Reckoning of Boston Jim (3 page)

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Authors: Claire Mulligan

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Historical

BOOK: Reckoning of Boston Jim
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Perhaps the woman, this Dora Hume, is touched with madness, perhaps loneliness has got to her, out there alone in a cabin, her husband away. It's different for women; they subsist on speech and company. He doesn't long for companionship. If he had a family, a wife, a servant, one of these ‘friends,' then every night there would be speaking; every night there would be more words that would stay with him until the grave.

The money was his own. It was her own peculiarity, then, her choice to return what was his. It was not a gift she gave him, no matter what she said about birthdays and such. It did not need recompense to show that he was her equal. She gave him water and food, true, but these things are always given to travellers in need. It was expected of her, of everyone, and was, in fact, some kind of law. Such acts are always reciprocated sooner or later and so cannot be considered generosity at all, but rather a way of equalizing. Don't the few trappers in his parts keep a grudging eye on each other? And only last summer he'd helped those Klallams. He found them near his trapline, an old man and his youngest son. They were exhausted and starving and so he took them to his cabin, gave them food, let them sleep on his benches. They had been living in the Songhees village in Victoria until the Whites burned their huts and forced them to leave at rifle point. It was all so that Tom Dyer, the pox, didn't spread to the Whiteman's town, though it was the Whiteman who set Tom Dyer loose among them, who made it so they rotted while they still lived. The younger Klallam showed him the five slashes on his arm and told him in Chinook, in low furious tones, that the slashes were for each of his dead children and one for his wife. Later the old man raised himself up and spoke in a dialect that Boston barely understood, though it was plain he was laying curses, a litany that went on until darkness fell.

No, he will waste none of his time, none of his money earned from his own toil. It was idiotic to even consider it. He was not in her debt. He owed her nothing. Not even this second, return visit she asked of him.

≈  ≈  ≈

The old woman holds up a brush made of boar's bristles and inlaid with shells. Boston mutters that he must be going.

“I am sorry, so sorry that we did not find something for your lady,” the old woman rasps. “Think on it well, and then return. The exact thing is never easy to find. No indeed.”

Two

Eugene Augustus Hume has never liked parlours and Mrs. Jacobsen's at the Avalon Hotel is no exception. In the half-dark of imminent dawn, the bric-a-brac and furniture seem hunched and huddled and quietly animate, like exhausted refugees seeking shelter from some cataclysm. But it is natural that he stay here. It is his home in a way, given that when he arrived in '
61
he had stayed at the Avalon for nearly six months. He lived then in a two-room affair for a cracking good price. Meals were included and Mrs. Jacobsen often served him with her own hands. Eugene merely had to assist with errands and with the odd reluctant bill payer, a task he did with tact and soldierly aplomb, though he did not relish it, hearing echoes of his own not-so-long ago protestations in that of his quarry, recalling his own name chalked on the blackboard behind the counter of the tailor, the butcher. He initially suggested that perhaps Mr. Jacobsen should be the one to act the constable. This suggestion astonished Mrs. Jacobsen. He was a partial invalid, she proclaimed, who rarely dared venture from his room on the southern side. And indeed, Eugene himself has never yet seen him up close, only rounding a corner, disappearing into a doorway, poking about in the pantry, enough to ascertain that Mr. Jacobsen is a small man with the furtive movements of a creature who prefers the dark. He is inept, perhaps, but far too ambulatory to be called an invalid. Perhaps Mrs. Jacobsen was referring—and this thought wanders into Eugene's mind unbidden—to his prowess in his husbandly duties.

≈  ≈  ≈

Eugene strikes a lucifer and lights a candle. The wick is untrimmed and the flame flares high. Above the sideboard is a great oil of some blank-faced, inbred aristocrats picnicking on a hill. A child has crawled away from the group and is a hand span away from an ominous thicket. None of the picnickers seem to notice the wayward child in the least.

He sniffs at a decanter. Ah, quite so. Sherry. It is a lady's drink, but a good a capper as any to a fine evening. He was the last man standing at the Brown Jug, an establishment that was known to stay open for business as long as there was someone to serve, as long as there was someone, such as Eugene, celebrating before a departure into the wilderness. And yet no matter how many times he raised his arm in a toast there remained that fluttering at the back of his skull, as if moths were rising from sleep.

