Knit Together

IMG-8598“Finally!” Shelagh thought to herself.  No matter how successful “fifteen minutes on each breast” was during the daytime feeds, baby Teddy did not seem to agree with the strategy in the evenings.  It was just as well, she supposed.  These longer feeds just prior to bedtime seemed to help him sleep longer spells through the night, and if Teddy slept longer spells, then so did she.  What Truby King didn’t know wouldn’t hurt him.

She placed the dozing infant into his cot and tiptoed from the room.  If she hurried, she could finish that last hem on Angela’s costume and still get a few hours of sleep before Teddy needed her again.  It wasn’t likely to be her best workmanship, but Madam Edith would simply have to lower her expectations.

The air got progressively cooler as she went down the staircase, and she regretted not putting on her fuzzy blue robe.  “Best finish quickly,” she told herself, “or I might freeze my toes off!”  

Patrick sat sat hunched at the kitchen table, his pose familiar from so many nights reviewing patient files at home.  She came down the last steps to stop at his side.  “I’m just being silly,” she told him.  “What’s that you’re doing?  You said you were finished with your work for the night.”  

He lifted his head from his task and stretched his neck from side to side.  “I was hoping to get this finished before you came down.   I’m afraid I’m better at suturing than needlework.”  He held up Angela’s odd little tunic for her inspection.  “Surprise!”  he whispered sheepishly.

A small gasp of surprise filled her lungs.  “Oh, Patrick! That’s lovely!”  

He grinned, an eyebrow lifting in self-mockery.  “It isn’t, really, but at least it’s one less thing for you to do.”  He knotted the last stitch carefully and clipped the thread, then with a quick movement folded it and placed it in Shelagh’s mending bag.  “That’s done and dusted.  Tim can finish the ridiculous Alice band vine for you tomorrow after school.”

Shelagh bent and kissed his cheek.  “Thank you, dear.  We’ll be sure to tell Angela her daddy helped.”  She rubbed the coarse ivory wool over his shoulders and rested her head against his.  “I think this jumper is my favourite.”

“I look like a sailor in this old thing,”  he chuckled.  “My grandad would’ve been proud.  He always wanted me to join the Royal Navy.”

“You look very handsome in this old thing.  I’m not sure why you’ve kept it in a drawer.”  Her fingers tapped the intricate knitted cables.

He leant back against her.  “It doesn’t quite fit under my suit jacket, I’m afraid.  I could use it on some of my house calls of late.  The tower blocks may look modern, but those upper storeys take the blast from the wind.”

“Remember how cold the flat could get?” Shelagh shivered at the memory.  She squeezed his hands between hers.  “Your hands are always so warm.”

Patrick’s eyebrows soared.  “And yours are always freezing!  Shelagh, where is your dressing-gown?  It’s far too chilly for you to go about in that thin nightie, you’ll catch your death.  Here, take this.”  He stood to grasp the edge of his jumper and pulled it over his head.

“Patrick, don’t be silly, it was far colder at the old Nonnatus House.  And now you’ve nearly finished Angela’s costume for me, there’s hardly anything left for me to do.  I’ll be up in bed in a jiffy.”

“Shelagh, put it on, please.  Doctor’s orders.”  

Shelagh rolled her eyes with an exasperated sigh.  “Not fair pulling rank, Doctor Turner.”  She pushed her arms into the sleeves, then poked her head through the neck.  The too-large jumper caught on her, and she wiggled a bit to try to make it fit.  Patrick helped her, his hands smoothing the wool over her body.  It hung large on her small frame, the arms dangling well below her fingertips.  Laughing, she looked up at him through a tangle of hair.    “I must look ridiculous.”  The light giggle brought out her dimples.  

His fingers gently brushed the hair from her face but his eyes did not meet hers. Shelagh watched as a look flickered across his face, then disappeared.  He swallowed thickly, then passed his hand over the back of his head before turning away.  “Right, then,” he proclaimed in a too-cheery voice.  “I’m for bed.  Don’t be long.”

She gazed after his retreating form, the crease appearing above her nose.  That was the first time she had seen such a…hopeful look on her husband’s face in quite some time.  It had passed so quickly, she wasn’t completely certain she had even seen it.  

With a shrug of her shoulders and shake of her head, she turned to the kitchen.  The poor man was tired, that was all.  She fussed for a few moments, recreating her evening routine.  She’d never sleep if she knew the teapot hadn’t been rinsed and the breakfast dishes were not set out.  Bedtime was the only chance she got to see the house in any sense of order.

