sea-girl, judging her moment,—
was
able to convulse herself sideways into the backwash and
slither on through the foam to deeper water. In the haze of her huge effort Pitiable barely saw her
go, but when her vision cleared and she looked out to sea, she saw the girl beckoning to her from
beside the tip of the promontory.
Wearily she rose and staggered down. The sea-girl gripped the rock with her good hand and
dragged herself half out of the water. Pitiable sat beside her with her feet dangling into the wavewash. Her knees and shins, she noticed, were streaming with blood. The sea-girl saw them and
made a grieving sound.
“It’s all right,” said Pitiable. “It is only scratches.”
Face to face they looked at each other.
“You must go now,” said Pitiable. “Before he comes back.”
The sea-girl answered. She craned up. Pitiable bent so that they could kiss.
“I must dress myself before the men come,” she said. “Goodbye.”
She gestured to herself, and up the shore, and then to the sea-girl and the open sea. The sea-girl
nodded and said something that must have been an answering good-bye. They kissed again, and
the sea-girl twisted like a leaping salmon and shot off down the inlet, turned in the water, rose,
waved and was gone.
As Pitiable dressed, she decided that now Probity would very likely kill her for what she had
done, take her home and beat her to death, half meaning to, and half not. And then, perhaps, he
would kill himself That would be best all round, she thought.
And then she thought that despite that, she had done what Mercy would have wanted her to. It
was why she had told her the story of Charity Goodrich, though neither of them could have
known.
When she was dressed she shook her hair out and sat combing her fingers through it to help it
dry in the sun, but still he did not come, so she tied it up under her shawl and waited where he
had left her. Her mood of gladness and resignation ebbed, and she was wrapped in terror once
again.
The men came at last, four of them, carrying nets and ropes, a stretcher, and a glass-bottomed
box of the sort that crab-catchers used to see below the surface of the water. From their dress
Pitiable saw that the three helpers were townspeople, as they would have to be—Probity would
not even have tried to persuade any of the People to come on such an enterprise. From the way
they walked, it was obvious that even these men were doubtful. A tall, thin lad in particular kept
half laughing, as if he was convinced that he was about to be made a fool of. But Probity came
with a buoyant, excited pace and reached her ahead of the others.
“Has anyone been near?” he whispered.
“No one, grandfather.”
“And have you heard anything?”
“Only the gulls and the sea.”
He stood and listened and frowned, but by now the helpers had come up, so he told them to wait
with Pitiable and make no noise, and himself climbed up onto the ridge and crept out of sight.
After a while he climbed down and fetched the glass-bottomed box, and this time he allowed the
others to come up with him, but Pitiable stayed where she was. She heard his voice, gruff and
stubborn, and the others answering him at first mockingly and then angrily, until he came down
again and strode over to where she sat, with the others following.
Pitiable rose and waited. She could see how the others glanced at one another behind Probity’s
back, and before he spoke, she knew how she must answer.
“I tell you, the child saw it also,” he shouted. And then to Pitiable, “Where has it gone? How did
it get free?”
“What do you speak of, grandfather?”
“The sea-child! Tell them you saw the sea-child!”
“Sea-child, grandfather?”
He took a pace forward and clouted her with all his strength on the side of her head. She
sprawled onto the shingle, screaming with the pain of it, but before she could rise, he rushed at
her and struck her again. She did not know what happened next, but then somebody was helping
her to her feet and Probity and the others were shouting furiously—while she shook her head and
retched in a roaring red haze. Then her vision cleared though her head still sang with pain, and
she saw two of the men wrestling with Probity, holding his arms behind him.
“The wicked slut let her go!” he bellowed. “She was mine! Mine! You have no right! This is my
grandchild! Mine!”
His face was terrible, dark red and purple, with the veins on his temples standing out like
exposed tree roots. Then he seemed to realize what he had done and fell quiet. In silence and in
shame he let them walk him back to the town, with the young man carrying Pitiable on his back.
Though there were magistrates in the town, there was so seldom any wrongdoing among the
People that it was the custom to let them deal with their own. After some debate the men took
Probity to the Minister and told him what they had seen, and he sent for three of the elders to
decide what to do. They heard the men’s story, gave them the money Probity had promised them,
thanked them and sent them away. They then questioned Probity.
Probity did not know how to lie. He said what he had seen, and insisted that Pitiable had seen the
sea-child too. Pitiable, still dazed, unable to think of anything except how he would beat her
when he had her home, stuck despairingly to her story. She said that she had been looking at the
pool when Probity had climbed up beside her and looked too and become very excited and told
her to wait down on the shore and let no one else near while he went for help.
At this Probity started to shout and his face went purple again and he tried to rush at Pitiable, but
the elders restrained him, and then a spasm shook him and he had to clutch at a chair and sit
down. Even so, but for his story about the sea-child, the elders might have sent Pitiable home
with him. She was, after all, his granddaughter. But a man who says he has seen a creature with a
human body and a shining fish tail cannot be of sound mind, so they decided that in case there
should be worse scandal among the People than there already was, Pitiable had best be kept out
of his way, at least until a doctor had examined him.
