Patience & Sarah (Little Sister's Classics) (17 page)

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Authors: Isabel Miller

Tags: #Homosexuality, #19th Century, #United States

BOOK: Patience & Sarah (Little Sister's Classics)
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“If we don’t go, then he’ll do something else. Like keep me away. Should I come tomorrow?”

 

Martha and I meet in the barn. It is early morning. She sits at her cow and I at mine. The milk hisses into our pails. She wants to remark but can’t decide how to begin. I won’t help her.

“I always knew there was something wrong with you,” she says. That needn’t have taken so much thought. She could have blurted that out first thing. “Many times I’ve tried to make Edward see it, but no.”

“He wouldn’t see?” I ask, pleased.

“Oh, no! Not
his
sister! Nothing could be wrong with
his
sister! How many times I said it, ‘Edward, she means to make you keep her all her life. She means not to marry and do her part,’ and he’d just say, ‘Oh, she’s young yet.’ Young!”

“Good Edward,” I say.

“Well, now he’s got to see. Spoiled and indulged like a princess! And see what comes of it. If I had my way you’d soon be glad to marry like any other woman, and not too fussy who, and do your part. Nothing but spoiled. What made you think you needn’t marry except pure spoiled? And think you could do things man and wife don’t do?”

“Kiss? Don’t you kiss?” I am very curious. I have had no such confidences before. To skirt so close to someone else’s secret life! Yes. I am curious.

“I won’t say,” she says. With stool and pail she flounces to her next cow. “Not like that we don’t. I wouldn’t care to. Not like that.”

I say, “Well, of course, if you wouldn’t care to – ”

“I wasn’t brought up that way.”

(But I wasn’t either.)

She says, “Wait till I tell Edward how you’ve been this morning. Cool as a pirate, not an ounce of decent shame in you. It’s a
sin
, you know. I don’t expect Edward remembered to mention that to you. Saint Paul forbids it.”

“He does?”

“With all your Bible reading and Bible pictures, you don’t know that? And your fronts all open like no-good Jezebels, and not caring who might walk in and find you, and
her not even in the family
!”

I am astonished. “Martha – Sister – ” I begin, but I am too astonished to go on. And perhaps she doesn’t realize what she has said.

 

It is afternoon. I am at my table, painting Saul on the road to Damascus. There’s a tap at my door and then I hear it open. That will be Martha with her Bible.

She sits down half around the table from me. “I had some trouble finding the passage,” she says. “It’s not one I expected to have a need for.”

I say, “You see, you put my mind on Paul. Here comes Saul, the raging wolf with all his attendants, who will all be wolfish too – perhaps you can’t tell at this stage. But, see, the road bends, and we can see, although Saul can’t, that in just about one minute he will be knocked flat by love and rise up Saint Paul.”

“I expect you want to claim that’s what happened to you.”

“No.”

“Well, don’t, because here’s what he says,” and Martha reads in her false flat reading voice: “‘Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonor their own bodies between themselves: who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed forever. Amen. For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections: for even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature: And likewise also the men, leaving the natural use of the women, burned in their lust toward one another; men with men working that which is unseemly, and receiving in themselves that recompence of their error which was meet. And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not convenient; being filled with all unrighteousness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, debate, deceit, malignity; whisperers, backbiters, haters of God, despiteful, proud, boasters, inventors of evil things, disobedient to parents, without understanding, covenantbreakers, without natural affection, implacable, unmerciful: who knowing the judgment of God, that they which commit such things are worthy of death, not only do the same, but have pleasure in them that do them. Therefore thou art inexcusable, O man, whosever thou art that judgest; for wherein thou judgest another, thou condemnest thyself; for thou that judgest doest the same things.’”

Martha doesn’t like the drift of the last part, so she stops there.

The condemnation is powerful indeed. I cannot answer it. I must bear it. May God save my heart for love, despite Saint Paul.

“I see you thought you could argue it away, but you can’t,” Martha says.

“No. He says it. He says I am worthy of death. So be it.”

I continue to paint. She watches against her will. Everybody likes to see a painter at work. She needn’t be ashamed.

Since I cannot dispute Saint Paul, we sit in silence. My house smells good, from a cake I am baking for you. It is snug here and pretty and quiet and fragrant. Martha is bothered by the seductions of my house. She starts to go, but doesn’t. Close by my side, alarmingly close, she lingers and says, “It could’ve been so sweet, working and helping each other here. It was what I thought about. It was what I thought would be. Edward and you and me together. And then you didn’t like me anymore, and I forgot I liked you, and I just lately remembered. Do you remember we used to like each other?”

Keeping such distance as I can, I say, “Yes.”

