The Big Book of Classic Fantasy

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The Big Book of Classic Fantasy Page 115

by The Big Book of Classic Fantasy (retail) (epub)


  “What is your trade really?” asked Miss Ford.

  “I’ll show you,” replied the Stranger, unbuttoning once more the flap of her pocket.

  * * *

  —

  She wrote a word upon the air with her finger, and made a flourish under the word. So flowery was the flourish that it spun her round, right round upon her toes, and she faced her watchers again. The committee jumped, for the blind ran up, and outside the window, at the end of a strange perspective of street, the trees of some far square were as soft as thistledown against a lemon-coloured sky. A sound came up the street….

  The forgotten April and the voices of lambs pealed like bells into the room….

  Oh, let us flee from April! We are but swimmers in seas of words, we members of committees, and to the song of April there are no words. What do we know, and what does London know, after all these years of learning?

  Old Mother London crouches, with her face buried in her hands; and she is walled in with her fogs and her loud noises, and over her head are the heavy beams of her dark roof, and she has the barred sun for a skylight, and winds that are but hideous draughts rush under her door. London knows much, and every moment she learns a new thing, but this she shall never learn—that the sun shines all day and the moon all night on the silver tiles of her dark house, and that the young months climb her walls, and run singing in and out between her chimneys….

  * * *

  —

  Nothing else happened in that room. At least nothing more important than the ordinary manifestations attendant upon magic. The lamp had tremulously gone out. Coloured flames danced about the Stranger’s head. One felt the thrill of a purring cat against one’s ankles, one saw its green eyes glare. But these things hardly counted.

  It was all over. The Mayor was heard cracking his fingers, and whispering “Puss, Puss.” The lamp relighted itself. Nobody had known that it was so gifted.

  The Mayor said: “Splendid, miss, quite splendid. You’d make a fortune on the stage.” His tongue, however, seemed to be talking by itself, without the assistance of the Mayor himself. One could see that he was shaken out of his usual grocerly calm, for his feverish hand was stroking a cat where no cat was.

  Black cats are only the showy properties of magic, easily materialised, even by beginners, at will. It must be confusing for such an orderly animal as the cat to exist in this intermittent way, never knowing, so to speak, whether it is there or not there, from one moment to another.

  The sixth member took a severely bitten pen from between her lips, and said: “Now you mention it, I think I’ll go down there again for the week-end. I can pawn my ear-rings.”

  Nobody of course took any notice of her, yet in a way her remark was logical. For that singing Spring that had for a moment trespassed in the room had reminded her of very familiar things, and for a few seconds she had stood upon a beloved hill, and had looked down between beech trees on a far valley, like a promised land; and had seen in the valley a pale river and a dark town, like milk and honey.

  As for Miss Ford, she had become rather white. Although the blind had now pulled itself down, and dismissed April, Miss Ford continued to look at the window. But she cleared her throat and said hoarsely: “Will you kindly answer my questions? I asked you what your trade was.”

  “It’s too dretful of me to interrupt,” said Lady Arabel suddenly. “But, do you know, Meta, I feel we are wasting this committee’s time. This young person needs no assistance from us.” She turned to the Stranger, and added: “My dear, I am dretfully ashamed. You must meet my son Rrchud….My son Rrchud knows….”

  She burst into tears.

  The Stranger took her hand.

  “I should like awfully to meet Rrchud, and to get to know you better,” she said. She grew very red. “I say, I should be awfully pleased if you would call me Angela.”

  It wasn’t her name, but she had noticed that something of this sort is always said when people become motherly and cry.

  Then she went away.

  “Lawdy,” said the Mayor. “I didn’t expect she’d go out by the door, somehow. Look—she’s left some sort of hardware over there in the corner.”

  It was a broomstick.

  CHAPTER II

  THE COMMITTEE COMES TO MAGIC

  I don’t suppose for a moment that you know Mitten Island: it is a difficult place to get to; you have to change buses seven times, going from Kensington, and you have to cross the river by means of a ferry. On Mitten Island there is a model village, consisting of several hundred houses, two churches, and one shop.

