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Authors: Trudy Morgan-Cole

BOOK: A Sudden Sun
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December 15
I don’t know why it should be that the very thing that froze and terrified me when it occurred at medical school—the sight of an injured person—should have such a different effect here. In this case it was a trapper who had half-severed his foot while chopping wood—and of course it took far too long for him to come to the clinic, the wound was deeply infected and the foot far past saving. It was every bit as gruesome as things I saw in the trenches.
But I felt exactly as it did back on the battlefields of
France and entirely unlike the clean and antiseptic hospital in Montreal. I thought only of the suffering man, and the injured limb, and what might be done to save him. In the end it meant amputating the foot—a hard blow, but he’s a brave fellow and was already learning to get around well on a crutch when I saw him last. I suppose I am much in the same situation—not having lost a foot, I mean, but having lost a piece of myself. Since coming here I have begun to see two things: that what I have lost will never be wholly regained, and that I may be able to go on without it.

In mid-January he wrote about the early dark and late dawn of the northern winter.

It’s dark by four in the evening and not light again ’til nine in the morning. I know it’s worse farther north, the land of the midnight sun in summer and the long dark winter. But it’s more than dark enough here… I go to the clinic in the morning darkness and return home, if I don’t work late, in afternoon darkness. And sit in my room looking out at the dark night, which seems endless. I was never afraid of the dark as a child but I’m beginning to fear it now—how foolish is that? The worst things, the deepest fears and doubts, seem to surface at night, and at this time of year up here it seems to be nearly always night.
I write to you that I’m happy here, happier than I was in St. John’s, and then I lie awake these nights and can think only dark thoughts. But it’s better, I’ve come to believe, to feel the horrible things than to feel nothing at all. You can’t imagine—I know you can’t, because you are so much alive, always glowing like a flame just lit—you cannot imagine feeling so dead that it would be a relief, almost, to be back in the trenches in France, braced for the whine of shells, if only to feel something again.

Grace did not want to picture Jack like that, sitting alone by a dark window, thinking what he described as “dark thoughts” and glad to be feeling anything at all, even if it was something terrible. She read on: it was not the only entry like that. His dark thoughts were all there on paper for her to see. All the things he had kept hidden during that year in St. John’s when she had wished he would talk to her were committed to writing now, as if he had to be hundreds of miles away before he could tell her the truth.

Yet through it all, as he wrote about the hardship and the loneliness, his terrifying dreams and the chasm of self-doubt that yawned before him on the darkest nights, he wrote, too, about loving his work and realizing he could still do it, and the joy that gave him. Grace’s eyes burned—sometimes with tears, sometimes just with the strain of reading so late at night when she ought to be asleep. But the same words that chronicled Jack’s despair also carried more hope than she’d heard from him in years.

March 12
I am leaving Battle Harbour for now; I’ve been sent down the coast to the clinic at Forteau, where there’s no doctor at the moment and a greater need for the services of an almost-doctor. The clinic, and the community there, is even smaller than at Battle Harbour, so, I imagine, even lonelier.
I wish you were here. And yet that’s not right because you seem so very much in your place in town that I can’t imagine transplanting you to Labrador. I think the only people who make it up here are the ones who do feel called to it—and I think, for now at least, that I am one such.

When Grace closed the black notebook her eyes ached with the effort of reading forty pages of handwriting by lamplight. She blinked at the clock: it was two in the morning. She had read
Jack’s stories of gruesome injuries, long hours, endless nights, an epidemic of flu that wiped out two entire families in a tiny village. He had written about his work, what he was learning, about his own pain and anguish and the glimmers of hope he saw. He had spoken to her more freely in his winter journal than in all the long months before he went away. He had written of missing her, and wishing she were there. But he had not written that he loved her, or said anything about marriage or the future.

She closed the book with the feeling that Jack had just been in the room, that she could still hear the echo of his voice. He was so close and yet he was far away, much further than the distance between St. John’s and the Labrador coast. As to when, or whether, she would see him again, Grace had no idea.

