The Tea Planter’s Wife (15 page)

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Authors: Dinah Jefferies

BOOK: The Tea Planter’s Wife
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Gwen took a sharp breath in.

‘I’m sorry I wasn’t able to be with you, though I’m sure you were very brave.’

‘I can hardly remember it, to be honest with you.’

The doctor nodded. ‘That is what so many mothers say. And thank goodness for selective memory.’

‘Indeed.’

Laurence, who had been standing at the end of the bed, spoke up. ‘Actually, John, it’s Gwen I’m worried about. She’s hardly sleeping and you can see how white she looks.’

‘Yes. She is pale.’

‘Well then? What are you going to do?’

‘Laurence, don’t worry.’

‘Don’t worry?’ He balled a fist and slammed it into the palm of his other hand. ‘How can you say that!’

‘I’ll give her a good tonic, but I’m afraid a sleeping draught could harm the baby. It’s thought that it might seep into the mother’s milk. Give things another fortnight to settle, and if she is not improved, we’ll rethink. Maybe a wet nurse.’

Laurence puffed out his cheeks, then let the breath go. ‘If that’s all you can suggest, that will have to do for now. But damn it, man, I want you to keep a strict eye on my wife.’

‘Of course, Laurence. Wouldn’t have it any other way. Rest assured, Gwen is in safe hands.’

‘I’ll leave you with her for a moment or two,’ Laurence said.

Had Laurence and the doctor concocted this plan between them?

‘What’s troubling you, Gwen?’ the doctor said, once Laurence had gone. He laid Hugh in his crib then gave her a puzzled look.

As she stared into his friendly grey eyes, a lump came in her throat. But how could she tell him about Liyoni? And how could she tell him that by controlling her tears so they spilt only when she was alone, or with Hugh, she lived with the added fear that her son might grow up with her guilt running through his veins.

‘Is it just lack of sleep? You can tell me, you know. It’s my job to help.’ He patted her hand. ‘There is something else, isn’t there?’

She swallowed the lump. ‘I –’

He ran his fingers through the thinning hair at his temple. ‘Is it resuming relations with Laurence that’s bothering you? I can have a word.’

She lowered her head, acutely embarrassed. ‘No, nothing like that.’

‘You seem so terribly unhappy.’

‘Do I?’

‘I think you must know you do. It’s normal for a woman to feel exhausted after a prolonged labour, and then with a heavily feeding baby, it’s no wonder, but it seems to me, well, it seems to me that there’s something more.’

Gwen bit her lip in an attempt to control her emotions, and avoided looking at him.
A God-fearing white woman does not give birth to a coloured child
– nor does she give a child away, she thought. Though she tried to convince herself that giving a baby away was better than smothering one, she felt so far beneath contempt that no words could ever lessen her wretchedness.

‘Do you want to tell me?’

‘Oh, Doctor, if –’

The door opened and Laurence walked in. ‘All done?’

The doctor glanced at Gwen. She nodded.

‘Yes, all done, for now. I think if your wife tries to establish a regular feeding schedule and takes some gentle exercise, that might help. And remember, you can call me any time, Mrs Hooper.’

As Laurence showed the doctor out, he glanced back at Gwen. ‘Would you like company? I’m sure Verity would be happy to sit with you. She wants to help.’

‘No thanks, Laurence,’ Gwen snapped. ‘I’m fine on my own.’

He looked miserable as he turned away. At the door he looked back again. ‘We are all right, you and me, I mean?’

‘Of course.’

He nodded and went out. She had almost told the doctor, had really wanted to, and she had made her husband unhappy. Her lip trembled and she whimpered as a flash of pain seared through her temple. Another headache. When her head felt so swollen that she could not remain awake, she slept fitfully. As dawn spread a pale grey light across her room, she woke: thirsty, lonely and wanting Laurence.

She imagined holding the baby girl in her arms, saw her lying in the cot beside Hugh, gazed so long that the line between what was real and what was not became blurred. She pictured the baby suckling, her lashes fluttering on her dark cheeks. The image seemed so real she felt compelled to run through to the nursery, fully expecting Liyoni to still be there, and hoping, half in terror and half in genuine hunger, that she would be fast asleep in the
cot next to Hugh’s. But when she got there she saw, straight away, that only one child slept in the nursery. She stood still, listening to Hugh – only one tiny breath where there should have been two – and felt as if her whole being had been sliced in two.

She clenched her fists, then turned and fled, knowing nothing would ever fill the aching void. It drove her to the mirror again, in search of her own real face. She stared at herself and screwed up her eyes in the effort of remembering what she had overheard Laurence say to the doctor. Until now, the words had seemed to dislocate. She didn’t know what she’d expected them to be, but they had seemed important at the time. Suddenly they came back again, and this time the meaning was clear.

