The Christmas Mouse (14 page)

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Authors: Miss Read

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BOOK: The Christmas Mouse
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Jane’s Christmas cracker had yielded a tiny spinning top that had numbers printed on it. When it came to rest,
after being twirled on the table, the number that was uppermost gave the spinner his score. This simple toy provided part of the evening’s play time, and all four played.

Later, Mrs Berry played Ludo with the children – a new game found in Frances’ pillow slip – while Mary wrote some thank-you letters. By seven o’clock both children were yawning, although they did their best to hide this weakness from the grown-ups. It would be terrible to miss anything on this finest day of the year.

‘Bed,’ said Mary firmly, and as the wails greeted her dictum, she relented enough to say: ‘You can take your toys upstairs and play with them for a little while.’

Within half an hour, they were safely in bed, and Mary and her mother sat down to enjoy the respite from the children’s clamour.

‘Why, there’s a new Christmas card!’ exclaimed Mrs Berry, her eye lighting on Mary’s from Ray.

Mary rose to fetch it from the mantelpiece and handed it to her mother.

‘Someone dropped it through the letterbox first thing this morning. I bumped into Ray yesterday when we were shopping and he helped us on to the bus with our parcels.’

‘Typical of the Bullens,’ commented Mrs Berry, studying the card with approval. ‘I knew his mother when she was young. A nice girl.’

Mary took a breath. This seemed as propitious a time as any other to mention the invitation.

‘There is a note somewhere. He has asked me to go to the New Year’s Eve concert. Would you mind? Looking after the girls, I mean?’

‘Good heavens, no! I’m glad to think of you getting out a little. You’ll enjoy an evening with Ray Bullen,’ said her mother easily.

Mrs Berry leaned back in the chair and closed her eyes. It had been a long day, and she was near to sleep. A jumble of impressions, bright fragments of the last twenty-four hours, jostled together in her tired mind like the tiny pieces of coloured glass in a child’s kaleidoscope.

Stephen’s mousey face, his pink hand spread like a starfish upon his knee, with a shining tear upon it. Her own shadow, poker in hand, monstrously large on the passage wall as she approached the unknown intruder. The furry scrap crouched on the windowsill with the wild weather beyond. Stephen’s resolute back, vanishing round the bend of the lane as he marched home. The reflection of the candles in her grandchildren’s eyes. The candles in the church – dozens of them today – and the sweet clear voices of the choir boys.

She woke with a jerk. The clock showed that she had slept for ten minutes. Her last impression still filled her mind.

‘It was lovely in church this morning,’ she said to Mary. ‘Flowers and candles, and the boys singing so sweetly. You should have come.’

‘I will next Sunday,’ Mary promised. ‘A New Year’s resolution, Mum.’

There was a quiet happiness about Mary that did not escape Mrs Berry’s eyes, but in her wisdom she said nothing.

Things, she knew in her bones, were falling, delicately and rightly, into place.

‘I’ll go and tuck up the girls,’ said Mrs Berry, struggling from her chair, ‘and switch off their light.’

She mounted the stairs and was surprised to see that both children were in her own room. They were kneeling on her bed, very busy with something on the windowsill.

They turned at her approach.

‘We’re just putting out a little supper for the Christmas mouse,’ explained Jane.

On the ledge was one of the doll’s tin willow pattern plates. Upon it were a few crumbs of Christmas cake and one or two holly berries.

‘They’re apples for him,’ said Frances. ‘When people call you should always offer them refreshment, Mummy says.’

Mrs Berry remembered the steaming bowl of bread and milk clutched against a duffel coat.

‘She’s quite right,’ she said, smiling at them. ‘But somehow I don’t think that mouse will come back.’

Stephen’s dwindling figure, striding away, came before her eyes. The children looked at her, suddenly forlorn. She offered swift comfort.

‘But I’m sure of one thing. That Christmas mouse will remember his visit here for the rest of his life.’

The rising moon silvered the roofs at Shepherds Cross and turned the puddles into mirrors. The sky was cloudless. Soon the frost would come, furring the grass and hedges, glazing the cattle troughs and water butts.

Dick Rose, at Tupps Hill, was glad to get back to the fireside after shutting up the hens for the night.

The table had been pushed back against the wall, and the
three children were crawling about the floor, engrossed in a clockwork train that rattled merrily around a maze of lines set all over the floor. Betty sat watching them, as delighted as they were with its bustling manoeuvres.

‘It’s only fell off once,’ said Stephen proudly, looking up at his foster father’s entrance.

‘Good,’ said Dick. He never wasted words.

