It
was dark and from inside the warmth of the covers over me as I lay in
my cot, kept all safe and secured against escape by the bars of its
sides - like most two year olds, I was not a voluntary inmate of a
bed but needed to be imprisoned there – thus it was from inside
that cocooned warmth that I heard a kerfuffle of voices outside and
the clicking of the front gate. There were few sounds at night where
I lay, 'cept those of the countryside, each clear and sharp for the
lack of the background hums and roars that so drown out distinct
noises in towns; mostly the hoots and screeches of owls, or calls of
foxes, the sudden sounds of wings, or the moans of the wind in the
trees. The house had its own distinct creaks and groans as the old
timber frame of which it was made settled, but these were all
familiar for I had known them since my first days.
Voices,
footsteps on the path: my father's voice, my mother's voice. Then the
closing of the heavy front door, creaking as it swung its studded oak
on its old hinges and the resounding whoomp as it married back into
its frame and the clunk as heavy latch dropped into place.
Some
more voices downstairs. My brother, so much older than I and still up
on this dark night, but still only a child. My cousin Anne, grown and
a working girl in an office, a typing pool, whatever that was. She
did look surprisingly dry each evening so I suppose the pool cannot
have been that deep – even her shoes seemed dry. Not, so not like
me when I went outside. My boots got so wet and muddy that they stuck
and my feet came out of them. The the mud went all squidgy up between
my toes making my socks all wet and sticky and I would fall over head
first into the tractor ruts and get up all covered. That is what
happened to people who went outside. If I went near the duck pond it
got even muddier and even more slippy and I would get even more
covered. How she could keep so dry in her pool, which must be
something so much deeper than the duck pond, which I was not supposed
to go near, and which I promised not to go near, even when the ducks
ran off there when I chased them, which I did because it was what the
boy on the salt did – if you don't believe me look at the picture
on the box of Cerebos salt and believe me that ducks run much faster
than two year old boys – how she did keep so dry and clean in her
pool I had no idea. It must have been something to do with the ty
ping. Perhaps it was a bit like a very big version of the tie-pin
that my father wore. Perhaps it was some sort of pin that you stood
on over the pool that meant that even your feet were dry.
It
was her voice down stairs with the other voices, all excited and
high.
Then
the voices went quiet.
In
a while the latch of my bedroom door clicked and softly it opened
revealing the halo of light that came from the candle that my mother
held in one hand to light her way. Her other arm was cradled around
something. Softly she came over to my cot holding whatever it was
quite close to her.
“David”
she said, “Look what I have got here. Some boys just dropped it
over the gate. They said they had found it trying to keep warm in the
ashes of a fire in the woods and that I would know how to look after
it.”
It
did smell of wood smoke.
It
did look very small and fluffy.
It
made a faint whimpering sound.
My
mother lowered it into my cot so that I could see it.
It
wriggled.
I
touched it and it was soft.
Its
little mouth closed over my fingers and there were needle like little
teeth.
It snuffled.
It snuffled.
“We
shall call it Waife” said my mother “Because it is a little waif
and stray that has come to us. When it is bigger and stronger you can
play with it, but for now I must keep it warm and feed it with a
dropper.”
“Feed
it what?” I asked
“Condensed
milk” she said.
It
was Christmas Eve and Waife was the best Christmas present ever. Not
planned, but soon to be my playmate as we both grew strong and bigger
that following spring and summer.
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