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The Inheritance And Other Stories Part 14

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"I am. And so are you, if you would bother to find it in yourself. It's part of your inheritance, and if you are wise, it will be the first part you reclaim."

"My inheritance?" I asked quietly.

The little eyes narrowed. "What goes with the empty ring that you wear. That is your inheritance. As you have donned both it and me, I suggest that you reclaim all that went with it. All that your Grandmother Aubretia possessed before she chose to set us aside and live quietly."

It was growing darker. Strange as may be, the little carved face seemed like a companion in the night. I took up the pendant and held the carved face closer to my own so I could see her. "Tell me," I begged. "For all the years that I lived with my grandmother and cared for her, I know little of her past."

"Well." The small dark eyes, so like my own, cast about consideringly. "Where shall I begin? Tell me what you do know of her."



I cast my mind back. "She told me little. Mostly I have guessed. I think that when she was very small, her family was wealthy. She often warned me against trusting handsome young men. While I lived with her, she would not permit anyone to court me. So I think that-"

"You think that her heart was broken when she was young. And you are correct. Aubretia did grow up in a family that had substance if not real wealth. Her father died when she was young. The Lantis family had little wealth save their name, but her mother was wise and set aside an inheritance for her youngest daughter. It was her intention that her child need never marry for wealth, only for love. I told them I did not see why the two could not go hand in hand, but they both dismissed it as a jest. When your great-grandmother was on her deathbed, she pa.s.sed me to her daughter. And she left this world in peace, knowing she had pa.s.sed on both worldly wealth and a secret counselor to Aubretia."

I tugged my blanket closer around my shoulders and leaned back against the largest rock. It still held some small heat from the day. I drew my knees up and set the pendant atop them to listen to her tale. Night crept closer around us.

"For a time, she lived wisely and well. Then she met a young man, a lovely young man. He was new to Bingtown, come to the great trading city to make his fortune. Howarth was a younger son, with no fortune to his name but rich in ambition. Aubretia would have married him a day after she met him, but he would not take her so. *When I have made a fortune of my own, then I will claim you as a bride. I will not have folk say I wed you for your money.' And so Howarth courted her with bouquets of simple wayside flowers and sat in her house before her fire and told her daily of how hard he struggled to wrest out a living as a clerk in a mercantile. He often scoffed at the fellow who owned the store where he worked, for he said the man had no imagination in his dealings, and that he might easily be twice as successful if he had but a bit of daring and imagination. Howarth planned that as soon as he had money enough to finance it, he would go on a trading journey to far Jamaillia, and bring back fine goods such as all Bingtown would clamor to buy. On his dreams were your grandmother's dreams founded.

"But her dreams and his were a long time in coming true. Your grandmother's lover saved his coins, true, but Howarth no sooner had one to stack upon two than he had to spend it for new boots or a winter cloak. Your grandmother despaired that he would ever wed her. She begged him to marry her, saying she did not care if he was penniless, that with his job her inheritance would be sufficient for them both. But again he refused, saying he would not wed until he had built a fortune of his own."

The pendant fell silent for a time, the small face gone pensive. I waited.

The small face pursed her lips in disapproval. "Then Aubretia had an idea. I warned her against it. In vain, I tried to persuade her to let this young man go his own way, but she would not listen. She went to Howarth and offered him money. He could take her money off to Jamaillia to buy the trade goods that would make them both wealthy. Half of whatever profits they made would be his, and then they could be married. He quickly agreed. Far too quickly for my liking.

"Howarth took her money and sailed away. Months pa.s.sed, and Aubretia pined, but I was relieved, knowing that even though her money was gone, he was gone with it. She still had enough left to get on with, and now perhaps was wiser. But just when she began to put memories of him aside, he returned. He wore fine clothes and brought gifts with him, perfumes and silk, but little else. Most of the coin, he told her, had been spent to court trading partners in that distant city. All was in readiness, now, and as soon as he had worked hard and saved a bit of money, he could go south and make their fortune."

My heart sank in me. I thought of my gentle grandmother and the unspoken sorrows that had seemed to live behind her eyes. "She believed him?" I murmured.

