Authors: Edward Eager
They sat there and couldn't think of anything exciting to do, and nothing went on happening, and it was then that Jane was so disgusted that she said right out loud she wished there'd be a fire!
The other three looked shocked at hearing such wickedness, and then they looked more shocked at what they heard next.
What they heard next was a fire siren!
Fire trucks started tearing past—the engine, puffing out smoke the way it used to do in those days, the Chiefs car, the hook and ladder, the Chemicals!
Mark and Katharine and Martha looked at Jane, and Jane looked back at them with wild wonder in her eyes. Then they started running.
The fire was eight blocks away, and it took them a long time to get there, because Martha wasn't allowed to cross streets by herself, and Couldn't run fast yet, like the others; so they had to keep waiting for her to catch up, at all the corners.
And when they finally reached the house where the trucks had stopped, it wasn't the house that was on fire. It was a playhouse in the backyard, the fanciest playhouse the children had ever seen, two stories high and with dormer windows.
You all know what watching a fire is like, the glory of the flames streaming out through the windows, and the wonderful moment when the roof falls in, or even better if there's a tower and it falls through the roof. This playhouse
did
have a tower, and it fell through the roof most beautifully, with a crash and a shower of sparks.
And the fact that it
was
a playhouse, and small like the children, made it seem even more like a special fire that was planned just for them. And the little girl the playhouse belonged to turned out to be an unmistakably spoiled and unpleasant type named Genevieve, with long golden curls that had probably never been cut; so
that
was all right. And furthermore, the children overheard her father say he'd buy her a new playhouse with the insurance money.
So altogether there was no reason for any but feelings of the deepest satisfaction in the breasts of the four children, as they stood breathing heavily and watching the firemen deal with the flames, which they did with that heroic calm typical of fire departments the world over.
And it wasn't until the last flame was drowned, and the playhouse stood there a wet and smoking mess of ashes and charred boards that guilt rose up in Jane and turned her joy to ashes, too.
"Oh, what you did," Martha whispered at her.
"I don't want to talk about it," Jane said. But she went over to a woman who seemed to be the nurse of the golden-haired Genevieve, and asked her how it started.
"All of a piece it went up, like the Fourth of July as ever was," said the nurse. "And it's my opinion," she added, looking at Jane very suspiciously, "that it was
set!
What are
you
doing here, little girl?"
Jane turned right around and walked out of the yard, holding herself as straight as possible and trying to keep from running. The other three went after her.
"Is Jane magic?" Martha whispered to Katharine.
"I don't know. I think so," Katharine whispered back.
Jane glared at them. They went for two blocks in silence.
"Are we magic, too?"
"I don't know. I'm scared to find out."
Jane glared. Once more silence fell.
But this time Martha couldn't hold herself in for more than half a block.
"Will we be burnt as
witches?
"
Jane whirled on them furiously.
"I wish," she started to say.
"
Don't!
" Katharine almost screamed, and Jane turned white, shut her lips tight, and started walking faster.
Mark made the others run to catch up.
"This won't do any good. We've got to talk it over," he told Jane.
"Yes, talk it over," said Martha, looking less worried. She had great respect for Mark, who was a boy and knew everything.
"The thing is," Mark went on, "was it just an accident, or did we want so much to be magic we
got
that way, somehow? The thing is, each of us ought to make a wish. That'll prove it one way or the other."
But Martha balked at this. You could never tell with Martha. Sometimes she would act just as grown-up as the others, and then suddenly she would be a baby. Now she was a baby. Her lip trembled, and she said she didn't want to make a wish and she
wouldn't
make a wish and she wished they'd never started to play this game in the first place.
After consultation, Mark and Katharine decided this could count as Martha's wish, but it didn't seem to have come true, because if it had they wouldn't remember any of the morning, and yet they remembered it all too clearly. But just as a test Mark turned to Jane.
"What have we been doing?" he asked.
"Watching a fire," Jane said bitterly, and at that moment the fire trucks went by on their way home to the station, to prove it.
So then Mark rather depressedly wished his shoes were seven-league boots, but when he tried to jump seven leagues it turned out they weren't.
Katharine wished Shakespeare would come up and talk to her. She forgot to say exactly
when
she wanted this to happen, but after they waited a minute and he didn't appear, they decided he probably wasn't coming.
So it seemed that if there was any magic among them, Jane had it all.
But try as they might, they couldn't persuade Jane to make another wish, even a little safe one. She just kept shaking her head at all their arguments, and when argument descended to insult she didn't say a word, which was most unlike Jane.
When they got home she said she had a headache, and went out on the sleeping porch, and shut the door. She wouldn't even come downstairs for lunch, but stayed out there alone all the afternoon, moodily eating a whole box of Social Tea biscuits and talking to Carrie, the cat. Miss Bick despaired of her.
When their mother came home she knew something was wrong. But being an understanding parent she didn't ask questions.
At dinner she announced that she was going out for the evening. Jane didn't look up from her brooding silence, but the others were interested. The children always hoped their mother was going on exciting adventures, though she seldom was. Tonight she was going to see Aunt Grace and Uncle Edwin.
"Why?" Mark wanted to know.
"They were very kind to me after your father died. They have been very kind to you."
"Useful presents!" Mark was scornful.
"Will Aunt Grace say 'Just a little chocolate cake, best you ever tasted, I made it myself?'" Katharine wanted to know.
