Read The Harriet Bean 3-Book Omnibus Online
Authors: Alexander McCall Smith
PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF CANADA, 2013
The Five Lost Aunts of Harriet Bean
copyright © 1990 Alexander McCall Smith
Harriet Bean and the League of Cheats
copyright © 1991 Alexander McCall Smith
The Cowgirl Aunt of Harriet Bean
copyright © 1993 Alexander McCall Smith
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.
The Five Lost Aunts of Harriet Bean
was originally published in Canada in 2006 by Alfred A. Knopf Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited.
Harriet Bean and the League of Cheats
was originally published in Canada in 2006 by Alfred A. Knopf Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited.
The Cowgirl Aunt of Harriet Bean
was originally published in Canada in 2006 by Alfred A. Knopf Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited. Published in 2013 by Alfred A. Knopf Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Distributed by Random House of Canada Limited.
Knopf Canada and colophon are registered trademarks.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
McCall Smith, Alexander, 1948–, author
The Harriet Bean 3-book omnibus : The five lost aunts of Harriet Bean, Harriet Bean and the league of cheats, The cowgirl aunt of Harriet Bean / Alexander McCall Smith.
Contents: The five lost aunts of Harriet Bean—Harriet Bean and the league of cheats—The cowgirl aunt of Harriet Bean.
eISBN 978-0-345-80877-6
I. McCall Smith, Alexander, 1948– . Five lost aunts of Harriet Bean. II. McCall Smith, Alexander, 1948– . Harriet Bean and the league of cheats. III. McCall Smith, Alexander, 1948– . Cowgirl aunt of Harriet Bean. IV. Title. V. Title: Harriet Bean three book omnibus.
PR6063.C326H36 2013 j823′.914 C2013-905933-4
v3.1
PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF CANADA
Text copyright © 1990 Alexander McCall Smith
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Published in 2006 by Alfred A. Knopf Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited, and simultaneously in the United States of America and in Great Britain by Bloomsbury. Originally published in 1990 in Great Britain by Blackie and Son, Ltd. Distributed by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.
Knopf Canada and colophon are trademarks.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
McCall Smith, Alexander, 1948-
The five lost aunts of Harriet Bean / Alexander McCall Smith.
(Harriet Bean series; bk. 1)
ISBN 0-676-97776-6
I. Title. II. Series: McCall Smith, Alexander, 1948- Harriet Bean series; bk. 1.
PR6063.C326L68 2006 j823′.914 C2005-905429-8
For Sophie and Anna
Did I ever tell you about my aunts? Well, if I didn’t, that’s what I’d like to tell you about now. Most people have aunts tucked away somewhere or other, and most of these aunts aren’t especially interesting. It’s not that I’d never want to hear about
your
aunts; it’s just that there’s something about my aunts that makes them very, very peculiar.
Strangely enough, I didn’t even know I had any aunts until I was nine. Then, quite out of the blue, my father said to me one day:
“Your aunts would like to hear about that!”
I forget what it was that my aunts would
have liked to hear about—I was so astonished to hear that they even existed.
“Aunts?” I said in surprise. “What aunts?”
“Oh,” said my father rather vaguely, as if it weren’t at all important. “All those aunts of yours. You know—my sisters. All those aunts you have.”
I was almost too surprised to speak. It was just like my father, though. He had always been extremely absent-minded, and he was quite capable of forgetting all about his sisters. He was a very strange man, my father, in so many ways. I won’t tell you too much about him now, because it’s really my aunts I want to talk about. I will tell you about his job, though, because it was so very unusual.
My father, you see, was an inventor. He invented the most extraordinary things, but unfortunately, most of them were quite useless. He was the inventor of the automatic book, for example. When you were reading an automatic book, the pages turned automatically, every few minutes. This was meant to save you the effort of turning them yourself,
but, as you can guess, different people reached the end of the page at different times. So it was always very irritating reading an automatic book, and not many of them were sold. In fact, none of his inventions was successful, and most of them came straight back from the factory with a little note saying: “Very interesting, but no, thank you” or “How remarkable—but do you think anybody really
needs
this?”
