Brave Janet Reaehfair
f\ ^
by
JANE DUNCAN
Pictures
by Mairi Hedderwick
i
1 jU.S.
US1861020 Duncan Brave Janet R...
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Brave Janet Reaehfair
f\ ^
by
JANE DUNCAN
Pictures
by Mairi Hedderwick
i
1 jU.S.
US1861020 Duncan Brave Janet Reachfar
US1861020
j
Duncan Brave Janet Reachfar
uJ
° o s CL .
UJ
t— en
2 PUBLIC LIBRARY EORT WAYNE AND ALLEN COUNTY,
IND,
CO
OQ
ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY
5T0
3 1833
00704 8603
Brave Janet Reachfar by JANE Pictures
©
DUNCAN
by Mairi Hedderwick
1975 by Jane Duncan copyright 1975 by Mairi Hedderwick First American edition 1975 Printed in Great Britain. All rights reserved
Text copyright Illustrations
©
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Duncan, Jane. Brave Janet Reachfar. During a sudden snowstorm, Janet ventures out onto a forbidden hill to rescue a lost sheep only to wind up
SUMMARY
needing help First [1.
:
herself.
published in
London under
Snow — Fiction]
1.
PZ7.D899Br ISBN o-S 1 64-3 130-2
title
:
Herself and Janet Reachfar
Hedderwick, Mairi, [Fie]
illus. II. Title.
74-8693
A Clarion Book THE SEABURY PRESS
NEW YORK
J
1
Everybody her
called Janet "Janet
home was named
Reachfar" because the farm which was.,
"Reachfar".
Highlands of Scotland and looked
The
nearest house to Reachfar
It
lay
down
on top of
towards the
a hill in the-
sea.
was two miles away but Janet never
U.S.
1861020
~.-/
V felt
lonely.
She
also
father
who
fff
She had her dog called Fly and her
Angus.
had her family: her grandfather and grandmother, her
and mother, her aunt and her
did
ferret called
special friends,
most of the work about the farm.
Tom
and George,
Janet's grandfather
was
a little deaf.
He
was very
old,
with
a
long white beard, and he
spoke very seldom and went about the farm by
imself Janet saw her father only in the evenings, for he
another farm
all
day.
managed
Her grandmother, her mother and Aunt Kate
were usually too busy
to talk to Janet very
grandmother who, Janet thought, must be the
much — especially busiest
woman
her
in the
whole world.
Granny was always bustling about and "laying down the law" or being "on about" things, as George and Tom called it. Only they did not
call
her
"Granny" when
she
was on about things
— they
called her "Herself".
t
One noonday
in spffig,
when Janet and
her family were sitting
at
the big kitchen table having their dinner, the sun suddenly seemed
and the sky went dark. Big
to disappear
past the
flakes
of snow began
to fly
window.
"I told
you
this
was coming," Granny
said,
and
it
was
in
her
to rain
and
"Herself" voice.
Granny always seemed
when
there
was going
to
to
be
know when a gale.
it
was going
George and
Tom
said that there
man who lived in the brown jug on the top shelf of the dresser who told Granny about the weather, but Janet knew that this was not true. One day when everybody was out of the house, Janet
was
a little
had climbed right up and looked insid|^pl nothing in
it
but
a
few
nails
and
a
deaosp^W^
jiifc
and there was
"I told
me. You
you," Herself
know
best
all
said again,
"but none of you ever
the time."
This was not true either. Janet thought that everybody
was always "I said
listening to Herself
it
was too
High Moor and
me now shelter
that
of the
She spoke
all
the time.
You
at
Reachfar
could not help
early in the year to put the sheep out
the East Hill," Herself
you have
to
Home Wood as if
listens to
went
on.
go and bring them
on
it.
the
"So don't blame all
back into the
again."
everybody was arguing with her but nobody was
saying a word.
Everybody was watching
the snow,
which was \.«
growing thicker and thicker and
piling
up on
the frames of the
windowpanes. "//
Candlemas
Herself finish
the
said.
be bright and fair, half the winter's
"And Candlemas
this
to
come and more"
year was like a day in June. So
your dinner, George and Tom, and fetch the sheep back into
wood." 'Yes, Mistress,"
Tom
and George
said together.
