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Authors: Eva Ibbotson

BOOK: The Dragonfly Pool
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“No one knows except Daley and Matteo, so you mustn't tell.”
“I won't say anything. But if she's your mother . . . you mean you miss her during term time? I miss my father but—”
“No. I miss her all the time; I don't see her even on the holidays. Well, hardly ever—just in secret places for a very short time. I'm too old, you see. I'm nearly thirteen, and it wouldn't do for her to have a daughter my age. She's supposed to be twenty-five, so I have to be kept out of the way, but I just want to be able to be with her. I love her so much.”
Tally knew what she should have done next—sat quietly beside Julia and let her talk—but she couldn't. She got to her feet and collected the largest stones she could find and hurled them one by one into the river. Except that in her mind it wasn't stones she was throwing, it was Gloria Grantley she was sending into the swirling, icy water. Gloria with her pout and her bosom and her fluttering eyelashes, who was too busy being famous to acknowledge her daughter.
It was a while before she could come back to comfort her friend.
“I expect it's just as hard for her. She must long to be with you, but I expect it's her manager who told her she has to be careful.”
Julia looked at her with gratitude. “Yes—he says it's only while her contract lasts. Then when she's saved lots of money she can retire and we can be together.” She looked wistfully at Tally. “There's another performance at five o'clock. I'm going to stay for it—even if I get into trouble. Will you tell Magda? ”
Tally sighed. “I'll stay with you,” she said. “You shouldn't go home by yourself in the dark.”
The thought of another two hours of the swan-necked Gloria was appalling. But at least she'd get another look at the brave king of Bergania, not to mention the prince-under-plumes.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Biology at Dawn
D
r. Hamilton was reading the latest letter from his daughter:
We had our first biology class with Matteo today. Only it wasn't a class really. It was a sort of walk . . . or an exploration . . . or an expedition. It was like being hunters on a trail and having your eyes sharpened with special drops so that you saw things that you didn't think you could see and yet they had been there all the time.
Matteo is tall with broad shoulders and very dark hair and eyes. He looks foreign and he is—he has a slight accent and his voice is very deep. He can look quite scary but he has a very funny laugh. I'm not describing him well because he isn't really like anybody else I've met. And the biology class wasn't like anything I'd imagined either.
For one thing it started at four o'clock in the morning. You wouldn't think a class could start then, would you, but Matteo's classes start at whatever time he thinks we will see the things he wants to show us.
So I was woken by him walking down the corridors and opening our bedroom doors and saying, “Out”—and then we were all huddled in the courtyard, trying to wake up.
But we didn't stay huddled for long because as we followed him into the copse where the path goes down to the river we were greeted by the most incredible noise! I'd read about the Dawn Chorus, but I thought it was just a gentle twittering. I didn't realize that while I was asleep all the birds in England were singing their heads off.
Matteo made us stop to listen but actually he didn't have to make us—it was so beautiful we couldn't help listening. He didn't tell us the names of the birds—it was about listening not identifying. Barney told me later that there were thrushes and robins and warblers and wrens—but I heard them like instruments in an orchestra, each one distinct and separate but joining up to make a marvelous whole.
Then we went on through the wood and no one said a word. If anyone starts talking when they're out with Matteo he bites their head off.
It was getting lighter now, and when we came to a boulder lying on the side of the path, Matteo stopped and said, “Well? What do you expect to find?”
All the others stood around and Barney said, “Snails' eggs,” and Tod said, “Centipedes,” and Julia said, “Wood lice,” and Matteo nodded and said, “Anything else?” and when no one said anything he said, “What about the humidity?” and one of the other boys said, “Violet ground beetles,” and Matteo said, “And a sheltering toad perhaps?”
So then he turned the stone over—and all the things were there, and I know it sounds silly but he made us all so pleased—I suppose because he was so pleased himself. It was as though what was under the stone was a splendid present that God or whoever does these things had put there for us. Then he put the stone back—putting things back is the core of fieldwork, he says. And we walked on a bit farther and crossed a paddock, and he bent down to a tuft of rough grass by a hedge and parted it very carefully, because he said it was the sort of place where there might be a field-vole's nest but there might not.
Only of course there was. Right at the base of the tussock was a round ball of chopped grass like a tennis ball and inside were three tiny squirming babies as pink and bald as sugar mice. We had to look at them very very quickly so that they wouldn't get disturbed, but I think I'll always remember them—they were so small but so alive.
The river is about twenty minutes' walk from the school, and we have to ask permission to go there without an adult because the current is quite fast in places. It's a really beautiful river, with banks full of balsam and bluebells everywhere, and there are sandy coves. We went to a place where there is an island which you can reach because a beech tree has fallen across from the bank. When we got to the island we had to lie down in the grass and be absolutely silent, and being absolutely silent didn't just mean not talking; it meant more than that.
We lay there for a while and nothing happened and then there was a silver flash and a fish jumped out of the water and made a great arc . . . and behind the fish—we could see it quite clearly now—were two otters.
I've never seen otters before. They are amazing—so swift and so . . . graceful but funny, too. It was a mother and a nearly full-grown cub and they started rolling over and over in the water, trying to grab the fish, and at first they lost it and there was a lot of splashing, but then they caught it and swam with it to a big flat rock in the water and settled down to their meal.
But it was what came next that I liked so much.
When they'd finished eating the fish they swam back to the shore and started grooming themselves. They licked their fur and they polished their heads on each other and they went on rolling and polishing, till they were quite dry and fluffy, and only then did they dive back into the water and swim away.
We were there a long time because the otters were like people one was visiting and one didn't want to leave them.
There was more we saw on the way back: a woodpecker, very close to, and a buzzard. It was as though Matteo knew where everything was—he would just go there and wait and there it was—and he said that we had to remember that everywhere was somebody's home and tread respectfully and reverently.
You might think it wasn't proper science, it was just a nature walk, but it wasn't like that. When we got back we wrote down the date and the temperature of the water in the river and the exact location of the field-vole nest and I don't feel that I will ever forget what I saw. Not ever.
 
