Read Justice Is a Woman Online
Authors: Yelena Kopylova
“What about?”
“Martin let it slip that he had been to the Christmas concert with David.”
“After all this time?”
“After all this time. And not only that, but that he had been in the Egans’ house more than once. Elaine
went on like someone insane; I’d never heard anything like it. I thought she was in for another spasm of
hysteria. But no, this was a bout of sheer virulent temper. Oh, how she hates David and Hazel. It’s
beyond all reason. If either of them had ever done anything to her you could understand it, but right from
the first time she set eyes on David she’s loathed him.”
Betty shook her head and glanced towards the
fire. Yes, she knew Elaine loathed David; she knew that in many people there was a
natural bias to
colour; but she, too, had never been able to understand Elaine’s antipathy towards the young man, for
no-one could be nicer or more pleasant than David. She looked at Joe again and asked,
“What was the
outcome?”
“Well,” he sighed, “I was supposed to be off tonight to York for a conference, as, of course, I shall do
tomorrow. But at one time, Betty, I really did think it would have to be tomorrow before I could leave
there, because I became so blindly furious with her, I... I don’t know how I prevented myself from telling
her what I’d learned.
But I knew if I had, the session would have gone on all night. “
“Oh my dear.”
“How did the old lady fare at the hospital?” Joe now asked.
She smiled as she replied, “You should ask how the staff will fare,” and at this they both laughed;
then, her face becoming straight, she said, “I feel a little guilty at deceiving her.”
“Don’t. You know, somehow I think she’d understand.”
“Yes, perhaps she would. Being who she is perhaps she would ... I made something to
eat. It just
needs warming up. You must be hungry.”
“I couldn’t eat a bite. Honestly. I’m sorry if you’ve gone to any trouble, but just a cup of coffee.” They
again stared at each other in silence; then, their hands still clasped, they rose and went into the kitchen ..
It was midnight. Joe lay with his head on her breast, his arm about her bare waist. He had never felt so
content in his life before. He loved this woman. He knew, as in the moment when pure
truth is revealed,
that he loved her, and not just because her body had satisfied him as no other had done, but because she
was who she was;
Betty:
a woman he had lived in the same house with for years without once touching her; a
woman whose mind
was broad and whose heart was big and whose compassion was boundless.
He now moved his lips against the firm flesh of her breast, and she made no response in any way. She
had not spoken a word since his first gentle loving, nor through his not so gentle taking, when his mind
became subordinate to his senses, nor since he had lain in the deep valley of contentment against her
warm flesh. He now took his hand from her waist and turned her face towards him and
saw in her eyes
an emotion that was impossible for him to translate into words. Winding his fingers now in her loose hair,
he brought his face slowly down to her and, placing his lips on her mouth, he lay still.
They had sung, “We’ll hang out the washing on the Siegfried Line’, but they hadn’t been able to do it.
When, on 3 September 1939, Chamberlain’s appeasement of fear had failed and England
declared war
on Germany, the sirens went for real for the first time and people scuttled to the air-raid shelters and
waited for the bombs to rain down. But nothing happened that day, nor the next, nor the next, and as
days moved into weeks the whole thing became a bit of an anti-climax. Except for what was happening
in France.
But then there was the Maginot Line, wasn’t there ?
Poland, of course, had got it hot and heavy, but Poland was a long way away. As long as the Germans
didn’t bomb here, that’s all that mattered. Of course, there were irritations, such as blackouts and having
to carry gas masks in those horrible little boxes. And then you weren’t allowed to use the headlights on
your car.
And, of course, there had been the business of evacuating schoolchildren and teachers, together with
mothers with children under five, from what were known as danger areas.
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Re-shuffling the population, in those first months, had been as big a headache as
organising rationing.
And by early 1940 many of the evacuees had returned home. Yet, later in the year, after Dunkirk, when
Hitler’s bombing sent them scattering from the industrial towns, doors that had been shut were now
opened to them. There was a broadening of understanding of how the other half lived, at least among
certain sections of society, for there were still those who strenuously refused to give shelter to evacuees;
and Elaine was one of them.
“Where,” she asked Betty, and not for the first time, ‘would we put them? “
“We still have one spare room, and the morning—room could be turned into a bedroom.”
“Why not suggest taking over my sitting-room?”
“Well, it didn’t happen, anyway, and it certainly won’t now.”
“Look!” Elaine peered through narrowed eyelids at Betty before she went on slowly,
‘what’s come
over you recently? You’re different:
you’ve turned into a different being during this last year; you have no concern for me now at all. “
“Perhaps you’re right.” Betty nodded slowly now.
“Looking back, I’d say I’ve wasted years of concern on you.”
“Well!” Elaine took a step back and she narrowed her eyes as she said, “Now we’re
coming into the
open, aren’t we? Now we know where we stand. Are you looking for an excuse to leave?
Because if
you are, it’s a dirty way to go about it. And it would be just like you to walk out and go to that old horror when you’re most needed here. “
“And what am I needed for? Tell me what I am needed for. Not to see to Mike, because
you don’t
give a damn what happens to Mike. What you need me for, Elaine, is to enable you to
continue your
jaunts to London; you couldn’t go off so frequently and leave Martin to his own devices if I weren’t here,
because Martin might take to visiting The Cottage, or some other infectious place. And don’t tell me that
it is concern for Uncle that takes you up there, because I’d laugh in your face. You
haven’t fooled
anyone ... anyone. You understand?”
Her mouth agape, Elaine was now standing with her back to the couch.
Her face was red with temper and she stammered as she said, “I ... I wou .. would never have believed
it ... And what do you mean, I haven’t fooled anyone? What do you mean?”
