Falling Angels (10 page)

Read Falling Angels Online

Authors: Tracy Chevalier

"Oh, it seems so trivial now, compared to all this." She waves her hand round her. I'll have to ask our pa what
trivial
means.
"Nothing is trivial here. What is it?"
"It's about our grave down in the meadow. Some ivy from another grave is growing up the side of it. Though I believe it is our responsibility to cut it, it's rather upset my mother-in-law, who feels the cemetery should complain to the neighboring grave owner."
Now I understand what
trivial
means.
Mr. Jackson smiles a smile you only see when he's with visitors, like he's got a pain in his back and is trying to hide it. Mrs. C. looks embarrassed.
"I'll have someone remove it at once," he says, "and I shall have a word with the other owners." He looks round as if he's looking for a boy to give orders to, so I step out from the stone I was standing behind. It's risky, 'cause I know he's still mad at me for hanging round Livy and Ivy May rather'n working. But I want Mrs. C. to see me.
"I'll do it, sir," I say.
Mr. Jackson looks surprised. "Simon, what are you doing here? Have you been harassing Mrs. Coleman?"
"I don't know what
harassing
means, sir, but I ain't been doing it. I'm just offering to clear off that ivy."
Mr. Jackson is about to say something but Mrs. C. interrupts. "Thank you, Simon. That would be very kind of you." And she smiles at me.
No lady's ever said such a nice thing to me, nor smiled at me. I can't move, staring at her smile.
"Go, boy. Go," Mr. Jackson says quietly.
I smile back at her. Then I go.
JANUARY 1905
Jenny Whitby
It were a right nuisance, that was sure. We'd got into a routine, he and I. Everyone was happy--the missus, the girls, him, and me. (I always come last on the list.) I'd take the girls up the hill once a week or so. I'd my bit of fun, they'd theirs, and her ladyship didn't have to do nothing but sit at home and read.
But then she got it into her head to take them to the cemetery herself. In the summer she started going up there two, three times a week. The girls were in heaven, but me, I were in hell.
Then she stopped, and started sending me again, and I thought: It's back on. But now it's winter the girls don't go so much, and when they do she wants to take them again. Sometimes she even takes them when they ain't so keen on going. It's cold there, with all that stone round the place. They have to run to keep warm. Me, I know how to keep warm when I'm there.
Once or twice I've convinced the missus that I should go instead of her. Rest of the time I've to sneak out of an afternoon. He ain't there evenings. Gardeners work shorter hours than maids, I like to remind him.
"Yep, an' we get paid twice as much," he said. "It's a dog's life, innit?"
I asked him what it is with the missus--what she goes to the cemetery so much for.
"Maybe the same reason as you," he said.
"She never!" I laughed. "Who would she go for, anyhow--a gravedigger?"
"The guvnor, more like," he said.
I laughed again, but he were serious--said everyone saw 'em together, talking over in the Dissenters.
"Just talking?"
"Yep, just like us," he said. "Fact is, we talk too much, you an' me. Just shut your mouth an' open your legs, now."
Cheeky sod.
OCTOBER 1905
Gertrude Waterhouse
I do like to make an effort with my At Homes. I always have them in the front parlor, and use the rose-pattern tea set, and Elizabeth bakes a cake--lemon this week.
Albert asks sometimes if we oughtn't use the front parlor as the dining room instead, rather than eating in the back parlor, which is a bit cramped when the table is pulled out. Now, Albert is right in most things, but when it comes to running a household I do get my way. I always feel better having a "best" room to show visitors to, even if it's only used once or twice a week. Thus I have insisted that we leave the rooms as they are, though I admit it is a bit inconvenient to fold the table back three times a day.
It is very silly, too, and I will never tell Albert, but I also prefer to have my At Homes in the front parlor because it is out of view of the Colemans' house. This is very silly because for one thing, according to Livy, who has been to them a few times with Maude (I have never gone, of course), Kitty Coleman has her At Homes in her morning room, which is on the other side of the house, overlooking the street rather than us. And even if it were on this side, she would hardly have the time to look out of her window over at us. But just the same I do not like to think of her presence at my back, judging what I do. It would make me nervous and unable to attend to my visitors.
I am always a little anxious when Lavinia goes to Kitty Coleman's At Homes, which I'm relieved to say is not very often. Indeed, more often than not the girls come here after school. Maude says it's much more snug here, which on reflection I think is intended as a compliment rather than a comment on the lack of space. At any rate I have decided to take it as such. She is a dear girl and I do try to see her as separate from her mother.
I am quietly pleased that, for all the space and elegance of the Colemans' house, it is here that the girls prefer to be. Livy says their house gets very cold and drafty except in the kitchen, and she fears she'll catch a chill--though really, apart from her fainting she has a robust constitution and a healthy appetite. She also says she prefers our comfortable dark sofas and chairs and the velvet curtains to Kitty Coleman's taste for rattan furniture and venetian blinds.
Until the girls arrive back from school, Ivy May helps me with the At Homes, passing around the cake and taking the pot back to the kitchen for Elizabeth to fill. The ladies who come--neighbors from the street and from church, and stalwart friends who make the journey from Islington to see me, bless them--all smile at her, though they are often puzzled by her as well.
