Sixteen
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To Abigail, the tight-tangled alleys and narrow,
anonymous rights-of-way that made up the North End always smacked
more of the village Boston had been a hundred and fifty years ago,
than of the thriving colonial city it had become. In fall and
spring, the bustle and variety in the crowded streets went to her
head like a glass of wine: book-shops, silversmiths’, the closeness
of the wharves with their tall ships; the smells of sea salt and
pine. In the stench and heat of summer, with pigs and chickens and
the occasional milk-goat blocking the narrow alleys, she invariably
felt a longing for the green quiet and fresh food of Braintree, and
today—with winter closing in, and the bells of the city tolling,
and an edge of violence in the air—it seemed to her that here in
this cramped islet could be found the concentrated solution of the
worst of what Boston was.
Boston was a seaport town: sailors, both coastal
and deep-water, were to be seen everywhere. The tenements that
crowded these narrow streets housed them in their hundreds
and—cheek-by-jowl with them—the chandler ies, slopshops, and
harlots that made up their world.
Boston was a wealthy town: Amid the crumbling
squalor of dockside poverty, handsome brick mansions reared, where
merchant families had held land for generations while the
neighborhood decayed around them. Up until eight years ago,
Governor Hutchinson had resided here with his family, in a splendid
house up the hill from his wharf. Then in ’65—enraged by Britain’s
arbitrary decision to tax everything printed, from bills of lading
to playing cards—rioters had gutted the building, burned the
Governor’s painstakingly collected library of the colony’s oldest
documents, and driven his family out into the night. The family
lived in Milton now, in the countryside, and the Governor, when in
town, had a newer and larger brick mansion on Marlborough Street
close to the Commons. The Olivers—relations of the Hutchinsons and
the Governor’s appointees to the most lucrative colonial posts—had
a house on the North End as well, but as Abigail passed it, she
noted that its shutters were up, and the knocker taken from its
door.
Boston was a town of passions: for religion, for
liberty, for riotous street fighting that broke out every fifth of
November—Pope’s Day—in parades, brawls, battles between
North-Enders and South-Enders. As she followed Sam’s maid Surry
along the cobbled pavement, Abigail could hear voices arguing in
taverns, in tenements, in alleyways. In addition to the homes of
the rich, the North End held a large concentration of Boston’s
poor, and though it outraged Abigail’s Christian soul, she knew
that the refuge of the poor (if they have not the spiritual
mettle to either resign their souls or to better their
condition) was drink, of which plenty was available. The
liveliness that elsewhere characterized Boston seemed here to be
only a step from violence. On this very cold morning most of the
local dwellers were on their way to or from the market in North
Square, but gangs and groups of countrymen clustered around the
inns and taverns, with rifles on their backs, tomahawks at their
belts, and little parcels of clean shirts and spare stockings under
their arms.
“Do you remember hearing of the two murders, three
summers ago?” she asked her companion, and the slave-woman
nodded.
“Was there two? I only heard of the one. Kitta—Mrs.
Blaylock’s cook”—Mrs. Blaylock was Sam Adams’s neighbor—“says Mrs.
Fishwire was cut up something horrible. A judgment on her, Kitta
says, though to my mind that don’t show much of the Christian
charity she’s always braggin’ on that she has.” Having been the
property of Sam Adams for many years, Surry was easy-tempered and
virtually unshockable: a pretty mulatto woman of about Abigail’s
own age, to whose speech still clung the lazy accent of
Virginia.
“Why a judgment? I thought Mrs. Fishwire was a
hairdresser.”
“Oh, Lord, nuthin’ like that.” The maidservant
shook her head. “For one thing, Zulieka Fishwire was older than Mr.
Adams—not that that’s ever stopped a woman with a good man,” she
added with a pixie grin. “But Kitta—and some other folks in this
town—thinks that because a woman learned herb-doctorin’ from the
Indians, and maybe from the country Negroes that come in from
Africa, she’s got to be learnin’ it from the Devil.” She sniffed
scornfully. “Some of those white doctors can’t tell the
difference between prickly heat and the smallpox . . . Well, Mrs.
F. did dress hair, and did it well. But folks knew, if they
didn’t want to be bled or purged or dosed with some of those awful
things doctors’ll make you swallow, she was the one to come to, to
get you well.”
The blocks of the North Street Ward had originally
been plotted deep enough to permit gardens behind them, but during
the course of time this land had been sold, and divided, and built
upon for rentals and barns and work-shops. In much the same way,
old Ezra Tillet had built the narrow little house behind his own,
that his son Nehemiah had rented to Rebecca Malvern. The result of
this rear-yard building was that much of the North End was a maze
of yards and cottages, and alleyways that would admit no more than
a wheelbarrow. Down one of these, past the Blue Bull tavern and
behind Love Lane, Surry led Abigail, to a sort of cobbled courtyard
surrounded by three or four ramshackle structures of various sizes,
aswarm with grubby children barefoot in the cold.
Washing-lines stretched from house to house, and a
bonfire burned in the middle of the court under a black cauldron
that looked as if it had begun its career on a whaling vessel. Two
children who should have been in school were feeding the fire
beneath it. A third, slightly older, stirred an acrid burgoo of
shirts and chemises simmering within it. The heavy air smelled of
woodsmoke, lye, and privies that needed cleaning.
Abigail walked up to the older woman engaged, with
yet another child, in hanging shirts of white ruffled linen over
the stretched ropes, and asked, “Begging your pardon, m’am, but
does Hattie Kern still live hereabouts?” Rachel Revere, who lived
two streets away on North Square, had given her this name along
with the information that Mrs. Kern took in washing. Sure enough,
the woman said, “That’ll be me, m’am.”
