The Linnet Bird: A Novel (43 page)

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Authors: Linda Holeman

BOOK: The Linnet Bird: A Novel
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I stood beside my piled luggage, my ticket in my hand. From nowhere a near-naked sadhu, a holy man, twirled and shouted his way through a crowd of uninterested women in fuchsia, turquoise, and orange saris. The sadhu’s body gleamed blue-black under its covering of smeared wood ash, and his dense, wiry hair hung like twisted ropes, the parting on his scalp vermilion dusted. I recognized the three horizontal lines painted with a thick white substance on his forehead, indicating that he was a follower of Shiva, the god of death. As he leaped about, closer and closer, the layers of beads on his chest danced and clattered. He came straight at me, as if he had been searching for me, and I stared into his bloodshot eyes. He shouted something into my face, spraying me with saliva, and his breath was rank with the smell of betel and stomach rot. I didn’t understand the words, but I knew the meaning. It was a warning, a premonition. A man in an army uniform and solar topee pushed him rudely away from me, asking if I was all right. I nodded, but couldn’t speak.

I understood the portent of the sadhu.

 

 

I
RETURNED IN A PALANQUIN.
When the door was opened by the
chuprassi,
he stared at me, then behind me, with a look of modified horror at my lack of decorum at calling at a gentleman’s house, unchaperoned.

“I wish to speak to Mr. Ingram,” I said. “Is he still at home?”

He nodded, but stood, immobile, blocking the door.

“Come now,” I said, pushing past him and into the entrance hall. “I must see him. Please summon him for me.” When the man still didn’t move, I started through the house, to the room where Mr. Ingram and I had last spoken. By the time I reached the hallway a small herd of servants trailed, obviously distressed with my boldness.

I stopped in front of the shuttered door, my hand raised to knock. But a breeze rattled the shutter before I had the chance, and there was movement inside; perhaps my shadow had been cast into the room, my presence announced.

“Hazi? Is that you? Have you got my clean collar?”

I pulled open the shuttered door. “No. It’s me, Mr. Ingram,” I said, and stepped inside the room with the moreen canopy, firmly shutting the door on the concerned servants.

Somers Ingram stood behind his desk. He wore only his trousers and an unbuttoned collarless shirt, the cuffs undone. His hair, lacking its usual pomade, curled about his ears and neck. In spite of what had passed between us, I was still struck by his appearance.

I felt the closed door at my back.

Mr. Ingram came toward me, his face unreadable. “To what do I owe this early morning visit?” he asked.

“I’ve made my decision.”

He came closer. I smelled soap, the starch of his shirt. “And?” I could see now that although he was trying to hide it, there was a shallowness in the rise and fall of his bare chest that belied his attempted nonchalance.

“I agree to your terms.”

“To be my wife,” he confirmed, and his voice came out with less than his usual surety. When I nodded, he raised the knuckle of his index finger to his mustache in that tiny, quick way I had come to watch for. And in seeing his body’s involuntary reaction—his breathing, his voice, the touch of his mustache—I felt a small sense of pride, of accomplishment, for I knew then that no matter how he tried to act as if my decision meant little to him one way or another, that my final answer had been the one he’d actually hoped for.

“You’ve made the right decision, Linny. For don’t you see? We are the same. We both hide something, and we both must stay at the level of acceptance we have attained here. It will go much easier on both of us this way. There need be no sham between us; we understand each other. Do you not see it this way?” he repeated.

I didn’t answer, turning my face from his. While it might be true that he found a part of me loathsome, as I did him, there could be no denying that for all his bluster, I saw that I did hold some power over him.

 

 

Chapter Twenty-Two

 

 

February 15, 1831

My dearest Shaker,
     It is difficult to compose this letter, only because it is one I never expected to write to you. I know that by the time you read this you will have only just received my initial packet of letters, telling you about my new life here. I wrote those letters with a heart full of joy, with the lightness of shaking off an old life and beginning one anew. And now this brief page is written in a different vein, with a heavy heart. There is no other way to say it but this: I am to be married within a fortnight. Of course, by the time you read this I expect I shall have been married for months.
     It was a completely unexpected and, as you must know, unforeseeable, event. The words I spoke to you last summer, before I left Liverpool, were true. So please dismiss from your imagination romantic trysts, passion, or even the hint of friendship. This is not a marriage that involves any emotion for either the gentleman or myself. It is a marriage of convenience. I can say no more, although I know you are now thinking—a marriage of convenience? Did I not speak this phrase to her myself, suggesting that this could have worked for us? But Shaker, there is more to this, so much more. There are things I can never explain, a hard, linked chain of events from my past that precipitated this union, each link rusted, forever fixed. And it is due to that dark time that I must become Mrs. Somers Ingram. He is a gentleman from London, in the employ of the East India Company.
     I can write no more at this time. As is apparent from the appearance of this letter, my hand is far from steady. Please forgive me, and please, please dictate a letter in reply. I await each posting from England with great eagerness. Although you may not have forgiven me enough to wish to correspond, at least my letters have not been returned, and I take this as an agreement to this one-sided correspondence. Should you feel that contacting me is impossible, I will understand. But again I beg you, please, Shaker, do not cast me from your life, for in many ways, I feel that I need you even more now.

