Read Till the Sun Shines Through Online
Authors: Anne Bennett
âBridie, it's not like that.'
âIt is like that,' Bridie snapped. âJust like that and I know who is to blame and that's me. I'm the one that is the worst in the world in my own village and now in yours, the wicked scarlet woman who went out to snare the priest. They think I'm not good enough for you and, by Christ, they're right. I allowed myself to be raped and then had an abortion to get rid of the evidence. My own parents think me so wicked they've disowned me and now yours are saying much the same thing.'
âStop this, Bridie.'
âNo, I'll not, because it's right. Don't get mixed up with me, Tom, I'm bad news.'
âNonsense!'
âIt isn't nonsense,' Bridie said. âI've made a decision and I won't change it. You don't need me, Tom, I'm bad for you, bad for anyone I come into contact with. In time you will meet a good, wholesome, untainted girl who will be a fine wife to you.'
âI want you for a wife.'
âThat wouldn't be a good choice, Tom â I love you too much to see you wreck your life and destroy the relationship you have with your parents.'
âNo, I'll not let you do this,' Tom cried, grasping Bridie's arm tight.
âYou must,' Bridie said in a flat voice. âTake your hands off me, Tom, I want to go home.'
Tom saw there was no point in arguing further with Bridie in such a mood. âI'll not let you do this,' he said again. âGo home tonight if you must and talk it through with your aunt. I'll call for you tomorrow.'
âThere's no point.'
âI'll be the judge of that,' Tom said.
Bridie shook her head, but said nothing further and, turning away from Tom, began making her way home.
Mary had left Eddie listening out for the children and had popped in to see Ellen. Sam had taken himself off to the pub and so the two women looked up at Bridie's entry.
They both took in the look on her face and Mary asked, âWhat is it? What's wrong?'
Bridie swallowed the lump in her throat determinedly and willed her voice not to shake as she said, âTom is ⦠We've split up. There will be no marriage.'
It was the last thing Ellen and Mary expected to hear and they both gaped at Bridie in shock. âBut why?' Mary demanded eventually.
âIt's ⦠it's a long story,' Bridie said. âI don't want to talk about it. I'm going to bed.'
Neither woman said anything. They knew Bridie was controlling herself with difficulty and needed to be alone. As they heard her steps on the attic stairs, Ellen said quietly, âI'll take her a cup of tea in a wee while. She'll have had a good cry then and maybe will be ready for a good chat.'
âMaybe,' Mary said doubtfully. âThis all boils down to Mammy, you know? Why don't they give her permission to marry Tom? I've told them what a lovely person he is.'
âAnd me,' agreed Ellen. âI even said if she's so keen to put her out of her life, why is she blocking her chance of being happy with someone else?'
âI can't understand it,' Mary confessed. âAnd the longer it goes on, the more depressed she gets. She feels she doesn't deserve happiness.'
âDoes she?'
âAye,' Mary said with feeling. âI had a fair bit of that kind of talk after the abortion, but more after she confessed it to that damned priest at St Chad's.'
âWell,' said Ellen, âthat's decided me. The girl has had enough happen in her young life to withstand more heartache. I'll go over to Ireland as soon as I can and make Sarah, or possibly Jimmy, see sense if it's the last thing I do.'
âBut what if the wedding's off as Bridie said?'
âIt's not off,' Ellen said dismissively. âThose two are made for each other, just like you and Eddie are. They've had a tiff and little wonder with all the pressure they're under. His parents won't be best pleased either, I shouldn't think. But the girl deserves a crack at happiness.'
Perhaps she did, but over the next week, while Ellen made arrangements to go to Ireland, Bridie became paler and more drawn than ever. She refused to see Tom if he called at the house, went to work, but never left the building at lunchtimes and dodged him on her way home in the evening, always leaving with a crowd of the girls.
She saw him of course. If he approached her counter she said she was too busy to talk and she ignored the dejected figure leaning on the wall, waiting for her to leave. She knew he'd not approach a giggling mass of shop girls, arms linked, marching through the Bull Ring. Most of the girls thought Bridie mad to throw up a boy as dishy as Tom Cassidy with those gorgeous âcome to bed eyes', as one girl was heard to say.
