I
The small locomotive engine, Number 4, came clanking, stumbling
down from Selston with seven full waggons. It appeared round
the corner with loud threats of speed, but the colt that it
startled from among the gorse, which still flickered indistinctly
in the raw afternoon, outdistanced it at a canter. A woman, walking
up the railway line to Underwood, drew back into the hedge, held
her basket aside, and watched the footplate of the engine
advancing. The trucks thumped heavily past, one by one, with slow
inevitable movement, as she stood insignificantly trapped between
the jolting black waggons and the hedge; then they curved away
towards the coppice where the withered oak leaves dropped
noiselessly, while the birds, pulling at the scarlet hips beside
the track, made off into the dusk that had already crept into the
spinney. In the open, the smoke from the engine sank and cleaved to
the rough grass. The fields were dreary and forsaken, and in the
marshy strip that led to the whimsey, a reedy pit-pond, the fowls
had already abandoned their run among the alders, to roost in the
tarred fowl-house. The pit-bank loomed up beyond the pond, flames
like red sores licking its ashy sides, in the afternoon’s
stagnant light. Just beyond rose the tapering chimneys and the
clumsy black head-stocks of Brinsley Colliery. The two wheels were
spinning fast up against the sky, and the winding-engine rapped out
its little spasms. The miners were being turned up.
The engine whistled as it came into the wide bay of railway
lines beside the colliery, where rows of trucks stood in
harbour.
Miners, single, trailing and in groups, passed like shadows
diverging home. At the edge of the ribbed level of sidings squat a
low cottage, three steps down from the cinder track. A large bony
vine clutched at the house, as if to claw down the tiled roof.
Round the bricked yard grew a few wintry primroses. Beyond, the
long garden sloped down to a bush-covered brook course. There were
some twiggy apple trees, winter-crack trees, and ragged cabbages.
Beside the path hung dishevelled pink chrysanthemums, like pink
cloths hung on bushes. A woman came stooping out of the
felt-covered fowl-house, half-way down the garden. She closed and
padlocked the door, then drew herself erect, having brushed some
bits from her white apron.
She was a tall woman of imperious mien, handsome, with definite
black eyebrows. Her smooth black hair was parted exactly. For a few
moments she stood steadily watching the miners as they passed along
the railway: then she turned towards the brook course. Her face was
calm and set, her mouth was closed with disillusionment. After a
moment she called:
“John!” There was no answer. She waited, and then
said distinctly:
“Where are you?”
“Here!” replied a child’s sulky voice from
among the bushes. The woman looked piercingly through the dusk.
“Are you at that brook?” she asked sternly.
For answer the child showed himself before the raspberry-canes
that rose like whips. He was a small, sturdy boy of five. He stood
quite still, defiantly.
“Oh!” said the mother, conciliated. “I thought
you were down at that wet brook—and you remember what I told
you—”
The boy did not move or answer.
“Come, come on in,” she said more gently,
“it’s getting dark. There’s your
grandfather’s engine coming down the line!”
The lad advanced slowly, with resentful, taciturn movement. He
was dressed in trousers and waistcoat of cloth that was too thick
and hard for the size of the garments. They were evidently cut down
from a man’s clothes.
As they went slowly towards the house he tore at the ragged
wisps of chrysanthemums and dropped the petals in handfuls along
the path.
“Don’t do that—it does look nasty,” said
his mother. He refrained, and she, suddenly pitiful, broke off a
twig with three or four wan flowers and held them against her face.
When mother and son reached the yard her hand hesitated, and
instead of laying the flower aside, she pushed it in her
apron-band. The mother and son stood at the foot of the three steps
looking across the bay of lines at the passing home of the miners.
The trundle of the small train was imminent. Suddenly the engine
loomed past the house and came to a stop opposite the gate.
The engine-driver, a short man with round grey beard, leaned out
of the cab high above the woman.
“Have you got a cup of tea?” he said in a cheery,
hearty fashion.
It was her father. She went in, saying she would mash. Directly,
she returned.
“I didn’t come to see you on Sunday,” began
the little grey-bearded man.
“I didn’t expect you,” said his daughter.
The engine-driver winced; then, reassuming his cheery, airy
manner, he said:
“Oh, have you heard then? Well, and what do you
think—?”
“I think it is soon enough,” she replied.
At her brief censure the little man made an impatient gesture,
and said coaxingly, yet with dangerous coldness:
“Well, what’s a man to do? It’s no sort of
life for a man of my years, to sit at my own hearth like a
stranger. And if I’m going to marry again it may as well be
soon as late—what does it matter to anybody?”
The woman did not reply, but turned and went into the house. The
man in the engine-cab stood assertive, till she returned with a cup
of tea and a piece of bread and butter on a plate. She went up the
steps and stood near the footplate of the hissing engine.
