Authors: Rudyard Kipling
âBut you've 'ad your satisfactions?'
âGodd! Yess! Those four years 'e was workin' on the rail near us. An' the other drivers they gave him a brave funeral, too.'
âThen you've naught to cast-up about. âNother cup o' tea?'
The light and air had changed a little with the sun's descent, and the two elderly ladies closed the kitchen-door against chill. A couple of jays squealed and skirmished through the undraped apple-trees in the garden. This time, the word was with Mrs Ashcroft, her elbows on the tea-table, and her sick leg propped on a stoolâ¦
âWell I never! But what did your 'usband say to that?' Mrs Fettley asked, when the deep-toned recital halted.
â'E said I might go where I pleased for all of 'im. But seein' 'e was bedrid, I said I'd âtend 'im out. 'E knowed I wouldn't take no advantage of 'im in that state. 'E lasted eight or nine week. Then he was took with a seizure-like; an' laid stone-still for days. Then 'e propped âimself up abed an' says: “You pray no man'll ever deal with you like you've dealed with some.” “An' you?” I says, for
you
know, Liz, what a rover 'e was. “It cuts both ways,” says 'e, “but I'm death-wise, an' I can see what's comin' to you.” He died a-Sunday an' was buried a-Thursday⦠An' yet I'd set a heap by him â one time or â did I ever?'
âYou never told me that before,' Mrs Fettley ventured.
âI'm payin' ye for what ye told me just now. Him bein' dead, I wrote,
up, sayin' I was free for good, to that Mrs Marshall in Lunnon â which gave me my first place as kitchen-maid â Lord, how long ago! She was well pleased, for they two was both gettin' on, an' I knowed their ways. You remember, Liz, I used to go to 'em in service between whiles, for years â when we wanted money, or â or my 'usband was away â on occasion.'
â'E
did
get that six months at Chichester, didn't âe?' Mrs Fettley whispered. âWe never rightly won to the bottom of it.'
â'E'd ha' got more, but the man didn't die.'
â'None o' your doin's, was it, Gra'?'
âNo! 'Twas the woman's husband this time. An' so, my man bein' dead, I went back to them Marshall's, as cook, to get me legs under a gentleman's table again, and be called with a handle to me name. That was the year you shifted to Portsmouth.'
âCosham,' Mrs Fettley corrected. âThere was a middlin' lot o' new buildin' bein' done there. My man went first, an' got the room, an' I follered.'
âWell, then, I was a year-abouts in Lunnon, all at a breath, like, four meals a day an' livin' easy. Then, âlong towards autumn, they two went travellin', like, to France; keepin' me on, for they couldn't do without me. I put the house to rights for the caretaker, an' then I slipped down âere to me sister Bessie â me wages in me pockets, an' all âands glad to be'old of me.'
âThat would be when I was at Cosham,' said Mrs Fettley.
â
You
know, Liz, there wasn't no cheap-dog pride to folk, those days, no more than there was cinemas nor whisk-drives. Man or woman âud lay hold o' any job that promised a shillin' to the backside of it, didn't they? I was all peaked up after Lunnon, an' I thought the fresh airs âud serve me. So I took on at Smalldene, obligin' with a hand at the early potato-liftin, stubbin' hens, an' such-like. They'd ha' mocked me sore in my kitchen in Lunnon, to see me in men's boots, an' me petticoats all shorted.'
âDid it bring ye any good?' Mrs Fettley asked.
â'Twadn't for that I went. You know, âs'well's me, that na'un happens to ye till it '
as
âappened. Your mind don't warn ye before'and of the road ye've took, till you're at the far eend of it. We've only a backwent view of our proceedin's.'
â'Oo was it?'
â'Arry Mockler.' Mrs Ashcroft's face puckered to the pain of her sick leg.
Mrs Fettley gasped. â'Arry? Bert Mockler's son! An'
I
never guessed!'
Mrs Ashcroft nodded. âAn' I told myself â
an
' I beleft it â that I wanted field-work.'
âWhat did ye get out of it?'
âThe usuals. Everythin' at first â worse than naught after. I had signs an' warnings a-plenty, but I took no heed of 'em. For we was burnin' rubbish one day, just when we'd come to know how âtwas with â with both of us. 'Twas early in the year for burnin', an' I said so. “No!” says he. “The sooner dat old stuff's off an' done with,” 'e says, “the better.“ âIs face was harder'n rocks when he spoke. Then it come over me that I'd found me master, which I 'adn't ever before. I'd allus owned 'em, like.'
âYes! Yes! They're yourn or you're theirn,' the other sighed. âI like the right way best.'