As she worked, niggling worries began to distract her.  Surely it wasn’t so very long?  Of course, it had to be that long since they’d been intimate–Teddy was already a month and a half old, and those final weeks of her pregnancy had been so tiring–but thinking about it in terms of months just made it seem all the more astounding.

Had they become that couple? she wondered.  After Angela came to them, she and Patrick hadn’t had such a dry spell, as tired as she was with night time feeds and helping Timothy.  They would sit close enough together for Timothy to complain about “mushy stuff,”  and she often caught her husband glancing at her in ways that made her warm.  Intimacy may have been less frequent, but they still had found time for one another.

It couldn’t be helped, she sniffed as she set the table for breakfast.  They were busy now, and getting busier.  What did it matter that she’d been given the go-ahead from an unflappable Nurse Crane only last week?  She knew well enough a healthy postnatal check-up wasn’t an automatic return ticket to marital intimacies.  

Patrick  knew all this, of course.  He hadn’t once brought up the subject since her appointment at the clinic.  He probably hadn’t given it a moment’s thought.  Except…there was that moment.  

Her chilled feet brought her attention back to the cooling room.  Rubbing her arms briskly, she finished her tasks and followed Patrick’s path up to their bedroom.  She peeked in the children’s rooms, smiling over Timothy’s long frame dangling over the edge of his bed and Angela curled up like a kitten in her own “big girl” bed, and she wondered how long until they would bring Teddy in to share with his sister.  Careful to leave Angela’s door ajar, Shelagh padded past the bathroom door just as the tap began to fill the bath.  She’d be asleep by the time Patrick came to bed tonight.

Their room was dimly lit by the light from the cupboard.  She glanced about the space, no longer the chic master bedroom haven she had once dreamt of.  Teddy’s cot stood in the corner near her side of the bed, and a low dresser for baby items stood beside it.  In just six weeks, Teddy had taken over the space.  

With a sigh, she pulled Patrick’s jumper over her head and folded it neatly on the chair.   The cold was still expected to linger for another few weeks; it was likely he would need it again. He did look very attractive wearing it tonight–bulky, and safe, and strong.  It would be lovely to be held close in his arms, warm wool and Patrick.   A blush crept across her cheeks, stirring something she was afraid to name.   

The mirror reflected her form in the dim light and she peered at her image.  Her body had certainly changed since they had married.  She still carried some of her pregnancy weight, and her skin hung loosely around her middle.  She was certain her hips were wider.  The lines on her face weren’t exactly deeper, but at times she wondered if she was showing her age.  Doubt flickered across her face. She wasn’t her most alluring, and certainly not in her tent-like flannel nightie.  She must have imagined the gleam.  

“You’re just being silly, Shelagh,” she muttered to herself.  “It’s perfectly normal, the children simply take up too much of our attention.  It’ll happen when things are easier.”  She turned back to the bed and climbed under the covers.  She should get to sleep as soon as possible.  Teddy would need her soon enough.  Restlessly, she turned to her side.

Their new bed was bigger than the old one in the flat.  They liked the extra space, but Patrick’s pillow seemed so far away tonight.  She ran her hand over the linen, remembering how close his head would be to hers when they slept in their old bed.  They would lie close together in their private world, sharing secrets and dreams and each other, but it felt like such a long time ago now.  It hurt to suddenly realize how she missed that closeness.  

Teddy snuffled, and she rose immediately to check on him.  Taking no notice of his bewildered mother, he rubbed at his nose and settled back to slumber.  Shelagh pressed her lips together and shook her head.  Teddy had been able to settle to sleep for weeks now, all her fussing would set him back.   She didn’t need to continually mother him–or the rest of the family, for that matter.

Understanding struck her, and she took in a sharp breath.  They hadn’t been drifting apart, rather she had been holding him at arms length.  There had been time for the children, time for the surgery, even for Nonnatus, but she never seemed to make time for Patrick.  She had dismissed the notion of his interest because she herself hadn’t considered sex.     

“Oh, for heaven’s sake. Enough is enough.”  Shelagh threw the covers back and crossed to her dressing table.  She would make time for him tonight.  

She glanced down at her practical nightgown.  She’d chosen it more for its warmth than its glamour.  It was hardly an invitation.  Her mind went to the boxes in the back corner of their cupboard, forgotten since the move.  Is that were her pretty nightgowns were?  Would they even fit her?  She sighed.  The Bri-nylon would fit, certainly, but she hadn’t seen it since long before the move.  Even if she did find it, would she look silly?  A tired mother masquerading as a bride?

