Jalna: Books 1-4: The Building of Jalna / Morning at Jalna / Mary Wakefield / Young Renny (11 page)

“It is the truth. They left the ship — Mary and my two little brothers — but they’ve gone home. She’ll be quite safe.”

Mrs. Cameron had turned a ghostly pale. She put her hand to her throat and demanded: —

“Who told you this?”

“I had a letter from Sholto. And my husband was told by one of the sailors who saw them.”

Mrs. Cameron spoke in a hoarse whisper.

“Show me the letter.”

Adeline handed it to her. She riveted her eyes on it as though she would tear the written words from the page. At the end she reeled across the cabin but she recovered herself. She faced Adeline in a fury, her hands clenched at her sides.

“It’s your fault!” she cried. “It’s all your fault! You encouraged them. You begged me to allow Mary to go about with that
wicked boy. Oh — ” As she was struck by the possibilities of the situation her voice rose to a scream — “Oh, what has he done to her! My little ewe lamb! She was as pure as the driven snow till we came on board this accursed ship! Oh, can’t something be done? Where is the Captain?”

She pushed her way past Adeline, thrust aside Philip’s restraining hand, and bounded up the companionway. So flimsy were the partitions that a general consternation was caused by her outbreak. People came running from all directions (some thought a fresh disaster had befallen the ship) while Adeline and Philip followed after, miserably conscious of what had really happened.

“What’s this — what’s this, madam?” asked Captain Bradley, coming to meet Mrs. Cameron.

She flung herself against his shoulder.

“Oh, save her! Save my little girl!” she cried hysterically.

“Where is she?” he asked, in his resonant voice.

“There!” She pointed landward. “She left the ship with those horrible Irish boys! I call everyone to witness that she was as pure as the driven snow! Oh, what shall I do?”

“What’s all this about?” Captain Bradley demanded on Philip.

“The girl has eloped with my young brother-in-law, a lad of eighteen,” he replied gruffly. “But from what was said in the letter they’ve gone straight to his father’s house.”

“If you’d like to go back for them, Captain dear,” put in Adeline, “I’ll pay for the cost of it.”

It was to the Captain’s shame that he looked more tenderly on Adeline than on Mrs. Cameron, whom he regarded as a complaining woman of depressing appearance.

“Do you think the young gentleman will marry her?” he asked Philip, in a low voice.

“I’m sure he intends to,” said Philip, with rather more certainty than he felt.

“Come, come, it may not be so bad as you think,” the Captain comforted Mrs. Cameron. To Adeline he said — “Look backward, Mrs. Whiteoak! The ship’s been flying away like a bird. You
must understand that it’s impossible for us to return for a young runaway couple.”

“It’s all her fault!” shrieked Mrs. Cameron. “She’s as wicked as her brothers. We don’t want their kind in our beautiful young country! They’re evil!”

Mrs. Cameron became hysterical and it was with difficulty that the Captain and the steward got her back to her cabin. For the remainder of the voyage she never left it. Fortunately there had joined the ship at Galway two new passengers with whom she made friends. They were a married couple from Newfoundland. The husband was in the fisheries business; the wife, deeply religious, was a great comfort to Mrs. Cameron.

The other passengers, and particularly those in the steerage, chose to regard the elopement as a youthful romance and poor Mrs. Cameron as a tyrannical parent. Conway Court had been a favourite on board and it was the general opinion that the plain young girl had done extremely well for herself — for it was taken for granted that he would marry her.

The winds were fair and the ship sped on. The livestock became fewer. A poor woman from Liverpool gave birth to a child with a terrible lack of privacy. In the salon Captain Whiteoak and Messrs. D’Arcy, Brent, and Wilmott played at bezique each evening, while they sipped French Brandy out of small green glasses that were filled from a wicker-clad bottle. Adeline would sit watching them, her wide skirts spread gracefully about her, her chin in her palm while her eyes moved contemplatively from one face to the other of the players.

Then one night a frightening thing happened. James Wilmott had just carried a small glass of the liqueur to Adeline’s side, for she looked pale and rather languid. There came a shuffling sound on the companionway, a growling sound of voices. Adeline half-rose in her chair. The four men turned their heads toward the door. Crowding into it they saw a mob of rough, fierce-looking men. They were carrying clubs, sticks, any weapon they could lay their hands on. The whites of their eyes glistened in the light of the swaying hanging-lamp. One of them raised a hairy arm and pointed to Wilmott.

