A High Wind in Jamaica - Richard Hughes [16]
Jamaica remained, and blossomed anew, its womb being inexhaustible. Mr. and Mrs. Thornton remained, and with patience and tears tried to reconstruct things, in so far as they could be reconstructed. But the danger which their beloved little ones had been through was not a thing to risk again. Heaven had warned them. The children must go.
Nor was the only danger physical.
"That awful night!" said Mrs. Thornton, once, when discussing their plan of sending them home to school: "Oh my dear, what the poor little things must have suffered! Think how much more acute Fear is to a child! And they were so brave, so English."
"I don't believe they realized it." (He only said that to be contradictious: he could hardly expect it to be taken seriously.)
"You know, I am terribly afraid what permanent, _inward_ effect a shock like that may have on them. Have you noticed they never so much as mention it? In England they would at least be safe from dangers of that sort."
Meanwhile the children, accepting the new life as a matter of course, were thoroughly enjoying it. Most children, on a railway journey, prefer to change at as many stations as possible.
The rebuilding of Ferndale, too, was a matter of absorbing interest. For there is one advantage to these match-box houses--easy gone, easy come: and once begun, the work proceeded apace. Mr. Thornton himself led the building gang, employing no end of mechanical devices of his own devising, and it was not long before the day came when he stood with his handsome head emerging through the fast dwindling hole in the new roof, shouting directions to the two black carpenters, who, lying spread-eagle in their check shirts, pinned on shingle after shingle--walling him in, like the victim in some horrid story. At last he had to draw in his head, and where it had been the last few shingles were clapped into place.
An hour later the children had looked their last on Ferndale.
When they had been told they were to go to England, they had received it as an isolated fact: thrilling in itself, but without any particular causation--for it could hardly be due to the death of the cat, and nothing else of importance had occurred lately.
The first stage of their journey was by land, to Montego Bay, and the notable thing about it was that the borrowed wagonette was drawn not by a pair of horses or a pair of mules, but by one horse and one mule. Whenever the horse wanted to go fast the mule fell asleep in the shafts: and if the driver woke it up it set off at a gallop, which angered the horse. Their progress would have been slow anyhow, as all the roads were washed away.
John was the only one who could remember England. What he remembered was sitting at the top of a flight of stairs, which was fenced off from him by a little gate, playing with a red toy milk-cart: and he knew, without having to look, that in the room on the left Baby Emily was lying in her cot. Emily _said_ she could remember something which sounded like a Prospect of the Backs of some Brick Houses at Richmond: but she might have invented it. The others had been born in the Island-- Edward only just.
They all had, nevertheless, most elaborate ideas about England, built up out of what their parents had told them, and from the books and old magazines they sometimes looked at. Needless to say it was a very Atlantis, a land at the back of the North Wind: and going there was about as exciting as it would be to die and go to Heaven.
John told them all about the top of the stairs for the hundredth time as they drove along; the others listening attentively (as the Believing do to a man remembering his reincarnations).
Suddenly