Authors: Yelena Kopylova
back the
doctor, not the old doctor, but a new one who, after staring at Mary Ellen, said to her,
“Why, we have
met before haven’t we?” And from the blackness she had been swimming in, she seemed
to come to the
surface for a moment and, peering at the face hanging over her, she recognized the man who had sat to
one side of her on the top of the coach, the same that had paved her way to see Roddy.
And the strange
face kept her on the surface of the blackness for a time, until he said, “That’s it. Go to sleep. Go to
sleep.”
The young doctor straightened his back and looked at the old crone standing to his side.
She was a
weird apparition, like a skeleton hung round with old clothes. And she was as strange as was this room,
for there, along one wall, were shelves filled with bottles and jars, and bunches of herbs were hanging
from every beam in the ceiling. He had heard about people like her, country crones, but she was the first
one he had himself come across. Not so many years ago, she would have been one of
those that were
burnt. He had never seen anyone who looked so old. Yet her voice was strong and her
words sensible.
“She’s been worse, much worse. She’s over it,” she had said as a consequence of his
remarks.
Perhaps she was right, but the girl had a long way to go, she was still very ill.
When she had told him earlier what had happened at the birth, he had thought he had
better examine the
girl in case she was festering. And having done so and found the cuts clean and healthy, he had thought
he couldn’t have done a better job himself. Perhaps he mightn’t have made the incisions so big, but
nevertheless, they had evidently been done in time, and had certainly helped to save the girl’s life, as had
the removal of the afterbirth.
It was amazing the things that happened in the country. He had thought when he came
here a few
months ago that he would be bored with the sameness of the life, but hardly a day passed without
something unusual happening. Funny incidents, tragic incidents. All around he felt there was tragedy,
especially in the coughs of the men working in the lead and smelt mills and coal mines.
Some of them
would never see middle years. Yet, the poor here were different to the poor in the town, for they were
better housed. Oh, yes, indeed, especially around the mill. And they had their good plots of land with
animals and vegetables. They wouldn’t go hungry, as did so many in the cities.
One thing he was learning: most of these people were born into a set pattern of life, but those of a strong
mind and will could alter it.
And in here, in this strange room, there must have certainly been a battle of wills a few days ago, for this
girl should surely have died if a stronger will than hers hadn’t taken over. And it
belonged to that fellow
who had asked him to call. No, not asked him, demanded him. He had left him at the door here, saying
he had to go and see to his beasts but he would be back. There was one thing certain, if that man had
been responsible for the girl’s condition, she would have been married by now. What had happened to
the other man, the one who created all that fuss when there were graves opened and a rich farmer was
accused of murder?
He said to the old woman, “Where is the other young man, the one she came to see in
prison?”
The reply was brief: “Away, in London.”
“London?”
“Aye, that’s what I said, London.”
He wanted to say: Is he responsible, does he know about the child? But the look in the bleared eyes
told him he had asked enough questions, for the present at any rate. And so he left, saying he would call
the next day and bring some medicine. And the answer he was given was, “Bring some
medicine? She
has all the medicine she needs.” But he countered her words and tone with those of
authority, saying,
“Nevertheless, I shall bring her medicine, and you will see that she takes it.” And her last words to him
as he made towards the door were, “How d’you think she’s got this far?” Then she added,
“Pull the
door tight shut, there’s a wind.” When Hal returned, she told him what had transpired
with the young
doctor, and he said, “I hear he’s good and knows what he’s about. If he brings her
medicine, she’ll have
to take it. Understand, Kate?”
And Kate’s voice had the same implication in it as she had given to the young doctor.
“I’ll do as I think fit an’ best for her,” she said.
Then pointing to an animal that had followed on Hal’s heels, she said, “Whose is that?”
Hal turned, a half smile on his face as he looked down on the dog, saying, “Tis mine.”
“Since when did you have a dog?”
“Since yesterday. I bought him from an Irish tinker, He was camped out near the old
barn. He had his
horse in there and three dogs. He’d asked me the previous day if I had any turnips, so I dropped him a
few by. And there was Boyo.”
He nodded towards the dog.
“He looked at me, and if ever a dog spoke, he did.
“Take me,” he said, because, as you can see, like the tinker’s horse he had been fed on gypsies’ hay,
which, as you know, is the whip. He was the smallest of the three dogs and likely, if there was anything
going at all, he came out worst. So I did a deal, I bought him. Sixpence I paid for him. “
“You were robbed, by the look of him.”
“He’ll be all right. He’s big boned, let him get some flesh on him.
Anyway, I’ve been thinkin’ about a dog for some time: the passing gypsies are not above comin’ in and
helpin’ themselves, especially to chickens an’ hay. He’ll be all right. Won’t you, Boyo? “
He stooped
down and patted the dog’s head, and the animal pressed itself against his leg and looked up at him, then
turned and went towards the clothes basket where the baby was lying, and after sniffing two or three
times he lay down by the side of it, his head on the rim of the basket.
“Well, what d’you think about that?”
“I think he knows when he’s on a good thing. He looks a mixture.”
“He’s young, part sheepdog, part hound, I’d say. Anyway, enough.” He turned from her
and went
towards the bed and looked down on the white thin face and, softly now, he said, “Mary Ellen. Mary
Ellen.”
Slowly she opened her eyes, then blinked her lids as she tried to get him into focus. And when she did,
she lifted her hand slowly and put it out towards him, and as he gripped it, he brought his lips tight
together to stop their trembling, for the gesture was as if she had bestowed on him the gift of herself, for
never before had she put her hand out willingly to him.
