Read Justice Is a Woman Online
Authors: Yelena Kopylova
with anyone, in fact, below her own station. It would so often appear that she was more at home with
the lower classes. Well, she’d put her into the picture straightaway: she wasn’t going to allow that kind
of thing to go on in this house ..
But wait. She needed Betty. Oh yes, she needed Betty, and not only now, but would do
for months to
come; and when the child was born she would need her more .. She’d better tread
carefully; Betty was
quite capable of taking up her bags and leaving. She suddenly experienced a feeling of deep envy
towards her gauche sister. Oh, to be able to take up your bags and go . with enough
money to provide
for your needs, to say farewell to this part of the country, and this house and everyone in it. Oh yes, this
house and everyone in it.
“You’re not going to accept?”
“Of course I am.”
“After her sending you a letter like that?” Elaine pointed to the sheet of paper in Betty’s hand, and Betty
laughed, replying, “If she had written any other way I wouldn’t have thought it was from her;
it’s characteristic. “ She read aloud, ‘“ Come to tea on Wednesday four o’clock .. just you. This place
is like the North Pole; wrap up well. You remember me ? We met in the railway carriage.
Sarah’ll
likely not speak to you but don’t let that bother you. Yours, Mary Ambers. “ “ It’s just like her. “
“What did she mean, just you? Did she think that I would go along with you?”
“No, of course not.”
“Then why did she say it?”
“I don’t know, Elaine.” Betty now folded up the letter and put it in her pocket.
“She’s an eccentric old lady,” she added.
“You’re being invited on sufferance: you must refuse it; she says Lady Menton will likely not speak to
you.”
“I’m not going to refuse it, Elaine; she’s likely very lonely.”
“Nonsense. She’s more likely bored and wants to use you as a form of excuse.”
“Most probably. Most probably.” Betty now turned towards the door, adding, as she
opened it, “Most
people do.”
As the door closed behind her, Elaine called testily, “Betty! Betty!”
Betty took no notice, but crossed the landing and went into her room.
Jane had lit the fire, for the day was bitterly cold; in ten days’ time it would be Christmas.
She had never
looked forward to Christmas, because she always felt sad at Christmas. She didn’t know why, but even
as a child she had felt sad at this time of year.
Christmas presents and a Christmas stocking had done nothing to alleviate this feeling.
She couldn’t
understand why; it was something deeply inborn in her. But now she was depressed, too, by other
matters, things that she couldn’t discuss with Elaine, such as the deep sympathy she felt for the miners
down there in the village, and for all those others who’d had to return to work under worse conditions
than they had suffered before going on strike. For seven long months they had stood out and now, as
Joe had said last night, they were like an army that had surrendered to a merciless foe, and like
conquered men they were bitter and full of hatred. She had seen that hatred take on a tangible form a
few weeks ago when she was passing through Fellburn. The miners had been fighting
with the police,
themselves protecting pit men from another town who had come to work in the mine. The streets had
been full of raging curses intermingled with cries of:
“Blacklegs! Scurvy swine! Backdoor bastards. Thieves! Taking the bread out of the
hairns’ mouths;’
on and so on. And she had seen the blood running down thin rage-engulfed faces.
A month ago all the windows down one section of Joe’s factory had been smashed in,
and two of his
men had been attacked in the dark and beaten up. Injustice created beasts: Mike had
stated it well when
he said that it turned fireside tom-cats into tigers.
But now it was all over there was a deeper sadness in the village and the town than there had been when
the strike was at its height. She likened the situation to war-occupied territory. Admitted, there were
many rough customers among the miners, but who wouldn’t be rough when forced to
work under such
conditions as they had, and for so little money?
There were times of late when she wished she hadn’t come here. Except for the time she spent in war
service she had, for most of her life, lived among a class of people who, in the main, lived graciously.
Even though, for some time now, she had found herself as an employee, nevertheless she had, in a way,
been on the same plane as her mistresses. But since coming into this house she had been plunged into a
different atmosphere, a strange atmosphere; yet despite it all she found herself in
sympathy with it, and
with those from whom it emanated, not only with Joe and Mike, but also with David and Hazel down in
the cottage, who were quietly fighting their war against colour prejudice; and with Ella, who had been
forced to change her name just to please Elaine; and with Mary and Duffy, both work-
weary. And it
distressed her to think that she felt more at ease in their company than she did in that of her sister.
Elaine had always been petulant, and marriage hadn’t improved her; in fact, on more than one occasion
of late it had been as much as she could do to carry on playing ‘good old Betty’ and not to turn on her
and tell her exactly what she thought. But she had reminded herself that Elaine was well into her sixth
month of pregnancy and was feeling unwell most of the time, or at least so she said. She slumped down
in her chair and held her feet out towards the fire and chastised herself. She mustn’t accuse Elaine of
putting on her sickness, for at times she really did look ill.
She wished Christmas was over; she wished she had something definite to do besides
soothing Elaine,
and arranging flowers, and knitting, knitting, knitting. The only brightness in her days occurred when she
climbed the stairs and had a natter with Mike, or when she talked to Joe; not that she often had the
chance to talk to Joe, apart from at breakfast, or perhaps at late supper if Elaine had gone to bed. She
liked talking to Joe. She liked Joe altogether. She thought he was a fine man, much too good for Elaine.
Betty rose abruptly from the chair and went hastily from the room and up the stairs to the top floor.
When she opened the sitting-room door she could see no sign of Mike, so she knocked on the bedroom
door only to hear a voice from the observatory calling, “I’m up here. Who is it?”
“It’s me, Mike.”
“Aw, come on up, lass.”
She climbed the steep stairs into the conservatory, and there he was sitting on a straight-backed chair, a
rug round his knees and an oil stove to the side of him, and she said immediately, “What on earth brought
you up here?”
