Read Snake Ropes Online

Authors: Jess Richards

Tags: #General Fiction

Snake Ropes (27 page)

But it weren’t him what had to wash the blood off her. It weren’t him what had to tell her over and over, it were safe to go to sleep. It weren’t him, it won’t ever be him, what has to make her forget it
.

But a trade is a trade. Him dun know anything else, and perhaps I dun either
.

I don’t want to read this, but still my hands turn the pages.

Him has kept to the trade, came in the boats with the others, but him stayed away from our home
.

Valmarie has given me the forgetting herb. It works. Thankful it works, I am, for Mary were in a terrible way. But she is forgetting
.

I told Valmarie the tincture were for me, something terrible had happened I needed to forget. She could see how pale I were, and I couldn’t hardly speak, though she said she’d keep silent. I were shaking myself. Dun want anyone to know. Dun want him to come back for Mary or for me, not ever again
.

My eyes feel stained, clouded. This crime was never punished. It was buried. I shouldn’t know this. Just one more page and I’ll put this book down. One page. Then I’ll stop.

I choose the final page:

K and V have talked Annie round – she were always too easy swayed. She’s got too many folks giving her thoughts she talks up into storms. I could change A’s mind as quick as stick a pin in a cushion if I wanted to
.

She’s been swayed to thinking that us weaving the snake ropes is wrong
.

If it were that bad to be sending the snake ropes off to the main land, for sure the Thrashing House would have called all of us women. The north shore is full of the Glimmeras’ hair, more and more comes, it creeps towards us, for it is full of thems poisons. But we cut it away, and contain it in the snake ropes. What the main land folks do with crates of snake ropes, well, that’s thems choice
.

I’ll put my own hands on a snake rope. Be the first to touch them bare – women have always been gloved. But not all the things we believe are as true as our mothers and grandmothers might have taught us. I’ll prove it to them. I’ll take my gloves off. Wrap a snake rope round myself, on my bare skin, my ankles, my wrists – prove to them the effects aren’t as bad as them’re making out. We’re not spreading poison by weaving the snake ropes and sending them away, we’re containing it
.

The last entry in a dead woman’s diary, where she had something to prove that I don’t understand.

This book isn’t a story. It doesn’t have a beginning or an ending. It’s not teaching me anything or making me feel I could become someone else. I can’t think about what Beatrice has written in here. But I do have to think about this feeling, curled deep in my gut, that this book wanted to be found. That it needs to be read. I feel sick, knowing that a book can be a place for such painful secrets to be written onto pages, so Beatrice’s mind could be unburdened, and this crime concealed. Closed away inside a cover, placed in a hidden place, forgotten.

I hear a sigh. Beatrice’s faint breath mists up a windowpane. Her translucent finger writes in the condensation:

TELL HER

I say, ‘I can’t tell Mary anything. They’re
your
words … I shouldn’t have read them.’ But there’s an ache in my chest. When Beatrice was alive, she chose silence over justice. A choice I’ve never had to make. I couldn’t have played my game of three choices for this.

I lay the diary on Mary’s pillow and whisper, ‘Beatrice, I’ll
look for her. Somehow, I’ll find her and bring her home. But your diary …’

Breathing another fog on a windowpane, I write:

IT’S MARY’S CHOICE

A cold wind blows around the room, and stills. For the first time since I’ve been in it, this cottage feels empty.

Beatrice has gone.

Just a feeling, but there is something certain. It feels solid and sure, right in the centre of me, that in this empty fireplace soon there will be a burning cracking fire and two pairs of hands, mine and Mary’s, to warm at it. She’ll teach me embroidery, I’ll bake potatoes and thick stews and honey puddings. We’ll never go hungry. We’ll know each other well. Not family, not tied together. Not trapped.

Choosing this. A choice for both of us, and it’s the only one I want.

A woman’s shrill wail from outside. I open the curtain and a draught creeps in through the window frame. On the beach, Annie’s three dogs bolt past, turn, sniff the air and tear towards the path that leads up to the cliffs. They’ve caught a scent. There is a crowd of women, one carrying a wide-brimmed hat, following the dogs, slipping, sliding after them through thickening snow.

Chasing towards something …

Annie’s wail grows louder, a grief inside it like the sound of high winds. Large flat flakes of snow spiral from the grey and
pink sky. I bundle myself into a coat, hide my hair with a scarf and follow the women.

The women’s footprints lead around the side of the Thrashing House. It stands tall above me, half-white and half-dark. The snow flurries horizontally.

I stop at the door. The key will still be there in the lock, on the inside. It should be out here, so it can be used.

The wood of the door creaks. A sound in the lock.

