September time.
When they arrived, the hay was all safely gathered in as the summer had been glorious and Ellen came with tales of the hungry baby Mary could barely satisfy. âSheâs feeding him every minute and heâs so big, youâd never believe it,â Ellen said. âIâve told Mary that child doesnât need milk, he needs good roast meat and potatoes, that one. And as for Jamie, I tell you that child is one bodyâs work. Dear Lord, Mary often doubts heâll ever grow up, heâs in so many scrapes.â
âWeâre all longing to see them,â Sarah said.
âMaybe next year Iâll come with her to give her a hand â Jamie will surely fall overboard the minute her back was turned.â
âHe sounds a handful right enough.â
âHeâs full of life and fun, thatâs all,â Ellen said. âThey have only the streets to play in too, remember. You canât always be at the park.â
âThereâs more space here.â
âAye, thatâs true,â Ellen said. âBut thereâs dangers too. Jamie might easily sink into the midden, or drown in the river, or fall down the hillside.â
Bridie laughed. She longed to see Jamie and the new baby and wondered as the work slowed down for the winter whether sheâd be able to go over to see them. Even a week, or failing that a few days, would be better than nothing.
But the trip wasnât to be. Ellen and Sam had only been gone home a week when Sarah tipped a kettle of boiling water over her legs and feet as she attempted to fill the teapot on the hob. The scalds were bad enough and needed the services of a doctor, but a more longer-lasting concern was why it had happened in the first place. It appeared that Sarahâs left arm had given way on her.
As the scalds healed, the arm got steadily weaker and the doctor was able to offer no reason for it, or treatment, or possibility of a cure. Gradually, Sarah was able to do less and less and Bridie had taken on more, until she knew even to take a day off now would be out of the question. Her motherâs disability had tied her even more firmly to the farmhouse and yet Sarah could hardly be blamed. It was just the way of things.
Bridie lifted the burden of the house onto her narrow shoulders and found as time passed she had scarcely a minute to call her own. Even those winter months that usually werenât so frantically busy on the farm were not easy for her. There was still the washing to be done, the cooking and breadmaking and the dairy work, which her mother had always taken the brunt of previously.
Christmas and the New Year passed in a flurry of activity and even more cooking than usual and Bridie looked forward to 1932 with little enthusiasm, although she would be eighteen in February. This year sheâd be able to go to the Harvest Dance. It was the highlight of the year â Rosalyn, being a year older, had already been there the once and had hardly stopped going on about it for weeks afterwards.
Some parents had allowed their daughters to go at sixteen, but Jimmy, Francis and Delia had been adamant that the girls were not to go till they were eighteen, for drink was served there, and that Frank should take them there and fetch them home again.
Bridie was more excited than she would normally be; since her mother had scalded herself, sheâd not even been to any of the socials, though Rosalyn had urged her to. âCome on,â she said. âItâs the only chance weâll have to do things like this. My aunt Maria said if she knew what she knows now, sheâd have stayed single longer.â
âI donât blame her,â Bridie said. Deliaâs brother Aiden had married his Maria and now had two boys of three and two and a baby girl of six months old. Heâd gone to America and got work with a gang of navvies in Central America, but so far had found nowhere suitable for his family
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