Read The Girl with the Creel Online
Authors: Doris Davidson
âDon't be daft! Go and enjoy yourself, it's maybe your last chance.'
âWhat if Peter finds out?'
âWho's going to tell him? I'll not say anything.'
While she washed, dressed and had her supper, Lizann continued to feel guilty about deceiving Peter, but the minute she saw George again she knew why she had agreed to meet him. He was tall and broad, with untidy brown hair slightly lighter than Mick's and the same brown eyes, but above all, he had something about him that played havoc with her heart.
As she walked by his side, she contemplated telling him about Peter â it wasn't fair to let him think she was free â and she was on the point of confessing when George said, âLizann, I'd better tell you ⦠I've got a lass at home in Cullen.'
Relieved in one way, she said, âI've a lad in Buckie.'
âAre you promised to him?'
âNot exactly, not yet. Are you promised to her?'
âNot yet.'
Nothing else was said for several minutes, then George told her a bit about the other members of his ship's crew and asked her about the girls she worked with. Wanting to learn more about each other, they discussed their relatives, their homes, their likes and dislikes, and they kept walking and talking until it was time for Lizann to go back to her lodgings.
Before she went in, George slid his arms round her. âA first and last kiss, Lizann?' he coaxed.
She wouldn't have refused even if he'd given her the chance, and she was sorry when he stopped at one. âThat's it, then,' he sighed as he released her. âI hope you and Peter make a go of it. Goodbye, Lizann.'
Peggy May was waiting eagerly to find out what had happened. âDid he kiss you?'
âJust once.'
âWhat's his name? Did you like him? Is he as nice as he looks?'
âHis name's George, and yes I like him, and yes he's nice, but he said he'd a girl in Cullen and I told him about Peter.'
âWill you be seeing him again?'
âNo, he's sailing home tomorrow.'
âSo that's it?' Peggy May was disappointed. âI was looking forward to you telling me what you and him got up to, the juicy bits, but there's nothing for it but go to sleep.'
Lizann's thoughts kept her from sleeping for some time. She shouldn't have gone out with George but she had, and she wished he hadn't waited so long to kiss her. If he'd been quicker, he'd have had time to do it again ⦠and again? Imagining it, she could actually feel the thrill of it and her heartbeats quickened at an alarming rate. His hands would have run over her, gently at first, then more insistently until ⦠Oh, God, what had got into her? She should be thinking of Peter, of his kisses, of his arms around her. It wouldn't be long now.
Late the following forenoon, when she stopped working momentarily to wipe her brow, she had a pleasant surprise. âOh, here's George,' she whispered to Peggy May, who said, somewhat accusingly, âI thought you said he was going back to Cullen the day.'
âThat's what he told me.' Lizann gave George a warm smile when he reached them.
âWe've been held up for repairs,' he explained, âso we'll have a few more days here. Can I see you tonight again? Please, Lizann?'
She knew she shouldn't go out with him again, not after the things she'd thought last night, but she couldn't say no and was glad that Peggy May didn't say anything sarcastic, neither then nor later when she was making ready to meet George.
During their first hour together they made light conversation and teased each other a little, and then â she didn't know what sparked it off â he pulled her into his arms and kissed her hungrily. âI shouldn't be doing this,' he muttered in a few minutes.
Thrusting aside the thought that she shouldn't be letting him, she whispered, âI like it, George,' a gross understatement, for every inch of her was responding to the stimulus â responding in a way that, in her naivety, she did not understand could have only one possible outcome.
George, however, was cautious. âBut what about Peter, and Katie?'
Propelled on to find out what Peter had always held back from, she looked at George now and said, âThey'll never know,' adding with an embarrassed half-smile, â⦠whatever we do.'
Straightaway, it came to her that saying this might put him off her, make him think she was cheap, and she wished she hadn't been so bold, but when George murmured, âDo you mean what I think you mean?', she didn't correct him.
