Grannie came to Elm Cottage next morning
with two duck eggs for Pete’s breakfast.
She was boiling them in a saucepan when Pete came downstairs.
“Come now,” she said coaxingly,
as she laid them on the table, with the water smoking
off the shells. But Pete could not eat.
“He hasn’t destroyed any
food these days,” said Nancy. A little before
she had rolled her apron, slipped out into the street,
and brought back a tiny packet screwed up in a bit
of newspaper.
“Perhaps he’ll ate them
on the road,” said Grannie. “I’ll
put them in the hankerchief in his hat anyway.”
“My faith, no, woman!”
cried Nancy. “He’s the mischief for
sweating. He’ll be mopping his forehead
and forgetting the eggs. But here where’s
your waistcoat pocket, Pete? Have you room for
a hayseed anywhere? There!... It’s
a quarter of twist, poor boy,” she whispered
behind her hand to Grannie.
Thus they vied with each other in
little attentions to the down-hearted man. Meantime
Crow, the driver of the Douglas coach, a merry old
sinner with a bulbous nose and short hair, standing
erect like the steel pins of an electric brush, was
whistling as he put his horses to in the marketplace.
Presently he swirled round the corner and drew up at
the gate. The women then became suddenly quiet,
and put their aprons to their mouths, as if a hearse
had stopped at the door; but Pete bustled about and
shouted boisterously to cover the emotion of his farewell.
“Good-bye, Grannie; I’ll
say a word for you when I get there. Good-bye,
Nancy; I’ll not be forgetting yourself neither.
Good bye, lil bogh,” dropping on one knee at
the side of the cradle. “What right has
a man’s heart to be going losing him while he
has a lil innocent like this to live for? Good-bye!”
There was a throng of women at the
gate talking of Kate. “Aw, a civil person,
very a civiller person never was.” “It’s
me that’ll be missing her too. I served
her eggs to the day of her death, as you might say.
‘Good morning, Christian Anne,’ says she just
like that. Welcome, you say? I was at home
at the woman’s door.” “And
the beautiful she came home in the gig with the baby!
Only yesterday you might say. And now, Lord-a-massy!” “Hush!
it’s himself! I’m fit enough to cry
when I look at the man. The cheerful heart is
broke at him.” “Hush!”
They dropped their heads so that Pete
might avoid their gaze, and held the coach-door open
for him, expecting that he would go inside, as to a
funeral. But he saluted them with “Good
morning all,” and leapt to the box-seat with
Crow.
The coach stopped to take up the Deemster
at the gate of Ballure House. Philip looked thin
and emaciated, and walked with a death-like weakness,
but also a feverish resolution. Behind him, carrying
a rag, came Aunty Nan in her white cap, with little
nervous attentions, and a face full of anxiety.
“Drive inside to-day, Philip,” she said.
“No, no,” he answered,
and kissed her, pushed her to the other side of the
gate with gentle protestation, and climbed to Pete’s
side. Then the old lady said
“Good-morning, Peter. I’m
so sorry for your great trouble, and trust...
But you’ll not let the Deemster ride too long
outside if it grows... He’s had a sleepless
night and ”
“Go on, Crow,” said Philip, in a decisive
voice.
“I’ll see to that, Miss
Christian, ma’am,” shouted Crow over his
shoulder. “His honour’s studdying
a bit too hard that’s what he
is. But a gentleman’s not much use if his
wife’s a widow, as the man said eh?
Looking well enough yourself, though, Miss Christian,
ma’am. Getting younger every day, in fact.
I’ll have to be fetching that East Indee capt’n
up yet. I will that. Ha! ha! Get on,
Boxer!” Then, with a flick of the whip, they
were off on their journey.
The day was calm and beautiful.
Old Barrule wore his yellow skull-cap of flowering
gorse, the birds sang on the trees, and the sea on
the shore sang also with the sound of far-off joy-bells.
It was a heart-breaking day to Pete, but he tried
to bear himself bravely.
He was seated between Philip and the
driver. On the farther side of Crow there were
two other passengers, a farmer and a fisherman.
The farmer, a foul-mouthed fellow with a long staff
and two dogs racing and barking on the road, was returning
from Midsummer fair, at which he had sold his sheep;
the fisherman, a simple creature, was coming home from
the mackerel-fishing at Kinsale, with a box of the
fish between his legs.
“The wife’s been having
a lil one since I was laving in March,” said
the fisherman, laughing all over his bronzed face.
“A boy, d’ye say? Aw, another boy,
of coorse. Three of them now all men.
Got a letter at Ramsey post-office coming through.
She’s getting on as nice as nice, and the ould
woman’s busy doing for her.”
“Gee up, Boxer we’ll
wet its head at the Hibernian,” said Crow.
“I’m not partic’lar
at all,” said the fisherman cheerily. “The
mack’rel’s been doing middling this season,
anyway.”
And then in his simple way he went
on to paint home, and the joy of coming back to it,
with the new baby, and the mother in child-bed, and
the grandmother as housekeeper, and the other children
waiting for new frocks and new jackets out of the
earnings of the fishing, and himself going round to
pay the grocer what had been put on “strap”
while he was at Kin-sale, till Pete was melted, and
could listen no longer.