“The view, lass, as always the view, for on a clear day like this it’s something not to be missed. Look at
that.” He pointed through the wide panes.
“You can see all the way to the river, even the ships going up and down. Look there.” He handed her a
pair of binoculars and when she put them to her eyes, yes indeed, she could see the
different shapes of
the ships on the river.
She stood by his side and turned her head one way and then the other as she said, “It is a most
extraordinary view.”
“Aye, lass, there’s not a yard of land for miles around you can’t pick out from here. Me old dad knew
what he was doing when he built this place.”
“He did indeed! But look’ she bent over him ‘it’s dangerous for you to attempt those
stairs alone.”
“I’m all right; I’ve arrived.” He spread out his arms.
“One of these days you’ll arrive at the bottom.”
“Very likely, lass, very likely, and that’ll put a quick end to it, and a good job an’ all.”
“Don’t be silly.” .
“I’m not being silly.” He looked up at her now, his clear blue eyes fastened intently on her.
“I’m going to ask you a question. In the same position, which would you choose, a quick end or a
long-drawn-out existence looking at your bones twisting up?” She stared back at him, her face
solemn-looking as she replied, “I don’t know; I wouldn’t be able to answer that truthfully unless I found
myself in your position. I only know that your going would leave a gap in a great many lives.”
“You think so?” He laughed a short amused laugh; then he shook his head at her and said,
“You’re
kind, lass, you’re kind. But you know something? I’ve never been able to use all the
fingers on one
hand to count the friends I’ve had, the real friends. And I’m not the only one, because you show me the
man who says he’s got more than five friends in the world, real friends I’m talking about, mind, and I’ll
show you the biggest liar going. A man can have acquaintances by the score; in fact, we all tend to say.
Oh, he’s a friend of mine. But no, lass, friends, real friends, are scarcer than the radium that Madame
Curie went after. By the way, I’ve been reading about her the day. Great woman, great woman; nearly
went mad when her man died. And by the way, that’s scarce too, the element that makes a woman
nearly go mad when her man dies.”
“Now you’re being cynical.”
“Oh no, lass, no, I’m not. If she’s young she takes it in her stride;
if she’s under fifty she dolls herself up and looks for another man;
an’ if she’s over fifty she takes a housekeeping job and hopes. “ His head went back and his laugh was
infectious, and she joined hers to it, and when it died away she dried her eyes and said, “
You’re an
awful man, Mike, but you’re good for one, like some medicines. “
“Epsom salts or cascara?”
She flapped her hand at him; then taking a seat to the side of him, she said, “I’m going out to tea on
Wednesday.”
“Aye, where to?”
“The Hall, Lord Menton’s place.”
He turned to her so quickly that he ricked his neck, and the pain was evident in his face.
He gasped
before he said, “No kiddin’, lass?”
“No kiddin’, Mike.”
“Well, I’ll be damned! Lady Menton asked you?”
“Oh no, no, not Lady Menton, the one I was telling you about, the eccentric one. Lady Mary Ambers.”
“Oh her; the one you met on the train?”
“Yes; here’s the invitation.” She pulled the letter from her pocket and handed it to him, and as he read it
his face stretched in glee as he exclaimed, “Well, I’ll be damned! I’ve seen some
invitations in me time
but that beats all. She must be a character.”
“Yes, she is. I’m rather looking forward to meeting her again.”
“Does ... does Elaine know?”
“Yes. Yes, I told her.”
“How did she take it?”
He had poked his face towards her and she hesitated a moment before she smiled and
said, “Oh, she
advised me to refuse it.”
“Aye, she would. But she wouldn’t have given you that advice if she’d been included.
You go, me
lass. But mind, I’m going to tell you something.” He wagged his finger at her.
“If the conversation comes round to this house and me, likely you won’t come back here, because me
name’s mud, as was me father’s afore me. No, no, his name was darts, which means the
same, but it’s a
thicker kind, you know.” He jerked his head at her now, saying, “By! I won’t be able to wait until you
get back to hear all about it. But mind you keep your end up; don’t let them floor you.”
He now put his
head on one side and paused before he ended, “But I don’t think they could. Nor do I
think they would
want to; I don’t think they’d want to floor you, ‘cos you’re not prickly.”
“Oh, you don’t know me.”
“Don’t I? I think I do. I knew all about you within a few days of your coming. I know people, Betty, I
know people and’ he grinned mischievously at her now as he whispered, “ I know
something about you
that you try to keep hidden. “
“You do?” She was whispering back at him.
“Aye, I do. You’ve got a temper, but you’ve got it well under control. There’s two
Bettys, one under
the skin and one on top of it.”
She didn’t return his grin but she stared at him in for a moment in silence before looking away and
saying, “You see too much, Mike; you’re uncomfortable; you see too much.”
“Aw, lass’ he nearly upset himself from the chair as he reached out and grabbed her hand
“ I mean no
offence, lass. I wouldn’t offend you for the world. It was just that I wanted you to know that I recognise
the depth in you. You’re so damn pleasant to everybody that folks take you for granted.
You’re the oil
on the wheels that makes things run smoothly. You’re the hearty good sort. That’s on the outside. But
underneath, there’s you, the real one . I know you, you see, I know you. “
They were holding each other’s gaze, and he was also holding her wrist with one hand
and she was still
holding his arm with her other where she had tried to steady him. She swallowed deeply in her throat,
sniffed, blinked her eyes a number of times, then said briskly, “Come on; it’s about time you got yourself
down those stairs.”
After a moment’s hesitation he pulled himself to his feet, and, standing by her side, he laughed softly as
he said, “I’m stooped a bit, but I’m still taller than you.”
Again their gaze held, but she made no reply; she understood the meaning behind the