Most of the time, my father seemed to be in a bit of a daze, thinking about some strange thing he was planning to invent. Days could pass without him saying a word, and when this happened I knew that he was about to come up with an invention.
So it was not all that unusual for my father never to have mentioned his sisters, and if I did not say anything more about it, then that was all that I might have heard about the matter. But I was not going to leave it at that.
“I didn’t know I had any aunts,” I said, trying not to sound too annoyed. If I did then he would go out to his shed in the garden,
which is what he always did when I got annoyed with him. He had an unusual invention there, which he never quite finished and which nobody was ever allowed to see.
“You didn’t know you had aunts?” he said, sounding rather bemused. “How very strange!”
Well! It’s hardly strange not to know you have aunts when nobody has ever said anything about them.
“Perhaps I should tell you about them,” my father went on, a little doubtfully. “You are their niece, after all. Mind you, there are so many of them, I hope I don’t get mixed up.”
I waited for him to begin. I was dying to hear about my aunts, and yet my father seemed to forget about them almost as soon as he had mentioned them. I knew, though, that if I asked him to tell me about them at once, he would only become quiet and start to read his newspaper. So I said nothing then and waited until the next day. After he had come back from work with another rejected
invention, I made him a cup of tea and a buttered scone. I knew that there was nothing he liked more than that.
“About those aunts…,” I began.
He glanced at me, but his eyes were fixed on the scone. “Is that for me?” he asked eagerly.
“Yes,” I said. “If …”
My father frowned. “If what?” he asked.
“If you tell me about my aunts.”
My father stared at me, and then looked again at the thickly buttered scone.
“What would you like to know about them?” he asked. “There isn’t an awful lot to hear, you know.”
“I want to hear everything,” I said quickly. “Everything you can remember.”
My father sighed.
“May I have the scone first?” he asked.
And so my father told me about my aunts, although he did not tell me the whole story in one sitting. I had to coax it out of him, and it was only after several days—and a whole
plate of buttered scones—that I heard all that he had to say about my newly discovered aunts.
My father had been the only boy in the family. They lived on a small farm in those days, and there was not much money. It would have been all right if there had been just one or two children, but there were six children altogether, and that meant there were eight mouths to feed. With so many children, too, there was never enough money to buy the clothes that were needed. My father told me that he had to wear girls’ shoes, handed down from his sisters. So while other boys wore proper boys’ shoes, he wore red shoes with bows on them, right up until he reached the age of eight. This embarrassed him horribly. Whenever anybody came to the farm, he would quickly take his shoes off and walk around barefoot.
The children did much of the work on the farm. They did have a tractor once—my father thought it must have been one of the first tractors ever made—but it was so old that
eventually it couldn’t be patched up anymore. At harvest time, they used to cut the crops themselves, using scythes and sickles. And if things needed to be dragged around, they also had to do that themselves. As a result of this, he explained, most of my aunts grew up very, very strong.
Slowly, as I wrested the story out of him in dribs and drabs, I was able to build up a picture of my marvelous aunts. With a growing sense of excitement, I realized that every one of them had something rather special about her. Even to have one aunt like that would have been a treat—but to have five, well, that was very good luck indeed!
He told me first about Veronica. She was the oldest, and also the strongest. She could lift four bales of hay at once, he said, without feeling the strain. If the plow got stuck in a ditch, then they’d call Veronica. She’d walk around it for a moment or two and then, with a quick heave, she’d have it out of the ditch and back in its place.
My father told me that they were all proud
of her strength. At the agricultural show each year there was a strong man competition. All the farmhands who thought they were stronger than everybody else thought this was the highlight of the show, and they would puff and go red in the face picking up all sorts of heavy objects.