Read Hester Waring's Marriage Online
Authors: Paula Marshall
âYou can't help her even if you stay with her,' Alan told him quietly. âI won't disguise the fact that she is very weak and I fear for both her and the child. If it comes to it, do I save the mother or the child?'
Tom turned savagely away from his friend. âFor God's sake, Alan, what a question! The mother, of course. I cannot lose Hester now. You'll never know what she was prepared to do for me tonight.'
âI can guess,' said Alan, who had heard Hester's ramblings. âI'll do my best for them bothâand for you. But the matter is out of my hands. In childbirth God disposes. If matters become desperate I promise to send for you.'
Banished from his Hester, his love, the star by which he lived, so that should she now die, his life would become meaningless, and all that he had striven for would turn to ashes, Tom sat in his chair, his head in his hands.
He had married her almost in jest, thinking that she was just one more possession which he had acquired on his way to power and domination, and now she possessed him. They were twin souls whom an unlikely fate had blessed with one another, and if she were to die now, then what was left for Tom Dilhorne?
Inside the bedroom, Alan and Sarah laboured together to save Hester, if not the baby, for it was, Alan saw quite plainly, coming down to that. Once, Sarah came out to find Tom standing in the corridor, his good shoulder propped against the wall. His face was ghastly.
âOh, Tom, at least sit down,' she said, shocked by his appearance. âYou are making yourself ill to no purpose.'
He refused.
âNo, not whilst Hester is in such agony. Oh, God, Sarah, I'm such a selfish brute and she's such a little thing. She knew how much I wanted a child. Not once in all these months of suffering has she ever complained.'
âDon't give up hope,' said Sarah earnestly. âAlan thinks that he can save them both. Childbirth is never easy at the best of times.'
âBut this is Hester, and I have never cared for anyone elseâand there is nothing I can do to help her, nothing. If I could I would bear all her pain, but I can't⦠It will break my heart to lose her.'
He began to sob, his face in his hands, his body shaking with the violence of his grief.
Sarah had never thought to see hard Tom Dilhorne so broken. She swallowed. âThis is not like you, Tomâthat I should have to ask you to be brave.'
âNo, I am quite unmanned, as you see.'
He seized her by the wrist with such strength that she almost cried out. âYou must promise me that if things go wrong you will let me in. I must be with her.'
âOf course. You must trust us, Tom. If the worst comes to the worst, then we shall fetch you at once.'
The night wore on. Slowly, Hester began to fail. She had been in pain for so long and was so weak that she started to drift away on a tide of peace where neither pain, nor joy, nor any sensation could reach her.
Her inward Mentor, aroused by Jack Cameron's threats, had helped her at first, but had been silenced by her protracted agony. The claims of will and self were silent, too. Alan, looking down at her, saw what he had sometimes seen before: a look of resigned and accepting peace, and he knew what it meant. He was losing her.
Sarah, on the other side of the bed, saw it, too. Her face a mask of grief, she asked her husband, âShall I fetch Tom?'
âNo!' exclaimed Alan violently. âNot yet. I'll not fail them. At least I'll save Hester.'
On hearing Tom's name Hester's eyes had fluttered open, only to close again.
Alan, bent down, put his hands under Hester's armpits, lifted her into a sitting position on the bed, and placed a bolster in the small of her back.
âHester!' he said urgently. âLook at me.'
Her eyes opened. He willed them not to close.
âDo as I tell you. For Tom and the baby.'
Tom and the baby, her Mentor whispered, suddenly coming to life again. Think of Tom and the baby. Don't sleep. To sleep is to die. Remember, Hester, Tom and the baby. You do want to see the babyâand to see Tom with the baby, don't you?
At first Hester wanted to ignore the urgent voice. To awake, to return to life, meant pain and suffering. All that she wanted was peaceâand freedom from pain. Tom would not want her to suffer.
The voice came again, louder and stronger. Think of Tom and the babyâyou don't want to leave him alone, do you? Remember how much you love him.
âYes,' she replied in a voice so weak that Alan could hardly hear her. âI do remember. I want to see Tom againâand the baby.'
âTake Sarah's hands in yours,' said Allan, meeting her eyes which now seemed to recognise that he was there, âand when the next pain comes, don't reject it, don't ignore it. Scream, Hester, scream as loudly as you can. Accept the pain, ride with it, and then I can help you.'
Even as he spoke the pain came again, so strong that it seemed to rise from the depth of her being. So powerful was it that Hester felt that she was being torn in two. Her scream was her first; as Alan said later, it was her stoicism which had been destroying her. The scream contained the same anguish as the one she had made when she had thought that Jack Cameron had killed Tom.
Outside, Tom put his face in his hands at the sound.
Inside, Sarah was dragged towards Hester by the strength of her grip.
Alan shouted, âGood! And again!' seeing the next spasm strike her. âYou're nearly there. Push, Hester, push with all your strength.'
This time she pushed but did not scream, feeling a terrible relief which Alan shared with her in a different way, when a tiny, black-haired child shot into the world, to land on the bed between her legs, squalling defiance.
Alan, after handing the baby to Sarah, turned back to care for Hester, only to cry out, âBy God! There are two!'
A sandy head had appeared to signal the reason for Hester's size, her weakness and the prolonged labour.
The second child was born without difficulty. Sarah wiped Hester's sweating face again and placed the first
baby on her right arm. Alan lifted the other, still wet, and also squalling loudly, on to her left.
âTwo,' said Hester with wonder. The joy of the birth, successfully achieved, was filling her. Her poor bruised body and her dreadful weakness were to be accepted, not given in to, or resented, for they had brought her this prize.
âTwo, you clever girl,' said Alan, âand both boys.'
âNo wonder I was like an elephant,' sighed Hester weakly. âTwo little Toms. Does he know? Oh, I must show him.'
âAlan will fetch him,' said Sarah.
âAnd you are not to tell him that there are two,' said Hester with a touch of her old mischief.
Alan, Sarah and Hester were to say afterwards that the only time that they ever saw Tom Dilhorne disconcerted was when Hester showed him their twin sons, saying, âTom and Alan.'
He stared at the two angry boys, shouting their fury at leaving the warm haven of their mother's body.
But, being Tom, he recovered quickly, as he always did.
âCompound interest, Hester, my darling. You said that you knew all about percentages when we first met.'
Finally, when Alan and Sarah gave him the two howling boys to hold for a moment, he said to the room at large, âDilhorne and Sons, Hester, Dilhorne and Sons.'
ISBN: 978-1-4592-3703-2
HESTER WARING'S MARRIAGE
First North American Publication 2004
Copyright © 2000 by Paula Marshall
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