V
Same as yesterday, Mrs. Kesserich was sitting on the edge of the couch in the living room, yet from the first Jack was aware of a great change. Something had filled the domestic animal with grief and fury.
“Where’s Dr. Kesserich?” he asked.
“Not here!”
“Mrs. Kesserich,” he said, dropping down beside her, “you were telling me something yesterday when we were interrupted.”
She looked at him. “You have found the girl?” she almost shouted.
“Yes,” Jack was surprised into answering.
A look of slyness came into Mrs. Kesserich’s bovine face. “Then I’ll tell you everything. I can now.
“When Martin found Mary dying, he didn’t go to pieces. You know how controlled he can be when he chooses. He lifted Mary’s body as if the crowd and the railway men weren’t there, and carried it to the station wagon. Hani and Hilda were sitting on their horses nearby. He gave them one look. It was as if he had said, ‘Murderers!’
“He told me to drive home as fast as I dared, but when I got there, he stayed sitting by Mary in the back. I knew he must have given up what hope he had for her life, or else she was dead already. I looked at him. In the domelight, his face had the most deadly and proud expression I’ve ever seen on a man. I worshiped him, you know, though he had never shown me one ounce of feeling. So I was completely unprepared for the naked appeal in his voice.
“Yet all he said at first was, ‘Will you do something for me?’ I told him, ‘Surely,’ and as we carried Mary in, he told me the rest. He wanted me to be the mother of Mary’s child.”
Jack stared at her blankly.
Mrs. Kesserich nodded. “He wanted to remove an ovum from Mary’s body and nurture it in mine, so that Mary, in a way, could live on.”
“But that’s impossible!” Jack objected. “The technique is being tried now on cattle, I know, so that a prize heifer can have several calves a year, all nurtured in ‘scrub heifers,’ as they’re called. But no one’s ever dreamed of trying it on human beings!”
Mrs. Kesserich looked at him contemptuously. “Martin had mastered the technique twenty years ago. He was willing to take the chance. And so was I—partly because he fired my scientific imagination and reverence, but mostly because he said he would marry me. He barred the doors. We worked swiftly. As far as anyone was concerned, Martin, in a wild fit of grief, had locked himself up for several hours to mourn over the body of his fiancée.
“Within a month we were married, and I finally gave birth to the child.”
Jack shook his head. “You gave birth to your own child.”
She smiled bitterly. “No, it was Mary’s. Martin did not keep his whole bargain with me—I was nothing more than his ‘scrub wife’ in every way.”
“You think you gave birth to Mary’s child.”
Mrs. Kesserich turned on Jack in anger. “I’ve been wounded by him, day in and day out, for years, but I’ve never failed to recognize his genius. Besides, you’ve seen the girl, haven’t you?”
Jack had to nod. What confounded him most was that, granting the near-impossible physiological feat Mrs. Kesserich had described, the girl should look so much like the mother. Mothers and daughters don’t look that much alike; only identical twins did. With a thrill of fear, he remembered Kesserich’s casual words: “… parthenogenesis … pure stock … special techniques …”
“Very well,” he forced himself to say, “granting that the child was Mary’s and Martin’s—”
“No! Mary’s alone!”
Jack suppressed a shudder. He continued quickly, “What became of the child?”
Mrs. Kesserich lowered her head. “The day it was born, it was taken away from me. After that, I never saw Hilda and Hani, either.”
“You mean,” Jack asked, “that Martin sent them away to bring up the child?”
Mrs. Kesserich turned away. “Yes.”
Jack asked incredulously, “He trusted the child with the two people he suspected of having caused the mother’s death?”
“Once when I was his assistant,” Mrs. Kesserich said softly, “I carelessly broke some laboratory glassware. He kept me up all night building a new setup, though I’m rather poor at working with glass and usually get burned. Bringing up the child was his sisters’ punishment.”
“And they went to that house on the farthest island? I suppose it was the house he’d been building for Mary and himself.”
“Yes.”
“And they were to bring up the child as his daughter?”
Mrs. Kesserich started up, but when she spoke it was as if she had to force out each word. “As his wife—as soon as she was grown.”
“How can you know that?” Jack asked shakily.
The rising wind rattled the windowpane.
“Because today—eighteen years after—Martin broke all of his promise to me. He told me he was leaving me.”