by Mary Lavin
In the Middle of the Fields
Like a rock in the sea, she was islanded by fields, the heavy grass washing about the house, and the cattle wading in it as in water. Even their gentle stirrings were a loss when they moved away at evening to the shelter of the woods. A rainy day might strike a wet flash from a hay barn on the far side of the river. Not even a habitation! And yet she was less lonely for him here in Meath than elsewhere. Anxieties by day, and cares, and at night vague, nameless fears, these were the stones across the mouth of the tomb. But who understood that? They thought she hugged tight every memory she had of him. What did they know about memory? What was it but another name for dry love and barren longing? They even tried to unload upon her their own small purposeless memories. ‘I imagine I see him every time I look out there,’ they would say as they glanced nervously over the darkening fields when they were leaving. ‘I think I ought to see him coming through the trees.’ Oh, for God’s sake! she’d think. She’d forgotten him for a minute.
It wasn’t him she saw when she looked out at the fields. It was the ugly tufts of tow and scutch that whitened the tops of the grass and gave it the look of a sea in storm, spattered with broken foam. That grass would have to be topped. And how much would it cost?
At least Ned, the old herd, knew the man to do it for her. ‘Bartley Crossen is your man, Ma’am. Your husband knew him well.’
Vera couldn’t place him at first. Then she remembered. ‘Oh, yes, that’s his hay barn we see, isn’t it? Why, of course. I know him well, by sight.’ And so she did, splashing past on the road in his big muddy car, the wheels always caked with clay, and the wife in the front seat beside him.
‘I’ll get him to call around and have a word with you, Ma’am,’ said the herd.
‘Before dark,’ she cautioned.
But there was no need to tell Ned. The old man knew how she always tried to be upstairs before it got dark, locking herself into her bedroom, which opened off the room where the children slept, praying devoutly that she wouldn’t have to come down again for anything, above all, not to answer the door. That was what in particular she dreaded: a knock after dark.
‘Ah, sure, who’d come near you, Ma’am, knowing you’re a woman alone with small children that might be wakened and set crying? And, for that matter, where could you be safer than in the middle of the fields, with the innocent beasts asleep around you?’ If he himself had come to the house late at night for any reason, to get hot water to stoup the foot of a beast, or to call the vet, he took care to shout out long before he got to the gable. ‘It’s me, Ma’am!’ he’d shout.
‘Coming! Coming!’ she’d cry, gratefully, as quick on his words as their echo. Unlocking her door, she’d run down and throw open the hall door. No matter what the hour! No matter how black the night!
‘Go back to your bed now, you Ma’am,’ he’d say from the darkness, where she could see the swinging yard lamp coming nearer and nearer like the light of a little boat drawing near to a jetty. ‘I’ll put out the lights and let myself out.’ Relaxed by the thought that there was someone in the house, she would indeed scuttle back into bed, and, what was more, she’d be nearly asleep when she’d hear the door slam. It used to sound like the slam of a door a million miles away. There was no need to worry. He’d see that Crossen came early.
It was well before dark when Crossen did drive up to the door. The wife was with him, as usual, sitting up in the front seat the way people sat up in the well of little tub traps long ago, their knees pressed together, allowing no slump. Ned had come with them, but only he and Crossen got out.
‘Won’t your wife come inside and wait, Mr Crossen?’ she asked.
‘Oh, not at all, Ma’am. She likes sitting in the car. Now, where’s the grass that’s to be cut? Are there any stones lying about that would blunt the blade? Going around the gable of the house, he looked out over the land.
‘There’s not a stone or a stump in it,’ Ned said. ‘You’d run your blade over the whole of it while you’d be whetting it twenty times in another place.’
‘I can see that,’ said Bartley Crossen, but absently, Vera thought. He had walked across the lawn to the rickety wooden gate that led into the pasture, and leaned on it. He didn’t seem to be looking at the fields at all though, but at the small string of stunted thorns that grew along the riverbank, their branches leaning so heavily out over the water that their roots were almost dragged clear of the clay. When he turned around he gave a sigh. ‘Ah, sure, I didn’t need to look. I know it well,’ he said. As she showed surprise, he gave a little laugh, like a young man. ‘I courted a girl down there when I was a lad,’ he said. ‘That’s a queer length of time ago now, I can tell you.’ He turned to the old man. ‘You might remember.’ Then he looked back at her. ‘I don’t suppose you were born then Ma’am,’ he said, and there was something kindly in his look and in his words. ‘You’d like the mowing done soon, I suppose? How about first thing in the morning?’
Her face lit up. But there was the price to settle. ‘It won’t be as dear as cutting meadow, will it?’
‘Ah, I won’t be too hard on you, Ma’am,’ he said. ‘I can promise you that.’
‘That’s very kind of you,’ she said, but a little doubtfully.
Behind Crossen’s back, Ned nodded his head in approval. ‘Let it go at that, Ma’am,’ he whispered as they walked back towards the car. ‘He’s a man you can trust.’