Clickclickclack of the key.

I turn the handle and push the door open.

A creak, a crack from the shadows.

The ghost of a man steps from behind the door with the key in his hand. He’s wearing a woollen jumper and a thick pair of trousers.

He says, ‘Tried to get you to see me. But them were louder. Them’d waited far longer.’

‘They were old ghosts. The people they wanted me to give their messages to wouldn’t even be alive any more.’

He nods. ‘Long gone.’

‘But you’re from now.’

He holds out his hand. The Thrashing House key lies across his palm. ‘Dun give this to Mary. Too much for her. Give it to someone older. But you tell Mary, her Mam did her best. Might be right. Might be wrong. But she tried. Me, I were all kinds of useless.’

I take the key. ‘How were you useless?’

‘Talk of trading boys made me think to tell the tall man Barney were hims son. Him’d never known. Thought Mary’d remember what him done to her, if she still had Barney. Dun
think that would’ve been good for her. But I dun know. Takes a Mam to know these things.’ He stares down at his feet. He’s wearing only one boot. ‘See – useless.’

‘You’re Mary’s father.’

He nods, his eyes are tired. He glances up at me and back at his feet. ‘Relics.’ He lifts up his bare foot and puts it back down. ‘You tell Mary, I’m sorry about Barney. Thought it were right. Thought she’d be best without him. Over time.’

I say, ‘I’ll tell her.’

He nods again. Glances up at me as he pushes the door shut.

I lock the door and put the key in my pocket.

I watch from a hill as the women and Annie’s dogs flounder around the graveyard. The gravestones are coated in snow. The bushes are dark and twisted, like black-inked lung diagrams, the coiled branches and sharp twigs thicken up from the ground and disappear under piles of heavy snow.

It’s silent.

The dogs have no direction, they scamper, shake snow from their coats. One woman catches a dog, holds its nose to the wide-brimmed black hat. She whistles and it cuts though the air. The other dogs collide with her, and they relearn the scent.

The dogs sprint towards a dip in the hill under the Thrashing House where a small house is covered in snow. A woman was crying. But I can’t remember her face … fog … the waves on the beach …

Barks crack through the silence. The dogs are at the house. Other women from all over the island are closing in. I move closer and watch from behind a small tree, push a branch out
of the way and snow drops wet on the shawl that covers my hair. A woman reaches the house and peers through the window. She lets out three shrill whistles. The dogs howl, bark, scratch at the door. Five women reach them, one of them opens the door and the dogs charge in, the women behind them.

They drag out the shadow man.

He doesn’t respond to the women’s pushes or shouts. The women form a circle around him and release his arms. He stands up, towers above them. He doesn’t move. A woman reaches in her pocket and pulls on a pair of white gloves, several of the others do the same. One woman carries a large round basket, she walks around the circle. The gloved women reach in, draw out a length of thick rope, and another and another. They wind the ropes around the man. The other women stand back, watching.

He gazes at the sky. The women tie his arms to his sides, bind his legs together. Still, he stares up at the sky. They wrap him in thick ropes from his neck to his ankles. One of the women, wearing a black shawl, stands in front of him, leaning on her walking stick.

A shrill whistle, she pushes him backwards with her gloved hands. He falls, slowly. Three gloved women break his fall. Four others move in and pick up his legs. He is laid flat on their hands. The woman in the black shawl leads the way. Seven women carry him, three at each side and one at his head. The others follow behind in single file. They march away through the snow. A silent funeral procession with a living body, and no flowers.

A low groan, deep underground. The procession of women moves along the centre of the island, over a small hill. One woman splits off in another direction, taking the dogs away.

The procession is going to pass my parents’ house.

I wonder what Dad would say if they asked him to bury a living body. Or what he’d say about this snow, still falling so thickly. A silence of snowflakes. I draw the coat tightly around me and follow the procession.

Thieves. I can’t live with them again. Their stolen food would taste like dust and decay. The clothes I’ve left there would feel like shrouds on my skin, and the sound of Mum hammering would be the sound of bones knocking under coffin lids.

But the pink fence is covered in blue-white snow, the sky above it glows pale pink and floats in the windows. A whole landscape of pastel colours. A picture of some sugar-coated home in a winter bedtime story: a house that tastes of sugared almonds and marzipan. But anything in a storybook that is as sugar-sweet as this always gets destroyed.

If this were a picture in a story, it would be an image of a home that waits for change. Waits for a wolf to come calling, asking for a new red coat, or for bears to break in and eat all the oats, for a baby with a squirrel’s face to throw a hazelnut at a crack in the wall. The whole sugar house would collapse, dissolve itself. The sweetest story would change into a darker tale, where there’s no sugar left anywhere in the whole world and real bears roam, armed with teeth, claws and killer instincts. Where the dead lie voiceless in their graves and criminals are never caught.