“I get so lonesome with just Edward. We don’t kiss. There’s something he does to me, but we don’t kiss. We’re not sweet together. And the children. And the girl. She’s no better than you were, Patience. She’s sullen too. So many times I wish I could sit by you of an evening, but I expect you wouldn’t want that.”

How cruel and cold to leave her there, unhugged, unreceived. But she’s too late. I am yours now, and my hugs are only yours.

She says, “No, you wouldn’t.” (Her voice hard again.) “You’ve got those Dowlings trooping in here every night, and them not even in the family.”

She and her Bible go. I am uneasy. What would Saul have done if love had flung him down and then decided not to keep him after all?

 

Edward has finished two days of meditation and prayer. He is here to tell me my fate. I sit with my hands folded, meekly ready to accept it, in case it is a fate I am willing to accept.

“You have made a great mistake,” he begins. “These are the passions marriage is meant to discourage and then extinguish. At first we imagine and hope, but in marriage we learn we are not wanted. But we find solace in work and in making the world go. I speak of men. I have no idea what women feel or want. Have you?”

“No. Not in general.”

“Most people manage well enough with marriage and work, but what’s to become of you? You have wakened feelings marriage can’t help you with. You let them wake, and you let them grow, and you took pleasure in thinking of them, and here we are. As to work, I honestly don’t see how a woman’s work uses her mind enough to help her this way. She can’t fight these feelings by work. The only hope is not to let them wake.”

“But here we are,” I say, quite timidly. I do, in fact, feel timid. I have taken a terrible risk. His power is very real. I am grateful to Martha for telling me that he cares more for me than he ever seemed to. Except for knowing this, I might not be able to bear the frights of this confrontation.

“Yes, here we are. You’ve made us all a problem. And I have had to think what it is my duty to do about it.”

“Have you decided?”

“I considered all the things I might do,” he says. “First was the possibility of turning my back on it all and letting it go on. But Martha found you, and someday the children could, or a neighbor, and then the family is disgraced and the children unmarriageable. I confess I couldn’t be quite blind. I turned my back all this while, I confess, and here we are.”

“Yes.”

“Next was asking the girl’s father to keep her away, as he did before. It would mean brute force, considering the feelings you’ve encouraged in each other. It would be difficult, but duty often is. It’s what Martha wants.”

Oh praise God for Martha! Except that she wants this, it is what he would do.

He says, “I think the end of such a course would be that I had to declare you mad and build you a cage in the loft.”

I am shocked. I haven’t thought of this at all.

“But I’m not mad,” I say.

“No. But you soon would be.”

“Yes.”

“And there’s grounds to question that it would be best to drive you mad. It’s a blot on a family, madness. I think it’s not my duty to bring it on.”

“I hope not,” I choke.

“You spoke last year of wanting to go to Genesee.”

To hide my relief and pleasure – because I don’t want him to think that he is shirking the duty of punishing me – I say, “That has come to seem unreasonable.”

“I thought so at the time.”

“Yes, I know you did.”

“It’s the only solution I see now. It needn’t be to Genesee, of course. But I can’t let you stay here.”

“Our father’s will – ” I say, knowing Edward must have thought of it. I don’t want to think of an objection he hasn’t anticipated and dismissed.

“I am prepared to make a money settlement for your property here.”

“But then my subsistence. Who can say how much it might be worth over the years?”

“Woman! Are you trying to drive a hard bargain? You are in no position to.” He frowns magnificently. We are a handsome family. I hope that God will someday give Edward, too, the great task he longs for. “You can trust me to be fair.”

“I know I can, Edward. When must I go?”

“You are not helpless. You are in good health, and you know how to do all the female things, and how to keep school.”

“Yes. When must I go?”

“And she’ll be with you, I assume. At least there can be no children. The two of you alone can manage, if you’ll go where land is cheap and the arts you know are wanted.”

“How soon?” I say.

“The sin is for your own soul to bear. I’ve done what I can if I protect my family.”

What can I say to reassure him that he is being harsh enough?

I try. “To leave the home my father built me! The protection of my brother! His children! My friends!” To say it is to see some truth in it. My tears are quite unexpected and unforced, almost guileless.

“You might have thought of that before,” he says, feeling better.

“Couldn’t Sarah just live here with me?” He can tell Martha that I begged for that, but that he was strong and cruel.

“I’m not obliged to keep her in food and shoes, to let her be an example to my daughters.”

I submit and say no more, but think sad true thoughts to bring the tears along.

He says, “There’s a parcel of land I can turn into money. I’ll have it soon.”

“It’s winter!” I say.

“If you want to make a crop this year, you should be starting. It won’t be long. Can you behave yourself, knowing it won’t be long? There can be no more in this house.”

I nod.

“Tell me there will be no more in this house. I know your nods.”

“There will be no more in this house.” I’m afraid it will be easy to keep this promise. I pray that my feeling can flow again when we have built our private place.

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