“You needn’t ‘a’ brought me bread
an’ butter,” said her father. “But a cup of
tea”—he sipped appreciatively—“it’s
very nice.” He sipped for a moment or two, then: “I
hear as Walter’s got another bout on,” he said.
“When hasn’t he?” said the woman bitterly.
“I heered tell of him in the ‘Lord Nelson’
braggin’ as he was going to spend that b—— afore
he went: half a sovereign that was.”
“When?” asked the woman.
“A’ Sat’day night—I know that’s
true.”
“Very likely,” she laughed bitterly. “He gives
me twenty-three shillings.”
“Aye, it’s a nice thing, when a man can do nothing
with his money but make a beast of himself!” said the
grey-whiskered man. The woman turned her head away. Her father
swallowed the last of his tea and handed her the cup.
“Aye,” he sighed, wiping his mouth.
“It’s a settler, it is—”
He put his hand on the lever. The little engine strained and
groaned, and the train rumbled towards the crossing. The woman
again looked across the metals. Darkness was settling over the
spaces of the railway and trucks: the miners, in grey sombre
groups, were still passing home. The winding-engine pulsed
hurriedly, with brief pauses. Elizabeth Bates looked at the dreary
flow of men, then she went indoors. Her husband did not come.
The kitchen was small and full of firelight; red coals piled
glowing up the chimney mouth. All the life of the room seemed in
the white, warm hearth and the steel fender reflecting the red
fire. The cloth was laid for tea; cups glinted in the shadows. At
the back, where the lowest stairs protruded into the room, the boy
sat struggling with a knife and a piece of whitewood. He was almost
hidden in the shadow. It was half-past four. They had but to await
the father’s coming to begin tea. As the mother watched her
son’s sullen little struggle with the wood, she saw herself
in his silence and pertinacity; she saw the father in her
child’s indifference to all but himself. She seemed to be
occupied by her husband. He had probably gone past his home, slunk
past his own door, to drink before he came in, while his dinner
spoiled and wasted in waiting. She glanced at the clock, then took
the potatoes to strain them in the yard. The garden and fields
beyond the brook were closed in uncertain darkness. When she rose
with the saucepan, leaving the drain steaming into the night behind
her, she saw the yellow lamps were lit along the high road that
went up the hill away beyond the space of the railway lines and the
field.
Then again she watched the men trooping home, fewer now and
fewer.
Indoors the fire was sinking and the room was dark red. The
woman put her saucepan on the hob, and set a batter pudding near
the mouth of the oven. Then she stood unmoving. Directly,
gratefully, came quick young steps to the door. Someone hung on the
latch a moment, then a little girl entered and began pulling off
her outdoor things, dragging a mass of curls, just ripening from
gold to brown, over her eyes with her hat.
Her mother chid her for coming late from school, and said she
would have to keep her at home the dark winter days.
“Why, mother, it’s hardly a bit dark yet. The
lamp’s not lighted, and my father’s not
home.”
“No, he isn’t. But it’s a quarter to five! Did
you see anything of him?”
The child became serious. She looked at her mother with large,
wistful blue eyes.
“No, mother, I’ve never seen him. Why? Has he come
up an’ gone past, to Old Brinsley? He hasn’t, mother,
‘cos I never saw him.”
“He’d watch that,” said the mother bitterly,
“he’d take care as you didn’t see him. But you
may depend upon it, he’s seated in the ‘Prince o’
Wales’. He wouldn’t be this late.”
The girl looked at her mother piteously.
“Let’s have our teas, mother, should we?” said
she.
The mother called John to table. She opened the door once more
and looked out across the darkness of the lines. All was deserted:
she could not hear the winding-engines.
“Perhaps,” she said to herself, “he’s
stopped to get some ripping done.”
They sat down to tea. John, at the end of the table near the
door, was almost lost in the darkness. Their faces were hidden from
each other. The girl crouched against the fender slowly moving a
thick piece of bread before the fire. The lad, his face a dusky
mark on the shadow, sat watching her who was transfigured in the
red glow.
“I do think it’s beautiful to look in the
fire,” said the child.
“Do you?” said her mother. “Why?”
“It’s so red, and full of little caves—and it
feels so nice, and you can fair smell it.”
“It’ll want mending directly,” replied her
mother, “and then if your father comes he’ll carry on
and say there never is a fire when a man comes home sweating from
the pit.—A public-house is always warm enough.”
There was silence till the boy said complainingly: “Make
haste, our Annie.”
“Well, I am doing! I can’t make the fire do it no
faster, can I?”
“She keeps wafflin’ it about so’s to make
‘er slow,” grumbled the boy.
“Don’t have such an evil imagination, child,”
replied the mother.
