Read A Small Country Online

Authors: Siân James

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A Small Country (19 page)

BOOK: A Small Country
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‘Would you like to see the bedroom and the parlour?’

‘No, thank you. I know it will suit me. Also, I won’t want to use the parlour unless you’d rather keep me out of the kitchen.’

‘Live as family, four and sixpence,’ the woman said.

She passed Miriam the baby, now fast asleep, and got her purse from the dresser drawer. She put the sovereign into it and handed Miriam a florin.

‘I’m Mrs Thomas,’ she said, ‘Lily Thomas. Widow.’

FOURTEEN

Catrin withdrew from the day-to-day life of the farm. Everyone thought she was busy with preparations for her departure to Cardiff; in fact she spent her time in her room, studying herself in the mirror for hours, doing absolutely nothing.

In making her decision to train as a nurse, she had thought she was taking a step which would radically change her life and was realizing that it had in no way changed her. She had expected immediate metamorphosis into a completely different being, selfless, whereas she was still, she knew it, the immature, over-emotional girl thwarted in her first love encounter. The big gesture seemed to have been in vain, even rather silly.

Doctor Andrews, because he was a little in love with her, had some idea of what she was going through, and on his daily visits to her mother never failed to spend five minutes with her, talking about the more exciting aspects of modern medicine; the advances being made in operation techniques, the newest theories about nervous diseases. Realizing that she was intent on sacrificing herself, he wanted her at least to consider the sacrifice worthwhile.

In the event, it wasn’t the doctor’s pep talks which strengthened her resolve, but something else entirely.

On 5 August, a few days before she was due to leave home, it was announced in the papers that England had declared war on Germany.

From her earliest schooldays, a war between the great powers, England, France and Germany, had been prophesied; the inevitable outcome of their increasing military strength and continual jockeying for position. Now that the war had come, it seemed the appropriate time for putting aside personal vanities like love affairs and painting and drawing, and for making a serious commitment. It wasn’t so much patriotism that moved her as a foreboding of difficult times ahead, a foreboding that life was earnest and might be grim. The outbreak of war enabled her to forget herself and really think of herself as a nurse.

It was the following day that Josi returned home. He walked about the farm in his old way, talking to everyone, taking it easy, so entirely master of the situation that there was little speculation about why he’d come back; he was there, that was enough. Everyone was pleased.

It was only with Rachel that his composure left him; she had changed so much in his absence, had lost such a great deal of weight; lost her hold on life, it seemed.

‘Rachel,’ he said. ‘I’m sorry to see you so low.’

‘Did Tom ask you to come back? Was that why you came?’ She struggled to sit up, not noticing his shocked expression or his faltering tones.

‘That mostly. Other things as well.’

‘We’re man and wife, Josi,’ she said.

He took her hand. Her wedding ring was loose on her finger.

‘We are, Rachel.’

‘This is where you should be.’

‘It is.’

‘Don’t leave me again. There’s no need for it.’

‘I won’t leave you again. Believe me I won’t. I’m sorry to have caused you such distress. I’ll be here from now on.’

With that she had to be satisfied. She was satisfied. Rachel believed her husband had returned because he had received assurances of her forgiveness. Her heart grew large with forgiveness; it seemed the sweetest thing in the world.

She called Tom up to her room when Josi had gone downstairs and told him to arrange weekly payments for the baby until her sixteenth birthday. Tom promised to see the solicitor that afternoon.

‘I want the payments to continue, remember, even if I should die.’

‘Of course they shall, Mam, of course. I think you’re acting generously and properly.’

Tom bent and kissed his mother’s forehead. He was relieved that she hadn’t asked him any embarrassing questions; whether he had seen Miss Lewis and the baby, where they and his father had been living. He considered his mother a perfect lady.

‘Now that Father is home, I think I’ll apply for a commission with the Monmouthshire Regiment. I was in the Officers Training
Corps at school, so I don’t think they’d turn me down. I feel I ought to go. It seems my duty. They say it will be all over by Christmas.’

‘Tom, but you’re needed here.’

