Five
![006](/epubstore/B/H-Barbara/The-Ninth-Daughter/OEBPS/hami_9781101140383_oeb_006_r1.jpg)
He hounds me. Rebecca had wiped her eyes as
she’d said it, on an evening in summer—the summer before last, one
afternoon when Rebecca had crossed the bay to Braintree with some
of Abigail’s Smith cousins, and they’d spent the day in the summer
tasks of threading leather britches beans to dry, and bottling
blackberries from the woods behind the orchard. Abigail had been
heavy yet again with child—baby Tommy, old enough now to stagger
sturdily about the kitchen. Walking swiftly through the market,
thrusting guilt from her heart as she would have brushed falling
rain from her face, Abigail earnestly hoped that Pattie—the
fourteen-year-old farm-girl who’d lived with the family since their
return to Boston a year ago—was keeping an eye on him . . . on
Charley, too. There were simply too many things a pair of
enterprising little boys could get into, in a kitchen on a freezing
day.
He hounds me. He has always considered me his
property, like his horses or the corn in his ships. He questions
the servants about everything I do, he opens and reads my letters,
he demands accounting of every penny I spend and he has imprisoned
me under lock and key as if I were a disobedient child. Yet he has
said, he will not let me go.
And Orion Hazlitt had cried: If ever there was a
case of God’s hand being needed in mortal affairs—
Abigail shook her head, her heart aching at the
desperation in the young man’s voice.
The clock in the brick turret of Faneuil Hall
chimed ten thirty. Abigail drew her skirts aside from barrows of
country apples, wet from the rain. Pens of sheep blocked her way;
crates of fish, drying now and several hours out of the sea: By
the time I can do my marketing they’ll be stale, and the best will
be gone . . .
But her steps did not pause. If I am to see him
at all, I must see him first. Before the Watch.
Her mind chased Rebecca’s voice back along a
corridor of memory.
They’re spying on me. I know they’re spying on
me. All except Catherine—my maid—and he has the other servants spy
on her. I dread he’ll send her away, and get some creature
of his own, like that horrid Mrs. Jewkes in Pamela. That
had been earlier, before she’d left Charles Malvern’s house: only
weeks after she and Abigail had first met. When she’d wept then,
the lace border of her handkerchief had been wider than the linen
it surrounded.
I used to laugh at Pamela, but I swear I
feel like that wretched ninny these days. Rebecca had never had
much use for Abigail’s favorite novel, or its saintly heroine.
He actually did lock me up, for nearly a week. He’s said he will
again, if he hears I’ve come here to see you. “I will not be defied
in my own house,” he says. The servants seemed to think nothing of
it. And no one will help, because like Pamela’s Mr. B, he
can hurt them in their pocketbooks—
And it was true, Abigail knew, that the innkeeper
from whom Rebecca had first rented chambers in October of ’70 had
been nearly driven out of business by the prices Malvern and his
network of merchant cronies had demanded of him for victuals and
wood. The same thing had happened to the second room she had
rented, early in the summer of ’72. The Adamses had returned to
Braintree by then and Abigail had asked her to move into the
crowded little farmhouse, but again Rebecca had refused. I can’t
live with you and John forever, she’d said, but Abigail had
been aware at the time that Charles Malvern’s youngest child,
four-year-old Nathan, had been ill. Though Rebecca was estranged
from her little stepson’s father, still she would not leave Boston.
She had found the little house behind the Tillets’—who loathed
Malvern over the politics of their respective congregations—but by
what Orion had just told her, Malvern had not ceased his efforts to
make his estranged wife’s life as difficult as possible.
And then, thought Abigail, as she turned
into the waterfront bustle of Merchants’ Row, there was the
matter of Rebecca’s father’s will.
It was the last occasion upon which she—or as far
as she knew, Rebecca—had seen Charles Malvern, except to catch a
glimpse of him across the sanctuary of the Brattle Street
Meeting-House.