Soon the room was busy in the darkness with the crisp sound of
crunching. The mother ate very little. She drank her tea
determinedly, and sat thinking. When she rose her anger was evident
in the stern unbending of her head. She looked at the pudding in
the fender, and broke out:
“It is a scandalous thing as a man can’t even come
home to his dinner! If it’s crozzled up to a cinder I
don’t see why I should care. Past his very door he goes to
get to a public-house, and here I sit with his dinner waiting for
him—”
She went out. As she dropped piece after piece of coal on the
red fire, the shadows fell on the walls, till the room was almost
in total darkness.
“I canna see,” grumbled the invisible John. In spite
of herself, the mother laughed.
“You know the way to your mouth,” she said. She set
the dustpan outside the door. When she came again like a shadow on
the hearth, the lad repeated, complaining sulkily:
“I canna see.”
“Good gracious!” cried the mother irritably,
“you’re as bad as your father if it’s a bit
dusk!”
Nevertheless she took a paper spill from a sheaf on the
mantelpiece and proceeded to light the lamp that hung from the
ceiling in the middle of the room. As she reached up, her figure
displayed itself just rounding with maternity.
“Oh, mother—!” exclaimed the girl.
“What?” said the woman, suspended in the act of
putting the lamp glass over the flame. The copper reflector shone
handsomely on her, as she stood with uplifted arm, turning to face
her daughter.
“You’ve got a flower in your apron!” said the
child, in a little rapture at this unusual event.
“Goodness me!” exclaimed the woman, relieved.
“One would think the house was afire.” She replaced the
glass and waited a moment before turning up the wick. A pale shadow
was seen floating vaguely on the floor.
“Let me smell!” said the child, still rapturously,
coming forward and putting her face to her mother’s
waist.
“Go along, silly!” said the mother, turning up the
lamp. The light revealed their suspense so that the woman felt it
almost unbearable. Annie was still bending at her waist. Irritably,
the mother took the flowers out from her apron-band.
“Oh, mother—don’t take them out!” Annie
cried, catching her hand and trying to replace the sprig.
“Such nonsense!” said the mother, turning away. The
child put the pale chrysanthemums to her lips, murmuring:
“Don’t they smell beautiful!”
Her mother gave a short laugh.
“No,” she said, “not to me. It was
chrysanthemums when I married him, and chrysanthemums when you were
born, and the first time they ever brought him home drunk,
he’d got brown chrysanthemums in his button-hole.”
She looked at the children. Their eyes and their parted lips
were wondering. The mother sat rocking in silence for some time.
Then she looked at the clock.
“Twenty minutes to six!” In a tone of fine bitter
carelessness she continued: “Eh, he’ll not come now
till they bring him. There he’ll stick! But he needn’t
come rolling in here in his pit-dirt, for I won’t
wash him. He can lie on the floor—Eh, what a fool I’ve
been, what a fool! And this is what I came here for, to this dirty
hole, rats and all, for him to slink past his very door. Twice last
week—he’s begun now-”
She silenced herself, and rose to clear the table.
While for an hour or more the children played, subduedly intent,
fertile of imagination, united in fear of the mother’s wrath,
and in dread of their father’s home-coming, Mrs Bates sat in
her rocking-chair making a ‘singlet’ of thick
cream-coloured flannel, which gave a dull wounded sound as she tore
off the grey edge. She worked at her sewing with energy, listening
to the children, and her anger wearied itself, lay down to rest,
opening its eyes from time to time and steadily watching, its ears
raised to listen. Sometimes even her anger quailed and shrank, and
the mother suspended her sewing, tracing the footsteps that thudded
along the sleepers outside; she would lift her head sharply to bid
the children ‘hush’, but she recovered herself in time,
and the footsteps went past the gate, and the children were not
flung out of their playing world.
But at last Annie sighed, and gave in. She glanced at her waggon
of slippers, and loathed the game. She turned plaintively to her
mother.
“Mother!”—but she was inarticulate.
John crept out like a frog from under the sofa. His mother
glanced up.
“Yes,” she said, “just look at those
shirt-sleeves!”
The boy held them out to survey them, saying nothing. Then
somebody called in a hoarse voice away down the line, and suspense
bristled in the room, till two people had gone by outside,
talking.
“It is time for bed,” said the mother.
“My father hasn’t come,” wailed Annie
plaintively. But her mother was primed with courage.
“Never mind. They’ll bring him when he does
come—like a log.” She meant there would be no scene.
“And he may sleep on the floor till he wakes himself. I know
he’ll not go to work tomorrow after this!”
The children had their hands and faces wiped with a flannel.
They were very quiet. When they had put on their nightdresses, they
said their prayers, the boy mumbling. The mother looked down at
them, at the brown silken bush of intertwining curls in the nape of
the girl’s neck, at the little black head of the lad, and her
heart burst with anger at their father who caused all three such
distress. The children hid their faces in her skirts for
comfort.
When Mrs Bates came down, the room was strangely empty, with a
tension of expectancy. She took up her sewing and stitched for some
time without raising her head. Meantime her anger was tinged with
fear.