"Of course. And she persuaded him to take more of her money and set out again immediately. Aubretia kept back only the tidy little house she lived in, some family jewels, and enough to support herself until he returned. When over a year pa.s.sed with no word from him, she admitted to me she had been a fool. More, she admitted it to her friends and they aided her, not only with money but with introductions to suitable young men. But she swore her love would not be easily won again. She lived quietly and simply and alone."

"Until she met my grandfather?" I guessed.

The charm scowled at me. "Your grandfather was a hardhanded, flinty-hearted man. He married your grandmother solely to have someone to tend to his squalling son and keep his house in order after his first wife died of his ill treatment. She married him solely to have a place to rest her head at night. But he does not come into this story. Not yet."

Ignoring my shocked silence, the pendant spoke on. "One cold wet evening, who should come and knock at her door but her wayward suitor. I thought surely Aubretia would drive him away, but she welcomed him in and unquestioningly embraced him. Howarth wept, telling her that all had gone awry for him, and that he had been too ashamed to come home and face her, but finally his heart could stand to be parted from her no longer. He had come back, to beg her forgiveness." The little face gave a disdainful snort. "And she believed him."

"But you did not?"

"I believed he had spent all her money, that it was not his heart that had brought him back, but his greed. She told him it mattered nothing to her, that all would be well if he would but marry her. Side by side they could toil and still make a good, if simple life for themselves. She still had her house and some family jewelry and somehow they would manage."

I closed my eyes, pitying my grandmother that she could love so much and so blindly.

"I warned her. Her friends warned her, too, saying that if she listened to that rogue again, they would disown her. But Aubretia cared nothing for anyone but him. And he, speaking so n.o.bly, said he would not let her family think her a fool. Howarth would not marry her while he was penniless. A fortune was still within his grasp. If only he had enough money, he could recoup his losses and go on."

"How could that be?" I demanded.

"An excellent question. One that your grandmother never asked, or at least not directly. He implied all sorts of things. That a bribe to a tariff official would free up a seized s.h.i.+pment, that it he were seen to be successful, others would lend him the money to complete some transaction. He spoke so skillfully and knowingly of how one must have money and spend money in order to make money."

A terrible sadness welled up in me. How often had I heard my mother lament our poor circ.u.mstances and wish for better days, only to have Grandmother say, "But it is hopeless, my dear. One must have money in order to make money."

"She went to her grave believing that was so."

The pendant was silent for a moment. Then she gave a tiny sigh. "I feared as much. For of course you have guessed the rest of the story. Aubretia sold all she had and gave him the money to redeem his fortune. When she dared to ask to go with him, he said that her pa.s.sage south would cost too much, and the hards.h.i.+ps would be too much for her to endure. That ring you wear once held an emerald, flawless and deep green. Even that he took. Howarth pried the stone out of the setting himself, saying he would sell the stone in Jamaillia only if he had to, but that he hoped to bring it back and restore it to her hand. He promised her that, no matter how he fared, he would come back within a year. She watched him sail from the Bingtown docks. Then she went to her oldest friend and confessed her situation. She threw herself on her mercy. Well, they had been friends since girlhood. Despite her threats, she took your grandmother in, and gave her a bed to sleep in and a place at the table. Aubretia was, after all, still a Lantis and a Trader. It was expected that she would find a way to make her way in the world, and eventually make a suitable match. There is a saying in Bingtown. *Money does not make a Trader, it is the Trader that makes the money.' Her friends hoped she had learned her lesson.

"Yet it was hard for them to be patient with her, for she did little except moon after her absent lover. A year went by and then another. All of us told her both man and fortune were gone, and she should make a fresh start for herself. Aubretia insisted she would wait, that Howarth would come back for her." The carved face pursed her lips in ancient disappointment. "She waited. And that was all she did."

"Did Howarth ever come back?" I asked in a whisper.

The pendant's small face twisted in disgust. "Oh, yes. He returned. Some three years later, he came back to Bingtown, but it was months before your grandmother knew of it. She recognized him one day as he strolled through the market with his fine foreign wife at his side. A servant walked behind them, carrying a parasol to shade them. A nurse carried their little son. And his pale, plump Jamaillian wife wore the Lantis emerald at her throat."

