‘He was in his mind.’
‘He ain’t never been out of it yet to my knowledge,’ Jesse drawled, and
uncorked his tea-bottle.
‘But then Jim says: “I ain’t goin’ to shift my stack a yard,” he says.
“The Brook’s been good friends to me, and if she be minded,” he says, “to
take a snatch at my hay, I ain’t settin’ out to withstand her.” That’s
what Jim Wickenden says to me last—last June-end ’twas,’ said Jabez.
‘Nor he hasn’t shifted his stack, neither,’ Jesse replied. ‘An’ if
there’s more rain, the brook she’ll shift it for him.’
‘No need tell me! But I want to know what Jim was gettin’
at?’
Jabez opened his clasp-knife very deliberately; Jesse as carefully
opened his. They unfolded the newspapers that wrapped their dinners,
coiled away and pocketed the string that bound the packages, and sat down
on the edge of the lodge manger. The rain began to fall again through the
fog, and the brook’s voice rose.
* * * * *
‘But I always allowed Mary was his lawful child, like,’ said Jabez,
after Jesse had spoken for a while.
‘‘Tain’t so.... Jim Wickenden’s woman she never made nothing. She come
out o’ Lewes with her stockin’s round her heels, an’ she never made nor
mended aught till she died. He had to light fire an’ get
breakfast every mornin’ except Sundays, while she sowed it abed. Then she
took an’ died, sixteen, seventeen, year back; but she never had no
childern.’
‘They was valley-folk,’ said Jabez apologetically. ‘I’d no call to go
in among ’em, but I always allowed Mary—’
‘No. Mary come out o’ one o’ those Lunnon Childern Societies. After his
woman died, Jim got his mother back from his sister over to Peasmarsh,
which she’d gone to house with when Jim married. His mother kept house for
Jim after his woman died. They do say ’twas his mother led him on toward
adoptin’ of Mary—to furnish out the house with a child, like, and to keep
him off of gettin’ a noo woman. He mostly done what his mother contrived.
‘Cardenly, twixt ’em, they asked for a child from one o’ those Lunnon
societies—same as it might ha’ been these Barnardo children—an’ Mary was
sent down to ’em, in a candle-box, I’ve heard.’
‘Then Mary is chance-born. I never knowed that,’ said Jabez. ‘Yet I
must ha’ heard it some time or other ...’
‘No. She ain’t. ‘Twould ha’ been better for some folk if she had been.
She come to Jim in a candle-box with all the proper papers—lawful child o’
some couple in Lunnon somewheres—mother dead, father drinkin’.
And there was that Lunnon society’s five shillin’s a week for
her. Jim’s mother she wouldn’t despise week-end money, but I never heard
Jim was much of a muck-grubber. Let be how ’twill, they two mothered up
Mary no bounds, till it looked at last like they’d forgot she wasn’t their
own flesh an’ blood. Yes, I reckon they forgot Mary wasn’t their’n by
rights.’
‘That’s no new thing,’ said Jabez. ‘There’s more’n one or two in this
parish wouldn’t surrender back their Bernarders. You ask Mark Copley an’
his woman an’ that Bernarder cripple-babe o’ theirs.’
‘Maybe they need the five shillin’,’ Jesse suggested.
‘It’s handy,’ said Jabez. ‘But the child’s more. “Dada” he says, an’
“Mumma” he says, with his great rollin’ head-piece all hurdled up in that
iron collar. He won’t live long—his backbone’s rotten, like. But
they Copleys do just about set store by him—five bob or no five bob.’
‘Same way with Jim an’ his mother,’ Jesse went on. ‘There was talk
betwixt ’em after a few years o’ not takin’ any more week-end money for
Mary; but let alone she never passed a farden in the mire ‘thout
longin’s, Jim didn’t care, like, to push himself forward into the
Society’s remembrance. So naun came of it. The week-end money would ha’
made no odds to Jim—not after his uncle willed him they four cottages at
Eastbourne an’ money in the bank.’
‘That was true, too, then? I heard something in a scadderin’
word-o’-mouth way,’ said Jabez.
‘I’ll answer for the house property, because Jim he requested my signed
name at the foot o’ some papers concernin’ it.
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