II
The clock struck eight and she rose suddenly, dropping her
sewing on her chair. She went to the stairfoot door, opened it,
listening. Then she went out, locking the door behind her.
Something scuffled in the yard, and she started, though she knew
it was only the rats with which the place was overrun. The night
was very dark. In the great bay of railway lines, bulked with
trucks, there was no trace of light, only away back she could see a
few yellow lamps at the pit-top, and the red smear of the burning
pit-bank on the night. She hurried along the edge of the track,
then, crossing the converging lines, came to the stile by the white
gates, whence she emerged on the road. Then the fear which had led
her shrank. People were walking up to New Brinsley; she saw the
lights in the houses; twenty yards further on were the broad
windows of the ‘Prince of Wales’, very warm and bright,
and the loud voices of men could be heard distinctly. What a fool
she had been to imagine that anything had happened to him! He was
merely drinking over there at the ‘Prince of Wales’.
She faltered. She had never yet been to fetch him, and she never
would go. So she continued her walk towards the long straggling
line of houses, standing blank on the highway. She entered a
passage between the dwellings.
“Mr Rigley?—Yes! Did you want him? No, he’s
not in at this minute.”
The raw-boned woman leaned forward from her dark scullery and
peered at the other, upon whom fell a dim light through the blind
of the kitchen window.
“Is it Mrs Bates?” she asked in a tone tinged with
respect.
“Yes. I wondered if your Master was at home. Mine
hasn’t come yet.”
“‘Asn’t ‘e! Oh, Jack’s been
‘ome an ‘ad ‘is dinner an’ gone out.
E’s just gone for ‘alf an hour afore bedtime. Did you
call at the ‘Prince of Wales’?”
“No—”
“No, you didn’t like—! It’s not very
nice.” The other woman was indulgent. There was an awkward
pause. “Jack never said nothink about—about your
Mester,” she said.
“No!—I expect he’s stuck in there!”
Elizabeth Bates said this bitterly, and with recklessness. She
knew that the woman across the yard was standing at her door
listening, but she did not care. As she turned:
“Stop a minute! I’ll just go an’ ask Jack if
e’ knows anythink,” said Mrs Rigley.
“Oh, no—I wouldn’t like to
put—!”
“Yes, I will, if you’ll just step inside an’
see as th’ childer doesn’t come downstairs and set
theirselves afire.”
Elizabeth Bates, murmuring a remonstrance, stepped inside. The
other woman apologized for the state of the room.
The kitchen needed apology. There were little frocks and
trousers and childish undergarments on the squab and on the floor,
and a litter of playthings everywhere. On the black American cloth
of the table were pieces of bread and cake, crusts, slops, and a
teapot with cold tea.
“Eh, ours is just as bad,” said Elizabeth Bates,
looking at the woman, not at the house. Mrs Rigley put a shawl over
her head and hurried out, saying:
“I shanna be a minute.”
The other sat, noting with faint disapproval the general
untidiness of the room. Then she fell to counting the shoes of
various sizes scattered over the floor. There were twelve. She
sighed and said to herself, “No wonder!”—glancing
at the litter. There came the scratching of two pairs of feet on
the yard, and the Rigleys entered. Elizabeth Bates rose. Rigley was
a big man, with very large bones. His head looked particularly
bony. Across his temple was a blue scar, caused by a wound got in
the pit, a wound in which the coal-dust remained blue like
tattooing.
“Asna ‘e come whoam yit?” asked the man,
without any form of greeting, but with deference and sympathy.
“I couldna say wheer he is—‘e’s non ower
theer!”—he jerked his head to signify the ‘Prince
of Wales’.
“‘E’s ‘appen gone up to th’
‘Yew’,” said Mrs Rigley.
There was another pause. Rigley had evidently something to get
off his mind:
“Ah left ’im finishin’ a stint,” he
began. “Loose-all ‘ad bin gone about ten minutes when
we com’n away, an’ I shouted, ‘Are ter
comin’, Walt?’ an’ ‘e said, ‘Go on,
Ah shanna be but a’ef a minnit,’ so we com’n ter
th’ bottom, me an’ Bowers, thinkin’ as ‘e
wor just behint, an’ ‘ud come up i’ th’
next bantle—”
He stood perplexed, as if answering a charge of deserting his
mate. Elizabeth Bates, now again certain of disaster, hastened to
reassure him:
“I expect ‘e’s gone up to th’ ‘Yew
Tree’, as you say. It’s not the first time. I’ve
fretted myself into a fever before now. He’ll come home when
they carry him.”
“Ay, isn’t it too bad!” deplored the other
woman.
“I’ll just step up to Dick’s an’ see if
‘e is theer,” offered the man, afraid of appearing
alarmed, afraid of taking liberties.
“Oh, I wouldn’t think of bothering you that
far,” said Elizabeth Bates, with emphasis, but he knew she
was glad of his offer.
