How Green Was My Valley (48 page)

Read How Green Was My Valley Online

Authors: Richard Llewellyn

A gentle madness comes of kissing, yet even so gentle, there is hot wish to hurt,
though only to delight. To bite, to hold with force, to press the mouth with fury,
to show strength that is male to softness that is female. Yet while I lay beside her
and she was smiling quiet to let me cup my palm about the mystery of warmth and firmness
that pushed up the stripes of her dress into ploughed hills, and my fingers knew the
satin slither of her flesh under the coarse topsoil of fabric, and brought wrinkles
to her forehead and sweet wryness to her mouth when I squeezed the tender stalks,
I saw yellow of a lamp shining on the green of bush below us, and sat, cold, and my
heart going big inside me and beating to stop breath.

“Huw,” Ceinwen said, and felt for my hands.

“They are after us,” I said, and pulled the rugs in a pile, and started putting the
dishes in the basket. The fire was low, barely red, and the drainings of tea spat
it out with a blowing of ash. I had the basket and Ceinwen had the rugs, and I pushed
her before me up toward the top of the mountain and away from the many lights, that
we could see so plainly now, working up to us.

We went up in an arc, through bush and gorse, pasture and briar, over hedges, and
through herds of cows, when Ceinwen feared and hid her face and gripped my arms to
push me in front of her, and down the steepness through the trees and on to the road.
Good it felt to have the feet on hard stones again.

“Stay here,” I said, “I will catch the mare and bring the trap here.”

She nodded, and I found her dearer to me in her helplessness and fear, and kissed
her cheek, but she stared in front, with her knuckles to her face, and a paleness
of fear lighting her eyes.

“O, Huw,” she said, in whispers, “if they find me they will put me in jail.”

“Jail, girl?” I said, and so surprised as to be in another world. “What for, then?”

“Or they will call me in Chapel,” she said, and tears taking her breath.

“I will get the mare,” I said. “We will build bridges when the river wets our feet.
Wait, you.”

Off I went, round the road, running on the grass, with the talk of the brook louder
than my footfalls, to the place where we had left the trap, but I was heavy with fright
long before I got there, for fires were alight there, and men’s shadows black against
them, and tobacco smoke going up above their heads like the ghosts of babies.

The trap had been pulled out of the space by the side of the road with the shafts
in the dust, and another trap, just the same, near it, and the mare and another tied
to the branch of a tree near them.

I knew what had happened while I made my mind firm that Ceinwen would go free of hurt.

The mare had run home and told them.

What to do, now, what to do and quickly.

I wonder where the thoughts do come from that help you to do what you do, when seconds
before your mind was an empty ache, and you watched it working, like somebody else
inside of you, crooking its fingers in helpless search of a notion.

Out with the matches and closer to the horse. I untied him and turned him to face
the fire down the road. Then I struck a match and held it for a moment against his
hock, telling him in the spirit that I was sorry for the hurt, but Ceinwen was staring
in the darkness down the road and thinking of faces and voices in Chapel, and away
he went with screams in a storm of hoof and dust, and I fell backwards and pushed
myself up, with dust and burnt hair sharp in the nose, and jumped for the mare’s head
to untie her and lead her to the trap.

The men were shouting to one another and the horse’s rump was orange in the fire-light,
and then gone in the darkness on the other side, and the men running up the mountain
to head him off when he turned the bend on the other side.

Into the shafts with the mare, with cursing for the weight of thought behind her careful
hoofs, up with the shafts to slip through the harness, a pulling of straps on one
side and a run round to the other, a tearing at the tangle of rein tied through the
brass rings on her back pad, a jump at the iron step and the springiness of the trap
under me, and off went the mare with the flip of the reins to send her.

So glad I was to see the whiteness of the striped dress in the darkness that I could
have shouted to skim the bushes from the mountain, but I pulled the mare almost to
sit, and jumped down to give the reins to Ceinwen and throw up the rugs and basket
after her.

“Five minutes’ start, no more,” I said. “Good-bye, now.”

