Ten
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“What I don’t understand, m’am, is how Miss
Rebecca even knew this Mrs. Pentyre.” Scipio kept his voice to a
near-whisper as he led Abigail up the servants’ backstairs to the
upper floor. “She was only a young girl, not even wed to Mr.
Pentyre when Miss Rebecca left this house. Unless Mr. Pentyre for
some reason thought to learn something from Miss Rebecca, that
would damage Mr. Malvern—”
Abigail said, “Good Heavens!” It was something she
hadn’t even considered. “Would he? I’ve never met the man—”
“Nor I.” They reached a tiny landing and the butler
opened the little door there. The hall was near pitch-dark, save
for the dim glow of the candles he bore in a pewter branch, and
cold as the back corridors of Hell. “Ulee—that’s the head groom—has
a cousin in Pentyre’s stables, though, so every time Mr. Malvern
sues Pentyre, or Mr. Pentyre gets the Governor or the Royal Port
Commissioner to fine Mr. Malvern or hold up one of his cargoes to
search—”
“My goodness. I had no idea. Every time . .
. Is this a common occurrence? Do they hate one another so?”
“Like a horse hates a snake, m’am—only each of them
thinks he’s the horse, and the other’s the snake. Mr. Malvern’s
daddy hated Mr. Pentyre’s uncle, that was the merchant in the
family and he left Mr. Pentyre all his ships and money; they
undersell each other’s cargoes, they slander each other’s goods.
You know how Mr. Malvern won’t let a matter rest, if he thinks he’s
been wronged, and Mr. Pentyre, for all he looks like he doesn’t
have the red blood in him to do up his shoe buckles, is the same.
Only, bein’ related to the Governor, he’ll use that to make trouble
for those that make trouble for him.”
Halfway down the silent hallway he opened a door.
The darkness beyond it was warmer, and breathed of sandalwood and
dried rose petals. The candles’ light briefly caressed sat inwood
bedposts, the Venetian glass of an expensive toilet-mirror.
“Back in August, it was Mr. Pentyre who had his
agents buy up all Mr. Jeffrey’s gaming debts, and call them in,
close to a thousand pounds’ worth. Then Mr. Malvern put the rumor
about that Pentyre was smuggling, and got one of his cargoes
seized, and Miss Tamar tried to bribe one of the kitchen staff at
Pentyre’s to poison Mrs. Pentyre’s little dog, in revenge.”
“What a charming picture you servants must have of
the lives of your masters,” Abigail murmured, and a ghost of a
smile tugged the slender man’s mouth.
“All this is nothing, m’am. Not to what you see if
you’re a slave in Barbados, where I was born.”
Abigail, gathering her skirts aside to draw out the
trundle bed from beneath the great bed, looked aside from him,
ashamed. Scipio set the candelabra on the little se cretaire by the
window, and came to help her. The trundle was made up with fresh
linen. Either Tamar didn’t like to be alone for one minute of the
day or night, or her father didn’t want her to be. A night rail was
laid out ready on the pink silk counterpane of the main bed, the
linen as light as silk.
“Does she get love letters?”
“Dozens,” affirmed the butler resignedly. “Some she
keeps in the desk, but the ones she doesn’t want her father to
see—or know about—she has delivered to the lady who runs the hat
shop at the end of her father’s wharf, and sends Miss
Oonaugh—that’s her maid—down to get them for her. You think they’re
under the bed?” At Abigail’s gestures, the two of them had
maneuvered the low bed away from the large one, and Abigail now
knelt near the main bed’s head.
“’Tis where I hid mine. Not that I set up
clandestine flirts,” she hastened to add, as the butler grinned.
“But when I was young my father considered political pamphlets
inappropriate reading for well-bred girls, and I had my older
sister’s beau smuggle them to me. Dreadfully badly written they
were,” she went on reminiscently, easing down onto her stomach and
reaching as far toward the head of the bed as she could. “And
shockingly ill-reasoned, some of them. After a time my conscience
grew so bad that I confessed the whole to—Ah!” Her fingers brushed
what felt like the corner of a largish box. She flattened herself
further, squirmed beneath the tall frame, reaching with both arms
and thanking the heavens that Scipio kept the cham bermaids
strictly up to their work: no nonsense about sweeping only as much
of the floor as showed and letting dust kittens breed with abandon
in the dark.