âI didn't. But âArry did⦠âLong then, it come time for me to go back to Lunnon. I couldn't. I clean couldn't! So, I took an' tipped a dollop o' scaldin' water out o' the copper one Monday mornin' over me left âand and arm. Dat stayed me where I was for another fortnight.'
âWas it worth it?' said Mrs Fettley, looking at the silvery scar on the wrinkled fore-arm.
Mrs Ashcroft nodded. âAn' after that, we two made it up âtwixt us so's 'e could come to Lunnon for a job in a liv'ry-stable not far from me. 'E got it.
I
âtended to that. There wadn't no talk nowhere. His own mother never suspicioned how 'twas. He just slipped up to Lunnon, an' there we abode that winter, not âalf a mile âtother from each.'
âYe paid âis fare an' all, though'; Mrs Fettley spoke convincedly.
Again Mrs Ashcroft nodded. âDere wadn't much I didn't do for him. 'E was me master, an' â O God, help us! â we'd laugh over it walkin' together after dark in them paved streets, an' me corns fair wrenchin' in me boots! I'd never been like that before. Ner he! Ner he!'
Mrs Fettley clucked sympathetically.
âAn' when did ye come to the eend?' she asked.
âWhen 'e paid it all back again, every penny. Then I knowed, but I wouldn't
suffer
meself to know. “You've been mortal kind to me,” he says. “Kind!” I said. “'Twixt
us
?” But 'e kep' all on tellin' me âow kind I'd been an' âe'd never forget it all his days. I held it from off o' me for three evenin's, because I would
not
believe. Then 'e talked about not bein' satisfied with âis job in the stables, an' the men there puttin' tricks on 'im, an' all they lies which a man tells when âe's leavin' ye. I heard 'im out, neither âelpin' nor âinderin'. At the last, I took off a liddle brooch which he'd give me an' I says: “Dat'll do. I ain't askin' na'un'.” An' I turned me round an' walked off to me own sufferin's. 'e didn't make
'em worse. 'E didn't come nor write after that. 'E slipped off âere back 'ome to âis mother again.'
âAn' 'ow often did ye look for âen to come back?' Mrs Fettley demanded mercilessly.
âMore'n once â more'n once! Goin' over the streets we'd used, I thought de very pave-stones âud shruck out under me feet.'
âYes,' said Mrs Fettley. âI dunno but dat don't 'urt as much as aught else. An' dat was all ye got?'
âNo. âTwadn't. That's the curious part, if you'll believe it, Liz.'
âI do. I lay you're further off lyin' now than in all your life, Gra'.'
âI am⦠An' I suffered, like I'd not wish my most arrantest enemies to. God's Own Name! I went through the hoop that spring! One part of it was headaches which I'd never known all me days before. Think o'
me
with an âeddick! But I come to be grateful for 'em. They kep' me from thinkin'â¦'
â'Tis like a tooth,' Mrs Fettley commented. âIt must rage an' rugg
3
till it tortures itself quiet on ye; an' then â then there's na'un left.'
â
I
got enough lef to last me all
my
days on earth. It come about through our charwoman's liddle girl â Sophy Ellis was âer name â all eyes an' elbers an' hunger. I used to give âer vittles. Otherwhiles, I took no special notice of âer, an' a sight less, o' course, when me trouble about âArry was on me. But â you know how liddle maids first feel it sometimes â she come to be crazy-fond o' me, pawin' an' cuddlin' all whiles; an' I 'adn't the 'eart to beat âer off⦠One afternoon, early in spring 'twas, âer mother 'ad sent âer round to scutchel up what vittles she could off of us. I was settin' by the fire, me apern over me head, half-mad with the âeddick, when she slips in. I reckon I was middlin' short with âer. “Lor'!” she says. “Is
that
all? I'll take it off you in two-twos!” I told her not to lay a finger on me, for I thought she'd want to stroke my forehead; an' â I ain't that make. “I won't tech ye,” she says, an' slips out again. She 'adn't been gone ten minutes âfore me old âeddick took off quick as bein' kicked. So I went about my work. Prasin'ly, Sophy comes back, an' creeps into my chair quiet as a mouse. âEr eyes was deep in âer âead an' âer face all drawed. I asked âer what 'ad âappened. “Nothin',” she says. “On'y I've got it now.” “Got what?” I says. “Your âeddick,” she says, all hoarse an' sticky-lipped. “I've took it on me.” “Nonsense,” I says, “it went of itself when you was out. Lay still an' I'll make ye a cup o' tea.” “'Twon't do no good,” she says, “till your time's up. âOw long do
your
âeddicks last?” “Don't talk silly,” I says, “or I'll send for the Doctor.” It looked to me like she might be hatchin' de measles. “Oh, Mrs Ashcroft,” she says, stretchin' out âer liddle thin arms. “I
do
love ye.” There wasn't
any holdin' agin that. I took âer into me lap an' made much of âer. “Is it truly gone?” she says. “Yes,” I says, “an' if 'twas you took it away, I'm truly grateful.” “'
Twas
me,' she says, layin' âer cheek to mine. “No one but me knows how.” An' then she said she'd changed me âeddick for me at a Wish âOuse.'
