The Piskey Purse - LightNovelsOnl.com
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'This is wisht news, sure 'nough,' wailed the Little Mother, and off she rushed to the well, where the witch was sitting smoking.
'What have you been and done with Wednesday?' she asked angrily.
'I gave her a bit of figgy-pudding, and sent her to Place House to ask if Squire Prideaux's housekeeper would kindly give an old body a bottle of their good physic to cure her rheumatics.'
'I'm going up to Place House to see if Wednesday is there,' said the Little Mother, looking in at the window of the cottage. 'If the witch should come to the door whilst I am away, don't let her come in, whatever you do!'
When she had gone to Place House, an old mansion standing above Padstow Town, the old witch left the well, and before the children saw her, she had pushed open the door, and stood in the doorway, looking in.
'May I come in and light my pipe?' she asked.
'No,' answered Thursday.
But she came in, nevertheless, and having lighted her pipe, she caught up Thursday and took her across to the well.
'What! has the witch been here again, and taken away Thursday?' exclaimed the Little Mother when she came back from Place House without finding Wednesday, discovering that another of her children was gone.
'Iss,' sighed Friday. 'She came over the doorsill before we saw her.'
'This is too dreadful!' cried the poor Little Mother. 'I shall soon have no little maids left to call my own!' and wringing her hands, she went across the lane to the well.
'What have you been and done with Thursday, you bad old witch?' she demanded.
'I gave her a piece of limpet-pie, and sent her to London Churchtown to buy me a steeple-hat and a broom,' the witch made answer, rudely puffing her pipe in Betty's face. 'If you go there in Marrowbone Stage, [38] you will perhaps find her.'
'I am off to London Churchtown in Marrowbone Stage to look for Thursday,' cried the Little Mother, returning to her cottage in great haste and excitement. 'Keep the door and hatch locked and barred till I come back, and then, if you are good children and do as I bid, I will bring you home each a gold ring.'
When the Little Mother had driven away in Marrowbone Stage to London Churchtown in search of Thursday, Friday saw the witch leave the well and cross the road to their cottage.
'Shut the door quickly and bar it,' she cried to Little Sat.u.r.day.
And Sat.u.r.day had but slipped the bolt into its socket when the old hag was at the door, knocking loudly to be let in.
'My pipe has gone out again,' she shrilled through the keyhole. 'May I come in and light it?'
'No!' answered Friday. 'Mother said you would take us away as you did poor Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, if we let you in.'
'I must come in and light my pipe,' insisted the witch. 'And if you don't open the door, I'll come through the keyhole;' and as the children would not open the door, through the keyhole she came!
Having lighted her pipe and unbolted the door, she caught up both children and carried them away, and when the tired Little Mother returned from London Churchtown in a fruitless search for Thursday, she found to her dismay not only Friday gone, but dear Little Sat.u.r.day!
She hurried to the well in an agony of despair.
'Where is Friday and Little Sat.u.r.day?' she cried.
'I gave them each a herby pasty, [39] and sent them to Windmill with grist to grind for to-morrow's baking,' answered the witch, spreading her petticoats over the dark water of the well.
'Tired as I am, I must go to Windmill to look for my dear children,'
said the poor Little Mother, with a sigh. 'P'r'aps I shall meet them coming back; and up the lane she went on her way out to Windmill.
When she came back to the well the old witch had smoked her pipe, and was sound asleep and snoring.
'I have been all the way out to Windmill, and I could not see Friday and Little Sat.u.r.day anywhere,' cried the Little Mother, shaking the old hag roughly by the shoulder. 'Where are they, you wicked old witch?'
'Friday and Little Sat.u.r.day came back soon after you had gone to look for them,' said the witch, opening her eyes and yawning.
'Where are they?' demanded the Little Mother.
'With Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday,' answered the witch, knocking the ashes out of her pipe.
'And where is Monday and the others?'
'Upstairs,' answered the witch.
'Whose stairs?' asked Betty.
'My stairs,' returned the witch.
'Shall I go up your stairs and bring them?' asked the Little Mother eagerly.
'Your shoes are too dirty,' cried the witch.
'I will take off my shoes,' said Betty.
'Your stockings are too dirty,' protested the witch.
'I will take off my stockings.'
'Your feet are too dirty,' protested the old hag.
'I will wash my feet,' said the Little Mother.
'No water would wash them clean enough to climb up my stairs,' cried the witch.
'I'll cut off my feet,' persisted Betty, determined that no excuse should stop her from getting to her children.
'The blood would drop and stain my stairs,' said the witch.
'I'll tie up my stumps,' cried the Little Mother.
'The blood would come through,' howled the witch.
'Then, what shall I do to get up your stairs?' said the Little Mother, with a cry of despair.
'Fly up!' cackled the old hag.
'But I can't fly without wings,' wailed Betty.
'Get wings,' cried the witch, with a sneer.