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THE GREAT WAR SAGAS: Box set of 2 passionate and inspiring stories: A Crimson Dawn and No Greater Love

Page 49

by Janet MacLeod Trotter


  A blackbird came screeching out of a hedge and George stopped to laugh at himself. He was reminded of himself as a young boy, springing out of ditches, brandishing a sword-stick and making battle speeches against the occupying Romans.

  Suddenly another voice came stridently into his mind. I’m fighting for justice for all women … We want equality with men under the law and equal wages...

  Maggie Beaton was mad, George declared to himself, and such notions might be a danger to working men whose jobs must be protected and enhanced. Yet he was troubled by Maggie’s startling words. Were the suffragettes not asking that women be given the very things that working men wanted - the vote, better pay and improved social conditions?

  George mocked himself. What would Bob Stanners and the others think of him if they suspected he was going soft on women’s rights? If his friends thought of such things at all, it was with irritation that women dared to set sports pavilions on fire or throw hammers through picture-house windows. When a suffragette had smashed the window of Lloyd George’s car in Newcastle, Bob had said, ‘If it was my missus, I’d give her a hidin’ into next week. Shows lasses aren’t fit to vote, doesn’t it?’

  George had grunted agreement but had been secretly admiring of the woman’s courage in confronting the ruling class so brazenly. He was disturbed by the thought that, while the suffragettes got on with their revolution, he and his mates just endlessly talked about it.

  Time for a drink, George thought, trying to clear his mind of conflicting feelings. He pushed the poetry book back inside his jacket and strode back towards the town.

  Chapter 6

  Gas jets were flaring outside the pubs, and Maggie could glimpse smoky interiors behind the heavy brass-handled doors. She was tempted to stride in and shout her slogans over the general hubbub, but she knew she had to be careful. She must do nothing tonight to provoke arrest and miss her important meeting with Emily Davison and she knew the police would detain her on the slightest pretext. They knew all the local militants and watched them like hawks, so she maintained her unobtrusive position at the edge of the Bigg Market, silently holding up a copy of The Suffragette in the hope that some of the Saturday night revellers might buy one.

  She was content to watch chattering couples and families walking around the open stalls, lit by a hissing phosphorous light. A father cradled a sleeping girl in his arms, while two boys beside him shared a tub of peas and his wife fingered a piece of red calico in indecision. Rejecting it, the mother moved away, ruffling the boys’ hair in amusement at something they had said and Maggie felt a strange sense of aloneness.

  She was set apart by what she chose to do, but she was meant to be alone. How else could she do this important work? If she had a husband and family, she would be too occupied with daily chores to have any energy left for the women’s cause. She realised that she was lucky to have Susan and Granny at home to take care of the mundane, wearisome tasks of daily life, so that, after her office job, she could concentrate on more important work. Although Granny might think of it like that, she knew her sister did not. Yet it cheered Maggie to think that Susan inadvertently helped women’s suffrage in this way.

  As the market began to empty and the yawning stallholders packed up their goods and went home, Maggie realised how tired and footsore she was. She decided to bundle up her newspapers too.

  ‘Here, hinny.’ The toothless pea-seller stopped and offered her a tub from her soapbox on wheels. ‘Bet you’ve had nowt to eat all night.’

  ‘Ta, Mrs Surtees.’ Maggie smiled gratefully at the stooped woman who often lingered to speak to her, taking the proffered food.

  ‘Too hard for my old gums anyways,’ Mrs Surtees cackled. ‘Sell ’em to Pearson’s as bullets, me old man always says.’

  ‘Taste canny to me,’ Maggie said, biting on the hard peas hungrily.

  Mrs Surtees began to recount the week’s events, her husband’s health and the gossip of Sandgate, keeping Maggie entertained while she ate. The square had darkened and fallen so peaceful that the sudden disruption as brawlers spilled out of the Half Moon took them by surprise.

  ‘You’re a bloody cheat!’

  ‘I won fair and square. You’re too drunk to know the difference.’

  ‘Don’t call me a drunk!’

  A man was shoved into their path, knocking the remaining tubs of peas onto the cobbles. As they bounced away in front of an astonished Mrs Surtees, Maggie upbraided the sprawling men.

