They never did. I’d ha’ packed her off
with any man that would ha’ took her—an’ God’s pity on him!’
‘Umm!’ said Jabez, and sucked his pipe.
‘So then, that was the beginnin.’ The man come back again next week or
so, an’ he catched Jim alone, ‘thout his mother this time, an’ he fair
beazled him with his papers an’ his talk—for the law was on his
side—till Jim went down into his money-purse an’ give him ten shillings
hush-money—he told me—to withdraw away for a bit an’ leave Mary with
’em.’
‘But that’s no way to get rid o’ man or woman,’ Jabez said.
‘No more ’tis. I told Jim so. “What can I do?” Jim says. “The law’s
with the man. I walk about daytimes thinkin’ o’ it till I sweats
my underclothes wringin’, an’ I lie abed nights thinkin’ o’ it till I
sweats my sheets all of a sop. ‘Tisn’t as if I was a young man,” he says,
“nor yet as if I was a pore man. Maybe he’ll drink hisself to death.” I
e’en a’most told him outright what foolishness he was enterin’ into, but
he knowed it—he knowed it—because he said next time the man come ‘twould
be fifteen shillin’s. An’ next time ’twas. Just fifteen shillin’s!’
‘An’ was the man her father?’ asked Jabez.
‘He had the proofs an’ the papers. Jim showed me what that Lunnon
Childern’s Society had answered when Mary writ up to ’em an’ taxed ’em
with it. I lay she hadn’t been proper polite in her letters to ’em, for
they answered middlin’ short. They said the matter was out o’ their hands,
but—let’s see if I remember—oh, yes,—they ree-gretted there had been an
oversight. I reckon they had sent Mary out in the candle-box as a orphan
instead o’ havin’ a father. Terrible awkward! Then, when he’d drinked up
the money, the man come again—in his usuals—an’ he kept hammerin’ on and
hammerin’ on about his duty to his pore dear wife, an’ what he’d do for
his dear daughter in Lunnon, till the tears runned down his two dirty
cheeks an’ he come away with more money. Jim used to slip it into his hand
behind the door; but his mother she heard the chink. She didn’t hold with
hush-money. She’d write out all her feelin’s on the slate, an’ Jim ‘ud be
settin’ up half the night answerin’ back an’ showing that the man had the
law with him.’
‘Hadn’t that man no trade nor business, then?’
‘He told me he was a printer. I reckon, though, he lived on the rates
like the rest of ’em up there in Lunnon.’
‘An’ how did Mary take it?’
‘She said she’d sooner go into service than go with the man. I reckon a
mistress ‘ud be middlin’ put to it for a maid ‘fore she put Mary into cap
an’ gown. She was studyin’ to be a schoo-ool-teacher. A beauty she’ll
make!... Well, that was how things went that fall. Mary’s Lunnon father
kep’ comin’ an’ comin’ ‘carden as he’d drinked out the money Jim gave him;
an’ each time he’d put-up his price for not takin’ Mary away. Jim’s
mother, she didn’t like partin’ with no money, an’ bein’ obliged to write
her feelin’s on the slate instead o’ givin’ ’em vent by mouth, she was
just about mad. Just about she was mad!
‘Come November, I lodged with Jim in the outside room over ‘gainst his
hen-house. I paid her my rent. I was workin’ for Dockett at
Pounds—gettin’ chestnut-bats out o’ Perry Shaw. Just such weather as this
be—rain atop o’ rain after a wet October. (An’ I remember it ended in dry
frostes right away up to Christmas.) Dockett he’d sent up to Perry Shaw
for me—no, he comes puffin’ up to me himself—because a big corner-piece o’
the bank had slipped into the brook where she makes that elber at the
bottom o’ the Seventeen Acre, an’ all the rubbishy alders an’ sallies
which he ought to have cut out when he took the farm, they’d slipped with
the slip, an’ the brook was comin’ rooshin’ down atop of ’em, an’ they’d
just about back an’ spill the waters over his winter wheat.
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