‘God willing, she’s not going the same way as Caroline.’

Yes, that was it. And Caroline was dead.

After that, she tried not to think. Not about what had happened to Caroline and not about her daughter. But she still wept, and sat for hours in the dark of her bathroom where she could hide her tears. Naveena brought her tea and toast, but the sight of food made her nauseous; she left it to grow cold on the bedside table.

Gwen knew she could not remain in her room for ever, and nor could she let what had happened ruin her life, or Laurence’s. She had to find some inner resolve: the grit she’d never needed until now. Mechanically, she forced herself to wash.

At her dressing table she examined herself in the mirror. Her face had changed. It might not be obvious to others but Gwen saw the damage. How long would it take for her face to reveal the guilt? Five years? Ten? She scanned the row of glass bottles, picked up her favourite, Après L’Ondée, and dabbed some behind her ears. As the lovely scent filled the air, she took her silver-handled hairbrush and, while she was brushing her hair, made a decision. She put the brush down and from between her silk scarves she took out the pretty little watercolour Mr Ravasinghe had made of her.

She picked up the box of matches that Naveena used to light
her fire then looked out of the window. It seemed as if flickering coins of liquid gold floated on the lake, and with the sound of the household coming to life, the morning sky appeared brighter, the clouds fluffier, her heart a little lighter. She took the painting to the wastepaper basket, struck a single match and watched the image curl as it burned and fell.

12

The doctor had suggested activity, so although she wanted to bury herself in her bed and never face another day, a few days later she forced herself up. She dressed, trying not to think about anything, then asked Naveena to take care of Hugh and to fetch her only for timed feeds. It wouldn’t be easy as the baby cried so much, but for everyone’s sake, she had to find a way. When she emerged from her room, nervous energy flooded her body and, as if awakened from a long slumber, the call to action took over from feelings of self-recrimination.

She had spotted a storeroom at the back of the house – a cool ground-floor room with thick walls in a shady part of the garden, and because it was situated next to the kitchen there would be access to water – a good place to make cheese. With her head held high, she walked through the house and out of the side door into the courtyard. A tiny purplish-black sunbird took off right in front of her and was followed by another as it rose into the big blue sky. It was a lovely sunny day, and as she glanced up to follow the flight of the birds, she heard a window open. Verity leant out and waved.

‘Hello. You’re up and about, I see.’

‘Yes. Yes, I am.’ Squinting, she looked at her sister-in-law.

‘Are you going for a walk? I’ll join you. I won’t be a tick.’

‘No, I’m actually going to sort out the storeroom.’

Verity shook her head. ‘Get a houseboy to do that. You’ve just had a baby.’

‘Why does everybody keep treating me as if I was ill?’

‘In that case, I’ll give you a hand. I’ve got nothing to do today.’

Undeterred, Gwen attempted to smile. ‘There’s really no need.’

‘I insist. I’ll be right down. It’ll be fun. Goodness knows what we’ll find squirrelled away. I’d really like to help.’

‘Very well.’

As Gwen walked across the courtyard to the storeroom, she glanced up at the tall trees. Today they seemed bright and light, not the gloomy tunnel she had once rushed through in fear, and feeling the sun’s warmth on her skin, she felt hope stirring. She’d already requested the key from McGregor, and though he’d been surprised that she really intended to go through with her plan to make cheese, he had not objected. He’d even smiled quite warmly and wished her luck.

‘Here I am,’ Verity said as she came up behind her.

The padlock on the storeroom door came apart with a tug. Together they pulled the doors, the sudden draught of air sending dust motes swirling in a room that smelt of old, forgotten things.

‘First, we need to get everything out,’ Gwen said as the dust gradually settled.

‘I still think we need houseboys to lift the heavy stuff.’

Gwen scanned the room. ‘You’re right. There’s some furniture back there we’d never be able to shift.’

A couple of kitchen boys had come out to see what was going on. Verity spoke to them in Tamil and one of them went to fetch the
appu
, who nodded at Gwen when he came out, but smiled when he saw Verity. They chatted together as he smoked a cigarette and leant against the wall.

‘You seem to get on well with him,’ Gwen said as the
appu
went back in. ‘I always find him a little terse.’

‘He’s nice to me. Well, he would be, I was the one who got him the job here.’

‘Oh?’

‘Anyway, he says he’ll call a couple of the houseboys. Though they won’t be pleased to get their nice white clothes dirty. It’s not a cleaning day today.’

Gwen smiled. ‘I know that. I was the one who drew up their timetable, remember.’

‘Of course you were.’

Gwen squeezed past an old chest of drawers that looked as if it had seen better days. ‘This piece is riddled with some kind of woodworm.’

