by Clare Dudman
Seren is the book imprint of
Poetry Wales Press Ltd
57 Nolton Street, Bridgend, Wales, CF31 3AE
www.serenbooks.com
© Clare Dudman 2010
ISBN 978-1-85411-612-3 (EPUB edition)
The right of Clare Dudman be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
A CIP record for this title is available from the British Library.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted at any time or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the copyright holder.
This book is a work of fiction. The characters and incidents portrayed are the work of the author’s imagination. Any other resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Cover image: 'Patagonia' Oil canvas by Elisabet d'Epenoux
Typesetting by Lucy Llewellyn
Ebook conversion by Caleb Woodbridge
The publisher acknowledges the financial support of the Welsh Books Council.
In memory of my brother
Huw Thomas Jenkins
1964-2005
Contents
A PLACE OF MEADOWS AND TALL TREES
Glossary of Welsh-English Terms
Glossary of Tehuelche-English Terms
Author's Note
Acknowledgements
A Place of
Meadows
and Tall Trees
Prologue
North Wales 1849
Old Hannah Lloyd was roused from sleep by the dogs. Intruder. Their barks should have made her frantic, but she paused for a few seconds to touch the other side of the bed. Of course he wasn’t there: a dream, that’s all it had been. She shook the impression of his hand from her shoulder and the warmth of him from her back. Gone. Gone for good he was.
A renewed burst of barking made her crawl over the coldness of his side, grip onto the walls of her bed and let herself down. These days it did no good to hurry. The world had become treacherous, with objects obscured by the thickening skin of cataracts.
The dogs were at the door, leaping at it, snarling. When she lifted the latch they were away into the haze of morning light, yapping absurdly at something. Before she could open the door fully there were shouts, one high-pitched scream which could have been animal or human and then the sound of a gun firing, once and then once again, and then silence.
‘Gwyn? Anwyn?’ She stood at the door peering dimly through the bright air.
‘Where are you, fy mechgyn?’
She felt for her shawl, pulled it around her and started slowly along the path. She knew each broken slab, each place where she would have to reach out to find a handhold to help her step down. She was still firm on her feet but her near-blindness had made her afraid. In the haze that now afflicted everything, she could hear whimpering.
‘Gwyn? Is that you?’
She waited, her head tilted to the side, listening. The whimpering changed pitch. She stepped forward again. ‘Who’s there? Who is it?’
She had gone beyond the garden now, past the wall and into the meadow where there was no path. A few paces more and she trod on something soft. She stumbled, her arms out, her knees sinking into warmth.
‘Anwyn!’ Her favourite dog. Her old friend. The golden fur and the black eyes. She shuffled backwards, caught his head in her hands, and clutched tightly onto his ears even though she could feel something wet, something warm. The animal whimpered again and his eyes closed against her hands. ‘Anwyn!’
Behind her the long dry grass snapped and broke. A foot in a boot nudged Anwyn’s rump and then a single sudden wrench pulled her to her feet. She could just see the cloth of a jacket: good stuff, too good for anyone she knew. She tried to pull herself away but whoever was holding her had a grip like lockjaw.
‘Leave me alone. Let me go.’ She lurched forward with her head, her mouth open. Some of her teeth were loose. She left one of them embedded in the hand of the man who held her. He cried out, tried to shove her away but she went for him again, using her nails as well this time. He backed away gaining enough momentum to sweep forward again with his fist, cracking it smartly against her chin so she crumpled immediately onto the carcass of her dog.
‘Behave now will you, gwrach?’
She moaned softly into Anwyn’s fur.
‘You had Sir Philip’s letter, didn’t you?’ The boot nudged at her just as it had nudged at the dog, ‘You have to be out. Today. Heddi. Understand? Your son, the one with big ideas, didn’t vote for him. His Lordship didn’t like that.’
‘Probably can’t read, anyway.’ Another voice, and then another boot joining the first one, trying to turn her over as if she was something dirty that had been dumped there and needed to be inspected. ‘Is she hurt?’
‘Not much. The gwrach went for me, Trev. Look. Am I bleeding?’
