'Oh, aye? Hark at him! Just 'cuzye're up in the held, you think you know everythin'? Fra' doon here ye're nothing but dead weight, pal!'
'Aye, right! I'm wi' the elbows on this one! Where'dyou be if it wuzn'tfor us carryin' ye aroound? Who's ye think ye are?'
'I'm Rob Anybody Feegle, as you ken well enough, an' I've had enough o' the lot o' yezf 'OK, Rob, but it's real stuffy in here!'
'Ach, an' I'm fed up wi' the stomach complainin', too!'
'Gentlemen.' This was the voice of the toad; no one else would dream of calling the Nac Mac Feegle gentlemen. 'Gentlemen, time is of the essence. The cart will be here soon! You must not miss it!'
'We need more time to practise, Toad! We're walkin' like a feller wi' nae bones and a serious case o' the trots!' said a voice a little higher up than the rest. 'At least you are walking. That's good enough. I wish you luck, gentlemen.' There was a cry from further along the thickets, where a lookout had been watching the road. 'The cart's comin' doon the hill!'
'OK, lads!' shouted Rob Anybody. 'Toad, you look after Jeannie, y'hear? She'll need a thinkin' laddie to rely on while I'm no' here! Right, ye scunners! It's do or die! Ye ken
what to do! Ye lads on the ropes, pull us up noo!' The bushes shook. 'Right! Pelvis, are ye ready?'
'Aye, Rob!'
'Knees? Knees? I said, knees?'
'Aye, Rob, but-'
'Feets?'
'Aye, Rob!' The bushes shook again. 'Right! Remember: right, left, right, left! Pelvis, knee, foot on the groond! Keep a spring in the step, feets! Are you ready? Altogether, boys . . . walk!' It was a big surprise for Mr Crabber the carter. He'd been staring vaguely at nothing, thinking only of going home, when something stepped out of the bushes and into the road. It looked human or, rather, looked slightly more human than it looked like any- thing else. But it seemed to be having trouble with its knees, and walked as though they'd been tied together. However, the carter didn't spend too much time thinking about that because, clutched in one gloved hand that was waving vaguely in the air, was something gold. This immediately identified the stranger, as far as the carter was concerned. He was not, as first sight might suggest, some old tramp to be left by the roadside, but an obvious gentleman down on his luck, and it was practically the carter's duty to help him. He slowed the horse to a standstill. The stranger didn't really have a face. There was nothing much to see between the droopy hat brim and the turned-up collar of the coat except a lot of beard. But from somewhere within the beard a voice said: '. . . Shudupshudup . . . will ye all shudup while I'm talkin'. . . Ahem. Good day ta' ye, carter fellow my ol' fellowy fellow! If ye'll gie us - me a lift as far as ye are goin', we - I'll gie ye this fine shiny golden coin!' The figure lurched forward and thrust its hand in front of Mr Crabber's face. It was quite a large coin. And it was certainly gold. It had come from the treasure of the old dead king who was buried in the main part of the Feegles' mound. Oddly enough, the Feegles weren't hugely interested in gold once they'd stolen it, because you couldn't drink it and it was difficult to eat. In the mound, they mostly used the old coins and plates to reflect candlelight and give the place a nice glow. It was no hardship to give some away. The carter stared at it. It was more money than he had ever seen in his life. 'If... sir ... would like to ... hop on the back of the cart, sir,' he said, carefully taking it. 'Ach, right you are, then,' said the bearded mystery man after a pause. 'Just a moment, this needs a wee bitty organizin' . . . OK, youse hands, you just grab the side o' the cart, and' you leftie leg, ye gotta kinda sidle along . . . ach, crivens! Ye gotta bend! Bend! C'mon, get it right!' The hairy face turned to the carter. 'Sorry aboot this,' it said. T talk to my knees, but they dinnae listen to me.'
'Is that right?' said the carter weakly. 'I have trouble with my knees in the wet
weather. Goose grease works.'
