Authors: Yelena Kopylova
Especially did she recognize those in her
husband. But going on the premise that no one was
perfect, she had for years condoned all his little sharp practices, and the last thing she would have ever thought of doing was to point out his faults to him. But not so
Nellie. Nellie was sackcloth on the skin of
both her father and her sister, although strangely that wasn't her intention,
Nellie's intention, she knew, was just to present
her idea of things and people as they
appeared to her. Ever since she had passed the lisping
stage she had gone to great pains to express herself
fully on all manner of subjects. Having been
placed in the most embarrassing situations by their
daughter's frankness when in company she and her
husband had learned it was wiser to keep their opinions of their neighbours to themselves, at least until they were in the privacy of their bedroom.
That her daughter had of late learned a
little discretion, at least with regard to outsiders, was very small comfort, for hardly a day went past but she
irritated her father or infuriated her sister, while
at the same time, Florence had to admit
guiltily, affording herself not a little amusement. And the funny thing about it all was that Nellie's verbal
attacks always held more than a smattering of truth,
as in her latest statement that her husband and daughter took after the bull, for, as in her father, so there was raging in Victoria deep physical passion, which
could only be really assuaged by marriage. ... At
least she kept hoping so.
She was in a way worried about Victoria. She
wished this business between young Charlie MacFell and
her could be settled.
Her father was bent on it,, had been for years, and
Victoria herself didn't seem all that averse.
But what about Charlie?
He was an odd fellow was Charlie, not like a
farmer at all; took after his mother really. . . .
Yet no; that woman was a silly bitch if ever there
was one, stacking the house with her fancy furniture
and dressing like a girl half her age. That place
would soon go to rack and ruin if it wasn't for young
Betty, She should have been the man, should
Betty. Yes, she should have been the man; there was
too much of the woman in Charlie. Not that he wasn't
manly. In his own fleshless longboned way he was
an attractive young fellow. But gutless. Aye,
that was the word, gutless.
Charlie needed someone strong, someone to guide him;
and Victoria would be the right one in the right place
there. It was a pity he was two years younger than her, it made things a little more difficult. But it was a
difficulty that must be overcome if she wanted
life with Hal to be bearable.
Her husband had a bee in his bonnet about merging
the lands. If the positions of the farm had been altered and most of their land had been freehold, like Moor
Burn was, then Hal might have taken a different
view of the
marriage. Oh yes, he undoubtedly would have.
It was funny how land got hold of men. Her
husband, almost twenty years her senior, was turned
sixty. In the order of things he hadn't all that time
to enjoy the acquisition of more land, yet she knew it
wasn't only of himself he was thinking but of his grandchildren.
He wanted grandchildren, male grandchildren, in whom he could live on, walk in their steps as it were over the land,
following the seasons from spring dawns to the
mist-shrouded setting suns of winter. Men like her
husband wanted to perpetuate themselves for ever. It was when they saw no prospect of this happening they would
tend to make life pretty uncomfortable, to say the
least, for those around them.
For herself, she didn't like to live uncomfortably:
she enjoyed good food, good wine, she liked a soft
bed and a warm house; she liked to dress well, according to her station, and have enough spare cash over from the housekeeping and dairy not to have to beg for coppers.
She had a good life, an enjoyable life, and she
wanted this to go on, so she turned to her daughter now and, her voice low and harsh, she said, "That was a nasty crude thing to say; but we'll forget about it and we'll talk of tomorrow and your party. Now you want your party to go off well, don't you, Nellie?"
Nellie stared back at her mother but made no
reply, and Florence, straightening her broad
shoulders, drew in a deep breath and went on,
"Well, it's going to be up to you, because if you get your father's back up-and Victoria's-this will be your
final birthday party. Now I mean that, Nellie.
There'll be a lot of people here tomorrow, not only your friends but your father's and mine . , . and Victoria's, and
I want us all to enjoy ourselves."
"As it's my party why can't I have just my friends?"
"Well, one reason that should be evident to you is that your friends have all got to be driven here, and you can't leave their parents or their brothers standing on the
doorstep . , . now can you?"
They looked at each other for a moment before
Nellie said, "I suppose Betty won't be
able to ride over by herself, Charlie will have to bring her?"
"Yes, Nellie." Florence's words' were
weighty now. "Charlie will be bringing Betty . . .
and her mother."
"Oh, that'll be nice, if not for Charlie, for
Dad I mean."
"Nellie!" Florence now ground her teeth.
"There are times when I could skelp you hard."
"For speaking the truth, Mother? It's under
everybody's nose."
Nellie now rose sharply from the windowseat and,
making for the door, she said, "Poor Charlie;
she'll eat him alive. He won't know which horse
has kicked him by the time she's finished with him. It's like throwing a Christian to the lions."
Before she had time to turn the knob of the door her
mother had her by the shoulders again and, swinging her about, she hissed at her, "Nellie Chapman! now
I'm warning you, you say one word to spoil things for
Victoria tomorrow and I'll never forgive you."
Nellie gazed back at her mother, sighed a
deep sigh and said, "All right. All right, keep
your hair on. But you can't stop me feeling sorry
for Charlie."
On the landing Nellie paused a moment and looked
towards Polly Benton who was on
her knees sweeping up the powder from the carpet and there passed between them an exchange of glances expressing
mutual understanding.