“You’re not helping,” she muttered to herself.  She glanced at her warm blue dressing-gown, but rejected it as well.  She wanted to look sexy, not like matron on Women’s Surgical.  Patrick’s jumper caught her eye.  Shelagh lifted the heavy wool fabric and pressed it to her face.  It did smell of him, and she imagined could still feel the warmth of his body in its fibres.  

The bathroom door clicked open, pushing her into action.  Moving quickly, she pulled her nightie off and slipped into Patrick’s jumper.  Goose flesh rose, making her more sensitive to the coarse wool against her skin.  She felt the chill against her bare legs and stretched up on her toes nervously.  Patrick liked her legs.  Perhaps this wasn’t such a bad idea after all.  She fluffed her hair and waited.

Patrick entered the room, his hair still damp from his bath.  Closing the door behind him, he stepped around the wall and saw their empty bed.  “Shelagh?”  He twisted his head to search her out.

“Hello, Patrick,” she answered nervously, then in a rush, “I thought perhaps you might be interested, but I…I quite understand if you’re not, of course, I didn’t want you to think that it would be unwelcome, or-” her voice trailed off.

He stood still, his face stunned.  Shelagh clasped her hands in front of her, then resolutely stepped out of the shadow towards him.  Her confidence grew as she saw his eyes glitter with desire.   “I’d like to borrow your jumper tonight, if you don’t mind.”

He shook his head.  “I…I don’t mind.”  His voice was husky.

Shelagh felt a warm glow rise up through her body.  He wanted her, and the rest of the world, all her worries fell away.  She moved closer, so their bodies were almost touching and breathed his scent in deeply.  “You smell clean.”  Her finger traced the pattern on his pyjama top, then pressed against his heart.  

His hands covered hers and he looked her squarely in the eye.  “Shelagh, you don’t have to do this.  It’s only natural if you need more time.  Your body’s been through so much-”

“All is as it should be,” she answered.  “You’ve been wonderfully patient for so long, darling.  I’d started to forget how important this is.  Not simply the…the sex,” her whisper grew softer on the word,  “but being us, together.  A couple.”  She slid her arms around his waist and pressed her head against his chest.  “Even if you don’t want to tonight, I’d like to be near you tonight.”

A rumble deep in his chest made her smile.  “I think you know I want to,” he teased.  His voice grew serious again and he bent his head to meet her eyes.  “Are you certain?’

She raised her face to his.  “I am completely certain.”

 

Writing Her Own Rules, Epilogue

Author’s note: Apologies for the “Dad Dancing” reference. I’ve been trying to get that one in for a very long time.

Previous Chapter


Late afternoon sun poured through the window above the kitchen sink as gurgles of infant laughter filled the room. A blue plastic infant tub converted the typical white porcelain basin into an indoor water playground.

“Well, that’s certainly a happy sound, little Miss. I suppose we’ve made friends again?” Shelagh Turner cooed. “I always say, a bath can fix everything!” Offering up a toy giraffe of indeterminate age, she watched as the baby kicked and splashed. Two towels sat at the ready, one for baby, one for clean-up.

Down the hall, she heard the doorbell, followed by the still-brisk steps of her husband. “Guess who’s here, dearest,” she asked the baby.

Moments later, Angela Turner entered the kitchen. “Mum, you didn’t have to give her a bath,” she declared.

“I know, dear. But there was a bit of a disagreement over the peas for her ladyship’s tea. Besides, you know I don’t mind, and it will be one less thing for you to do tonight.” Shelagh unfolded a towel and offered it to her daughter. “Since I’ve had the bath time honors, would you like to dress the little princess?”

Angela sighed and moved to the pantry closet. “No, you can do it, Mum. I’ll put out the tea.”

Years of practice made Shelagh a dab hand at changing wet, slippery babies, and in the work of a moment, her granddaughter clean, dry and dressed.

“Dad was on his way out to the garden when he let me in. He looks good,” Angela commented as she scooped tea into her mother’s favorite teapot.

“Your father always looks good, dear. He’s a very handsome man.”

The spoon clanged on the countertop. “Ugh, Mum. You’ll put me off my dinner.”

They both laughed. “Your father is doing quite well, actually,” Shelagh answered as she placed the baby into the nearby playpen. “Tim came by and asked that he do a seminar at the college on patient care next month. Don’t tell your father I said so, but he’s really quite thrilled to be back in the field. His practice was too much, I think, but his work with the medical students has revitalized him since his retirement. He wants to go dancing tomorrow night!” Shelagh’s cheeks pinkened.

