Louisa shuddered, lips parted suddenly.
The two women stood in the downstairs hall. Elizabeth Harper was wringing her hands disconsolately.
“If only my dear husband were alive,” she said miserably.
“Well, he isn’t,” snapped her irate sister, “and we have to fend for ourselves.”
Agatha Winston’s hand closed over her umbrella handle with the grip of a warrior on his battle sword.
“There’s work to be done,” she said, her angry voice threatening in the Kellville house.
Chapter Seven
“Stop that kicking!”
Jimmy Coles’ right foot stopped thumping against the chair leg and hooked quickly around the back of his left ankle as his eyes lifted in a cautious glance at his father. His fork hovered shakily near his mouth, a piece of meat impaled on its tines.
Then his father’s cup slammed down furiously and made everyone at the table start.
“
“Yes, sir,” Jimmy’s faint voice echoed his father’s outraged prompting.
“You had better learn your manners, young man,” his father said, his voice threatening slow, “or you’ll feel the strap across your legs.”
Jimmy swallowed the suddenly tasteless beef and sat petrified on his chair, blue eyes staring at his father. Mrs. Coles looked toward her younger son with that look of futile despair which, so often, showed on her face.
Now Matthew Coles picked up his fork and dug it ruthlessly into a thick slice of beef. Shearing off a piece with one tense drawing motion of his knife, he shoved the meat into his mouth and sat chewing it with rhythmic, angry movements of his jaw.
“In my day,” he went on as though he had just uttered his previous comment on the subject, “we valued the honor of our women. We defended it.”
Robby sat picking listlessly at his food, his stomach still queasy from the brief fight. He hadn’t wanted to sit down with his family at supper but his father had insisted.
“You’re not eating, sir,” Matthew Coles told him.
Robby looked up at his father. “I don’t feel well, sir,” he said quietly.
“You shouldn’t feel well,” his father drove home another lance. “Your intended bride is insulted and you do nothing.”
“Matthew, please don’t—” Jane Coles started imploringly.
Her husband directed one of his women-were-not-created-to-speak looks at her and she lowered her head, the sentence unfinished. She had been tensely worried ever since Robby had told his father the reason for the fight with John Benton. She knew her husband; knew his unyielding strength and was afraid of what he might badger Robby into doing.
“This is something which must be spoken of,” Matthew Coles went on firmly. “And it
Mrs. Coles said nothing. She knew that Matthew wanted no reply but preferred the advantage of asking challenging questions which were not answered. She knew it gave him the pleasure of unopposed refuting.
“No, you have no answer,” said Matthew Coles with a tense nodding of his head. “You know as well as I do that when men cease to defend their women and their homes, our society will cease to exist.”
Robby drank a little water and felt it trickle coldly into his near-empty stomach. He hoped his father would go on ranting at his mother, beleaguering Jimmy—anything except stay on the subject of Louisa and John Benton. He’d been on it all afternoon at the shop where he’d insisted that Robby perform his usual tasks, ill or not.
“That a son of mine,” said Matthew Coles grimly, “should be afraid to stand up for the honor of his intended bride.” He shook his head. “Especially since the poor girl has no family man to speak for her.” He shook his head again. “In
“May I be excused?” Robby asked.
“You may not, sir,” said his father. “The meal is not over.”
“Does your stomach still hurt, dear?” Mrs. Coles asked Robby gently.
An attempted smile twitched at the corners of Robby’s lips. “I feel better, mother,” he said.
“Is there anything I can get for—”
“Don’t coddle the boy!” her husband broke in furiously. “Are we raising daughters or sons? It’s no wonder he’s too cowardly to face John Benton, the way you’ve coddled and protected him!”
“Matthew, he
“Is that what you call defending honor!” shouted Matthew Coles, his face suddenly livid with fury at being contradicted. “Getting hit in the stomach and whining like a dog all day!”
Jane Coles looked disturbedly toward Jimmy who was staring at his father, his slender body unconsciously cringed away from Matthew Coles’ imperious presence.
“Matthew, the—”
“What is this—a house of
“Matthew, the boy,” his wife pleaded, a break in her tired voice.
“Don’t tell me about the boy! It’s time he learned the place of a man in his society!” His head snapped over and he looked accusingly at Jimmy. “Don’t think you’re going to live your life without fighting,” he said to the white- faced boy. “Don’t think you’re going to get away without defending the honor of your women.”
He leaned forward suddenly, neck cords bulging, dark eyes digging into the young boy.
“Tell me, sir,” he said with thinly disguised calm, “what would you do if a man insulted your mother?”
“Matthew,” his wife begged in anguish, “please . . .”
“Would you just sit by and let the insult pass? Is that what you’d do?” He finished in a sudden burst that made Jimmy’s cheek twitch.
“N-no, sir,” the boy mumbled.
“Speak up, sir, speak up! You’re a man, not a woman, and a man is supposed to be heard!”
“
“Is that what you’d do; let the insult pass?”
“No, no,” Jimmy said hurriedly.
“No, what?”
“No, I wouldn’t let the—”
“
Jimmy bit at his lower lip, a rasping sob shaking in his throat.
“Woman!” cried Matthew Coles. “A house of women!”
“Matthew . . .” His wife’s voice was weak and shaking.
Matthew Coles drew in a deep, wavering breath and sawed savagely at his meat. He crammed it into his mouth and started chewing while his family sat tensely in their places, unable to eat.
“
“Eat your food,” said Matthew Coles. “I don’t buy food to be wasted.”
Jimmy picked up his fork with shaking fingers and tried to retrieve a piece of potato which kept rolling off the tines. He bit his lip to stop the sobbing and stuck the fork into a piece of meat.
“What would you do?” his father asked.