Trevor sniggered. ‘Nothing your Nerys can’t lick away. What did you have to hit her for?’
‘She’d have killed me, man.’
Trevor snorted. ‘Well, you can take her in if she’s a mess.’ The boots stopped their probing. ‘It’s clear up there now, is it?’
‘Still full of her cach, I expect.’
‘Good. We need some tinder to get it going, Joni boy.’
‘You’re not going to let her back in first?’
‘She had her chance. Now you get her down to town while I see to business up here.’ Trevor’s boot gave the silent mound in front of them another small nudge. ‘She got anyone, beside that la-di-dah son of hers?’
‘Oh aye, she pupped all right, a litter of little wasters. A son and a couple of daughters in those sties by the river.’
‘Well, let them see to her.’ He raised his voice. ‘The least they can do, eh, old woman?’
Joni knelt down and levered up her head. ‘Cach. I didn’t hit her that hard.’ He let the head fall again and then dragged at the arm.
Trevor laughed. ‘Looks like you’re going to be in the llaca when they see that, fy ffrind.’
Joni paused, held the old face with both hands and bellowed into it. ‘If anyone asks, you fell. Understand, you old crone? You fell.’
*
They saw the fire from the lakeside: a glow on the hill that drew the eye. But it was the nose that had been drawn first: burning, a rich odour of something other than wood. People said it was the smell of a life burning; all its hopes, its memories and disappointments. The old woman would not be consoled. Her daughters and then her granddaughters took turns in bathing her wound and talking to her, but she would not speak back. For days she sat outside their house in the street, on the wall and then on a chair, watching where a spiral of smoke beyond the lake grew smaller. People said she couldn’t see and yet still she watched. And when it was entirely gone her eyes closed. Days later, when she opened them again it was obvious to everyone that her mind had gone too.
One
Patagonia 1865
It is as if the land is coming on them in the dark, as if they are not moving, as if the sea is bringing it close: great cliffs each side, and in the distance the grinning crescent of a beach. At last, after all these weeks.
Everyone is on deck, the strange half-light illuminating their pale, silent faces. It is difficult to see, difficult to tell who is who. A single figure divides into two and then three: a slight ginger-haired man and his wider wife, then a child at their feet: Silas and Megan James and their child Myfanwy.
‘I can’t stand still,’ he says and squeezes her shoulder slightly, but she keeps looking at t
he land. ‘It’s been so long,’ she says, ‘if we stop watching maybe it will go.’
That’s what things do if you don’t watch them.
There is a mewling from the shawl wrapped around her and Silas pats the warm small globe of material. Mine, he thinks, and allows a warm current of satisfaction to rise through his body.
He looks again at the land and then at the people watching. The light is gaining strength, dispelling shadows. He smiles. Everyone is dressed to the nines. Sunday jackets, and Sunday frocks, clean clothes on the children. Who are they expecting to impress? The Indians? Indians. The thought makes him shiver. Heathen and vicious according to some, given to marauding new settlements and carrying off the women and children. Will they be lined up on the shore ready to greet them? He peers out into the gloom, but still there is neither sight nor sound of life.
He is startled by a tug at his trousers. ‘Dadda?’ He reaches down and allows the soft small plump hand to close around his own. She is hopping up and down, restless and impatient.
‘Calm, child.’ They’ll pay for this excitement later with her tears and protests. With his other hand he smoothes her head and feels the small springs of her curls bounce against his fingers – a shade halfway between his thin strands of vibrant orange and her mother’s brown.
‘Dadda, what are you looking at? Can I see?’ Her small quacking voice. Her hand tugging at his own like the string on a kite in the wind, but he doesn’t feel, doesn’t hear. All he can think about is the land – how it will feel to have something solid beneath his feet, to hear the sound of wind through the branches of trees, and to taste fresh food again – fruit, a few leaves and meat without salt. There are other thoughts too – shadows and wisps of something dark that he pushes away before they gather substance in his mind. Not yet, he thinks. Later, when there’s time. Then he will let it take hold, let it do its damnedest and hurt. But not yet.