She is indeed a funny little thing. At first her refusal to speak very often did upset me, but over time I've grown used to it and now love her the better for it. Ivy May's silence can be a great comfort after Livy's dramas and tears. And there is nothing the matter with her head--she reads and writes well enough for a girl of seven, and her numbers are good. In a year I will send her to school with Livy and Maude, and then it may be harder for her--her teachers may not be so patient with her as we are.
I asked her once why she said so little, and the dear replied, "When I do speak, you listen." It is surprising that someone so young should have worked that out for herself. I could have done with the lesson--I do go on and on, from nerves and to fill the silence. Sometimes in front of Kitty Coleman I could just sink into the ground from hearing myself chatter like a performing monkey. Kitty Coleman just smiles as if she's terribly bored but hiding it so civilly.
When the girls get home Livy immediately takes over the passing out of the cake to the ladies, and little Ivy May sits quietly in the corner. It breaks my heart sometimes. Still, I am glad to have the girls around me, and I try to make things as comfortable as possible. Here at least I can have some influence over them. I don't know what Kitty Coleman gets up to when they are at Maude's. Mostly she ignores them, according to Livy.
They like to come here, but they love best of all to go to the cemetery. I have had to limit how often Livy may go--else she'd be up there every day. As it is I do believe she lies to me about it. A neighbor said she thought she saw Livy and Maude running among the graves with a boy one day when she was meant to be playing at Maude's, but when I questioned her she denied it, saying the neighbor must need new spectacles! I did not look convinced, and Livy began to cry to think I suspected her of lying. So really I do not know what to think.
I wanted to have a word with Kitty Coleman about the frequency of their visits--it being she who most often takes them. What an awkward conversation it was! She does make me feel such a fool. When I suggested that it was perhaps unhealthy for them to visit the cemetery so often, she replied, "Oh, the girls are getting plenty of fresh air, which is very healthy for them. But really if they want to go there, we have Queen Victoria to blame for it, elevating mourning to such ridiculous heights that girls with romantic notions grow drunk from it."
Well! I was mortified, and not a little angry too. Apart from the slight on Livy, Kitty Coleman knows how dear the late Queen still is to me, God bless her soul. There is no need to go criticizing the dead. I told Kitty Coleman so, straight to her face.
She just smiled and said, "If we can't criticize her now, when can we? Do so when she was alive and we'd likely have been tried for treason."
"The monarchy is above criticism," I responded with as much dignity as I could muster. "They are our sovereign representatives, and we do well to look up to them or it reflects poorly on us."
Soon after, I made my excuses and left, still furious with her. It was only afterward that I remembered I had not properly spoken to her about curtailing Livy's cemetery visits. She is impossible--I shall never understand her. If I am honest, nor do I wish to.
FEBRUARY 1906
Maude Coleman
I know every inch of the cemetery now. I know it better than my own garden. Mummy does take us there all the time, even after school in winter when it is already getting dark and we have not asked to go.
Of course it is great fun playing there. We find Simon first, and if he is free he comes with us for a bit. We play hide-and-seek, and tour the angels (there are two new ones), and sometimes we sit at our graves and Lavinia tells stories about the people buried in the cemetery. She has an old guide to the cemetery that she likes to read from, about the girl whose dress caught fire, or the lieutenant-colonel killed in the Boer War described as "brave and kindhearted," or the man who died in a railway accident. Or she simply makes up stories, which I find rather tedious but which Simon likes. I haven't the imagination she has. I am more interested in the plants and trees, or the kind of stone used for the memorials; or, if Ivy May is with us, I test her reading using words on the graves.
I do not know what Mummy does while we play--she wanders off and I rarely see her until she comes looking for us when it is time to go. She says it is good for us to take the air, and I suppose she is right, but I am sometimes cold and, I admit, a little weary of the place. It is funny to think how desperate I used to be to get to the cemetery when I wasn't allowed to, and yet now that I go there all the time, it is no longer quite so special.
Kitty Coleman
He will not have me. I am mad for him but he will not have me.
For almost two years I have visited the cemetery solely for the purpose of seeing him. And yet he will not take me.
I was careful at first--although I sought him out I did not want it to appear so. I always took the girls with me, then let them go off to play and pretended to be looking for them when really I was looking for him. I have paced up and down the paths, appearing to be fascinated by the merits of Roman versus plain crosses, or obelisks in Portland stone versus granite, or the names on graves chiseled into the stone versus fastened on with metal letters. I do not know what the workers there think of me, but they have grown used to my presence, and always nod respectfully.

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