A story that lasts longer than bedtime. Longer than the final page. Longer than a kiss. Longer than a lifetime. As long as ever after. And right now, that seems like the worst thing that could happen.

The gate in the pink fence is off-centre; it’s been broken.

Inside that sugared house is the only family I’ll ever have. They’ll want the gate mended, locked up. I want to shut them away safely behind it.

My heart clenches in my chest and I think of my mother and how she looks like a child when she eats the food I cook for her, and how my father has given me a respect for all living things. And the twins, secretly plotting their escape.

My parents made sure I had so many books, and taught me to read and write. I think of all the games of three choices I’ve played, when I thought I had none. My parents had choices as well. They chose to bring me here with them. Other children are left behind in the world, when their parents run away from something. From wars, from tragedy, from shame, pain, loss, from losing control or will or hope. Or called towards something else – a bottle, a missed opportunity, death, a second family, a hospital bed, a new lover … So many choices. Many people have children, but they can’t always keep them.

But mine kept me. Nothing bad has ever happened to me. I think of Mary having had no choice at all.

The procession of women trudges away over the hill through the snow in another direction, away from my parents’ home.

My parents wouldn’t know what to do if danger came and hammered on their door, demanding a cup of tea. But perhaps it’s time it did. Maybe sugar only tastes sweet when it’s been stirred.

I keep out of view of their house, and follow the women.

Mary

Darkness behind my eyelids. ‘What happened to me?’

Shadow Mary’s voice inside my head,
You have forgotten. Forgotten everything
. Over and over, her voice cuts my belly like metal.

The tall man walks towards me in bed.

I call out for Mam but hims pale hand closes my mouth.

I wake under thick blankets. A fire. A box of matches on the hearth. A basket of peat. A room I dun know. Silence. My hands fidget, wool scratches my fingers. Samplers in frames on the walls, a cross-stitch of a woman’s face. A crimson rug on the floor. The fire burns bright, only I can’t feel the warm. Through the window, the sky’s thick with grey clouds.

A doorway with a heavy black curtain pulled across it, a woman’s voice humming behind, low, quiet.

Kelmar’s voice, louder. ‘Dinnertime, keep them teeth sharp.’

I’m inside Kelmar’s cottage.

Bright colours light up everywhere; the floorboards gleam
brown and ochre, the crimson rug has flecks of red, orange, deep blue.

Sound. Claws scrape. Something thumps in my head, a pulse. The sound of crunching. My jaw too tight. A bump, a low growl. I lean forwards; my spine aches.

A bark. ‘Hoy. Settle.’ Kelmar’s voice. Her boots thack thuck across the floor.

My heart thack thuck in my chest. I move my arms, shift my hips forwards in the chair and sharp pins prickle down my legs. My voice cracks out of me, ‘Is Annie here?’

Kelmar calls out, ‘No. Just her dogs.’

She comes through with two green cups, puts one in my hands. The warm tea smells of honey and cinnamon. The chair opposite me creaks as she sits down.

‘How’re you feeling?’ She sips from her cup like it’s easy.

‘Sore.’

‘You’re in shock. You understand that?’

Not far away from this cottage, clifftops. Just a walk. Just one step, and another, and another. I will see the Pegs, watch how strong and brave them are to stand so solid while fierce waves wash all around them.

Kelmar’s voice, ‘Mary, come back.’

Is everything old, like the Pegs? The Pegs hold on tight, dun let nothing wash them away. I’ve always wanted to see Sishee’s dress under the waves. Sishee’s drowned dress. Inside the teacup, in the tea, the sea swirls around the bottom of the clifftops. Such a long way down.

‘Mary?’ says Kelmar’s voice from somewhere.

I’m swimming in the sea in the cup because I’m not yet drowned.

‘Wake up.’

I surface.

Kelmar leans forwards, ‘Do you want to talk, or do you just want quiet?’ She seems huge.

I stare into the tea. The rememberings are floating in the cup. Pictures. Watching something from a long time ago …

Mam stood in my bedroom holding the baby wrapped in a blanket.

Hims fingers twitching.

Mam said, ‘A baby needs a name, and with a name, him will know who him is.’

My voice, ‘Call him Barney for me.’

She took him to the door, said, ‘All right. Mary, this is my son, your brother, Barney. You get up out of bed soon. Folk’re talking.’

She walked away with my brother, Barney.

