Still more of them witnessed the next scene. When we led Annabel into the field, she hid behind us, Monarch tried to get round us to look at her, and the lot of us – since as fast as we sidestepped evasively so did Annabel behind us and so did Monarch in front – did a veleta across the field.
Roused, no doubt, by banging on one another's doors, a crowd that would have done credit to a town crier witnessed the scene when we ran to encourage Annabel, Monarch ran too to catch us up, and, encircled with animals like an Indian attack, we went flat out for our lives.
Eventually we left them together, however. Eventually they touched noses and made friends. Magically, with Annabel feeding beside him and he looking proudly down at her, Monarch started to graze. She could sleep soundly tonight now, said Mrs Jennings, as we slipped off up the lane.
Not perhaps so soundly as she hoped. Somebody passing our cottage later that evening reported Monarch and Annabel going round their paddock like the Valkyries. Somebody else, passing our way at closing time, reported Mrs Jennings and her husband going like Valkyries too. Trying to catch them, they said – for one of the conditions we'd made about lending Annabel was that she should be locked in for safety at night. They'd caught them. Led them in. Annabel first, reported the onlooker; Monarch refused to move a step till he'd seen Annabel put into a loose box ahead of him. Let them out the next morning, continued the report, when Annabel was seen heading through the vegetable garden as her personal short cut to the paddock and Monarch gallivanting after her.
Gallivanting was the word. The whole of that day, apparently, he never stopped chasing Annabel. Whether – which was something we hadn't given thought to – it was because she was a girl. In which case, said Charles, her marriage to Henry was no doubt null and void but in the course of time we could expect a donkey foal with legs like a racehorse. Whether, which was the Jennings' interpretation, she was just too small for Monarch... From the point of view of playing, explained Mrs. Jennings – with those little legs and that long coat and Monarch chasing her round like a puppy.
But that night they brought her back again. Monarch was eating like a horse, they said, thanks to her. To keep up the good work they'd borrowed a companion for him more his own size and now he was chasing that one round the field...
Never, in all the time we'd had her, had we seen a more thoughtful donkey than the one who walked into her house that night, looked appreciatively at her bed, and snorted with contentment as we put her hurdle up. East, West, Home Was Best, said Annabel as she lay down in the straw. She didn't like racehorses, she said as we crept quietly away with the cats.
Postscript
So there, for the moment, we are. The one thing we have learned from our year of donkey keeping is that donkeys don't eat nettles. Not straight from the field, anyway. Only when they are cut down and wilted so the sting doesn't hurt their mouths, said an expert who told us about it one day. And wasn't that reasonable, when one came to consider it?
Perfectly. Except that Annabel – put at last among the fruit trees, with the bracken removed, cages round the apples (better, we thought, than a cage around Annabel), the nettles cut and wilted and nothing to do but pick them up – didn't eat the nettles. She ate all the raspberry canes. Prickles and all, announced Charles, arriving starkly with the news that she'd mown them all to the ground. And then we moved her to another patch of ground and she ate our cultivated hollies. Prickles and all too, until all that remained of months of cherishing by Charles were two little main-stems with the labels fluttering like distress signals from their tops. Got mixed up with the Dandelions, was Annabel's explanation.
That is why, when she is out of her paddock now, she usually has Charles in attendance. Keeping an eye on her while he works to prevent further misunderstandings about dandelions. Unless, of course, she is on the lawn under my jurisdiction. Chasing Solomon and Sheba, who play Donkeys and Indians with her willingly for the perturbation of passers-by. Greeting the tradesmen, who grow nimbler day by day at nipping backwards through the gate with Annabel's nose in their baskets. Clattering into the kitchen for refreshment, which has led to a further discovery. That Annabel likes liquor.
She likes, at any rate, the top off fermenting barley wine. Nectar, commented Annabel when I experimentally offered her the skimmings. Nourishing, she announced, practically knocking the table over in her anxiety to have some more. It took two of us to get her back to the paddock that night, and she ate my tape-measure as she went.
We have very peculiar cats. We now have a peculiar donkey.
Any bets, asks Charles, that come October we have another peculiar member of the household? About two feet high with a liking for barley wine? With ears and a voice like Annabel?
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