"What did she do?" I whispered.

The pendant's small voice grew heavy with an old weariness. I sensed it was a memory often pondered but still painfully fresh. "She stood and stared. She could not believe her eyes. And then a cry of purest disbelief broke out of her. At the sound, he turned. Howarth recognized her, and yet he turned aside from her. She shrieked his name, demanding to know why he had abandoned her. In the streets of Bingtown, before Traders and common merchants, she wailed like a madwoman and tore out her hair. She fell to her knees and begged him to come back to her, crying that she could not live without him. But Howarth only took his wife's arm and hurried her way, whispering something to her about *that poor mad woman.' " The pendant fell silent.

"Then what happened?" I demanded. My heart was beating strangely fast. "Did she go to him and confront him and his wife, denounce how he had taken her fortune, demand the return of her emerald?"

In a trembling whisper, the pendant confided, "No."

"Why?" Pain hushed my voice. I recalled my grandmother's resigned eyes and feared I already knew the answer.

"I do not know. I will never understand it. Her friends urged her to confront him, to bring a complaint against them. When she spoke with them, she was strong. But whenever she was alone and set pen to paper, she lost her resolve. Weeping, she would confess to me that she loved him still. She would spin tales that he had been drugged or was bewitched by the woman. Her hands would shake and she would wonder aloud what she herself lacked, what was wrong with her that the Jamaillian woman could steal Howarth from her. Never, ever did she see him for the scoundrel and the cheat that he was. I could not make her see that the man she loved had never existed, that she persisted in loving an idealized image of Howarth, that the real man was worthy only of her contempt. She would sit down, pen in hand, to denounce him. But always, her accusing letters somehow changed into pleas to him to come back to her. The worst was the night that she went by darkness to his door. She sought entry there, like a beggar, pleading with a servant to let her in so she might speak privately with the master of the house. The servant turned her aside with disdain, and she, Aubretia Lantis of the Bingtown Traders, crept away weeping and shamed. I think that night broke her. The next evening she packed the few possessions that remained her own, and we left Bingtown, walking away in the dimness while her friends were at dinner. She did not even bid them good-bye. She felt she had lost all standing with them and could never be seen as anything but a fool."

I felt ill, dizzied with the dirty little story. It twisted my memories of the gentle old woman I had tended for the last two years. I had believed her contained and stoic. I had deemed it strength, that she had endured my grandfather's harsh ways and tolerated the disrespect of her stepson. Now it seemed something else. The implacable little voice went on.

"She left Bingtown. Just walked away. She said she did not care what became of her, just so long as she could escape everyone telling her she should confront Howarth. She came to the countryside and floundered through work as an inn-maid until she married a man she did not love, to tend his son and bear him a daughter. Shortly after your mother was born, she set me aside, for I was the final reminder of the life she had abandoned." The tiny face pressed her lips together in a flat line. "I begged her to listen to me, even as she wrapped me in linen. I could not stand to see her raise her daughter in submission to her brutish father and that loutish boy of his. She should have her birthright, I said. I told her it was not too late to go back and reclaim her inheritance. But she m.u.f.fled my voice and shut me away."

I thought of all the years the pendant had waited in the box. "Why did you tell me this?" I asked the pendant in a low voice.

For the first time, a question seemed to give her pause. She lifted her brows as if amazed I did not know. "Because she lives on in me, as do all the women of your line who have worn me. And I would see things set right. I would see you regain what is rightfully yours."

Rightfully mine. The concept seemed almost foreign. It frightened me. "But how? I have no proof, I do not know him, if Howarth still lives and-"

"Hush. I will guide you. You have the empty ring on your hand and me at your throat. You need no more than this."

My head so whirled with stories, I do not know how I slept that night. But I woke, still clutching the wizardwood pendant in my hand. Stiff in every joint, I rose, and donned the silver necklace and made my way to Bingtown.