As day followed day, she became stronger, but it was no thanks to the doctor’s medicine, for as soon as
he had left the room, K-ate made it her business to pour it into the swill bucket and fill the bottle up with
her own concoction, which happened to be much the same colour.
The snow slowly disappeared and by the beginning of February the earth was showing
itself again,
except higher up on the hills, and these would keep their white caps for some time yet.
The first time Mary Ellen brought her feet over the side of the bed she felt as if she was about to float
away, her body seemed so light, but her mind was clear. She sat with a hap over her legs looking down
the room to where the fire glowed and the child lay in the basket to the side of it.
“Could I have her?” she said softly to Mrs. Patterson. And Mrs. Patterson, a slight figure of a woman
with a melancholy face, said, “Aye, lass, aye, if you think you’re up to it.”
“I’m up to it.”
Mrs. Patterson brought the child to her and laid it in her arms. It was not the first time she had held the
baby; but she had not then taken its weight, for it had lain across her arm on the bed; now she was
holding it, supporting it, and she looked down on to its face. Its eyes were round and looked deep blue,
but then as Kate had said, most babies’ eyes were blue to begin with, as they grew older they could turn
to black, brown, green or hazel. The cheeks were round, the mouth like an open flower, and the skin
like velvet. She was a bonny baby.
“What are you going to call her?” asked Mrs. Patterson.
“Kate.”
“Kate? Oh, well, aye, I suppose ... yes you should, ‘cos she’s brought you through, has Kate. Not
forgetting Hal. My God! no. Say what you like about him, and he’s not the easiest to get on with, takin’
man or woman, but he’s worked like a Trojan these past weeks. How he got through to
you that
mornin’, nobody knows. Must have taken him hours, half the night I think, because
nobody could move
for two days. Do you know, there were four horses lost in the drifts below the mill. And John Tollett
was found almost frozen to death. Trying to get home he was. His son found him not
twenty yards from
their door. How long he’d been lying they didn’t know. But his feet are not right yet, they’re swollen up
like balloons. Eeh! It was a dreadful time. I remember me ma sayin’ there was a like fall in 1802, or
was it three?
But anyway, it was round that time and they found Jimmy Crawford, the journeyman,
dead in a ditch.
Frozen as stiff as a seven-day corpse.
And there’s never been a fall like it since. And they say there’s more to come. “
Mary Ellen listened to Mrs. Patterson’s voice droning on. It was known all round the
village she was a
harbinger of bad news: she was happy when she was foretelling disasters. She wished she would go and
Hal would come.
Hal. There was a mist in her mind covering the past weeks, yet through it she knew he
had been there
all the time, and she knew she owed her life, not to Kate’s potions, but to him. Vaguely she could recall
the agonizing hours before the birth. But the memory that surpassed that agony was the one when his
knife went into her flesh. The mist thickened after that but Kate had cleared some of it away since, and
she knew if he hadn’t done what he did, she wouldn’t be here now.
There returned to her mind again and again the faint memory of the time she knew she
was going to die,
and his face on hers. She could not remember what he said, only the essence of it through the tone in his
voice. She knew he had begged her not to go, and the intensity of his plea had awakened something in
her that lay in the depths beyond the pain. Yet, as she became stronger, it seemed to sink deeper and
deeper to where lay another pain, and its name was Roddy.
Roddy. If she had known what she had to go through, would she have forced herself on
him, as her
honesty told her she had done? And the answer she got was, yes, because at that time she had no
knowledge of childbirth, all that mattered then was the easing other desire.
She had lain here for days now asking herself odd questions such as.
Why had God put this craving into girls who were not yet women? It was a craving that
defied
understanding or explanation. And as one grew up it became stronger, especially when it was centred on
one person. God was funny, not really sensible because He told you to be good yet put
into your being
something that made you do bad, bad, that was, unless you were married.
And then there were her mixed feelings about Hal, for her mind was presenting her with a picture of him
that she had never seen before, having never associated him with tenderness. Even during the past
months before the child came, he had been kind, but never tender, never. Then there was something
else, something she couldn’t define.
She only knew that if he stopped coming she’d miss him as much as she had missed
Roddy. And now
what she could not understand and what was troubling her for it didn’t seem reasonable, was that she
had to add the word, more, to that. It was a month before she started pottering round the kitchen again.
The doctor’s visits had ceased. He had been six times in all and each time she had
reminded herself
how strange it was that he of all people should have come doctoring in this part of the world. He was a
nice young man. She liked him. Not so Kate. Kate was rude to him. In fact, she had told him
yesterday that she could buy him at one end of the street and sell him at the other. And he had been so
nice to her: he had laughed and said he had no doubt in his mind at all that she could do just that. And
not at the end of the street, he had said, but halfway down it.
Even that hadn’t placated her. To her, the word doctor was just another name for butcher.
Apparently
one such had amputated her father’s foot when it had gangrene, and hadn’t even knocked him drunk
before doing so.
She walked to the window and looked out. The sun was shining. There was a wind
blowing. The earth
looked fresh, bare but fresh.
As she stood, she saw a figure dropping down from the slope. The dog was running round it in circles.
She smiled to herself. That dog was a funny creature. She had never seen one act like it did. There had
been dogs on the farm:
you only had to tell them to lie down, but this one, if you said lie down, it came and licked your hand.
The only time it lay down was by the child’s basket. It seemed to love the child. At least, next to its