‘It might be termites. It should go on the bonfire. Oh, let’s have one. I do love a bonfire.’

‘Is the gardener around? I’ve rather lost track, what with the baby and everything.’

‘I’ll go and look.’

While Verity was gone, Gwen, driven by a jittery kind of energy, carried out the smaller items: broken kitchen chairs, a couple of cracked vases, a bent umbrella missing one or two spokes, a few dusty cases, some metal boxes. This stuff should have been chucked years ago, she thought, as she made a pile for burning. When the houseboys arrived, she pointed at the chest of drawers and the furniture at the back, and they began to shuffle it out, piece by piece. Dust flew about in clouds and their white clothes soon dirtied.

By the time they had almost finished, Verity still hadn’t returned. There was just a large ottoman trunk left at the very back of the room. When the boys carried it out, she saw the sides were covered in fabric, now stained and ripped in places, and when she lifted the leather top, she saw it was a metal-lined container, the kind that they used in the house for storing linen. But there was no household linen in this trunk and she was shocked to see towelling nappies and dozens of immaculately folded tiny baby clothes, each one wrapped separately in tissue paper. Matinee jackets, bootees, woolly hats, all hand-knitted and lovingly embroidered. At the very bottom she spotted some yellowing lace. She reached for it and stood up to shake it out. It was long, perfectly preserved apart from the colour, and Gwen’s eyes stung as she realized that it must have been Caroline’s bridal veil. She wiped her hands on her skirt then brushed the tears away, wishing she’d never seen such sad reminders. She asked the boys to carry it all indoors, certain that Laurence would tell her what to do with it.

She was relieved to see Naveena coming across with Hugh in her arms, and feeling the fullness in her breasts and the dragging sensation as the milk began to seep, she went over to the ayah and reached for her child.

As Gwen went indoors, she took stock. For almost the whole morning she had not focussed on the little baby girl, and apart from the moment when she had seen the contents of the trunk, she had not felt wretched. Encouraged by her progress, she saw that if she could only erect a wall around herself by keeping busy, the misery might fade.

At lunch, Laurence was in a jovial mood. Gwen was amazed that she’d been able to hide her unease so well that he hadn’t noticed her true state of mind, but he joked with her and Verity, and was delighted to hear that Hugh had smiled.

‘Well, it might not have been a real smile,’ Verity said. ‘But he is such a darling and he didn’t cry so much today, did he, Gwen?’

‘Perhaps the doctor was right about scheduling his feeds,’ Laurence said.

Verity smiled. ‘I can’t wait for him to grow up a bit.’

Laurence turned away to look at Gwen. ‘It’s wonderful to see you looking so much better, Gwen. I can’t tell you how happy it makes me.’

‘I’ve been helping Gwen sort out the old storeroom for her to make cheese there,’ Verity said.

‘Really, Verity?’

‘Yes.’

‘Well, I’m jolly pleased to hear it.’

‘What do you mean by that?’

Laurence smiled. ‘Exactly what I said.’

‘But you said it as if you meant something by it.’

‘Verity, I meant nothing. Come on. We were a having a nice lunch. And I’ve got some good news as it happens.’

‘Tell us,’ Gwen said.

‘Well, you know I was investing in copper-mining shares
through Christina’s bank, or rather the bank in which she is the major shareholder? They’re doing rather well, and as long as things go on like this, in a couple of years I hope to be able to buy the neighbouring plantation. My third. We’ll be the biggest tea planters in Ceylon!’

Gwen forced a smile. ‘How marvellous, Laurence. Well done.’

‘It’s Christina you have to thank. She persuaded me to invest even more during that ball in Nuwara Eliya. America, that’s where the money is to be made these days. England’s lagging behind.’

Gwen pulled a face.

His brows drew together a little. ‘I wish you’d try to like her. She was very good to me after Caroline died.’

‘Was that when you gave her that devil mask?’

‘I didn’t know you’d seen it.’

‘I went for lunch the day Mr Ravasinghe’s painting of her was unveiled. I thought the mask was perfectly horrible.’

He frowned slightly. ‘They’re pretty hard to get hold of. The natives use them, or used to use them, for their devil dancing. Some still do, I believe. Caroline actually saw one take place.’

‘Where?’

‘I don’t quite remember the circumstances. They wear the masks and some grotesque outfit and then lose themselves in wild primitive dancing.’

‘Sounds ghastly,’ Verity said.

‘Actually, I think Caroline found it fascinating.’

When they’d finished their pudding, Verity got up abruptly, claiming a headache.

Laurence held out a hand to Gwen after his sister had gone. She reached up to touch his cleft chin and fought to conceal her hesitation. If she wanted to keep her husband she had to get over this.