  It was the sixth member who discovered, after the committee meeting, that the address on the forsaken broomstick’s collar was: Number 100 Beautiful Way, Mitten Island, London.

  The sixth member, although she was a member of committees, was neither a real expert in, nor a real lover of, Doing Good. In Doing Good, I think, we have got into bad habits. We try in groups to do good to the individual, whereas, if good is to be done, it would seem more likely, and more consonant with precedent, that the individual might do it to the group. Without the smile of a Treasurer we cannot unloose our purse-strings; without the sanction of a Chairman we have no courage; without Minutes we have no memory. There is hardly one of us who would dare to give a flannelette nightgown to a Factory Girl who had Stepped Aside, without a committee to lay the blame on, should the Factory Girl, fortified by the flannelette nightgown, take Further Steps Aside.

  The sixth member was only too apt to put her trust in committees. Herself she did not trust at all, though she thought herself quite a good creature, as selves go. She had come to London two years ago, with a little trunk and a lot of good intentions as her only possessions, and she had paid the inevitable penalty for her earnestness. It is a sad thing to see any one of naturally healthy and rebellious tendency stray into the flat path of Charity. Gay heedless young people set their unwary feet between the flowery borders of that path, the thin air of resigned thanks breathed by the deserving poor mounts to their heads like wine; committees lie in wait for them on every side; hostels and settlements entice them fatally to break their journey at every mile; they run rejoicing to their doom, and I think shall eventually find themselves without escape, elected eternal life-members of the Committee that sits around the glassy sea.

  The sixth member was saved by a merciful inefficiency of temperament from attaining the vortex of her whirlpool of charity. To be in the vortex is, I believe, almost always to see less. The bull’s eye is generally blind.

  The sixth member was a person who, where Social Work was concerned, did more or less as she was told, without doing it particularly well. The result, very properly, was that all the work which a committee euphemistically calls “organising work” was left to her. Organising work consists of sitting in buses bound for remote quarters of London, and ringing the bells of people who are almost always found to be away for a fortnight. The sixth member had been ordered to organise the return of the broomstick to its owner.

  Perhaps it would be more practical to call the sixth member Sarah Brown.

  The bereaved owner of the broomstick was washing her hair at Number 100 Beautiful Way, Mitten Island. She was washing it behind the counter of her shop. She was the manageress of the only shop on Mitten Island. It was a general shop, but made a speciality of such goods as Happiness and Magic. Unfortunately Happiness is rather difficult to get in war-time. Sometimes there was quite a queue outside the shop when it opened, and sometimes there was a card outside, saying politely: “Sorry, it’s no use waiting. I haven’t any.” Of course the shop also sold Sunlight Soap, and it was with Sunlight Soap that the shop-lady was washing her hair, because it was Sunday, and this was a comparatively cheap amusement. She had no money. She had meant to go down to the offices of her employer after breakfast, to borrow some of the salary that would be due to
her next week. But then she found that she had left her broomstick somewhere. As a rule Harold—for that was the broomstick’s name—was fairly independent, and could find his way home alone, but when he got mislaid and left in strange hands, and particularly when kindly finders took him to Scotland Yard, he often lost his head. You, in your innocence, are suggesting that his owner might have borrowed another broomstick from stock. But you have no idea what arduous work it is, breaking in a wild broomstick to the saddle. It sometimes takes days, and is not really suitable work for a woman, even in war-time. Often the brutes are savage, and always they are obstinate. The shop-lady could not afford to go to the City by Tube, not to mention the ferry fare, which was rather expensive and erratic, not being L.C.C. Of course a flash of lightning is generally available for magic people. But it is considered not only unpatriotic but bad form to use lightning in war-time.

  The shop was not expecting customers on Sunday, but its manageress had hardly got her head well into the basin when somebody entered. She stood up dripping.

