On a wintry morning at the close of
1690, the sun shining faint and red through a light
fog, there was a great noise of baying dogs, loud voices,
and trampling of horses in the courtyard at Wildairs
Hall; Sir Jeoffry being about to go forth a-hunting,
and being a man with a choleric temper and big, loud
voice, and given to oaths and noise even when in good-humour,
his riding forth with his friends at any time was attended
with boisterous commotion. This morning it was
more so than usual, for he had guests with him who
had come to his house the day before, and had supped
late and drunk deeply, whereby the day found them,
some with headaches, some with a nausea at their stomachs,
and some only in an evil humour which made them curse
at their horses when they were restless, and break
into loud surly laughs when a coarse joke was made.
There were many such jokes, Sir Jeoffry and his boon
companions being renowned throughout the county for
the freedom of their conversation as for the scandal
of their pastimes, and this day ’twas well indeed,
as their loud-voiced, oath-besprinkled jests rang
out on the cold air, that there were no ladies about
to ride forth with them.
’Twas Sir Jeoffry who was louder
than any other, he having drunk even deeper than the
rest, and though ’twas his boast that he could
carry a bottle more than any man, and see all his
guests under the table, his last night’s bout
had left him in ill-humour and boisterous. He
strode about, casting oaths at the dogs and rating
the servants, and when he mounted his big black horse
’twas amid such a clamour of voices and baying
hounds that the place was like Pandemonium.
He was a large man of florid good
looks, black eyes, and full habit of body, and had
been much renowned in his youth for his great strength,
which was indeed almost that of a giant, and for his
deeds of prowess in the saddle and at the table when
the bottle went round. There were many evil
stories of his roysterings, but it was not his way
to think of them as evil, but rather to his credit
as a man of the world, for, when he heard that they
were gossiped about, he greeted the information with
a loud triumphant laugh. He had married, when
she was fifteen, the blooming toast of the county,
for whom his passion had long died out, having indeed
departed with the honeymoon, which had been of the
briefest, and afterwards he having borne her a grudge
for what he chose to consider her undutiful conduct.
This grudge was founded on the fact that, though
she had presented him each year since their marriage
with a child, after nine years had passed none had
yet been sons, and, as he was bitterly at odds with
his next of kin, he considered each of his offspring
an ill turn done him.
He spent but little time in her society,
for she was a poor, gentle creature of no spirit,
who found little happiness in her lot, since her lord
treated her with scant civility, and her children one
after another sickened and died in their infancy until
but two were left. He scarce remembered her
existence when he did not see her face, and he was
certainly not thinking of her this morning, having
other things in view, and yet it so fell out that,
while a groom was shortening a stirrup and being sworn
at for his awkwardness, he by accident cast his eye
upward to a chamber window peering out of the thick
ivy on the stone. Doing so he saw an old woman
draw back the curtain and look down upon him as if
searching for him with a purpose.
He uttered an exclamation of anger.
“Damnation! Mother Posset
again,” he said. “What does she there,
old frump?”
The curtain fell and the woman disappeared,
but in a few minutes more an unheard-of thing happened—among
the servants in the hall, the same old woman appeared
making her way with a hurried fretfulness, and she
descended haltingly the stone steps and came to his
side where he sat on his black horse.
“The Devil!” he exclaimed—“what
are you here for? ’Tis not time for another
wench upstairs, surely?”
“’Tis not time,”
answered the old nurse acidly, taking her tone from
his own. “But there is one, but an hour
old, and my lady—”
“Be damned to her!” quoth
Sir Jeoffry savagely. “A ninth one—and
’tis nine too many. ’Tis more than
man can bear. She does it but to spite me.”
“’Tis ill treatment for
a gentleman who wants an heir,” the old woman
answered, as disrespectful of his spouse as he was,
being a time-serving crone, and knowing that it paid
but poorly to coddle women who did not as their husbands
would have them in the way of offspring. “It
should have been a fine boy, but it is not, and my
lady—”
“Damn her puling tricks!”
said Sir Jeoffry again, pulling at his horse’s
bit until the beast reared.