“I will love you while I live,” she said, with trembling. “See you Monday. Good-bye,
now.”

Queen of the Brythons never swung her war chariot with more skill. The whip whispered
and cracked, the mare plunged with her fores, and gathered herself to open her wings,
and was still, caught in a moment of surprise to find four hairy roots holding her
to earth, and almost in regret, threw up her head to see spaces that she might have
flown, drew the mighty muscles under her, and jumped from sprung haunches to stretch-neck
gallop, with Ceinwen standing black against the sky bearing on the reins.

I waited until the hush of the trees was the loudest noise to be heard, and went down
to the river and walked round through the fields, to the bridge by the Three Bells,
and up home. Nobody was in the streets, and no lights anywhere, but I could see many
a yellow spark up on the mountain.

I came in round our back and climbed the shed to get in this window.

The candle was lit as soon as I was in, and the window closed for me.

Ianto, Owen, and Gwilym were sitting on the beds that used to be over there, in their
clothes, with their hats and coats on this chair by here.

“Well,” Ianto said, straight in the face.

“Hullo,” I said.

“Where have you been?” Owen asked me, serious.

“Up the mountain,” I said, and a bit of pride coming.

“With who?” Ianto asked me, and looking at me with his head down and his eyes gone
to points.

“My business,” I said, with emptiness coming inside me.

“Ceinwen Phillips, is it?” Owen said.

“My business,” I said.

“Listen to me, you fool,” Ianto said, with a whisper that might have been a shout,
so big a jump it made me give, “do you want the men of the other Valley round here
to burn the village? Is it a fight you want to cause?”

“No, no,” I said, and a coldness of surprise in me. “Who is going to burn the village,
then?”

“Every man here is waiting for it to start,” Owen said. “Not a man is in bed. Those
lights have been on the mountain these hours. If you had been caught they would have
skinned you.”

“Would you have sat here to let them?” I asked Ianto.

“We only knew it was you when we came up here, now just,” he said. “Frightened sick
in case Mama found out, we were. Lucky for you she have gone to sleep with Bron for
the night.”

“Your supper is on the table,” Gwil said. “Have it, and sleep, for the love of God.”

“I will go and tell them to stop looking,” I said.

“Have your supper,” Ianto said, “before I will skin you myself. If you go to them
now, there will be murder certain. We want to save Mama worry. Supper, quick.”

So down I went, hang-dog, to mix a couple of tears with the mint sauce. But when I
came back up here, my brothers had gone to warn everybody it was safe to go to bed,
and the lights had gone from the mountain.

But before I went to sleep I lay again beside Ceinwen and cursed with blackness the
men who had carried the lamp that took her from me, the mare that had run home to
tell them, and the lack of thought that let her go to graze without a shackle, and
so ended in cursing myself, a blessed state, indeed.

“Fifteen feet of rope,” Ianto said to me next morning, “and a picket stake. That is
what you are wanting. Good God, what is next, I wonder? A boy and a bit of a girl
up on the mountain till all hours. No more, understand?”

“Why not?” I asked him, with a rebel shouting inside me.

“Because,” he said, “if it happens again we will have four hundred men over here.
Think fortune to yourself that nobody knew who was with her. You would be good for
a box instead of Chapel this morning.”

“Listening to nightingales, we were,” I said.

“I know, boy,” Ianto said. “I have done a bit myself.”

Chapter Twenty-Seven

THE TALK OUTSIDE CHAPEL
all that day was split between the choir coming home and the search on the mountain.
Some of the men wanted a deputy to go round to the other Valley and find out what
the trouble was, but Ianto and Owen spoke against it, saying it would be better to
let it die its death in peace. I was going over myself to find out what had come to
Ceinwen, but my mother had use for me all day long, preparing food and drink for the
choir, and I lost my worry in the clatter of pots.

Long after midnight it was when we heard the bands coming over the mountain, and good
to hear in the dark quiet. Nothing is better to the ear, and nothing to raise the
spirits more, than the boom of the big drum and the rasping voice of brass and silver
swelling and dying as the wind takes his breath.