In the next few weeks, the pendant became my guide. My ears swiftly became attuned to its soft whisper. The advice it gave me was difficult to follow, and yet when I listened to it, I found that my life progressed. In Bingtown, I sought and found a position caring for an elderly Trader woman. The food at Trader Redof's table was better than any I had ever eaten before, and the cast-off garments of her granddaughters were the finest clothing I had ever worn. My years of caring for my grandmother served me in good stead. I became a willing ear for any gossip Trader Redof wished to share, and despite all the difficulties of escorting such an old woman in Bingtown, I saw to it that she visited her friends often.

Tending to her, I soon came to know well the bustling trade city. Supporting her elbow and carrying her foot cus.h.i.+on, I moved invisibly among Bingtown society. I saw the power of the Bingtown Traders, power based not solely on wealth, but on heritage. I marveled at all my grandmother had abandoned, all that might have been my mother's life. From marveling at it, I grew to hunger for it. I changed my country manners to mimic Trader Redof's and flattened the tw.a.n.g of my speech. Schooled by my pendant in the evening, I changed how I carried myself in public and how I dressed my hair. I took on the mannerisms of a Bingtown woman, where women who were Traders for their families held as much power as their male counterparts. Seeing all that my grandmother had surrendered made my hatred of Howarth grow. I longed to seek him out and confront him. Yet month after month pa.s.sed, and still the pendant bid me bide my time in patience.

My yearnings for vengeance surprised me. My grandmother and my mother had both schooled me in self-effacing resignation. I had thought it the lot of all women. Only in Bingtown did I come to see that a woman might live alone and manage her own life. I looked back on how Tetlia had robbed me of my grandmother's necklaces and could not recall why I had not challenged her. I recalled the liberties Hetta's husband had attempted on me and wondered why I had not vigorously resisted him. My old self in the countryside faded to a young woman whose docility was as incomprehensible to me as my grandmother's fatalistic surrender of her life.

I listened to my pendant. I never spoke Howarth's name aloud or asked after him and his family. I was a devoted servant, well nigh invisible. Twice, other families tried to hire me away but I kept my place. And finally, one day as I hovered near my mistress's chair at a tea, I heard his name mentioned, in connection with some other tattle about a Jamaillian family that had moved to Bingtown and was putting on airs. "A page from Howarth's book," someone said with a sniff, and I knew then that he still lived and that my grandmother's scandal was still recalled by these old women. I listened as they chewed through that old tale, and I gained tidings not only that Howarth still lived but that knowing Traders in Bingtown still regarded him with disdain.

That night, in my small chamber off my mistress's room, I consulted with my pendant. "Are we ready now to take revenge? To confront Howarth and demand that he return all he stole from my grandmother?"

The small lips pursed as if tasting wine that had gone to vinegar. She gave a tiny sigh. "I suppose it is time you saw the man. In some ways, that could be the culmination of your education." The little eyes narrowed and glittered speculatively. "When we go, you will take the empty ring. Let me pick the day, however. And on that day, you must do and say exactly what I tell you to. In this, you must trust me, or all will be for naught."

Twice every forty days, my mistress granted me a half day to myself. My pendant chose a day for me. It was one my mistress was loath to grant me, for it was a day of celebration in Bingtown, but I persuaded her to allow it, promising her that I would return early to help her with her evening preparations. It was the anniversary of the Traders arriving at Bingtown Bay. In the evening, there would be parties and dinners hosted by the wealthier Traders. But earlier in the day, the whole city would celebrate. There would be speeches and dancing in the center of the Great Market, food and drink would flow free to all, and the streets would be thronged with folk of all persuasions. Although the evening festivities were reserved for Traders and their families only, all the folk of Bingtown would join in the munic.i.p.al celebration. From all the gossip I had heard, I knew it was a day when more recent arrivals to Bingtown courted the Old Trader families. Those who did not share Trader blood would seek to make more secure their social alliances with the powerful Traders. Howarth and his family would certainly be there.