She drew it out, sat back on her heels. More
quietly, she asked, “Did you ever try to tell their father that
Tamar and Jeffrey were telling him lies about Rebecca? About her
trying to convert them to Catholicism, or punishing them for not
praying to the Virgin?”
Scipio opened his mouth, closed it, then sighed.
“You’ll think me a coward, m’am. And I daresay I am. But I didn’t
dare. None of us did. What man would believe his new young wife
over his daughter? What man wouldn’t believe his daughter, if she—”
He hesitated. “If she decided to lie about a slave? And a
man-slave?”
Abigail thought about that, and felt her face heat
with anger. Hotter, even, than when Rebecca had come to her weeping
about the way her stepdaughter had used to twist her every action
and word.
“He knew I’d been raised a Catholic,” Scipio went
on gently. “Miss Rebecca spoke up for me, early in her marriage
here, which was a mistake, when Mr. Malvern gets going on one of
his rages. He said, we’d conspire, if one of us spoke for the
other, after that. Then, too,” he went on, “there were those things
Miss Rebecca truly did, that were unwise. Things she did for those
she loved.”
Abigail sighed, and turned the box over in her lap.
Twelve inches by twelve, and nearly that deep, with a little hasp
and padlock. The sort of thing gentlemen kept case bottles of
cognac in, locked away from their servants. When she shook it, both
its heft and the dry, whispery rattle inside spoke of folded paper.
“I think you’re right to tread carefully around Mistress Tamar,”
she said. “For you, it isn’t a case of simply being turned out
without a character and having to find a new employer, is
it?”
“No, m’am.”
How dare the man buy and sell another? How
dare any man put another in the position of being bought and
sold like a donkey?
She took a deep breath, trying to steady herself
against the rage that swept her. In a studiedly neutral tone, she
asked, “You wouldn’t happen to know if any of Rebecca’s other
letters survived, would you?”
“He burned them all, m’am. And cursed her name as
he did it. Since then, Miss Tamar will every now and then come up
with, I didn’t tell you this at the time, but she used to do
thus-and-such—threaten her with a red-hot curling iron, I think
was one of them. I can always tell when she’s done it. I wish she
wouldn’t. Not just for Miss Rebecca’s sake, but for his.”
“Well, we have it on the authority of Scripture
that the Lord shall avenge the stripes of the righteous, and uphold
his children against those who slander them.” Abigail sighed.
“Though sometimes I wish Scripture were a little more specific
about when, exactly, these events will take place. In the meantime,
do you know where Miss Tamar keeps the key to this?”
“On a ribbon,” said a man’s harsh voice from the
doorway. “I should imagine it’s the blue one, knotted at her waist
with her watch.”
Abigail slewed around on her heels, aghast. Scipio
got hastily to his feet, the dark beyond the single candle’s light
cloaking, Abigail suspected, the ashen hue of his face.
Charles Malvern said, “You may go, Scipio.”
“Sir, I—”
“You may go.”
Scipio stayed long enough to help Abigail to her
feet. “Mr. Malvern,” she said, as the servant’s footsteps retreated
down the stair, “I beg you not to blame Scipio in this.”
“And in what way is a trusted servant not to be
blamed, who admits robbers to his master’s house while the family
is away?” He put his head a little to one side, and the pale eyes
that regarded her shrieked rage in a face as calm as stone. “Don’t
tell me Scipio, too, has been corrupted by this talk of colonial
liberties that your husband and his friends vomit forth. Or does he
merely seek a share of my daughter’s jewelry?” He reached for the
bellpull, and Abigail impulsively extended her hand to stop
his.
“This isn’t jewelry, sir—”
“If it was garden dirt,” said Malvern, yanking the
bell, “it would still not excuse burglary.”
“Mr. Malvern,” said Abigail desperately, “I have
reason to believe this box contains clandestine correspondence of
your daughter’s.” She felt sick at the thought of Scipio being
taken to one of the taverns by the Long Wharf, where dealers bid
for slaves to carry south to Virginia. Even if the little merchant
went so far as to actually have her locked up in the gaol house by
the law-counts for part of the night—with every thief and
prostitute in Boston—John would get her out, with no worse effects
than perhaps lice in her hair and bugs in her skirts from the
bedding.
Scipio was not in the law’s hands, but the hands of
his master.
Malvern’s eyes narrowed: “A girl’s love notes.” For
a moment she thought he was going to snap at her, My daughter
does not receive any such thing . . .