“Dad dancing? Sorry, Mum.” Angela grimaced.

Shelagh waved her daughter’s sympathy away. “Not that ridiculous disco nonsense you do-”

“Mum, disco’s been dead for a decade!”

“Proper ballroom dancing, Angela, at the Dorchester. They’ll even have a band!” Shelagh’s eyes glowed.

No longer satisfied with the companionship of a toy giraffe, Julienne reached for her mother. Angela reached into the playpen and lifted her daughter into her arms.

Shelagh smiled to herself as she watched mother and child settle into each other, and turned to finish the tea.

“You look a bit tired, dearest,” she remarked gently. “Would you like us to take Angela tonight? With your final boards coming up, you’ll need your rest.”

“Not tonight, Mum, thanks. I just want to bring Julie home and snuggle her. I haven’t had a night home with her and Charlie all week. Tonight’s the first night in weeks Charlie isn’t teaching a class, and we need a bit of family time.”

Three generations of Turner women settled quietly into their tea. After a long moment, Angela spoke up.

“I am tired, though. I knew this would be hard, having a baby while I’m still qualifying for my obstetrics license while Charlie finishes his doctorare, and I could never have gotten this far without you and Dad and Charlie supporting me. But sometimes I think maybe I should just give in and wait until after Julie’s grown to finish.”

She looked up at her mother. “I must seem very cowardly to you.”

“Cowardly?” Shelagh asked, stunned.

Angela sighed deeply. “Thinking about giving up. I have so much help, and I can barely manage. Some days I don’t manage at all.” She rubbed her cheek against her daughter’s head, her eyes damp. “You did it. You did it back when there was no such thing as on-site day care, or working mothers groups. You didn’t even have your mother to help.” Angela looked up, sad and confused. “How did you? You raised Tim and me, you ran Dad’s surgery, served as a nurse and midwife, all by yourself.”

Shelagh smiled. “It was hardly by myself, dearest, and there were many days when I didn’t think I could manage. But you’re wrong, you know. I had so much help. I had your father. Back then, most fathers did very little in the way of child care, but I could always count on your father to try,” she giggled. “Dinners were a mess, and he never could do the laundry correctly, but he always made the effort. Your father knew I needed to help make a difference in the world outside our family, and he wasn’t afraid to pitch in when necessary. So, we wrote our own rules.” Leaning in, Shelagh added, “He was quite good at getting the nuns to lend a hand, too. One word from him, and I never had to mend another pair of your brother’s trousers again!”

Angela gave a watery chuckle. Gratefully taking the hanky her mother held out, she wiped her eyes. “I remember when Dad had to help me with my hair before hockey practice when I was nine. “A” for effort, but that’s why I learned to do my own plaits before anyone else on the team!” She kissed the sleeping baby’s head.

“Yes, and Tim mastered shepherd’s pie just to avoid your father’s cooking!” Shelagh reached over and caressed her daughter’s arm. “Marriage, motherhood, they’re hard, Angela. It’s hard for everyone, but it’ll get easier. You’ll write your own rules, I’m sure of it. The world doesn’t usually see change overnight. It changes nearly unnoticed, one woman at a time.”

“One woman at a time what?” asked Patrick as he entered the kitchen, a bundle of freshly cut blooms in his hand. “I should think one woman would be enough for anyone!”

Shelagh got up from the table and took a vase from under the sink as Patrick began to trim the stems. “The hydrangeas,” Shelagh admired. “The soil’s so funny this year, I didn’t think we’d ever see them turn pink.”

Patrick grinned, “I know the right things to say, my love. You just have to make them blush.”

“Right, then. That’s my cue.” Angela stood, shifted her sleeping child in her arms and crossed to kiss her mother goodbye. Heading for the door, she grumbled, “Why we never wrote a rule against that sort of thing I’ll never know!”

 

 

Writing Her Own Rules, Chapter 4

Previous Chapter

Hours later in the quiet flat, Shelagh put the last of the dishes away. With a tired sigh, she looked around the pristine kitchen, then took off her apron. She could hear the bathtub drain as Timothy finished in the bath, his night nearly over.

Patrick would come home after a difficult night and would need something in his stomach to help him sleep. She set the tea try, leaving a slice of her ham and egg pie under a dampened serviette to prevent it from drying, and left the kitchen.

