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Table of Contents * NEXT The Grand High Witch The
next day, a man in a black suit arrived at the house carrying a brief-case, and
he held a long conversation with my grandmother in the living room. I was not
allowed in while he was there, but when at last he went away, my grandmother
came in to me, walking very slowly and looking very sad. "That
man was reading me your father's will," she said. "What
is a will?" I asked her. "It
is something you write before you die," she said. "And in it you say
who is going to have your money and your property. But most important of all, it
says who is going to look after your child if both the mother and father are
dead." A
fearful panic took hold of me. "It did say you, Grandmamma?" I cried.
"I don't have to go to somebody else, do I?" "No,"
she said. "Your father would never have done that. He has asked me to take
care of you for as long as I live, but he has also asked that I take you back to
your own house in England. He wants us to stay there." "But
why?" I said. "Why can't we stay here in Norway? You would hate to
live anywhere else! You told me you would!" "I
know," she said. "But there are a lot of complications with money and
with the house that you wouldn't understand. Also, it said in the will that
although all your family is Norwegian, you were born in England and you have
started your education there and he wants you to continue going to English
schools." "Oh
Grandmamma!" I cried. "You don't want to go and live in our English
house, I know you don't!" "Of
course I don't," she said. "But I am afraid I must. The will said that
your mother felt the same way about it, and it is important to respect the
wishes of the parents." There
was no way out of it. We had to go to England, and my grandmother started making
arrangements at once. "Your next school term begins in a few days,"
she said, "so we don't have any time to waste." On
the evening before we left for England, my grandmother got on to her favourite
subject once again. "There are not as many witches in England as there are
in Norway," she said. "I'm
sure I won't meet one," I said. "I
sincerely hope you won't," she said, "because those English witches
are probably the most vicious in the whole world." As
she sat there smoking her foul cigar and talking away, I kept looking at the
hand with the missing thumb. I couldn't help it. I was fascinated by it and I
kept wondering what awful thing had happened that time when she had met a witch.
It must have been something absolutely appalling and gruesome otherwise she
would have told me about it. Maybe the thumb had been twisted off. Or perhaps
she had been forced to jam her thumb down the spout of a boiling kettle until it
was steamed away. Or did someone pull it out of her hand like a tooth? I
couldn't help trying to guess. "Tell
me what those English witches do, Grandmamma," I said. "Well,"
she said, sucking away at her stinking cigar, "their favourite ruse is to
mix up a powder that will turn a child into some creature or other that all
grown-ups hate." "What
sort of a creature, Grandmamma?" "Often
it's a slug," she said. "A slug is one of their favourites. Then the
grown-ups step on the slug and squish it without knowing it's a child." "That's
perfectly beastly!" I cried. "Or
it might be a flea," my grandmother said. "They might turn you into a
flea, and without realising what she was doing your own mother would get out the
flea-powder and then it's goodbye you." "You're
making me nervous, Grandmamma. I don't think I want to go back to England." "I've
known English witches", she went on, "who have turned children into
pheasants and then sneaked the pheasants up into the woods the very day before
the pheasant-shooting season opened." "Owch,"
I said. "So they get shot? "Of
course they get shot," she said. "And then they get plucked and
roasted and eaten for supper." I
pictured myself as a pheasant flying frantically over the men with the guns,
swerving and dipping as the guns exploded below me. "Yes,"
my grandmother said, "it gives the English witches great pleasure to stand
back and watch the grown-ups doing away with their own children." "I
really don't want to go to England, Grandmamma." "Of
course you don't," she said. "Nor do I. But I'm afraid we've got
to." "Are
witches different in every country?" I asked. "Completely
different," my grandmother said. "But I don't know much about the
other countries." "Don't
you even know about America?" I asked. "Not
really," she answered. "Although I have heard it said that over there
the witches are able to make the grown-ups eat their own children." "Never!"
I cried. "Oh no, Grandmamma! That couldn't be true!" "I
don't know whether it's true or not," she said. "It's only a rumour
I've heard." "But
how could they possibly make them eat their own children?" I asked. "By
turning them into hot-dogs," she said. "That wouldn't be too difficult
for a clever witch." "Does
every single country in the world have its witches?" I asked. "Wherever
you find people, you find witches," my grandmother said. "There is a
Secret Society of Witches in every country." "And
do they all know one another, Grandmamma?" "They
do not," she said. "A witch only knows the witches in her own country.