As they stumbled up the entry, Elizabeth Bates heard
Rigley’s wife run across the yard and open her
neighbour’s door. At this, suddenly all the blood in her body
seemed to switch away from her heart.
“Mind!” warned Rigley. “Ah’ve said many
a time as Ah’d fill up them ruts in this entry, sumb’dy
‘ll be breakin’ their legs yit.”
She recovered herself and walked quickly along with the
miner.
“I don’t like leaving the children in bed, and
nobody in the house,” she said.
“No, you dunna!” he replied courteously. They were
soon at the gate of the cottage.
“Well, I shanna be many minnits. Dunna you be
frettin’ now, ‘e’ll be all right,” said the
butty.
“Thank you very much, Mr Rigley,” she replied.
“You’re welcome!” he stammered, moving away.
“I shanna be many minnits.”
The house was quiet. Elizabeth Bates took off her hat and shawl,
and rolled back the rug. When she had finished, she sat down. It
was a few minutes past nine. She was startled by the rapid chuff of
the winding-engine at the pit, and the sharp whirr of the brakes on
the rope as it descended. Again she felt the painful sweep of her
blood, and she put her hand to her side, saying aloud, “Good
gracious!—it’s only the nine o’clock deputy going
down,” rebuking herself.
She sat still, listening. Half an hour of this, and she was
wearied out.
“What am I working myself up like this for?” she
said pitiably to herself, “I s’ll only be doing myself
some damage.”
She took out her sewing again.
At a quarter to ten there were footsteps. One person! She
watched for the door to open. It was an elderly woman, in a black
bonnet and a black woollen shawl—his mother. She was about
sixty years old, pale, with blue eyes, and her face all wrinkled
and lamentable. She shut the door and turned to her daughter-inlaw
peevishly.
“Eh, Lizzie, whatever shall we do, whatever shall we
do!” she cried.
Elizabeth drew back a little, sharply.
“What is it, mother?” she said.
The elder woman seated herself on the sofa.
“I don’t know, child, I can’t tell
you!”—she shook her head slowly. Elizabeth sat watching
her, anxious and vexed.
“I don’t know,” replied the grandmother,
sighing very deeply. “There’s no end to my troubles,
there isn’t. The things I’ve gone through, I’m
sure it’s enough—!” She wept without wiping her
eyes, the tears running.
“But, mother,” interrupted Elizabeth, “what do
you mean? What is it?”
The grandmother slowly wiped her eyes. The fountains of her
tears were stopped by Elizabeth’s directness. She wiped her
eyes slowly.
“Poor child! Eh, you poor thing!” she moaned.
“I don’t know what we’re going to do, I
don’t—and you as you are—it’s a thing, it
is indeed!”
Elizabeth waited.
“Is he dead?” she asked, and at the words her heart
swung violently, though she felt a slight flush of shame at the
ultimate extravagance of the question. Her words sufficiently
frightened the old lady, almost brought her to herself.
“Don’t say so, Elizabeth! We’ll hope
it’s not as bad as that; no, may the Lord spare us that,
Elizabeth. Jack Rigley came just as I was sittin’ down to a
glass afore going to bed, an’ ‘e said,
‘‘Appen you’ll go down th’ line, Mrs Bates.
Walt’s had an accident. ‘Appen you’ll go
an’ sit wi’ ‘er till we can get him home.’
I hadn’t time to ask him a word afore he was gone. An’
I put my bonnet on an’ come straight down, Lizzie. I thought
to myself, ‘Eh, that poor blessed child, if anybody should
come an’ tell her of a sudden, there’s no knowin’
what’ll ‘appen to ‘er.’ You mustn’t
let it upset you, Lizzie—or you know what to expect. How long
is it, six months—or is it five, Lizzie? Ay!”—the
old woman shook her head—“time slips on, it slips on!
Ay!”
Elizabeth’s thoughts were busy elsewhere. If he was
killed—would she be able to manage on the little pension and
what she could earn?—she counted up rapidly. If he was
hurt—they wouldn’t take him to the hospital—how
tiresome he would be to nurse!—but perhaps she’d be
able to get him away from the drink and his hateful ways. She
would—while he was ill. The tears offered to come to her eyes
at the picture. But what sentimental luxury was this she was
beginning?—She turned to consider the children. At any rate
she was absolutely necessary for them. They were her business.
“Ay!” repeated the old woman, “it seems but a
week or two since he brought me his first wages. Ay—he was a
good lad, Elizabeth, he was, in his way. I don’t know why he
got to be such a trouble, I don’t. He was a happy lad at
home, only full of spirits. But there’s no mistake he’s
been a handful of trouble, he has! I hope the Lord’ll spare
him to mend his ways. I hope so, I hope so. You’ve had a
sight o’ trouble with him, Elizabeth, you have indeed. But he
was a jolly enough lad wi’ me, he was, I can assure you. I
don’t know how it is . . .”
