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Authors: Tim Vicary

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BOOK: Cat and Mouse
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Her body tried to vomit it out again and her throat gurgled and she nearly choked. She thought, what if I can't breathe? They'll suffocate me and there's nothing at all I can do. She took great desperate snorts of air through her nose and thought: how thin my nostrils are, how easily they could get blocked. I had a cold last week — please God don't let me cry because my nose often gets blocked then and I'll die!

The young doctor stopped feeding the tube into her. He picked up the funnel and jammed it into the other end. Then he held the funnel and the other end of the tube with his left hand, directly above Sarah's face. With his right hand he picked up the white enamel jug.

He looked down at her and smiled!

‘Here you are, Mrs Becket. Your breakfast. Best beef broth with egg whipped into it. Just the thing to put strength back into you and bring you to your senses. I'm going to pour it slowly into your stomach through this tube. All right? You'll feel better afterwards.’

He began to pour. She didn't, in fact, feel anything at first. Just a slight warmth and swelling inside the tube as the soup went down inside her throat. Then, as he went on, there was an ache and a bloating feeling inside her stomach. She tried to shift her legs to ease the discomfort, and became horribly conscious of the heavy wardress sitting on them. Please God don't let that woman move, she thought — if she puts any weight on my stomach, I'll drown in all this, something will burst and I'll die . . .

There was a gurgling sound from the funnel at the top of the tube, and the young man put the enamel jug down with a clang.

‘That's it, then, Mrs Becket. Now, I'll just take this tube and gag out, and leave you in peace to digest your meal.’

He began to haul the tube up, hand over hand like a sailor hauling an anchor out of the sea. Sarah became aware that she had a headache, and a rising tide of nausea was flooding through her. Her face, her neck were sweating. Still she could not move. The doctor bent over her and began to fiddle with the knobs of the steel gag, to loosen it from her mouth. As he pulled it out, the nausea became unbearable. She retched, and a stream of brown vomit shot out all over him.

The wardress let go of her head, and the doctor started back. Sarah was aware of the foul stuff all over her face and hair, and she struggled onto her side, her hands free for the first time. Feebly, she tried to brush the vomit away. It was on her face, her dress, the bed, the floor — everywhere. She saw it was on the doctor's coat and hands too — he was cursing and mopping them with a handkerchief.

Sarah sat with her head in her hands on the edge of the bed, wondering if more would come. She wanted to do something about it, clean it up, but for the moment she was too weak to move.

One of the wardresses took the bucket from the trolley and placed it in front of her. Then she opened the door, went out into the corridor, and came back with another prisoner, a sad, grey-haired woman in a serge dress covered with arrows, who had a mop and bucket of water in her hand.

‘There! This prisoner's been sick. Clean it up, will you, quick as you can!’

The doctor stood by the trolley, mopping his coat. He glared at Sarah in disgust. ‘Look at what you've done now, you stupid woman! Mess everywhere! If you can't take the punishment, you shouldn't commit the crime. Learn to eat, or we shall be back again tomorrow, and every day from now on!’

He marched out. The three wardresses stayed, watching the elderly prisoner slowly, methodically mopping the floor. She did it without comment, never raising her head to look at anyone. Sarah felt immensely sorry for her.

‘I'll clean it up myself next time,’ she whispered. Her voice was so faint that she wondered if anyone could hear it. She looked up at the wardress who had held her head. ‘Do you think . . . I could have a bath, or a wash at least? This stuff is in my hair and on my dress.’

‘Bathtime's six o'clock. You'll have to wait till then.’ The young slab-faced wardress glared at her, then relented slightly. 'But I'll see you get a bucket of water and a towel. Whatever 'appens, 'olloway's a clean prison, we can't change that.’

‘Thank you.’ Sarah gazed down at the woman scrubbing the slimy floor, and shivered. She felt so cold, feebler than she had ever been in her life. It has happened now, she thought slowly. I have suffered, as other suffragettes have done. And I am still alive.

This is what men do to women. When we protest and stand up for our rights they don't understand or respect us at all. This is the only way they can fight back.

Does Jonathan know they are doing this to me?