Abigail slowed her steps as she passed the Malvern
countinghouse, at the head of his wharf. Not a grand wharf, like
Hancock’s, or the marvel of the Long Wharf that stretched half a
mile out to sea, but big enough to serve either of Malvern’s
oceangoing brigs. The Fair Althea stood in port, named for
the woman Abigail suspected its owner had never forgiven Rebecca
for replacing. Malvern had rebuilt the countinghouse at the wharf’s
head, on the site of his grandfather’s original modest structure:
two and a half stories of solid Maine timber, with a warehouse
behind it for muslins and calicoes, tool-steel and paint.
The tide was out. The sloping shingle below street
level was dotted with heaped boxes, rough drays, coils of rope, and
wet-dark cargo nets spread to dry. At the nearby Woodman’s Wharf a
vessel was loading with kegs of what smelled like potash,
stevedores shouting to one another as they worked. Beyond lay the
leafless forest of bobbing masts, and the cold air muttered with
the creak of ropes, the endless soft knocking of pulley blocks
against the mast-wood. The world smelled of seaweed and wet rope.
Wind smote her, but it was not colder than Charles Malvern’s
wrinkled angry countenance and pale eyes, when last she, and
Rebecca, and John had stood before him.
“By the terms of James Woodruff’s will, I am
executor of that property.” Malvern had spoken to John, not to
Rebecca, his square brown hands folded ungivingly on his desk. The
merchant was even shorter than John, and though now in his
midfifties, and wiry in build, gave an impression of tremendous,
almost threatening, physical strength. His merchant father had sent
him to sea in his youth, and he retained the hardness of a man who
has had to impose his will by force on other men in order to
survive. “It was made over to me as Rebecca’s husband—”
She heard the pause before her friend’s name, heard
in that harsh cracked voice the refusal to call her Mrs.
Malvern . Mrs. Malvern was and forever would be the woman he
had lost.
“—and she has but to give over her present mode of
life, to regain its use. To hand property to a woman who has
forsaken her husband to live upon the town would do neither her nor
the community any service, and would provide the worst sort of
example.”
“To whom, sir?” demanded Abigail hotly. “To other
wives who find it not to their taste to have communications with
their families forbidden? Who don’t care to be imprisoned like
felons for weeks at a time or to have their books burned and rooms
searched?”
“Precisely, Madame,” Malvern had replied. “If my
wife cannot tolerate my attempts to better her, but would flee the
lesson like a fractious child, then shame upon her as well as upon
myself. If I keep watch upon her it is because she has lied to me,
both about her faith and about the conduct of my first wife’s
children, to whom she has shown nothing but dissembled hatred since
first she entered my house. I defy the law, or any man of business,
to fault me in separating her from her family, after she has robbed
me and given the money to them—to purchase the property whose
income she now claims as her own.”
“That is not true!” Rebecca rose, stepped to the
desk before which John already stood. It had been early December,
as bleak as it was today, and with the smell of snow in the air.
Abigail recalled, as much as the interview itself, how cramped and
stuffy the little office had felt, and how intrusive had been the
noise of the wharves and the street outside, after a year and a
half of the farm’s slow-paced peace. “That land was my father’s,”
Rebecca said. “And his father’s, before that—”
“Which would have been sold to pay your father’s
debts,” responded Malvern, “had you not helped yourself to the
household money entrusted to you, and pledged my good name in a
loan, to salvage it. And if your client”—here he had turned his
bitter pale eyes back to John—“wishes those facts to be aired at
large before the General Court of the colony, along with her
father’s will, which clearly places the property in my hands in
trust for her as my wife, I will certainly oblige her and
you, Mr. Adams, by so doing. In the meantime she has but to return
to my roof, to fulfill her own portion of a contract of which she
is now in violation.”
Tears glittering sharply in her brown eyes, Rebecca
had said, “I would sooner take up my abode in Hell.”
The following week, Abigail recalled, two
clients—both merchants connected with Malvern—had withdrawn their
business from John, even as John had lost half a dozen during the
months that Rebecca had lived beneath their roof.
The Malvern house, like the countinghouse,
was solid. Modest in its way, it had clearly been built to proclaim
the extent to which God had favored the endeavors of the family.
