“I’m very happy,” she went on.
“We decided that no matter what Mama said we would wait no longer.”
“I’m so glad, Miriam,” I cried.
“You should have done it years ago.
Never mind. You have at last. So when shall you be married? “
“Ernest says there is no sense in waiting. We have waited long enough.
We were waiting, you know, for him to get St. Clissold’s because the vicar there is very, very old, but he just goes on living and could live for another ten years. “
“No use waiting for dead men’s shoes or dead vicars’ vestments. I think it’s wonderful, and I’m glad you’ve come to your senses. It’s lovely and I hope you’ll be very happy.”
“We shall be very poor. Papa can give me nothing, and I still have to tell Mama.”
“Don’t let her stop you.”
“Nothing could stop me now. Ifs rather a blessing that we have been so poor lately-though not as poor as Ernest and I shall be. It means that I have learned how to make everything go a long way…”
“I’m sure you’re right, Miriam. When is the wedding to be?”
Miriam looked really frightened.
“At the end of August. Ernest says we’d better put up the banns right away and then no one can stop us.
There’s the little curate’s cottage in the vicarage grounds where Ernest lives alone. But there’ll be room for two of us. “
“You’ll manage very well, Miriam.”
I was glad she had made the decision and the change in her was miraculous. My grandmother was naturally angry and sceptical. She referred slightingly to ‘our lovesick girl’ and how some people seemed to think they could live like church mice on the crumbs which fell from the rich man’s table. I bubbled over with mirth at that and pointed out that she did not know her Bible as it certainly was not the mice who had devoured those very special crumbs.
“You have become impossible, Jessica,” she told me.
“I don’t know what this household is coming to. How different things might have been if some people had taken their responsibilities more seriously. Perhaps then we shouldn’t have foolish old maids making laughing-stocks of themselves in the mad rush to marry anybody-just anybody before it is too late.”
Miriam was wounded and wavered, but only slightly. She was Ernest’s future wife now, not merely my grandmother’s daughter, and she quoted him whenever possible. I was delighted. I talked to her often and we grew more friendly than we ever had been. I told her she was doing the right thing in escaping from my grandmother’s tyranny, that she was fortunate to be able to and that she was going to be very happy.
“I wonder what will happen here when I have left,” she said on one occasion.
“Jessica, what of you?”
“What do you mean ?”
“You’re going a great deal to Oakland Hall. Sometimes that frightens me. It’s what your mother did.”
“I enjoy going there. Why shouldn’t I go? You must admit life is not exactly hilarious at the Dower House.”
“Her trouble began there.”
“It’s going to be quite different with me. Stop worrying, Miriam.
Think of the future. I know you’re going to be happy. “
“I’m determined to be,” she said defiantly, as though she were thinking of her mother.
Miriam was married, as she had said she would be, at the end of August. My grandmother went to the wedding because it would look unsuitable if she did not, and this seemed to be her sole reason for going. My grandfather performed the giving away ceremony and I was a bridesmaid. It was a quiet wedding-necessarily so, my grandmother pointed out about a hundred times after the banns had been called, in our reduced circumstances.
There was no wedding feast.
“What is there to celebrate?” demanded my grandmother.
“Just an old maid’s folly.”
She was cruel, but Miriam seemed impervious to her insults; she was so happy to be married at last and to have made the decision which had hung over her for so many years. There was a permanent sneer about my grandmother’s lips when she referred to the married pair, and she took to calling them ‘the church mice’, gloating over their future poverty and making it out to be so much worse than it was.
There was no honeymoon.
“Honeymoon,” sneered my grand mother.
“You know what their honeymoon will be-a piece of bread and cheese eaten from that cottage wooden table which my daughter will have to learn to scrub. Then she will discover her folly. A honeymoon in that miserable little hut … for it is no more! I wish them joy for it.”
My grandfather spoke up: “Sometimes there can be more joy in a humble cottage than in a mansion. It says some thing like that in the Bible, and it seems to me that Miriam can only congratulate herself that she has escaped from this place.”
My grandmother stared at him and he picked up The Times and walked out of the room.
Change indeed when my grandfather stood his ground with his wife.
It was a week after Miriam’s wedding when the accident happened. Ben was walking in the grounds one morning when his crutch apparently slid on some damp leaves and he fell. He was in the grounds for an hour before he was discovered. He was carried in by Banker and Mr. Wilmot, who called the doctor. It seemed that his injuries were by no means slight as the wound on his leg had burst open and he would have to remain in bed until it was healed.
He was looking not only disgruntled but ill when I called.
“Look what the old fool’s done, Jessie,” he grumbled. There was I sprinting along, you might say, one minute and the next my crutch has gone flying and I’m rolling on the grass and there’s that old leg letting me know it was once there and mad because they lopped it off and its there no longer. Why weren’t you there to save me this time ? "
“How I wish I had been.”
Well, you’ll have to come and see me now and then. “
“As often as you like, Ben.”
“You’ll get tired of this sick old man. But I’ll be up and about soon, you’ll see."
” Of course. “
“It means postponing our going to Australia. Why, that doesn’t seem to upset you.”
“I couldn’t bear to think of your going.”
“Not when you were coming with me ?”
“I don’t think I ever really believed I would.”
That’s not like you, Jess. You wanted to come, didn’t you ? You didn’t want to stay in that house. You’d be stifled there. What’s going to happen to you if you stay there? It’s no place for a bold spirit like yours. You want to live, see the world, spread your wings You’re a gambler, Jessie. Oh yes, you are. It’s in your blood, the same as ifs in mine. Look at it like this. Ifs a postponement One day you’re going off to Australia. I promise you. “
“Are you going to gamble with them for me this time?” I laughed.
That’s not a bad idea, I’d take your grandfather on any day. ” He grimaced.
“But suppose I lost, eh, Jessie? What then?”
“You’re a gambler. You’d take a risk.”
There are some things too important to take a chance on. ” He gripped my hand firmly.
“You’re going to Australia. That’s something I’ve made up my mind about.”
“Well, Ben, all you have to do is get well.”
“Leave it to me. Next week I’ll be on the hobble again.”
But he wasn’t.
September passed and October was with us, and still the wound did not heal. Until it had, the doctor insisted, he must stay in bed.
He raged a good deal, cursed doctors, declared they didn’t know what they were talking about, but he was uneasy. Why wouldn’t the miserable wound heal? He was not going to stay in bed. He had plans. He tried to get up, but the effort of attempting to walk was too much for him and he had to admit defeat.