‘Not now. Not now that Father is back.’

‘Tom. Oh Tom, I suppose you must do what you think is right.’

‘I think it’s right. Germany has marched into Belgium, a peaceful little country, not much bigger than Wales; that seems indefensible. The English and French armies will have to put a stop to that, it seems to me. Don’t you think so?’

‘So I’m going to lose you and Catrin?’

‘You won’t lose either of us. We’ll come back when it’s all over and you’ll be proud of us. I’m very pleased now that Catrin is going to be a nurse; it’s the very thing I’d want her to do. After her training, she can volunteer to nurse the wounded.’

‘But you said it would be over by Christmas.’

‘The newspapers could be wrong, I suppose.’

Josi read the accounts of war, but couldn’t concentrate on them. Things outside his control didn’t occupy his mind. Miriam occupied his mind. Was he right to have left her? Rachel was dying, that was obvious even to him, yet she seemed the stronger of the two women. It wasn’t that Miriam had wept or clung to him; quite the reverse. When he had got back to their little cottage a couple of days ago, she had seemed terribly and awfully composed, drawing away from him when he’d tried to touch her, as animals do when injured.

‘I’ve found lodgings for her and me, Jos, in that cottage I told you about. I know you won’t be able to visit us, I won’t expect it, but perhaps you’ll write a line or two now and again. Care of Mrs Thomas, Carreg Las, Morfa. I expect you’ll change, though, Josi, people change when someone is dying, death turns even the best people into hypocrites. You’ll become religious, you shall see; more religious, I mean. You’ll think of me as your fall from grace and you’ll pray for deliverance from the sins of the flesh. Yes, you will, Josi. Never mind, I won’t change. You can be sure of me.’

‘Don’t torture me, girl. You know how I love you. Don’t break my heart with your nonsense. I don’t know how I can bring myself to leave you, home is where you are, you know that, Miriam. Only a little month we’ve had together here, and we thought we’d never be parted again. What can I do to show you how much I love you?’

If Miriam had asked him to stay, he would have stayed, he knew it. But she didn’t. Only tormented him in the way she had, so that there was only one way of release, and that way, she denied him.

They had spent the entire night in feverish thrust and parry, she never relenting, always keeping him away, beating him with her hard little fists whenever he tried to touch her. And at dawn they were still awake. Still alone and separate, they heard the first bird piping up. Then another and another, thrushes and blackbirds, robins and linnets, reaching an urgent, tumultuous crescendo.

‘They really seem to think it’s wonderful, don’t they; being alive,’ Miriam said, her voice calm. ‘Listen to them straining their little throats. It’s only another day, you foolish creatures, it’s not the blessed resurrection.’

‘Let them be,’ Josi said. He put his hand out to touch her and found her small and quiet. She didn’t resist when he lifted her towards him.

‘You’re my new day, Josi,’ she said afterwards. In the faint light of dawn they clung together and kissed in absolute surrender. They half-slept, kissed as they slept, clung together in their despair.

That evening after dark, he took her and the baby to their new home in Morfa. Mrs Thomas came to the door at Miriam’s first tap. She seemed surprised to see a man with her, perhaps relieved, but didn’t ask him in. ‘Goodbye,’ Miriam said, touching his hand briefly and following Mrs Thomas into the lamp-lit kitchen. ‘Goodbye, my girl.’

The tearing pain of parting remained with him still. So many songs he had sung about heartache, but they were all inadequate. Words turned about and stuck in his throat. Only the wind on the moor and the rain and the eerie broken cry of the curlews seemed to express the pain he felt.

She had shed a radiance on his life, he had never understood it, only accepted it. She made him feel as previously he had never felt for a woman, had felt only for an occasional frosty night when the stars shone on the hard, bright snow, at a funeral when the choir of men’s voices seemed to touch the nerve at the centre of existence. She affected him like stars and music. How could he do without her? He walked about the farm feeling like the husk of the man he was.

*

Tom hadn’t told Catrin that their father was returning. She walked into the kitchen at midday and found him there talking to Miss Rees. For a moment she neither moved nor spoke, so great was her shock at seeing him; her heart pounded and her mouth was dry.