Three stories high, it was fashioned of both timber and bricks, and
kept the old diamond-glass windows of an earlier day. As Abigail
approached it a carriage was brought to its door, and the two
surviving Malvern children emerged, followed by a black manservant
and Miss Malvern’s plump, giggling maid. They lie about me to
their father, Rebecca had whispered desperately. They carry
tales—terrible things!—and he believes them . . .
And what parent would take the word of a new young
wife, before that of his own daughter and son?
Jeffrey must be twenty now. From the opposite side
of King Street Abigail watched them. Rebecca had written to her
that the young man had begun at Harvard. Taller than his father, he
favored the first Mrs. Malvern’s pale beauty, especially when he
threw back his head and laughed at one of the maid’s flirtatious
sallies. Mistress Tamar Malvern tapped her brother sharply on the
sleeve with her fan, but laughed as well. From a sharp-faced little
vixen of eleven when her father had married Rebecca, she had grown
into a lovely peaches-and-cream brunette, with the air of a girl
who is quite aware that men swoon at her feet. Neither gave the
manservant so much as a glance as he opened the carriage door for
them. The servant stepped back sharply to avoid being splashed as
the carriage pulled away.
“Mrs. Adams.” He saw her across the street and
smiled, teeth very white in a fine-boned ebony face. His name,
Abigail recalled, was Scipio; he’d greet her with his sunny smile
at the Brattle Street Meeting, if he was sure his master wasn’t
looking. Sure enough, he glanced back at the house as if to make
sure he was unobserved before crossing to her. “Are you well, m’am?
And Mrs. Malvern: Is all well with her?”
“No,” said Abigail softly. “I am sorry to say a
shocking thing has happened, and I was coming now, to let your
master know of it. As far as I know she’s all right,” she added,
seeing how the man’s eyes widened with alarm. “It wouldn’t be right
to tell you details before I’ve spoken to him—”
“No, of course not.” He collected himself quickly,
hastened ahead of her, to open the house door. “I’ll let him know
you’re here.”
No fire burned in the grate of the book-room where
he left her, though there were Turkey carpets on the brick floor.
Charles Malvern was not a man to heat rooms when they were not in
use. A portrait of the Fair Althea hung on the wall, very like
Jeffrey but with kindliness rather than wit in her smile. Beside it
hung a painting of Tamar, done recently, where once Rebecca’s
pen-sketch of little Nathan had been displayed: the child whose
birth had cost his mother her life. Abigail remembered that Nathan
had been fascinated with it, had sat, too, looking up at the
likeness of the mother he had never seen. The sketch was gone.
Abigail wondered whether Malvern had disposed of it when Rebecca
had left, or after the boy had died.
“Mrs. Adams?” Scipio reappeared in the doorway, to
usher her across the hall.
“Good day to you, m’am.” Charles Malvern rose from
his desk when the butler admitted her, came around himself to bring
up a chair. His wide-skirted dark coat and plain Ramilles wig were
not one shilling more costly than they had to be, to let others
know of his consequence in the world of trade and business. Their
former encounter and her championship of his estranged wife
flickered like malign fire in his eyes, but he asked politely,
“Will you take tea? ’Tis a raw morning.”
“Thank you, no.” Any number of Abigail’s friends
observed the boycott but made it a point to call on their less
political friends for a cup of Hyson or Bohea in the course of a
cold afternoon. That, in Abigail’s opinion, was cheating.
He didn’t offer the acceptable Whig alternative of
coffee, but signed Scipio from the room. “To what do I owe this
honor, m’am?”
“A shocking thing has happened.” He was walking
back around his desk as she spoke, and Abigail couldn’t keep
herself from waiting until she had a good view of his face, to see
how he would take the news. “There was a murder done last night, at
the house where Mrs. Malvern is now living—”
He turned back, eyes flaring, as Scipio’s had, and
she saw in them for one second not just surprise, but apprehension
and even fear. She went on swiftly, “A woman: We don’t know
who.”
“Not Mrs. Malvern?” That first instant’s
horror—like the echo of her own cry, Not
Rebecca!—disappeared and was replaced by suspicion: the wary
anger of a man who has been cheated by a mountebank, and looks out
lest he be cheated again.