TCP 5
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birthday party was going with a swng, it had been going with a swing for the past three hours. The guests had sat down at five o'clock to a high tea and it was well
past six before they rose from the table. In the
sitting-room they chatted and talked for a time and teased Nellie the while she, as usual, gave back more
than she received. Then Florence was persuaded to sit
at the piano, and from then the party got under way. They danced the polka; they waltzed; they jigged; there were enough couples to form three sets of lancers, and sufficient
of the old ones present to clap and applaud
from their seats which had been pushed against the wall in order to clear the floor.
By ten o'clock a deal of wine and spirits had been
imbibed and the quantity was beginning to tell on some of the guests, as was evident when the sound of their hoots and laughter reached the kitchen.
Lindy Morton, piling the plates of sandwiches
and mince pies on to the tray that
Polly was holding, giggled as she said, ""It's like New Year's Eve afore its time in there, isn't
it? By! they're goin" at it an' by the look of
him the master's nearly blotto, an' the missis
isn't far off either. An' your Charlie's knockin'
it back an' all."
"Don't call him my Charlie, Lindy;
I've told you that afore."
"Well, you're always talkin' about Mm."
"Not in that way. And if the missis heard you,
what do you think she'd say?"
"Aw, she'd just laugh, Well, she would about
somebody in your position havin' a shine on someone like Mister Charlie. All right! All right! Look,
you'll upset the tray . . . I'm sorry; I was
only havin' you on."
"Well, don't have me on about that."
Polly bounced her head at her work-mate; then
swinging abruptly about she went up the kitchen and,
turning her back to the door, thrust at it with her
buttocks, then edged herself around it and into the broad passage. Using the same procedure with the door at
the far end of the passage, she emerged into the hall and although, while crossing it, she kept her eyes
averted from where Miss Betty was sitting on the
bottom stair by the side of Robin Wetherby, she
did note that they
both had their heads down and that their shoulders were shaking with laughter, and she remarked to herself that Miss
Betty must have had a drop an' all if she was
letting herself go on a laugh.
She ignored a second couple standing against the
wall in the passage bordering the side of the
staircase. They weren't so close together but their
shoulders were resting against the panelling as they gazed at each other and this conveyed to her a sense of intimacy, as close as if they had been in each other's arms.
At first she couldn't make her way into the
sitting-room because there was a jig in process.
Miss Victoria was doing a kind of highland fling
opposite Mr Whitaker. They were twirling and
hooting to the beat of the clapping, which was almost
drowning the music of the piano.
Her arms were breaking with the weight of the tray, but she moved her head back and forward between the shoulders in front of her to get a better view, and as she stared
wideeyed at the two dancing figures, her thoughts
ran along the same lines as Nellie's had done
yesterday: She's like a wild horse, she'll
trample him to death.
Her eyes left the dancers now and searched the room,
as much as she could see of it; and then she saw him in the corner of her vision. She could see only his head and
his hands; he was laughing and was clapping as loudly as the rest.
There was a final great whoop of sound; the dancing
stopped and the clapping faded away; but she had
to repeat a number of times, "Excuse me.
Excuse me, please," before those in the doorway
parted to allow her through to the table that had been cleared at the end of the room.
As she put the full plates on the table and
picked up the empty ones, the laughter and voices
beat down on her and she said to herself, "It isn't fair; it's Miss Nellie's birthday party but
they're making it more like a rowdy New Year's do."
This was the third Christmas she had been
here, having taken up the post almost immediately after her father had died, but in all the parties they had had she had never seen so much drink flowing as there was tonight; nor so much-she hesitated on the word-jollification. And
anyway, it wasn't like a jollification; well, not
a jollification People of the Chapmans' standard were
known to indulge in, it was more approaching something she imagined one would see in the Wayfarers' Inn on the
high road, where the drovers got together after a big
market and things went on, so she had heard, that would sizzle your eyebrows.
As she stretched over to retrieve an empty
plate, she glanced to where Mrs MacFell was
sitting, and she gave a small shake of her head.
She got worse as she got older. Dressed
to kill. Her frock would have suited someone half her
age. They said she was on the lookout for a man.
Well, if nothing else, her getup would make her
fall between two stools, for to a young man she would
look like mutton dressed up as lamb, while to a
farmer who wanted a working wife she'd look like a
giddy-headed goat. Mr Chapman said that she had
gone back twenty years to when she first came to the
farm as a young scatterbrained lass, and that was what
she was acting like now. Her head was back,
her mouth was wide open and her hands were flapping at
Farmer Kelly.
As she wended her way out of the room, Polly's
eyes again searched for Charlie. She must have a word with him, she must; but the only hope she'd have of
waylaying him would
be when he went to the men's closet outside. And so
from now on she'd keep on the watch because surely
they'd want nothing more to eat, not for a while anyway; she'd carried four tray-loads of food in there in
the past half hour.
She had heard the boss say that you could drink your
fill to over-flowing as long as you ate with it, and he was certainly seeing that everybody did that the night. The stuff he had hauled up from the cellar was nobody's
business; he had even brought up bottles that were
twenty years old, the ones he usually bragged about.
She paused for a moment between the doors. It
wasn't like a birthday party at all, it was as if
he was celebrating something . . . aye, or hoping
to celebrate something. She turned about on a gasp
as a hand caught her arm.
"Hello there, Polly."
"Oh!" She now took in a short, sharp breath,
smiled, then said again, "Oh! , . .
hello, Charlie."