Authors: Beryl Kingston
âWhat's per-sev-er-ence?' she said, returning to the paper.
âYou are,' he laughed. âIt means keeping on and on.'
Although he laughed at her, he was touched by her determination and proud of his unexpected skill as a teacher. He would look round at the other servants while she read aloud and feel smug when he saw how impressed they were, and after one amazing afternoon, when she stood in Mr Hayley's
empty library and read a whole page from the book left open on the table, he was so full of himself that he actually bragged about how clever he was being and was teased for days afterwards, every time he walked into the kitchen. But better by far was the effect all this learning had on their courtship.
She was so quick and so passionate, kissing him almost before they were out of sight of their neighbours, allowing him so many new liberties when they
were
on their own that he lived in a state of perpetual arousal. Strolling into the fields after church was now a regular occurrence, and one they both looked forward to with intensifying pleasure. Sometimes, when it wasn't too wet â and it often
was
wet that summer â they took a stroll during the week too, eastward along the beach towards Middleton and the sand dunes, or south through the water meadows that lay alongside the two mills, or west towards the great houses that Mr Hotham had built for his wealthy friends. And every walk took them further away from the village and nearer to the moment that Betsy was both breathlessly awaiting and, it had to be admitted, secretly dreading.
Their passion was now so strong they kissed until their lips were sore and, as he lifted his head so that they could catch their breath, he groaned that he was driven wild for love of her and begged her to let him go further. Which she did, further and further, and with increasing pleasure until it was an agony to him not to go on to the final longed-for moment
that he needed so much and urged so strongly.
As the summer bloomed towards harvest and the trees grew heavy-bosomed and the corn stood rustling and ready for reaping, it became more and more difficult to deny him anything, when his face was so pale with passion and his cock so hard she could feel it through both sets of clothes.
âLet me,' he begged, running his hands up her legs, his fingers moving closer and closer to the place where she ached so enticingly, and her heart shook and thundered, and her eyelids closed of their own accord, heavy with the weariness of long-deferred desire. Oh, how easy it would be to give in. âLet me, Betsy, my dearest darling. Please, please let me. I die for the love of you.'
But what he was asking was wrong. The Reverend Church was always saying so, calling it âfornication' and âthe sins of the flesh' and warning of dire consequences. And hadn't Sarah Perkins been forced to marry in a hurry only last year with the baby born a mere six months after the wedding? â although 'twas a pretty baby and christened in the usual way so no harm seemed to have come of it. But she'd been talking to her friend Molly about it, for Molly had been back home for a day or two while Miss Poole was away in London, and Molly said the thing was a risk, on account of â'twas painful the first time and like to be painful for a considerable time after'. She couldn't say why that should be but she was sure 'twas true, having been told about it by no less a person than Sarah Perkins
herself. It was all very worrying. And now Molly was back in Lavant again and there was no one to ask. Was it any wonder she spent so much time learning to read? But she was avoiding temptation and putting off the decision, that was all, and she knew it.
Eventually, one damp night in August, when their hair was spiked and their clothes spotted with the most aggravating rain, his frustration erupted into an outburst of bad temper. âYou're just hardhearted,' he said. âTha's how it is. You don't love me.'
âI do,' she protested. Hadn't she told him so, over and over?
âYou don't,' he said, his handsome face sullen. âOh, I knows you say so, but you don't, or you wouldn't keep on a-sayin' no. You knows what it means to me.'
âHave some sense, Johnnie do,' she said. âWe can't. 'Twouldn't be right. You know it wouldn't.'
âWhy not?' he demanded angrily. â'Twould be right if we was married.'
It was a weary argument. They'd been over it time and time again that summer. âBut we're not,' she said doggedly, âare we?'
He scowled. âThen let's get married.' It was hardly the most gracious of proposals but he supposed he meant it.
But marriage held no charms for Betsy Haynes. Being married meant living in a tied cottage, which would probably be damp and dirty, with only
cabbage and bacon to eat, and a baby every year. âAn' what would we live on?' she said. âTell me that. I'd have to leave the house. You
knows
that. He don't have room for married servants. An' what then? How would we manage?'