âThrow him my way, duck, if you can't stand the pace,' another put in. âChrist! I'd give him a run for his bleeding money.'
But others were more sympathetic. âYou can't help it if you just don't fancy someone,' one of the nicer girls said. âGive the kid a break. Don't matter any road what the problem is. If she doesn't want to see him, she don't have to.'
âRight, us girls have got to stick together,' said another and there was a chorus of agreement.
Peggy McKenna, who had a nose for scenting out trouble, soon realised things weren't right between Bridie and her young man. âWhat did you expect?' she asked her one night as Bridie made her way home. âNo decent man would want anything to do with the likes of you.'
Peggy's words fed the unworthiness and low self-esteem that Bridie already felt anyway and she knew she'd been right to give Tom up.
But, as day followed day, she grew quieter and thinner. She found she couldn't eat and sadness seemed to seep inside her. But, she told herself, she had no right to happiness and if at any time she was to doubt that, Peggy McKenna would be at her elbow, heaping her with scorn.
Ellen told few people where she was heading. She hadn't told her sister Sarah to expect her, nor had she told Bridie where she was really going. Not wishing to raise the girl's hopes, she told her she was off to stay with a relative of Sam's down south who'd had a fall.
Mary, who knew of Ellen's plans and thought it highly unlikely that she'd succeed in changing her mother's mind, played along with the story.
Ellen wasn't so sure she'd succeed either when she alighted from the rail bus at the farm. Boneweary and hungry, her spirits took a downturn. What was she doing, a woman of her age, running about between the countries trying to build bridges? And did she think she'd do any earthly good?
She didn't, not really. She knew her sister, none better, and once her mind was made up, that was usually it. âStop it,' she told herself sternly. âA defeatist attitude is no good in a situation like this,' and she squared her shoulders and marched up the path alongside the meadow where the cows, placidly chewing the cud, turned their heads inquisitively to look at her. She went up towards the back of the cottage, wrinkling her nose at the stink rising from the midden. The hens, shut up for the night, started fluttering and clucking as they heard her approach and the young calves in the byre beside the house lowed gently.
Yet no one in the house heard her approach. Jimmy sat before the fire almost asleep, despite the early hour. He'd been up since dawn and tomorrow would be more of the same.
Sarah, too, was tired and had lifted the heavy pot from the hook above the fire and began to pour it into the squat brown teapot set beside the hearth when Ellen walked in the door.
Sarah stared across the room in shock at her older sister. She'd admired her for years, yet since Bridie had left home she'd felt differently about her. Sarah felt Ellen had let her down. She'd sworn she'd known nothing of Bridie's plans to run away and maybe that was the truth, but still the girl was staying with her. If she'd not been so keen to give her a bed, she might have come home, explained herself, told Sarah why she'd gone the way she had.
Ellen saw the hostility in Sarah's face and reminded herself that she didn't know and could never know Bridie's reasons for her flight. Once, Sarah would have flown across the room to hug her sister, bid her welcome and draw her to the fire, and she felt a pang of regret for that closeness lost. Oh, but how much worse for Bridie, she reminded herself. The petted and favoured child was now cast adrift for reasons not of her own making. If she was to have a future at all it lay with Tom Cassidy. Ellen discounted their quarrel; sure it could be mended with one word of consent from her parents.
Jimmy looked at Ellen. He'd been embarrassed at his wife's lack of warmth on seeing her sister. True, her appearance had been an unexpected shock, but she was family and a guest.
He pulled himself to his feet and went across the flagstones to Ellen in his stockinged feet, having removed his boots. He had his hand outstretched but, moved by the sadness he saw in her face, encircled her in a hug instead. âThis is a surprise, Ellen,' he said, releasing her at last, âbut a welcome one. What brings you out here?'
âDon't act daft, man,' Sarah snapped. âYou know why she's here and I'll tell you now it won't work. I have no child named Bridie, nor any interest in anything she does.'
âGod, woman!' Jimmy cried. âEllen has just arrived and Bridie is our flesh and blood whether you like it or not. Give over now. Let Ellen come up to the fire and pour her a cup of tea at least.'