Grace
CHAPTER THIRTY


I
T HAS BEEN thirty years since my mother joined a group of women who marched to our Colonial Building and presented a bill asking for the right to vote,” Grace said, her voice shaking a little. She paused for translators to repeat her statement in French, in Spanish, in Italian. “And still the women of Newfoundland do not have the right to vote!”

“Shame! Shame!” cried some voices from the crowd. It was a crowd indeed, the largest Grace had ever spoken in front of—women from England and America and Europe as well as other parts of the world, brown and black faces mingled with the white ones at this ninth Congress of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance. The women of Newfoundland properly belonged among the brown and black faces, Grace thought, for the fact that they still didn’t have the vote put them among the backward countries of the world, like that poor woman from Egypt who had spoken with such passion the day before. Italy, the host country, had still not given women the vote, though the country’s new leader had promised it would come soon. Among the British Dominions, only the women
of South Africa stood along with Newfoundland on the side of those who had not yet been given the franchise.

Speaking to such a group was both exhilarating and frightening. Grace’s speech was a brief coda at the end of Miss Kennedy’s presentation, and she felt disloyal to Lily as the words came out of her mouth. The very thing Lily had worked hard to conceal from her, the past that she was so ashamed of, Grace was telling this large group of strangers. Speaking as if suffrage was a cause she had learned about at her mother’s knee.

When she finished with a plea for the ladies to petition the Newfoundland government for women’s franchise, a burst of applause met her speech—something Grace’s previous experience speaking in Sunday School and to church women’s groups had not prepared her for.

It was not making speeches, though, but listening to them that was the most exciting part of the week—hearing the great Carrie Chapman Catt speak as she laid aside the mantle of leadership she had borne for nearly twenty years and the new president, Mrs. Ashby of England, was elected. Later, Grace was introduced to Mrs. Catt and shook her hand. Then there was the fact that, incredible as it seemed, she was in Rome. Grace spent as many hours as she could spare walking the streets, looking at the ruins. There was the Coliseum, and there the Roman Forum, just as they had been when Caesar was murdered on the Senate floor, when St. Paul and St. Peter preached here.

On Sunday, their last day in Rome, Miss Kennedy asked if the Italian lady who was acting as their tour guide, Signora Rignotti, could take her to St. Peter’s. “I would so love to catch a glimpse of the Holy Father, and perhaps get some holy medals to bring home to dear Mother—it would mean so much to her,” she said. Grace sometimes forgot that Miss Kennedy was a devout Roman Catholic; she was the only papist Grace had known well since the days when
she worked under Nurse Fitzpatrick at the old Empire Hospital. Both women had done a great deal to erode Grace’s wariness of Catholics, but her staunch Methodist soul shrivelled at the idea of going to St. Peter’s Square to see the Pope and get holy medals blessed. “I believe I’ll stay at the hotel,” she said.

“I will bring you to a group of ladies who are making a—a pilgrimage, you would say?—to St. Peter’s,” Signora Rignotti said to May Kennedy. “Then I take Grace to the Coliseum. I am not so very good a Catholic; the Pope can say mass without me there.” She laughed and hooked her arm through Grace’s.

Italy was a country rebuilding itself after the ravages of the war that had ended five years earlier. Everywhere in Rome new roads were being built and new monuments erected. Grace exclaimed as she stepped over a metal drainage cover emblazoned with the eagle of the ancient Roman legions and the “SPQR” legend that she knew represented the Senate and People of the Roman Republic. “Goodness! Surely the drainage covers haven’t been around since the time of the Caesars, have they?”

Signora Rignotti laughed. “No, no, not at all. Italy is an old country and a very new one, too. Much of our past was buried and forgotten. All this, bringing back the eagle and the old Roman symbols—that is all Mussolini and the Fascists. They want us to think the Roman Empire is great again. A bit foolish perhaps, but they are also putting in the new drains, so who am I to complain?”