That morning, I brought my mistress her breakfast tray. I laid out her clothing and left her dressing maid to attend her. In my tiny chamber, I bathed and dressed as carefully as if it were my wedding day. At my pendant's bidding, the h.o.a.rded coins I had earned had gone for enameled pins and a choker of lace. I swept my hair high and secured it. When I slipped into my mistress's room to steal a glance in her mirror, I stared at my reflection. My mistress, setting down her teacup, opened her eyes wider at sight of me. "You remind me of someone," she said sleepily. She sat up in her bed, regarding me more closely. As if I were her daughter, she commanded me to turn before her, and then to turn my face to the light. "Paint your lips with my carmine," she instructed me suddenly. "And touch your eyes with black." When I had done so, she inspected me critically. "You'll do," she observed. "There's Bingtown in your bloodline, my little country wren," she added with satisfaction. "So I've been telling those old biddies I call my friends. Off you go, to whomever you've chosen to captivate. He won't stand a chance before those eyes."

Her words heartened me as much as the approving murmur from my pendant. I returned to my room, to don my final layer of courage. The saffron wool of my grandmother's Trader robe was soft against my skin. It fit as if made for me. My determination swelled as I set out through the morning streets of the city I had made mine. The bustle of commerce no longer daunted me, nor did I look aside from the approving glance a Trader's son sent my way. Like me, he wore his Trader robe today. The garment proclaimed me his equal, and by his glance, I could tell me accepted me as that. I held my head higher. I made my way confidently into the heart of the city.

Occasionally, an older Trader would regard me with a puzzled stare. I knew it had been years since anyone had worn the saffron Trader robes of the Lantis family. I smiled at their puzzlement and strode on. The festive crowds grew denser, yet it seemed they parted for me. The music drew me, as did the savory aromas that floated on the morning air.

I reached the great circle of the Market. Today, the center had been cleared. Music was playing, and sailors and shopgirls were already dancing in the morning sun. On the edges of the circle, pavilions had been raised, and people of social note welcomed their friends and business a.s.sociates. The grandest pavilions belonged to Bingtown Trader families and bore their colors, but the tents of the wealthy merchants of lesser bloodlines competed to draw the eye. The sides of the pavilions had been roped open to reveal carpets and expensive furniture. Trader families welcomed one another with tables of dainty foods in these temporary dwellings, competing in opulence and comfort. No expense had been spared for this single day of celebration. I walked a slow circuit of these, listening to the murmur of my pendant as it peeked through the lacy choker that concealed it.

"Those are the Hardesty colors; well, they seem to have prospered in the last generation. And that ta.s.seled one would be the Beckerts; they were always given to show. Wait. Stop here."

I halted, and I swear I felt a vibration of tension from the pendant. The pavilion before us was pitched almost in line with those of the Bingtown Traders' tents, as if to claim near equal status. Whereas the Trader pavilions bore the simple colors of each of the old Bingtown families, the newcomers' tents were striped or parti-colored. The pavilion before me was white and green. The family was arrayed within as if for a portrait; parents and grown children sat about a table heavy with a rich morning repast. Two young men in the robes of Bingtown Traders were guests there. From a separate, higher table, on tall chairs almost like thrones, an elderly couple looked down benevolently on their family. The matriarch was a small plump woman. Her thinning white hair was carefully coifed, and rings adorned her pale little hands. The emerald at her throat seemed to burn with a green fire. Beside her sat a handsome old man, as elegantly dressed and groomed. As I looked at him, I felt the pendant share my glance. From it, I felt a sudden wave of hatred greater than any I had ever known. Mingled with it was fury, and outrage that he and the wife he had bought with Aubretia's money had both outlived her in luxury and grace. Hards.h.i.+p and privation, I now saw, had cut short my grandmother's life. Not just wealth and respect, but life itself he had stolen from her.

"But for your betrayal, Howarth, Aubretia Lantis would still be alive!"