The old woman continued to muse aloud, a monotonous irritating
sound, while Elizabeth thought concentratedly, startled once, when
she heard the winding-engine chuff quickly, and the brakes skirr
with a shriek. Then she heard the engine more slowly, and the
brakes made no sound. The old woman did not notice. Elizabeth
waited in suspense. The mother-in-law talked, with lapses into
silence.
“But he wasn’t your son, Lizzie, an’ it makes
a difference. Whatever he was, I remember him when he was little,
an’ I learned to understand him and to make allowances.
You’ve got to make allowances for them—”
It was half-past ten, and the old woman was saying: “But
it’s trouble from beginning to end; you’re never too
old for trouble, never too old for that—” when the gate
banged back, and there were heavy feet on the steps.
“I’ll go, Lizzie, let me go,” cried the old
woman, rising. But Elizabeth was at the door. It was a man in
pit-clothes.
“They’re bringin’ ’im, Missis,” he
said. Elizabeth’s heart halted a moment. Then it surged on
again, almost suffocating her.
“Is he—is it bad?” she asked.
The man turned away, looking at the darkness:
“The doctor says ‘e’d been dead hours.
‘E saw ’im i’ th’ lamp-cabin.”
The old woman, who stood just behind Elizabeth, dropped into a
chair, and folded her hands, crying: “Oh, my boy, my
boy!”
“Hush!” said Elizabeth, with a sharp twitch of a
frown. “Be still, mother, don’t waken th’
children: I wouldn’t have them down for anything!”
The old woman moaned softly, rocking herself. The man was
drawing away. Elizabeth took a step forward.
“How was it?” she asked.
“Well, I couldn’t say for sure,” the man
replied, very ill at ease. “‘E wor finishin’ a
stint an’ th’ butties ‘ad gone, an’ a lot
o’ stuff come down atop ‘n ’im.”
“And crushed him?” cried the widow, with a
shudder.
“No,” said the man, “it fell at th’ back
of ’im. ‘E wor under th’ face, an’ it niver
touched ’im. It shut ’im in. It seems ‘e wor
smothered.”
Elizabeth shrank back. She heard the old woman behind her
cry:
“What?—what did ‘e say it was?”
The man replied, more loudly: “‘E wor
smothered!”
Then the old woman wailed aloud, and this relieved
Elizabeth.
“Oh, mother,” she said, putting her hand on the old
woman, “don’t waken th’ children, don’t
waken th’ children.”
She wept a little, unknowing, while the old mother rocked
herself and moaned. Elizabeth remembered that they were bringing
him home, and she must be ready. “They’ll lay him in
the parlour,” she said to herself, standing a moment pale and
perplexed.
Then she lighted a candle and went into the tiny room. The air
was cold and damp, but she could not make a fire, there was no
fireplace. She set down the candle and looked round. The
candle-light glittered on the lustre-glasses, on the two vases that
held some of the pink chrysanthemums, and on the dark mahogany.
There was a cold, deathly smell of chrysanthemums in the room.
Elizabeth stood looking at the flowers. She turned away, and
calculated whether there would be room to lay him on the floor,
between the couch and the chiffonier. She pushed the chairs aside.
There would be room to lay him down and to step round him. Then she
fetched the old red tablecloth, and another old cloth, spreading
them down to save her bit of carpet. She shivered on leaving the
parlour; so, from the dresser-drawer she took a clean shirt and put
it at the fire to air. All the time her mother-inlaw was rocking
herself in the chair and moaning.
“You’ll have to move from there, mother,” said
Elizabeth. “They’ll be bringing him in. Come in the
rocker.”
The old mother rose mechanically, and seated herself by the
fire, continuing to lament. Elizabeth went into the pantry for
another candle, and there, in the little penthouse under the naked
tiles, she heard them coming. She stood still in the pantry
doorway, listening. She heard them pass the end of the house, and
come awkwardly down the three steps, a jumble of shuffling
footsteps and muttering voices. The old woman was silent. The men
were in the yard.
Then Elizabeth heard Matthews, the manager of the pit, say:
“You go in first, Jim. Mind!”
The door came open, and the two women saw a collier backing into
the room, holding one end of a stretcher, on which they could see
the nailed pit-boots of the dead man. The two carriers halted, the
man at the head stooping to the lintel of the door.
“Wheer will you have him?” asked the manager, a
short, white-bearded man.
Elizabeth roused herself and came from the pantry carrying the
unlighted candle.
“In the parlour,” she said.
“In there, Jim!” pointed the manager, and the
carriers backed round into the tiny room. The coat with which they
had covered the body fell off as they awkwardly turned through the
two doorways, and the women saw their man, naked to the waist,
lying stripped for work. The old woman began to moan in a low voice
of horror.
“Lay th’ stretcher at th’ side,” snapped
the manager, “an’ put ’im on th’ cloths.
Mind now, mind! Look you now—!”
