Read The Oyster Catchers Online
Authors: Iris Gower
An ice-cold finger touched Eline’s spine; Carys’s words seemed to carry a warning and she shivered.
‘What’s the matter,
cariad
, a goose walked over your grave?’
Eline forced a laugh and drew the door of her cottage shut. ‘Aye, something like that,’ she said softly.
Outside Carys’s house, the old mare stood patiently waiting between the shafts of the cart, head drooping to nuzzle the cobbles. Carys slapped the animal’s rump good-naturedly.
‘No oats down there for you, girl,’ she laughed. ‘Come on, Binnie, we’re going to Swansea and I promise I’ll let you chew some grass on the way.’
As the horse moved off, the cart jolted into motion and the sacks of oysters shifted, seeming to groan with life. Carys urged the animal forward holding the reins loosely in her plump hands as she led the horse out on to the roadway.
‘Nice day for it,’ she observed looking up at the clear skies. ‘Hope the rain keeps off, though my Sam did say
there’s some coming later on today.’ She smiled at Eline. ‘We should be back by then.’
As the horse and cart jolted over the uneven ground, Eline glanced over to her left where the doorway of William Davies’s shop stood welcomingly open. The window display had been changed, it was eye catching; a parade of boots seemed to be walking across a stage covered in black silk, bringing to mind an army marching to war.
‘
Duw
, will you look at them boots,’ Carys said enviously, drawing the animal to a halt. ‘I’d love to see my Sam in something elegant like those high riding-boots.’
Handing the reins to Eline, she made her way across the road to peer in the window, hand against the glass.
Impatiently, Eline fidgeted, praying that William Davies wouldn’t see her wearing her old skirt and a shabby knitted shawl.
He appeared in the doorway so suddenly that Eline gasped, his eyes were upon her, and he was smiling warmly. To her embarrassment, he came out of the store and lifted his hand to greet her.
‘Good morning, fine day, isn’t it?’ He crossed the road and stood close, looking down at her. ‘What’s your name?’ he said softly.
‘Eline,’ she said, almost afraid to look at him. Her colour was high and she wanted to back away from him so intensely did she feel the attraction between them.
‘Eline, that’s beautiful.’ He spoke in a low tone and the words, ordinary in themselves, conveyed an intimacy that was unmistakable.
Unable to help herself, she looked up and her eyes met his. ‘Mr Davies,’ she began, knowing she must tell him she was married, that she was
Mrs
Eline Harries, but he stopped her with his hand raised in protest.
‘Will, anyone who is important in my life calls me Will.’ He thrust his hands into his pockets as though worried that he had been too familiar.
Eline heard his words in a flurry of excitement, he thought she was important, he wanted her to call him by his first name.
‘I like your window,’ she said in a voice she didn’t recognize as her own, ‘it’s lovely.’ How banal; why couldn’t she think of something clever to say, something meaningful?
‘Thank you, Eline.’ He spoke her name lingeringly and it was like a caress.
The spell was broken by the return of Carys who took the reins of the horse from Eline’s nerveless fingers.
‘
Duw
, there’s nice to see a toff like you talking to folks of our like,’ Carys said robustly. ‘And there’s good it is to see a fine boot and shoe shop opening in the village. Could do with a bit of style like them town folk, we could.’
William Davies stepped back apace and smiled easily. ‘I hope we’ll see you as customers someday soon, both of you.’
With a last glance in Eline’s direction, he returned to the other side of the road, his long legs covering the short distance easily. At the doorway of his shop, he turned and, though he didn’t move, his eyes were on Eline as she fell into step beside Carys who was already walking along the street.
‘There’s a lovely young man,’ Carys said. ‘Seems to fancy you, mind.’ There was laughter in her eyes. ‘He don’t know you’re married to the finest man in the village.’
Her words were like a dousing of cold water and Eline gasped. ‘I didn’t think to tell him I was married,’ she said and then added defensively, ‘mind, we were only passing the time of day, didn’t talk about anything personal.’
There had been no need for talk, the feelings transmitted between them had needed no words.
‘Well, no harm in that,’ Carys said good-naturedly,
‘he wants customers. Anyway, he’s got charm, just like I said before
and
he’s a polite young man. More polite to you than to me, mind.’
‘I suppose so,’ Eline said but she knew that the attraction between Will and herself had been far more than politeness.