When the floor was clean the young wardress sent the elderly prisoner to fetch a bucket of water and a towel. Then they all went out and left her alone.

For a long time she sat without moving on the edge of her bed. Even to move a finger was an enormous effort. But then the smell and the stickiness of her hair became too much to bear, and slowly, very carefully, she knelt down on the grimy floor in front of the bucket, picked up the cake of grey, gritty soap, and started to wash her hair.

Much later, she dragged herself to her feet, and, with the towel wrapped like a turban round her head, began to totter the four steps from window to door, and back again.

Again. And again. And again.

Three miles a day. Making herself see the grass. Hear the birdsong. Feel the warm sunlight on her back.

Remembering Glenfee . . .

PART TWO

Deborah

6

D
EBORAH CAVENDISH stood on the verandah at Glenfee, waiting.

Her home, Glenfee Lodge, was a three storey red-brick building of some fifteen or twenty bedrooms, standing in ten acres of parkland on the edge of Strangford Lough. In front of her the lawns sloped down towards the lough, and in the orchard the apple trees were resplendent with blossom. Away to her right, gardeners were raking out nursery beds in the walled vegetable garden and planting out seedlings from the cold frames; and all around them, birds flitted to and fro, seeking bits of straw and twigs for the nests they were building in the luxuriant creepers that festooned the south wall of the Lodge.

She was a fair-skinned woman, tall and slim like her sister but with full breasts and a delicate, motherly face that tended to freckles if she was out too much in the sun. Unlike Sarah she had long fair hair which was wound into an elegant coiffure parted in the middle and swept back round the top of her head, like a turban. It was a style that was supposed to be fashionable, but Deborah was not quite sure if it suited her or not. She was never sure of things like that. She only knew that it took her maid half an hour's careful work each morning to pin it into place, that it made her look very similar to the fashionable ladies in
The Times
, and that it was very easy to pin a hat on to. She would have preferred to wear her hair long and loose over her shoulders as she had as a girl, but of course no married woman of twenty-eight could do that, it would cause a scandal.

So Deborah wore her hair up and the hairstyle made her hold her head up too, making her delicate face look rather proud, anxious, on edge. She had a straw hat on and a full-length white dress with a high collar. There were white gardening gloves on her hands, and she was carrying a basket of tulips and late daffodils which she had just picked and was intending to arrange in the house. She had caught sight of herself in a mirror before she went outdoors and thought: I am dressed like a bride today.

Not that Charles will notice . . .

But he has to notice me sometime. Sometime soon. If he doesn't, it will be too late.

I may look like a bride but I feel like a whore . . .

Deborah had seen the first swallows earlier in the week, and as she watched, one swooped in under the eaves of the stables to where they had built a nest of mud every year since Deborah's marriage.

Nine years, Deborah thought. Which means those swallows must have hatched how many chicks under our roofs: twenty, thirty? But they can't be the same birds — how long does a swallow live? We have reared generations of swallows while I just have the one son.

But an afternoon like this was made for hope. She looked beyond the lawns to the sparkling blue waters of the lough, where the brown and white sails of fishing boats bobbed up and down; and then glanced left, along the dusty white coast road to Killyleagh, where two horsemen were riding towards the house.

She watched as they passed through the gates and rode up the drive. They were a handsome pair — the tall man on the bay hunter and the boy on the dapple grey Connemara pony. As they came nearer the man saw her and waved, and her heart leapt. Perhaps it would really work this time, she thought. It had been a difficult few weeks, these Easter holidays, but now that Charles was back from Egypt at least he had made a real effort to spend time with their son, Tom. And through spending time with Tom he had spent a little more time with her, too — more time than she could remember for many years. She waved back, enthusiastically. Perhaps this time . . .?

As they came closer her son nudged his pony into a trot. He halted on the drive just below the verandah and looked up, beaming. She smiled down at him.

‘Did you have a good ride?’

‘I'll say! Mother, I jumped the three hedges down by the copse, and the ditch! He never stopped once — ask Father if you don't believe me!’

