"Oh, Meggie," he said helplessly.
She turned her gaze to him and out of her pain gave him a smile of absolute,
overflowing1 love, nothing in it held back, the
taboos2 and inhibitions of womanhood not yet a part of her world. To be so loved shook him, consumed him, made him wish to the God Whose existence he sometimes doubted that he was anyone in the universe but Ralph de Bricassart. Was this it, the unknown thing? Oh, God, why did he love her so? But as usual no one answered him; and Meggie sat still smiling at him. At dawn Fee got up to make breakfast, Stuart
helping3 her, then Mrs. Smith came back with Minnie and Cat, and the four women stood together by the stove talking in hushed monotones, bound in some league of grief neither Meggie nor the priest understood. After the meal Meggie went to line the little wooden box the boys had made, planed smooth and
varnished4. Silently Fee had given her a white satin evening gown long since gone to the
hue5 of ivory with age, and she fitted strips of it to the hard contours of the box interior. While Father Ralph put a toweling padding in it she ran the pieces of satin into shape on the sewing machine, then together they
fixed6 the
lining7 in place with thumbtacks. And after that Fee dressed her baby in his best
velvet8 suit, combed his hair and laid him in the soft nest which smelled of her, but not of Meggie, who had been his mother. Paddy closed down the lid, weeping; this was the first child he had lost. For years the reception room at Drogheda had been in use as a
chapel9; an altar had been built at one end, and was draped in golden raiment Mary Carson had paid the
nuns10 of St. Mary d'Urso a thousand pounds to
embroider11. Mrs. Smith had decked the room and the altar with winter flowers from Drogheda's gardens, wallflowers and early stocks and late roses, masses of them like pink and
rusty12 paintings magically finding the dimension of
scent13. In a laceless white alb and a black chasuble free of any ornamentation, Father Ralph said the
Requiem14 Mass.
As with most of the great Outback stations, Drogheda buried its dead on its own land. The
cemetery15 lay beyond the gardens by the willow-littered banks of the
creek16, bounded by a white-painted wrought-iron railing and green even in this dry time, for it was watered from the homestead tanks.