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Authors: Sara Seale

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BOOK: Green Girl
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What was she like? How did she die?


Miss Kitty, as she was? She was like a child that

s taken too soon from its mammy, an

she pined for the lights an

the gaiety they took from her. She died when the babby came, God rest her soul!

Jimsy stood there holding the lamp and seemed to have forgotten her, remembering too vividly, perhaps, the melancholy little story, and Harriet said softly:


Oh, how terribly sad
...
sad enough not to be happy in such a place as this, but sadder still to die when a child would have changed everything.


She niver wanted the child. Mr. Duff, too, thought a babby would divert her from her miscontent, and the paintin

she was always at, shuttin

herself up in this very room, for it was the wan she tuk for herself, but the waitin

an

the slow change in her body soured her on
him
an

she turned agin him.


Oh, poor man ... he would have blamed himself, I suppose.


He did so, though

twas not his fault he niver onder-stood Miss Kitty, for dancin

an

dressin

up was nary a Lonnegan

s notion of the gaiety, but he took it hard, blamin

himself for wishin

the child on her and
mislidn’
the poor toad on account of it.


That

s sadder still,

she said.

I should have thought the little girl would be a comfort.


Ah, well
...
himself wished for a son, which was only natural, with Clooney in mind, an

how would a
man
find comfort in a pukin

wean, an

he with no patience with wailin

females annyways?

Jimsy said with a sudden return to his more usual manner.


Where

s the little girl now?

Harriet asked curiously, for there seemed to be no signs of a child about the house.


Away to her convent skule in Knockferry. There

s not much companionship here for a child, so that way was best.


The holidays must be lonely here for her.


She

s used to it, the cra
y
thur, havin

known nothin

else. Himself was mistaken shutting up the castle, I

m thinkin

, but he couldn

t abide the place at first, and went trapesin

round furrin

parts, drinkin

hard an

gamblin

high, an

wenchin

hard too, if he

s annything like his grandda.

A rather leery look accompanied the old man

s final remark, and she felt herself colouring as she began to suspect Jimsy was exercising his histrionic talents with rather too much exaggeration of the national characteristics.


Ah well ... I

ll leave you the lamp an

fetch another to the snug in case you want to gawp here a while longer,

he said a little huffily, and placing the lamp on a table, shuffled out.

She wandered curiously about the room, seeking for indications of its late owner

s personal tastes, but there were few traces of a young girl

s occupation, except for a shelf of dusty books and a small chest of drawers containing the discarded mementoes of parties, and a trivial assortment of unused, or unwanted presents, some still with their Christmas labels attached, and many bearing the signature
Sam.
Books, too, were inscribed with the same name; expensive editions of reproductions in art, lives of painters and sometimes books of verse. Some had
From Sam, with love,
scrawled across the fly-leaf, one or two bore more intimate effusions, and one proclaimed itself to be
in memory of that unforgettable night in Dublin.

Who was this Sam, so attentive and so pervasive? wondered Harriet, shutting up the last book with an unreasoning feeling of distaste, and the
v
eiled portrait on the easel suddenly proved an irresistible temptation.

She twitched the drapery off with a quick, guilty jerk and stood gazing with curious eyes at the face looking back at her, the face of a young girl brimming over with life and a strange, teasing beauty, a face which proclaimed only too heartbreakingly the truth of Jimsy

s kindly memories of a girl who loved dancing and dressing up and the innocent pleasures of admiration; but there was something there which contradicted that suggestion of pining. The work was unfinished, and not very good, Harriet thought, and remembering that the young Mrs. Lonnegan had painted for a hobby and a distraction, wondered whether this had been a self-portrait left unfinished because death had intervened.

She shivered involuntarily and was replacing the drape when the door opened suddenly and she saw her host standing there watching her with a slightly intimidating expression on his dark face.


What on earth are you doing in this cold room? You should be resting that ankle by the fire,

he said, and she moved hastily away from the easel.


I didn

t realise it was so late,

she apologised.

I wanted to explore these rooms again and discover more treasures. I hope you don

t mind.


Why should I mind? But there

s little here to rank as treasure. Most of the stuff

s worthless and has amply accumulated through the years.


So Jimsy said.


