Home > The Ocean at the End of the Lane(7)

The Ocean at the End of the Lane(7)
Author: Neil Gaiman

    “It’s not a pond,” said Lettie. “It’s my ocean.”      She turned to me and said, “Come on.” She led me out of the house the way we had      come.

    The day was still gray.

    We walked around the house, down the cow path.

    “Is it a real ocean?” I asked.

    “Oh yes,” she said.

    We came on it suddenly: a wooden shed, an old      bench, and between them, a duck pond, dark water spotted with duckweed and lily      pads. There was a dead fish, silver as a coin, floating on its side on the      surface.

    “That’s not good,” said Lettie.

    “I thought you said it was an ocean,” I told her.      “It’s just a pond, really.”

    “It is an ocean,” she said. “We came across it when      I was just a baby, from the old country.”

    Lettie went into the shed and came out with a long      bamboo pole, with what looked like a shrimping net on the end. She leaned over,      carefully pushed the net beneath the dead fish. She pulled it out.

    “But Hempstock Farm is in the Domesday Book,” I      said. “Your mum said so. And that was William the Conqueror.”

    “Yes,” said Lettie Hempstock.

    She took the dead fish out of the net and examined      it. It was still soft, not stiff, and it flopped in her hand. I had never seen      so many colors: it was silver, yes, but beneath the silver was blue and green      and purple and each scale was tipped with black.

    “What kind of fish is it?” I asked.

    “This is very odd,” she said. “I mean, mostly fish      in this ocean don’t die anyway.” She produced a horn-handled pocketknife,      although I could not have told you from where, and she pushed it into the      stomach of the fish, and sliced along, toward the tail.

    “This is what killed her,” said Lettie.

    She took something from inside the fish. Then she      put it, still greasy from the fish-guts, into my hand. I bent down, dipped it      into the water, rubbed my fingers across it to clean it off. I stared at it.      Queen Victoria’s face stared back at me.

    “Sixpence?” I said. “The fish ate a sixpence?”

    “It’s not good, is it?” said Lettie Hempstock.      There was a little sunshine now: it showed the freckles that clustered across      her cheeks and nose, and, where the sunlight touched her hair, it was a coppery      red. And then she said, “Your father’s wondering where you are. Time to be      getting back.”

    I tried to give her the little silver sixpence, but      she shook her head. “You keep it,” she said. “You can buy chocolates, or sherbet      lemons.”

    “I don’t think I can,” I said. “It’s too small. I      don’t know if shops will take sixpences like these nowadays.”

    “Then put it in your piggy bank,” she said. “It      might bring you luck.” She said this doubtfully, as if she were uncertain what      kind of luck it would bring.

    The policemen and my father and two men in brown      suits and ties were standing in the farmhouse kitchen. One of the men told me he      was a policeman, but he wasn’t wearing a uniform, which I thought was      disappointing: if I were a policeman, I was certain, I would wear my uniform      whenever I could. The other man with a suit and tie I recognized as Doctor      Smithson, our family doctor. They were finishing their tea.

    My father thanked Mrs. Hempstock and Lettie for      taking care of me, and they said I was no trouble at all, and that I could come      again. The policeman who had driven us down to the Mini now drove us back to our      house, and dropped us off at the end of the drive.

    “Probably best if you don’t talk about this to your      sister,” said my father.

    I didn’t want to talk about it to anybody. I had      found a special place, and made a new friend, and lost my comic, and I was      holding an old-fashioned silver sixpence tightly in my hand.

    I said, “What makes the ocean different to the      sea?”

    “Bigger,” said my father. “An ocean is much bigger      than the sea. Why?”

    “Just thinking,” I said. “Could you have an ocean      that was as small as a pond?”

    “No,” said my father. “Ponds are pond-sized, lakes      are lake-sized. Seas are seas and oceans are oceans. Atlantic, Pacific, Indian,      Arctic. I think that’s all of the oceans there are.”

    My father went up to his bedroom, to talk to my mum      and to be on the phone up there. I dropped the silver sixpence into my piggy      bank. It was the kind of china piggy bank from which nothing could be removed.      One day, when it could hold no more coins, I would be allowed to break it, but      it was far from full.

 

 

III.

    I never saw      the white Mini again. Two days later, on Monday, my father took delivery of a      black Rover, with cracked red leather seats. It was a bigger car than the Mini      had been, but not as comfortable. The smell of old cigars permeated the leather      upholstery, and long drives in the back of the Rover always left us feeling      car-sick.

    The black Rover was not the only thing to arrive on      Monday morning. I also received a letter.

    I was seven years old, and I never got letters. I      got cards, on my birthday, from my grandparents, and from Ellen Henderson, my      mother’s friend whom I did not know. On my birthday Ellen Henderson, who lived      in a camper van, would send me a handkerchief. I did not get letters. Even so, I      would check the post every day to see if there was anything for me.

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