  ‘You big clumsy buggers! You’ll pay her for the peas,’ she shouted.

  A thin-faced man snarled at her to shut up as he took hold of the man at her feet and jerked him round.

  Maggie was dumbfounded as she peered into the dark. ‘Richard Turvey, is that you? What in the world...?’

  Richard focused on her with smoke-reddened eyes. ‘Help me, won’t you?’ He doubled up as his assailant kicked him in the stomach. Other men began to crowd round the victim.

  ‘Stop it,’ Maggie said, attempting to intervene.

  The thin man turned on her aggressively. ‘Stay out of this, you silly bitch. He’s cheated me of me money and he’s in for a good hidin’.’

  ‘And you’ve cheated this woman of her earnings,’ Maggie replied sharply. ‘You’ll pay for the peas you’ve ruined.’

  The young drunk glared at her menacingly. ‘What you interfering for? Who the hell are you anyway?’ Suddenly he noticed her suffragette sash and the pile of newspapers. ‘You’re one of them bloody women,’ he spat. ‘I’ll have you!’

  Forgetting the man on the ground, he lurched towards Maggie, grabbing her sash and tearing it off her. In an instant he was followed by others from the pub who turned on her with hostile looks and menacing hands. Maggie froze in terror as Mrs Surtees was shoved out of the way by the riled men. One grabbed her by the jacket, another by the blouse.

  ‘Whore!’

  ‘You’ve asked for this.’

  ‘Hanging’s too good for your kind!’

  ‘Let her have it!’

  She screamed in agony as her hair was pulled and someone punched her breast. Instinctively she knew that if she lost her footing and went down, that would be the end. She clutched at one of the attackers and held on to his arm, sinking her teeth into his hand. He howled in pain, drawing back his hand, but someone else jabbed a fist into her eye. For a moment Maggie was blinded and as the angry faces blurred before her, she felt herself slipping to the cobbles.

  I’m going to die, she thought. I’m going to die in a dirty lane because of these senseless drunken men. And my petty efforts for the cause will be wasted before I’ve had time to prove myself.

  As she went down, Maggie was aware of increased noises and confusion, then her head hit the ground and she blacked out.

  ***

  George Gordon and Bob Stanners came across the commotion as they took a short cut through the market on their way home. At first they thought it just another Saturday night fight as the pubs emptied, then George spotted a torn sash lying in the debris of rotting vegetables and discarded paper.

  Pushing their way into the fight, they saw the old pea-seller crouched and sobbing on the kerb.

  ‘Help the lass, please help the lass!’ she wailed at them.

  George strained into the dark and saw a young woman on the ground. Filled with fury, he seized the nearest attacker round the neck and pulled him back. Caught off balance, the man stumbled and George helped him on his way with a hard punch. Without hesitation, Bob set about the woman’s attackers too. The drunks were no match for the fit blacksmith and his friend and they soon fell back, stumbling away with curses and bleeding noses.

  George bent down to help the woman. A lone stallholder hurried over with a lamp and the light flickered to reveal a pale bruised face under the matted black hair.

  ‘Maggie Beaton!’ George gasped in horror. ‘The bastards!’

  ‘You know the lass?’ Bob asked.

  ‘Aye, she’s from over our way,’ George said, fill
ed with disgust at the attack. He leaned forward and gently lifted her to a sitting position. Maggie’s eyes flickered open, but she gave no look of recognition. She moaned and George felt her thin body convulse under his touch.

  ‘It’s all right, hinny,’ Mrs Surtees tried to reassure her. ‘These lads have saved you. They’ll do no harm.’

  Maggie still stared at them with confused eyes as a harsh sobbing rose up in her throat.

  ‘Shall I gan for the coppers?’ Bob asked.

  George hesitated, noticing the torn sash of purple, green and white.

  ‘No, they’d probably just arrest her for selling her papers.’

  The truth suddenly dawned on Bob. ‘She’s a bloody suffragette!’

  ‘So?’ George was sharp.

  ‘Probably asked for it,’ Bob said disparagingly, ‘mouthing off.’

  George turned on him angrily. ‘No lass deserves to be set on like this, no matter what she stands for.’

  ‘Aye,’ Mrs Surtees agreed, stroking Maggie’s forehead with her gnarled hands. ‘And it only happened ’cos she stood up for a man they were attacking. The bugger didn’t even stay to help her. Makes me blood boil.’