When Crossen and the wife had driven away, Ned reassured her again. ‘A decent man,’ he said. Then he gave a laugh, and it was a young kind of laugh for a man of his age. ‘Did you hear what he said about the girl he courted down there? Do you know who that was? It was his first wife. You know he was twice married? Ah, well, it’s so long ago I wouldn’t wonder if you never heard it. Look at the way he spoke about her himself, as if she was some girl he’d all but forgotten. The thorn trees brought her to his mind. That’s where they used to meet, being only youngsters, when they first took up with each other.
‘Poor Bridie Logan! She was as wild as a hare. And she was mad with love, young as she was. They were company-keeping while they were still going to school. Only nobody took it seriously, him least of all, maybe, till the winter he went away to the agricultural college in Clonakilty. They started writing to each other then. I used to see her running up to the postbox at the crossroads every other evening, and sure, the whole village knew where the letter was going. His people were fit to be tied when he came home in the summer and said he wasn’t going back, but was going to marry Bridie. All the same, his father set them up in a cottage on his own land. It’s the cottage he uses now for stall-feds, it’s back of his new house. Oh, but you can’t judge it now for what it was then. Giddy and all as she was, as lightheaded as a thistle, you should have seen the way Bridie kept that cottage. She’d have had it scrubbed away if she didn’t start having a baby. He wouldn’t let her take the scrubbing brush into her hands after that.’
‘But she wasn’t delicate, was she?’
‘Bridie? She was as strong as a kid goat, that one. But I told you she was mad about him, didn’t I? Well, after she was married to him she was no better. Worse, I’d say: She couldn’t do enough for him. It was like as if she was driven on by some kind of a fever. You’d only to look in her eyes to see it. Do you know! From that day to this, I don’t believe I ever saw a woman so full of going as that one. Did you ever happen to see little birds flying about in the air like they were flying for the divilment of it and nothing else? And did you ever see the way they give a sort of a little leap in the air, like they were forcing themselves to go a bit higher still, higher than they ought? Well, it struck me that was the way Bridie was acting, as she rushed about that cottage doing this and doing that to make him prouder and prouder of her. As if he could be any prouder than he was already with her condition getting noticeable.’
‘She didn’t di
e in childbed?’
‘No. Not in a manner of speaking, anyway. She had the child, nice and easy, and in their own cottage too, only costing him a few shillings for one of those women that went in for that kind of job long ago. And all went well. It was no time till she was let up on her feet again. I was there the first morning she had the place to herself. She was up and dressed when I got there, just as he was going out to milk.
‘“Oh, it’s great to be able to go out again,” she said, taking a great breath of the morning air as she stood at the door looking after him. “Wait, why don’t I come with you to milk?” she called out after him. Then she threw a glance back at the baby to make sure it was asleep in its crib by the window.
‘“It’s too far for you, Bridie,” he said. The cows were down in a little field alongside the road, at the foot of the hill below the village. And knowing she’d start coaxing him, Bartley made off as quick as he could out of the gate with the cans. “Good man!” I said to myself. But the next thing I knew, Bridie had darted across the yard.
‘“I can go on the bike if it’s too far to walk,” she said. And up she got on her old bike, and out she pedalled through the gate.
‘“Bridie, are you out of your mind?” Bartley shouted as she whizzed past him.
‘“Arrah, what harm can it do me?” she shouted back.
‘I went stiff with fright looking after her. And I thought it was the same with him, when he threw down the cans and started down the hill after her. But looking back on it, I think it was the same fever as always was raging in her that was raging in him, too. Mad with love, that’s what they were, both of them, she only wanting to draw him on, and he only too willing.
‘“Wait for me!” he shouted, but before she’d even got to the bottom she started to brake the bike, putting down her foot like you’d see a youngster do, and raising up such a cloud of dust we could hardly see her.’
‘She braked too hard?’
‘Not her! In the twinkle of an eye she’d stopped the bike, jumped off, turned it round, and was pedalling madly up the hill again to meet him, with her head down on the handle-bars like a racing cyclist. But that was the finish of her.’
‘Oh, no! What happened?’
‘She stopped pedalling all of a sudden, and the bike half stopped, and then it started to slide back down the hill, as if it had skidded on the loose gravel at the side of the road. That’s what we both thought happened, because we both began to run down the hill too. She didn’t get time to fall before we got to her. But what use was that? It was some kind of internal bleeding that took her. We got her into the bed, and the neighbours came running, but she was gone before night.’
‘Oh, what a dreadful thing to happen! And the baby?’
‘Well, it was a strong child. And it grew into a fine lad. That’s the fellow that drives the tractor for him now, the oldest son, Barty they called him not to confuse him with Bartley.’
‘Well, I suppose his second marriage had more to it, when all was said and done.’
‘That’s it. And she’s a good woman, the second one. Look at the way she brought up that child of Bridie’s, and filled the cradle, year after year, with sons of her own. Ah sure, things always work out for the best in the end, no matter what!’ the old man said, and he started to walk away.
‘Wait a minute, Ned,’ Vera called after him urgently. ‘Do you really think he forgot about her, until today?’
‘I’d swear it,’ said the old man. Then he looked hard at her. ‘It will be the same with you, too,’ he added kindly. ‘Take my word for it. Everything passes in time and is forgotten.’
