Helen Humphreys Three-Book Bundle (22 page)

BOOK: Helen Humphreys Three-Book Bundle
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Does she? Annie watches Isabelle through the window. She thinks of the glasshouse, how sometimes all she wants is for Isabelle to be looking at her in the way she does when she has all the hope in the world that whatever photograph she’s taking of Annie at the moment will be the answer that she wants.
Don’t take your eyes from me.
“That’s not it,” she says.

They stand at the window, watching the dinner party go on without them. Eldon is glad to be away from the dinner. It is not that he doesn’t feel proud of Isabelle for her unexpected success. But her success makes him think about his own failures. In the drawing room, before dinner, when he’d been standing with Isabelle and Mr. Drake had come over and exclaimed about the photographs, he’d felt glad for his wife, glad to see how pleased the praise made her. But when Mr. Drake had offered to exhibit all of Isabelle’s new work, without even seeing it beforehand, Eldon had felt the sharp teeth of envy at his throat. She was being rewarded for doing what she wanted to do. He was being stopped from doing what he had waited his whole life to do. There was no escaping the dismal comparison. And he has wanted so litde in his life. He has wanted to travel and then to be able to record where he has been. To go away. To come back. He has wanted to turn his face to the stars. To draw the line of his breath across a blank piece of paper.
I was here.

“You should go back in,” he says. “Phelan, they’ll miss you.” He puts a hand on Annie’s shoulder, squeezes it gently. “Isabelle will mind that you’re gone,” he says, and starts off down the path, away from the house, leaving Annie standing by the window.

*

The dinner party that Isabelle has meticulously planned and anticipated is not going very well at all. First Annie Phelan has bolted from the room, and now Robert Hill is holding forth on the limits of the photographic arts. Why has everything gone so horribly wrong? Isabelle looks around the table at her guests. Perhaps the sad truth is that she is only accepted within this society because she is the daughter of a Lord. They don’t care a whit about her identity as an artist. They are moved only by the status of the peerage. Why did she imagine that they would care about her gold medal from Dublin? And is that why Robert Hill went on about Ireland and drove Annie Phelan from the room? Because Isabelle’s award was from Dublin?

“I fear that photography will be the death of painting,” Robert Hill is saying, loudly, to the dinner guests. “An art that depends so largely on technical skill and craft, on God-given talent, will be subsumed by a machine that practically anyone can operate with a litde instruction. We are entering a new and dangerous age when being an artist will not mean what it does now, when an image is quick and temporary, casual even, not something to be invested with meaning, to be laboured over and appreciated partly as a result of that labour. What will art mean,” he says, dramatically waving his cheese knife in the air, “when it is the property of anyone? When it is even the property of those so obviously beneath us? Of course, my dear Isabelle, you cannot help this. You aren’t responsible for what is to come.”

Isabelle raises an eyebrow. “Am I not?” she says. What a pompous idiot he is. Afraid, she thinks. He is so afraid that she is at the beginning of what he is at the end of, that her success will ultimately mean his failure. “Am I not the future, Robert?” she says. “Isn’t that what you were saying?”

Letitia Hill clasps a napkin to her mouth. She is either coughing or laughing.

Robert hesitates for only a moment. He raises his glass of wine to the assembled guests, nods deferentially to Isabelle. “To the future, then,” he says, and drinks.

As Annie slips back around the side of the house, back through the drawing-room doors, ready to go upstairs and hide in her room to avoid rejoining the dinner party, she hears voices. Crying. Wilks is trying to walk out into the hallway, but Tess has both her hands around his arm, holding on. Neither of them has seen Annie. She stops just inside the garden doors. Beyond Tess and Wilks are the closed doors of the dining room, the sounds of the dinner guests. The loud booming voice of Robert Hill.

“Get off me,” hisses Wilks, shaking his arm, trying to dislodge Tess. “Get away from me, you fat cow.”

“But you love me. I love you.” Tess’s second declaration comes out softer, like a whisper.

“Won’t change anything. It’s not my child. I don’t have duties to you. If you hadn’t gone slutting after your last master, you wouldn’t be with child at all.”

“He forced me,” says Tess, her voice a real whisper now. “You know that. I told you that.”

