“When is the baby due?” asked Cyrena at last.
“In August,” said Ghertrude, sheepishly. “At least, that’s when I think it should be, but…it seems to be progressing faster than that.”
“Carnival?” asked Cyrena.
“Yes, it was conceived then.”
“Is it his?”
“I don’t know; I cannot be sure.”
“You coupled with more than one?”
“Yes,” she said, without a quiver of shame. It was too early to be assigned a father. The tiny beast of jelly turned in her soul and tried to speak in drowning verse to anything that might be its parents.
“Can you find out? There are some medical tests available. Maybe Hoffman?”
They met each other’s gaze and Cyrena understood that the master of the skulking Gladstone bag would not be returning to collect it. Its doglike presence behind the chair seemed to awaken for a moment at the sound of its master’s half-said name. Cyrena felt it. “You’d better get rid of that,” she said.
Ghertrude stiffened, thinking she still referred to the unborn child, then saw that her friend was looking elsewhere. “Get rid of what?”
Cyrena pointed languidly and Ghertrude followed her wagging finger to the shadow. She cringed when she saw it, letting out a small shudder. It was as if the good doctor’s head had been left under the chair, unnoticed, watching their every action since his removal.
She told Cyrena everything. The threat to her life; his rage; the broken pearls and Mutter’s revenge.
“I will protect Sigmund for what he did to save me from that vile animal,” she said with gritted determination. “I will protect him against all.”
The implication of her words was clear: Cyrena was inside the pact or out of it; there was no middle ground. She would take Mutter’s ground against all comers, including her friend.
“Your secret is safe with me,” Cyrena replied, and she meant it. The new life and old death in the room were being gifted in a one-way transaction; she was already part of them both and wanted to be active in each of this woman’s conclusions. Anyway, the prospect of crossing a raging Mutter was too horrible to contemplate. “I am glad that wretched man is out of our lives,” she said decisively. “It sounds like he got everything he deserved.”
Ghertrude nodded, nipping anxiously at the edges of her fingernails. Something dawned on Cyrena and she looked at her friend quizzically.
“What did Mutter do with…the remains?”
Ghertrude paused, realising that she did not know. They had never spoken fully about that night; she had only thanked him and sworn her silence, a pact she had now broken. “I don’t know,” she confessed. “Don’t tell him you know—don’t tell him I told you!”
She was becoming distraught again, and Cyrena wanted her confidence, not her fear. She reached out and held her hands, looking intently into her anxious face.
“I will do whatever you want. I am with you in everything; you can trust me in this. We will put this whole horrid business behind us and face the future with your child together. I can help in all things.”
And so they rebuilt the previous weeks with vigour and companionship. They rolled up their sleeves and scrubbed away all the images and stains of memory that were attached to their dealings with Hoffman and Maclish. They burnt the Gladstone bag and incinerated the days where the monsters, humiliations, and violence had dwelt. In their growing, joyous friendship, Ishmael was almost forgotten.
Mutter watched their daily laughter and the endless tidying and rearranging of furniture; the buying of flowers, the intimate lunches and dinners, their closeness; he knew that she had been told. The haughty outsider was aware of his crime, though she feigned a clever ignorance. He started to observe her more closely, wondering how he would dispose of her when the time came.
Yet Cyrena’s gleaming, overactive vision missed nothing; she saw the simple, wicked plans being knotted together behind the old servant’s red, veined eyes. If she did not deal with this now, it would soon be permanently out of her control.
Ghertrude was out shopping when Cyrena arrived at the gate. She was let in and made to cross the cobbled yard, coming to a stop on the exact spot where Hoffman had been dispatched.
“Herr Mutter, I think we should talk,” she said, peering down at the bunched and ready man. “There is a great secret,” she began, ignoring the clenching of his fists and his boots bracing the ground. “A great secret that I think you should know. I am telling you because I know of the loyalty you have for your mistress. In the future we will need your help even more, and that is why I am telling you, because Ghertrude is still too shy.”
Mutter frowned and relaxed his attack stance.
“The truth is, your mistress is going to have a baby.”
He had known it, had felt it days ago. He had smelt the glow, the warmth hidden in milk. His house and his life had been full of it for years. He had known it and put the idea aside as being impossible.
“Only the three of us know about this. She will tell her family later. I know this places an extra burden on you and I think it only fair that you should be remunerated for all you have done and will do in the future.”
The old yeoman had no idea what she was talking about—“remunerated” meant nothing to him.
“So, Herr Mutter, please, accept this for your troubles.”