When he had read Tally's letter through twice and taken it upstairs to the aunts, Dr. Hamilton made his way to the surgery. He walked with a light step, ready for the question his patients always asked about his daughter.
“Tally is well,” he would tell them. “Tally is very well indeed.”
CHAPTER NINE
Trash Cans and a Festival
T
he term, which had begun slowly, suddenly seemed to gather speed. Armelle stopped asking the children to be forks and told them to become victims of the bubonic plague. Josie sent them out to collect bunches of motherwort, which they had to boil up in a vat.
Clemmy gave an art class in which she told them about a Spanish painter called Goya, who fell ill and became deaf and rather mad and shut himself up in a gloomy house away from everybody and people thought the poor old man was finished—but afterward they found that he had covered all the walls of his house with strange, dark pictures. Then she drew the blinds in the art room and told the children to select their paints without turning on the light, and they grumbled and fussed—and found that they had made paintings in colors they hardly knew existed. The next day she retired to the kitchen and made pancakes for the whole school.
Magda allowed Tally to froth up her cocoa with the whisk sent by the aunts, but she lost page thirty-two of her book on Schopenhauer and became troubled again. As spring turned to early summer and some of the other children began to go barefoot, Verity took to wearing shoes.
And Matteo solved the problem of Borro's snails in two minutes.
“They're the wrong kind. Edible snails are
Helix pomatia
—these are
Cepaea hortensis
.”
And he suggested that Borro should tip them out and let them go, which Borro did.
Tally's first tutorial with Matteo took place in his room, which was not in the main building but above the row of workshops behind the gym. It was reached by an outside staircase and had the look of a mountain hut: very plain, with wooden walls, a scrubbed table, a narrow bed, and a case full of books in various languages. The sackbut lay on a chair; it looked like a battered trombone and far too harmless to make such a howling and melancholy sound.
“Come and sit down,” he said.
He had come straight from taking a fencing class; his foils and mask were propped up in a corner and Tally looked at them wistfully.
“Could anyone take fencing?” she asked. “Could I?”
“Next year would be better,” said Matteo. “You're still rather young.”
Tally nodded, accepting this. “I really liked your biology lesson. I liked it so much. I always thought science would be different—sort of cold and impersonal—but it isn't, is it? It's all part of the same thing. My father tried to make me see that, but I didn't listen properly.”
“Listening is one of the most difficult things.”
He talked to her for a while about the river and what else might be seen in it later that year. Then he said, “But what about you personally? Your problems.” He smiled. “Tutors are for problems, you know.”
“Yes. Well, I do have problems. There's Magda, you see. I found her crying on the first day about Germany and Heribert and I can't do anything about that, but now she's worrying again and it's about the blackout curtains and Magda can't sew. Of course, there may not be a war, but if there is we're going to need an awful lot of them. So I think we should find some way of helping her so that she can get on with her book and stop the pages flying about so much, but I haven't been here very long and I'm not sure how to do it. Could it be part of the domestic work we do before school?”
“I don't see why not. That would be a way of doing it which would not upset her, and I'm sure you could manage it.”
“And there's Kit,” Tally went on. “Of course, he can be very annoying, but he does so very much want to play cricket. I don't know anything about it—we didn't play it at my convent—but I thought . . . there's the high school at St. Agnes and they do play cricket—I asked Daisy who I do housework with, and she says they do; her brother goes there. So couldn't Kit go there one afternoon a week, maybe?”

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