I found nothing in the Blue Lias but shards of bellies, which I kept even though they were worthless with the tip broke off. Visitors only want to buy long bellies, preferably with the tip intact. But once I've picked something up it's hard to drop it again.
In the rocks, though, I discovered a complete unbroken ammonite. It fitted perfectly in my palm, and I closed my fingers over it and squeezed it. I wanted to show it to someone; you always do want to show your finds, to make them real. But Pa--who would have known how hard it was to find such a perfect ammo--Pa weren't there. I shut my eyes to stop the tears. I wanted to keep that ammo in my hand always, squeezing it and thinking of Pa.
'Hello, Mary.' Elizabeth Philpot was standing over me, dark against the grey light of the sky. 'I didn't expect to find you out here today.'
I couldn't see her expression, and wondered what she thought of me being upon beach rather than at home, comforting Mam.
'What have you found?'
I scrambled to my feet and held out the ammo. Miss Elizabeth took it. 'Ah, a lovely one.
I gestured to the rocks at our feet.
'Don't forget to write down where you found it, which layer of rock and the date.
It is important to record it.' Since I'd learned to read and write at Chapel Sunday school, Miss Elizabeth was always nagging me to make labels. She glanced down the beach.
'Will the tide cut us off, do you think?'
'We've a few minutes, ma'am. I'll turn back soon.'
Miss Elizabeth nodded, knowing that I would prefer to walk back on my own rather than with her. She took no offence--hunters often like to be alone. 'Oh, Mary,' she said as she turned to go. 'My sisters and I are all very sorry about your father. I will come by tomorrow. Bessy has made a pie, Louise a tonic for your mother, and Margaret has knitted a scarf.'
'That be kind,' I mumbled. I wanted to ask what use scarves and tonics were to us now, when we needed coal or bread or money. But the Philpots had always been good to me, and I knew better than to complain.
A gust blew the rim of Miss Elizabeth's bonnet so that it turned inside out. She pushed it back and wrapped her shawl close, then frowned. 'Where's your coat, girl? It's cold to be out without.'
I shrugged. 'I'm not cold.' In fact, I
I waited until Miss Elizabeth had got to the curve in the deserted beach before I made my own way back, still squeezing the ammo. The line of her straight back far ahead kept me company and was a comfort of sorts. Only when I reached Lyme did I see anyone else. A group of Londoners in town for the last of the season were strolling by Gun Cliff at the back of our house. As I slipped past them, a lady called to me, 'Find anything?'
Without thinking I opened my hand. She gasped and caught up the ammo to show the others, who stopped to admire it. 'I'll give you half a crown for it, girl.' The lady handed the ammo to one of the men and opened a purse. I wanted to say it weren't for sale, that it was mine to help me remember Pa by, but she'd already put the coin in my hand and turned away. I stared at the money and thought, 'Here is a week's bread. It'll keep us from the workhouse.' Pa would've wanted that.
I hurried home, squeezing that coin tight. It was proof that we could still make a business out of the curies.
Mam no longer complained about our hunting. She didn't have time to: by the time she recovered from the shock of Pa's death, the baby were born, which she called Richard after Pa. Like all the past babies, this one were a cryer. He was never very well, and nor was Mam; she was cold and tired, with baby not sleeping well and feeding badly.
It were baby's crying--that and the debt--that sent Joe out into the bitter cold he hated, one day a few months after Pa's death. We needed fossils. I wanted to go out too, even with the cold, but I was stuck indoors, jiggling baby about to stop his crying. He was such a squally little thing it was hard to like him. The only thing that shut him up was when I held him tight and jiggled him and sang 'Don't Let Me Die an Old Maid' over and over.
I was just singing the last lines for the sixth time--'Come old or come young, come foolish or witty/ Don't let me die an old maid, but take me for pity'--when Joe come in, banging the door back so I jumped. A bank of cold air hit me and started baby crying again. 'Look what you done!' I shouted. 'He was just quieting and you gone and woke him.'