She handed him a small cloth pouch, which he took gingerly, holding it in uncertain hands.
“Do open it—it is for you and your growing family.”
He pulled a document out from inside the pouch, awkwardly unfolding it into his blank stare. She suddenly realised that he could not read and was ashamed at her own ignorance. How could she have been so stupid?
“I am afraid it is rather a complicated legal paper. Essentially, it is your house. It is the ownership of your home. It is now yours and your family’s, forever.”
Mutter stared blankly at the paper, her words beginning to stick to it with an uncomfortable mixture of amazement and distrust. He wondered if it was a payoff, or some sort of lever, to prise him away from his job. But no: His father had always paid rent to the Tulps, and so had he, endlessly. His cynical heart began to understand that it was, in fact, a gift. A gift for saving Ghertrude from that foolish man. A gift of freedom for his children and their children to come. He stared at her, changing gear from silence to awestruck speechlessness. She smiled at him from the bright clouds and said, “You are not to work today, Sigmund. Go, tell your good wife the news.”
She fluttered her hand towards the door and he slowly started to move towards it, walking backwards in a crablike fashion. His smile began as he reached the wall and grew with every step that brought him nearer to home. He did not notice Ghertrude pass on the other side of the cathedral square as he hurried along, cap clutched to his chest.
Ghertrude entered through the side gate and found Cyrena still standing in the courtyard. She looked at her friend in bewilderment.
“I have just seen Mutter rushing through the streets, with an insane expression on his face.”
Cyrena beamed at her. “Perhaps he is happy?”
“I have never seen him like that before, I do hope he is all right.”
“I am sure he is fine,” said Cyrena, opening the door of the house and motioning for her friend to enter.
Mutter was out of breath by the time he reached home. He stumbled inside, through his narrow door, catching his rigid boot noisily on the frame, dislodging minute traces of the vanquished Dr. Hoffman. The commotion made his wife stop her duties in the kitchen and rush to see what was going on.
“Whatever’s the matter, Sigi?”
He laid his cap aside, still grasping the crumpled paper and cloth bag. “What on earth is the matter? You look like a giddy ox—look at the colour of you. What is it?”
He could say nothing through his breathless gasps, but his scarlet face looked as though it was ready to burst. He placed the paper on the dining table, which was the focus of the small room. He lovingly flattened it out, caressing its folds into careful submission.
“Thaddeus! Is he in?” he asked his wife excitedly.
“Yes, my dear, but what—”
“Thaddeus!”
The young man loped into the room, bending almost double to avoid the low doorways and sloped ceiling.
“Thaddeus, please read this for us.”
They crowded around the nervous paper, Thaddeus skimming the document to see what he was dealing with, before moving into oratory mode. He stopped short and looked at his father.
“Father, do you know what this is?”
“Yes, yes, read it!”
Thaddeus read it slowly and carefully, announcing the long legal words carefully.
“Oh, Sigi, what is it? I don’t like the sound of it. Are we in trouble about the rent again?” said the frantic wife, who had screwed her thin apron into a ball.
“No, Mother,” said her son. “It says that we now own the house. It is ours forever. None of us will ever pay rent again.”
The other children now joined the table, having been attracted by the unique sounds and vibrations in the room. The wife looked back and forth between the paper, Thaddeus, and Mutter, waiting for one of them to speak.
“It’s been given to us by Mistress Tulp and the Lohr woman. It’s a present for my loyalty to them and for being quiet about the baby.”
“Whose baby?” said his wife quietly, the hope draining from her face.
“Father, this is overwhelming. Your services must have been remarkable to be given such a generous gift.”
“Whose baby?” she said again, suspicion furrowing her brow.
Mutter blushed through his cooling face; praise was an experience previously unknown to him, and he looked shyly at his son.
“Your grandfather and I have cared for that house for years, long before these good people arrived. It has been very different working for them in there.”
“Whose baby?” squawked the infuriated wife.
Everybody looked at her in surprise and Mutter said, “I don’t know whose baby it is. It’s a carnival mite, I think.”
He saw her confusion crush her accusation and realisation set in. “You thought it was mine? With one of them?!”
He started to titter, which very quickly turned into a roar of snorting laughter. They all joined in, the children not knowing why and the wife no longer caring. Under his mirth, Mutter felt a great pride that his wife thought him capable of siring another child, of tupping those genteel ladies, pleasuring them with the girth of his masculinity. He grinned again and opened a bottle. It was much better to think about being paid to bring new life into the world, especially when his real reward had been for dragging life out of it, screaming.