Page:The cream of the jest; a comedy of evasions (IA creamofjestcomed00caberich).pdf/123

 I

They Come to a High Place

He was looking down at the most repulsive old woman he had ever seen. Hers was the abhorrent fatness of a spider; her flesh appeared to have the coloring and consistency of dough. She sat upon the stone pavement, knitting; her eyes, which raised to his unblinkingly, were black, secretive, and impersonally malevolent; and her jaws stirred without ceasing, in a loose chewing motion, so that the white hairs, rooted in the big mole on her chin, twitched and glittered in the sunlight.

"But one does not pay on entering," she was saying. "One pays as one goes out. It is the rule."

"And what do you knit, mother?" Kennaston asked her.

"Eh, I shall never know until God's funeral is preached," the old woman said. "I only know it is forbidden me to stop."