Here Comes a Candle (10 page)

Read Here Comes a Candle Online

Authors: Jane Aiken Hodge

BOOK: Here Comes a Candle
2.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Again the child took no notice. She was busy now, lining up salt cellars and other bits of crockery across the table, and Kate, who was indeed famished, was glad to leave her to it and hurry on with her own meal. She had almost finished when Mrs. Peters returned with a steaming bowl of bread and milk.

Ummm—that looks good,

she moved over to sit beside Sarah.

Shall we pretend you

re my baby and I

ll feed you? Would that be fun, Sarah?

And then, when the child merely looked past her with wide, uncomprehending eyes,

My mother used to have a game she played with me. Let me see how it went.

She dipped the spoon in the steaming bowl.

Here

s a bite for Lord Nelson

—the child swallowed it—

and
one for the Queen—A bite for Lord Chatham, Wherever he

s been—

She laughed.

I shall have to make up a new one for you, Sarah. Let

s think—

as she talked she was spooning bread and milk into the passive mouth.

No good thinking we can find a rhyme for President, is there?

She did not expect an answer, and went straight on, as if talking to herself.

Here

s a bite for your father, and one for his mill. A bite for your mother—

Sarah

s teeth clenched on the spoon and she spat bread and
milk
all over the table.

Oh, Sarah!

But instinct warned her not to lose her temper, and she managed, quite cheerfully:

What a mess! Let

s mop it up, shall we?

congratulating herself, meanwhile, that Mrs. Peters had vanished with a disapproving glance as she began on the first rhyme.

While she was busy cleaning up the table, Sarah contrived to spill most of the rest of the bowlful down her front, but Kate refused to be drawn.

Had enough, have you? Right; then let

s go up and
c
hange that sopping dress.

She pulled back Sarah

s chair, making a mental note to ask Jonathan Penrose if there was not some more practical place and way of feeding the child than at this polished dini
n
g table. In the meantime, Mrs. Peters would doubtless draw the gloomiest conclusions from the state in which they left the room, but that could not be helped. Sarah was her job—and no sinecure. She took her hand and felt it writhe in hers, the child desperately braced against her, ready for flight.

Fatal to give in now. She stooped and swung Sarah up into her arms.

My father had a game he played with me too.

She began to sing:

Ride a cock horse/To Banbury Cross,

swinging Sarah in her arms in time to the music. Sarah struggled for a minute, wildly, then just as suddenly burst into a shriek of laughter that Kate found almost as disconcerting as her previous resistance. But never mind, they were halfway upstairs.

In Sarah

s room, she delved in closets and drawers, to find what struck her as an immense and unsuitable wardrobe for a child so young. Hard to imagine wayward little
Sarah dressed up in these frilled and flounced muslins. The checked gingham she was wearing seemed eminently more suitable, and Kate found its twin lying in a drawer. But Sarah stamped her foot, her lip trembling.


You don

t like it, Sarah? Well, pick one you do like.

At once, the child dug to the very bottom of the drawer and brought out a well-worn dotted muslin.


That one? Do you think it

s big enough for you? Let

s try it anyway.

She had got used now to the fact that Sarah never answered her, and was already suiting the action to the word. The dress was a tight fit, but not, she thought, actually an uncomfortable one. At any rate, Sarah was obviously pleased, taking a few almost dancing steps across the room, skimpy skirts held out. Kate half expected her to run to the looking glass, but when she led her there, the child showed no interest, merely pulling Kate out of the room and downstairs again. Outside, the sun was now shining brilliantly with all the warm promise of early summer. Kate held back for a moment.

Let

s have
a
picnic, Sarah.

After all, she must be hungry. And then, when a mutinous look and a further tug of the hand suggested that here was a word Sarah did not understand:

We

ll get some cake or something from Mrs. Peters and take it out in the garden. Where

s the kitchen, Sarah?

The child stood
stock still
, puzzled, wary, but luckily at this moment Mrs. Peters appeared from a door halfway down the hall, and Kate explained what she wanted.