The beacons had been lit a long time to tell us the men were coming, so we were all
ready for them. My mother went to get her cloak as though The Trump had sounded and
the last boat was leaving the quay for Paradise. Bron had been wearing hers for hours,
bonnet and all. They knew it would take the men a good hour to reach the Square from
up the top there, and only a minute for us to get to the same place, but never mind,
cloak, bonnet, mittens, and bottle of something to warm, quick, no stopping, all hurry,
all haste, as though hope of glory to come depended on their getting down to the Square
without another moment’s loss.

Out in the street we joined in with everybody else on the hill, all going down together,
and as we passed the little house with the sea-shell porch, Mr. Gruffydd came out,
and went to the middle of the street to conduct us. We were singing when the procession
got inside the village, and singing still when the wain stopped by Mr. Gruffydd, and
the band and choir all singing with us.

Then the shouting of cheers, and my father looking all round to find my mother, and
she crying so much she could see nothing of him, and he crying so much, he could see
nothing of her.

“Take me to him, my sons,” my mother said, and Owen and I made a way through the crowd.

My father was standing against a flat wooden crate about four feet square and a foot
deep, looking as though he had found all of Ophir’s treasure.

Owen and Ianto lifted it down, and I helped them to carry it up to the house, and
my father shouting to us to put it in our front till he came and to take care, or
if we dropped it he would kill us twice. It took us a long time to get that old crate
up the Hill, for there was a thickness of people going up and coming down, and stopping
to talk, and asking the choir what Windsor was like, and if the Queen was in gold,
and if they had their food from diamond plates, and those who stayed home trying to
look as though they would give a fig to go to Windsor to see the Queen, and old Silas
Tegid the Maltster saying that he had never enjoyed a Sunday more than that day, so
peaceful it had been, such resolution had appeared in Chapel, so beautiful the weather.
Foolish are such people, for the lie is in their faces, in their voices, in their
smiles.

I went out in the back to get the tool-box ready to unpack the crate, and Bron came
in with wet tears and put her arms about me to cry for a bit, and warm and full of
softness she was.

“There is a fool I am,” she said, “washed away with crying, but nobody knows why,
not even me. The Queen has given Ivor a baton, and a picture of her. Signed with her
own hand, Huw. With her own writing.”

Shouts for the tool-box inside, then, and me going in with it, and hammering, and
prising, and splintering to get the cover off, between my brothers and me, for whoever
had nailed the crate was at pains to show that he had nails and to spare.

My father was on tacks all the time, with my mother trying to make him drink a drop
of hot broth, and Mr. Gruffydd putting an arm on his shoulder, and the crowd all round
and in the doorway and looking through the open window, counting the nails as we threw
them out. Then we took the lid off, and bayonets could not have kept him back from
pulling out the wool flock packing.

“Now then,” he said, “has every one of us got a good pot of beer?”

“Yes,” we all said, and up with them.

“Good,” said my father, and pulled a couple of pegs from the inside of the crate,
and opened wide his arms to lift out the picture, with a red brocade back, and a wide
gilt frame, made, every inch of it, and singing to you, by a craftsman who loved his
work.

My father turned it and put it to stand on the sideboard, with not even a whisper
from my mother about scratches.

“Now then,” he said, and without a voice, from pride and lifting the weight of it,
and taking his glass from my mother, and the beer shaking out, “Beth, from the Queen
of Britain to your son.”

Head and shoulders in black and white, with the background gone to mist, and almost
as she was on a penny, the noble Queen looked out across her Empire as untroubled
as my mother. But that prow of a nose could have cut through any sea, that chin would
keep the shake from a mouth half as firm again, and the trouble never came to light
that would bring a flinch to those austere, yet tranquil, eyes. The hard disciplines
of a thousand generations of greatness sat lightly upon her, and yet left their subtle
marks in the squareness of her shoulders, and the carriage of her head.

And upon the head, the Crown, and under it, to enrich its maleness, the mark of woman,
a veil.

“Victoria, R.I.,” said my mother, with my father’s finger pointing to the writing.
“O, there is proud I am.”

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