Home > The Ocean at the End of the Lane(3)

The Ocean at the End of the Lane(3)
Author: Neil Gaiman

    I liked that. Books were safer than other people      anyway.

    My parents had also given me a Best of Gilbert and      Sullivan LP, to add to the two that I already had. I had loved Gilbert and      Sullivan since I was three, when my father’s youngest sister, my aunt, took me      to see Iolanthe, a play filled with lords and fairies. I found the existence and      nature of the fairies easier to understand than that of the lords. My aunt had      died soon after, of pneumonia, in the hospital.

    That evening my father arrived home from work and      he brought a cardboard box with him. In the cardboard box was a soft-haired      black kitten of uncertain gender, whom I immediately named Fluffy, and which I      loved utterly and wholeheartedly.

    Fluffy slept on my bed at night. I talked to it,      sometimes, when my little sister was not around, half-expecting it to answer in      a human tongue. It never did. I did not mind. The kitten was affectionate and      interested and a good companion for someone whose seventh birthday party had      consisted of a table with iced biscuits and a blancmange and cake and fifteen      empty folding chairs.

    I do not remember ever asking any of the other      children in my class at school why they had not come to my party. I did not need      to ask them. They were not my friends, after all. They were just the people I      went to school with.

    I made friends slowly, when I made them.

    I had books, and now I had my kitten. We would be      like Dick Whittington and his cat, I knew, or, if Fluffy proved particularly      intelligent, we would be the miller’s son and Puss-in-Boots. The kitten slept on      my pillow, and it even waited for me to come home from school, sitting on the      driveway in front of my house, by the fence, until, a month later, it was run      over by the taxi that brought the opal miner to stay at my house.

    I was not there when it happened.

    I got home from school that day, and my kitten was      not waiting to meet me. In the kitchen was a tall, rangy man with tanned skin      and a checked shirt. He was drinking coffee at the kitchen table, I could smell      it. In those days all coffee was instant coffee, a bitter dark brown powder that      came out of a jar.

    “I’m afraid I had a little accident arriving here,”      he told me, cheerfully. “But not to worry.” His accent was clipped, unfamiliar:      it was the first South African accent I had heard.

    He, too, had a cardboard box on the table in front      of him.

    “The black kitten, was he yours?” he asked.

    “It’s called Fluffy,” I said.

    “Yeah. Like I said. Accident coming here. Not to      worry. Disposed of the corpse. Don’t have to trouble yourself. Dealt with the      matter. Open the box.”

    “What?”

    He pointed to the box. “Open it,” he said.

    The opal miner was a tall man. He wore jeans and      checked shirts every time I saw him, except the last. He had a thick chain of      pale gold around his neck. That was gone the last time I saw him, too.

    I did not want to open his box. I wanted to go off      on my own. I wanted to cry for my kitten, but I could not do that if anyone else      was there and watching me. I wanted to mourn. I wanted to bury my friend at the      bottom of the garden, past the green-grass fairy ring, into the rhododendron      bush cave, back past the heap of grass cuttings, where nobody ever went but      me.

    The box moved.

    “Bought it for you,” said the man. “Always pay my      debts.”

    I reached out, lifted the top flap of the box,      wondering if this was a joke, if my kitten would be in there. Instead a ginger      face stared up at me truculently.

    The opal miner took the cat out of the box.

    He was a huge, ginger-striped tomcat, missing half      an ear. He glared at me angrily. This cat had not liked being put in a box. He      was not used to boxes. I reached out to stroke his head, feeling unfaithful to      the memory of my kitten, but he pulled back so I could not touch him, and he      hissed at me, then stalked off to a far corner of the room, where he sat and      looked and hated.

    “There you go. Cat for a cat,” said the opal miner,      and he ruffled my hair with his leathery hand. Then he went out into the hall,      leaving me in the kitchen with the cat that was not my kitten.

    The man put his head back through the door. “He’s      called Monster,” he said.

    It felt like a bad joke.

    I propped open the kitchen door, so the cat could      get out. Then I went up to the bedroom, and lay on my bed, and cried for dead      Fluffy. When my parents got home that evening, I do not think my kitten was even      mentioned.

    Monster lived with us for a week or more. I put cat      food in the bowl for him in the morning and again at night as I had for my      kitten. He would sit by the back door until I, or someone else, let him out. We      saw him in the garden, slipping from bush to bush, or in trees, or in the      undergrowth. We could trace his movements by the dead blue-tits and thrushes we      would find in the garden, but we saw him rarely.

    I missed Fluffy. I knew you could not simply      replace something alive, but I dared not grumble to my parents about it. They      would have been baffled at my upset: after all, if my kitten had been killed, it      had also been replaced. The damage had been made up.

    It all came back and even as it came back I knew it      would not be for long: all the things I remembered, sitting on the green bench      beside the little pond that Lettie Hempstock had once convinced me was an      ocean.

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