The name and image of the new leader, Mussolini, was everywhere. He had sat on the dais and greeted the suffrage delegates on the first night of the conference, a blunt, plain-looking man who spoke what sounded to Grace like blunt and plain Italian. Nothing was poetic or eloquent about him, but when he spoke, people listened. Since coming here she had heard Italian ladies speak almost with reverence of their new leader—they called him
Il Duce
, “The Boss”—while others rolled their eyes and shook their
heads when the great man’s name was mentioned. One way or another, this man was the centre of everything in this city.

In a strange way Rome reminded Grace of Port Union—on a far grander scale of course, but the ancient city had the same endless string of new building projects that the little outport did, the same air of energy and optimism, and the same sense that behind it all was one man’s vision, one towering personality. Over dinner that evening with Signora Rignotti, May Kennedy, and some ladies from the Canadian delegation, Grace tried to explain to Signora Rignotti. The Italian woman nodded, then shook her head. “Yes and no,” she said. “I see what you mean about these great men—they build cities as their monuments—but if your Mister Coaker is a union man I do not think he and Mussolini would get along well, for Il Duce is set against the unions. His Blackshirts break up the strikes and promise they will save us from the socialists. Me, I’m not so sure we need the saving, but he says he will give our women the vote.”

“I suppose time will tell,” Miss Kennedy said, and when Signora Rignotti shot her a questioning glance, she added, “Your Mussolini—whether he is a good leader or not. And whether you, and we, get our rights.”

“Ah yes, time. Time does not heal all wounds, as you English say, but it makes many things clear.”

Signora Rignotti walked them back to their hotel that evening. At the door she turned to Grace. “It move me very much, what you say about your mother. I pray you in the New Found Land soon have the vote, and we here in Italy too. I am sure your mother will be proud of you.” She put her arms around Grace, who was still struggling to adjust to the frequent kisses and embraces of southern Europe.

Then the Roman interlude was over, and Grace and Miss Kennedy were on a steamer headed back across the Atlantic. Their
ship was bound for New York, from where they would catch the
Nerissa
to St. John’s a few days later. Grace had arranged to spend those days staying with Mrs. Parker, who was eager to hear about everything: Grace’s family, her work in St. John’s, Jack, the conference in Rome. Abigail Parker was a most gratifying audience: she was never bored.

“What a wonderful opportunity, not just to attend a conference like that, but to speak. I tell you, Grace, I’m ashamed sometimes to think I come from Newfoundland when I see how backward our country is, but now I really think we might be seeing change in the air. And you’re going to be a part of making it happen! Your mother would be proud, really she would.”

Abigail Parker—who had known Lily so well, so long ago—unconsciously echoed the Italian woman who had never met her:
I am sure your mother will be proud of you
. And they were both wrong.

Grace took a long breath. “Do you really think she would, Mrs. Parker? She’s told me over and over that she doesn’t want me involved in the suffrage movement. Why would she think that, if she fought for women’s votes herself once?”

For the first time since Grace had met her, Abigail didn’t start talking immediately, treading on the heels of Grace’s question. She took the time for a long sip of tea and laid cup and saucer down with great care. She picked up a scone, looked at it, laid it down again.

“Your mother was very badly hurt once, Grace. Perhaps she made some—poor choices. And perhaps she blames the suffrage women for some of that. She thinks that—well, that one thing led to another.”

“She was in love with someone else before she married my father, wasn’t she?”

Another sigh, like a soft puff of wind in summer. “Yes. Yes, she was. Madly in love, I’d have said.”

“I can’t picture that.”

“No, and that’s the tragedy—not that she fell in love, but that it turned her into a woman you can’t imagine ever being in love. It’s as I told you. She was very badly hurt.”

“Who was he?”

“No one. I mean, no one you’d know of. No one any of us knew of, really. He didn’t move in our circles. He was a nobody—a journalist, very ambitious, very radical ideas.”

“This was in St. John’s?”

“Yes, hard to believe there was anyone radical in St. John’s in those days, isn’t it? He left eventually, of course. Came here, to New York.”

“He left my mother?”

“He, ah—yes, he went away.”