A
picnic? I don

t see why not. I forgot to tell you, miss, that Mr. Jonathan left a message. Just to say he was sorry not to see you before he left, but he

d have to be at the mill all day. He mostly lunches there. He looks forward to seeing you at dinner, he says.


And that

s?


Late. Seven o

clock, if you

ll believe it. It

s an idea Mr. Jonathan picked up in foreign parts. Well, I reckon it does fit in well with his business.

It was the grudging approval of an old retainer.


You

ve been with Mr. Jonathan a long time?


Just about forever, I reckon. And his father before him—oh, I

ve seen some times
...


And Job?

She had been wondering where the old colored man had got to this morning.

She snorted.

Oh, he

s just a newcomer. Mr. Jonathan brought him back one year he was at Harvard. He

d been down to Washington with a friend of his for his Christmas vacation. I guess they went down into Virginia to one of those slave auctions they have there, and Mr. Jonathan just couldn

t bear it. I know there was ructions when he got home, on account of all the money he

d spent on Job—and only to free him, of course. Though I reckon Job earns his keep at that. He

s a powerful fine coachman and never had a spill yet. And waits at table when there

s company, and valets Mr. Jonathan
...
We don

t have the kind of household you

ve likely been used to in England, miss.

Here, suddenly, was the heart of the long speech.

Just me and Prue, and Job and the boy, but we

ll do
o
ur best to make you comfortable.


I

m sure you will, Mrs. Peters, and I

ll try to be as little trouble as possible. I

m not a bit used to being waited on. My father and I only had one daily girl toward the end.

She had never thought the day would come when she would speak of her father, and face the old nightmare of his death, and what followed it, so easily. It all seemed at last, mercifully, a long time ago.

The present was Sarah. Here was a challenge, something worth doing. For already she found herself wholeheartedly in agreement with Jonathan Penrose. She could not believe that whatever ailed Sarah was beyond cure. If only she knew more about how it had started. Surely there must be some clue there?

On an impulse, she asked Mrs. Peters about it, as they wrapped up pound cake and cheese and dried fruit for the picnic. Sarah had retreated to the far end of the big kitchen to kneel in a big rocking chair, rocking violently and singing to herself—a tune that Kate recognized, almost with triumph, as
Greensleeves
.


It

s been a year?

Kate was comfortably certain that Sarah was paying no attention.


Since it happened? Just about—and getting worse all the time, poor lamb.


Were you here when it started?


Yes, but
they
weren

t. Mrs. Penrose had taken Sarah to Saratoga Springs with her,

she explained.

When they came back, I noticed at once the child was quiet—it seemed to come on from day to day: awful to watch it was. She was such a lambkin, Mrs. Croston, before and now
...
(she looked over her shoulder and lowered her voice) sometimes it seems as if the devil was in her, and I have to remind myself it

s our Sarey. There

s some in the village, though, won

t come near her. I

ve heard talk, once or twice, that

s frightened me.


And no one knows what started it?


Not rightly. It was that night, of course—the one when she was lost, poor little lamb, and locked up in that awful shed, in the dark. And how she came to stray so far from the hotel is more than I

ll ever understand: she was such a good little thing. Do always try to remember that, when she kicks and screams and bites, and you think you

ll go crazy too. And nothing they can do, the doctors say. It fair breaks yo
u
r heart.


Well, I

m going to try—

she stopped. What was she going to try?


You do that, miss. You never know. She

s certainly taken a rare shine to you, which is more than I

ve seen happen since
...
Mind you, she cares about her father, all right; you can see that plain enough, if you just use your eyes.

She stopped, suddenly aware of the implication with regard to Arabella.

Well, there

s your picnic, and I hope it keeps fine for you.

