Rosemary, who gathered it was mice that Mrs Walker could not abide, and not kippers, looked at Carbonel. He was tactfully keeping out of sight behind the horsehair sofa, but she could see that he had finished the saucer of milk and was looking as self-satisfied as if it had been a bowl of cream. He opened his great golden eyes and looked full at Rosemary, and could it be? She was not quite certain, but it almost seemed as if one eye flickered in a wink.
‘I shall never feel easy in that kitchen again,’ said Mrs Walker.
‘But it will be quite all right,’ said Rosemary. ‘You see, we did not get rid of my cat last night.’
‘We were going to see if we could find a home for him today,’ broke in Mrs Brown hurriedly.
Rosemary picked up Carbonel; it needed both arms.‘But isn’t it a good thing we’ve still got him? Because I’m sure he will get rid of your mice for you.’
‘I think you would find the very fact that there was a cat in the house would keep the mice away,’ said Mrs Brown.
‘Well, he’s a handsome animal, that I will say,’ said Mrs Walker. ‘You can keep him and welcome, if only he’ll get rid of the mice!’
‘Rosie, dear, take him down to the kitchen and leave him there…’
‘Yes, dearie, do! And I’ll give your mum a hand with her dirty crocks; I expect she wants to be getting off to work. I couldn’t stay in the kitchen while…’ Mrs Walker broke off and shuddered.
Carbonel had already struggled out of Rosemary’s arms and was standing expectantly by the door. As her mother said, he might have understood every word. She opened the door and he ran down the stairs so quickly that Rosemary had no time to fetch the broomstick. So it was an entirely one-sided conversation she held with him on the way down. Explanations would have to wait till later.
‘I don’t know how you did it, but it was very clever of you! And now you can stay with us for always and always! At least, until you have to go away. How glorious!’
They had reached the basement by now, where Mrs Walker lived with her husband. Carbonel was scratching impatiently at the kitchen door. Rosemary turned the handle and looked in. The noise of squeaking was deafening. There were mice all over the place; they were scuttering over the linoleum and running up and down the lace curtains that hid the dismal view of the dustbins in the yard. They were playing hide-and-seek in the rag rug on the hearth and nibbling the loaf that stood on the table. There was even one peering out of the Coronation mug that held the place of honour on the mantelpiece. Rosemary took all this in in a flash, and at the very same time she remembered something which in the excitement of the moment she had forgotten. She remembered the way in which cats generally get rid of mice. Surely Carbonel was not going to eat them? She shut the door hurriedly and retreated to the bottom step of the flight of stairs with her eyes tight shut and her fingers in her ears. Of course it was silly to expect a cat not to behave like a cat, even if he was a prince.‘All the same,’ thought Rosemary, ‘there must have been hundreds of them! It seems horrible, because he must have tricked them somehow into coming, and the one in the Coronation mug did look so sweet!’
It seemed hours before she plucked up enough courage to open her eyes and take her fingers from her ears, but really it was only a few minutes. There was complete silence; not a squeak was to be heard. Then from the other side of the door came a faint‘Mew’. She stood up and walked slowly to the door. Once they had had a cat who caught a mouse now and then. He would eat up every bit except the tail, and that he would present to her mother as a great prize. Would she find…? But wondering only made it worse. She took a deep breath and flung open the door. There was no sign of any movement, not a mouse was to be seen, but where the loaf of bread had been on the trencher were now only a few crumbs. Carbonel stalked past her slowly and with great dignity. Licking his whiskers he mounted the stairs as though it was rather an effort.
Mrs Walker was waiting for them.
‘You ’ave been quick, dearie! Has ’e done it?’
Rosemary nodded.
‘Thank you ever so! Well, it beats me how it happened. Not a mouse in fifteen years and then ’undreds!’
‘I have heard of mice moving in a body from some building which has been pulled down,’ said Mrs Brown.
‘Depend upon it, that’s it!’ said Mrs Walker. ‘Though why they have to pick on my house to come to I really do not see!’
‘It certainly is a most extraordinary thing,’ said Mrs Brown.
‘Oh well, I’ll be glad to have a cat around, Rosie, so I’ll feed ’im while you are gone. I ’ear you are going with your ma today. Well, I must get on with my old man’s kippers.’ And full of smiles Mrs Walker went downstairs.
‘It’s very odd,’ said Mrs Brown when she had gone, ‘but it could not have happened at a better time for us! Just look at that cat!’
Carbonel was lying on the hearthrug, looking so portly that it was not surprising that he seemed reluctant to curl up in his usual way. Rosemary wondered if perhaps he could not curl up if he wanted to. He lay stretched on his side, purring deeply.
‘You had better go and get ready,’ said Mrs Brown. ‘Put on your better sandals, the ones that have just been mended, and don’t forget a clean hankie.’
When Rosemary was holding the broomstick and could hear him talk she was always a little in awe of Carbonel, but now he was silent and sleeping like any hearthrug animal, so without any ceremony she scooped him up in her arms, too sleepy to struggle, and dropped him on her bed. Then she whirled to the wardrobe and fetched the broom.
‘How could you!’ she said, stamping her foot. ‘It was hateful of you!’ Carbonel opened his eyes sleepily, and his purr took on a deeper, slower note.
‘I’ve never had such a meal in my life,’ he said dreamily.
‘Did you eat them all?’ said Rosemary incredulously.
‘Heads, tails, and backbones,’ said Carbonel, ‘and left not a wrack behind! Shakespeare,’ he added graciously.
‘Then I think you ought to be ashamed of yourself! Just for your own ends to eat all those dozens of poor little mice!’
Carbonel opened his eyes very wide.
‘Who said anything about mice? It was the kippers I ate, two pairs of them. They were on the floor, and everyone knows that is where the cat’s food is put. If they weren’t put there on purpose I can’t help that. In any case it was the least she could do, putting me to all that trouble. I had to round up all the mice in Tottenham Grove and then explain what I wanted them to do. It took me all night. I didn’t touch a whisker of them,’ he said with righteous indignation. ‘I’d given them my word, hadn’t I? The only way I could get them to come was by promising a truce for six weeks. Oh, they drove a hard bargain, I can tell you. Six weeks without a mouse! It’s positive cruelty. Now run away and leave me to sleep it off.’ And he curled himself up like a foot-warmer.
Rosemary was filled with a wave of self-reproach. How could she have thought so badly of him? She bent down over the sleeping animal and whispered,‘I’m sorry I was so silly. Please forgive me.’
But there was no answer, so she put the broom in the wardrobe and tiptoed away.
8
Tussocks
[????????: _3.jpg]
By the time that Rosemary had arrived at Tussocks, Mrs Pendlebury Parker’s house, she had decided that she was not going to think about witches, or broomsticks, or anything magic at all for the whole day. It was really rather a relief. She wondered if the house would be anything like she had imagined it, and what the boy she would have to play with would be like.
The house turned out to be larger even than Rosemary had imagined. It had been built in the reign of Queen Victoria, so her mother said, by Mrs Pendlebury Parker’s grandfather, who had made a lot of money in cotton, and then moved to the south to try to forget how he had made it. The house had towers with blue slate roofs and battlements of stone and very bright red terracotta gargoyles all over the place. Although Mrs Brown said it was ugly, Rosemary thought it was beautiful, and would be a wonderful place to play in. They went to a side door where a cheerful-looking maid in a pink striped dress let them in.