He was surly with anger. âOther people manage.'
âWe're not other people.'
âNo, we're not,' he said, turning away from her. âI'm off to The Fox.' And he strode away from her, walking quickly so as not to feel too guilty at leaving her. Well, what did she expect? He was only flesh and blood. 'Tweren't fair to go on a-teasin' him the way she did.
âOh, tha's lovely!' she said sarcastically, piqued at being left. âWhat am I supposed to do?'
âDo what you like,' he called back to her. âI'm off to see my mates, what've got a deal more sense than you!'
Unfortunately his drinking companions were in a mood for teasing that evening and his sudden dishevelled appearance presented them with an easy target. They started on him at once, as he stood on the threshold shaking the raindrops from his shirtsleeves.
âAn' where've you been my sonny?' Reuben asked. âWe been lookin' out for you all evenin'.'
âYou knows where I been,' he said, still surly with frustration. âI been teachin' Betsy to read. Same as I've been every night for weeks.'
He knew he'd made a mistake as soon as the
words were out of his mouth. Sceptical eyebrows were raised dramatically on every side, the leers were scurrilous, and Reuben's goblin face gleamed through the smoke of his pipe wicked with intended mischief. âYou been a-doin' what?' he asked, as if he couldn't believe his ears.
Johnnie blushed and stammered. âTeachin' Betsy to read.'
There was a chorus of mocking disbelief. âOut in the rain?' they cried. âOh ho! Pull the other one, Johnnie!'
âSo tha's what they calls it nowadays!' Reuben teased. âOi hopes she's a good learner.'
âYou wanna watch out with some a' that ol' learnin',' the ostler warned, grinning at him, âor you'll end up stood at the altar rail with a gun to your head. Tha's the punishment for lechery, as I knows to my cost.'
Johnnie struggled to think of something he could say to deflect them. âThat aren't the way of it at all,' he said. âI'm helpin' her to learn, tha's all. I don't get no time for nothin' else.' And was greeted with hoots of disbelieving laughter.
He was very upset. It was unfair to tease him for lechery. He weren't no Jack the Lad, never had been, never would be. â'Tis all very well you shoutin' and laughin,' he growled. That just showed how coarse and silly they were. âYou don't know nothin' about it.'
That made things worse. âYou gonna tell us then, boy?' they yelled.
Reuben called for quiet. âHush up, you lot. Johnnie's gonna tell us what he been up to with that girl of his.'
âNo, I'm not,' Johnnie yelled above the din. âI'm not. On account of there aren't nothin' to tell.' But that just set them off into paroxysms of delighted hooting.
âOh ho!' they yelled. âAre you tellin' me you ent been doin' nothin'? Oh my eye!' âTha's rich, that is.' âIf that's what you been a-doin' Johnnie, Oi'd like to be a fly on the wall ter see you a-doin' of it.'
Johnnie's face flamed with embarrassment. Having spent the entire evening holding his passion in check he felt belittled by such unfairness. 'Twas wrong of 'em to mock him so. What he felt for Betsy wasn't lechery, never had been. Even the thought of it made him shudder. Lechery was a low, coarse, farmyard sort of activity. What he felt for Betsy was different altogether. He wanted to tell them how crude they were being but he couldn't find the words or the way. He wanted to yell at them to stop but they'd jeer even louder if he did that. He wanted to run away but his feet seemed stuck to the sawdust. He had never been in such a state of paralysed emotion. Fortunately, as he stood shaking and shamed and totally at their mercy, he was rescued by two new arrivals, Mr Cosens, the miller, and his friend and servant Mr Haynes who, being Betsy's father, had to be treated with some caution. Not that caution was needed that evening for they roared into the bar with the force of a gale,
thick-set, broad-shouldered and so full of the latest news that they brushed all teasing aside, like the irrelevance it was.
âEvenin' my sonny,' the miller said, as Johnnie stood aside to make way for him. âPint a' porter, Mr Grinder, if you please.' He looked round cheerfully at his neighbours, rubbing his broad hands together to warm them. âHeard the news then, have 'ee?'