âWhatt?' Mrs Fettley spoke sharply.
âA Wish House. No!
I
'adn't 'eard o' such things, either. I couldn't get it straight at first, but, puttin' all together, I made out that a Wish âOuse 'ad to be a house which 'ad stood unlet an' empty long enough for Some One, like, to come an in'abit there. She said, a liddle girl that she'd played with in the livery-stables where âArry worked 'ad told âer so. She said the girl 'ad belonged in a caravan that laid up, o' winters, in Lunnon. Gipsy, I judge.'
âOoh! There's no sayin' what Gippos know, but
I
' ve never 'eard of a Wish âOuse, an' I know â some things,' said Mrs Fettley.
âSophy said there was a Wish âOuse in Wadloes Road â just a few streets off, on the way to our green-grocer's. All you 'ad to do, she said, was to ring the bell an' wish your wish through the slit o' the letter-box. I asked âer if the fairies give it âer? “Don't ye know,” she says, “there's no fairies in a Wish âOuse? There's on'y a Token.”'
âGoo' Lord A'mighty! Where did she come by
that
word?' cried Mrs Fettley; for a Token is a wraith of the dead or, worse still, of the living.
âThe caravan-girl 'ad told âer, she said. Well, Liz, it troubled me to 'ear âer, an' lyin' in me arms she must ha' felt it. “That's very kind o' you,” I says, holdin' âer tight, “to wish me âeddick away. But why didn't ye ask somethin' nice for yourself?” “You can't do that,” she says. “All you'll get at a Wish âOuse is leave to take someone else's trouble. I've took Ma's âeadaches, when she's been kind to me; but this is the first time I've been able to do aught for you. Oh, Mrs Ashcroft, I
do
just-about love you.” An' she goes on all like that. Liz, I tell you my âair e'en a'most stood on end to 'ear âer. I asked âer what like a Token was. “I dunno,” she says, “but after you've ringed the bell, you'll 'ear it run up from the basement, to the front door. Then say your wish,” she says, “an' go away.” “The Token don't open de door to ye, then?” I says. “Oh no,” she says. “You on'y 'ear gigglin', like, be'ind the front door. Then you say you'll take the trouble off of 'oo ever 'tis you've chose for your love; an' ye'll get it,” she says. I didn't ask no more â she was too âot an' fevered. I made much of âer till it come time to light de gas, an' a liddle after that, âer âeddick â mine, I suppose â took off, an' she got down an' played with the cat.'
âWell, I never!' said Mrs Fettley. âDid â did ye foller it up, anyways?'
âShe askt me to, but I wouldn't 'ave no such dealin's with a child.'
âWhat
did
ye do, then?'
âSat in me own room âstid o' the kitchen when me âeddicks come on. But it lay at de back o' me mind.'
â'Twould. Did she tell ye more, ever?'
âNo. Besides what the Gippo girl 'ad told âer, she knew naught, âcept that the charm worked. An', next after that â in May 'twas â I suffered the summer out in Lunnon. 'Twas hot an' windy for weeks, an' the streets stinkin' o' dried âorse-dung blowin' from side to side an' lyin' level with the kerb. We don't get that nowadays. I 'ad my âol'day just before hoppin',
4
an' come down âere to stay with Bessie again. She noticed I'd lost flesh, an' was all poochy under the eyes.'
âDid ye see âArry?'
Mrs Ashcroft nodded. âThe fourth â no, the fifth day. Wednesday 'twas. I knowed 'e was workin' at Smalldene again. I asked âis mother in the street, bold as brass. She 'adn't room to say much, for Bessie â you know âer tongue â was talkin' full-clack. But that Wednesday, I was walkin' with one o' Bessie's chillern hangin' on me skirts, at de back o' Chanter's Tot. Prasin'ly, I felt 'e was be'ind me on the footpath, an' I knowed by âis tread âe'd changed âis nature. I slowed, an' I heard 'im slow. Then I fussed a piece with the child, to force him past me, like. So 'e â
ad
to come past. 'E just says “Good-evenin'”, and goes on, tryin' to pull âisself together.'