She glanced at Charles as he drew up, grinning, beside Tom. Charles Cavendish was a tall, lean man, ten years older than his wife. He had a thin brown face with a hooked, aquiline nose, high cheekbones, and a short dark moustache. Over the years the face had become thinner, more leathery with exposure to wind and sun. When he smiled, as he was doing now, the smile always rose more to the left of his face than the right, giving an engaging, boyish look. But I see it so seldom, Deborah thought.

‘Quite true, m'dear, every word! And you needn't be frightened, either — the boy's got a seat like a trooper and the pony's a genuine smasher! We'll have him out with the hunt this autumn!’

‘Well done,’ she said, gamely. The thought of her little boy flying through the woods with the hunt appalled her, but only briefly; she had far too many other worries now. And besides, if Tom was happy, that was the whole point of this holiday. To bring them together as a family again. Before it was too late.

A stable lad ran up to take the horses, and Charles dismounted. But Tom stayed on his pony.

‘It's all right, Harry,’ he said. ‘I'll ride him down to the stables and untack him. I can, can't I, Father? I like doing it, and you always say a good soldier has to be able to do everything for his horse.’

‘Yes, of course. Be sure to walk him round until he's cool, then rub him down. Harry'll show you.’

Charles smiled, watched them go, and came up the steps to his wife.

‘It seems that the present was a success, then,’ she said.

‘Certainly. He's a grand little pony.’

‘I’m glad. Tom will have something to boast of, at least, when be goes back to school.’

‘Yes.’ He paused just below the top step, and looked at her, still smiling. I remember he smiled at me like that on our wedding day, Deborah thought. Nine years ago this May, in the church in Downpatrick. Sarah said I was a fool to marry so young but I defied her. We came back here afterwards in a black shining landau and stood on the steps of this house to welcome our guests to the reception. The photographer from the
Belfast Times
took a picture and printed it next day, saying we were the handsomest couple in Ulster.

Now the smile looks more like that of a general, a commander. Weighing you up even as he looks at you. Yet there is that haunting loneliness somewhere deep behind the eyes, too. It's been worse these past two months than ever before. I wish he would let me in to touch that. Ease the pain of whatever it is that gnaws him . . .

‘Well . . .’ As she spoke she thought she sounded almost flustered, not quite knowing how to deal with the unexpected intimacy of such a short, friendly moment. He had been away so often in their married life, they had spent so little time together. If I'm not careful I'll blush, she thought, and that would be really foolish. It's so important. ‘I've spent all the afternoon getting Tom's clothes packed. I think he'll find they're in apple-pie order.’

It was Tom's third term at boarding school, and tomorrow she was to take him back for the start of the summer term. It seemed that an eight year old boy needed a quite extraordinary collection of clothes and kit to last him through the next twelve weeks — cricket flannels, house blazer, rowing strip, straw boater, black gown, house tie, house cap, and a complete selection of new shirts, knickerbockers, socks, boots, stiff collars, and suits, to replace those that his wrists and ankles were suddenly poking out of. Deborah had spent most of the last week buying and labelling these things, and was heartily sick of them all.

‘Good. Let's hope he keeps them like that. He can be a scruffy little beggar if he wants to. Not with the pony's tack so far, but with his own things. Would never do in the army.’ Charles stepped up onto the verandah and strolled beside her into the house. They went up the main staircase together, to the first floor where their two suites of rooms opened one off the other. He said: ‘The fields are looking good, too. If this weather holds we should have a good year.’

‘I hope so. We've had a good crop of daffodils anyway. And a few early tulips — look.’

He glanced at the basket she was carrying over, her arm. ‘So I see.’ They reached his bedroom door and he turned to go in. ‘You'll want to be arranging them, I suppose. I'd better get out of these clothes and change for dinner.’

‘Of course.’ He was wearing his riding boots and jodhpurs, and she could smell the scent of leather and horse-sweat on him. As he opened the door she said: ‘Charles.’

‘Yes?’

‘Do you — mind if I come and talk to you while you change?’

As soon as she had said it she felt her hand shaking; it was not the sort of thing that happened between them once in a year, even. But then, it was the sort of thing that other married women must say, all the time; and she had a feeling, growing in her, that today was going to be different, lucky. It had to be, if their marriage was not going to fall apart for ever.

BOOK: Cat and Mouse
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