Authors: Yelena Kopylova
He lay now looking towards the door. They were all so kind to him in this house. He
hadn’t seen the
master of it yet, but he received messages from him, which was strange, even laughable.
The only other
person he hadn’t seen was Maggie. Maggie, he understood, was in everybody’s black
books, so
Gabriel had said. Yet, in a way, he had a lot to thank Maggie for, for how other could he have got round
that irascible man if she hadn’t run home with the dire news of his true identity, and so almost causing
them both to die. In no other way would he have melted. He must ask Kate to tell Maggie that he felt no
bitterness towards her, as indeed he didn’t. But now, what would the head of the house say when he
heard the doctor’s opinion of what should happen when he was fit to travel? Would there be more
protests, more tirades? Yes, very likely, because to keep them within his orbit he had, without giving his
blessing, consented to their living in the Bannamans’ house, although, as Kate had said, they weren’t to
expect him visiting, ever; they would have to do the calling. Well, he didn’t mind that in the least as long
as he could carry out the desire in his mind to erase the evil from that place.
But now, if he were to follow doctor’s orders, Kate would be taken out of her dad’s orbit not only for
some months to come, but for many winter months of each year.
Kate coming back into the room, he said to her, “You’ve been a long time.”
“A long time?” She smiled at him.
“I said goodbye to the doctor, had a word with Annie about your dinner and told her she’s not to make
you such luscious meals, and I washed my face and hands, spoke to Mother at the top of the stairs, and
here I am.”
“It’s been nearly fifteen minutes.”
“Oh, Ben.” She sat down on the edge of the bed and he put his arms out to her, and she held him, and
he murmured into her neck, “Italy or France, the very sound of it, or perhaps
Switzerland.” Then raising
his head and looking into her eyes, he added, “How do you think he’ll take this last
blow?”
“I don’t know. Doctor told Mother what he told us; I’ll give her time to tell him and then I’ll go and face
the barrage. Yet somehow, I don’t think there’ll be much, he’s changed.... What really happened up
there? You never said.”
“There was nothing much to tell. After Biddy did her work I found him, dragged him into the hut, then
got him up to the cottage, and there we told each other what we thought in no polite
language.” He
laughed gently now as he said, “I recall, when I went to wash the blood from his face he snatched the
cloth so quickly from my hand it slapped him across the mouth. I remember I wanted to
laugh, but
thought better of it.”
“You saved his life, and nearly lost your own. And you hold no bitterness against him
although it has left
you with this?” She patted his chest.
“That’s small payment to extract for you, Kate, and for his willingness that we should be together,
because although somehow or other I would have taken you from under his nose, you
would never have
been really happy, knowing how you had hurt him, whereas now He laughed again as he
said, “ He will
really want to shoot me when he knows I’m going to take you out of the country for
months at a time. “
“I don’t think so.” She bent forward and kissed him gently. Then holding his face
between her hands
she said, “You know, I’ll never be able to understand the reason why you love me. Of all the women in
the world you could have had, and yes’—she nodded at him “ I think you could have had
any one you
chose, you’ve got to come into these backwoods and find me, and tell me that you love
me. I know it’s
a dream, and I’m going to wake up from it some day, because it can’t be true, can it? “
“No, of course it isn’t true that I love you and you love me, and that you are the only woman in the
world for me, and always will be. No, of course it isn’t true. And one day we’ll wake up and find we
were both dreaming. But until then, let’s make believe, eh?” Now he put his lips on hers and held her
close to him until there was a rattle on the sneck of the door, and they moved apart. And Mary Ellen
came in, saying, “Well, now. Making plans?”
“Yes, sort of.” Kate rose from the bed, then added, “Have you told him?” And Mary
Ellen said, “Aye.
Aye, I’ve told him.”
“How did he take it?”
“Quietly, which, in a way I’m sorry to say, hurts me, because as you know it isn’t like him to be baulked
in any way and take it quietly.
But go in and say your piece, and I’ll sit on the bed here and ask this man of yours how it is he’s come
to alter my husband so; and whether it’s for better or worse, I’m not sure, because I miss me bawling
lad. “ She smiled sadly now; then with a wave of her hand she sent Kate from the room.
But Kate didn’t make straight for her father’s room, because there, coming from the top of the landing
was Maggie. She was carrying a clean water bucket in one hand and a broom and duster
in the other,
and she cast her eyes downwards and made to pass Kate without a word, as she had done
since the day
she delivered her message in 575 the kitchen. But now Kate put out her hand and drew
her to a stop,
saying quietly, “Let’s forget about this, Maggie. Tis all over. I hold you no bitterness, and neither does
Ben. Believe that.”
Maggie’s head drooping lower now, and her voice breaking, she said, “I’m sorry. I don’t know why I
did it. And ... and I’ve gone through hell thinking he might have died.” The tears were running down her
cheeks now. Kate, putting her hand on her shoulder, said gently, “Well, he didn’t, and everything’s
turned out all right. In fact, if you hadn’t done what you did do, I doubt if Ben and I would have ever
come together, not really, at least not happily like we shall now. So there, you see, good’s come of it.”
When Maggie shook her head from side to side, Kate said, “Believe me, everything’s all right. Look,
when Mam comes out, go in and have a word with him.”
At this, Maggie ran from her, her body half bent, the pail jangling in her hand. And Kate looked after
her sadly for a moment before turning and going in to Hal.
He was propped up in bed and there was a newspaper and a magnifying glass lying on the quilt as if he
had been reading. But his hands now lay idle in front of him and he greeted her with, “If he doesn’t soon
take this damn wood off me foot, I’ll never be able to move it again.”