She is strictly forbidden to communicate with any foreign witches. But an
English witch, for example, will know all the other witches in England. They are
all friends. They ring each other up. They swop deadly recipes. Goodness knows
what else they talk about. I hate to think." I
sat on the floor, watching my grandmother. She put her cigar stub in the ashtray
and folded her hands across her stomach. "Once a year," she went on,
"the witches of each separate country hold their own secret meeting. They
all get together in one place to receive a lecture from The Grand High Witch Of
All The World." "From
who?" I cried. "She
is the ruler of them all," my grandmother said. "She is all-powerful.
She is without mercy. All other witches are petrified of her. They see her only
once a year at their Annual Meeting. She goes there to whip up excitement and
enthusiasm, and to give orders. The Grand High Witch travels from country to
country attending these Annual Meetings." "Where
do they have these meetings, Grandmamma?" "There
are all sorts of rumours," my grandmother answered. "I have heard it
said that they just book into an hotel like any other group of women who are
holding a meeting. I have also heard it said that some very peculiar things go
on in the hotels they stay in. It is rumoured that the beds are never slept in,
that there are burn marks on the bedroom carpets, that toads are discovered in
the bathtubs, and that down in the kitchen the cook once found a baby crocodile
swimming in his saucepan of soup." My
grandmother picked up her cigar and took another puff, inhaling the foul smoke
deeply into her lungs. "Where
does The Grand High Witch live when she's at home?" I asked. "Nobody
knows," my grandmother said. "If we knew that, then she could be
rooted out and destroyed. Witchophiles all over the world have spent their lives
trying to discover the secret Headquarters of The Grand High Witch." "What
is a witchophile, Grandmamma?" "A
person who studies witches and knows a lot about them," my grandmother
said. "Are
you a witchophile, Grandmamma?" "I
am a retired witchophile," she said. "I am too old to be active any
longer. But when I was younger, I travelled all over the globe trying to track
down The Grand High Witch. I never came even close to succeeding." "Is
she rich?" I asked. "She's
rolling," my grandmother said. "Simply rolling in money. Rumour has it
that there is a machine in her headquarters which is exactly like the machine
the government uses to print the bank-notes you and I use. After all, banknotes
are only bits of paper with special designs and pictures on them. Anyone can
make them who has the right machine and the right paper. My guess is that The
Grand High Witch makes all the money she wants and she dishes it out to witches
everywhere." "What
about foreign money?" I asked. "Those
machines can make Chinese money if you want them to," my grandmother
said. "It's only a question of pressing the right button." "But
Grandmamma," I said, "if nobody has ever seen The Grand High Witch,
how can you be so sure she exists?" My
grandmother gave me a long and very severe look. "Nobody has ever seen the
Devil," she said, "but we know he exists." The
next morning, we sailed for England and soon I was back in the old family house
in Kent, but this time with only my grandmother to look after me. Then the
Easter Term began and every weekday I went to school and everything seemed to
have come back to normal again. Now
at the bottom of our garden there was an enormous conker tree, and high up in
its branches Timmy (my best friend) and I had started to build a magnificent
tree-house. We were able to work on it only at the weekends, but we were getting
along fine. We had begun with the floor, which we built by laying wide planks
between two quite far-apart branches and nailing them down. Within a month, we
had finished the floor. Then we constructed a wooden railing around the floor
and that left only the roof to be built. The roof was the difficult bit. One
Saturday afternoon when Timmy was in bed with 'flu, I decided to make a start on
the roof all by myself. It was lovely being high up there in that conker tree,
all alone with the pale young leaves coming out everywhere around me. It was
like being in a big green cave. And the height made it extra exciting. My
grandmother had told me that if I fell I would break a leg, and every time I
looked down, I got a tingle along my spine. I
worked away, nailing the first plank on the roof. Then suddenly, out of the
corner of my eye, I caught sight of a woman standing immediately below me. She
was looking up at me and smiling in the most peculiar way. When most people
smile, their lips go out sideways. This woman's lips went upwards and downwards,
showing all her front teeth and gums. The gums were like raw meat. It
is always a shock to discover that you are being watched when you think you are
alone. And
what was this strange woman doing in our garden anyway? I
noticed that she was wearing a small black hat and she had black gloves on her
hands and the gloves came nearly up to her elbows. Gloves!