Pitiable spent the night at the Minister’s house, not with his own children but sleeping in the attic
with the two servants. First, though, the Minister’s wife, for whom cleanliness was very close
indeed to godliness, insisted that the child must be bathed. That was how the servants came to
see the welts on Pitiable’s back and sides. Her torn knees they put down to her fall on the beach
when Probity had struck her. The elder servant, a kind, sensible woman, told the Minister. She
told him too that if the child received much more such handling, she would die, and her blood
would be not only on her grandfather’s hands.
The elders did not like it, but were forced to agree. A home would have to be found for the child.
As a servant, naturally—she was young, but Mercy Hooke had trained her well. So on the second
day after the business on the Scaurs, a Miss Lyall, a very respectable spinster with money of her
own, came to inspect Pitiable Nasmith. She asked for a private room and the Minister lent her his
study.
Pitiable was brought in and Miss Lyall looked her up and down. Not until they door closed and
they were alone did she smile. She was short and fat with bulgy eyes and two large hairy moles
on the side of her chin, but her smile was pleasant. She put her head to one side and pursed her
lips and, almost too quietly to hear, started to hum. Pitiable’s mouth fell open. With an effort she
closed it and joined the music. At once Miss Lyall nodded and cut her short
“I thought it must be so,” she said softly. “As soon as I heard that story about the sea-child.”
“But you know the song too!” whispered Pitiable, still amazed.
“You are not the only descendant of Charity Goodrich, my dear. My mother taught me her story,
and the song, and said I must pass them on to my own daughters, but I was too plain for any
sensible man to marry for myself, and too sensible to let any man marry me for my money, so I
have no daughters to teach them to. Not even you, since you already know them. All the same,
you shall be my daughter from now on and we shall sing the song together and tell each other the
story. It will be amusing, after all these years, to see how well the accounts tally.”
She smiled, and Pitiable, for the first time for many, many days, smiled too.
The Sea-king’s Son
by Robin McKinley
There was a young woman named Jenny who was the only child of her parents. Her parents were
not wealthy as the world counts wealth, but they had a good farm and were mindful and thorough
farmers; and since they had but the one child, they could afford to give her a good deal. So she
had pretty clothes and kind but clever governesses and as many dogs and cats and ponies and
songbirds as she wanted. She grew up knowing that she was much loved, and so she had a happy
childhood; but the self-consciousness of adolescence made her shy and solemn. And she found,
as some adolescents do, that she was less and less interested in the kinds of things her old friends
were now most interested in, and so they drifted apart. Now she preferred to go for long solitary
walks with her dogs, or riding on the fine thoroughbred mare her parents had bought her when
she outgrew the last of the ponies. Her mother had to forbid her to stay in the kitchen through the
harvest feast, where she would have gone on bottling plums and cherries from their orchards
with her mother and the two serving-women till all the dancing was over; and at the next fair her
mother sent her on a series of errands to all the stalls where the young people would be working
for their parents. But Jenny only spoke to them as much as she had to, and came away again.
Her parents had hoped that she would outgrow her shyness, as she had grown into it, but by the
time she was eighteen, they had begun to fear that this would not happen. They worried, because
they “wanted her to find a husband, that she might be as happy with him as they had been with
each other; and they hoped to leave their farm in their daughter’s hands, to be cared for by her
and her husband as lovingly as they had cared for it, and given on to her children in the proper
time. They worried that even a young man who would suit her well would not notice her, for she
made herself un-noticeable; and they feared that it was only they who knew that, when she
smiled, her face lit up with gentleness and humour and intelligence.
They decided that they would take her to the city for a season, and that perhaps so drastic a
change in her usual way of life might bring her to herself. They had relatives in the city, and this
could be done without discomfort. They told her of their plan, and she would have protested, but
they told her that they were her parents, and they knew best.
But because of her knowledge that she was to go away, she carried herself with more of an air
during the next weeks—it was an air of tension, but it made her eyes sparkle and her back
straight. She looked around her at her familiar circumstances with more attention than she had
done for years, as if this trip to the city were going to change her life forever. And she knew well
enough that her parents hoped that it would, that they hoped to find her an acceptable suitor: and
what could change her life more thoroughly than marriage?
They were going to the city a little after the final harvest fair of the year, when the farm could be
left to look after itself for a while, with none but the hired workers to keep an eye on it; and
when, as well, the best parties in the city were held, after the heat of the summer was over. The
letters were written, and the relatives had pronounced themselves delighted to have Jenny for a
season and her parents for as much as they felt they could stay of it. Her parents permitted
themselves to feel hopeful; even the possibility that Jenny would fall in love with some city boy
who loathed the very idea of farming seemed worth the risk.
But things did not turn out as Jenny’s parents had planned. For at the harvest fair she caught the
eye of a young man.
This young man lived in a neighbouring village, and was one of four sons, third from the eldest.
His family too held a good farm, like hers, but they had four sons to think of. The first was a hard