For now there is just what lies in front of them. Land. He shuts his eyes, leans against the railing, and tries to remember how it will smell: the aromatic tang of crushed leaves, the barn-like fog of hay and cut grass, the damp mouldy smell of the forest floor… the rich stench of a prize sow’s muddy boudoir. Trotters churning up the cach. He smiles. Yes, just now, he longs even for that.
He opens his eyes again and peers forward. It is still hard to see. There is a great bank of cloud covering the sun and everything is grey. The shore seems lighter than he’d expect and there’s something strange about the flatness.
‘Dadda?’
He looks down at her and she tugs again at his trousers. Her voice, when it comes this time, is complaining and threatening tears. ‘Why won’t you lift me up? I want to see.’
The weight of her always surprises him. She clenches her knees at his waist and hooks her arm around his neck and then squeals as the sun comes out. ‘Look Dadda! Yellow!’
The sudden sight of it winds him like a blow to the stomach. Behind the white beach the land is almost as pale, and is bordered by cliffs that look as if they have been painted there by a madman’s brush – jarring oranges and more yellow. Even though the sunlight is weak the land ahead is glowing. Something grips his lungs, squeezes them tight. No trees. No grass. Too yellow, too bright. He closes his eyes and opens them again but the brightness stays. It is unreal, untrue, a brash, feverish dream.
‘Dadda!’ Myfanwy wails, ‘stop it. Let go. You’re hurting me.’
Her voice brings him back. Something real. He is holding her too tight, crushing her to him. He releases her and then carefully draws her head towards him so he can feel her burning cheek with his own, then, still looking at the land, turns his head slightly to kiss her. Sorry. Oh Myfanwy, cariad, cariad. Still holding her to him he squints ahead, trying to see something of promise. Not a single tree. Not a single patch of grass. Some off-white patches which could be tents, and a brown hulk of a wreck protruding from the water ahead of them. Apart from that, just yellow cliffs pitted with holes, too shallow to be called caves, and a few scraps of vegetation: dead-looking bushes and something that looks like it could perhaps be a bramble.
‘This can’t be the place,’ he says. ‘Soon someone will realise. That drunk of a captain has made a mistake.’
Megan gives no sign that she’s heard. She’s glaring at the land as if she’s waiting for it to change into something else. As the sun climbs everything is becoming clearer and more vivid. A flock of birds erupt from a cliff with a couple of loud calls, and then settle again almost immediately. ‘Seagulls!’ she says, and grips onto his arm.
Two
It is the 27th July 1865, midwinter. The sun rises timorously from the South Atlantic to no great height then slumps back down towards the desert of Patagonia. The day is cold and clear. Somewhere near the beach, which so far has no name but one day soon will be called Port Madryn, a cannon fires and causes some of the children to cry. At noon a keen-eyed child claims to spot a flag billowing on a pole – green on the bottom, white above with a faint indication of red in the middle; the red dragon, the child says, turning around to catch any approbation – and shortly afterwards a schooner appears in the bay from the north.
‘That’s his,’ says the first mate, who seems to have the eyes of an eagle. ‘Mr Lloyd’s. I reckon I can see him on deck. He’ll have brought some fresh supplies down here from Buenos Aires.’
The Mimosa’s dinghy is launched, and Silas follows it across the bay. It merges with the sea and then re-emerges again, disappears and appears then seems to disappear for good. His eyes are weaker than the mate’s. If he squeezes his eyelids together hard he can just pick out the schooner – a small brown smudge against the cliffs of the Península Valdés they passed yesterday.
Silas shakes his head slightly. They’re wrong. A whalers’ schooner, that’s all it is. Silas has heard how they come after the whales, Right Whales, the ones that are easy to catch. Just the week before they thought they’d come across one of these ships, and for a while it had been comforting to think they had some fellow humans this far down in the South Atlantic. It had been days since they’d seen another ship. But when they came closer the ‘steam’ from funnels turned out to be the V-shaped fountains of whales exhaling as they reached the surface.
As Silas watches, the smudge across the bay seems to lengthen slightly and then divide into two. He blinks. A slightly smaller smudge and then something that moves steadily back towards them: the Mimosa’s dinghy.
