Mary Olivier: A Life | Page 2

May Sinclair
shone
white above the pile of oranges on the dark blue dish. She was dipping
her fingers in a dark blue glass bowl.
When Mary saw her she strained towards her, leaning dangerously out
of Jenny's arms. Old Jenny said "Tchit-tchit!" and made her arms tight
and hard and put her on Papa's knee.
Papa sat up, broad and tall above the table, all by himself. He was
dressed in black. One long brown beard hung down in front of him and
one short beard covered his mouth. You knew he was smiling because
his cheeks swelled high up his face so that his eyes were squeezed into
narrow, shining slits. When they came out again you saw scarlet specks
and smears in their corners.

Papa's big white hand was on the table, holding a glass filled with some
red stuff that was both dark and shining and had a queer, sharp smell.
"Porty-worty winey-piney," said Papa.
The same queer, sharp smell came from between his two beards when
he spoke.
Mark was sitting up beside Mamma a long way off. She could see them
looking at each other. Roddy and Dank were with them.
They were making flowers out of orange peel and floating them in the
finger bowls. Mamma's fingers were blue and sharp-pointed in the
water behind the dark blue glass of her bowl. The floating orange-peel
flowers were blue. She could see Mamma smiling as she stirred them
about with the tips of her blue fingers.
Her underlip pouted and shook. She didn't want to sit by herself on
Papa's knee. She wanted to sit in Mamma's lap beside Mark. She
wanted Mark to make orange-peel flowers for her. She wanted Mamma
to look down at her and smile.
Papa was spreading butter on biscuit and powdered sugar on the butter.
"Sugary--Buttery--Bippery," said Papa.
She shook her head. "I want to go to Mamma. I want to go to Mark."
She pushed away the biscuit. "No. No. Mamma give Mary. Mark give
Mary."
"Drinky--winky," said Papa.
He put his glass to her shaking mouth. She turned her head away, and
he took it between his thumb and finger and turned it back again. Her
neck moved stiffly. Her head felt small and brittle under the weight and
pinch of the big hand. The smell and the sour, burning taste of the wine
made her cry.

"Don't tease Baby, Emilius," said Mamma.
"I never tease anybody."
He lifted her up. She could feel her body swell and tighten under the
bands and drawstrings of her clothes, as she struggled and choked,
straining against the immense clamp of his arms. When his wet red lips
pushed out between his beards to kiss her she kicked. Her toes
drummed against something stiff and thin that gave way and sprang out
again with a cracking and popping sound.
He put her on the floor. She stood there all by herself, crying, till Mark
came and took her by the hand.
"Naughty Baby. Naughty Mary," said Mamma. "Don't kiss her, Mark."
"No, Mamma."
He knelt on the floor beside her and smiled into her face and wiped it
with his pocket-handkerchief. She put out her mouth and kissed him
and stopped crying.
"Jenny must come," Mamma said, "and take Mary away."
"No. Mark take Mary."
"Let the little beast take her," said Papa. "If he does he shan't come
back again. Do you hear that, sir?"
Mark said, "Yes, Papa."
They went out of the room hand in hand. He carried her upstairs
pickaback. As they went she rested her chin on the nape of his neck
where his brown hair thinned off into shiny, golden down.
III.
Old Jenny sat in the rocking-chair by the fireguard in the nursery. She
wore a black net cap with purple rosettes above her ears. You could

look through the black net and see the top of her head laid out in stripes
of grey hair and pinky skin.
She had a grey face, flattened and wide-open like her eyes. She held it
tilted slightly backwards out of your way, and seemed to be always
staring at something just above your head. Jenny's face had tiny creases
and crinkles all over it. When you kissed it you could feel the loose
flesh crumpling and sliding softly over the bone. There was always
about her a faint smell of sour milk.
No use trying to talk to Jenny. She was too tired to listen. You climbed
on to her lap and stroked her face, and said "Poor Jenny. Dear Jenny.
Poor Jenny-Wee so tired," and her face shut up and went to sleep. Her
broad flat nose drooped; her eyelids drooped; her long, grey bands of
hair drooped; she was like the white donkey that lived in the
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