One of the men had knocked off a vase of chrysanthemums. He
stared awkwardly, then they set down the stretcher. Elizabeth did
not look at her husband. As soon as she could get in the room, she
went and picked up the broken vase and the flowers.
“Wait a minute!” she said.
The three men waited in silence while she mopped up the water
with a duster.
“Eh, what a job, what a job, to be sure!” the
manager was saying, rubbing his brow with trouble and perplexity.
“Never knew such a thing in my life, never! He’d no
business to ha’ been left. I never knew such a thing in my
life! Fell over him clean as a whistle, an’ shut him in. Not
four foot of space, there wasn’t— yet it scarce bruised
him.”
He looked down at the dead man, lying prone, half naked, all
grimed with coal-dust.
“’‘Sphyxiated,’ the doctor said. It is
the most terrible job I’ve ever known. Seems as if it was
done o’ purpose. Clean over him, an’ shut ’im in,
like a mouse-trap”—he made a sharp, descending gesture
with his hand.
The colliers standing by jerked aside their heads in hopeless
comment.
The horror of the thing bristled upon them all.
Then they heard the girl’s voice upstairs calling shrilly:
“Mother, mother—who is it? Mother, who is
it?”
Elizabeth hurried to the foot of the stairs and opened the
door:
“Go to sleep!” she commanded sharply. “What
are you shouting about? Go to sleep at once—there’s
nothing—”
Then she began to mount the stairs. They could hear her on the
boards, and on the plaster floor of the little bedroom. They could
hear her distinctly:
“What’s the matter now?—what’s the
matter with you, silly thing?”— her voice was much
agitated, with an unreal gentleness.
“I thought it was some men come,” said the plaintive
voice of the child. “Has he come?”
“Yes, they’ve brought him. There’s nothing to
make a fuss about. Go to sleep now, like a good child.”
They could hear her voice in the bedroom, they waited whilst she
covered the children under the bedclothes.
“Is he drunk?” asked the girl, timidly, faintly.
“No! No—he’s not! He—he’s
asleep.”
“Is he asleep downstairs?”
“Yes—and don’t make a noise.”
There was silence for a moment, then the men heard the
frightened child again:
“What’s that noise?”
“It’s nothing, I tell you, what are you bothering
for?”
The noise was the grandmother moaning. She was oblivious of
everything, sitting on her chair rocking and moaning. The manager
put his hand on her arm and bade her
“Sh—sh!!”
The old woman opened her eyes and looked at him. She was shocked
by this interruption, and seemed to wonder.
“What time is it?”—the plaintive thin voice of
the child, sinking back unhappily into sleep, asked this last
question.
“Ten o’clock,” answered the mother more
softly. Then she must have bent down and kissed the children.
Matthews beckoned to the men to come away. They put on their
caps and took up the stretcher. Stepping over the body, they
tiptoed out of the house. None of them spoke till they were far
from the wakeful children.
When Elizabeth came down she found her mother alone on the
parlour floor, leaning over the dead man, the tears dropping on
him.
“We must lay him out,” the wife said. She put on the
kettle, then returning knelt at the feet, and began to unfasten the
knotted leather laces. The room was clammy and dim with only one
candle, so that she had to bend her face almost to the floor. At
last she got off the heavy boots and put them away.
“You must help me now,” she whispered to the old
woman. Together they stripped the man.
When they arose, saw him lying in the naïve dignity of death,
the women stood arrested in fear and respect. For a few moments
they remained still, looking down, the old mother whimpering.
Elizabeth felt countermanded. She saw him, how utterly inviolable
he lay in himself. She had nothing to do with him. She could not
accept it. Stooping, she laid her hand on him, in claim. He was
still warm, for the mine was hot where he had died. His mother had
his face between her hands, and was murmuring incoherently. The old
tears fell in succession as drops from wet leaves; the mother was
not weeping, merely her tears flowed. Elizabeth embraced the body
of her husband, with cheek and lips. She seemed to be listening,
inquiring, trying to get some connection. But she could not. She
was driven away. He was impregnable.
She rose, went into the kitchen, where she poured warm water
into a bowl, brought soap and flannel and a soft towel.
“I must wash him,” she said.
Then the old mother rose stiffly, and watched Elizabeth as she
carefully washed his face, carefully brushing the big blond
moustache from his mouth with the flannel. She was afraid with a
bottomless fear, so she ministered to him. The old woman, jealous,
said:
“Let me wipe him!”—and she kneeled on the
other side drying slowly as Elizabeth washed, her big black bonnet
sometimes brushing the dark head of her daughter. They worked thus
in silence for a long time. They never forgot it was death, and the
touch of the man’s dead body gave them strange emotions,
different in each of the women; a great dread possessed them both,
the mother felt the lie was given to her womb, she was denied; the
wife felt the utter isolation of the human soul, the child within
her was a weight apart from her.
