, until it was almost too
stiff to move. Then it began to scratch forlornly among the
half-buried tins on what remained of the rubbish heap and found one
that held, miraculously, a crust of meat round the rim. After this
it wasted no more time but set out on a resolute search for shelter.
TOO
BUSY TO REMEMBER