“I’m persuaded still she
wasn’t well when she went away,” he whispered,
turning his shoulder to the men and his face to Philip.
He talked in a low voice, just above the rumble of
the wheels, trying to extenuate Kate’s fault
and to excuse her to Philip.
“It’s no use thinking
hard of anybody, is it, sir?” he said. “We
can’t crawl into another person’s soul,
as the saying is.”
After that he asked many questions about
Kate’s illness, about the doctor, about the
funeral, about everything except the man of
him he asked nothing. Philip was compelled to
answer. He was like a prisoner chained at the
galleys he was forced to go on. They
crossed the bridge over the top of Ballaglass, which
goes down to the mill at Cornaa.
“There’s the glen, sir,”
said Pete. “Aw, the dear ould days!
Wading in the water, leaping over the stones, clambering
on the trunks aw, dear! aw, dear!
Bareheaded and barefooted in those times, sir; but
smart extraordinary, and a terble notion of being
dressy, too. Twisting ferns about her lil neck
for lace, sticking a mountain thistle, sparkling with
dew, on her breast for a diamond, twining a trail of
fuchsia round her head for a crown aw,
dear! aw, dear! And now well, well,
to think! to think!”
There was laughter on the other side of the coach.
“What do you say, Capt’n Pete?”
shouted Crow.
“What’s that?” asked Pete.
The fisherman had treated the driver
and the farmer at the Hibernian, and was being rewarded
with robustious chaff.
“I’m telling Dan Johnny
here these childers that’s coming when a man’s
away from home isn’t much to trust. Best
put a sight up with the lil one to the wise woman
of Glen Aldyn, eh? A man doesn’t like to
bring up a cuckoo in the nest what d’ye
say, Capt’n?”
“I say you’re a dirty
ould divil, Crow; and I don’t want to be chucking
you off your seat,” said Pete; and with that
he turned back to Philip.
The driver was affronted, but the
farmer pacified him by an appeal to his fear.
“He’d be coarse to tackle, the same fellow I
saw him clane out a tent with one hand at Tyn-wald.”
“It’s a wonder she didn’t
come home for all,” said Pete at Philip’s
ear “at the end, you know. Couldn’t
face it out, I suppose? Nothing to be afraid
of, though, if she’d only known. I had kept
things middling straight up to then. And I’d
have broke the head of the first man that’d
wagged a tongue. But maybe it was myself she was
freckened of! Freckened of me! Poor thing!
poor thing!”
Philip was in torment. To witness
Pete’s simple grief, to hear him breathe a forgiveness
for the erring woman, and to be trusted with the thoughts
of his heart as a father might be trusted by a young
child it was anguish, it was agony, it
was horror. More than once he felt an impulse
to cast off his load, to confess, to tell everything.
But he reflected that he had no right to do this that
the secret was not his own to give away. His
fear restrained him also. He looked into Pete’s
face, so full of manly sorrow, and shuddered to think
of it transformed by rage.
“Sit hard, gentlemen. Breeches’ work
here,” shouted Crow.
They were at the top of the steep
descent going down to Laxey. The white town lay
sprinkled over the green banks of the glen, and the
great water-wheel stood in the depths of the mountain
gill behind it.
“She’s there! She’s
yonder! It’s herself at the door. She’s
up. She’s looking out for the coach,”
cried the fisherman, clambering up on to the seat.
“Aisy all,” shouted Crow.
“No use, Mr. Crow. Nothing
will persuade me but that’s herself with the
lil one in a blanket at the door.”
Before the coach had drawn up at the
bridge, the fisherman had leapt to the ground, shouldered
his keg, shouted “Good everin’ all,”
and disappeared down an alley of the town.
The driver alighted. A crowd
gathered around. There were parcels to take up,
parcels to set down, and the horses to water.
When the coach was ready to start again, the farmer
with his dogs had gone, but there was a passenger
for an inside place. It was a girl, a bright young
thing, with a comely face and laughing black eyes.
She was dressed smartly, after her country fashion,
in a hat covered with scarlet poppies, and with a
vast brooch at the neck of her bodice. In one
hand she carried a huge bunch of sweet-smelling gilvers.
A group of girl companions came to see her off, and
there was much giggling and chatter and general excitement.
“Are you forgetting the pouch and pipe, Emma?”
“Let me see; am I? No; it’s here
in my frock.”
“Well, you’ll be coming together by the
coach at nine, it’s like?”
“It’s like we will, Liza, if the steamer
isn’t late.”
“Now then, ladies, off the step!
Any room for a lil calf’ in the straw with you,
missy? Freckened? Tut! Only a lil calf,
as clane as clane and breath as swate as
your own, miss. There you are it’ll
be lying quiet enough till we get to Douglas.
All ready? Ready we are then. Collar work
now, gentlemen. Aise the horse, sir.
Thank you! Thank you! Not you, your Honour sit
where you are, Dempster.”