The sky had become overcast and grey and Carys looked upwards with a grimace. ‘I hope the rain keeps away,’ she said, ‘otherwise we won’t get many customers.’
Eline hardly heard Carys’s words, she was thinking of Will standing so near her and yet not touching. His very words were a caress and the way he spoke her name made it sound romantic, golden and gleaming with sunlight.
He hadn’t seemed to notice her old shawl or the faded skirt; he had looked into her face and into her eyes and he had touched some hidden spring within her that she had not known she possessed.
The roadway to Swansea seemed to be paved with feathers, the day seemed filled with sunshine and even the rattle of the cart-wheels against the hard ground sounded like the tinkling of bells.
The market as usual was vivid with life. Cockle women sat near the gate, baskets at their feet, scallop shells protruding from the beds of cockles waiting to be scooped, a halfpenny worth at a time, into jugs or dishes.
Farmers from Gower were there as usual with produce brought fresh from the rich earth. They called loudly to each other and to the shoppers passing by.
Looking at the earth-covered potatoes and the solid swedes and rich cabbages Eline felt a dart of homesickness for her own farm up on the Town Hill. But it was not her farm now, she reminded herself sternly, Honey’s Farm had been sold to strangers.
‘Look, here’s my pitch.’ Carys lifted a folding table down from the cart and set it up, swiftly covering it with
a snow-white cloth. ‘I’ll put the sacks at the side of you and here’s my tin for taking the money.’ She placed her measuring jug on the white cloth alongside the battered tin which contained some loose change.
‘Will you be long?’ Eline said uneasily. ‘I’m not sure I’m cut out for this.’
‘
Duw
, there’s a worrier you are.’ Carys hauled a sack down from the cart and the oysters rattled together noisily as though seeking an escape.
‘What if I give the wrong change?’ Eline persisted, glancing round with a feeling of panic.
‘Don’t worry,’ Carys repeated, ‘it wouldn’t be the end of the world. Anyway, you’ll find most people are honest and they’ll put you right quick enough especially if you’ve done them out of a farthing or two.’
She drew her shawl round her big shoulders. ‘I’m going to take Binnie out back to graze and then I’ll go round the stalls. I want to buy some wool and some yards of cloth and a nice rich pie for our dinner and then I’ll be back, all right?’
Eline watched Carys disappear into the crowd and bit her lip wondering why on earth she’d agreed to come in the first place.
Her first customer was a serving girl who bent over the sacks, her fingers raking the oysters diligently.
‘Fresh, are they?’ she said in an off-hand manner that put Eline on the defensive.
‘Naturally,’ she said, ‘just out of the sea a few hours ago. If you want fresher you’ll have to dredge them yourself.’
The girl looked at her sharply. ‘No need to be huffy,’ she said. ‘If I give my master a bad belly, I’ll feel the weight of his boot, mind.’
Eline softened. ‘No need to worry, these oysters are fresh, I promise you.’
‘All right then,’ the girl said grudgingly, ‘fill my dish up, to the top, mind.’
She watched as Eline scooped up the oysters in the measure, and tumbled them into the dish. The girl smiled.
‘You gives a bit more than the other woman,’ she said in satisfaction. ‘Bit on the mean side, she is.’
The girl covered the dish with a cloth and dropped some money in the tin. ‘See yer.’
Eline bit her lip, she must remember next time not to be so generous. She glanced into the tin and saw that the money the girl put in was short by a halfpenny. Well, that was her first lesson in selling, folk might not feel inclined to cheat the more experienced Carys, but Eline must count the money carefully from now on.
Eline looked round the market, a wash of women wandered past, servants from one of the big houses no doubt. Some had children with them, others carried loaded baskets over their arms, all of them were engaged in earnest gossip and suddenly Eline felt lonely.
‘Hello again.’ The voice was warm and low and Eline looked up to see William Davies standing over her. Strangely enough she wasn’t surprised at his sudden appearance in Swansea, indeed she had the sneaking suspicion that he had come especially to see her.
‘Hello.’ Her voice trembled and her cheeks were warm, she felt tongue-tied and stupid, staring up at him, not knowing what to say.
A surge of customers arrived at once; they were pressing around her and flustered, Eline began to serve them.
‘Good shellfish, these.’ One of the women picked up an oyster and examined it. ‘Fresh out of the sea if I’m any judge.’