She was wearing gloves! I
froze all over. "I
have a present for you," she said, still staring at me, still smiling,
still showing her teeth and gums. I
didn't answer. "Come
down out of that tree, little boy," she said, "and I shall give you
the most exciting present you've ever had." Her voice had a curious rasping
quality. It made a sort of metallic sound, as though her throat was full of
drawing-pins. Without
taking her eyes from my face, she very a slowly put one of those gloved hands
into her purse and drew out a small green snake. She held it up for me to see. "It's
tame," she said. The
snake began to coil itself around her forearm. It was brilliant green. "If
you come down here, I shall give him to you," she said. Oh
Grandmamma, I thought, come and help me! Then
I panicked. I dropped the hammer and shot up that enormous tree like a monkey. I
didn't stop until I was as high as I could possibly go, and there I stayed,
quivering with fear. I couldn't see the woman now. There were layers and layers
of leaves between her and me. I
stayed up there for hours and I kept very still. It began to grow dark. At last,
I heard my grandmother calling my name. "I'm
up here," I shouted back. "Come
down at once!" she called out. "It's past your suppertime." "Grandmamma!"
I shouted. "Has that woman gone?" "What
woman?" my grandmother called back. "The
woman in the black gloves!" There
was silence from below. It was the silence of somebody who was too stunned to
speak. "Grandmamma!"
I shouted again. "Has she gone?" "Yes,"
my grandmother answered at last. "She's gone. I'm here, my darling. I'll
look after you. You can come down now." I
climbed down. I was trembling. My grandmother enfolded me in her arms.
"I've seen a witch," I said. "Come
inside," she said. "You'll be all right with me." She
led me into the house and gave me a cup of hot cocoa with lots of sugar in it.
"Tell me everything," she said. I
told her. By
the time I had finished, it was my grandmother who was trembling. Her face was
ashy grey and I saw her glance down at that hand of hers that didn't have a
thumb. "You know what this means," she said. "It means that there
is one of them in our district. From now on I'm not letting you walk alone to
school." "Do
you think she could be after me specially?" I asked. "No,"
she said. "I doubt that. One child is as good as any other to those
creatures." It
is hardly surprising that after that I became a very witch-conscious little boy.
If I happened to be alone on the road and saw a woman approaching who was
wearing gloves, I would quickly skip across to the other side. And as the
weather remained pretty cold during the whole of that month, nearly everybody
was wearing gloves. Curiously enough though, I never saw the woman with the
green snake again. That
was my first witch. But it wasn't my last. BACK *
Table of Contents * NEXT BACK *
Table of Contents * NEXT The Grand High Witch The
next day, a man in a black suit arrived at the house carrying a brief-case, and
he held a long conversation with my grandmother in the living room. I was not
allowed in while he was there, but when at last he went away, my grandmother
came in to me, walking very slowly and looking very sad. "That
man was reading me your father's will," she said. "What
is a will?" I asked her. "It
is something you write before you die," she said. "And in it you say
who is going to have your money and your property. But most important of all, it
says who is going to look after your child if both the mother and father are
dead." A
fearful panic took hold of me. "It did say you, Grandmamma?" I cried.
"I don't have to go to somebody else, do I?" "No,"
she said. "Your father would never have done that. He has asked me to take
care of you for as long as I live, but he has also asked that I take you back to
your own house in England. He wants us to stay there." "But
why?" I said. "Why can't we stay here in Norway? You would hate to
live anywhere else! You told me you would!" "I
know," she said. "But there are a lot of complications with money and
with the house that you wouldn't understand. Also, it said in the will that
although all your family is Norwegian, you were born in England and you have
started your education there and he wants you to continue going to English
schools." "Oh
Grandmamma!" I cried. "You don't want to go and live in our English
house, I know you don't!" "Of
course I don't," she said. "But I am afraid I must. The will said that
your mother felt the same way about it, and it is important to respect the
wishes of the parents." There
was no way out of it. We had to go to England, and my grandmother started making
arrangements at once. "Your next school term begins in a few days,"
she said, "so we don't have any time to waste." On
the evening before we left for England, my grandmother got on to her favourite
subject once again. "There are not as many witches in England as there are
in Norway," she said. "I'm
sure I won't meet one," I said. "I
sincerely hope you won't," she said, "because those English witches
are probably the most vicious in the whole world." As
she sat there smoking her foul cigar and talking away, I kept looking at the
hand with the missing thumb. I couldn't help it. I was fascinated by it and I
kept wondering what awful thing had happened that time when she had met a witch.
