âThis is remarkable,' Joseph says, âquite remarkable.'
âWhen people ascend first time, sometimes they talk of God,' Jacques tells them.
âI can understand that,' says Sarah. âThe ordered beauty of the natural world.' That day at the Schuylkill River. âBut think of the thousands of lives below, the tragedies, pleasure, love, the sadness, and we can neither see nor hear any of them! Like the ship's captain who cares nothing for the mice on board!'
She thinks: âMy own life, too, is as nothing in the universe. Yet now for me each second is full, so full of everything that is happening, all that has happened.'
âOf course
you
don't believe in God, Jacques,' says Joseph. âYou are a man of the Revolution. For you, men are masters of the universe.'
âNot yet masters complete, Joseph. Not of the whole world. But
I
shall conquer the sky. Balloons first. And parachutes. I design a parachute. Madame Garnerin have jumped already.'
âHow astonishing,' Sarah says. âWas she not afraid?'
âShe feel no fear.'
âDo you believe in a deity, Sarah?' Joseph asks, dipping his brush rapidly, sketching, scratching with his nail.
âA distant one. A first cause.'
âWell! I thought all deists were men!'
They ascend higher and a west wind drives them over a forest. Jacques is attending to the map.
âHere is the Epping forest.'
âThe easiest thing to sketch so far, let me tell you. Look, it's like a great gooseberry bush.'
He daubs and streaks, trying out greens merging into blue, black shadows, a distant sift of cloud while yet the sun still burns.
They move rapidly, high, to the east.
In the huge blueness Sarah's senses are keenly alert. She feels her body glow with the sun's heat, her mind open so that past and future spread like a magnified map. She sees like a blade.
And knows what she must do. Suddenly. What she must do for Eve and for herself.
She must leave Battle's. Sell it. Its darkness and smells, closed, inward-looking, a standing pool, black, stagnant. She will take Eve away from its influence. Sail once more, for the last time, to Philadelphia. Live there, work there. Publish and sell books herself. Take up where Tom left off.
âI shall do what he did,' she thinks, âwhat he would have done had he lived, what we would have done together. I learned something of the business there, enough to try. Sell cheap reprints, he said, so as to publish more pamphlets and unknown writers. I'll finish our pamphlet on women's education.
âI can do it with the money from selling Battle's; I don't need Robert Wilson. What was it Tom said about me? He thought I was wasted in the coffee house.
She will find a new way in this new world.
I shall!
âLucy and little Matthew can come with us, live with Eve and me. And Martha will be there, dear Martha. She will help Lucy laugh. Yes. I shall do all this.
âOh! It's like the moment when the clouds dissolved! I can see it all set out: Sarah Cranch & Daughter, Books and Printseller, Market Street, Philadelphia.'
Joseph notices the change in Sarah's face, her features seeming both to sharpen and to shine. An inner exultation. Sketches her as well as he can without her knowledge. No cartoon, he catches uplift, illumination.
The balloon moves with speed towards lines of light and dark.
He stands close to her. âSarah, look. We're approaching the sea, I'm sure of it. Before it's too late, before we descend, I must tell you something. I understand everything now.'
âHow strange! I feel exactly the same!'
âYou
do
? How wondrous! The light, the atmosphere, makes everything into a vision, doesn't it? You look so beautiful in this upper air. Like a goddess, serene and noble.'
She doesn't hear, exulting still. He hesitates, but only for a moment.
âOh Sarah, I know now without doubt. I love you. You, Sarah.'
She stares, unseeing.
âThis journey, sailing in the ether, has helped me understand. Lucy was just a model for my work. I had a mistress who satisfied me, but she was coarse. You are the woman I love. The only woman I
can
love. You are the woman I need. You are a widow, free to marry; Lucy and I never married so I am free, too. And I am rich now, Sarah. You need never work again. Let us marry. Will you? Say you will. Oh, say you will!'
She looks at him. This young man, strong in body, charged with feeling, charming, skilled, of whom she's grown fond in recent weeks. He, seeing only assent, clasps her to him and for a moment the embrace claims her: she has lived on memories for so long.
She pulls back.
âNo! Good God, no, Joseph!'
Sees his shock. Regrets what she must do.
âYou don't know me, Joseph. You know nothing about me, do you? Tom was my husband. Tom Cranch. Yes, he's dead but I shall be true to him always. For three years we lived as husband and wife though we couldn't be legally married. I am
his
widow, not Wintrige's. Wintrige was a spy and a liar. The marriage was a sham. I loved Tom from the moment we fled the country; no, much earlier, though I didn't realise it. I loved him then, I love him now and always shall.'
Oh, she is struck by sadness. To use his name to hurt! Fierce certainty subsumes it.
âI have decided to return to America. I shall sell Battle's and leave as soon as I can.'
Joseph, white, sways with the blow. Clutches the basket edge with both hands, for his vision has skewed, his mind is blind. He staggers. His bulk crumples, shrivels. His body is bones, his ecstasy a husk: he could be tossed out of the basket.
