CHAPTER THREE
To the girl on the stool, the scream was at once both ear-shattering and guttural. The hairs on her arms and the back of her neck stood on end and her heart pounded furiously against her chest wall. The woman on the low bed beside her moaned and writhed in agony, gripped in a contraction beyond her control.
“Tess!” The woman hissed, the contraction slowly ebbing away. Her eyes clenched shut in fear and pain.
“I’m here,” Tess responded and shifted her weight forward on the stool, gently wiping the woman’s brow. In spite of the fire burning in the hearth, cold rivulets of her own sweat trickled down between Tess’s shoulder blades.
Being the daughter of the much sought after London physician, Dr. Charles Thomas Willoughby, Tess had heard similar cries of distress coming from the many pregnant patients her father attended to. She had, on several occasions, accompanied him into the bed chambers of these laboring women for their deliveries, handing him whatever linens, medical potions, and tools that he required. However, this time, the screams burst forth from her mother, and it was horrifyingly different.
Elizabeth Willoughby lay on the cot, her nightshift pasted with sweat to her chest. A thin sheet draped her lower body. As her eyes slowly opened, she fixed Tess in a glassy stare. She breathed a series of shallow gasps behind chattering teeth.
“C’mon, Mum,” Tess encouraged, in a voice that she hoped did not relay her own fear. “Squeeze my hand and bite down on this linen when the next pain comes–”
Another wrenching scream cut Tess off as her mother’s body tensed then arched with the fury of the contraction.
Something is very wrong!
Tess again mopped the sweat from her mother’s forehead, and wiped a sliver of drool which slid down from the corner of her mother’s mouth. She tried to keep her voice low and soothing.
“Cassie’s gone to find Father! Father went to tend to a mishap down on the docks but they’ll be back any minute.”
Cassie would be able to find Dr Willoughby as quickly as anyone, but being labeled a “nigger servant”, she might have been subject to interference by any number of London’s citizens. Tess fervently hoped that Cassie had been able to make her way to the waterfront unimpeded.
“Any minute now, they’ll be here–do you hear me? Elizabeth Willoughby, answer me!” she scolded, but her mother did not respond. Not even to the use of her formal name.
“Packing, Tess.” Her mother’s cracked whisper was barely audible.
What did she say?
“Packing? But you’ve not had the child yet, Mum–” Tess stopped short as her mother weakly pulled back the sheet covering her abdomen. Tess’s eyes widened in fright. A dark spreading stain was seeping along the bedding between her mother’s legs.
“Oh my God, Mum!” Tess shrieked and sprang to her feet. She raced across the room to the barrel that held the cleaned battings of raw cotton. Jamming an armful of the yellow fluff between her mother’s thighs she pressed with both hands.
“Father says steady pressure is the key to stopping any bleeding,” she gasped. “You’ll be alright, you’ll see, Mum!’
What is keeping Father? He should have been back by now! How long can bleeding like this continue? Tess sent up a silent prayer. Please, God, don’t let her die! Don’t let them die!
She felt stiff with building panic. She wasn’t sure if it was being fuelled by her mother’s impending doom or the thought of bearing the brunt of her father’s quick temper. She adjusted her pressure on the cotton wad and felt a small hard knob push back into the palm of her hand.
What is that?
Sweat dripped freely from the tip of Tess’s nose and chin now; droplets slid from her forehead and burned her eyes as she blinked fiercely to clear the sting.
It feels like a –it can’t be! Please, Dear God, don’t let it be!
Tess pulled the edge of the sodden cotton bundle back and quickly felt for the knob again.
There it is! A heel! Slippery with warm blood and birth fluids, it was definitely a tiny foot.
Dear Mary in Heaven, the baby is coming the wrong way!
A sanguineous effluence announced another contraction’s arrival, but this time her mother was silent.
“Mum?” Tess anxiously scanned her mother’s face. No reply.
“Mum!” It was Tess’s turn to scream. “Don’t you leave me! Father’s coming! This baby needs you! Stay with me!”
What to do? What to do? Her thoughts crashed and collided with each other. Get the baby out! a voice inside her instructed. It sounded vaguely detached yet familiar and comforting.
Tess positioned herself with one hand on her mother’s swollen belly and began pushing towards her mother’s feet. With her other hand, she grabbed the baby’s foot and gently pulled. Another nub protruded from the birth canal, announcing the arrival of the second foot. Her mother’s swollen torso hardened again and again. Tess lost count of the contractions before the baby’s tiny body finally emerged with one horrible bloody gush.
A boy! I have a brother! Tess had not thought of the child in terms of a sibling until this moment.
“God, spare him!” she pleaded in audible prayer. As if in answer, the baby’s head emerged with the next contraction. The tiny boy laid ominously still in Tess’s hands, his face and body quickly deepening to a dusky purple.
Too long! It took too long!
Frantically Tess swiped the mucous from her new brother’s face then grasped and squeezed his rib cage with her hands.
“Breathe!” she screamed into the still blue face. The shock of her scream had its desired effect. At once, the curled up arms and legs flew open and the baby sucked in a gurgling breath, then emitted a high pitched squeal of indignant newborn rage. Tess had never heard a more beautiful sound. A sob of relief escaped from her chest. He’s alive!
“Tess!” a voice roared. “What in God’s name have you done?”
The angry words thundered from the doorway. Tess gasped, nearly dropping the infant in her panic. Reflexively clutching the screaming bundle to her chest, she whirled around to meet her accuser. Her father’s imposing frame charged into the room.
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Quintspinner - A Pirate's Quest
FantasyEven in the year 1717, one month, one week, or one day, can make all the difference in the world. One month ago, Tess Willoughby was the daughter of a well-to-do physician in London, and she witnessed the murder of an old seer. Coming into possessio...