Obviously taking her silence as agreement, he pulled her to the ground. She had been afraid that the reality wouldn't measure up to her dreams, but, carried away with the rapture of it, she lost track of everything except a mounting, spiralling need. Being so innocent, it did not dawn on her that she was being guided by an expert, an expert who had gentled her past the initial pain and soothed her with kisses before taking her on a soaring flight which came to the wildest, most wonderful conclusion. Only then did she become conscious that the wetness from the soggy grass was seeping right into her clothes, that a dense fog which had descended unnoticed was lying over them like a blanket.
Silently, George helped her up and turned his back so that she could make herself presentable. She was quite relieved that he kept quiet, but disappointed when he took her to her lodgings and left her still without saying a word. When she went upstairs, she excused her flushed face and damp clothing to Peggy May by saying that he had lain on the grass with her and kissed her an awful lot, and if her friend suspected he'd done more than that, she didn't say so.
Lizann's dreams were predictable that night, but in the morning she wondered if George had been disgusted when she offered herself to him, for that's what it had amounted to. She was thankful, therefore, when he appeared on the Denes in the forenoon, and there was no hesitation in the nod she gave in answer to the question in his eyes. Time couldn't pass quickly enough for her now, and when work was finished for the day she set off for their digs at a pace that had Peggy May complaining, âSlow down, Lizann, for ony sake. I ken you're desperate for his kisses, but there's nae need to rush me off my feet.'
Unhappily for Lizann, George did not kiss her once that night, nor the following night. She couldn't understand it. Why was he acting as if nothing had happened between them? But when he said, at Mrs Marks's door, that tomorrow would be their last night together, she still agreed to meet him.
Her thoughts were confused when she went inside. She'd been attracted to him the first time she saw him, but her feelings for him went much deeper now. She should really steer clear of him tomorrow, for they were both committed, almost, to somebody else, but â¦
She met him as promised, praying that he would stop being so distant, but again he talked only about trivialities. Lapsing into a dejected silence, she wished he would speak about things that mattered. If he didn't want to see her again, why didn't he just tell her, bid her goodbye and leave her? Short and sharp, it would still be better than dragging it out like this.
Hearing a change in the tone of his voice, she turned to look at him. âLizann,' he said, âare you angry about what I did the other night?'
âNo, I'm not angry,' she replied, honestly, âand I'm not sorry we did it.' She was more to blame than he was, after all.
âWhat's wrong, then?'
âWhat are we going to do, George? After this, I mean.'
âWhen I go back to Cullen and you go back to Buckie?'
âI still love Peter, and I can't tell him.'
âNo.' After a pause, he said, slowly, âI'm still going to marry Katie, and you'll marry Peter. What we did hasn't changed that, but I'd better get you back â¦'
âNot yet. If I'm never going to see you again, give me a last night to remember.' It was out before she knew what she was saying.
âAre you sure?'
A twinge of conscience made her say, âD'you think I'm awful?'
âNo, I want it as much as you.'
Now it was as if nothing of the outside world existed for them; they were conscious only of their rising passions, of the shared thrills and heart-stopping ecstasies, then, stealthily intruding, the awful thought that their time together was coming to an end. They were reluctant to break away from each other, but the parting had to come some time, and at last they walked slowly, morosely, to the door of Lizann's lodgings. George's final kiss was long and tender, and her spirits leapt when he groaned, âOh, God, Lizann, I think I love you.'
âI think I love you and all, George.' She looked at him in awe for some seconds, as if trying to find some way they could have a future together, then suddenly said, âNo, I can't let Peter down now.' With a strangled sob, she ran inside.
Peggy May eyed her in concern but, to Lizann's great relief, asked no questions â she didn't want to speak about it. Nobody could understand how she felt; she didn't understand it herself.
Lizann lay in torment that night. She had been unfaithful to Peter, she had let her mother down, and she could imagine how angry her father would be if he ever found out what she had done; but she wasn't sorry for having done it. What she did regret was that she would never see George again.