“Yon’s him!” he exclaimed.

With a threatening growl the others moved in a body toward Wilmott, who faced them coolly.

“I don’t know what you mean,” he said.

“You are Thomas D’Arcy, Esquire, ain’t ye?”

“No, my name is Wilmott.”

D’Arcy rose to his feet. “I am Thomas D’Arcy,” he said, smiling a little.

“Yes — that’s him — the blackguard! The bloody villain! The cold-hearted brute!”

They came forward with cursings, most of them unintelligible from the brogue.

“What’s all this about?” shouted Philip, putting his stalwart figure in opposition to the mob.

Their spokesman shouted — “Get out o’ the way, yer honour! That villain, D’Arcy, is the man we want. We’re not going to leave two whole bones in his body, and may hell-fire blast it when we’ve done with it!”

“I’ve done no harm to any of you,” said D’Arcy, pale but contemptuous.

“Haven’t ye, thin? And didn’t ye evict Tom Mulligan’s ould parents into the winter night, and the rint for the tumble-down hovel that was their home only three months behind? And didn’t his poor ould father die of the cold and the wet and his poor ould mother of a broken heart? And here’s Tom to give ye the first blow himsilf!”

A thickset man waving long arms and a club detached himself from the rest and, with a black scowl, shrieked: —

“Take that, ye black-sowled murderer!” D’Arcy’s skull would have been opened by the blow if he had not snatched up his chair and defended himself with it.

In an instant Adeline found herself the spectator of a terrifying scene. Philip, Brent, and Wilmott also snatched up their chairs and met the attackers shoulder to shoulder with D’Arcy.

Philip shouted to her — “Run, Adeline! Out through the other door!”

Instead, she ran forward and flung herself on the raised arm of the spokesman, who brandished a hammer. She uttered a shriek that was heard even above the tumult. And at the same instant Captain Bradley and the mate appeared from the companionway carrying pistols.

“Now, men, do ye want a bullet in you?” shouted Captain Bradley. “Lay down those cudgels!”

Like a sudden squall, the fury of the peasants passed. They stood quiet, relaxed, like the sails from which the gale has receded. They stared in silence at the Captain.

“These men,” explained D’Arcy, “seem to think I evicted the parents of one of them and caused their death, but I did nothing of the sort.”

“It was yer agent done it!” retorted the spokesman. “It was that twister, McClarty — the murderer — and yoursilf off to the races at Dublin or Liverpool and niver knowing how yer tenantry is trated! Ye didn’t care, if you could lay hands on the rints.”

“Aye, that’s true,” added Mulligan. “And my poor ould parents getting their death out of it!”

“It’s a shame to him!” cried Adeline. “And if I had known it I should have been fighting on your side, Mulligan, instead of against you!” She was beside herself with excitement and exhilaration. She could hear the whistle of the wind, the clash of the waves. The wild scene had stirred something savage in her. The peasants crowded about her.

“Thank you, me lady! God save you.”

“May the Saints bless you! May yer children grow up to comfort you.”

D’Arcy spoke calmly to the men. “Why did you attack me,” he asked, “after all these weeks?”

“Sure, we’d just found out who you are, divil take you!”

A movement passed through them and it seemed for a moment that Adeline might be put to the test. But Captain Bradley’s authoritative voice ordered them below and like a troubled wave they receded, though with mutterings.

Philip had been embarrassed by Adeline’s outbreak against D’Arcy. He foresaw that their relations would not be so pleasant for the rest of the voyage. D’Arcy was watching her sulkily as she paced up and down the salon declaiming against the cruelties of absentee landlords, telling of how her own father never left his estate and knew the personal history of every man, woman, and child on it.

“Your father may be a paragon, in all truth, Mrs. Whiteoak,” returned D’Arcy, “but you cannot blame me for all the wrongs of Ireland.”

“You’ve no love for the people nor for the land,” she answered. “Your heart is not there! So what can you bring to the place but misfortune?”

“Well,” put in Brent, “I’ve sold every acre I owned in Ireland, and I’m glad of it!”

“I’d be better off if I had done the same,” declared D’Arcy.