As she shook her head doubtfully, he shook his emphatically. ‘When the tree falls, how can the shadow stand?’ he said. And he walked away.
I wonder! she thought as she walked back to the house, and she envied the practical country people who made good the defaults of nature as readily as the broken sod knits back into the sward.
Again that night, when she went up to her room, Vera looked down towards the river and she thought of Crossen. Had he really forgotten? It was hard for her to believe, and with a sigh she picked up her hairbrush and pulled it through her hair. Like everything else about her lately, her hair was sluggish and hung heavily down, but after a few minutes under the quickening strokes of the brush, it lightened and lifted, and soon it flew about her face like the spray over a weir. It had always been the same, even when she was a child. She had only to suffer the first painful drag of the bristles when her mother would cry out, ‘Look! Look! That’s electricity!’ And a blue spark would shine for an instant like a star in the grey depths of the mirror. That was all they knew of electricity in those dim-lit days when valleys of shadow lay deep between one piece of furniture and another. Was it because rooms were so badly lit then that they saw it so often, that little blue star? Suddenly she was overcome by longing to see it again, and, standing up impetuously, she switched off the light. It was just then that, down below, the iron fist of the knocker was lifted and, with a strong, confident hand, brought down on the door. It was not a furtive knock. She recognised that even as she sat stark with fright in the darkness. And then a voice that was vaguely familiar called out from below.
‘It’s me, Ma’am. I hope I’m not disturbing you?’
‘Oh, Mr Crossen!’ she cried out with relief, and unlocking her door, she ran across the landing and threw up a window on that side of the house. ‘I’ll be right down!’ she called.
‘There’s no need to come down, Ma’am,’ he shouted. ‘I only want one word with you.’
‘Of course I’ll come down.’ She went back and got her dressing-gown and was about to pin up her hair, but as she did she heard him stomping his feet on the gravel. It had been a mild day, but with night a chill had come in the air, and for all that it was late spring, there was a cutting east wind coming across the river. ‘I’ll run down and let you in from the cold,’ she called, and, twisting up her hair, she held it against her head with her hand without waiting to pin it, and she ran down the stairs in her bare feet and opened the hall door.
‘Oh? You were going to bed, Ma’am?’ he said apologetically when she opened the door. And where he had been so impatient a minute beforehand, he stood stock-still in the open doorway. ‘I saw the lights were out downstairs when I was coming up the drive,’ he said contritely. ‘But I didn’t think you’d gone up for the night.’
‘Not at all,’ she lied, to put him at his ease. ‘I was just upstairs brushing my hair. You must excuse me,’ she added, because a breeze from the door was blowing her dressing-gown from her knees, and to pull it across she had to take her hand from her hair, so the hair fell down about her shoulders. ‘Would you mind closing the door for me?’ she said, with some embarrassment, and she began to back up the stairs. ‘Please go inside to the sitting-room off the hall. Put on the light. I’ll be down in a minute.’
Although he had obediently stepped inside the door, and closed it, he stood stoutly in the middle of the hall. ‘I shouldn’t have come in,’ he said. ‘You were going to bed,’ he cried, this time in an accusing voice as if he dared her to deny it. He was looking at her hair. ‘Excuse my saying so, Ma’am, but I never saw such a fine head of hair. God bless it!’ he added quickly, as if afraid he had been too familiar. ‘Doesn’t a small thing make a big differ,’ he said impulsively. ‘You look like a young girl.’
In spite of herself, she smiled with pleasure. She wanted no more of this kind of talk, all the same. ‘Well, I don’t feel like one,’ she said sharply.
What was meant for a quite opposite effect however, seemed to delight him and put him wonderfully at ease. ‘Ah sure, you’re a sensible woman, I can see that,’ he said, and, coming to the foot of the stairs, he leaned comfortably across the newel post. ‘Let you stay the way you are, Ma’am,’ he said. ‘I’ve only one word to say to you. Let me say here and n
ow and be off about my business. The wife will be waiting up for me, and I don’t want that.’
She hesitated. Was the reference to his wife meant to put her at ease? ‘I think I ought to get my slippers,’ she said cautiously. Her feet were cold.
‘Oh, yes, you should put on your slippers,’ he said, only then seeing that she was in her bare feet. ‘But as to the rest, I’m long gone beyond taking any account of what a woman has on her. I’m gone beyond taking notice of women at all.’
But she had seen something to put on her feet. Under the table in the hall there was a pair of old boots belonging to Richard, with fleece lining in them. She hadn’t been able to make up her mind to give them away with the rest of his clothes, and although they were big and clumsy on her, she often stuck her feet into them when she came in from the fields with mud on her shoes. ‘Well, come in where it’s warm, so,’ she said. She came back down the few steps and stuck her feet into the boots, and then she opened the door of the sitting-room. She was glad she’d come down. He’d never have been able to put on the light. ‘There’s something wrong with the centre light,’ she said as she groped along the skirting board to find the plug of the reading lamp. It was in an awkward place, behind the desk. She had to go down on her knees.
‘What’s wrong with it?’ he asked, as, with a countryman’s interest in practicalities, he clicked the switch up and down to no effect.