“Could have been lies. It all could be lies. Everything you say. In any case, I want nought to do with you now.” Wilks uses his hands to firmly pry Tess’s fingers from his sleeve. He turns to walk out of the room.

“I thought you cared for me?” says Tess. “Don’t leave me,” she cries, and throws herself onto the ground, grabs onto Wilks’s leg to stop him from walking out of the room.

Annie has recognized the scene, the pose, this vocabulary for love and loss. Guinevere. It frightens her. It is powerful, what happens in the glasshouse. Isabelle is powerful, perhaps more powerful than Annie had thought.

Wilks has surged free of Tess’s desperate grasp, and is out into the hall, is gone. Annie crouches down beside Tess, tries to haul her up, but Tess collapses into Annie’s arms instead, cries onto her shoulder.

The baby is not Wilks’s after all. The real father is the master of the last house Tess worked in. Probably this is what made her leave that employ. Annie suddenly feels sorry for the baby, sorry for Tess. Annie rocks Tess slowly. “Hush,” she says. “Hush, now. Don’t cry. I’m here.”

Eldon sits at his desk. When he was a boy, confined mostly to bed, coughing into a handkerchief and having to drink great steaming mixtures of foul-tasting liquids, he’d dreamed of travel. It was foolishness, he thinks now, nothing but romantic nonsense. He has read the field journal of a surveyor in the Canadian wilderness. He knows that the reality of that man’s life was nothing even close to the heroicism Eldon had imagined for him. Canadian survey parties were given rations unsuitable to the harshness of the northern bush where they worked. Flour would become saturated with water from an overturned canoe. Butter would go rancid in the heat. Half the time the survey party was starving. The other half they were so badly besieged by mosquitoes and blackflies that it was, as the surveyor had recorded,
an agony of which leads men to madness.
No matter how they smeared tar and paint on their bodies or swathed their heads in cloth, the insects crawled into their noses and ears, swarmed about their heads. It was impossible to breathe without swallowing them and the faces of the men would have been constantly swollen beyond recognition.

If Eldon had been there, he would have wanted to get out. Never being able to see more than a few feet in front of him for the tangle of branches and swamp alders. Laying the heavy survey chain down across the forest floor, one sixty-six foot length at a time. The thick, thick heat of the summer pressing at him like so many hands. The flies. The rations spoiled and the men in the survey party restless with hardship. He would want to get away from that. The long climb alone with his clothes humid and filthy on his body, loose rocks of the screes skittering out from under his feet like nervous laughter. And perhaps there was one moment, near the top of the cliff, one moment before he fell from the sky. When he could see. For miles.

Eldon gets up and goes over to his map table, flips through the stack of maps until he finds the one he wants. It’s the last map that this surveyor made. He finally was able to leave the closeness of the northern bush and was given the task of mapping the Great Lakes. The relief he felt at this change is evident everywhere on this map. Eldon lays a finger down and runs it slowly over the faint lines of ink. The compass rose is a spiky chrysanthemum. There are coastlines scalloped like holly leaves, islands as chiselled arrowheads. Lakes are river-tentacled, covered in grey spots and floating unattached to land, like large, bulbous soft-bag jellyfish. The scale is draped with a garland of flowers and vines. Lake Huron is called
the Grand Lake of the Sweet Sea.
This map makes Eldon’s breath burn in his throat. The cartographer loved this map, not as a record or a guide or a deed of ownership, but as a landscape itself. To shift the pen so carefully around the indentations of a bay. To draw the mountain ranges as thick lengths of rope. To have no explanations. To list
latitudes observed
as though they were migrating ducks, something seen overhead and fleeting, on wing. To say on the edge of the map,
From this place to the fiery nation is forty-three days’ Journey.
This map-maker felt the geography as a runner feels speed, a solid, tangible thing, bridged by the mind and crossed by the body.

When the map-maker made this map he had no idea that it might be used, years later, as a guide to the area’s minerals, so they might be exploited for profit.