“I’ll leave you to work that out, Elaine. And also, I think you’d better spend the afternoon writing a long
letter to Lionel and explaining how it will be impossible for you to come up this week-end, as Betty has
walked out.”
Elaine slowly eased herself to the front of the couch and, gripping the edge of it, she said,
“You’re not!
You wouldn’t.”
“I am, and I will. In any case I’d have to leave shortly. You’ve just said you’ve noticed a difference in
me during the last year. Well, I’ve been wondering that you didn’t also notice a greater difference
recently, for I am now four and a half months
pregnant and my baby will be born in October. “
Elaine fell back against the couch and, bringing her hands up, she placed them one after the other across
the lower part of her face; and then, her hands leaving her face, she flapped them as if throwing off
something unclean as slowly, her lips spreading away from her teeth, she hissed, “You!
and that dirty old
man up there? You’re disgusting, filthy.”
“Shut up!”
“I won’t shut up. I could go up there and spit on him, and you too.”
Then she shrank back as Betty took two quick steps forward and, bending towards her,
said with deep
bitterness, “How often I’ve wanted to take my hand and slap you across the face, and
never more than
at this moment. You dare to call anyone filthy or dirty when you’ve been carrying on
with a married man
for years under Joe’s nose, while depriving him of his rights under the pretext of nerves.
Your first
breakdown might have had some reality about it, but you’ve used it since to have your way and deprive
him of his rights as a husband. And now you dare turn your lip up at me. Well, for your information I’ll
tell you that the father of my child doesn’t happen to be Mike. If I’d known years ago what I know now
he would have been, and I would have had a family running around me in this house.
And I would have
been its mistress; I wouldn’t have had to say thank you to you for the pittance you gave me;
that is, until Joe found you out. “
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The colour drained from Elaine’s face now, the skin looking as taut as a piece of
alabaster. Her eyes
were wide and almost spitting fire as she cried, “You wouldn’t have been here at all if it hadn’t been for
me. You would have been pushed from dog to devil, going the rounds as an unpaid
companion. You’ve
had the run of the house, you’ve done what you liked, and I still say it’s dirty and
indecent that you, at
your age, should go with a man. I suppose the old witch arranged it. Was it her
chauffeur?”
Betty’s hand came out and up, but just as Joe’s had done years previously it halted in mid-air. She
closed her eyes and as her hand dropped to her side so did her head bow on to her chest, and she
turned slowly about and went from the room. But before she closed the door Elaine’s
voice hit her, as
she shouted, “You’re pathetic! That’s what you are, pathetic!”
Blindly now, Betty made her way across the landing but, hearing Martin’s voice in the hall below and
knowing he would come to her room, she began to mount the stairs to Mike’s quarters.
But half-way up
she stood and leant her head against the wall and repeated to herself, “Pathetic. Pathetic.”
Was that
how she would appear to others, pathetic? She hadn’t felt pathetic, at least not until now.
For weeks she had felt wonderful, warm, alive, and everyone had said how well she
looked. She hadn’t
meant it to end like this. They’d had it all planned:
she was going to make the excuse that she must go and look after Lady Mary, who was
ill. She had
thought to be away by next week. The hardest
part, she had considered, would be telling Mike;
and now that hard part lay immediately before her and she didn’t know how she would
begin the telling
of it.
As if the child was already bearing her down, she walked heavily up the rest of the stairs and into Mike’s
sitting-room.
He greeted her straightaway. Shambling from the workshop, he said, “That was you and
her at it,
wasn’t it? I thought the bloody Germans had arrived without knocking. What’s the
matter, lass?” He
came slowly towards her, and for answer she said immediately and simply, “I’m leaving, Mike.”
He stared at her but didn’t answer, then moved towards his chair near the window; and he looked out
and up into the bright blue sky before he said, “I’ve never heard you say it like that afore.
You mean it
this time. For good, is it?”
“Yes, Mike.”
He was looking at her again.
“What brought it about?”
She went slowly towards him and took the seat facing him, the seat she had sat in for years whenever he
had wanted a bit of a crack, as he called it. Then, her head bowed slightly but her eyes still looking into
his, she said quietly, “I’m going to have a baby, Mike. I’m pregnant.”
It was a good thirty seconds before he made any response whatever; and then he hitched himself in the
leather chair and took in a deep breath and emitted one word: “Aye.”
She nodded slowly.
“Huh! Huh!” It was a derogatory sound. Then, looking at her from under his eyebrows,
he said,
“You’ve nearly left it too late. I could have put you in the family way years ago if that’s all you wanted. I
told you at the time.”
“I know you did, Mike, and ... and I wish now I’d taken you at your word. At least, no, that isn’t true;
what I mean to say is, I should have taken your offer at the time, then there would have been no need for
this to happen as it has. But now that it has, I’m glad. I’m more than glad. I’m
overwhelmed with the
happiness of it.”
“May I ask who it is?”
Her head was well down now. That was one thing she wouldn’t and couldn’t tell him:
after refusing him,
to have taken his son would be too great a blow to his ego; crippled as he was, Mike was still very much
a man inside.
The next moment she almost fell off the chair, so quickly did her head jerk up as he asked quietly,
“Would our Joe have anything to do with it?”
She stared at him silently, her body still now, except for her lips, which were trembling.
She watched
him pull himself to his feet and stand by the broad window-sill, and, leaning on it for support, he looked
down into the garden as he said, “It doesn’t surprise me, but. but it’s bloody hurtful, nevertheless. Still,
like father like son, I suppose ... What’s that? Who’s she at now?”
As he turned from the window Betty rose sharply to her feet and they both looked down towards the