Of course any father would seek to protect his
daughter by knowing who was courting her—particularly a man of
wealth like Malvern. Yet it crossed her mind to wonder if he sought
to control his daughter’s thoughts and movements as totally as he
had sought to control Rebecca’s.
Footsteps sounded on the back stairs. Dim yellow
light mottled the creamy plaster visible through the hall door,
making the vines stenciled there seem to stir in soundless
wind.
“I pray so, sir,” she said, keeping her voice
steady with an effort. “Because I fear this box contains evidence
of a conspiracy against both yourself, and your wife.”
For one instant, familiar with the uncontrollable
first rush of his rages, she would not have been surprised had he
struck her. Malvern only stood, staring, mouth half open and eyes
glittering with fury. Then his lips closed hard, and he stepped to
her, and yanked the box from her hands.
A manservant appeared in the doorway, hastily
adjusting a badly tied neckcloth. “Sir?”
Malvern was silent for a moment, studying Abigail’s
face. “Bring me a chisel to my study,” he said at last. And he
added, as if the words were forced from him at gunpoint, “And bring
coffee for myself and Mrs. Adams.”
In November of 1770, a few months after starting
at Harvard, Jeffrey Malvern had written to Tamar, Father spoke
today of the Papist. It sounded like he begins to have regard for
her for making her own way. This does not sound promising. Can you
not find him a mistress? There is a woman here named Mrs. Bell, who
would be willing but has the appearance of great
respectability.
John’s clerk, young Mr. Thaxter, had told Abigail
things about Mrs. Bell of Cambridge, and Abigail thought young Mr.
Jeffrey grossly underestimated his father’s gullibility, if he
supposed the merchant hadn’t heard them, too.
March of 1771: What earthly reason did you give,
for not complaining to him at the time, if she indeed threatened
you with a hot coal in your face? Surely even for the Whore of
Babylon, that is extreme?
July of 1772—a few weeks after the death of their
young brother: . . . but since he is gone, could you not
come up with some way that it was the Papist’s doing?
January of 1773, shortly after Rebecca’s effort to
retrieve her property: I don’t like this talk of divorcement.
He’s but four-and-fifty, and there’s juice in him yet. No sense
prying one step-mama away from him only to have him wed another,
and then it will be all to do again. The next one may not be so
Jesuitical or so obliging about leaving her correspondence where
they may be found. What about Clara Wheelock, or one of her fair
“nieces”? That carroty one (Jenny?) should keep any man alive
busy.
Abigail looked up from Piers Woodruff’s dozenth
letter begging and bullying his sister Rebecca to send him money as
the clock struck ten. Walking home from their meeting with Malvern
last November, with Rebecca silent and shaking at her side, she had
wished for worms to consume Malvern from the inside out, as they
had consumed Herod Agrippa in the Book of Acts. Now seeing his
face, she thought, I must never wish such ill again, even in my
heart. His was indeed the face of a man whose heart and
entrails were being devoured from within.
For the first time in her life, she pitied him. She
said, “I’m sorry.”
He laid down his son’s latest missive—containing
only lamentations about debts and hangovers, and a request for
Tamar to get the old man to see reason about my
allowance—and passed a hand over his face. Two hours ago,
Malvern had sent his disheveled serving man to Queen Street, with a
note to the effect that Mrs. Adams was detained at his house but
would return with a suitable escort, and had summoned Scipio from
the kitchen to tell him that he need not worry for his position,
but should go to bed. “I will see to Miss Malvern, when she comes
home,” the father had said.
“Has this accomplished all that you had in mind,
Mrs. Adams?” the merchant now asked, visibly struggling to control
the anger that seemed to be the only emotion he was capable of
feeling. He reached for the coffeepot, but lifting it found it
empty (as Abigail had, half an hour previously). For a moment he
seemed about to hurl it to the floor, but it was an expensive
piece, so he set it down again. His pale eyes burned with exhausted
resentment as he looked back at her. “Does the knife go deep enough
for you, to avenge the hurt I gave your friend?”
“I did not come seeking vengeance.” Abigail lifted
the yellowing sheets, the looping scribbles of the handwriting of
that young wastrel and gambler who had made his sister’s life such
a misery. “Only information, about who Rebecca might have known,
who would have done such a thing to an innocent woman in her
house.”
“The woman wasn’t innocent,” grated Malvern. “She
was a whore, as her husband is a lying pimp.”
