Captivity. Deborah Noyes

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Captivity - Deborah  Noyes

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she isn’t trying, she’ll glimpse some thing unaccountable to others. It’s a kind of beckoning, isn’t it? The same you feel when you’re walking home across the fields after dark and pass a lighted window. No one prompts you to look in, and you know it isn’t right to peer into the glow of another family’s privacy, isn’t respectable, but the busyness inside, the very square of light against the cricket-roaring black, invites you.

      A shimmering rip in the air or a simple certainly; if it isn’t exactly possible, then it’s easy enough to conjure—like the crowd of spirits back in the field in Hydesville—with feverish intensity. And what’s the difference, after all, between real and unreal when people react precisely the same way to either? Doesn’t the Bible say somewhere, Ask and you’ll receive? Well, Maggie’s asking, and since this spirit game started, no one’s told her no. Her whole life before the peddler was one agonizing no.

       11 No Wish to Be Right

      Clara isn’t surprised when the girl bursts in again without warning. The other one was just as brash till Clara grabbed her wrist one morning and warned in a tone of seething civility, “You will not enter this room again without knocking. Do you understand?” Clara never bit or scratched the hand, as rumors had it, but she might have done, and that was enough. Lizzie—the other one—has been timid and quiet ever since, though it taxes her nature, clearly.

      Father insists these girls be treated with respect. “These aren’t ordinary servants, Clara, but the beleaguered daughters of friends in our circle.” By our circle, he meant his, of course. “They’ve been under tremendous pressure and require our support and tolerance.”

      “And for this we pay them?” she asked.

      Clara does her best, but she can little tolerate—much less support—some bright young body flitting about her room every day, her room, like a trapped hummingbird reeking of nectar.

      But this Maggie Fox does seem a rare species.

      Clara sits unnaturally still in her corner chair, squinting over a book, and it takes the girl a moment to ferret her out. She throws open the curtains again, all insolence, and the room blooms with dusty light. “You’ll ruin your eyes.”

      Clara feels her own wrath, even if the child doesn’t. “I may have mentioned that my mother died when I was born….”

      Maggie Fox looks up woefully under dark brows as if to say, “No, you didn’t.”

      “I got on rather well without her.”

      “I doubt that—”

      “I’m saying, of course, that if I wished the drapes to be open, I would open them. I thank you, but I’m not an invalid. Not yet.”

      “You’re welcome,” Maggie Fox says gamely, and it’s only for her father’s sake that Clara protests no further. She’s spent her lifetime reining herself in, not for society’s sake but for her own; she has a knack and a preference for revealing next to nothing about herself.

      But this girl can communicate with the dead, people say, with those dead and gone and gravely silent. And now this same witless creature is trailing plump fingers over the line of seashells formerly concealed on Clara’s windowsill. “They’re pretty,” she croons. “Did you collect them?”

      “Pretty”—Clara crosses her hands stiffly over her lap—“is a cheap word. Worthless. I’d advise you to relegate it to the cupboard with your dolls. Together with nice and good. People will expect more of you from now on.”

      But words don’t sting this one as they did the other. Maggie Fox stares back at her—curious, expectant—and then lifts a shell and peers into it as if it were not dry and barren, as if there might be life there yet.

      “I collected them years ago.” Clara’s not sure why her voice, persistent as grief, issues like a stranger’s from her hoarse throat. Casting back hurts, as green leaves hurt in springtime because they are too loud and bright. It was her nature, as in Mudeford with Will, to pluck up the downed feather, slip the smooth pebble in her cuff, a habit that bound her to him in memory, but she came to scorn the impulse to collect. It became tiresome as fashions do: fern cases and seaweed albums; parties of earnest ladies armed at the seaside with jam jars, prying up anemones from rock pools. “But I’m glad to have them now.” Glad because the door is too far away for me to reach. My arm is a weight. My fist is clenched. Because there you see every trace of him, all that’s left.

      “Because they remind you of England?”

      Clara fixes Maggie Fox in her hard gaze. “I need little to remind me of England.” She taps her forehead. “I’ve hardly left it.”

      Did that sound pitiful? Despondent? She draws back. She will not give herself away if it can be helped—especially with the Widow Bray on the premises, as she lately is on Mondays, helping Father with his books—and it can always be helped.

      “Well,” the swaying other says, concealing something behind her back, “this isn’t from England. I found it lately on a walk. I thought of you when I unpacked it this morning. Close your eyes.”

      Why are her lids closing? Perhaps she’s sleepwalking again, as she did as a child. The girl lifts Clara’s two hands, her two cold hands, and it seems they will crumble and collapse to dust, for she is rarely touched. No servant cinches her into a corset or brushes her hair with the rough strokes of girlhood. Clara wears antique dresses from her mother’s trunk, the empire cut that doesn’t beg support—for why bind herself to sit alone? She brushes her own hair now. It helps the time pass.

      “Now, don’t look,” the girl cautions, and how to bear it, both the waiting and the willingness to wait? Clara trembles, cannot but tremble as the plump hands set into her bony ones a perfect brittle oriole’s nest, delicately knit, smelling of the three seasons it has accumulated like shiny coins. Though she’s been peeking through slits anyway, Clara opens her eyes.

      “I thought of you.” The girl motions toward drawings marking every free space on the walls, table, shelves.

       Is Maggie Fox so guileless as that?

      “I like it because there’s a girl’s hair ribbon stitched in.”

       Whatever can she want?

      “See there, a bit of red? It’s faded now, but you can still make it out. It might be mine. I rather think it is mine—”

      Clara winces back tears. No. She won’t weep, not this far from caring. There’s no route out, no safe passage. She manages to mutter a thank-you and sets the nest on her little table heaped with books and sketches. It instantly belongs there as if it never was anywhere else, never nestled eggs at its soft heart or rocked in a cruel wind. Perfectly formed and petrified. This room does that.

      Clara nods dumbly, remembering Will’s tale of his mentor, the limber old gypsy, “seller of nesties” at Smithfield. She hears for an instant, and with a clarity she had thought gone, Will’s teasing voice.

      “You’re welcome.” Maggie Fox has the sense to leave then, but the door doesn’t click shut just yet. She opens it a crack and lays her words in cautiously, as Will once hurled meat to the lions in the Tower. “They all say you’re mad, you know.”

      Of

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