I stumbled back to the road, half-blind with fear and confusion and anger.
Already love!
I stood upon the cobbled road, unsure what to do, where to go.
No, I finally determined. I would go back. I had seen Soor Lily’s handiwork, and I knew it had great power. She must try again.
I turned to go back to her house, but just off the road stood one of her great sons.
“Goodbye,” he said.
I thought to walk around him, but I saw that all seven of her sons were guarding the way.
“Goodbye,” another said. “Goodbye,” said each in turn.
I walked back to Tide-by-Rood and to home.
X
Of Tailor and Choirmaster and what I decide;
of good lemons and bad news.
Gretta and Beatrice had let themselves in and had done all my chores. Now they were stitching, and their faces were filled with worry. Grandmother was sleeping still.
“I have been to see Soor Lily,” I said quietly, and I began steeping foxglove tea.
“The charm is not working, is it?” Gretta said flatly.
“She says it is because I am in love already.”
“It must be Ben.”
“It must be, but the eye does not stop for Ben—it only slows.”
“It is waiting for your pie,” Beatrice said hopefully.
“Perhaps,” I said. I sat on the edge of Grandmother’s bed with the foxglove tea and stroked her hair until she woke with a smile.
While I helped her sip the tea, Gretta and Beatrice whispered together. Before Grandmother had finished the tea, the color had come back to her face and I had persuaded her to have breakfast.
“You were right, Keturah,” she said. “Death is not as near as I had thought, perhaps.”
After she had eaten, she took up her spindle and assured me that she might feel well enough to make supper also.
“If you are well enough, Grandmother Reeve,” Gretta said, “might we borrow Keturah for a time?”
“Of course, dears, run and play. Ah, youth is so carefree and innocent.”
My friends escorted me outside and pounced upon me immediately. “You have not looked at every man while you held the charm,” Gretta said accusingly. “Have you?”
“Indeed I have,” I said. “At the hunt, at the gatherings, among the work crew …”
“Tailor?” Gretta demanded.
“Tailor—no …”
“Choirmaster?” Beatrice asked.
“Choirmaster—no …”
“Just as we thought,” Gretta said, her hands on her hips.
“But they are for you!” I said. “Gretta, confess that you love Tailor yourself.”
“It is true that I admire him, Keturah. He is kind to his children, and he mends Hermit Gregor’s trousers for free. But a man who does good of his own free will is a man who cannot be bossed—and that, Keturah, can be a dangerous thing. Besides, I saw dirt in the corners of his house.”
“Not everyone, perhaps, can be as perfect as you, Gretta,” I said.
“Sister, friend,” she said sternly to me, “we show ourselves in everything we do. Dirty floors, dirty soul; unmade bed, unkempt soul. Perfection in cleanliness demonstrates perfection of being. Every perfect stitch is a glory to God. Now that man, he lives in—”
“Comfort,” I said.
“Sloth,” said Gretta. “His garden has nine weeds. I counted them myself.”
“Then it must please you that he demands perfection in stitches,” I said.
“See the way his poor children are forced to dress—in rags and patches,” she continued.
“I have seen them,” I said. “They are no worse off than the poor shepherds down the way.”
“Master Tailor is not poor,” Gretta snapped.
“He is thrifty, perhaps,” I said.
“He has such dear children. Perfect, in fact. But he and his orange hose!” Then she said, lost in reverie, “So hairy and muscled is he, he seems more suited to smithing than sewing.”
Beatrice said to me, “And if the eye cannot bear to gaze upon Tailor’s orange hose, surely it will cease to look when you hear the music Choirmaster has written for the king.”
“Beatrice, you know you love him yourself!” I declared.
“I shall have no husband but shall go to heaven pure,” she said with a grand turn of her head.
“And what, my friend, can be more purifying than to give your whole self and heart to another?” I countered. “Of course I could never love Choirmaster, nor Tailor.”
“Did not Soor Lily say that you already loved?”
“She did, but …”
“Then you must try everyone. Come!” Gretta insisted. And they locked their arms in mine and walked me down to Tailor’s cottage. I confess I was too tired to argue with them, let alone tear myself away. I even leaned upon them as I walked, so weary was I.
Tailor was gracious when we arrived at his door. It was a solid, simple home, well-built and warm, but plain. The furniture was made to withstand the use and abuse of children, and the whole room smelled of an abundance of good things to eat. There was not a flower or a curtain to be seen, but it was a house full of enough.
“Come in, Keturah, Gretta, Beatrice,” he said, gesturing for us to enter his comfortable home. Gretta looked at me hopefully and nodded to my apron.
“Thank you, Keturah,” Tailor said, “for helping with Lady Temsland’s gown.”
“Gown?”