The words rang out from my throat. I scarce recognized my own voice. All about me, the festivities faltered. Conversation in the adjoining pavilions ceased. All eyes were turned toward the scene I had abruptly created. My heart near stopped in my chest, but I found myself going on without it, stepping forward without conscious volition, shouting words whose source was not myself. "I bring you word of her death. Poverty and privation shortened her life, but it was your betrayal of her heart that killed her, Howarth. Aubretia Lantis was my grandmother. I give to you now the last bit of wealth that you were unable to strip from her: this ring, as empty as your promise. Keep it, along with all else you swindled from her." I pulled the silver circle from my hand and threw the empty setting with a skill not my own. It sparkled as it flew through the air, and it landed squarely in Howarth's empty gla.s.s, setting it ringing in the silence that followed my words. The old man's eyes stood out from his face, and a vein pulsed wildly on his brow. I suspected he felt he saw a ghost, come back to waken old scandal just when his reputation most needed to be sound. I looked aside from him to his wife. She was scarlet with humiliation. "Study it well, Howarth's wife," I bade her disdainfully. "Would not the Lantis emerald you wear about your neck fit well in its setting? Believe what you have denied to yourself all these years; a dead woman's wealth bought you. Know that you married a liar and an upstart, know that your whole family is founded on his betrayal of a Bingtown Trader." I rounded disdainfully on the two young Trader men who sat at his table. The young women beside them, obviously Howarth's granddaughters, stared at me in white-faced horror. "Consider well what you join your names to, Traders' sons," I told them. "It is the Lantis wealth you are marrying, stripped of the Lantis name."

Howarth had found his tongue. The dapper old man now looked drawn and pale. He pointed a shaking finger at me but spoke to his wife in the pitched voice of the near deaf. "She can prove nothing! Nothing! The money Aubretia gave me, she gave me for love of me. She cannot legally force me to return it."

His wife's jaw dropped. I thought she would faint from mortification. I let the silence gather, then floated my words upon it. "And with those words, you admit a guilt and a shame greater than anything I could wish to prove. Keep the wealth, Howarth. Choke on it. You have dirtied it, and I have no need of anything you have touched."

I turned on my heel then and walked away. A stunned silence hung behind me like a curtain, one that was suddenly rent by the wind of a thousand tongues flapping. Like a stirred beehive, all of the Great Market circle hummed and buzzed. The scandal that Howarth thought he had left behind him would now mark his declining years.

"Nor will his granddaughters wed Traders' sons. His wife would do best to sweep them back to Jamaillia and marry them off where she can, for after this, they will never mount into Bingtown society." My pendant whispered to me in savage joy. "You have done it, my dear. You have done us all proud with your success."

I made no reply, but cut my way through the crowds, ignoring the comments and stares that followed me. My steady walk slowly cooled the angry flush from my cheeks and calmed the thundering of my heart. I had found my way down to the Bingtown docks where the cool wind off the water swept the heat from my face. I pondered the words I had said and what I had done. At the time it had seemed so perfectly fulfilling. Now I wondered at it.

"But what did I accomplish?" I lifted the pendant from my neck and looked at the tiny face. "I thought I was doing all this to regain my inheritance. I thought I would force him to give up the wealth he had stolen from my grandmother. Instead, I walked away with nothing. Not even an empty ring remains to me. Only you."

"Only me," the pendant agreed. "And your name. Taken back out of the dust and raised to pride once more. It is what your grandmother abandoned, and what I wished you to reclaim. Not money or jewels, but the rightful self-worth of a Lantis. You are a Bingtown Trader now, by resolution as well as by right. Perhaps you will work as a servant by day, but what you earn will be your own. And when the Bingtown Council meets, you will wield your rightful vote." The little face smiled up at me. The warmth in the small voice was a family's love. "And that, girl, is your inheritance."

Cat's Meat.

How is it, I sometimes wonder, that a dog person like myself writes so many stories that feature cats?

I really don't have an answer to that. While dogs have dominated my life as companions, I've had a fair number of cat companions as well. The first that was mine, really all mine, was Loki, a long-haired black tom when I was a young teenager. He was fearless and as much dog as cat it sometimes seemed. Sometimes I'd find him outside in the dead of a Fairbanks winter, curled up snug between a couple of huskies.

When I was newly married in Kodiak, we enjoyed the company of my husband's childhood cat, Chlorophyll. As an unspayed female, she contributed quite a bit to the gene pool of cats on Kodiak Island and was fondly known as "Cat Factory" by the neighbors.