He contemplates a small statue of a cherub, says: “Steel yourself, Eugene Augustus. You have whiled away enough time. You are off to the goldfields, off to see the elephant, as they say. Now there is an absurd phrase, made by men who have likely never seen one of those ponderous creatures in their lives. But then what is two weeks more, or three? The gold, by all accounts, is still tight in the earth's icy embrace where it has lain for centuries—no, millennia. Consider Mr. . . . Mr. Lell, that was the name, and his book about stones and so forth. His
Geological Ideas
, that was it. Consider the vast stretches of time. How after millions upon millions of years, a mountain is still young! It is a stretch of nothing, like an afternoon for us mortals. And our afternoon is as a lifetime to a gnat. Hah, what think you of that, my little marble friend? Your parts are like to be as ancient as the Coliseum, as the very sea itself, as ancient as . . .”

“Mr. Hume. Is it you, sir? Are you there?”

Eugene starts, mouths a curse as sherry spills on the carpet.

“I heard voices. I was terrified out of my wits. I thought I might faint.”

Mrs. Jacobsen stands in the doorway. One hand holds a wrapper closed over her nightdress, the other a candle in its holder. Her hair, a robust red in better light, here streams darkly over her shoulders. And though she is affecting terror, affecting a heaving of her considerable bosom, it is doubtful she has ever fainted in her life. Not that this matters. She was beautiful once and thus can be forgiven much. Indeed Eugene sees her, not as she is now, but as she was thirty or forty years ago, with a regal, formidable beauty, the likeness of an Athena. He does not often boast of it, but he has an astonishing ability to detect the lost lineaments of beauty, much the way an archaeologist detects a once splendid city under rubble.

He covers the spilled sherry with his foot. “My apologies, madam, if I have awoken you. I cannot sleep.”

“You cannot sleep? Have you tried Doctor Helmcken's blue pills? Have you tried a purge? An iced bath? It draws the agitation from the limbs. It steadies the mind.”

Eugene admits he has not tried any of these remedies but will, of course.

Mrs. Jacobsen is filling his glass and now her own. He notes that she is remarkably powdered and rouged for one awoken in a fright. Notes also (how can he not?) her wrapper shifting open to show the complicated affair of her nightdress, the ravine between her once no doubt splendid breasts. He murmurs his thanks. Mrs. Jacobsen sits on the divan. He is relieved to sit also, for the late hour is bringing with it an unsteadiness of posture. He chooses the nearest armchair. His knees rise uncomfortably high. He will be glad when a taller monarch comes to the throne and the furniture is no longer made in deference to a woman the size of a gnome. His father, God rest him, had chairs from the reign of King George. Card playing chairs, high enough so that a tall man could sit with some dignity. They were the only items of furniture his father brought with them as they moved from this inn to that lodging house.
A man without a chair is nothing
, his father said, in one of his more philosophical moods.

“I, too, am often restless.” Mrs. Jacobsen says. “I, too, am often afflicted with wakefulness. Did you know it travels through a family line? Did you know that my Great Aunt Wilhelmina did not sleep for twenty years?”

“I did not know this. But it is fascinating, truly so.” Eugene smiles, showing his array of fine teeth. Mrs. Jacobsen's stern countenance transforms before this smile, before the manly presence that is Eugene Augustus Hume. He stands a head taller than most. Is broad shouldered and well featured with a clean-shaven chin and waves of chestnut hair. He wears checkered trousers in shades of brown, a matching frock coat, a fawn-coloured waistcoat, and a cravat of burgundy silk. All of which bring attention to the fine amber of his eyes. His top hat is on a side table as are his gloves. Not for him these coke hats and bared hands. And he has that way of looking about, as if he is always ready to leap to the rescue. Dashing, in a word.

“Mr. Hume. If I may ask. If I may be forthright. Do you feel at home here at the Avalon? Do you feel as if you are suited to its environs?”

“Indeed, madam.”

“Then I have an offer. A proposal.”

“A proposal?” The moths arise as he takes a good draft of sherry.

“I would like you to stay and have Mr. Vincent's position. Would that be agreeable? Would that take you off this silly notion of the Cariboo?”

“But you have only recently hired him.”

“He shakes. He is forever making mistakes in the accounts. He often sleeps throughout the afternoon. And he quails completely at bill collection. I am certain we can find an agreeable arrangement.”