Terra cognito. The known world. Eldon stares down at his hand on the sheet of paper in front of him. It is a dangerous thing, making a map. If there is a pure curiosity, an authentic urge for discovery and knowledge, why is it that every map seems a precursor to some form of exploitation? Settlement or battle. When the cartographer stands on a high place and draws lines radiating out like spokes, like the rays of the sun, how can he doubt that where he is, is not the centre of the world?

I am here.

This is mine.

And whether the idea of a New World is land, or love, the map is often the first step towards colonization. The voyage motivated by the desire for discovery. The map the proof of the voyage. Settlement or batde, the proof of the map.

Eldon sits at the pivot point of an imaginary compass and wonders how straight it is in human beings, this line between discovery and conquest. How direct. The bearings of the compass. The compass of the heart.

*

Annie is hiding in her reading room, crouched down on the floor between the carriages, head resting on her knees, crying. She is still wearing Isabelle’s dress, couldn’t bear to face Isabelle to return it, as she is certain Isabelle will be angry that she bolted from the dinner party and never returned.

It is late at night. All the dinner guests have gone. Tess is sleeping fitfully in their attic bedroom. The house creaks with night sounds, but is quiet of human noises.

Annie doesn’t know what to do about Isabelle. She can’t hide here forever, will have to, at some point, go up to Isabelle’s room and present herself in order to return the dress. She’ll have to accept whatever blame or punishment Isabelle has decided to give to her. But it seems so unfair. Annie hugs her knees. If her family had lived, if she’d never had to leave Ireland, would she have ended up as a maid? It is as though another life has grown quietly beside her all the while she has been living this life, another life that might have been hers. In that life she might have been working on a farm, or even as a schoolteacher. She would have been Catholic, would have had a different God, or the same God approached from a different direction, up a different set of steps.

There’s a sudden scrabbling noise. Mouse, thinks Annie, but it’s louder than that. Rat. It’s the sound of the door to the room being opened. Annie chokes back her tears, holds her breath. Someone is here in this room with her. There’s the sound of the door being closed, the flicker of a candle as the person moves further into the room. Annie presses back against a carriage wheel, trying to make herself invisible. The carriage squeaks, not a small noise that could have perhaps been caused by a mouse, or by gravity working the rusted springs to earth, but a noise that could only have been caused by another person in the room.

The candle swings round towards Annie.

“Who’s here?” It is Isabelle. The person in the room is Isabelle.

For a moment Annie thinks that Isabelle has followed her here, is angry enough that she can’t wait for Annie to come to her. But why then would she ask, in a nervous-sounding voice, who it was who was crouched here in the dark? No, Isabelle doesn’t know who it is. Annie remembers the time she was in this room before and saw that a carriage had been moved. She had thought that she was the only one to visit this room, but Isabelle must come here as well. Those carriages and prams, which Annie has thought of as belonging to this room, really belong to Isabelle. They belong to the children who died.

“Who’s here?”

The voice is closer now. Annie must say something or be discovered. She stands up. “It is I,” she says.

“Annie?”

“Yes, Annie.”

Isabelle steps right up to her, waves the candle in her face, almost setting her hair on fire. “What in God’s name are you doing here?”

Annie can’t think of a good way to tell Isabelle. “This is where I come when I want to be alone.” She can see the look of shock on Isabelle’s face. “I know I shouldn’t,” she says.

Isabelle looks caught between exploding into anger or collapsing into tears. She lowers the candle. “What else,” she says. “What else can happen this evening that I didn’t expect.” She sounds utterly defeated.

“I’m sorry about the dinner,” says Annie. “I know how you wanted it to be special.”

Isabelle sighs. “I’m sorry, too,” she says. “Sorry that arrogant man tried to suggest the Irish gave a disease to the English cattle. How ridiculous.” She touches the handle of a pram, pushes it gently so the body of the pram rocks up and down on the wheels. “I thought they would be happy for me,” she says. “But they don’t even like me. They certainly don’t care about the photographs. All they care about is that I’m my father’s daughter.” Isabelle continues rocking the pram, as carefully as one would rock it if there was a baby lying asleep inside the cave of it. “What do you do here?” she asks.

Annie isn’t sure if she should confess her arrangement with Mr. Dashell, how he operates a library service for her. “Think mostly,” she says. “It’s quiet. I like that.”

“What do you think about?”

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