“If she was a whore, her deserving would have been
an A sewed to her garment, in the old way, not to have her
throat cut and her body mutilated.”
Malvern opened his mouth to shout something about
whores and what they deserved, and Abigail steadily met his eyes.
After a moment he closed his lips again, settled back into his
chair. “You are right, Mrs. Adams,” he said, in a voice like the
grind of the sea on pebbles after a storm. “If it was reasonable
men we spoke of. Yet the woman did her whoring with the commander
of the British troops. And her husband is the Governor’s friend and
one of the commissioners who’s been given the Royal Monopoly to
sell East India Company tea. I should think it would be obvious,
where to seek for her murderers, and why they would do their deed
in—in the house that they chose.”
“You think she was killed by the Sons of Liberty,
in short,” said Abigail, and raised her brows. “Mr. Malvern, if
sexual congress with officers of the Sixty-Fourth regiment was
considered grounds for murder by the Sons of Liberty, the city of
Boston would be littered with female corpses from Copp’s Hill to
the Neck.” She brushed her hand across the letters on the table
between them. “I promise you, I have enough friends in the Sons of
Liberty to be sure that they were not behind this crime. If I
thought they were—or if I knew that Rebecca had run off with them—I
would not have risked spending a night in the city gaol trying to
find the true culprit. And I certainly would not have risked having
an innocent serving man hanged, which I believe is the penalty when
a slave robs his master.”
He continued to glare at her, like a bull who has
pursued a red flag to exhaustion. “And all that you say could be a
ploy to convince me of your lies.”
“Mr. Malvern,” said Abigail, “everyone in town
knows that you cannot be convinced of anything.”
To her surprise he laughed, a single explosive
sputter, then put his face in his hands, so that they hid whatever
expression had come over his mouth. He sat that way for some time,
staring at his wife’s letters, and his son’s.
“Rebecca has been missing for three days now,”
Abigail went on. “For three days the Sons of Liberty have been
seeking her—so I am told—about the city, and have found no trace of
her. For all I know this man, this killer, whoever he is, seeks
her, too. I’d hoped to find something in her correspondence with
her family that might help me. She had made few friends here in
Boston—”
“She had that printer!” Malvern’s hand smote the
table with a violence that made Abigail jump. “For all her talk of
my misdeeds, and my mistrust, while
she—”
“In the years you have been apart,” Abigail said
slowly, “your wife and I have been as near as sisters. And I will
swear an oath on the Testament that she has never regarded herself
as anything other than your wife. She has spoken of you in
anger—sometimes in very great anger—but never in disrespect . . .
Which is more, I’m afraid, than can be said of me.”
“It isn’t what I’ve heard.”
“From whom did you hear it?”
He was silent again, and in the silence hooves
could be heard in the street outside, and the clatter of harness as
a carriage came to a halt before the house’s outer door. Malvern’s
eyes moved toward the hall, then returned to Abigail, weary and
angry, yet to her the anger seemed to smolder deeper—an inner pain,
not a wall against opposition. “You’re not telling me all of the
truth, Mrs. Adams. You’re mired to the neck in the bog of Sam
Adams’s making—as you mired my wife.”
“What I believe—and what she believes—about the
rights of the colonies doesn’t mean that she isn’t in danger now.
It doesn’t mean that the man who perpetrated a monstrous crime
isn’t looking for her. Or that I would not move Heaven and Earth,
if I could, to find her before he gets to her.”
A serving man’s shoe-heels clacked in the hall,
lamp flame juddering across the papered walls. Abigail’s eye slid
to Malvern’s face, then away as a bright jumble of hushed giggles
sounded, a girl’s voice crying, “He is not my sweet-heart!” and a
young man’s, “Oh, so you go kiss in alcoves just any officer you
happen to meet?” “Faith, how’d ye know that, Master Jeff? Ye
weren’t out of the card-room but only long enough to piss in Mrs.
Fluckner’s rose-bed!”
“Good heavens, hand me that sponge, girl! This is
what comes of trying to take rouge off in the carriage—” “Don’t be
silly, Jeff, the old man’s asleep by this time . . .”