My breasts bound beneath a heavy bed dress. Mam’d bound them the day after him were born, showed me how. It were to stop the milk. That were the first time. Three years ago and now there’s no milk, but I still bind them flat.

Mam pretended the baby were hers. A woman in to wet-nurse him, who’d lost a baby of her own. Blank over her face. Mam must’ve got up to him in the night, changed hims nappy, weaned him quick off the wet nurse’s milk and onto warmed cow milk. I held him close when she weren’t watching. Whenever she caught me with him she never said a word, but she looked so sad when she took him from me.

It always were my arms him wanted.

I always wanted him in my arms.

And then,

‘She died,’ I whisper.

Kelmar says, ‘I’m so sorry Mary.’

I lift my cup to my mouth. Eyes float in the tea. Kelmar’s blue eyes from the blank dark. The blank dark is the part of
me what kept all the things I forgot inside of it. I drop the cup. The eyes spill all over the floorboards. Them close and are gone.

The space between me and Kelmar is dark and warm. I breathe hard. I lean away from her, and the space grows bigger. She moves back to her chair. I wipe my nose on my sleeve.

I’ve got ghosts in my eyes she can see.

‘Where’s Valmarie?’ I ask.

‘Gone.’

‘For good?’

Kelmar frowns down at her hands. ‘She won’t be back.’

‘What happened?’

‘Found what she’d been looking for. No need to stay in a place if you’re not tied to it.’

‘Did you tell her about me and Barney?’

‘No.’ Her face is open and clear.

‘But you pair were close.’

‘It weren’t anything I wanted to speak of.’

My throat cracks out, ‘Dun believe you’re the only one what knows. You must have told even just one person, got it off your chest.’ I stare at her large breasts and up at her face, quick.

She dun notice. ‘A midwife knows what’s going on. If I were to speak to just one person, I’d lose trust. Not just trust from people, neither. Me, the birthing woman, and life and death stood watching from the corners. Always four of us there, keeping hope high, all possibilities considered. All waiting to see what the next contraction brings. These things are not for the chattering of. Trust’s too easy broke.’

‘So you never told anyone?’

‘Your Mam wouldn’t let me near you after. Not even to check
you were healing right.’ Kelmar looks at the fire, she’s still talking, telling me she came round for days, then each week, then a month later, but Mam never let her in. She tells me she saw me out and about but always with other folks there, or I’d walk away, sometimes look right through her. She tells me she thought about talking to me, but then she thought I were coping the best way I could.

‘Dun understand forgetting.’

‘You were too young. Sometimes folk
can
remember the hard stuff, other times them have to blank it out.’

‘I kept drinking a tincture. The whole year is blank.’

‘The forgetting herb. But your Mam … there’s coldness in that.’ Her teeth bite her plump bottom lip.

‘So, is that why you and Valmarie killed her, for the sake of coldness, for what she did or dun do right?’ In the grate the flames dance.

‘We?’ Her face is flushed. ‘Oh no, you dun think that.
We
never killed her.’ She spills a splosh of tea on the rug and stands up. ‘I’ll get a rag.’

‘Are you telling me it were Annie? She can’t have. She loved Mam and she’s been there for me all this time since Mam got deaded. Were it all three of you?’

She goes out through the curtain. One of Annie’s dogs comes in, sits next to me, whimpers as Kelmar comes back in, kneels down and mops the rug. She says, ‘I can see how you’d think that, but it weren’t like that.’

‘What
were
it like?’

She sits back on her haunches and tells me it’s too much for me to talk of Mam, and I tell her I’d best get back home then, so I can ask Annie. The dog stalks off, slumps on the rug by the fire and sighs.

‘Mary, it’s too much shock, you’re to rest.’

‘Since when did you care so much for me?’

‘Since you were a terrified girl too young to give birth.’

I double over, my chest aches like she’s kicked it.

She says, firm, ‘Mary, there’s something you need to decide.’

‘Dun want this.’ I cover my eyes with my fingers.

Kelmar pulls my hands down, gentle, and says, ‘I need to know if you’ll let me speak out about Barney, about what that tall man did to you.’

‘I dun want—’

‘Him is held at the Weaving Rooms.’

I sag back in the chair. ‘Him is caught,’ I whisper, ‘so I dun need to think—’

‘You
do
need to think.’ She grips my hands. ‘And I’ve needed to think an’ all. The Thrashing House must’ve let him go because there’s a truth needs to come out, outside of its closed door. We need to deliver the justice.’

My heart thuds in my throat.

She says, ‘You’ve no Mam in the Weaving Rooms, so I want to speak for you. I need to know what you’ll let me say.’

My hands shake.

