Katie forced a smile. âItâs not really going to take hours, is it, Cook?â
âAlways does,â Mrs Davies said. She helped Katie back upstairs and sat her on the bed. âIâll get your shoes off and then Iâll get you into a clean nightgown. Now, donât you fret, youâre a fine strong girl and the birth wonât be too bad, youâll see.â
Katie felt as if she was a child again as the cook undressed her and carefully pulled a nightgown over her head.
âI can see how your bellyâs getting tighter and thatâs whatâs supposed to happen. I know it hurts but it means the babyâs trying to come out into the world.â She went to the door and called down the stairs. âBronnie, hurry with that brown paper, thereâs a good girl.â
Bronnie clattered up the stairs and rushed into the bedroom with clean cloths over her shoulder and the brown paper fluttering like a flag between her fingers.
âStand up for a minute,
merchi
, letâs get the bed ready before your waters break.â Mrs Davies prepared it deftly, then lowered Katie gently on to it. âThere, youâll be all right now. All we got to do is wait for the midwife. Bronnie, go and fetch her now. Iâll get a couple of bowls of nice warm water.â
Katie felt her heart flutter in fear as Mrs Davies left the room. She didnât want to be alone: the pains were really bad now â they seemed to ebb and flow like the sea, each contraction stronger than the last.
âBull, why arenât you here with me?â Katie felt tears well in her eyes but brushed them away impatiently: it was stupid to cry when women had babies every day of the week â there was nothing to be frightened about. She moaned as another pain gripped her and then, thankfully, Mrs Davies was back in the room.
âIâm sorry, Mrs Beynon.â She looked pale and worried. âBronnie went down the road to call the midwife but she was out on another delivery and no one knows how long sheâll be. Still, Bronnie left a note on her door and Iâm sure sheâll come in plenty of time. Anyway, first babies are always slow.â
Katie tried to relax but the pains had intensified. âCook, Iâm frightened, can Bronnie go to find Mr Beynon?â
âAye, Iâll send her right away, but you keep calm. Youâve a while to go yet.â
The cook left the room and Katie could hear her giving instructions to the maid. âMr Beynon will be up beyond high-street station I expect, girl. Tell him his wifeâs time has come and heâs wanted here.â
Mrs Davies was soon back and she sat on the bed holding Katieâs hand. âThat little brew of herbs I made up for you yesterday, Iâve put it to simmer on the fire. Itâs not very nice to taste but it might help you sleep a bit.â
Katie knew that nothing would make her sleep: the pains were getting faster and more intense by the minute. But she was wrong, the brew Mrs Davies gave her was vile but almost straight away she felt sleepy.
The time seemed to pass in a haze and Katie wondered if the baby would ever be born. Questions crept through her mind: where could the midwife be and why wasnât Bull here?
It was after midday when a fierce urge to bear down took Katieâs breath away. She closed her eyes tightly with the effort, grunting low in her throat as she struggled to give birth. She was wide awake now, and when the pain subsided she looked up at Mrs Davies. âYouâd better help me. My baby is coming and it looks like youâre going to be the one to deliver it.â
Mrs Davies came to the bed and looked down at Katieâs straining body. âI think youâre right,
merchi
. Here, let me hitch up your nightgown â itâs no time for modesty. Letâs get this little âun of yours into the world.â
Bull Beynon was thinking of Katie as he walked along
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