‘Are you sad Father Christmas never brought you a watch?’ asked Patsy of Stephen.

Dick’s eyes met his wife’s. Patsy was still young enough to believe in the myth, and the boys had nobly resisted enlightening her.

Stephen turned dark eyes upon her.

‘Never thought about it,’ he lied bravely. ‘I’ve got all this, haven’t I?’

He picked up the little train, and held it, whirring, close to his face. He turned and smiled – the radiant warm smile of his lost father – upon his foster parents.

‘You’re a good kid,’ said Dick gruffly. ‘And your birthday ain’t far off.’

For the first time since Stephen’s tempestuous arrival, he thought suddenly, the boy seemed part of the family.

There was a stirring beneath the third bush in the hawthorn hedge. A sharp nose pushed aside the ground-ivy leaves, and the mouse emerged into the moonlight.

It paused, sniffing the chill air, then ran through the dry grass by the shed, negotiated the mossy step by the wellhead, and stopped to nibble a dried seed pod.

On it ran again, parting the crisp grass with its sinuous body, diving down ruts, scrambling up slopes, until it gained the wet earth behind the wallflower plants.

Between the plants and the brick wall of the cottage it scampered, until it reached the foot of the rosebush, where it stopped abruptly. Far, far above it, lights glowed from the windows.

A tremor shook its tiny frame. Its nose and whiskers quivered at the sense of danger, and it turned to double back on its tracks, away from the half-remembered terrors of an alien world.

It hurried out into the moonlight and made for the open field beyond the hawthorn hedge. There among the rimy grass and the sweet familiar scents, its panic subsided.

Nibbling busily, safely within darting distance of its hole, the Christmas mouse was at peace with its little world.

Miss Read, or in real life Dora Saint, was a teacher by profession who started writing after the Second World War, beginning with light essays written for
Punch
and other journals. She then wrote on educational and country matters and worked as a scriptwriter for the BBC. Miss Read was married to a schoolmaster for sixty-four years until his death in 2004, and they had one daughter.

Miss Read was awarded an MBE in the 1998 New Year Honours list for her services to literature. She was the author of many immensely popular books, including two autobiographical works, but it is her novels of English rural life for which she was best known. The first of these,
Village School
, was published in 1955, and Miss Read continued to write about the fictional villages of Fairacre and Thrush Green for many years. She lived near Newbury in Berkshire until her death in 2012.

Books by Miss Read

NOVELS

Village School
Village Diary
Storm in the Village
Thrush Green
Fresh from the Country
Winter in Thrush Green
Miss Clare Remembers
Over the Gate
The Market Square
Village Christmas
The Howards of Caxley
Fairacre Festival
News from Thrush Green
Emily Davis
Tyler’s Row
The Christmas Mouse
Farther Afield
Battles at Thrush Green
No Holly for Miss Quinn
Village Affairs
Return to Thrush Green
The White Robin
Village Centenary
Gossip from Thrush Green
Affairs at Thrush Green
Summer at Fairacre
At Home in Thrush Green
The School at Thrush Green
Mrs Pringle
Friends at Thrush Green
Changes at Fairacre
Celebrations at Thrush Green
Farewell to Fairacre
Tales from a Village School
The Year at Thrush Green
A Peaceful Retirement
Christmas at Thrush Green ANTHOLOGIES

Country Bunch
Miss Read’s Christmas Book
Mrs Griffin Sends Her Love OMNIBUSES

Chronicles of Fairacre
Life at Thrush Green
More Stories from Thrush Green
Further Chronicles of Fairacre
Christmas at Fairacre
A Country Christmas
Fairacre Roundabout
Tales from Thrush Green
Fairacre Affairs
Encounters at Thrush Green
The Caxley Chronicles
Farewell, Thrush Green
The Last Chronicle of Fairacre
Christmas with Miss Read NON-FICTION

Miss Read’s Country Cooking
Tiggy
The World of Thrush Green
Early Days (
comprising
A Fortunate Grandchild & Time Remembered)

Copyright

An Orion ebook

First published in Great Britain in 1973 by Michael Joseph
First appeared in ebook in
Christmas at Fairacre
published in 2010 by Orion Books
This ebook published in 2013 by Orion Books

Text copyright © Miss Read 1973
Illustrations copyright © John S. Goodall 1973

The right of Miss Read to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor to be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

All the characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN: 978-1-4091-4866-1

The Orion Publishing Group Ltd
Orion House
5 Upper Saint Martin’s Lane
London, WC2H 9EA

An Hachette UK company

www.orionbooks.co.uk

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