“I thought he was going to do something this morning?”
“Aye, he’s let me toes free, that’s about all. Have a look at them.”
She pulled back the cover from the cage and looked at his bare toes sticking out from the bandage, and
she said, “Can you move them?”
“Can I hell! He says I’ve got to practise. But I haven’t got to touch them, or anybody else, like
massage them, I’ve got to think I can move them and then move them. That’s what he
says. He’s up the
pole, that fellow.”
She covered up the cage, then sat down by the side of him, and he looked at her and said,
“Well?” And
she answered him in the same vein, saying, “Well?”
He moved restlessly for a moment, then began to pick at the threads from a square of
patchwork in the
quilt before he said, “Came as another shock, that.”
“What? That Ben has an infected lung? Or that we must spend part of the winter months
in a warm
climate if he wants to get entirely better?”
“Aye, well, both you could say. But why not go to some warm part in England?”
“There are no really warm parts in England, not in the winter.”
“Oh aye, there are. They say Devon’s warm.”
“Well, it’s a different warmth Ben needs, so doctor says, constant sun and no damp.”
“Where d’you think of going then?”
“France, Italy, perhaps Switzerland, we don’t know yet. You see it was just sprung on us today.”
“Aye, just sprung on us. An’ you say, France. You’ll go to Paris likely, eh? And call on him?”
Her eyes widened and her whole face stretched. It was the last thing she had thought of when naming
France, that she would ever go to Paris and call on her father. She said now somewhat
vehemently,
“Just like you to say that, isn’t it? No, I won’t go to Paris to see him. He means nothing to me. I’ve told
you before, but you’re so thick-headed and....”
“All right, all right. Don’t take a pattern from your mother. I only thought you might.”
“Well, I won’t.” Her voice dropped.
“I can promise you that. Dad, I won’t go near him. We won’t even go anywhere near
Paris. He took
twenty-four years to come and see me, so I’m not going to break my neck in the next six to twelve
months to go and see him. No’ she caught hold of his hand ‘never worry on that score.
You are my
father, always have been, and always will be.” She leant towards him now and he put his arms about
her, and they held each other close.
When she muttered, “I could never have been really happy without your consent, no
matter what I’d
said,” he pressed her from him and, his eyelids blinking and his nose sniffing, he said,
“Damned hazardous
way I had to go about giving it to you, hadn’t I? And when we’re on, about the house, he still intends to
set up there?”
“He would like to. Dad. He’s got this feeling that somehow there he can erase the harm his mother and
his grandfather did.”
“That’s a tall order, lass. You cannot raise the dead, or erase how they met their death.
But still, if he’s
bent on it, I’ve got no say in the matter now, have I? The only thing is, as I told you, I can’t see me
visiting you.”
“Well—’ She pulled a face at him, and rising from the bed she said, “ We’lLonly have to bring the
children every Sunday to visit you. And to make sure we don’t go back on our word, I’ll go now and
get him to sign a paper to that effect. “ She laughed aloud as she backed from the bed, and at the door
she turned and gave him a little wave. It was an action she had been wont to do as a child when, from
her mother’s arms, she had watched him ride out of the yard. And when the door closed
on her his chin
dropped on to his chest and he muttered to himself, “ Bring the children every Sunday
afternoon.
Children with Bannaman’s blood in them. The sins of the fathers are visited upon the
children even to the
third and fourth generation. “
PART FOUR. And Hatred Therewith
The cows coming across the yard made a chorus of moos, all thirty-two voices seeming
to be vying with
each other. Mary Ellen considered the sound a mixture between a wail at their having
been driven from
the pasture to a pean of praise at the imminent relief of their low-flung swinging udders.
She glanced sideways from the table where she was kneading bread in a big brown
earthenware bowl
and as her gaze fell on the man following the herd she said, “Terry’s walking worse than ever. He’ll have
to get off his feet for a time. Yet, how we’ll manage I don’t know.” Then her eyes were drawn sharply
towards her daughter who was standing near the dresser changing her apron, for she had just said, “He’ll
have to engage another hand.”
“You know your dad doesn’t like new hands about the place.”
“Then he shouldn’t go enlarging the stock, should he? We’re lucky to have what good
pasture we have
got in this area, but it’ll only feed so many.”
Maggie had her hands behind her neck adjusting the straps of the white bib, and her head was bent
forward as she ended, “And what’ll happen if Willy decides to up and go?”
Mary Ellen stared at her daughter, the one, as she put it to herself, she had never been able to fathom.
There she was, thirty-nine years old, a spinster seemingly self—chosen, for it wasn’t for the want of
chances that she hadn’t married. She couldn’t understand her. She was the best looking one in the
family yet seemed to have the sourest nature. She had been a flirt and a bit of a
flibbertigibbet right up
until she was twenty three. But from the time she had exposed Ben’s relationship to the Bannamans she
had changed. Of course, what she had done could have been the means of killing both
Ben and her
father and that must have preyed on her mind, for from then her ways had changed:
instead of setting out
to attract every man who came within yards of her, she avoided him. Under the
circumstances you
would have thought she would have been glad to have married and got away from the
house and the
unspoken censure of her father, but the reverse was the case. In fact, for months at a time she would
never leave the farm, not even to go into the market on a Saturday. That was, until she reached her
middle thirties.
She couldn’t quite pinpoint when the second change occurred in her daughter except that it was at a time
of upheaval all round. What caused it was that Gabriel, who had worked on the farm for years alongside
his brother John and was then thirty years of age, had up, without notice, and told them he was going into
Newcastle to live with Hugh and find work there in the glass factory all because he had become
interested in glass objects, such as engraved goblets and the like that were being