We went back to the jaw in Church Cliffs, Fanny trailing behind us. As we worked she sat some way away, sifting through the stones at her feet. Maybe she still liked shiny pebbles. She looked so bored and frightened I almost pitied her.
So did Mr Buckland. Perhaps he felt idleness was an evil anyone would want to avoid. When he saw her playing with the stones he went over to talk
'undergroundology', as he liked to call geology. 'Here--Fanny, is it?' he said. 'Would you like me to tell you what those stones are you're arranging? Most of what you've got there is limestone and flint, but that pretty white bit is quartz, and the brown with the stripe is sandstone. There are several different layers of rock along this beach, you see, like this.' He took up a stick and drew in the sand the different layers of granite, limestone, slate, sandstone and chalk. 'All over Great Britain, and indeed on the Continent as well, we are discovering these layers of rock, always in the same order. Isn't that surprising?'
When Fanny did not respond, he said, 'Perhaps you would like to come and see what we're digging out.'
Fanny approached reluctantly, glancing up at the cliff face. She seemed not to have overcome her fear of falling rocks.
'Do you see this jaw?' Mr Buckland ran his finger along it. 'Beautiful, isn't it?
The snout is broken off, but the rest is intact. It will make an excellent model to use during my lectures on fossil discoveries.' He peered at Fanny as if to savour her response, and looked puzzled when she screwed up her face with disgust. Mr Buckland found it hard to understand that others didn't feel as he did about fossils and rocks.
'You saw the creatures Mary discovered when they were on display in town, did you not?' he persisted.
Fanny shook her head.
He tried once more to draw her in. 'Perhaps you would like to help? You may hold the hammers. Or Mary can show you how to look for other fossils.'
'No, thank you, sir. I've my own work.' As she turned to go back to her safe seat away from the cliff, Fanny's face was full of spite. If I were younger I would have pinched her. But she had punishment enough, being out upon beach with us, her presence allowing for the discovery of the very things she despised most. She must have hated that, and would have preferred to scrub any number of pots in the kitchen of the Three Cups.
Later Miss Elizabeth come along, hunting on her own. She frowned at Fanny, who now had out some lace she was making--though how she could keep it clean with so much mud about I didn't know. 'What is she doing here?' Miss Elizabeth demanded.
'Chaperone,' I said.
'Oh!' Miss Elizabeth watched her for a moment, then shook her head. 'Poor girl,'
she murmured, before passing on.
It's your fault she's here, I thought. If you weren't so funny about Mr Buckland you could stay with us and release Fanny from her torment. And my torment too that she's sitting there reminding me of the sort of woman I'll never be.
Fanny was with us all summer. Usually she sat on rocks away from us, or followed at a distance when we were wandering. Though she didn't complain, I knew she hated it when we went farther, to Charmouth or beyond. She preferred remaining close to Lyme, by Gun Cliff or Church Cliffs. Then a friend might come out to see her, and Fanny cheered up and become more confident. The two would sit and peek round their bonnets at us and whisper and giggle.
Mr Buckland tried to interest Fanny in what we found, or to show her what to look for, but she always said she had other things to do, and brought out lace or sewing or knitting. 'She thinks they're the Devil's works,' I finally explained in a low voice, when Fanny had once again rebuffed him and gone to sit with her lace. 'They scare her.'
'But that's absurd!' Mr Buckland said. 'They are God's creatures from the past, and there is nothing to be frightened of.'
He got up from his knees as if he would go to her, but I caught his arm. 'Please, sir, leave her be. It's better that way.'
When I looked over at Fanny she was staring at my hand on Mr Buckland's sleeve. She always seemed to notice when his hand touched mine as he passed me a fossil, or when I grabbed his elbow when he stumbled. She gasped outright when Mr Buckland hugged me the afternoon we managed to get the croc jaw out of the cliff. In that way her accompanying us made things worse, for I suspect Fanny spread plenty of gossip. We might have been better off alone, without a witness to report back everything she saw that she didn't understand. I still had funny looks from townspeople, and laughter behind my back.
Poor Fanny. I should be kinder to her, for she paid a price, going out with us.