She squeezes them. ‘Tonight, the women meet to decide what’s to be done with him.’

I ask how them caught him, and Kelmar tells me Annie’s dogs tracked him. She says the women need hims name to call him out from the silence him is surrounding himself in, that him won’t speak any words at all.

‘So Annie and her dogs found him?’

‘Not Annie.’ Kelmar stands and goes to the window. Folds her arms and looks out. I get up slow, walk over and stand next to her.

Outside the light in the sky is bright, with grey, green, blue
and pink colours spun through the clouds. The sky seems darker than the land, though it’s daylight – for all across the hills, the fields, rocks and bushes are covered in snow.

I say, ‘Warm snow … a storm from the Glimmeras.’

‘Aye. A storm from the north,’ says Kelmar. ‘The moment you fell asleep, it started to snow. While you were sleeping, the snow came in flurries and sweeps and covered everything up. Like you were meant to wake and see everything all new again.’

She puts her strong hand on my shoulder. ‘Now, what do you need to do, to help you decide?’

‘I want to go out in the snow.’

She smiles. ‘Then that’s what you’d best do.’

I wear Kelmar’s missing son Jake’s black coat. The snow glistens as I walk out of her cottage, like the island’s been stitched into a different picture. Kelmar’s cottage is covered in snow, with the chimney smoking. I thought I shouldn’t speak to her all this time, since Mam dun want her near.

That were another lie I told myself.

I stamp my feet. The snow flurries up in the air. I kick it and it scatters like flour. Kelmar wants me to think about Langward. I think about Morgan and wonder if she’s still in my cottage and if she can see Mam’s ghost. If she can ask Mam’s ghost if she really traded me. Or if Langward lied. I wrap my arms around myself. Because it matters.

Too much.

I kick up the snow some more. Can’t feel anything. I think about how Grandmam could tell me how warm the snow were, if she were here with me now. How if Mam were here too she’d
laugh, for she only ever half believed anything Grandmam said. The snow’s bundled all the noises away, tucked them up for warm sleep. Like Barney would be, if I had him here with me. I wipe my nose on the coat sleeve. I put my arms around myself. My heart burns warm. Not my brother. My son.

My son, Barney.

Barney
is
mine. Nothing can take that away. A half of him is mine, so I can make that half fill him up, warm him through, warm away anything what belongs to Langward. I can make Barney
all
mine far easier than him can. For him dun ever know Barney. I’ve always known him. Always loved him. And Barney has always loved me back. Langward can never ever have that.

Kelmar told me to think. So I have.

I flail my arms like I’m fighting whoever has Barney. I rage and punch at the sky, like these punches will pull down the clouds and get Barney back in my empty arms.

I stop.

What if it were Valmarie what has him. And she’s gone. How long ago? How long could him survive, hid away in her house when she’s left it? That animal what lived inside her black eyes. Animals want young. Animals breed. Her son Dylan were took. She loved him so fierce.

With the heart of a seal.

What if she took Barney for new young? A new seal cub from out of the sea she thought she could love … The snow is thick white dust. My feet go deep, sink and slide up to Kelmar’s front door. Inside, I pick up my bag.

Kelmar comes into the room.

I gasp, ‘When did Valmarie leave? How long ago?’

‘Not long, why?’

‘Where’s your storm room?’

‘Down there,’ she waves at a hatch in the floor. ‘But what—’

‘Give me a candle.’

‘Mary—’

‘If you want me to trust you, just—’

She gets a candle and lights it.

I surge across the room, open the trapdoor and climb halfway down the ladder. She passes me the candle and I climb down and put it on the floor.

‘Let me alone.’ I climb the ladder, close the trapdoor, bolt it, hear her call out, ‘Mary!’ I climb down again, squat on the floor, open my bag and get out the moppet.

‘Barney, are you still there?’

Listen close.

‘Barney?’

The sound of waves.

I look around the tiny storm room; shelves with candles, firelighters, pickled cabbage in jars. The sound of the sea surges in my ear. ‘Barney?’ Nothing but the sea. Wash in, wash out …

I say, ‘Mary?’ The sound of waves dies down. ‘Mary, is him there?’

‘Go. Away,’ she hisses.

‘Just tell me – has hims shadow gone?’

She says, ‘I’m too young to look after him.’

‘You dun have to. I’ll do it.’

‘You can’t have him for a son.’

‘Is him still in there?’

‘You have to look after me.’

‘I can take care of the both of you.’

‘Dun believe you. You pushed me into the blank dark, and then when you were hurting again, it were me you left in the graveyard, me you let him carve on. Him has cut me across where hims baby grew in me, and you won’t show anyone.’

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