A Hat Full Of Sky - Terry Pratchett [79]
“No, Mr. Weavall,” said Tiffany hoarsely.
“Oh, don’t cry, girl! The sun is shinin’, the birds is singin’, and what’s past can’t be mended, eh?” said Mr. Weavall jovially. “And the Widow Tussy is waitin’!”
For a moment he looked panicky, and then he cleared his throat.
“Don’t smell too bad, do I?” he said.
“Er…only of mothballs, Mr. Weavall.”
“Mothballs? Mothballs is okay. Right, then! Time’s a-wastin’!”
Using only the one stick, waving his other arm with the flowers in the air to keep his balance, Mr. Weavall set off with surprising speed.
“Well,” said Mistress Weatherwax as, with jacket flying, he rounded the corner. “That was nice, wasn’t it?”
Tiffany looked around quickly. Mistress Weatherwax was still nowhere to be seen, but she was somewhere to be unseen. Tiffany squinted at what was definitely an old wall with some ivy growing up it, and it was only when the old witch moved that she spotted her. She hadn’t done anything to her clothes, hadn’t done any magic as far as Tiffany knew, but she’d simply…faded in.
“Er, yes,” said Tiffany, taking out a handkerchief and blowing her nose.
“But it worries you,” said the witch. “You think it shouldn’t have ended like that, right?”
“No!” said Tiffany hotly.
“It would have been better if he’d been buried in some ol’ cheap coffin paid for by the village, you think?”
“No!” Tiffany twisted up her fingers. Mistress Weatherwax was sharper than a field of pins. “But…all right, it just doesn’t seem…fair. I mean, I wish the Feegles hadn’t done that. I’m sure I could have…sorted it out somehow, saved up…”
“It’s an unfair world, child. Be glad you have friends.”
Tiffany looked up at the treeline.
“Yes,” said Mistress Weatherwax. “But not up there.”
“I’m going away,” said Tiffany. “I’ve been thinking about it, and I’m going away.”
“Broomstick?” said Mistress Weatherwax. “It don’t move fast—”
“No! Where would I fly to? Home? I don’t want to take it there! Anyway, I can’t just fly off with it roaming around! When it…when I meet it, I don’t want to be near people, you understand? I know what I…what it can do if it’s angry! It half killed Miss Level!”
“And if it follows you?”
“Good! I’ll take it up there somewhere!” Tiffany waved at the mountains.
“All alone?”
“I don’t have a choice, do I?”
Mistress Weatherwax gave her a look that went on too long.
“No,” she said. “You don’t. But neither have I. That’s why I will come with you. Don’t argue, miss. How would you stop me, eh? Oh, that reminds me…them mysterious bruises Mrs. Towny gets is because Mr. Towny beats her, and the father of Miss Quickly’s baby is young Fred Turvey. You might mention that to Miss Level.”
As she spoke, a bee flew out of her ear.
Bait, thought Tiffany a few hours later, as they walked away from Miss Level’s cottage and up toward the high moors. I wonder if I’m bait, just like in the old days when the hunters would tether a lamb or a baby goat to bring the wolves nearer.
She’s got a plan to kill the hiver. I know it. She’s worked something out. It’ll come for me and she’ll just wave a hand.
She must think I’m stupid.
They had argued, of course. But Mistress Weatherwax had come up with a deeply unfair one. It was: You’re eleven. Just like that. You’re eleven, and what is Miss Tick going to tell your parents? Sorry about Tiffany, but we let her go off by herself to fight an ancient monster that can’t be killed and what’s left of her is in this jar?
Miss Level had joined in at that part, almost in tears.
If Tiffany hadn’t been a witch, she would have whined about everyone being so unfair!
In fact they were being fair. She knew they were being fair. They were not thinking just of her but of other people, and Tiffany hated herself—well, slightly—because she hadn’t. But it was sneaky of them to choose this moment