Adeline flashed a look of scorn on them both. “And have ye no pity in your hearts,” she cried, “for the suffering of those poor people?”

“Come, come, Adeline,” interrupted Philip. “It’s late. You should go to your bed.” He turned to D’Arcy. “She is overwrought and tired.”

“I’ll lay my head on no pillow tonight. I’ve seen too much. I’ll stay here with Mr. D’Arcy and Mr. Brent and argue the matter out with them till sunrise.”

“I’m sorry,” said D’Arcy, “but I think I shall have to rest for a bit.” He put his hand to his forehead and she saw a discoloured swelling near his temple.

She went close to look at it. “Ah, well and did a blow really land on you!” she exclaimed. “Ah, I am sorry for that!”

Her anger was gone. She had a basin of hot water brought and herself bathed his head. Their friendship was restored.

But the next day she was not well. She could not leave the cabin. The weather became stormy. She suffered from nausea. Philip, coming into the cabin, found her sitting on the side of her
berth, very pale, her eyes wet with tears. But there was nothing tearful in her voice as she turned its vibrant tones on him.

“Well,” she demanded, “and what do ye think has happened to me?”

“Are you worse?”

“Aye, I’m worse.” She stared moodily for a space at the heaving floor of the cabin, then raised her eyes accusingly to his. She said: —

“Aye, I’m worse and shall be worse still before. I’m finished with it. I’m going to have a baby!”

“My God!” The glass of sherry he had brought her dropped from his hand.

“Well,” she cried, “you are a ninny! To think that you’d let fall a glass at the news, when it’s I who ought to be throwing things about.”

“I didn’t throw it! I dropped it.”

“’Tis one and the same — at a moment like this — and I needing the sherry!”

“Are you positive?” he asked.

“That I need the sherry?” “That you are going to have a baby?”

“I wish I were as positive that this ship would arrive in port.”

He could not help exclaiming — “I wish to God you’d waited till we were settled in Quebec!”

She retorted, the colour returning to her cheeks — “And I wish
you
had waited. But no — would such a thought ever enter your head? No — my lord, you must have your pleasure, let come what may! And now you say you wish
I
had waited! Oh, It’s well that the good Lord made women patient and mild — with all they have to go through from the unreasonableness and selfishness of men! Yes — I wish we’d both waited before ever we took the way to the altar.”

“You took good care not to let me see you in one of your tempers before I married you.”

She looked him in the eyes. “And did you ever give me such cause for temper before you married me?” she demanded.

He burst out laughing. “Now you are just ridiculous,” he said.

He brought her another glass of sherry.

As he saw her sitting on the side of the berth wrapped in a great shawl with red stripes on it, and her fingers playing with the fringe of the shawl, a pang of pity went through him. For all her fine properties she looked like a forlorn child. He sat down beside her and held the glass to her lips.

“My only reason,” he said, “for wishing this had not happened till later is because of the discomfort of travelling when you’re
enceinte
.”

She gripped his fingers and managed to smile a little.

“Oh, I shall be all right,” she said.

He gave her another sip of the sherry. Then he exclaimed — “If it’s a boy we’ll call him Nicholas, after my uncle!”

“I’d have liked Philip.”

“No. I don’t want any Philip but myself in your life.”

“Very well. He shall be Nicholas. But never Nick or Nicky for short.”

“Never.”

A knock came on the door. It was the overworked stewardess to tell them that the ayah was once more very seasick and quite unable to look after the baby. The ship was now wallowing in a trough of the waves. She herself seemed to be suffering also, for her timbers gave forth the most melancholy creakings and groanings. Those on board could not help remembering her former betrayal of them and were prepared at any moment to hear that she had sprung another leak.

“Bring the child here,” said Philip.

The stewardess brought Augusta who came smiling, a shell held to each ear.

“Would it be possible for you to look after her?” Philip asked the woman. “My wife is not well. I shall make it worth your while.”

“I’ll do what I can for the poor bairn but I’m nearly run off my feet as it is. Half the passengers are sick again.”

When she had gone Adeline exclaimed: —

“I do dislike that woman! She never speaks of Gussie without
calling her ‘the poor bairn’ — as though we neglected or ill-treated her!”

Philip set his daughter on his knee. “If only she had taken to my sister,” he said, “as she should have done, she might be enjoying herself in England now, instead of adding to our problem here!”

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