  “Is Miss Thelma Bennett Watkins at home?” asked Sarah Brown, after a pause, during which she made her characteristic effort to remember what she had come for.

  “No,” said the other. “But do take a seat. We met last night, you may remember. Perhaps you wouldn’t mind lending me one-and-twopence to buy two chops for our luncheon. I’ve got an extra coupon. There’s tinned salmon in stock, but I don’t advise it.”

  “I’ve only got sevenpence, just enough to take me home,” answered Sarah Brown. “But I can pawn my ear-rings.”

  I dare say you have never been in a position to notice that there is no pawn-shop on Mitten Island. The inhabitants of model villages always have assured incomes and pose as lilies of the field. Sarah Brown and her hostess sat down on the counter without regret to a luncheon consisting of one orange, found by the guest in her bag and divided, and two thin captain biscuits from stock. They were both used to dissolving visions of impossible chops, both were cheerfully familiar with the feeling of light tragedy which invades you towards six o’clock P.M., if you have not been able to afford a meal since breakfast.

  “Now look here,” said Sarah Brown, as she plunged her pocket-knife into the orange. “Would you mind telling me—are you a fairy, or a third-floor-back, or anything of that sort? I won’t register it, or put it on the case-paper, I promise, though if you are superhuman in any way I shall be seriously tempted.”

  “I am a Witch,” said the witch.

  Now witches and wizards, as you perhaps know, are people who are born for the first time. I suppose we have all passed through this fair experience, we must all have had our chance of making magic. But to most of us it came in the boring beginning of time, and we wasted our best spells on plesiosauri, and protoplasms, and angels with flaming swords, all of whom knew magic too, and were not impressed. Witches and wizards are now rare, though not so rare as you think. Remembering nothing, they know nothing, and are not bored. They have to learn everything from the very beginning, except magic, which is the only really original sin. To the magic eye, magic alone is commonplace, everything else is unknown, unguessed, and undespised. Magic people are always obvious—so obvious that we veteran souls can rarely understand them,—they are never subtle, and though they are new, they are never Modern. You may tell them in your cynical way that to-day is the only real day, and that there is nothing more unmentionable than yesterday except the day before. They will admire your cleverness very much, but the next moment you will find the witch sobbing over Tennyson, or the wizard smiling at the quaint fancies of Sir Edwin Landseer. You cannot really stir up magic people with ordinary human people. You and I have climbed over our thousand lives to a too dreadfully subtle eminence. In our day—in our many days—we have adored everything conceivable, and now we have to fall back on the inconceivable. We stand our idols on their heads, it is newer to do so, and we think we prefer them upside down. Talking constantly, we reel blindfold through eternity, and perhaps if we are lucky, once or twice in a score of lives, the blindfolding handkerchief slips, and we wriggle one eye free, and see gods like trees walking. By Jove, that gives us enough to talk about for two or three lives! Witches and wizards are not blinded by having a Point of View. They just look, and are very much surprised and interested.

  All witches and wizards are born strangely and die violently. They are descended always from old mysterious breeds, from women who wrought domestic magic and perished for its sake, and from men who wrought other magic among lost causes and wars without gain, and fell and died, still surprised, still interested, with their faces among flowers. All men who die so are not wizards, nor are all martyred and adventuring women witches, but all such bring a potential strain of magic into their line.

  “A witch,” said Sarah Brown. “Of course. I have been trying to remember what broomsticks reminded me of. A witch, of course. I have always wished to be friends with a witch.”

  The witch was unaware that the proper answer to this was: “Oh, my Dear, do let’s. Do you know I had quite a crush on you from the first minute.” She did not answer at all, and Sarah Brown, who was tired of proper answers, was not sorry. Nevertheless the pause seemed a little empty, so she filled it herself, saying pedantically: “Of course I don’t believe friendship is an end in itself. Only a means to an end.”

  “I don’t know what you mean,” said the witch, after wrestling conscientiously with this remark for a minute. “Do tell me—do you know yourself, or are you just saying it to see what it means?”