Almost grudgingly, Sarah welcomed her sister with a stiff embrace, but she did pour her a cup of tea. And since the Irish way was never to offer just tea, there were also slices of soda bread, home-cured bacon and tomatoes, and slabs of barn brack topped with thick creamy butter.
The food revived Ellen, but only slightly; she was still very tired. Jimmy saw that she was and was glad. He was in no state himself for an emotionally charged situation that evening. The following day was early enough for any sort of confrontation.
But he couldn't get himself ready for his bed with both women there, positioned as it was in a curtained alcove off the kitchen, and so he took his jacket from the door and whistled to the dogs. âI'll take a look around before I turn in,' he said as explanation.
Sarah nodded. It was Jimmy's routine to check everything was safe and secure before going to bed. Then he'd come in, wind the clock, knock his pipe out in the grate and place the guard around the fire. So when the door closed behind him Sarah said to Ellen, âJimmy wants his bed. We'll away to the room. The beds are stripped, but I have sheets and blankets stored. You'll have to make up the bed, I can't with my arm, you know.'
âI'm no stranger to making beds,' Ellen said, and she went over to the chest her sister had opened and selected her bed linen for the night. She didn't think Sarah would follow her, but she did and she stood watching her making up the bed.
Suddenly she said, âWhy did she do it, Ellen? Why did our Bridie feel she had to run from us the way she did?'
It was the last thing Ellen had expected. She not only refused to answer her letters, but refused to talk about her at all in those she sent to Ellen and Mary and any reference they made about Bridie was studiously ignored. But glancing over at Sarah, Ellen was struck with pity for pain was etched on her face. Anger and bitterness was the armour assumed to help her cope with the hurt and Ellen could bet that she'd not have voiced the question if Jimmy had been in earshot.
But what could Ellen say? Oh, Bridie ran away because of years of sexual abuse from your brother-in-law, culminating eventually in rape? When Bridie found herself pregnant, she left to save the family from disgrace?
No, she couldn't tell her the truth. âOch, you know these young ones, they take notions.'
âDid she tell you nothing? Surely you asked?'
âAye. Aye,' Ellen said. âBut she said nothing definite, just that she was fed up of the farm and seeing no one, the daily grind, you know. I think she missed Rosalyn too.'
âWhy didn't she say?' Sarah cried. âWe'd have got someone in to help. Oh, I know we weren't keen at the time, but we had to get someone in when she left. Francis got us a man who Jimmy gets on fine with. His wife Beattie helps me and while it's not the same as one of your own, it's not so bad when all's said and done.
âBut as for missing Rosalyn, Ellen, I'm not so sure. Oh, she was upset at the time, no doubt of it, but now ⦠Well, Delia says she never writes. Rosalyn writes to her, but she never writes back. If she missed her that much, wouldn't she send a wee letter now and then?'
Ellen, who knew that Bridie felt she couldn't write to Rosalyn because she was connected to Francis, said nothing to this, but she did try to defend her. âShe works hard, Sarah,' she said, âand sometimes long hours. She doesn't get much free time.'
âEnough to get herself a boyfriend it seems.'
âAye,' Ellen said. âBut that's natural enough, isn't it?'
âShe's too young.'
âShe's nineteen and Tom is a fine young man,' Ellen said. âOh Sarah, you know there's no law about this sort of thing.'
âAnd she needs our permission to marry him?'
âAye.'
âWell, she can want,' Sarah stated flatly. âWe didn't want her to go, but she pleased herself. Well, I'll please myself and she can burn in Hell before I'd give my blessing to anything she does.'
âSarah, this attitude doesn't help,' said Ellen with a sigh.
âIt helps me, Ellen,' Sarah said tight-lipped. âAnd what's more, that's my last word on the subject.' And with that parting shot, she swept from the room, slamming the door shut behind her.
Ellen knew to keep on about Bridie when Sarah was in this mood would only make her dig her heels in further, so she went in search of Jimmy the following day. She was glad he was in the lower field for then she couldn't be seen from the house â she'd told Sarah she was off for a walk.
She'd guessed Jimmy wouldn't be so rigidly opposed to Bridie and she was proved right. He freely admitted he missed her and wished the situation could be put right between herself and Sarah.