H

m
...
and what else did Jimsy say? The old scoundrel can be like the Ancient Mariner when the fancy moves him.



He holds him with his glittering eyes—the Wedding Guest stood still,


Harriet quoted glibly to avoid a truthful answer, and he smiled.


Did the authorities insist you lea
rn
the whole of that terrible poem by heart?

he asked, and she replied quite seriously;


Oh, yes. We were very well grounded in the English poets. I could recite lots to you.


Well, we

ll reserve that pleasure for days when conversation fails us, I think. Come with me to the warmth. I want to talk to you.

She followed him into another room which must, she supposed, be the oddly named snug which both he and Jimsy had mentioned, and this, she thought, was clearly the room that was used from choice. It must once have presented the formal graciousness of a small drawing-room, for it was panelled with the fine-grained wood of another decade, and still retained something of the elegance of a past generation. But now the more masculine appointments of a smoking-room rubbed shoulders with brocaded chairs and spindly cabinets; sporting papers and magazines littered tables in untidy heaps, and the high stone mantel was crammed with an assortment of pipes, tobacco jars and official notifications.


Oh, this is nice! I can see, now, why you call it the snug,

Harriet said, warming her frozen hands at the fire and looking up, saw a coat of arms circled with lettering carved in the stone of the chimneypiece.

What does that say?


Wake not a sleeping wolf.
Perhaps you should take it as a warning,

he replied with a certain asperity, and, in the same tone, ordered her on to the sofa with instructions to put up her feet


Is this your family motto?

she asked, unperturbed by what merely sounded like a nursery threat, and he laughed.


In a sense, I suppose, though it was a Spanish De Wolfe who married into the family back in the middle ages who fancied it, I believe. Pinched it off Will Shakespeare, I shouldn

t wonder, if you know your
Henry IV.
So you like this room?


It

s homey and sort of mixed up,

she said, aware now that she was glad to rest her ankle after so much standing about.

Not that the other rooms weren

t lovely, of course,

she added hastily.


The other rooms are damn cold and very few of them are lovely from an aesthetic point of view. Clooney is a rather disastrous hotch-potch of style, thanks to the architectural whims of its various tenants,

he observed with some dryness.


I

ve had a wire from

this worthy lady of yours at Ogilvy Manor,

he stated casually, and the observation was so unexpected that she stared at him open-mouthed.


Matron?

But how could she know I was here?

she said at last.

She thinks I

m in Clapham.


Well, I regret to say I informed her.


You
informed her! Well, of all the—


How delightfully young you are, Harriet Jones—you nearly called me a dirty sneak, didn

t you?

The warmth and pleasure this room had given her faded, together with that new-found sense of belonging, a sense she had not been aware of until now. She would have to go back, she thought dully. Whatever harsh view the authorities were likely to take of her future, they could hardly leave her foisted on a complete stranger for want of the fare home.


Why did you?

she asked in a small, deflated voice.


Well, there might have been complications if you decided to stay on my terms. I wouldn

t want to be extradited to England on a charge of enticement!


Could they do
that
!”


Possibly. You

re under age, and I imagine such institutions have certain precautionary powers over their charges.


They

ll make me go back.


Yes, they will, unless you give them a valid reason for staying.


They won

t think lack of money a valid reason. They

ll send the fare. They might even send someone to fetch me.

He rubbed a thoughtful hand over his chin, regarding her with an odd expression.


But my dear young lady, only this morning you begged me to lend you the fare. Have you changed your mind since then?

he said with rather unkind irony, and she looked across at him with startled eyes.


Couldn

t I stop just for a time as companion to your little girl?

she asked, seeking for a compromise, and he gave her a sudden grin as though her attempt to bargain had given him the first round.


No, you could not,

he replied.

For one thing, Nonie

s only here in the holidays, so how would I explain your presence the rest of the time? For another, I happen to need a wife, not just a nursery governess.

His eyes suddenly twinkled with unsuspected humour.

Come now, foolish Harriet, what have you got to lose? You seem to be sold on my crumbling castle, and I can

t believe you
want
to return to whatever lies in wait for you at this dreary-sounding place. Is it my unromantic face that puts you off, or are you afraid I

ll beat you if you don

t behave yourself?

BOOK: Green Girl
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