They put on from the rack
their
heavy coats and mufflers, took and
in the passage,
Fan, out of the barn.
Then they
set
their tall sticks
called their sheepdogs,
Moss and
off towards the gate that led to the
High Moor. Janet followed them with Fly, but she did not go further than the gate. The High Moor was a forbidden place.
"We will
gather the big flock off the Heights
said at the gate. till
we
get back.
"Those
Run
first,
Tom," George
ewes on the East Hill will have
thirty
along into the house, Janet, out of all
to wait
this
snow
and cold." Janet and Fly turned back
go
into the house.
nobody ever
down
the farmyard, but they did not
There was no point, with Herself on about
listening to her.
.
MP
t
P
n
>•
W
it i
n
urif:
i
•'
•
/
n
Janet
>* I
4
went
into the stable and climbed
Betsy's manger, while Fly lay
Stroking Betsy's
was
a
magic
sort
face,
down on
up
to
a sack
by
sit
the wall.
Janet thought about her grandmother. She
of person
— something
like a witch,
ugly or wicked witch. She was rather beautiful, abouts" did not
last
for very long,
into the person they called
Almost magically
wise.
Granny,
sight. It
really.
who was
Her "on
gentle and wise.
Granny always seemed
seemed
but not an
and soon she would turn back
you had been and what you had been up
away out of her
on the edge of
to,
to
know where
even when you were
to Janet that
far
Granny knew not only
about the weather, but about every single thing in the whole world. Janet gave Betsy's neck a final pat and climbed
manger, saying inside her head the rhyme that
had made:
she,
down from
Tom
the
and George
When The Herself
Angus, her
of us are
When Janet
to.
go
to
better out.
into
to the
Granny by
tea-time, but
barn to have
a chat
with
want
to be
ferret.
Angus, however, made
moment,
three
would have changed back
meanwhile Janet decided
chatted
Herself is on-about
shut
them
it
quite clear that he did not
spoke to him, he opened
again, snuffled,
tightly. Janet shut his
his
pink eyes for
a
and curled himself up more
box and went through
the door at the end of
the barn into the byre.
Maggie, the big black cow, was lying on her
among head
a
the
warm
straw. She
shake and her
and lean against her
tail a
fat
side in her stall
was more welcoming. She gave her
twitch, inviting Janet and Fly to
warm
sit
down
body. Then she went on chewing her
cud, her big tongue flicking round and round inside her mouth.
r
*«v*
Feeling the
warmth of Maggie,
Janet began to think of the poor
sheep out on the cold East Hill. She could not stop thinking about
them.
It
would
take
Tom
George and
a
long time to bring
from the High Moor. The ewes on the East
flock
very long wait.
.
.
Hill
down
the
would have
a
.
Suddenly Janet stood up. She buttoned up her coat and put on her
woollen hood and gloves. "Heel, Fly," she
warm
said as they left the
steamy byre for the snow and cold of out-of-doors.
The ever.
East Hill
was
The wind kept
a
long
way
trying to
off,
and today
it
seemed longer than
blow Janet and Fly backwards
as
they
plodded through the deepening snow on the path through the wood.
At
last,
of the
though, they came to the
wood
onto the bare
hill
little
where
gate that led out of the
the
snow was
comer
like a thick
cloud
of feathers. '9
When Janet fingers
too
went
took off her glove to undo the latch of the gate, her
stiff
with the cold. The East Hill was
— but Janet did not intend
on to
it.
to
go
right out
on
a
to
forbidden place, it,
not
right
out
"
"Seek, Fly!" she
George. "Sheep!
said,
Go
waving her arm
or
body seemed
to
seek!"
The dog crouched low, slide
Tom
at the hill just like
so that her dark furry
under the blowing snow. She ran out onto the
hill,
while Janet
waited in the shelter of the trees by the gate.
Soon
the sheep began to
come towards Janet. "One, two,
she counted as the woolly creatures galloped one the
narrow gateway, baa-ing
as if to say
three
—
by one through
thank you for the shelter of
the trees.
"Twenty-nine," Janet
more, Fly!
Go
seek!"
said
when
Fly
came
to look
up
at her.