‘I’ve missed you so much, Gwen,’ he said, lowering his head to kiss the soft skin at the base of her neck.

She shivered. Then, as he hugged her, she felt herself unbend
a little and, despite her sorrow, had to admit that by sending the baby away she had managed to save her marriage. She buried her face in his chest, wanting everything he was and everything he would always be, but feeling heavy-hearted that she must now keep something of herself apart. She pulled back and looked into his eyes: eyes so full of love and longing that she held her breath. He was entirely blameless and must never know.

‘Come on then,’ she said with a smile. ‘What are you waiting for?’

He laughed. ‘Just you.’

In the days and weeks that followed, Gwen kept busy by going through the baby clothes she had found, separating them into those that were damaged and those that had remained intact, and also worked hard to get the storeroom ready. But Liyoni’s birth had opened up a seam in her and she felt it wouldn’t take much for the fabric of her life to rip apart.

Still finding it hard to believe what had happened, she felt cut off from the household and trapped in her own confusion. Had Savi Ravasinghe really behaved so abominably? She tried to focus on Laurence’s love for her, her love for Hugh and their lives together as a family, but whenever she thought of Liyoni, she felt as if part of her had died. Liyoni had to be the result of that night at the Grand, and because she and Laurence had made love the very next day, she prayed with all her heart that Hugh really was Laurence’s child. She had no way of finding out if it was possible – she could hardly ask the doctor – and had no choice but to live with uncertainty. She told herself that as long as Naveena never spoke of what had passed, nobody would suspect.

Although Gwen thought she had managed to convince Laurence that all was well, he seemed to sense that really it was not, and on 14 April he decided that a trip to see the New Year celebrations in the afternoon would be just the thing to cheer her up. When he suggested it, they were standing at the edge of the lake looking at birds dive, pick off their prey, then swoop up into the air. It
was a blazing afternoon, with a clear blue sky and a lovely smell of blossom in the air. Gwen glanced up as an eagle flew right across the sky and then disappeared behind the trees.

‘I thought it might do you good,’ he said. ‘It’s just that you still don’t seem very happy.’

She swallowed the lump in her throat. ‘I’ve told you, I’m perfectly happy. It’s just tiredness.’

‘The doctor did suggest a wet nurse if the tiredness didn’t diminish.’

‘No,’ she snapped, and then felt awful for biting his head off.

‘Well, let’s celebrate this moment between the old and the new, when everything stands still and hope rises.’

‘I don’t know. Hugh is still so little.’

‘It’s not a formal religious festival. It’s just about eating and wearing new clothes. A family occasion really.’

She made an effort and smiled. ‘That does sound good. What else?’

‘Lanterns and dancers, if we’re lucky.’

‘If we go, we must take Hugh and I think Naveena should come too.’

‘Absolutely. You’ll hear the brass drums.
Rabanas
they’re called. Make a heck of a din, but it’s fun. What do you think?’

She nodded. ‘What shall I wear?’

‘Something new, of course.’

‘In that case, I’d better see what I’ve got.’

She turned to go up to the house, but he caught hold of her hand and pulled her back. She glanced at her feet, then out at the lake again, then he brought her hand to his mouth and kissed it.

‘Darling,’ he said. ‘Please throw the old baby clothes away. I should never have kept them. At the time I just didn’t know what to do.’

‘And Caroline’s veil?’

Something flickered on his face. ‘Was that in there too?’

She nodded. ‘Naveena washed it and hung it out in the sun. It’s still a bit yellow.’

‘It was my mother’s veil, before Caroline.’

‘Then it’s a family heirloom. We should keep it.’

‘No. There is too much darkness attached to it now. Get rid of it.’

‘What was the matter with Caroline, Laurence?’

He paused before speaking then took a sharp breath in. ‘She was mentally ill.’

Gwen stared at him for a moment before she voiced her thoughts.

‘Laurence, how did that kill her?’

‘I’m sorry … I don’t think I can talk about it.’

The thought of Caroline and Thomas brought tears welling up. She cried so easily nowadays. Everything set her off, and the strain of keeping the secret of Liyoni’s birth was becoming harder. With Laurence near, she couldn’t prevent the sadness bubbling up, but if she allowed the tears to fall, and if he was kind, the truth might spill out too.

He reached for her and she was horrified to find her mouth open of its own accord. A word escaped, she let go of his hand, made some excuse and ran into the house to her room, only just holding herself together.

In the bathroom she sat on the edge of the bath. Her bathroom was simple and beautiful. Green tiles on the walls, blue on the floor, and a silver-framed mirror. A good place to cry alone. She got up and glanced at her puffy eyes. She undressed slowly and looked down at the extra layer of fat on her breasts, stomach and thighs, and once again she felt far from herself.

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