“But the steamer leaves. I am booked and . . .”

“And how many make their fortune? How many return, in fact, as paupers? Truly, sir, how many return not at all, but perish of this or that?”

“I have attempted far more difficult journeys, I assure you. Journeys rife with indescribable dangers. It is just . . .”

“Just? Yes? It is just?” Mrs. Jacobsen says, though the name is there, as if scrawled on the air between them.

“That I have certain obligations. The Cowichan, my land, and . . .”

“And? Miss Timmons? Is that what you mean? Have you married her, by the by? Should I offer my belated congratulations? Should I inform all my acquaintances?” Mr. Jacobsen smiles as if this were merely gay repartee.

“No, that is to say, not yet. I am waiting until I have sufficient means to provide a grand breakfast feast after the ceremony. It would be a disgrace to the name of Hume otherwise. Until then we are married in our souls, that is, as they say, in the custom of the country, a union that has a long and honourable tradition here. Even good Governor Douglas and his lovely dusky wife . . .”

“Indeed, but that was long before the arrival of proper ministers. We have ministers aplenty now. We have churches of every stripe. Perhaps you have not tied the knot because you have realized that it would be unwise? Perhaps that is why you cannot sleep?”

Eugene frowns and sadly shakes his head.

Mrs. Jacobsen twists her hair between her fingers. “I am sorry. I apologize. My jests sometimes do not sound as they should. I . . . it is just . . . you see, when you left with Miss Timmons I was shocked. I was astounded. I gave that young woman employment, a fine little room, as many sweet buns as she cared to stuff herself with and wages that were much higher than in London, or any other great city of Europe. What's more, I offered her friendship, albeit the restrained friendship of an employer, of an older, wiser woman, but still. And how did Miss Timmons thank me? She left before her contract was completed. And with a lodger.”

She said
lodger
as if she had forgotten that Eugene was this very same man.

Eugene wonders if he, too, should speak plainly. Should ask what a married woman, any woman, is doing in the parlour with a “lodger” at these dark hours, and in her nightdress yet, drinking sherry, mentioning baths.

Eugene, however, is nothing if not a gentleman and so decides on a fond sigh. “Ah, my dear Mrs. Jacobsen, do you think me so lacking in honour?”

“I did not mean . . .”

“I will return. I will marry her. I have given my word. But you have hit upon fragments of the truth, for in England, in that other world, Miss Timmons and I would never have been united over the chasm of class and fortune. But this is a new land. The rules are turned wholly 'round. Possibilities abound.”

“I thought so once as well,” she says quietly.

Eugene pushes himself up from the chair. “I am booked on the Thursday steamer. I thank you for your gracious offer. If circumstances had been different do not doubt that I would have grasped it without the slightest hesitation.”

“Thursday? But is it not already Tuesday? You have your supplies? You are prepared?”

“I am quite prepared.”

“Mr. Hume, sir. I spoke rashly just now. Will you allow me to make amends? Will you extend me the pleasure of your company tomorrow evening? I shall have Ah-Sing prepare a roast duck. Your favourite, is it not? We will talk of the latest inventions, of that war in America.” she smiles softly. “And other such safe and simple topics.”

“I would be honoured,” Eugene says and presses her bare hand to his lips, inhales the scent of powdered roses. “Good night, dearest Beatrice. You who have been so kind, so full of gracious understanding. Do not doubt I remain your servant.”

The use of her given name renders her speechless excepting a mutter of “Good night, sir, that is, Eugene.”

He listens for her steps up the stairs, and then the slow creaking shut of her door. She had once asked him into her room on some private matter then suggested that if he stayed it would not be unacceptable.

“My principles will not allow me to compromise your reputation,” he had replied, but with resignation and regret, as if his principles were grim, unyielding relatives.

≈  ≈  ≈

Morning casts a grey light over the painting of the oblivious picnickers. He will be glad to be quit of its sight. Dora called them a cheerful lot, but then she is likewise blessedly oblivious. Mrs. Jacobsen described them once as “awash in love” and added that they were her Parisian ancestors before the revolution came between their heads and their shoulders. Eugene thinks it far more likely that her ancestors would be depicted as peasants toiling in some mud-soaked field, but when is he one to quibble at inventiveness?

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