Dimanche Diller. Henrietta Branford
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Название: Dimanche Diller

Автор: Henrietta Branford

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Детская проза

Серия:

isbn: 9780007584529

isbn:

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      If it had not been for a kind-hearted guard called Winston, who knows how Dimanche would have managed? Fortunately, Winston was a father and a grandfather, and what he didn’t know about babies wouldn’t fill a thimble. He fetched warm milk, and banana sandwiches, and made Dimanche’s journey pleasant by singing to her.

      Valburga Vilemile did not show up until the train pulled into Hilton in the Hollow station. Winston felt extremely angry with her as he helped her down with the pram.

      “Look here, Sister,” he said. “You may be a nun but you don’t know a thing about babies. Babies need plenty of attention. They need food and drink all the time. They need conversation. They need looking at, picking up, and singing to. They need cheerful and abundant company by day and by night. Why d’you think their parents look so tired?”

      “I suggest, my good man, that you confine your attention to the serving of tea and coffee, the lifting down of prams, and the occasional clipping of tickets,” Valburga replied. “Unless you wish to be reported to your superiors for insolence.”

      Winston shook his head and clicked his fingers. He peeped into the pram. “Good luck, little one,” he murmured. “You’re going to need it.”

      How right he was.

       Five

      Dimanche’s new life, without her parents, or the nuns, and with her peculiar new aunt, was not an easy one. Dozens of nannies passed through Hilton Hall, and some were delightful and some were frightful but all of them gave in their notice within a month or two.

      Those who liked babies at all loved Dimanche. They couldn’t help it. She was adorable. By the time she was two, she was running up and down the long gloomy

      corridors of the big old house, opening doors, turning out cupboards, posting things down the lavatory, investigating dustbins, and doing all the things an enterprising baby should do. Her curly dark hair shone like hens’ feathers, and her round, brown eyes peered out from behind her fringe in a way that made you think of a hedgehog under a bush. Her little fat feet went pitter patter on the stone-flagged floors, leaving behind them a delicate tracery of tiny footprints marked out in whatever it was she had most recently been playing in – mud, if she’d been in the flower beds; sand, if the sandpit; talcum powder, if the bath. It drove her aunt wild. “Clean this mess up!” she’d shout at the unfortunate nanny. “Do it now and do it properly! Lock the child into her room and don’t let her out!”

      The better ones would kiss Dimanche goodbye and head for the station at this point. Nobody nice would agree to shutting a two-year-old into her bedroom, after all. The nastier ones would linger on a while, and during these times Dimanche would have been truly unhappy if it hadn’t been for Cosmo the gardener. He would tiptoe up the back stairs with a punnet of strawberries or a bowl of redcurrants in his hands, or a bunch of crunchy carrots, or a tomato warm from the sun. “Look what I’ve got for you, Dimanche,” he’d say. He’d shoo Cyclops away – he couldn’t abide cats because of the way they caught nestlings in the spring, and dug up his flower beds. Then he’d sit down beside Dimanche and feed her titbits, and tell her stories, and show her interesting things from out-of-doors.

      He brought her a last year’s blackbird’s nest, all scratchy and rough on the outside, but lined with mud as smooth as satin on the inside. He brought her hairy caterpillars to look at, and snail shells to add to her collection, and sometimes a frog in his hat. If he brought something alive, they would watch it together for a while before returning it carefully to that part of the garden where Cosmo had found it.

      Whenever Dimanche was feeling sad, she would go outdoors and look for Cosmo. If he was busy, she’d help him with his work. If not, they’d play together, or sit in the greenhouse while he told her riddles and jokes and played cat’s cradle with green garden string. Cosmo had six twiddly fingers on each hand, instead of five, and this made him particularly good at cat’s cradle.

      “Is that old aunt of yours making you miserable?” he’d ask. “Don’t let her! Come and talk to me while I weed the spinach, and I’ll tell you stories from when your gran was little.”

      “Can you remember when my gran was little?” Dimanche asked.

      Cosmo shook his head. “No. But I’m a friend of Old Tom Shovel the gravedigger, and he knows everything about everything. Especially if your family comes into it. I can’t make out how that aunt of yours comes to be part of your family at all. She’s nothing like the rest of them, from what Tom Shovel says. Funny thing is, she reminds me of somebody. Can’t think who. Here, try one of these plums, they’re ripe as rain.”

      Whenever the aunt caught Cosmo talking to Dimanche, she’d dock a day’s pay from his wages, and send Dimanche off to bed, but both of them felt it was worth the risk.

      One of the nicest of the nannies got the sack for letting Dimanche make mud pies on the grand stone steps in front of Hilton Hall. Valburga was on her way to the village to buy Cyclops a few treats – pigs’ ears, sheep’s eyes, that sort of thing. She didn’t look where she was putting her feet.

      “What is the meaning of this filthy mess?” she roared.

      “It’s mud pies, Madam,” the nanny answered. “Children make them. They need to. It helps them to develop, psychologically.”

      “Psychological nothing!” Madam roared. “I don’t pay you to develop her psychologically! I pay you to keep her out of my way! You’re fired!”

      When she got back from the village she rang London and ordered another nanny. “And send someone suitable this time!” she shouted. “I want someone from a military background. I’ve had enough of namby-pamby nannies with soft ideas about warm milk and nursery rhymes. What this child needs is discipline!”

      “We do have one young lady from a military background, Madam,” faltered the lady from the nanny agency. “But Lady Cruddle has reserved her. We’ve got an excellent person from the prison service, but Sir Brigham Brogue wants her for his difficult daughter. In fact, the demand for nannies has quite outstripped the supply for the time being. You yourself have already run through a dozen or so of our best candidates, Madam. To tell the truth I’ve only got one left, and I doubt if she would suit. Her name is Polly Pugh.”

      “Send her down.”

      That was how Polly Pugh arrived at Hilton Hall. It just happened that she arrived on Dimanche’s third birthday. Not that she would have known this. Dimanche did not know herself, and the aunt would certainly not have mentioned it – but the Sisters of Small Mercies had sent Dimanche, by train, a cherry cake with white icing and three candles, so Polly Pugh guessed. Around the outside of the cake was a circle of little dancing nuns made of fondant icing. In the centre there were golden marzipan beehives, and out of them flew a cloud of tiny bees that spelt out HAPPY BIRTHDAY, DEAREST DIMANCHE.

      “How gorgeous! How scrumptious! How beautiful!” cried Polly Pugh. “What time’s the party?”

      “Party, Miss Pugh? There’ll be no party.”

      “Why ever not, Madam?”

      “My niece doesn’t deserve one. She’s never had one and she’s СКАЧАТЬ