“Come, Bridget,
Saint Bridget, come in at my door,
The crock’s on
the bink and the rush ”
“She’s fast,” said
Nancy. “Rocking this one to sleep is like
waiting for the kettle to boil. You may try and
try, and blow and blow, but never a sound. And
no sooner have you forgotten all about her, but she’s
singing away as steady as a top.”
Nancy put the child into the cradle,
tucked her about, twisted the head of the little nest
so that the warmth of the fire should enter it, and
hung a shawl over the hood to protect the little eyelids
from the light. “Will you keep the house
till I’m home from Sulby, Pete?”
“I’ve my work, woman,” said Pete
from the parlour.
“I’ll put a junk on the fire and be off
then,” said Nancy.
She pulled the door on to the catch
behind her and went crunching the gravel to the gate.
There was no sound in the house now but the gentle
breathing of the sleeping child, soft as an angel’s
prayer, the chirruping of the mended fire like a cage
of birds, the ticking of the clock, and, through the
parlour wall, the dull pat-put, pat-put of the wooden
mallet and the scrape of the chisel on the stone.
Pete worked steadily for half an hour,
and then came back to the hall-kitchen with his tools
in his hands. The cob of coal had kindled to
a lively flame, which flashed and went out, and the
quick black shadows of the chairs and the table and
the jugs on the dresser were leaping about the room
like elves. With parted lips, just breaking into
a smile, Pete went down on one knee by the cradle,
put the mallet under his arm, and gently raised the
shawl curtain. “God bless my motherless
girl,” he said, in a voice no louder than a
breath. Suddenly, while he knelt there, he was
smitten as by an electric shock. His face straightened
and he drew back, still holding the shawl at the tips
of his fingers.
The child was sleeping peacefully,
with one of its little arms over the counterpane.
On its face the flickering light of the fire was coming
and going, making lines about the baby eyes and throwing
up the baby features. It is in such lights that
we are startled by resemblances in a child’s
face. Pete was startled by a resemblance.
He had seen it before, but not as he saw it now.
A moment afterwards he was reaching
across the cradle again, his arms spread over it,
and his face close down at the child’s face,
scanning every line of it as one scans a map. “’Deed,
but she is, though,” he murmured. “She’s
like him enough, anyway.”
An awful idea had taken possession
of his mind. He rose stiffly to his feet, and
the shawl flapped back. The room seemed to be
darkening round him. He broke the coal, though
it was burning brightly, stepped to the other side
of the cradle, and looked at the child again.
It was the same from there. The resemblance was
ghostly.
He felt something growing hard inside
of him, and he returned to his work in the parlour.
But the chisel slipped, the mallet fell too heavily,
and he stopped. His mind fluctuated among distant
things. He could not help thinking of Port Mooar,
of the Carasdhoo men, of the day when he and Philip
were brought home in the early, morning.
Putting his tools down, he returned
to the room. He was holding his breath and walking
softly, as if in the presence of an invisible thing.
The room was perfectly quiet he could hear
the breath in his nostrils. In a state of stupor
he stood for some time with bis back to the fire and
watched his shadow on the opposite wall and on the
ceiling. The cradle was at his feet. He
could not keep his eyes off it. From time to
time he looked down across one of his shoulders.
With head thrown back and lips apart,
the child was breathing calmly and sleeping the innocent
sleep. This angel innocence reproached him.
“My heart must be going bad,”
he muttered. “Your bad thoughts are blackening
the dead. For shame, Pete Quilliam, for shame!”
He was feeling like a man who is in
a storm of thunder and lightning at night. Familiar
things about him looked strange and awful.
Stooping to the cradle again, he turned
back the shawl on to the cradle-head as a girl turns
back the shade of her sun-bonnet Then the firelight
was full on the child’s face, and it moved in
its sleep. It moved yet more under his steadfast
gaze, and cried a little, as if the terrible thought
that was in his mind had penetrated to its own.
He was stooping so when the door was
opened and Caesar entered violently, making asthmatic
noises in his throat. Pete looked up at him with
a stupefied air. “Peter,” he said,
“will you sell that mortgage?”
Pete answered with a growl.
“Will you transfer it to me?” said Caesar.
“The time’s not come,” said Pete.
“What time?”
“The time foretold by the prophet,
when the lion can lie down with the lamb.”
Pete laughed bitterly. Caesar
was quivering, his mouth was twitching, and his eyes
were wild. “Will you come over to the ‘Mitre,’
then?”
“What for to the ’Mitre’?”
“Ross Christian is there.”
Pete made an impatient gesture.
“That stormy petrel again! He’s always
about when there’s bad weather going.”
“Will you come and hear what the man’s
saying?”
“What’s he saying?”
“Will you hear for yourself?”
Pete looked hard at Caesar, looked
again, then caught up his cap and went out at the
door.