‘What’s up with you?’ Josi asked her, and to her surprise she found herself crying in his arms as she had done when she was a child, as though he was the only one who could help her. And he patted her back and waited for her to stop.

‘Have you heard about the war?’ she asked at last. She hoped her emotional outburst would be ascribed to that cause.

‘Yes, I’ve seen the papers. Yesterday’s and today’s.’

‘Have you heard that I’m going nursing?’

‘Yes, I’ve heard that, too.’

‘Will you be here while I’m away?’

‘Yes, I’ll be here.’

He was so calm and self-assured, seemed so strong and dependable. Yet, he had left her mother for another woman; Catrin realized that she shouldn’t be basking in the warmth of his presence. He couldn’t help himself, she thought, any more than I could help falling in love with Edward Turncliffe. Nothing – she knew it – could keep her from Edward, neither family nor career nor the knowledge of hurting Rose whom she had liked and admired. She was no different. No better. Perhaps no one was. She had been too young and green to understand. She patted her father’s arm, forgiving him.

He thought her touch seemed like an appeal for help.

‘Don’t let them get you down,’ he said.

‘Who do you mean?’

‘Anybody.’

He thought of Isaac Lloyd, his boss for the last six weeks. How had the man become such a tyrant? How had it happened? What had twisted his nature? So that he had a need to antagonize every man and woman on his farm. Why? ‘The men will work twice as hard if you send them a good tea and give them time to eat it.’ ‘When I want advice from you I’ll ask for it.’ Every move Josi had made to try to humanize conditions had been countered by greater severity. When Josi had told him he was leaving, Lloyd had treated the statement with scorn. ‘You’ll leave when I kick you out.’ With no money and no reference, how could a workman leave? He was as tied as during the years of serfdom.

When Josi had told the farm lads of his departure, they had got up before dawn to help him load his furniture on to the wagon; partly, they liked him, mainly it was their delight that Isaac Lloyd was to be done down, to the best of their knowledge it was the first time such a thing had ever happened.

He wished he could warn Catrin about the Isaac Lloyds of the world, by all accounts there were plenty in the nursing profession. But she was young and resilient, and doubtless more charitable and understanding than he was.

‘Be happy,’ he said. ‘Try to be happy.’

‘I can’t be happy so I’ll have to be good, won’t I?’

Josi wondered what she meant, but she smiled and drew herself away from him as though unwilling to be questioned.

He let her go, his thoughts returning to Miriam. It was worse for her than for him. He was in the bosom of his affectionate family and surrounded by old friends; she was alone with strangers. Would anyone comfort and help her when the baby was fretful in the night? She was more sensitive than it was possible to be, happier than anyone else in the world when she was happy, but easily cast down, easily frightened, easily hurt. If only she had been willing to come back to Llanfryn, to old Hetty. ‘I won’t go where you’ll be tempted to visit me,’ she had said, ‘I know that would be worse for you.’ She was brave and wise; all the same he wished she was at Llanfryn with her aunt.

Lowri came in from the yard and stood before him. She came from the same small hamlet as he did, they were distantly related.

She didn’t say a word in greeting, just stood there looking at him with a familiar homely tenderness in her eyes. She reminded him of the picture of his mother as a child. He tried to think of something to say to her.

‘It’s whinberry tart today,’ she said at last. ‘Sali and I picked a basketful last night.’

‘That’s what I came home for,’ Josi said.

They smiled at each other.

Tom wrote to Edward telling him that he intended applying for a commission. ‘In a way I’m only escaping from the nightmare situation at home,’ he wrote. ‘Doctor Andrews has arranged for Catrin to be away so that she doesn’t have to see Mother suffering – he says she will soon be much worse – but in fact it is I who would find it intolerable. Catrin is much harder, or much braver, than I am. So I shall go to Monmouth tomorrow and with any luck shall be in France within the month. I persuaded Father to come home, so I shall be leaving the farm in good hands.’

BOOK: A Small Country
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