Though it was still only the end of May, the sun was shining as brilliantly as in full English summer, and Kate found herself envying Sarah her cool muslin dress as they took the path that led to the violet hollow. This, she was sure, was the place for their picnic, since it was clearly a favorite of Sarah

s. The sun was high overhead by the time they got back there, but she did not open their parcel of provisions at once. The kind of scene Sarah had made over breakfast must be bad for her; she would delay their meal until she had hunger on her side. So she began picking bunches of violets, separate ones for each color, and for a while Sarah joined in enthusiastically. But soon she tired of this, and instead of arranging her flowers in bunches began laying them out in long trails across the clearing, a line of white, a line o
f
yellow, a line of blue. Kate, carefully wrapping her own bunches in damp moss, tried to persuade her to do the same, but it was no use, the child merely shrugged in a curiously adult way, and went on with what she was doing.

Kate finished her own bunches, laid them down carefully in the shady spot where she had put their lunch, and looked up at the sky, wishing she had a watch. The sun was well past the meridian now and she, for one, was hungry. Without saying anything to Sarah, she moved about the clearing, picking large leaves and laying them out on a flat gray stone to serve as plates. Sarah laid a line of blue violets so that it passed close by this improvised table. In a moment she was watching as Kate opened Mrs. Peters

neat packets and put a slab of cake, a lump of cheese and a little handful of dried fruit on each

plate.


There,

Kate said at last, arranging a wreath of violets around the little feast.

I

m hungry!

And she sat down by one of the pieces and took a hearty bite of pound cake without apparently taking the slightest notice of Sarah.

For a moment, the child hung back, but she had had nothing to eat all day except a few spoonfuls of bread and milk. Suddenly she was beside Kate, frantically pushing alternate mouthfuls of cheese and cake into her mouth. Kate took no notice, but went on eating her own food with what she recognized as slightly exaggerated neatness. Naturally, Sarah finished first, and Kate was aware of her casting longing glances at her own pile of dried fruit. Without saying anything, she reached into her satchel for another helping. This, too, vanished at such speed that she began to understand the child

s gaunt, large-eyed look. She was close to starvation.

It was a relief when Sarah stopped suddenly, halfway through her third helping. Too much, on top of such a long course of undernourishment,
migh
t well be worse than too little. Sarah was rubbing her eyes with a dirty little hand. She was visibly dropping with sleep. And no wonder. Kate remembered the night

s endless screaming. She took off her shawl, spread it on a patch of last autumn

s dry leaves, arranged the satchel for a pillow, and picked up Sarah bodily to lay her on the improvised bed. For a moment, the child was tense as a wild little animal, then, as Kate laid her down, she went limp, her face turned into the lumpy pillow. Almost instantly, she was asleep.

Kate sat down by the driest bit of rock she could find to watch and think about her. Time passed slowly, restfully. Birds made strange, hoarse noises in the trees. Some insect kept up a perpetual, almost mechanical, whirring, creaking sound. A tiny brillian
tl
y green lizard came out and basked in the sun on a rock on the other side of the clearing, and she thought of snakes and wished she had not. She, too, was tired. Her head drooped back against the rock; the noises merged into a summer lullaby.

She woke with a start, shivering. The clearing was in shadow. She must have slept for a long time. And the child? A pang of pure terror was instantly allayed by the sight of Sarah, curled up in a ball, like a hedgehog, fast asleep. Waking her gently, Kate was filled with bitter anger at herself. What kind of guardian was she to bring this wild little creature out into the woods and then fall asleep and leave her unprotected? But there was no time to waste in self-blame. That could come later. She only hoped they could get home before the alarm was out for them.

But Sarah would not hurry. Refreshed by her sleep, she darted this way and that from the path—after butterflies, wild flowers, anything, nothing
...
Kate longed to pick her up, but remembered how she had resisted this before.
Instead, she-held out her hand:

Have you ever seen soldiers marching, Sarah? Take my hand, and I

ll sing you one of the songs they march to.

And then, as Sarah still hung back, she began to sing:

Other books

The Manager by Caroline Stellings
In Love with a Thug by Reginald L. Hall
Dreamwood by Heather Mackey
Florida Firefight by Randy Wayne White
The Spire by Patterson, Richard North
Their Wicked Ways by Julia Keaton