Today, I am owned by Pi, a black-and-white tuxedo cat who is currently nineteen years old. She has been the most faithful of writing cats, sitting on my lap for long hours while I typed over and around her. Sam, a junior cat at only eighteen years old, is the table-walking, snack-stealing bane of my husband's existence. And despite my resolution not to acquire any more cats, in December of 2009 both Princess and Fatty were added to our household. Grown littermates, they've proven remarkably adaptable to our dogs, kids, and senior cats.

Fatty is orange. With blue eyes. And full of tales to tell.

I made a mistake and I'm still paying for it." Rosemary tried to sound stronger than she felt. Less forlorn and more matter-of-fact.

"You've already paid enough for that mistake," Hilia responded stoutly. Her best friend since childhood, Hilia always took her part. She might be tactless sometimes, but she was loyal. Loyalty had come to mean a great deal to her.

Rosemary picked up little Gillam and bounced him gently. The toddler had been clutching at her knees and wailing since she set him down. The moment she picked him up, he stopped.

"You're spoiling him," Hilia pointed out.

"No, I'm just holding him," Rosemary replied. "Besides, I don't think he's the mistake. If anything, he's the only good thing I got out of my mistake."

"Oh, I don't mean him!" Hilia responded instantly. Her own baby, only a month old, was at her breast, eyes shut, all but asleep as she nursed. Gillam arranged himself in Rosemary's lap and then leaned over to look down curiously at the baby. He reached a hand toward her.

"Let her sleep, Gillam. Don't poke her."

"You paid enough for your mistake," Hilia went on, as if there'd been no interruption. "You've suffered for close to three years. It's not fair he should come back and try to start it all up again."

"It's his house," Rosemary pointed out. "Left him by his grandfather. His bit of land. And Gillam is his son, as he bragged yesterday at the tavern. He has rights to all of them."

"This is not his house! Don't you dare say that! Don't you dare defend that wretch! His grandfather said it was for Gillam when he deeded it over. Not Pell. His own grandfather knew he couldn't trust Pell to do the right thing by you and his child! And you are Gillam's mother, so you have just as much right to be here as Pell does. More, because you're the one who did all the work on it. What was this place when he left you here, with your belly out to there while he went traipsing off with that Morrany girl? A shack! A leaky-roofed shack, with the chimney half fallen down, and the yard full of thistles and milkweed. Now look at it!" Hilia's angry words rattled like hail on frozen ground as she gestured around the tiny but tidy room. It was a simple cottage, with a flagged floor and stone walls and a single door and one window. On the sill of that window, an orange cat slept, slack as melted honey in the spring sun.

"Look at those curtains and the coverlet on the bed! Look at that hearth, neat as a pin. Look up! That roof's tight! Well, it needs a new thatch, but where you patched it, it held! Look out the window! Rows of vegetables sprouting in the garden, half a dozen chickens scratching, and a cow with a calf in her belly! Who did that, who did all that? You, that's who! Not that lazy, good-for-nothing Pell! That stupid little s.l.u.t winked an eye and wriggled her rump at him, and off he went, to live off her and her parents. And now that she's done with him, now that her father sees what a bent coin he is and has turned him out, what makes him think he can come back here and just take over everything you've built? What right does he have to it?"

"As much right as I do, Hilia. Legally, we are both Gillam's parents. We both have the right to manage his inheritance for him until he's a man. As Gillam's mother, I can claim that right, but I can't deny it to Pell, too. And that is how it is." She spoke sadly, but a smile had come to her face to hear her friend defend her so stoutly.

"Legally." Hilia all but spat the word. "I'm talking about what is right and real, not what is legal! Has that wretch actually dared to come here?"

Rosemary bit down on her rising fear and hoped none of it showed on her face. "No. Not yet. But I heard yesterday that he'd come back to town and was talking in the tavern, saying it was time he went home and took up his duties as a father and landowner. I think he's working up the courage to confront me. I heard he was staying up at his father's house. I don't think his mother has any more use for Pell than I do. Her life is hard enough, with the way Pell's father knocks her around, without having another man to wait on. So I don't know how long she'll tolerate him under her roof. They'll both lean on him to leave, and I suspect his father will push him in this direction. He's always resented me living here. He's always said that the cottage and land should have come to him first, not gone directly to Pell."

