Authors: J. Jill Robinson
Aunt Annie is quite thrilled over the wedding, and pleased about Pearl. Daddy and I are awfully pleased about Pearl too, and we hope you will make each other happy.
Daddy will enclose twelve dollars, your June allowance. Heaps of love to you both,
XXXXxxxx Mama
Pearl didn't like the ring, though she hadn't said so to anyone except Tom. In the years ahead, whenever she looked at it, she would think of Eleanor Mayï¬eld's bossy, smiling face and hear her saying, “Because we are
paying
for it.”
Then, in November, Eleanor suddenly decided that Pearl and Tom should marry early in 1941. In January, in fact. What, Pearl wondered, was the big rush? Why not wait for spring or summer, for sunshine and warmth? Well, that was easy enough to ï¬gure out after a very little bit of thought. Right after his October birthday, Eleanor Mayï¬eld's good boy Tom had broken one of the rules at McGill, and his parents had been ofï¬cially informed. Tom had taken one of the maids who worked in his residence out for coffee, and someone had seen and reported them. Ye gods! You would have thought they'd been discovered in sexual
ï¬agrante delicto
given the uproar that ensued.
There were maids all over the place at McGill in those days, and they weren't all of them good girls, certainly. It was common knowledge that some of the maids who worked in the residences, attending to the men's housekeeping and laundry needs, went out on the sly with the men. It was rare for anyone to be caught, however, and rarer still to receive a reprimand, formal or otherwise. But Tom, who swore up and down that he had been
on an innocent mission related to laundry, had been both caught and reprimanded.
Of course Pearl herself had known all about it well ahead of time, as his
ï¬ancée
, and hadn't been concerned for a minute: the girl was homely and not bright, and whatever his interest in her, it most definitely wasn't of a sexual nature. And anyway, Pearl had that part of him cornered. Pearl ï¬gured that Eleanor Mayï¬eld, for whom social propriety and reputation were paramount, had been thrown into a perfect tizzy by the reprimand. Eleanor had become so worried that her precious elder son was going to end up compelled to marry one of the maids instead of someone of his own station, i.e., Pearl, that she had yet again taken matters into her own hands. Without bringing the matter up as she should have with Tom's
affianced
, Eleanor decided to solve the matter by pushing the wedding plans ahead, under some invented guise of a wedding presentâa honeymoon ski trip in the Laurentians. Wouldn't that be fun? Ha, thought Pearl. For whom? She did not ski.
Then Eleanor Mayï¬eld topped it all by writing Pearl another of her sweet little notes, this time about the importance of making oneself available to one's husband, “every night.” Eleanor needn't have bothered writing
that
.
That
was unlikely to be a problem. Pearl had never felt anything like the charged physical pull she and Tom felt towards each other. It would be enough to sustain them when they did not see eye to eye in other regards. Eleanor might as well have minded her own business. Yet again.
In the end, Tom's parents hadn't been able to attend the wedding anyway, though her parents and sister were there, and
Tom's brother, and one sister. The Mayï¬elds couldn't come, they wired, because of the war; the fear was that the Banff Springs Hotel would be needed for some war-related purpose, and the doctor had better be around. And so Tom and Pearl were married, in January of 1941, in Montreal, and after the wedding they travelled to the Laurentians for their honeymoon ski trip.
Four years later, Pearl sat at her dressing table assessing herself, and her state, in the mirror. “You are trapped,” she said. “How do you like that?” Gloomily, she picked up the silver-backed brush from her set. (Twelve pieces. Engraved. Sterling silver from Birks. A wedding present from her parents.) Immediately, her hands began warming the metal.
It was barely a month since she and Ruby had moved in with her parents, and things couldn't be going worse. On New Year's Day 1945, the day before Tom ï¬ew off to England with the RCAF, she and Ruby, two years old and devoid of sense, had taken the train from Regina to Calgary. Ruby had behaved badly the entire time and Pearl, who had so been looking forward to the trip, could have pitched her out the window without remorse. Her parents had met them at the station and brought them home. From the second her mother knelt down in front of Ruby and Ruby put her arms around her grandmother's neck and they cooed at each other and exchanged Eskimo kisses, Pearl knew that the arrangement was a bad idea. Her mother would try to take over and spoil the child.
But by then it was too lateâshe was a prisonerâand worse, she was in a prison of her own making. There would be no escape until Tom returned from England. It would be months. Could be years. Pearl heaved a great sigh. And to think she had done this to herself. Her mother would drive her around the bend before then, because she wouldn't stop meddling, and all too soon Pearl saw that her prediction was accurate: Opal was going to ruin Ruby. If Pearl announced a new policy she wanted implemented re child-rearing, her mother instantly met it with an argument as to its inefï¬cacy.
Pearl brushed her hair. What right did her mother think she had to question her, the child's own mother, as to her tactics? Ten strokes. Just what did Opal think she could teach Pearl about being a mother? Twenty. It wasn't as if Opal had been an extraordinary mother herself. Look at her elder daughterâhere, in the mirror. Was she on top of the world in any regard? Not likely. Thirty. Abandoned by her husband, saddled with a child. She bent over and dropped her head. Forty. Well, she would persevere in spite of her misgivings. What choice was there, really? Fifty. She sat up, tossed her head back, and put her silver-backed hairbrush down in its place with the rest of her boudoir set, patted it affectionately, and took up her nail ï¬le.
Being back here, in this house, in this room, she found herself responding and reacting to her parents as though she were twelve, or seventeen, not almost twenty-eight and a mother with a two-year-old. Speaking of which, Pearl could hear Ruby's juicy cough and her snorting and snuffling next door, along with the murmur of a voice that was either the maid's or Opal's. At least Ruby wasn't cranky with her cold: she liked taking her
pink cough syrup, and she liked watching the steam coming out of the kettle in her room. No doubt her Gramma Opal was waiting on her hand and foot. Spoiling her even further.