At last it was finished. He was a man of handsome body, and his
face showed no traces of drink. He was blonde, full-fleshed, with
fine limbs. But he was dead.
“Bless him,” whispered his mother, looking always at
his face, and speaking out of sheer terror. “Dear
lad—bless him!” She spoke in a faint, sibilant ecstasy
of fear and mother love.
Elizabeth sank down again to the floor, and put her face against
his neck, and trembled and shuddered. But she had to draw away
again. He was dead, and her living flesh had no place against his.
A great dread and weariness held her: she was so unavailing. Her
life was gone like this.
“White as milk he is, clear as a twelve-month baby, bless
him, the darling!” the old mother murmured to herself.
“Not a mark on him, clear and clean and white, beautiful as
ever a child was made,” she murmured with pride. Elizabeth
kept her face hidden.
“He went peaceful, Lizzie—peaceful as sleep.
Isn’t he beautiful, the lamb? Ay—he must ha’ made
his peace, Lizzie. ‘Appen he made it all right, Lizzie, shut
in there. He’d have time. He wouldn’t look like this if
he hadn’t made his peace. The lamb, the dear lamb. Eh, but he
had a hearty laugh. I loved to hear it. He had the heartiest laugh,
Lizzie, as a lad—”
Elizabeth looked up. The man’s mouth was fallen back,
slightly open under the cover of the moustache. The eyes, half
shut, did not show glazed in the obscurity. Life with its smoky
burning gone from him, had left him apart and utterly alien to her.
And she knew what a stranger he was to her. In her womb was ice of
fear, because of this separate stranger with whom she had been
living as one flesh. Was this what it all meant—utter, intact
separateness, obscured by heat of living? In dread she turned her
face away. The fact was too deadly. There had been nothing between
them, and yet they had come together, exchanging their nakedness
repeatedly. Each time he had taken her, they had been two isolated
beings, far apart as now. He was no more responsible than she. The
child was like ice in her womb. For as she looked at the dead man,
her mind, cold and detached, said clearly: “Who am I? What
have I been doing? I have been fighting a husband who did not
exist. He existed all the time. What wrong have I done? What was
that I have been living with? There lies the reality, this
man.”—And her soul died in her for fear: she knew she
had never seen him, he had never seen her, they had met in the dark
and had fought in the dark, not knowing whom they met nor whom they
fought. And now she saw, and turned silent in seeing. For she had
been wrong. She had said he was something he was not; she had felt
familiar with him. Whereas he was apart all the while, living as
she never lived, feeling as she never felt.
In fear and shame she looked at his naked body, that she had
known falsely. And he was the father of her children. Her soul was
torn from her body and stood apart. She looked at his naked body
and was ashamed, as if she had denied it. After all, it was itself.
It seemed awful to her. She looked at his face, and she turned her
own face to the wall. For his look was other than hers, his way was
not her way. She had denied him what he was—she saw it now.
She had refused him as himself.—And this had been her life,
and his life.—She was grateful to death, which restored the
truth. And she knew she was not dead.
And all the while her heart was bursting with grief and pity for
him. What had he suffered? What stretch of horror for this helpless
man! She was rigid with agony. She had not been able to help him.
He had been cruelly injured, this naked man, this other being, and
she could make no reparation. There were the children— but
the children belonged to life. This dead man had nothing to do with
them. He and she were only channels through which life had flowed
to issue in the children. She was a mother—but how awful she
knew it now to have been a wife. And he, dead now, how awful he
must have felt it to be a husband. She felt that in the next world
he would be a stranger to her. If they met there, in the beyond,
they would only be ashamed of what had been before. The children
had come, for some mysterious reason, out of both of them. But the
children did not unite them. Now he was dead, she knew how
eternally he was apart from her, how eternally he had nothing more
to do with her. She saw this episode of her life closed. They had
denied each other in life. Now he had withdrawn. An anguish came
over her. It was finished then: it had become hopeless between them
long before he died. Yet he had been her husband. But how
little!—
“Have you got his shirt, ‘Lizabeth?”
Elizabeth turned without answering, though she strove to weep
and behave as her mother-inlaw expected. But she could not, she was
silenced. She went into the kitchen and returned with the
garment.
“It is aired,” she said, grasping the cotton shirt
here and there to try. She was almost ashamed to handle him; what
right had she or anyone to lay hands on him; but her touch was
humble on his body. It was hard work to clothe him. He was so heavy
and inert. A terrible dread gripped her all the while: that he
could be so heavy and utterly inert, unresponsive, apart. The
horror of the distance between them was almost too much for
her—it was so infinite a gap she must look across.
At last it was finished. They covered him with a sheet and left
him lying, with his face bound. And she fastened the door of the
little parlour, lest the children should see what was lying there.
Then, with peace sunk heavy on her heart, she went about making
tidy the kitchen. She knew she submitted to life, which was her
immediate master. But from death, her ultimate master, she winced
with fear and shame.
|