‘Yes, it’s him, I’m sure of it – Edwyn Lloyd! The man himself – coming over here to see us!’ Silas turns to find his brother-in-law, Jacob, at his shoulder: a great fat moon of a face and a pair of stupidly adoring eyes. He grabs his sister’s shoulders. ‘At last you’ll meet him, Meg!’
No. Silas shakes his head slightly. That isn’t Edwyn Lloyd and this is not Patagonia.
But the dinghy is coming closer and Jacob’s grin is broadening. Even Silas can see that there are three heads now, and the blackness of a beard and a hat on the one at the front. Silas has never met Edwyn Lloyd before but he’s seen pictures in the papers, and this is how he is always dressed: tall black hat, striped waistcoat and chain. Stylish, slightly rakish. Explorer, adventurer, but also a man about town, proprietor of the press at Caernarvon, a friend of the Welsh gentry, of Gabriel Thomas and the rest of the emigration committee. He is thinner than his photographs, quite gaunt in fact, and fairly tall. Silas feels the muscles in his back clench, as though he is bracing himself.
‘Edwyn!’ Jacob calls out, as soon as the people in the dinghy are in earshot.
‘Brawd! It is so good to see you.’ Jacob leans over the side and half-pulls the man up the rope ladder, and, as soon as he has two feet on deck, engulfs him in a hug.
Silas watches Edwyn’s two long, elegant hands on Jacob’s back. The fingernails are clean and neatly trimmed and there are small, thick black hairs in two clumps along each finger. Then they catch hold of Jacob’s arms and push him firmly away. When the two men are a foot apart they
look at each other; Jacob’s broad slack smile is answered by a sudden flash of teeth.
‘At last! All of you, here! It’s been so long. I was beginning to think the day would never come!’
‘With the help of our dear Lord.’
Edwyn’s smile is extinguished. ‘Indeed, brawd, indeed.’ He touches Jacob’s arms again, then turns and leaps up the few steps to the quarterdeck.
‘Fy ffrindiau…’
My friends. Silas blinks – did he imagine that slight catch in the voice? Silas takes a couple of steps forward, but the man’s face is hidden beneath the shadow of his hat.
Edwyn swallows briefly and then continues: ‘Fy ffrindiau, I am so glad to see you here at last.’ Beneath the shadow of his hat Silas can just make out a pair of intense blue eyes moving slowly from face to face. ‘Welcome to America, and welcome to the start of a grand adventure…’
‘Dadda, I’m cold.’ Myfanwy hugs his legs and he draws her to him. It won’t be long now. In a minute Edwyn will have to break it to them that they have come too far south. They need to go back, he’ll say, he’s very sorry but that’s how it is. They’ll have to follow him back up the coast, where it is more like Wales and the vegetation is more lush and the air is warmer. Silas reaches out and grabs Megan’s hand. She squeezes his in return. ‘We’re here!’ she whispers loudly. ‘Everything’s going to be better now.’ He opens his mouth to whisper back but Jacob hushes him.
Edwyn is leaning forward now as if he is sharing a secret with the women immediately in front of him. ‘Ffrindiau, ffrindiau. I know you have suffered. I know what you have endured: a hard voyage, and before that theft, ah, so much has been stolen from us – our land, our language, our culture! But soon we shall endure no more. Soon you will see our promised land. It is there waiting for us. The land we deserve, just a few miles south. Cattle! Trees. A splendid river. And grass – oh you should see it – mile upon mile of the most verdant pasture. The best grass you can imagine, ffrindiau. Y Wladfa. Like the old Wales but better.’ He smiles – a quick flame of light that is soon extinguished again – then raises himself upright and looks at the rest of them. ‘Pristine, it is. Unspoilt. No one to interfere…’ he throws back his head. ‘A land for the Welsh. Just think of that! A great nation with our own laws. No English landlords trying to cheat us with their taxes. No English clergy demanding that we pay their tithes. A prosperous place. A place where every Welshman helps his neighbour. No poverty. No cheating. No drunkenness or debauchery. A place where God’s law shows us the way!’