“No. But Mrs. Malvern has disappeared—”
“Has she?” He settled back in his chair, and his
voice was dry again. “I daresay she’s run to that heretic printer
my daughter tells me she’s dallying with.”
“If it is Mr. Hazlitt you mean,” said Abigail,
feeling the blood rising in her cheeks, “I have come from there
just now.” Heretic, in Charles Malvern’s mental lexicon,
meant, Abigail knew, anyone of less than stringently double
predestinarian Calvinist belief. Even a convert, like Orion
Hazlitt, from a less doctrinaire sect was forever suspect, much
less a former Catholic like Rebecca. “Inasmuch as she has assisted
him with the text of the sermons he is printing—”
“Sermons forsooth!” He almost spit the words at
her. “By whom? One of those lying unbelievers at the New Brick
Meeting-House? What woman was killed? How did she come into the
house, if not for ill purposes? And at night, you say? Was she
another like my wife, who’d go about the town alone—?”
“We don’t know,” repeated Abigail, seeing the
seamed little face opposite her darkening a dangerous crimson with
rage. “She was found in Rebecca’s”—she bit back the word
kitchen, remembering that she was only supposed to have this
from hearsay, and finished—“house this morning, slashed to death,
and used most horribly.”
“Then she had her deserving.” Malvern almost
shouted the words at her. “If she was one of Sam Adams’s gang of
traitors. A trollop, as they’d have Rebecca be, for their dirty
sakes. Belike it was one of them that did the murder—”
“I don’t think so.” Abigail fought to keep her own
temper under control. “I’m trying to find who she was—”
“Why ask me, then? That lying Papist turned her
back on any decent females she knew when she left this house, and
the truly decent ones turned their backs on her. Surely you
would know, her dear good friend, her almost-sister, her
only true friend in the world . . .”
He is jealous of you, Rebecca had said, on
another of those occasions when she had sneaked from her husband’s
house, to take refuge in Abigail’s kitchen. Of my father, of the
secrets I tell my maid. Even of little Nathan. He wants me to be
his completely . . .
“But, I do not,” said Abigail, keeping her voice
level with an effort. “And I doubt you would say this woman had her
deserving, if you—” She bit off her words once more. You weren’t
there . . .
“If I what?” shouted Malvern. “If I were willing to
wink at treason, at sedition, at the creatures your husband and his
cousin play upon to get their way? Don’t tell me she wasn’t hand in
glove with these Sons of Liberty—Sons of Belial, more like! You ask
your husband, if you want to know who this bitch was that was
murdered, or where my wife might have run off to. And so I’ll tell
the Watch, when they come—if they come, and this isn’t all another
of Sam Adams’s lies. And as for you, Mrs. Adams, shame on you, a
mother of children, and shame on your husband for permitting you to
walk about the town like the harlot of the Scripture: Now is she
without, and now in the streets . . . her feet go down to hell.
To Hell is where you have led my wife, Mrs. Adams, in dragging her
into the affairs of your so-called friends. And for that I will
never forgive you, or them. Now get out of my house.”
Scipio whispered, “What happened?” as he
emerged from the book-room, to escort her to the door.
In the study, Malvern’s voice bellowed, “Scipio!”
and the butler flinched.
“Mrs. Malvern has disappeared,” replied Abigail
swiftly, softly—knowing the master’s wrath would descend on the
slave’s head if Scipio were one moment late in answering, or if the
merchant so much as suspected the butler had spoken with his
dishonored guest. “Where would she go, if she sought refuge? To her
maidservant? She left Boston, didn’t she? Catherine, I mean—”
“She did—”
“Scipio, get in here, damn you!”
“She might. It’s a long way, I don’t know the name
of the place but I’ll—”
The study door slammed open. Impassive, Scipio
opened the outer door for Abigail, held himself straight and
correct as she passed through. Only when Abigail glanced back over
her shoulder as the door was closing, did she see Charles Malvern
seize his slave by the shoulder of his coat and thrust him back
against the wall, and strike him with the back of his hand across
the face.