“She would not let me rest until
I came to you,” said the nurse resentfully.
“She would have you told that she felt strangely,
and before you went forth would have a word with you.”
“I cannot come, and am not in
the mood for it if I could,” was his answer.
“What folly does she give way to? This
is the ninth time she hath felt strangely, and I have
felt as squeamish as she—but nine is more
than I have patience for.”
“She is light-headed, mayhap,”
said the nurse. “She lieth huddled in a
heap, staring and muttering, and she would leave me
no peace till I promised to say to you, ’For
the sake of poor little Daphne, whom you will sure
remember.’ She pinched my hand and said
it again and again.”
Sir Jeoffry dragged at his horse’s mouth and
swore again.
“She was fifteen then, and had
not given me nine yellow-faced wenches,” he
said. “Tell her I had gone a-hunting and
you were too late;” and he struck his big black
beast with the whip, and it bounded away with him,
hounds and huntsmen and fellow-roysterers galloping
after, his guests, who had caught at the reason of
his wrath, grinning as they rode.
* * * *
In a huge chamber hung with tattered
tapestries and barely set forth with cumbersome pieces
of furnishing, my lady lay in a gloomy, canopied bed,
with her new-born child at her side, but not looking
at or touching it, seeming rather to have withdrawn
herself from the pillow on which it lay in its swaddling-clothes.
She was but a little lady, and now,
as she lay in the large bed, her face and form shrunken
and drawn with suffering, she looked scarce bigger
than a child. In the brief days of her happiness
those who toasted her had called her Titania for her
fairy slightness and delicate beauty, but then her
fair wavy locks had been of a length that touched the
ground when her woman unbound them, and she had had
the colour of a wild rose and the eyes of a tender
little fawn. Sir Jeoffry for a month or so had
paid tempestuous court to her, and had so won her
heart with his dashing way of love-making and the
daringness of his reputation, that she had thought
herself—being child enough to think so—the
luckiest young lady in the world that his black eye
should have fallen upon her with favour. Each
year since, with the bearing of each child, she had
lost some of her beauty. With each one her lovely
hair fell out still more, her wild-rose colour faded,
and her shape was spoiled. She grew thin and
yellow, only a scant covering of the fair hair was
left her, and her eyes were big and sunken.
Her marriage having displeased her family, and Sir
Jeoffry having a distaste for the ceremonies of visiting
and entertainment, save where his own cronies were
concerned, she had no friends, and grew lonelier and
lonelier as the sad years went by. She being
so without hope and her life so dreary, her children
were neither strong nor beautiful, and died quickly,
each one bringing her only the anguish of birth and
death. This wintry morning her ninth lay slumbering
by her side; the noise of baying dogs and boisterous
men had died away with the last sound of the horses’
hoofs; the little light which came into the room through
the ivied window was a faint yellowish red; she was
cold, because the fire in the chimney was but a scant,
failing one; she was alone—and she knew
that the time had come for her death. This she
knew full well.
She was alone, because, being so disrespected
and deserted by her lord, and being of a timid and
gentle nature, she could not command her insufficient
retinue of servants, and none served her as was their
duty. The old woman Sir Jeoffry had dubbed Mother
Posset had been her sole attendant at such times as
these for the past five years, because she would come
to her for a less fee than a better woman, and Sir
Jeoffry had sworn he would not pay for wenches being
brought into the world. She was a slovenly,
guzzling old crone, who drank caudle from morning till
night, and demanded good living as a support during
the performance of her trying duties; but these last
she contrived to make wondrous light, knowing that
there was none to reprove her.
“A fine night I have had,”
she had grumbled when she brought back Sir Jeoffry’s
answer to her lady’s message. “My
old bones are like to break, and my back will not
straighten itself. I will go to the kitchen to
get victuals and somewhat to warm me; your ladyship’s
own woman shall sit with you.”