âI didn't know this. I didn't know. It's true I know nothing about you. I see you as I want to see you. A guiding star, a cynosure. Oh, what have I done? What have I done? You will hate me now. Oh Sarah, I'm sorry. How foolish, how crass! Will you ever forgive me? Please forgive me, Sarah! Sometimes my feelings overwhelm me; I cannot help myself. Then I regret it.' He groans heavily, covers his face with his hands, his head bowing down below his shoulders.
â
Joseph
!' Jacques shouts. âFor God's sake, we must descend. Look,
la mer, la mer
!' The wind has driven them eastwards, over the marshes of Essex, extremely close to the sea. At the same time a summer storm cloud wells up immediately beneath them, black, heavy with disturbance.
Although Jacques shows no sign of panic, indeed he never feels it, he is coolness personified, he must keep the worst from Madame Battle.
âIl faut que nous passions a travers de ce drôle la
,' indicating the cloud.
âAccrochez vous ferme car nous allons nous casser le col
.'
âHe says to hold on tight,' Joseph tells Sarah as Jacques pulls on a rope to open the valve at the top of the balloon. âWe shall have to pass through this storm.'
Gas spurts, they plunge down into the cloud and the squall's centre, beaten by wind and rain as they descend with sickening velocity. They grip the sides of the basket and Sarah cries out as a particular buffet hurls her onto the floor.
Both men help her up.
âVite, vite
! We strike the ground in a moment,' Jacques yells above the wind. âHold the hoop, so. Lift the feet!'
The basket is held by a hoop attached to the net around the balloon. Joseph lifts Sarah up, bids her hold onto the hoop for dear life, raise her legs, does the same himself. Jacques, monkey-like, jumps up, tucks his feet into the net, holds an arm out to Sarah and the three of them, new-fangled acrobats, swing from the massive gas-emitting globe as they hit the ground.
Sarah, her bonnet long gone, her dress soaked against her body, her muscles jarred, is too cold to cry. Survival is all. Gusting wind pulls the balloon across fields, the car dragging behind it at speed, banging over the ground, knocking against trees while they hang on to ropes with both hands, glad to be down, though jolted mercilessly. At last the grappling iron fastens its claw-hooks onto a tree stump.
âMadame Battle, you are well?'
âI am alive.'
âWe could have done with your parachute, Jacques,' says Joseph, watching Sarah with fear.
â
Mais non
. Only madmen jump in this weather.
Regardez
!' People are running out of a nearby farmhouse and stand gawping and pointing. Not too close.
âSurely they will help, will take us in?' Sarah says.
Jacques and Joseph throw ropes towards them.
âAnchor us! Tie the ropes to your trees!' Joseph yells. The people stare. Some of the men confer with each other, gesture violently to the women who turn and run back to the house. A woman stumbles, shrieking.
âThey think we are Napoleon's invasion! With our Tricolours,' says Sarah, for the Union Jacks blew off some time before. âWe are friends!' she shouts, âplease help us!' But her voice is lost in the wind's roar.
âThey think we're devils dropped from the sky,' Joseph says grimly. âI'll jump out and secure a rope, Jacques.'
âYou cannot, alone, Joseph. You are not strong enough, even you. So much gas is still in the balloon. Many are needed to secure it.
Ils sont idiots, ces gens
!'
And then a sudden blast of wind grabs them like a hand, breaks the anchoring cable and with extraordinary speed shoots them hundreds of feet into the air. Tosses them back in the direction from which they came. The flight resumes just when they want it to end.
Jacques stretches for the gas-release valve rope, but it's out of his reach.
âIt have slipped away,' he shouts. âI cannot make us descend. We shall continue.'
Sarah pulls her cloak about her tightly to calm her shivering body.
âMadame Battle, have courage.'
âThere is no braver woman, Jacques,' shouts Joseph, shaking with despair. âBut look, we all need courage now. We're being blown back to the coast.' He fastens the clasps of his sketchbook, wraps it in oilcloth, ties it firmly.
âAt least what I have drawn may survive even if I drown,' he tells himself. âSomeone may find the sketch of her. It's the best thing I've ever done.'
âPut on the cork jackets. There will be ships, boats,' Jacques proclaims, confident.
Sarah longs for Eve, for Tom. Rejoices in her plan of hope and reuniting as the damaged balloon scuds rapidly towards a lucent sea.
Parthian, Cardigan SA43 1ED
www.parthianbooks.com
First published in 2015
© Alix Nathan 2015
ISBN 978-1-910409-61-9 ePUB
ISBN 978-1-910901-07-6 Mobi
Editor: Claire Houguez
Cover image:
Mrs Anne Hart
, Henry Raeburn, 1810, oil on canvas, 135 x 109 cm © Bildagentur fu
Ì
r Kunst, Kultur und Geschichte, Berlin
Cover design by Mark Jennings
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