It must have been something absolutely appalling and gruesome otherwise she
would have told me about it. Maybe the thumb had been twisted off. Or perhaps
she had been forced to jam her thumb down the spout of a boiling kettle until it
was steamed away. Or did someone pull it out of her hand like a tooth? I
couldn't help trying to guess. "Tell
me what those English witches do, Grandmamma," I said. "Well,"
she said, sucking away at her stinking cigar, "their favourite ruse is to
mix up a powder that will turn a child into some creature or other that all
grown-ups hate." "What
sort of a creature, Grandmamma?" "Often
it's a slug," she said. "A slug is one of their favourites. Then the
grown-ups step on the slug and squish it without knowing it's a child." "That's
perfectly beastly!" I cried. "Or
it might be a flea," my grandmother said. "They might turn you into a
flea, and without realising what she was doing your own mother would get out the
flea-powder and then it's goodbye you." "You're
making me nervous, Grandmamma. I don't think I want to go back to England." "I've
known English witches", she went on, "who have turned children into
pheasants and then sneaked the pheasants up into the woods the very day before
the pheasant-shooting season opened." "Owch,"
I said. "So they get shot? "Of
course they get shot," she said. "And then they get plucked and
roasted and eaten for supper." I
pictured myself as a pheasant flying frantically over the men with the guns,
swerving and dipping as the guns exploded below me. "Yes,"
my grandmother said, "it gives the English witches great pleasure to stand
back and watch the grown-ups doing away with their own children." "I
really don't want to go to England, Grandmamma." "Of
course you don't," she said. "Nor do I. But I'm afraid we've got
to." "Are
witches different in every country?" I asked. "Completely
different," my grandmother said. "But I don't know much about the
other countries." "Don't
you even know about America?" I asked. "Not
really," she answered. "Although I have heard it said that over there
the witches are able to make the grown-ups eat their own children." "Never!"
I cried. "Oh no, Grandmamma! That couldn't be true!" "I
don't know whether it's true or not," she said. "It's only a rumour
I've heard." "But
how could they possibly make them eat their own children?" I asked. "By
turning them into hot-dogs," she said. "That wouldn't be too difficult
for a clever witch." "Does
every single country in the world have its witches?" I asked. "Wherever
you find people, you find witches," my grandmother said. "There is a
Secret Society of Witches in every country." "And
do they all know one another, Grandmamma?" "They
do not," she said. "A witch only knows the witches in her own country.
She is strictly forbidden to communicate with any foreign witches. But an
English witch, for example, will know all the other witches in England. They are
all friends. They ring each other up. They swop deadly recipes. Goodness knows
what else they talk about. I hate to think." I
sat on the floor, watching my grandmother. She put her cigar stub in the ashtray
and folded her hands across her stomach. "Once a year," she went on,
"the witches of each separate country hold their own secret meeting. They
all get together in one place to receive a lecture from The Grand High Witch Of
All The World." "From
who?" I cried. "She
is the ruler of them all," my grandmother said. "She is all-powerful.
She is without mercy. All other witches are petrified of her. They see her only
once a year at their Annual Meeting. She goes there to whip up excitement and
enthusiasm, and to give orders. The Grand High Witch travels from country to
country attending these Annual Meetings." "Where
do they have these meetings, Grandmamma?" "There
are all sorts of rumours," my grandmother answered. "I have heard it
said that they just book into an hotel like any other group of women who are
holding a meeting. I have also heard it said that some very peculiar things go
on in the hotels they stay in. It is rumoured that the beds are never slept in,
that there are burn marks on the bedroom carpets, that toads are discovered in
the bathtubs, and that down in the kitchen the cook once found a baby crocodile
swimming in his saucepan of soup." My
grandmother picked up her cigar and took another puff, inhaling the foul smoke
deeply into her lungs. "Where
does The Grand High Witch live when she's at home?" I asked. "Nobody
knows," my grandmother said. "If we knew that, then she could be
rooted out and destroyed. Witchophiles all over the world have spent their lives
trying to discover the secret Headquarters of The Grand High Witch." "What
is a witchophile, Grandmamma?" "A
person who studies witches and knows a lot about them," my grandmother
said. "Are
you a witchophile, Grandmamma?" "I
am a retired witchophile," she said. "I am too old to be active any
longer. But when I was younger, I travelled all over the globe trying to track
down The Grand High Witch. I never came even close to succeeding." "Is
she rich?" I asked. "She's
rolling," my grandmother said. "Simply rolling in money. Rumour has it
that there is a machine in her headquarters which is exactly like the machine
the government uses to print the bank-notes you and I use. After all, banknotes
are only bits of paper with special designs and pictures on them. Anyone can