Would Peter notice anything different about her when she went home, and what would she tell him if he did? But she didn't need to tell him anything; it was natural that she'd be different after being away from home for the very first time. Nothing had really changed between them, and if he asked her again to get engaged, she would say yes.
Chapter Three
On the train, in spite of the singing and joviality going on around her, Lizann Jappy remained silent, as she had been since they set off in the morning. Normally her cheeks shone with rosy good health, her mouth was turned up in a smile, but today her face was peaky and her dark eyes had lost their radiance. Slumped in her seat, she seemed to have no interest in anything, but when the singers started up again, the first few words penetrated her consciousness.
âWhat a friend we have in Jesus,
All our sins and griefs to bear,
What a privilege to carry
Everything to God in prayer!'
Parting with George was the worst grief she'd ever had to bear, she thought wretchedly, and not even God could help her. How could she pray after the awful sin she'd committed? It had started off with her wanting to satisfy her curiosity because Peter ⦠no, she couldn't blame Peter, and he was such a decent man that she couldn't hurt him by telling him. Besides, as George had said, what they did hadn't changed anything. When she went home she would accept Peter's proposal and put George right out of her mind.
âWhat's wrong, Lizann?'
The voice in her ear made her jump. âNothing.'
Her friend was not to be fobbed off. âWhy are you nae singing? Are you thinking about that Cullen man? That George Buchan?'
âI love him.'
Peggy May's eyes widened. âDoes he love you?'
âHe said he did.'
âWell, he'll come and see you, won't he?'
âHe said he'd a girl at home, and I told him about Peter, so we're not going to see each other again.'
Peggy May was astonished. âBut you're nae promised to Peter?'
âHe asked me to marry him before I came away, and I said I'd give him my answer when I got back.'
âYou could tell him you've fell in love wi' somebody else.'
âWhat's the use? George is going to marry his Katie. He still loves her, the same as I still love Peter.'
âI canna understand you. Who d'you really love, Peter or George?'
âI know it sounds silly, but I love them both. I really do.'
After some thought, Peggy May said, âYou'll soon forget George once you're married to Peter.'
âI suppose so.'
Peggy May clicked her tongue in exasperation. âYou will, Lizann. You only ken't him for a wee while, and you've ken't Peter your whole life. You've went steady wi' him for months.'
Gathering that Peggy May had grown impatient with her for being lovesick over a boy she hardly knew, Lizann came to the conclusion that her friend was right. âAye, I'm being daft, amn't I? George and me had just been ships that pass in the night.'
Peggy May grinned, âThat's right, so tell Peter you'll marry him.'
Her own decision now being endorsed, Lizann smiled and joined in the singing, but exhaustion had finally caught up with the other girls, and when they came to the end of this hymn they dispersed to their own compartments. Those who were left settled back with their eyes closed and Lizann was the only one not to doze off.
Two years ago, when she asked if she could go to Yarmouth, her father had said, amongst other things, âThe English are different from us, and you never know what kind of queer folk you could meet.' She gave a faint smile at the memory. She hadn't met any of the queer English folk, only George â tall and broad, with untidy hair and soft, loving eyes. Could she ever forget him?
Hannah was still up when Lizann arrived home just after midnight. âIt's awful late,' she said, accusingly. âI was beginning to think something had happened to your train.'
âIt's an awful long way. It took us over seventeen hours.'
âYou must be wore out.'
âI'm ready to drop, and I'm going straight to my bed.'
It was late afternoon before she woke, refreshed by her long sleep, and when she went down to the kitchen, Hannah said, âThat's better. You was like death warmed up when you come in last night. Did you tell Peter when you'd be back?'
âI wrote to him the same time I wrote to you.'
âHe'll likely come after he's had his supper, then.'
He came at seven on the dot, and Lizann was astonished at the way her heart jolted at the sight of his dear face. âYou got home all right?' he asked, unnecessarily, as he waited for her to put on her coat.