And the three of them stood framed, suddenly, in
the door of the study—Mistress Tamar in her pink and silver ball
dress, her maid a step behind with her arms full of cloaks and her
black hair disheveled, handsome Jeffrey with the laughter dying out
of his face as they took in the pile of letters on the table, the
open box, the grim set of their father’s mouth. Tamar took a half
step into the room, said, “Papa—?” and cast an uncertain glance at
Abigail, then another at the box, and the letters from Jeffrey that
lay beside her father’s hand.
Then she turned back to her father, tears welling
to her eyes, streaming down her face. “Oh, Papa, I can explain! I
knew I shouldn’t have kept them, but—”
“We’ll speak in the morning, child.” Malvern held
up the letters in Piers Woodruff’s Italianate hand. “And before you
protest on the subject of whose correspondence is whose business in
this house, please be prepared to explain how you came to have
possession of letters written to your stepmother by her brother and
her father. I trust you enjoyed Mrs. Fluckner’s rout-party?” He
unpocketed and held out to her a large, clean handkerchief as she
began to cry, and his eyes, as he studied her face in the servant’s
candlelight, held not pity, but a weary disgust and
disbelief.
“Please, Papa, please, it was Oonaugh who made me
keep them! Oonaugh said she’d—”
“I never!” protested the servant girl, genuinely
indignant, and Abigail, watching Jeffrey’s face, saw the young
man’s expression go from surprise to bemusement to sudden, earnest
concern.
“Father, I must say that I’ve long deplored—”
“We’ll talk of it in the morning,” Malvern
repeated, as Tamar showed signs of dissolving into hysterical
tears. “Jeffrey, take your sister to her room. Oonaugh, if you’d be
so good as to stay?”
“Papa, don’t believe her! Please don’t believe her!
When I found she was forging those letters from
Jeffrey—”
“I never!” protested the maid, as Abigail closed
the study door behind Jeffrey and Tamar.
“Of course you never forged these things, girl,”
said Malvern harshly. “Don’t you think I know you can barely write
your own name?” From the litter on the table he picked up a handful
of the spicier billets-doux Scipio had told her of, addressed to
Tamar by a variety of young gentlemen and containing nothing more
incriminating than some of the worst sonnets Abigail had ever read.
“And I take it you have no idea how these came into my daughter’s
possession either?”
“Sorr, I can explain—”
“I’m sure you can,” he agreed. “I know my daughter
is extremely fond of you, girl, and since I can say with certainty
that Miss Tamar is going to be both bored and unhappy over the next
several months, I would hesitate to add to her distress by obliging
her to train a new servant. Do I make myself clear?”
The girl whispered, “Yes, sorr. But I never forged
nuthin’, nor told her to keep no letters—”
“It’s just a story my daughter made up?”
“Yes, sorr.”
“Like other stories she makes up?” His face was
mottled crimson with anger, but he kept his voice quiet, more
terrifying than a shout.
“Yes, sorr. She—”
“I’m going to ask you to do a favor for me,
Oonaugh.” He reached into the pocket of his sober gray vest.
“Several favors, in fact. I trust you know our conversation is not
to be shared with Miss Tamar?”
“Yes, sorr. I mean, no, sorr.”
He pitched a coin onto the desk. The maid
identified its size and weight in an instant and her black eyes
widened. “For a year now I’ve been paying your wages. I want you to
remember, from now on, that you are working for me. You tell my
daughter that you forgive her for lying about you—”
Oonaugh’s mouth popped open in protest.
“—and whatever she tells me, I expect you to
come to me with the truth. Is that clear?”
“Yes, sorr.”
“Now you may go.”
The girl’s short little fingers nipped up the coin,
and she bobbed a curtsey. As she turned to go, Abigail said, “Just
a moment, please. Mr. Malvern?”
He glanced at her, raised one heavy brow, tufted
like a bobcat’s.
“May I have a word with the girl, please?”
He nodded. “As many as you like. You may cut off
her hair and knit stockings out of it—”
Oonaugh clutched at her cap in alarm.
“Mistress Oonaugh,” said Abigail. “What is your
surname?”
“Connelley, m’am.”
“Miss Connelley. Are you acquainted with the maid
who worked for Perdita Pentyre?”
“Oh, that was a horror, m’am! I’ve heard she
was—”
“I know what you’ve heard,” said Abigail grimly.
“Do you know her?”
“We’ve spoke at parties. Down the rooms, you know,
when the quality are all up flirtin’ an’ playin’ cards an’ carryin’
on. Thinks the sun shines out her backside, she does, the consayted
Frog, but I knows her to speak to.”