Her ladyship’s “own woman”
was also the sole attendant of the two little girls,
Barbara and Anne, whose nursery was in another wing
of the house, and my lady knew full well she would
not come if she were told, and that there would be
no message sent to her.
She knew, too, that the fire was going
out, but, though she shivered under the bed-clothes,
she was too weak to call the woman back when she saw
her depart without putting fresh fuel upon it.
So she lay alone, poor lady, and there
was no sound about her, and her thin little mouth
began to feebly quiver, and her great eyes, which
stared at the hangings, to fill with slow cold tears,
for in sooth they were not warm, but seemed to chill
her poor cheeks as they rolled slowly down them, leaving
a wet streak behind them which she was too far gone
in weakness to attempt to lift her hand to wipe away.
“Nine times like this,”
she panted faintly, “and ’tis for naught
but oaths and hard words that blame me. I was
but a child myself and he loved me. When ’twas
‘My Daphne,’ and ‘My beauteous little
Daphne,’ he loved me in his own man’s
way. But now—” she faintly rolled
her head from side to side. “Women are
poor things”—a chill salt tear sliding
past her lips so that she tasted its bitterness—“only
to be kissed for an hour, and then like this—only
for this and nothing else. I would that this
one had been dead.”
Her breath came slower and more pantingly,
and her eyes stared more widely.
“I was but a child,” she
whispered—“a child—as—as
this will be—if she lives fifteen years.”
Despite her weakness, and it was great
and woefully increasing with each panting breath,
she slowly laboured to turn herself towards the pillow
on which her offspring lay, and, this done, she lay
staring at the child and gasping, her thin chest rising
and falling convulsively. Ah, how she panted,
and how she stared, the glaze of death stealing slowly
over her wide-opened eyes; and yet, dimming as they
were, they saw in the sleeping infant a strange and
troublous thing—though it was but a few
hours old ’twas not as red and crumple visaged
as new-born infants usually are, its little head was
covered with thick black silk, and its small features
were of singular definiteness. She dragged herself
nearer to gaze.
“She looks not like the others,”
she said. “They had no beauty—and
are safe. She—she will be like—Jeoffry—and
like me.”
The dying fire fell lower with a shuddering sound.
“If she is—beautiful,
and has but her father, and no mother!” she
whispered, the words dragged forth slowly, “only
evil can come to her. From her first hour—she
will know naught else, poor heart, poor heart!”
There was a rattling in her throat
as she breathed, but in her glazing eyes a gleam like
passion leaped, and gasping, she dragged nearer.
“’Tis not fair,”
she cried. “If I—if I could
lay my hand upon thy mouth—and stop thy
breathing—thou poor thing, ’twould
be fairer—but—I have no strength.”
She gathered all her dying will and
brought her hand up to the infant’s mouth.
A wild look was on her poor, small face, she panted
and fell forward on its breast, the rattle in her
throat growing louder. The child awakened, opening
great black eyes, and with her dying weakness its
new-born life struggled. Her cold hand lay upon
I its mouth, and her head upon its body, for she was
too far gone to move if she had willed to do so.
But the tiny creature’s strength was marvellous.
It gasped, it fought, its little limbs struggled
beneath her, it writhed until the cold hand fell away,
and then, its baby mouth set free, it fell a-shrieking.
Its cries were not like those of a new-born thing,
but fierce and shrill, and even held the sound of
infant passion. ’Twas not a thing to let
its life go easily, ’twas of those born to do
battle.
Its lusty screaming pierced her ear
perhaps—she drew a long, slow breath, and
then another, and another still—the last
one trembled and stopped short, and the last cinder
fell dead from the fire.
* * * *
When the nurse came bustling and fretting
back, the chamber was cold as the grave’s self—there
were only dead embers on the hearth, the new-born
child’s cries filled all the desolate air, and
my lady was lying stone dead, her poor head resting
on her offspring’s feet, the while her open
glazed eyes seemed to stare at it as if in asking Fate
some awful question.