"You shouldn't laugh at your Aunt Grace. I don't know what your father would say."
"Father laughed at her, too."
"It isn't the same thing."
"Why?"
This kind of conversation was always very interesting to the children, and could have gone on forever so far as they were concerned, but somehow no grown-ups ever seemed to feel that way about conversations. Their mother put a stop to this one by leaving for Aunt Grace's.
When she had gone things got strange again. Jane kept hovering in and out of the room where the others were playing a halfhearted game of Flinch, until everyone was driven wild.
Finally Mark burst out.
"Why don't you tell us?"
Jane shook her head.
"I can't. You wouldn't understand."
Naturally this made everyone furious.
"Just because she's magic she thinks she's smarter!" Martha said.
"
I
don't think she's magic at all!" This was Katharine. "Only she's afraid to make a wish and find out!"
"I'm not! I
am!
" Jane cried, not very clearly. "Only I don't know why, or how much! It's like having one foot almost asleep, but not quite—you can't use it and you can't enjoy it! I'm afraid to even
think
a wish! I'm afraid to think at
all!
If you have ever had magic powers descend on you suddenly out of the blue, you'll know how Jane felt.
When you have magic powers and know it, it can be a fine feeling, like a pleasant tingling inside. But in order to enjoy that tingling, you have to know just how much magic you have and what the rules are for using it. And Jane didn't have any idea how much she had or how to use it, and this made her unhappy and the others couldn't see why, and said so, and Jane answered back, and by the time they went to bed no one was speaking to anyone else.
What bothered Jane most was a feeling that she'd forgotten something, and that if she could remember it she'd know the reason for everything that had happened. It was as if the reason were there in her mind somewhere, if only she could reach it. She leaned into her mind, reaching, reaching...
The next thing she knew, she was sitting straight up in bed and the clock was striking eleven, and she had remembered. It was as though she'd gone on thinking in her sleep. Sometimes this happens.
She got up and felt her way to the dresser where she'd put her money, without looking at it, when she came home from the fire. First she felt the top of the dresser. Then she lit the lamp and looked.
The nickel she'd found in the crack in the sidewalk was gone.
And then Jane began thinking really hard.
At Aunt Grace and Uncle Edwin's the air was hot and stuffy and the furniture was hot and stuffy and Aunt Grace and Uncle Edwin were stuffy.
"Poor things, they're so kind, really," the children's mother thought to herself.
But she had to remind herself of this very hard when Aunt Grace got out the snapshot albums.
"Now I know you'll be interested in these pictures of our trip to Yellowstone Park, Alison." Aunt Grace settled herself among the cushions of the davenport as though she expected to stay there a long time.
"I think you showed them to me last time, Aunt Grace."
"No, no, dear, that was
Glacier
Park. Edwin, move the floor lamp so Alison can see. This is the Old Faithful geyser. It comes up faithfully every hour, you see. That woman standing there isn't anyone we know. It's some woman from Ohio who kept trying to get in the picture. Edwin had to speak to her. Turn over the page."
The next page of the snapshot album showed Old Faithful from a different angle. The woman from Ohio had got only halfway into the picture; otherwise it looked just the same as the first one.
The children's mother patted back a yawn.
"I really must be going, Aunt Grace."
"Nonsense, dear. You must stay for cake and coffee. Just a little chocolate cake, best you ever tasted, I made it myself."
The children's mother suppressed a smile. Katharine had said Aunt Grace would say that—she always did.
The clock struck eleven.
"Oh, dear," their mother said to herself. "And that long bus ride home, too! I wish I were home right now!"
Next moment all the lights in the room seemed to have gone out, only there seemed to be a moon and some stars shining in through the roof.
Their mother looked for Aunt Grace's stuffy, kind face, but Aunt Grace wasn't there. Instead, a clump of rather gangling milkweeds stared back at her. The hot, stuffy chair seemed suddenly to have grown cold and prickly. She looked down and around.
She was sitting on a weedy hummock by the side of a road. There were no houses in sight, nor any light but the far-off moon and stars.
What had happened? Had she suddenly gone mad? Or could she have said good-bye to Aunt Grace and Uncle Edwin, started to walk home instead of taking the bus, and then fainted?
But why couldn't she remember saying good-bye? Such a thing had never happened to her before in her life!
She thought she recognized the stretch of road before her. Aunt Grace and Uncle Edwin lived in a suburb, with half a mile of open country between them and the town. Half a mile with only one bus stop, the children's mother remembered. She must be somewhere in that half-mile, but would the bus stop be ahead or behind her?
The sky ahead showed a glow from the lights of town, and she started walking toward it.
The moon was a thin new one and didn't shed much light, and the woodsy thickets on either side of the road were dark and spooky. Things moved in the branches of trees. The children's mother didn't like it at all.
What was she, a successful newspaperwoman and the mother of four children, doing, wandering the roads by night like this?
When she was set upon and murdered by highwaymen and her body was found next morning, what would the children think? What would anyone think? It must be a bad dream. Soon she would wake up. Now she would keep walking.
She kept walking.
Behind her an engine throbbed and lights shone. She turned, holding up her hand, hoping it was the bus.
It wasn't the bus, just someone's car. But the car stopped by her, and rather a small gentleman looked out.
"Would you like a ride?"
"Well, no, not really," the children's mother said, which was not true at all; she would like one very much. But she had always told the children particularly not to go riding with strangers.
"Did your car break down?"