They confessed ignorance, all heads turning his way.
âThey're a-buzzing with it over Chichester way,' the miller said with great satisfaction. âSeems ol' Bonaparte's got his invasion fleet all set an' ready for us this time. Sixty thousand men, so they say. They reckon he means to sail this summer. They're building look-out towers up Seaford way.'
Alarm flashed from eye to eye, beer was gulped for comfort, there was a sudden increase in the volume of tobacco smoke, but for a second nobody said anything. Then Reuben launched into bravado and rescued them.
â'E won't get near us,' he said stoutly. âNot with Admiral Lord Nelson to pertect us. 'Tis all talk, same as we had last summer an' the summer afore that. Anyway, they're s'pposed to be makin' some sort a' treaty to keep 'em out, aren't that right Johnnie.'
It was a great relief to Johnnie to be able to turn to the consideration of something else, even if it was invasion. âTha's what they says in
The Times
,' he confirmed.
â
Times
or not they're a-building towers,' the miller said, âan' there's an army barracks going up in Chichester and soldiers every which way you look. Which I never seen afore. You mark my words they're a-comin' this time. There wouldn't be all this carry-on if there weren't something afoot.'
âWell let 'em come, sez Oi,' Reuben declared, puffing out his chest. âWe're more'n a match for a pack of ol' Frenchies. They won't get off the beach, will they boys?'
With one exception, his neighbours took their cue and were instantly full of fighting talk. âTha's right. They won't get past us, be they never so Frenchified. They needn't think it.' âWe'll see 'em off, right enough.' â'Tis a well-known fact one Englishman can see off ten Frenchies. Well-known fact.' âWe won't let 'em land, shall us boys, no we won't, an' there's an end on it.' âOi tell 'ee, Oi'll get my pitchfork out, tha's what Oi'll do, an' you won't see them yeller Frenchies fer dust.'
The exception was Johnnie Boniface. Being teased had sharpened his perceptions and now he stood in the shadows and listened with appalled understanding, annoyed by their stupidity yet aware that they were bragging to hide their fear. If the French landed it would take more than a dozen men with pitchforks to hold off an army of thousands and they must know it, no matter what nonsense they were talking.
After a few minutes, the boasting rose to such a beer-soaked crescendo of shouts and cheers that he
couldn't endure it any longer. When nobody was looking, he slipped out of the door, thrust his hands into the pockets of his breeches for warmth and walked away â not back to Turret House, for Betsy was there and he couldn't face her just yet, but south along the narrow earth track to the sea.
There was a full moon that night and although it was intermittently hidden by rain clouds, there was enough light to find the way, and the occasional flurry of rain was cooling to his hot head. He passed Mr Blake's cottage with its yellow candlelight glimmering in the little western window, strode through the cornfield, where the wet corn whispered, and finally crunched onto the beach and stood on the damp shingle in the damp air to gaze out at the impenetrable blackness of the sea. There was a strong tide running and huge waves were rolling powerfully in to shore, one close behind the other, round-bellied as barrels, their crests white-tipped in the moonlight. They roared onto the sand, pushing in so fast that the second wave crashed into the first before it could retreat and they broke together in a swirling complication of froth, flying spume and small sharp leaping waves, that dashed madly against each other like fighting cocks, tattered, fell to pieces, and leapt up to fight again. There could be enemy ships out there in the darkness at this very moment, Johnnie thought. We'd never hear them with all this racket. He could imagine the weight of them, their prows carving the black water, could see the soldiers leaping into the
shallows, wading ashore, muskets primed, swords sharpened, roaring drunk and fierce and implacable. If they come they could kill us all, every last one of us â me, Betsy, all those poor fools in The Fox â and we couldn't stop 'em. Oh, my darlin' Betsy, he thought, I couldn't abide for you to be caught by the Frenchies.
Someone was crunching across the pebbles to join him and, looking over his shoulder, he saw that the newcomer was his uncle Jem and knew that he'd be glad of his company. A sensible man Jem Boniface and one with a healthy respect for the sea, having been a fisherman for most of his adult life.