The Tree of Heaven eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 398 pages of information about The Tree of Heaven.

The Tree of Heaven eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 398 pages of information about The Tree of Heaven.

* * * * *

Michael was glad that he had been sent across the Heath to Grannie’s house with a message.  It made him feel big and brave.  Besides, it would put off the moment when Mary-Nanna would come for him, to make him ready for the party.  He was not sure that he wanted to go to it.

Michael did not much like going to Grannie’s house either.  In all the rooms there was a queer dark-greenness and creepiness.  It smelt of bird-cages and elder bushes and of Grandpapa’s funeral.  And when you had seen Auntie Edie’s Senegal wax-bills, and the stuffed fish, and the inside of Auntie Louie’s type-writer there was nothing else to see.

His mother said that Grandpapa’s funeral was all over, and that the green creepiness came from the green creepers.  But Michael knew it didn’t.  She only said things like that to make you feel nice and comfy when you were going to bed.  Michael knew very well that they had put Grandpapa into the drawing-room and locked the door so that the funeral men shouldn’t get at him and take him away too soon.  And Auntie Louie had kept the key in her pocket.

Funerals meant taking people away.

Old Nanna wouldn’t let him talk about it; but Mary-Nanna had told him that was what funerals meant.  All the same, as he went up the flagged path, he took care not to look through the black panes of the window where the elder bush was, lest he should see Grandpapa’s coffin standing in the place where the big table used to be, and Grandpapa lying inside it wrapped in a white sheet.

Michael’s message was that Mummy sent her love, and would Grannie and Auntie Louie and Auntie Emmeline and Auntie Edie come to tea?  She was going to have tea in the garden, and would they please come early?  As early as possible.  That was the part he was not to forget.

The queer thing was that when Michael went to see Grannie and the Aunties in Grannie’s house he saw four old women.  They wore black dresses that smelt sometimes of something sweet and sometimes like your fingers when you get ink on them.  The Aunties looked cross; and Auntie Emmeline smelt as if she had been crying.  He thought that perhaps they had not been able to stop crying since Grandpapa’s funeral.  He thought that was why Auntie Louie’s nose was red and shiny and Auntie Edie’s eyelids had pink edges instead of lashes.  In Grannie’s house they never let you do anything.  They never did anything themselves.  They never wanted to do anything; not even to talk.  He thought it was because they knew that Grandpapa was still there all the time.

But outside it the Aunties were not so very old.  They rode bicycles.  And when they came to Michael’s Father’s house they forgot all about Grandpapa’s funeral and ran about and played tennis like Michael’s mother and Mrs. Jervis, and they talked a lot.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Tree of Heaven from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.