"One
Fly disappeared into the
When
came back
she
paws up barking
she brought
to Janet's chest all
snow again and was gone
the time and
no sheep with
for a long time.
her.
She put her
and then began to dance round and round,
making bigger and bigger
her further and further out on the
circles that
took
hill.
She wanted Janet to follow her but Janet was not sure about Besides being forbidden, the East Hill under the blowing
this.
snow was
very wild, bare and frightening. In the end, though, she decided to trust Fly
who
always
knew
the
way home. She
shut the
and stepped out into the deep snow and driving wind.
0*
?
\
*
*
•
'
*>
\
'
\
little
gate
She was completely out of breath and her legs going to break with tiredness when,
hummock
to dig the
who
close to
its
Fly nuzzled into a
weak
tired voice as Janet
and Fly
snow away. Fly dug very quickly with her
paws, making the snow Janet
last,
they were
of snow and exposed the head of a sheep.
"Baa-aa," the sheep said in a
began
at
felt as if
fly
up
in a
cloud behind her. But
it
fore-
was
found the baby lamb, quite newly born and tucked mother.
in
/
"Stop, Fly," Janet
lamb and began and follow
to
said,
for she
knew
that if she picked
walk away, the mother sheep would struggle
lamb
inside,
and fastened the
coat again with the lamb's head sticking out between the
began
free
her.
Janet unbuttoned her coat, put the
buttons.
up the
When Janet
two top
and Fly started to walk away, the mother sheep
to struggle hard, baa-ing pitifully.
It
seemed she could not
get up.
.//*'
/
'*"
*
.'
I
/'
.'
..,
s
** T^
\i
:
They
all
Janet had
began
no
to
walk with the snow blowing behind them.
idea of the
way home
but that did not matter, for not
only was Fly there but George and
Tom
As they walked, they began
make
to
they reached the gate into the farmyard to Herself as soon as they
went
as well.
a it
Its
the East Hill gate.
mother's leg was stuck
And
that
is
why we
was
into the house
Janet found the first-bom lamb
Near
rhyme, and by the time
iu
are late.
some wire
finished.
They
told
it
Herself looked from
Tom
to
George, and then on to fanet with
the lamb's head under her chin. This
look she wore
when
was her suspecting look — the
she suspected that Janet,
George and
Tom
had
been up to something.
"Baa!" the
"That sternly. it
is
little
lamb
said in a small voice.
enough of your
silly
rhymes and nonsense," Herself said
"George, take that lamb out to the fold to
its
mother where
belongs."
"Right away, Granny," George
said,
beginning to undo Janet's
coat.
"This very minute, Granny,"
Now that
on
Tom
said.
knew that everything was all right. But she also knew wavto the fold with the lamb, George and Tom would
Janet their
be calling Granny "Herself", for she was
still
laying
down
the law.
"And you "and
sit
take those
down
at
wet things
the table beside your
Janet did as she
was
in,
no
was saying
sense at
went on, "Sometimes all,
in their heads.
It is
a
I
think
putting sheep out, taking
and prowling about among the snow and the cold
had no brains
to fanet,
mother where you belong."
told and Herself
the people of Reachfar have
them
off," she
wonder
that
as if they
some of them don't
get lost in the snow."
Janet's
miother was very quiet and spoke always
She spoke now. "If they got
have nobody
to scold.
lost in the
That would be
in a soft voice.
snow, Granny, you would terrible,
wouldn't
it?" she
said.
Herself looked
at
Mother, and Janet watched her change back into
Granny. Mother could always make her do
Granny smiled first
at Janet.
lamb of the spring
"But you
find that lamb."
are a clever girl, finding the
like that," she said.
be very hungry after %o\\\^ such
this.
"Eat
a long, long
a
way,
big all
tea.
You must
by yourself,
to
Granny took
the lid off the big black pot
With
supper soup.
the firelight shining
she did look like a witch
magic it
that
for a
you had gone
— a wise,
on the
on her
fire
face
and
and white
kind sort of witch
you had done
forgiven.
Janet Reachfar ate a boiled egg, a scone with butter,
with raspberry jam and factory tea.
of shortbread.
-..-
4
HIE
a piece
¥
'&>>
P% M
.
ft
.