make them who has the right machine and the right paper. My guess is that The
Grand High Witch makes all the money she wants and she dishes it out to witches
everywhere." "What
about foreign money?" I asked. "Those
machines can make Chinese money if you want them to," my grandmother
said. "It's only a question of pressing the right button." "But
Grandmamma," I said, "if nobody has ever seen The Grand High Witch,
how can you be so sure she exists?" My
grandmother gave me a long and very severe look. "Nobody has ever seen the
Devil," she said, "but we know he exists." The
next morning, we sailed for England and soon I was back in the old family house
in Kent, but this time with only my grandmother to look after me. Then the
Easter Term began and every weekday I went to school and everything seemed to
have come back to normal again. Now
at the bottom of our garden there was an enormous conker tree, and high up in
its branches Timmy (my best friend) and I had started to build a magnificent
tree-house. We were able to work on it only at the weekends, but we were getting
along fine. We had begun with the floor, which we built by laying wide planks
between two quite far-apart branches and nailing them down. Within a month, we
had finished the floor. Then we constructed a wooden railing around the floor
and that left only the roof to be built. The roof was the difficult bit. One
Saturday afternoon when Timmy was in bed with 'flu, I decided to make a start on
the roof all by myself. It was lovely being high up there in that conker tree,
all alone with the pale young leaves coming out everywhere around me. It was
like being in a big green cave. And the height made it extra exciting. My
grandmother had told me that if I fell I would break a leg, and every time I
looked down, I got a tingle along my spine. I
worked away, nailing the first plank on the roof. Then suddenly, out of the
corner of my eye, I caught sight of a woman standing immediately below me. She
was looking up at me and smiling in the most peculiar way. When most people
smile, their lips go out sideways. This woman's lips went upwards and downwards,
showing all her front teeth and gums. The gums were like raw meat. It
is always a shock to discover that you are being watched when you think you are
alone. And
what was this strange woman doing in our garden anyway? I
noticed that she was wearing a small black hat and she had black gloves on her
hands and the gloves came nearly up to her elbows. Gloves!
She was wearing gloves! I
froze all over. "I
have a present for you," she said, still staring at me, still smiling,
still showing her teeth and gums. I
didn't answer. "Come
down out of that tree, little boy," she said, "and I shall give you
the most exciting present you've ever had." Her voice had a curious rasping
quality. It made a sort of metallic sound, as though her throat was full of
drawing-pins. Without
taking her eyes from my face, she very a slowly put one of those gloved hands
into her purse and drew out a small green snake. She held it up for me to see. "It's
tame," she said. The
snake began to coil itself around her forearm. It was brilliant green. "If
you come down here, I shall give him to you," she said. Oh
Grandmamma, I thought, come and help me! Then
I panicked. I dropped the hammer and shot up that enormous tree like a monkey. I
didn't stop until I was as high as I could possibly go, and there I stayed,
quivering with fear. I couldn't see the woman now. There were layers and layers
of leaves between her and me. I
stayed up there for hours and I kept very still. It began to grow dark. At last,
I heard my grandmother calling my name. "I'm
up here," I shouted back. "Come
down at once!" she called out. "It's past your suppertime." "Grandmamma!"
I shouted. "Has that woman gone?" "What
woman?" my grandmother called back. "The
woman in the black gloves!" There
was silence from below. It was the silence of somebody who was too stunned to
speak. "Grandmamma!"
I shouted again. "Has she gone?" "Yes,"
my grandmother answered at last. "She's gone. I'm here, my darling. I'll
look after you. You can come down now." I
climbed down. I was trembling. My grandmother enfolded me in her arms.
"I've seen a witch," I said. "Come
inside," she said. "You'll be all right with me." She
led me into the house and gave me a cup of hot cocoa with lots of sugar in it.
"Tell me everything," she said. I
told her. By
the time I had finished, it was my grandmother who was trembling. Her face was
ashy grey and I saw her glance down at that hand of hers that didn't have a
thumb. "You know what this means," she said. "It means that there
is one of them in our district. From now on I'm not letting you walk alone to
school." "Do
you think she could be after me specially?" I asked. "No,"
she said. "I doubt that. One child is as good as any other to those
creatures." It
is hardly surprising that after that I became a very witch-conscious little boy.
If I happened to be alone on the road and saw a woman approaching who was
wearing gloves, I would quickly skip across to the other side. And as the
weather remained pretty cold during the whole of that month, nearly everybody
was wearing gloves. Curiously enough though, I never saw the woman with the
green snake again. That
was my first witch. But it wasn't my last. |
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