'Ah, weel, these knees is gonna get more'n a greasin' if I ha' to get doon there an' sort them oot!' snarled the hairy man. The carter heard various bangs and grunts behind him as the man hauled himself onto the tail of the cart. 'OK, let's gae,' said a voice. 'We' havenae got all day. And youse knees, you're sacked! Crivens, I'm walkin' like I got a big touch of the stoppies! You gae up to the stomach and send doon a couple of good knee men!' The carter bit the coin thoughtfully as he urged the horse into a walk. It was such pure gold that he left toothmarks. That meant his passenger was very, very rich. That was becoming very important at this point. 'Can ye no' go a wee bitty faster, my good man, my good man?' said the voice behind him, after they had gone a little way. 'Ah, well, sir,' said the carter, 'see them boxes and crates? I've got a load of eggs, and those apples mustn't be bruised, sir, and then there's those jugs of-' There were some bangs and crashes behind him, including the sploosh that a large crate of eggs makes when it hits a road. 'Ye can gae faster noo, eh?' said the voice. 'Hey, that was my-' Mr Crabber began. 'I've got another one o' they big wee gold coins for ye!' And a heavy and smelly arm landed on the carter's shoulder. Dangling from the glove on the end of it was, indeed, another coin. It was ten times what the load had been worth. 'Oh, well. . .' said the carter, carefully taking the coin. 'Accidents do happen, eh, sir?'
'Aye, especially if I dinnae think I'm goin' fast enough,' said the voice behind him. 'We - I mean I'm in a big hurry tae get tae yon mountains, ye ken!'
'But I'm not a stagecoach, sir,' said the carter reproachfully as he urged his old horse into a trot. 'Stagecoach, eh? What's one o' them things?'
'That's what you'll need to catch to take you up into the mountains, sir. You can catch one in Twoshirts, sir. I never go any further than Twoshirts, sir. But you won't be able to get the stage today, sir.'
'Why not?'
'I've got to make stops at the other villages, sir, and it's a long way, and on Wednesdays it runs early, sir, and this cart can only go so fast, sir, and-'
'If we - I dinnae catch yon coach today I'll gi'e ye the hidin' o' yer life,' growled the passenger. 'But if I do catch yon coach today, I'll gie ye five o' them gold coins.' Mr Crabber took a deep breath, and yelled: 'Hi! Hyah! Giddyup, Henry!' All in all, it seemed to Tiffany, most of what witches did really was very similar to work. Dull work. Miss Level didn't even use her broomstick very much. That was a bit depressing. It was all a bit.. . well, goody-goody. Obviously that was better than being baddy-baddy, but a little more . . . excitement would be nice. Tiffany wouldn't like anyone to think she'd expected to be issued with a magic wand on Day One
but, well, the way Miss Level talked about magic, the whole point of witchcraft lay in not using any. Mind you, Tiffany thought she would be depressingly good at not using any. It was doing the simplest magic that was hard. Miss Level patiently showed her how to make a shamble, which could more or less be made of anything that seemed a good idea at the time provided it also contained something alive, like a beetle or a fresh egg. Tiffany couldn't even get the hang of it. That was . . . annoying. Didn't she have the virtual hat? Didn't she have First Sight and Second Thoughts? Miss Tick and Miss Level could throw a shamble together in seconds, but Tiffany just got a tangle, dripping with egg. Over and over again. 1 know I'm doing it right but it just twists up!' Tiffany complained. 'What can I do?'
done very well for hisself, you know,' said Mr Weavall, proudly. 'Got a job indoors with no heavy lifting. He said he'll see I all right in my old age, but I told him, I told him I'd pay my way when I go - the whole thing, the salt and earth and tuppence for the ferryman, too!' Today, Miss Level gave him a shave. His hands shook too much for him to do it himself. (Yesterday she'd cut his toenails, because he couldn't reach them; it was not
a safe spectator sport, especially when one smashed a windowpane.) 'It's all in a box under my chair,' he said as Tiffany nervously wiped the last bits of foam off him. 'Just check for me, will you, Mary?' Oh, yes. That was the ceremony, every day. There was the box, and there was the money. He asked every time. There was always the same amount of money. 'Tuppence for the ferryman?' said Tiffany, as they walked home. 'Mr Weavall remembers all the old funeral traditions,' said Miss Level. 'Some people believe that when you die you cross the River of Death and have to pay the ferryman. People don't seem to worry about that these days. Perhaps there's a bridge now.'
'He's always talking about. . . his funeral.'
'Well, it's important to him. Sometimes old people are like that. They'd hate people to think that they were too poor to pay for their own funeral. Mr Weavall'd die of shame if he couldn't pay for his own funeral.' It's very sad, him being all alone like that. Something should be done for him,' said Tiffany. 'Yes. We're doing it,' said Miss Level. 'And Mrs Tussy keeps a friendly eye on him.'
'Yes, but it shouldn't have to be us, should it?'
'Who should it have to be?' said Miss Level. 'Well, what about this son he's always talking about?' said Tiffany. 'Young Toby? He's been dead for fifteen years. And Mary was the old man's daughter, she died quite young. Mr Weavall is very short-sighted, but he sees better in the past.' Tiffany didn't know what to reply except: 'It shouldn't be like this.'
'There isn't a way things should be. There's just what happens, and what we do.'