  George shook his head in disbelief.

  ‘So what do we do with her?’ Bob asked glumly.

  ‘We get her home to her family.’ George was adamant. ‘Help me lift her, Bob.’

  Bob muttered, ‘All right, but it doesn’t mean I agree with—’

  ‘Shut your gob and give us a hand!’

  They got Maggie to her feet and George covered her with his own jacket. She was shaking and in shock, saying nothing, as if she did not know him. Mrs Surtees blessed them and waved them away.

  In the warmth of the tramcar, Maggie began to revive, becoming aware of curious stares from the passengers. Feeling with her hands, she realised several buttons had gone from her blouse and that the jacket she wore was far too big. What was she doing here? she puzzled. And why was she wearing this jacket? All at once, the memory of the attack flooded over her and she looked around in panic. George Gordon stood looking over her, keeping his balance as the tram jolted them forward.

  ‘You’re all right, bonny lass,’ he smiled awkwardly. ‘We’ll see you home.’

  Maggie noticed he was in his shirtsleeves. Somehow, the tall blacksmith had rescued her. She closed her eyes again, every bump of the journey jarring her bruised body, though she was thankful to be in the safe fuggy interior of the car.

  Later, as George and Bob helped her from the tram and across the road to Gun Street, she was able to discover how they had stopped the assault.

  ‘Thank you,’ she whispered.

  There was consternation at her arrival, with Susan fussing around her and Granny Beaton instructing her to lie on the parlour bed while they attended to her cuts and bruises. The men withdrew hastily, refusing offers of tea. Jimmy and Helen came in bleary-eyed and yawning and demanding to know what the noise was about. Then Maggie’s mother appeared, her greying hair hanging in limp braids over her shoulders and her body shapeless in her nightgown. How old she looks now, Maggie thought through her fatigue as Susan explained what had happened.

  Mabel sat on the edge of the bed, holding Maggie’s hand. ‘I should never have let you go out on your own,’ she fretted, ‘and you shouldn’t have put yourself in such danger.’

  ‘I wasn’t on my own - Rose was there most of the time too,’ Maggie answered. ‘She hadn’t long gone when –’

  ‘Rose Johnstone!’ Mabel grew suddenly angry, withdrawing her hand from Maggie’s. ‘I wish you’d never met the lass. Turning your head with all this politics - I blame her for this.’

  ‘You were happy enough with Rose when she helped me with me education and getting a job at Pearson’s. It wasn’t Rose’s fault; it was a pack of drunken men who did it!’

  Helen gave an impatient huff, jealous of the attention Maggie was receiving. ‘There you go again - it’s always men’s fault for everything. The truth is you’ve never liked lads.’

  ‘Oh, you silly lass,’ Maggie said in exasperation. ‘Can’t you see there’re more important things in life than tappy-lappying after lads? I do what I do because I want to make things better for all lasses - including the likes of you, Helen, believe it or not.’

  Helen pulled a face and Maggie sank back again, feeling nauseous from the effort. But Susan was not going to let the matter lie.

  ‘This suffragette business has got to stop, hasn’t it, Mam?’ she scolded, still badly shaken by what had happened. ‘She could have got herself killed.’

  ‘Let the lassie rest,’ Granny Beaton chided gently. ‘It’s nearly the Sabbath. Words can wait till the morning when tempers have cooled.’

  But Susan would not be silenced. ‘It needs saying now,’ she said in high dudgeon. ‘Maggie’s got to give up this business before it brings the family down.’

  ‘Aye,’ Mabel said with a stem look, rising from the bed, ‘our Susan’s right.’

  Maggie felt her eyes sting with tears. ‘I won’t give it up, Mam, you can’t make me,’ she answered in a small, defiant voice.

  ‘Yes, she can,’ Susan replied heatedly. ‘You’ll do as Mam and me tell you as long as you live here.’

  ‘I’m a woman of twenty,’ Maggie protested, ‘and old enough to make my own decisions.’

  ‘You’ll do what’s right by the family,’ her mother said severely, ‘instead of inviting trouble.’

  All at once, a memory came back to Maggie. ‘I didn’t ask for trouble - it was all Richard Turvey’s fault, anyway. They were after him, not me.’

