Home > The Ocean at the End of the Lane(6)

The Ocean at the End of the Lane(6)
Author: Neil Gaiman

    The girl went, with the policeman, over to my      father, and she got permission to take me away, and then I was walking down the      lane with her.

    I said, “There is a dead man in our car.”

    “That’s why he came down here,” she told me. “The      end of the road. Nobody’s going to find him and stop him around here, three      o’clock in the morning. And the mud there is wet and easy to mold.”

    “Do you think he killed himself?”

    “Yes. Do you like milk? Gran’s milking Bessie      now.”

    I said, “You mean, real milk from a cow?” and then      felt foolish, but she nodded, reassuringly.

    I thought about this. I’d never had milk that      didn’t come from a bottle. “I think I’d like that.”

    We stopped at a small barn where an old woman, much      older than my parents, with long gray hair, like cobwebs, and a thin face, was      standing beside a cow. Long black tubes were attached to each of the cow’s      teats. “We used to milk them by hand,” she told me. “But this is easier.”

    She showed me how the milk went from the cow down      the black tubes and into the machine, through a cooler and into huge metal      churns. The churns were left on a heavy wooden platform outside the barn, where      they would be collected each day by a lorry.

    The old lady gave me a cup of creamy milk from      Bessie the cow, the fresh milk before it had gone through the cooler. Nothing I      had drunk had ever tasted like that before: rich and warm and perfectly happy in      my mouth. I remembered that milk after I had forgotten everything else.

    “There’s more of them up the lane,” said the old      woman, suddenly. “All sorts coming down with lights flashing and all. Such a      palaver. You should get the boy into the kitchen. He’s hungry, and a cup of milk      won’t do a growing boy.”

    The girl said, “Have you eaten?”

    “Just a piece of toast. It was burned.”

    She said, “My name’s Lettie. Lettie Hempstock. This      is Hempstock Farm. Come on.” She took me in through the front door, and into      their enormous kitchen, sat me down at a huge wooden table, so stained and      patterned that it looked as if faces were staring up at me from the old      wood.

    “We have breakfast here early,” she said. “Milking      starts at first light. But there’s porridge in the saucepan, and jam to put in      it.”

    She gave me a china bowl filled with warm porridge      from the stovetop, with a lump of homemade blackberry jam, my favorite, in the      middle of the porridge, then she poured cream on it. I swished it around with my      spoon before I ate it, swirling it into a purple mess, and was as happy as I      have ever been about anything. It tasted perfect.

    A stocky woman came in. Her red-brown hair was      streaked with gray, and cut short. She had apple cheeks, a dark green skirt that      went to her knees, and Wellington boots. She said, “This must be the boy from      the top of the lane. Such a business going on with that car. There’ll be five of      them needing tea soon.”

    Lettie filled a huge copper kettle from the tap.      She lit a gas hob with a match and put the kettle onto the flame. Then she took      down five chipped mugs from a cupboard, and hesitated, looking at the woman. The      woman said, “You’re right. Six. The doctor will be here too.”

    Then the woman pursed her lips and made a tchutch!      noise. “They’ve missed the note,” she said. “He wrote it so carefully too,      folded it and put it in his breast pocket, and they haven’t looked there      yet.”

    “What does it say?” asked Lettie.

    “Read it yourself,” said the woman. I thought she      was Lettie’s mother. She seemed like she was somebody’s mother. Then she said,      “It says that he took all the money that his friends had given him to smuggle      out of South Africa and bank for them in England, along with all the money he’d      made over the years mining for opals, and he went to the casino in Brighton, to      gamble, but he only meant to gamble with his own money. And then he only meant      to dip into the money his friends had given him until he had made back the money      he had lost.

    “And then he didn’t have anything,” said the woman,      “and all was dark.”

    “That’s not what he wrote, though,” said Lettie,      squinting her eyes. “What he wrote was,

    “To all my friends,

    “Am so sorry it was not like I meant to and hope      you can find it in your hearts to forgive me for I cannot forgive myself.”

    “Same thing,” said the older woman. She turned to      me. “I’m Lettie’s ma,” she said. “You’ll have met my mother already, in the      milking shed. I’m Mrs. Hempstock, but she was Mrs. Hempstock before me, so she’s      Old Mrs. Hempstock. This is Hempstock Farm. It’s the oldest farm hereabouts.      It’s in the Domesday Book.”

    I wondered why they were all called Hempstock,      those women, but I did not ask, any more than I dared to ask how they knew about      the suicide note or what the opal miner had thought as he died. They were      perfectly matter-of-fact about it.

    Lettie said, “I nudged him to look in the breast      pocket. He’ll think he thought of it himself.”

    “There’s a good girl,” said Mrs. Hempstock.      “They’ll be in here when the kettle boils to ask if I’ve seen anything unusual      and to have their tea. Why don’t you take the boy down to the pond?”

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)