With deepest affection,
Linny

 

Writing to Shaker was the most difficult aspect of marrying Somers, even more difficult that trying to explain my decision to Faith. After I had given Somers my consent and we’d discussed when the event would take place—of course, as soon as possible, as Somers wanted no dillydallying or false courtship rituals—I returned to the Watertons’. I found Faith, pale and listless, on the verandah. A servant stood behind her, fanning her with a peacock fan. She sat up straight, her mouth falling open, as I stepped through the doors.

“You didn’t go, then? You’ve changed your mind?” she asked, jumping to her feet.

I nodded.

“I knew you couldn’t abandon me, Linny. I just knew it.” She gave me a quick hug.

“I must tell you of my plans, Faith,” I said. “Sit down. Please.”

She lowered herself to the rattan settee. The boy immediately resumed his fanning. “Plans?”

Taking a deep breath, I sat beside her and took her hands in mine. “I’m to be married, Faith.”

Her fingers contracted, and I felt the bite of her nails against the backs of my hands. “Married? But . . . but to whom? There’s been nobody—”

“I know. It’s come about quite suddenly. It’s Somers Ingram.”

Faith frowned, then shook her head. “Somers Ingram? Mr.
Ingram
?”

“Yes.”

“He’s never even come to call. I’ve hardly noticed you speaking to him or dancing with him more than a few times. I . . . I don’t know what to think, Linny. What to say.”

There was silence, except for the soft swoosh of the beautiful fan.

“The wedding will be in two weeks. February twenty-eighth. Somers—Mr. Ingram—says it must be before the approach of the hot season.”

At that Faith wrenched her hands from mine and stood, an odd expression on her face. “Well. You are a sly boots. I see you’re capable of doing quite well for yourself, after all. And here I was, pitying you.” She was bristling with anger now. “It appears you’ve been working some black Hindu magic behind my back—behind all our backs. It’s well known that Mr. Ingram has been quite unattainable—and he is certainly a handsome and charming catch, as you obviously know. And with his senior position in the service—well, Linny, you will find yourself quite a senior lady, won’t you? You will even be above Mrs. Waterton in rank.”

I swallowed. I had not for one second thought of my own position as Somer’s wife within Calcutta society.

“Apparently a number of girls have tried for a match with him, but he wasn’t interested,” Faith went on. “There is the usual rumor of course—that he has a black mistress—and then . . . the other rumor.”

“Which is?” Was the secret Somers Ingram thought he kept so well hidden common knowledge after all? But Faith’s next sentence assured me this wasn’t so.

“That he might like a woman with a naughty edge; that he’s looking for more. And perhaps there
is
more to you than meets the eye, Linny. What is it, exactly, that has so attracted Mr. Ingram to you where the rest of us have failed? And why is it that you felt you had to hide everything from me? Why have you been so selfish?”

“It isn’t like that at all, Faith.”

“It isn’t? You didn’t bother to confide in me for one moment, to tell me you were even interested in Mr. Ingram. And there I was, making a fool of myself with him only a few weeks ago, thinking that if Mr. Snow was too shy to come forward, Mr. Ingram certainly seemed attracted. You must have been laughing at me the whole time.” She bunched her skirt around her and swept past me, stopping at the verandah doors. “Well, don’t expect me to attend your wedding, Linny Smallpiece, for I no longer consider you a friend. I should have listened to my instincts, and to everyone in Liverpool who advised me that you might not be a suitable companion. Did you know that, Linny? That I was cautioned against becoming too close to you by more than one? And I thought they proved right only hours earlier today, when you told me you were leaving India, and me. But now this?
This?
Showing me up, marrying before I’ve had a proposal? You, whom I rescued from that dreary library and even more dreary existence in that awful, provincial Everton, bringing you here out of the goodness of my heart and with the purse of my father. You made it perfectly clear that you had little interest in marriage, for some completely unknown and ridiculous reason. And now you dare to be the first of our entire fleet to become engaged—and with a wedding date set in such a hurried, preposterous manner? It’s as if everything you’ve said is a lie. And it’s too much for me, Linny. Just too much.”

And she swept from the verandah, leaving me with the boy and his peacock fan, the languid rhythm never missing a beat.

 

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