  Susan gawped at her. ‘Richard? What are you talking about?’

  ‘Who was after him?’ Mabel demanded.

  ‘Some drunks at the Half Moon. I was more angry at them upsetting Mrs Surtees’s peas. But Richard was there, sprawling in the gutter.’

  Susan went puce. ‘Of all the cheek! Dragging Richard’s name into this sordid carry-on! He couldn’t have been there anyway, he works Saturday nights. No, you’re just saying this ’cos you’ve taken a dislike to him.’

  ‘Aye,’ Helen piped up, ‘you’re just jealous because he doesn’t fancy you.’

  ‘I know what I saw,’ Maggie answered in agitation. ‘He was being chased for money. He asked me to help him and then they turned on me, because of my sash.’

  ‘You’re lying!’ Helen shouted. ‘Richard’s a gentleman.’

  ‘It’s the truth!’

  ‘George Gordon said nothing about Richard and he would have recognised him if he’d been there,’ Susan said sharply.

  ‘He must have run off.’

  ‘Really, Maggie, how could you say such a thing!’ Susan was furious.

  Mabel clapped her hands for silence. ‘Quiet, the lot of you! I don’t give two pins for this story about Richard Turvey. What matters is that Maggie’s safely home and come to no harm. Now, Helen, get off to bed this instant and take Tich with you.’

  Helen scowled, but her mother looked so angry she did as she was told. Jimmy following mutely behind. Mabel turned back to Maggie, determined to wipe the mutinous expression from her face.

  ‘You may think you know best, Maggie,’ she said sternly, ‘but you don’t know the half of it. I was the same at your age, thought I knew the answer to everything. But at twenty you don’t. I know what’s best for you and I’ve had enough of this obsession of yours. The likes of you and me can’t change the world, so stop trying.’

  ‘It’s not an obsession,’ Maggie began to protest, but her mother wasn’t listening.

  ‘Family comes first, understand? Your duty is to us. If you ever get into a scrape like this again, then there’ll be trouble, because I’ll not have you risking your job at Pearson’s for any fancy notions about equality or votes for women.’

  ‘But Mam—’

  Her mother wagged a finger in warning. ‘And I’ll not have you mixing with law-breakers any more. You stay away from the likes of Rose Johnstone and those other unnatural creat
ures that call themselves women, do you hear?’

  Maggie stared at her mother, appalled. She’d had no idea her mother was so prejudiced against the movement. When she had first joined the WSPU, Maggie was sure her mother had been proud of her showing an independent spirit and wanting to change things for the better. She had always been pushed to better herself. But perhaps Mabel’s interest had been superficial; a shallow pride in her daughter’s mixing with women of a different social class. Maggie looked into her mother’s tired, dark blue eyes and wondered if she believed in anything anymore.

  Maggie wanted to shout back that her cause was not a childish whim which could be so easily given up. But she felt weak with shock and achingly tired. Her family’s opposition overwhelmed her. She knew it would be impossible to give up her friends and her mission, but she did not have the strength to stand up to her mother tonight.

  She sighed in frustration, biting back her words of rebellion, and sank back into the pillow.

  That night she slept with Granny Beaton, comforted by the old woman’s bony warmth and her lack of censure. She fell asleep to her grandmother’s soft Gaelic lullabies, just as she had so many times as a young girl, crying noiselessly for her dead father.

  The next morning, she woke stiff but rested and was greeted by her smiling grandmother bringing in a cup of tea.

  ‘Here’s a strupach to revive you,’ she said, putting down the cup with shaky hands beside the bed. ‘You’re to stay in bed today, so you are.’

  ‘But I can’t,’ Maggie said at once, wincing as she sat up. ‘I have to see . . .’ She stopped before Rose’s name was mentioned.

  ‘Whatever it is can wait,’ Granny Beaton was firm.

  ‘But it’s so important,’ Maggie cried weakly. ‘I’m not going to lie here when I should be...’

  ‘You know your mother won’t let you go out as you please anymore,’ Granny said quietly.

  Maggie turned her head away as tears began to fall.

  Granny Beaton leaned across in concern, stroking the dark hair away from Maggie’s pale forehead and bruised eye.

 

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