(A week later, Pearl would come down with Ruby's cold, and she became much sicker with it than Ruby had been. She didn't leave her bed for a week. It didn't help matters that her mother's sickroom technique was deplorable: Pearl would ask for a glass of water and it might be half an hour before her mother would return. Or a handkerchiefâonce she'd ended up using a corner of the sheet, so then of course the bed had to be changed, and Pearl had to get out of bed and sit in a chair.)
Vigorously, Pearl ï¬led her nails, creating a point on each one. To top off her misery, Tom's latest letter was a complete dud. It contained not one word of affection until he signed it “Love, Tom.” And this, this one reference to love, was all he had to offer in a wedding-anniversary letter? Sure, greeting cards might be hard to come by in wartime, but words were free for the choosing. Why on earth did he think she would be interested in hearing what the editorial in the
Yorkshire Post
was about in the stead of endearments and words of love? Did he have rocks in his head? Or was their marriage old already, only three years on? Perhaps he had forgotten about her; perhaps he just didn't care, or surely to God he could use his imagination and visualize what her life looked like right now. Couldn't he tell that she had nothing to look forward to, to keep her spirits up, the way he did?
And the icing on the cake was that throughout her entire sickness and for three days beyond, not one single word from her husband. Not one, while she had managed to write once a day even when she could barely ï¬ll the pen. Ten days! How she
hated having to depend upon him for her happiness. It wasn't fair. Or right. She couldn't
make
him write to her. She couldn't
make
him want to. When she thought about her helplessness, anger rose in her like lava, burning her heart, her throat, her words.
Valentine's Day came and went.
What was the matter with him, anyway? Here she was, a pitiable object, surely, to any feeling person. The postman came and went, came and went without anything for her day after day after day, until she couldn't bear the rejection any longer. She wrote the letter with the molten words that, given some of the things she said, he would construe as angry. She had written in a passionate fury, when she knew if she didn't do something she'd explode, at either Ruby or her mother. She'd slammed the door to her room and picked up a pen instead. Heat and power surged through her veins as she found her stride. How wonderful it felt to let the words gush from her completely unrestrained! She'd written an entire aerogram of tiny writing in half an hour. She had held nothing back, wrote direct from her heart and her head, and the two together reinforced her.
Her wretched situation was all his fault, she told him, for not writing her more often and for making such feeble attempts when he did. Was he afraid the censor might think he loved his wife if he wrote more than one special term of endearment in the salutation? She had begged him and begged him to write more often, and he had not. Why didn't she matter to him? Had he stopped loving her? If he had done what he was supposed to do, none of this would ever have happened and she would be
happy for a change and all her letters to him would be sweet. She
did
matter, for his information.
She shouldn't have mailed it and she knew she shouldn't have mailed it. She'd ignored the cautioning voice in her head and made herself drop the letter in the box. Maybe she should have torn it up. But no: it was important to let him know what she was going through, because it at least gave him the opportunity to respond. And she did not hold with the notion some people had that when man and wife are far apart, some pieces of news would be better withheld, including, she supposed, the mental state of that wife. (Sometimes she wondered if she needed a psychiatrist. Should her husband know that? Yes. Especially when he was a doctor.) There was nothing to be gained by pretending that things were different than they actually were. It wasn't honest or useful, while even the exercise of pouring out misery in a few thousand words on paper could be of help, both to the person writing and to the intended recipient. She had felt so much better after writing. No, Tom would always get the straight goods from her. He might be in the war, but she wasn't going to deny the difï¬culties she was facing.
She looked sadly at herself in the mirror. She was angry yesterday, not today. Today she missed her darling husband with all her heart; loved him; longed for him. The only annoyance today so far was that she'd woken up with her period. Well, at least she wasn't pregnant. Odd, but with the onset of her menses she felt herself returning to a kind of calm, stability, after what she only now recognized as an emotional rather than rational state. It had happened before.
After Ruby was in bed that night, she wrote him again.
My Dearest Love,
I miss you so much tonight. I literally ache to have you near. I am inï¬nitely wretched for every mile that separates us, and yet I am happy too, because I recognize myself tonight. The volcano has subsided and I am serene in the one thought, that I love you. I love you dearâad inï¬nitum. I want you to know that I am weeping mental tears of anguish when I recall the awful letter which will have reached you recently. I don't know what I can say except that I couldn't help my unhappiness, and I needed to share it with you, as you are my husband. I am sorry. Your letters (when you write) are so warm and nice and I deserve them so little.
I suppose I am just a poor weak female after all, with even less than the prescribed quota of spunk. I make a poor wife and mother. You can't say I didn't warn you, though, can you? You will remember my telling you quite clearly that I was never much interested in being married, because it did not look to me like a pleasant state. (I ï¬gured even then that I was probably poor material besides, though I never actually expressed this idea, even to myself.)
Let me share something with you, which might help explain things a little. From my earliest childhood my parents caused me a great deal of unhappiness one way and another, and permanently scarred me in some regards. When I left home for university and lived at McGill, I was able to rise above the warped sort of person I had been, and I felt a genuine personal triumph. Life seemed pretty good
through those yearsâpretty straightforward, and comparatively carefree. I had escaped that unpleasant person I had been! And I swore a silent oath to myself that I would never again fall victim to the thousands of personality problems that
ye gods now beset me again
. Here I am, a married woman with a child, living with my parents, up to my neck in memories of the unpleasant past. My one consolationâit almost makes it worth itâis my love for you.