Eline was caught up in a feeling of panic trying to serve everyone at once. Money was clanging into the tin and she had no idea if the customers were paying honestly or not.
She scooped up oysters from the nearest sack and
filled a variety of jugs and dishes, aware that her hair was tumbling out of the restraining ribbons, falling untidily over her face.
‘
Duw
, there’s a crowd you got by here.’ Carys, solid and reassuring was at her side then, taking over the sale of the oysters with the ease of long practice. Soon the panic was over and Carys put her hand on Eline’s shoulder.
‘Take a breather, do a bit of shopping while you got the chance.’
Eline was only too glad to accept Carys’s offer and, with a quick glance round, moved away from the small table.
She had seen at once that William Davies was still standing on the fringes of the crowd. He smiled as he came to her side.
‘Well, that was rather a hectic few minutes,’ he said. ‘You looked as though you were terrified out of your wits.’
‘I was,’ she replied, pushing back her hair. ‘I was never so glad to see Carys in all my life.’
‘You are not a born oyster maiden then?’ he asked, walking easily at her side as Eline made her way distractedly through stalls she didn’t even see.
‘No, I was raised on a farm.’ She risked a glance at him and the colour flooded into her cheeks once more at the look in his eyes. ‘I’m just an ordinary woman.’
‘No, not ordinary,’ Will said. ‘You are so beautiful, Eline, and so vulnerable, I want to take you away and look after you.’
Eline lowered her head, now was the time to tell him she was married, that she had someone to take care of her, she had Joe. And yet the words would not pass her lips.
‘There is something I can’t explain,’ Will continued, ‘a feeling between us that I’ve never experienced before. You feel it too, don’t you?’
Eline nodded, but she couldn’t speak. They stood still in the middle of the crowded market and stared at each other as though each was trying to memorize the other’s face.
Will held out his hand as though he would touch her and then he let it drop to his side. ‘What is it, Eline? Is there something you are not telling me?’
Eline took a ‘deep breath and knew that she couldn’t tell him, she didn’t want to break the magical, fragile bond that was growing between them.
‘I must go,’ she said. ‘I have to think things out, please let me be.’ She turned and hurried away from him and when she glanced over her shoulder, he had gone, swallowed up in the crowd.
The hours seemed to drag after that. Eline and Carys shared a pie, snatching the food between serving customers. Then, at last, the oyster sacks were empty, lying limply on the ground. Carys lifted her tin heavy with money and sighed contentedly.
‘Time to fold up the table,’ Carys said, ‘there won’t be any more customers today.’
Eline sighed with relief; she had been on edge, her eyes searching the crowds, seeing William Davies’s build and bearing a hundred times, only to find out it wasn’t him at all.
Carys transferred the money from the tin into a huge pocket beneath her apron and then folded the empty sacks and handed them to Eline. ‘Let’s pop round the back, fetch the horse and cart,’ she said. ‘We can ride a bit of the way back home, give our legs a rest.’
Binnie was contentedly chewing the grass at the edge of the roadway. Carys untied the reins from round the bark of a tree and stroked the animal’s ears.
‘Good girl, Binnie, come on, we’re going home.’ She threw the sacks on to the back of the cart and led the horse out on to the roadway.
‘Jump up on the cart,’ Carys said, lifting her skirts and
hauling herself on board. The cart swayed dangerously as Eline carefully climbed up beside her.
‘Not a bad day’s work,’ Carys said, running her hands through the coins in her pocket. ‘Hope my Sam got a good catch this trip out, got a special customer over at Caswell, a man that runs a tavern, been taking a lot of Sam’s oysters lately, mind.’
The sky overhead was darkening, rain clouds seemed to be gathering over the entire bay, hovering over the craggy headland of Mumbles that was mistily visible from the Oystermouth Road.
Carys sighed. ‘I spects I’ll have a lot of work on the perches when Sam comes back, laying down them oysters is a back-breaking business.’ She glanced at Eline.
‘Your Joe don’t let you do that though, do he?’ she said, eyebrows raised. ‘That’s one mistake you should put right.’ She sighed. ‘Still, you don’t know you’re born having a man like Joe.’
Eline was scarcely listening but she made an effort to appear interested. ‘I suppose I am lucky.’ She glanced at Carys trying to give the conversation some of her attention. ‘Why will you be laying down oysters this trip, then?’