“And that was the end of things between them?”

“I can’t tell you the whole story, Grace. Your mother begged me never to tell you….”

“But there is a whole story. And you know it.”

“I helped your mother—I mean, I thought at the time I was helping. I helped her see this man, spend time with him. I thought it was all fun, a great lark—you know, secret admirers and all that. I didn’t know how badly she would be hurt when—oh dear. I’ve said too much already.”

“I’d pieced together a lot of it anyway. Things my mother and father said, and some old postcards I found in her room at Grandfather’s house.” The two postcards that had mystified her for years, the one signed A and the one signed D, were in Grace’s purse, worn soft on the edges from carrying around. She had brought them knowing she would see Mrs. Parker in New York, though it wasn’t until Signora Rignotti said
I think your mother will be proud
that Grace had decided to show them to Abigail.

Now she passed her the one signed A, the one that said, “
It’s a pickle and no mistake
.” “You wrote this, didn’t you?”

Mrs. Parker looked at the card, her lips forming the words as she read. “Yes,” she said, almost a whisper.

“And this other one. He wrote it—the man my mother loved.”

Mrs. Parker nodded, reading the card. “I suppose so. Yes, of course he did. I saw his hand writing often enough. I used to pass notes for them, sometimes. I should have known better.”

“Can you tell me his name?”

“I can’t. I shouldn’t.”

Grace wasn’t sure why she persisted. For so many years she’d known there were secrets in her mother’s past but had been willing to let them lie. It wasn’t as if she had any right to them, if Lily didn’t choose to tell her. But she had gone to Rome, and told women from around the world that her mother had once been a suffragist—her mother, who burned the suffrage petition. Last fall, when Grace had written to tell her parents that the Franchise League had raised money to send her to Rome, the Reverend had written back to give her his blessing. He had made it clear that he was going against Lily’s wishes, something he rarely did where Grace was concerned. He also wrote, “We would like to see you at home again,” but Grace had not been back since Lily burned the petition. She pleaded the need to stay in town and work, to save money for the Rome congress. The last letter she had from Lily before leaving Newfoundland was full of news about what everyone in Catalina had contributed to the Ladies’ Aid sale of work, but had made no mention of Grace’s trip to Rome.

Abigail Parker, who hated keeping secrets, needed little persuasion to tell Grace about a man called David Reid, a Newfoundlander who, like herself, had lived in New York all these years. They didn’t see each other socially, of course—not the same circles at all—but David Reid looked her up from time to time. Asked about people from home. Asked about Lily. He was a journalist. He lived in Brooklyn. And he had never married.

“You have an address for him, then. Or at least you know where to find him,” Grace said.

“Oh Grace, that wouldn’t be a good idea. That wouldn’t be a good idea at all.”

Two days later, the day before her ship sailed for St. John’s, Grace walked down the Brooklyn street where David Reid lived. The streets grew narrower and more crowded as she moved further into the heart of Flatbush. May in New York was as hot as May in Rome had been; she missed the cool of a St. John’s fog. This Brooklyn street was a different world from Mrs. Parker’s neighbourhood in Manhattan. She heard a babble of voices in different languages, saw dark faces, saw old Jewish men in black hats with long fringes of hair by their ears, woman in long dark dresses with veiled heads.

Mrs. Parker had given her the address after some protest. It really hadn’t been a fair fight, Grace thought, pitting her own will against Abigail Parker’s. Abigail still had that romantic, foolish side. The same part of her nature that had once helped Lily arrange meetings with a secret beau also wanted to know what would happen if Grace were to meet her mother’s old lover. Grace had considered coming here and knocking on the man’s door, or walking into his newspaper office, but she had sent a note instead explaining who she was and asking if they could meet. She had hesitated before adding the postscript.
My mother does not know I am contacting you.

He had replied by return post, suggesting a restaurant in his neighbourhood at four o’clock this afternoon. She stood looking at the house a moment longer—it was four now, so if he were punctual at all he had left—and then went down the street, checking the address on the now crumpled piece of paper in her hand.

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