she had seen for a moment the Little White Girl. It couldnât have been a plum-bough. Perhaps someday she would see her again.
3
Lucifer was prowling about the bed of striped ribbon-grass, giving occasional mysterious pounces into it. The Witch of Endor was making some dark magic of her own on the white gate-post. They were both older than Marigold, who felt therefore that they were uncannily aged. Lazarre had confided to her his belief that they would live as long as the Old Lady did. âDey tells her everythingâeverything,â Lazarre had said. âHavenâ I seen dem, sittinâ dare on her bed, wiâ deir tail hanginâ down, a-talkinâ to her lak dey was Chreestian? Anâ every tam dat Weetch she catch a mouse, donâ she go for carry it to de Old Lady to see? You take care what you do âfore dose cats. I wouldnât lak to be de chap dat would hurt one of dem. What dem fellers donâ know ainât wortâ knowin.ââ Marigold loved them but held them in awe. Their unfailing progeny gave her more delight. Little furry creatures were always lying asleep on the sunwarm grasses or frisking in yard and orchard. Ebon balls of fluff. Though not all ebon, alas. The number of spotted and striped kittens around led Uncle Klon to have his serious doubts about the Witchâs morals. But he had the decency to keep his doubts to himself and Marigold liked the striped kittens bestâundisturbed by any thought of bends sinister. Creatures with such sweet little faces could have no dealings with the devil she felt quite sure, whatever their parents might be up to.
Lazarre had given over fiddling and was going homeâhis little cottage down in âthe hollow,â where he had a black-eyed wife and half a dozen black-eyed children. Marigold watched him crossing the field, carrying something tied up in a red hanky, whistling gaily, as he was always doing when not fiddling, his head and shoulders stooped because he was continually in such a hurry that they were always several inches in advance of his feet. Marigold was very fond of Lazarre, who had been choreman at Cloud of Spruce before she was born and so was part of the things that always had been and always would be. She liked the quick, cordial twinkle in his black eyes and the gleam of his white teeth in his brown face. He was very different from Phidime Gautier, the big blacksmith in the Hollow, of whom Marigold went in positive dread, with his fierce black mustache you could hang your hat on. There was an unproved legend that he ate a baby every other day. But Lazarre wasnât like that. He was kind and gentle and gay.
She was sure Lazarre couldnât hurt anything. To be sure there was that horrible tale of his killing pigs. But Marigold never believed it. She knew Lazarre couldnât kill pigsâat least, not pigs he was acquainted with.
He could carve wonderful baskets out of plum-stones and make fairy horns out of birch-bark, and he always knew the right time of the moon to do anything. She loved to talk with him, though if Mother and the Grandmothers had known what they talked about sometimes they would have put a sharp and sudden stop to it. For Lazarre, who firmly believed in fairies and witches and âghostisesâ of all kinds, lived therefore in a world of romance, and made Marigoldâs flesh creep deliciously with his yarns. She didnât believe them all, but you had to believe what had happened to Lazarre himself. He had seen his Grandmother in the middle of the night standing by his bed when she was forty miles away. And next day word had come that the old lady had âgone daid.â
That night Marigold had cried out in terror, when Mother was taking the lamp out of her room, âOh, Mother, donât let the dark inâdonât let the dark in. Oh, Mother, Iâm so afraid of the big dark.â
She had never been afraid to go to sleep in the dark before, and