"Didn't his grandfather offer it to Pell when he got you pregnant?"

From anyone else, such a blunt reminder might have stung. But this was Hilia, her oldest, truest friend. Rosemary sighed. "Yes. He actually brought us both out here, with a minstrel to witness the vows. He told Pell it was time he stood up and acted like a man and took care of the child that he'd caused and the woman he'd ruined." It was still hard to say the phrase aloud. She sighed and looked at the wall. "Pell refused then. He said we were both too young, that one mistake shouldn't cause another. And a month or two later, he proved he was right on that. He left me. But at least I'm not married to him. He gave me that much freedom."

"Freedom!" scoffed Hilia. "No woman with a babe on her hip is free of anything. What did his grandfather say when Pell said no?"

Rosemary forced her mind back to her tale. "Soader was a good man. He tried to help Pell do what he thought was right. When Pell said he wouldn't wed me, Soader said he wouldn't waste the minstrel's fee. He willed the cottage and land to my unborn child, boy or girl, right then. It made Pell angry but he dared say nothing. He was already out of favor with the rest of his family. Our baby owning a cottage at least gave us a place to live. It made Pell's father furious, I heard later. He felt that the cottage should have gone to Soader's daughter, his wife, so that he could have the good of the land. Not that there was much good to it when we got it.

"But Soader meant well. He said that a couple that works together takes the true measure of each other." Rosemary sighed again. "Well, I guess that when I was here alone, I got Pell's true measure. I was sad when Soader died last year. He was Pell's mother's father, and the only one of Pell's family who came to see Gillam at all after Pell left. Right up until he took the lung cough, he came every month."

"He gave you money, then?"

Rosemary shook her head. "No. But he brought food sometimes, and other things. He gave me a rhubarb start, and walking onion bulbs that spread. Things I could use to better my life, if I were willing to work with them. He was a good man."

"Good man or not, letting Pell refuse to marry you was not the *right' thing for him to do."

"Actually, it was. Hearing him refuse to speak the marriage oath before a minstrel was important. Up until then, I was sure he would marry me, right after the baby was born. Not that he'd ever asked me or I'd ever asked him. I guess I was afraid to ask. Soader wasn't. I didn't want to hear what he made Pell say, but it was a good thing for me to know sooner rather than later."

Rosemary sipped at her cooling tea. It loosened her throat that had closed tight as she recalled that humiliation. Kendra the minstrel had looked aside from her shame, but Soader had met her gaze steadily and quietly observed, "So that is how it will be."

"Of course, later, when we were alone, Pell had all sorts of reasons why I shouldn't be angry at him." Rosemary forced the words out, trying to keep her tone light. "And I believed them. I believed that he was *married to me in his heart' and that there would *never be another woman.' I was so foolish."

For the past three years, she'd been pus.h.i.+ng herself to take responsibility for the mess she'd made of her life. Sometimes it helped. Sometimes she looked around and thought, If I can make that big a mistake, I can make just as big of a correction. And she'd thought she'd done so. She'd worked hard. The repairs to the cottage had been done by her own hand or paid for by barter. She'd turned the old garden over, one shovelful of earth at a time. She'd barrowed in manure dropped on the roadside by pa.s.sing horses and worked it into the soil herself. She'd traded labor for seed and starts, and she and Gillam lived cheap and stingy to save up the coins for a spindly, worm-plagued yearling cow. That cow, healthy now, was soon to drop her first calf. The chickens had been eggs, kept warm near the hearth and turned daily, a dozen eggs to hatch a mere two pullets and a c.o.c.kerel. But they had multiplied to a decent flock now. Her daily gathering kept a stack of wood by the side of the house and a neat pile of split and ready kindling beside it. She could do things, make things, and cause change to happen.

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The Inheritance And Other Stories Part 14 summary

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