“Would you be so kind as to carry a note to her for
me? I should very much like to speak with her.” The handmaid of
Jezebel, that was privy to all her ways . . .
Malvern brought another coin from his pocket, and
held it up for Oonaugh to see. “Please tell Miss—”
“Droux, sorr. Lisette Droux.”
“Please tell Miss Droux that both Mrs. Adams and I
understand how valuable her time is.” There was silence, broken
only by the creak of a manservant’s feet in the hall, and the
scratching of Abigail’s quill as she penned a hasty note. “Does she
read English?”
“I dunno, sorr.” Oonaugh looked puzzled by the
question. “I shouldn’t think so, if she’s French.”
“Then perhaps you could ask her, if she would meet
Mrs. Adams here at her earliest convenience?”
“That I’ll do, sorr. You can depend on me.”
“Good.” He laid the second coin on the table. “You
may go.” As the door shut behind Oonaugh, he added quietly, “Shall
I call Scipio in and have him make more coffee, Mrs. Adams? You
look quite exhausted.”
She could hear the half hour striking on Faneuil
Hall, and tried to recall which hour had passed. She felt cold,
weary to death, and a little ill. Surely it hadn’t been only that
morning that she’d started reading through Rebecca’s letters of the
summer before last, before sallying forth to the market to question
Queenie.
“Thank you, sir, no. Thank you,” she said again, as
he came around to her, to hand her up from her chair. “More than I
can say.” The thick Spanish dollar he’d held up to Miss Connelley
would buy, she guessed, any amount of information from Mlle Lisette
Droux, and very quickly, if she knew anything of the cupidity of
servants—particularly servants who might be facing unemployment in
a foreign city.
He rang the bell nevertheless. Scipio appeared,
having evidently disregarded his master’s orders to take himself
off to bed. “Have Ulee harness the chaise, to take Mrs. Adams home.
I trust,” he added, as the butler turned to obey, “that I have no
need to say that I rely on your discretion, about all things
concerning the events of this night, Scipio?”
The servant bowed. “You have no need, sir.”
“So Mrs. Adams tells me. If I have not said so
before,” he went on quietly, “and I may not have, for you know as
well as I that I do speak hastily when angry—I value very much the
discretion that is natural to you, Scipio; as indeed I value all of
your good qualities. Thank you for the help that you have extended
to Mrs. Adams, on behalf of-of my good wife.”
Scipio inclined his head. “Thank you, sir. Mrs.
Adams.” And he bowed himself from the room.
When he escorted her to the door some ten minutes
later, Malvern said, “Let me know what you learn, Mrs. Adams. If
you would,” he added, like a man recalling a phrase in a foreign
tongue. “I’ll have the letters from Woodruff to-to my wife”—again
he avoided calling her Mrs. Malvern—“sent over to you next
week; I should like to read them myself again. You probably know as
much as I do about—about my wife’s family—and in any case it is
hard to see, after the lapse of nearly eight years, why someone
from her past would choose to do violence against an innocent third
party in her house.”
“I agree,” said Abigail quietly. “Yet the killer
has to be someone she knows, and trusted.”
“Which doesn’t preclude Sam Adams or one of his
ilk,” retorted Malvern grimly. “There!” he added. “That’s the three
quarters striking! Ulee had best make a little speed, if you’re to
be home when the Sabbath begins.”
Icy wind clawed them as he handed her down the step
and into the chaise. Abigail had protested, while they’d waited for
it, that the distance was barely five hundred yards to her own
door, but in her heart she was grateful, as the glow of the
vehicle’s lamps caught on flying spits of rain. “If he’s a few
minutes late,” she replied, “I think we can argue, with our Lord,
that it comes under the heading of pulling one’s ox from a pit. The
Sabbath was made for Man, and not Man for the Sabbath.”
“Let me know what you learn,” he said. “And how I
may help you find—Mrs. Malvern.”
Quietly, Abigail said, “I will.” But as the chaise
rattled up King Street, Abigail reflected on how little she had
learned, since she’d waked in the morning’s cold dawn. She had
pulled no ox from any pit. And though a small part of her heart
rejoiced at what she thought she had heard in Charles Malvern’s
voice, she was well aware that she was no closer to knowing
Rebecca’s whereabouts than she had been on Thursday morning,
watching the Sons of Liberty mop Perdita Pentyre’s blood from
Rebecca’s kitchen floor.