  Sarah Brown was obviously damped by this, and the witch added kindly: “I bet you twopence you don’t know what this place is.”

  “A shop,” said Sarah Brown, who was sitting on the counter.

  “It is a sort of convent and monastery mixed,” replied the witch. “I am connected with it officially. I undertook to manage it, yet I forget what the proper word for me is. Not undertaker, is it?”

  “Superintendent or secretary,” suggested Sarah Brown moodily.

  “Superintendent, I think,” said the witch. “At least I know Peony calls me Soup. Do you live alone?”

  “Yes.”

  “Then you ought to live here. This is the only place in the world of its kind. The name of this house is Living Alone. I’ll read you the prospectus.”

  She fell suddenly upon her knees and began fighting with a drawer. The drawer was evidently one of the many descendants of the Sword Excalibur—none but the appointed hand could draw it forth. The witch, after a struggle, passed this test, and produced a parchment covered with large childish printing in red ink.

  “My employer made up this,” said the witch. “And the ferryman wrote it out for us.”

  This is the prospectus:

  The name of this house is Living Alone.

  It is meant to provide for the needs of those who dislike hotels, clubs, settlements, hostels, boarding-houses, and lodgings only less than their own homes; who detest landladies, waiters, husbands and wives, charwomen, and all forms of lookers after. This house is a monastery and a convent for monks and nuns dedicated to unknown gods. Men and women who are tired of being laboriously kind to their bodies, who like to be a little uncomfortable and quite uncared for, who love to live from week to week without speaking, except to confide their destinations to bus-conductors, who are weary of woolly decorations, aspidistras, and the eternal two generations of roses which riot among blue ribbons on hireling wall-papers, who are ignorant of the science of tipping and thanking, who do not know how to cook yet hate to be cooked for, will here find the thing they have desired, and something else as well.

  There are six cells in this house, and no common sitting-room. Guests wishing to address each other must do so on the stairs, or in the shop. Each cell has whitewashed walls, and contains a small deal table, one wooden chair, a hard bed, a tin bath, and a little inconvenient fireplace.
No guest may bring into the house more than can be carried out again in one large suit-case. Carpets, rugs, mirrors, and any single garment costing more than three guineas, are prohibited. Any guest proved to have made use of a taxi, or to have travelled anywhere first class, or to have bought cigarettes or sweets costing more than three shillings a hundred or eighteenpence a pound respectively, or to have paid more than three and sixpence (war-tax included) for a seat in any place of entertainment, will be instantly expelled. Dogs, cats, goldfish, and other superhuman companions are encouraged.

  Working guests are preferred, but if not at work, guests must spend at least eighteen hours out of the twenty-four entirely alone. No guest may entertain or be entertained except under special license obtainable from the Superintendent.

  There is a pump in the back yard. There is no telephone, no electric light, no hot water system, no attendance, and no modern comfort whatever. Tradesmen are forbidden to call. There is no charge for residence in this house.

  “It certainly sounds an unusual place,” admitted Sarah Brown. “Is the house always full?”

  “Never,” said the witch. “A lot of people can swallow everything but the last clause. We have at present one guest, called Peony.”

  She replaced the prospectus in the drawer, which she then tried to shut. While she was engaged in this thundering endeavour, Sarah Brown noticed that the drawer was full of the little paper packets which she had seen the day before in the witch’s possession.

  “What do you do with your magic?” she asked.

  “Oh, many things. Chiefly I use it as an ingredient for happiness, sometimes to remind people, and sometimes to make them forget. It seems to me that some people take happiness rather tragically.”

  “I find,” said Sarah Brown, rather sententiously, “that I always owe my happiness to earth, never to heaven.”

  “How d’you mean heaven?” said the witch. “I know nothing about heaven. When I used to work in the City, I bought a little book about heaven to read in the Tube every morning. I thought I should grow daily better. But I couldn’t see that I did.”

 

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