The sight of Timothy, fresh-faced and pink under the blankets on his bed, made her smile tenderly. His hair was still plastered wetly to his head, and his pyjama top was misbuttoned. It was at times like this it was easy to see the young boy he was so rapidly leaving behind.

Picking up the towel  left on the lid of his clothes bin, she chuckled. “There now, you’ll catch your death going to bed with a wet head like that. Sit up, I’ll dry it for you.” Settling on the side of his bed, she waited as he shifted into position.

“There’s some doubt now that being cold actually causes a cold, you know. A cold is caused by a virus, Mum, and a virus isn’t looking for a cold spot. Going to bed with wet hair is highly unlikely to give me a head cold.” In one sentence, the emerging adolescent reappeared.

“Well, it will certainly give you a wet pillow, young man,” Shelagh laughed as she vigorously rubbed at his head. “Be still for two minutes and make your mother happy.”

She finished with a flourish, and reached for the comb on his bedside table.

“Mum,” Timothy complained. “I can do that.”

“If you’re sure,” she teased. She ran her fingers through the lightly damp hair falling over his forehead. “Don’t stay up too late tonight. The medical world needs your insight.”

The flat was quiet again, and Shelagh returned to the sitting room. No matter how hard she tried, she didn’t seem able to keep ahead of the mess in there. Laundry spilled over from its basket, a pile of school books scattered across the table, and Angela’s toys were simply everywhere.

Starting her clockwise turn around the room, Shelagh organized books into Tim’s school bag and signed a forgotten permission slip. The laundry was next, a never-ending task that made Shelagh long for the new-fangled machines they were seeing in the paper.

“I doubt those machines will fold and put away,” she muttered. “But if a man were in charge of … Oh, for goodness’ sake, Shelagh! Will you stop with that today?” She sat down on the sofa in frustration and rested her chin in her hands. Why was she in such a mood? she wondered.

Today wasn’t so different from most days. She spent her time caring for her family, and she loved it. She relished in the fact that Patrick needed her so, and her family was everything to her. Daily life certainly wasn’t glamorous, or even exciting sometimes, but there were moments of such joy.

Shelagh stood and rolled her shoulders back. Just under the curio cabinet she could spy that giraffe they’d been searching for since dinner.


Finally finished for the evening, Shelagh sat at her vanity brushing her hair. Her thoughts travelled back to her conversation with Trixie. She would have to check back to see if she had been correct in her diagnosis of Mrs. Young. Humility aside, she was certain she had not been mistaken.

For years, she had been the midwife called in for the rare and difficult cases, and she felt the glory of God through her work. Now, her life in midwifery seemed so far away, and so intrinsically tied to her former life as a nun. Perhaps that was why she had never considered continuing her work once she left the order.

She shook her head. No, she thought. When she chose her new life, she was deciding not just to marry, but to be a mother to Tim, and any other babies God would give them. Her heart tugged for a moment for that lost chance. She had been so hopeful.

God had found another way to answer her prayers, and she was truly grateful. Angela filled in her heart, just as Timothy and Patrick did. Placing her hairbrush on the table, she moved to the cot next to her bed.

No matter how many times she put Angela on her back, her daughter always found her way into her favorite position. Shelagh ever-so-lightly ran her hand down the length of the little back, coming to rest on the little bottom jutting up in the air.

“Precious Angel Girl,” Shelagh whispered. The baby sighed and found her thumb, settling back to sleep. Shelagh sat on the edge of the bed, her head resting on the cot’s rail. “How could I ever consider leaving you, even for a little while?” Her hand caressed the downy pale hair that covered the baby’s head. Just two short months ago, there was so little, the baby still appeared bald, and in another few months, it would be long enough to curl about her ears.

There were so many changes ahead. Baby to toddler, toddler to child; Shelagh didn’t want to miss a moment. She was completely certain that nothing could bring her the joy that her family did. But there was still that nagging feeling, just in the back of her mind. Not quite a thought, just…a feeling. A feeling that there was something else to consider.

Shelagh smiled knowingly. Life had taught her that she would need to heed the call of her subconscious. Ignoring her feelings before had only led to heartache. As in the past when she had denied her growing need for a family and Patrick to share it with, or buried her fears that Patrick was holding himself  back from her, her problems would not disappear because she pretended they did not exist.

Only by facing these questions had she found peace. For now, she would love her family and focus her energies on them. But these questions would need answers.

It was time to decide exactly what the questions were.


Epilogue