“I’m Mrs. Andrews, from Haverhill.” She held out
her hand to the warm, laundry-wet grip of those rough fingers. “And
this is Lula.” Surry curtseyed. “I understand a woman named
Fishwire used to live near here; Lula was her niece. We only heard
this past summer about the poor woman’s death”—in an isolated
township like Haverhill, this was not beyond the realm of
possibility—“and Lula being her closest relative we had wondered,
if any of her things remained?”
“Lord save you,” exclaimed Mrs. Kern, and dried her
hands on her apron. “I have some of her things—a good few,
anyway—and Georgie Ballagh still has that poor cat of hers.
Nannie”—this to one of the children feeding the cauldron fire—“run
get Mr. Ballagh, there’s a good girl . . . Not you, Isaac, you stay
with the fire. To think of her having a niece after all!”
“What happened?” asked Abigail, though Rachel
Revere had last night given her the armature of the story: that
sometime during the night of the twelfth of September, 1772,
Zulieka Fishwire had been slashed to death in her house on Love
Lane—a house now rented to a tailor named Gridley and his family.
(“And a very pleasant gentleman he is, when he’s himself,” affirmed
Mrs. Kern loyally.)
Paul Revere’s wife had, like Lieutenant Coldstone,
described Mrs. Fishwire as a hairdresser, “But that was just so the
church elders wouldn’t come pokin’ their long noses into her
affairs,” provided Mrs. Kern. “Between black eyes from the
Bull”—she nodded in the direction of the public house—“and round
bellies from the girls down at the wharves, if you’ll excuse my
mentioning what’s in front of everyone’s noses hereabouts, and
children hereabouts comin’ down with fever and what-have-you every
summer, not to speak of breakin’ their arms like my Timmy did
climbin’ on the back of the butcher’s cart like a young id jit . .
. Well, Mrs. F. barely had time to fix her own hair, poor
lady.”
“It’s why nobody thought a thing of it, that
strangers were in and out of her house all the day and of an
evening,” confirmed Georgie Ballagh, a bent little man who’d lost a
leg and a hand fighting the French at Louisburg, over a decade ago.
“Mysel’, I don’t hold with a woman gettin’ shut of a child she’s
carryin’, but what’s the odds, if the poor mite’ll be born to a
mother who’s workin’ the streets for her livin’? Sailors’d come in
with their doxies, or by theirselves to be rid of the pox—beggin’
your pardon for mentionin’ it, m’am—at all hours of the day and
night.”
He frowned, and ruffled at his thin, colorless hair
with the iron hook that had replaced his left hand; Abigail told
herself firmly that she must not speculate how many scars he had on
his scalp from this habit. “We think a sight more of it now, I’ll
tell ye. There’s not a man or a woman on this yard, that don’t
prick up their ears when they see a stranger come ’round. But all
that’s after closin’ the barn door when the horse is already
gone.”
“Did anyone not see who was the last person to
visit her house that evening?” Abigail made herself look shocked,
and Mrs. Kern, Mr. Ballagh, and three other neighbors poured out a
confused tale: it was a lady, at about the time Mrs. Kern was
setting out to find where Nannie had got to—no, no, it was a man in
a green coat (only Lettie Grace said it was gray) who’d come in a
chaise, she thought—No, that chaise belonged to that French feller
stopping at the Bull. Mrs. Russell said it was a Negro, but then
Mrs. Russell had no use for Negroes on the whole—
As Abigail had coached her, Surry, upon being shown
the few effects that Mrs. Kern (and several other neighbors) had
taken from the house once the constables of the Watch had been
there, asked, “Did no one find among her things a coral necklace?
There was a gold bead on it. It was my mother’s, that she’d brought
from Africa when they came over,” which gave Abigail the chance to
describe both Rebecca Malvern and Perdita Pentyre, as the possible
thieves.
It was a bow drawn at a venture, and if either of
those women had visited the tiny shop that Zulieka Fishwire had
kept on the ground floor of the little house, nobody had
particularly noticed them. Given the proximity of the Bull, and the
wide variety of Mrs. Fishwire’s clientele, this was scarcely
surprising. Mrs. Gridley, whose husband now rented the shop, added
that it had costed the landlord six months’ rent, that killing had,
as no one would rent the place, and she and her man wouldn’t have,
neither, except the asking price came down so cheap, and then
they’d got Father Scully that looked after the Irish in His
Majesty’s Forces to come over from Castle Island and say prayers,
and Mrs. Gridley still wouldn’t go into that room after
dark, not for ready money.
“Slack your fire, lass,” said Mr. Gridley easily,
from where he sat beside the front window stitching a waistcoat of
yellow silk. “There’s no such a thing as ghosts.” He nodded a
genial greeting to Abigail and the rest of the procession that
followed her in, agog to display their knowledge of the old
crime.
The floor was sanded, after the old country habit,
and the ceiling low. The building itself was even more rickety than
Rebecca Malvern’s dwelling, so that the dashing footsteps of
several little Gridleys (there were at least four of them that
Abigail could see, and Mrs. Gridley didn’t herself look old enough
to be out without her own mother) almost vibrated the house. Nails
and hooks had been driven into the walls of the small front room:
“She had strings back and forth between ’em, with her herbs
dryin’,” provided Mrs. Kern. When Abigail looked up at the little
cluster of hooks in the low ceiling, the washerwoman added, “She’d
hang skins up there. Snakeskins, enough to make a Christian’s flesh
creep. Mornin’s, she’d go out to the Commons and catch ’em by the
Mill-Pond, or pay the boys hereabouts. Lizards, too. She’d have ’em
up there to keep the cats from ’em.”
“Had she many?”
“Three,” said George Ballagh. “My lad Pirate was
one of ’em—” He looked out the open door of the little house, and
pointed to a thin, rather delicate-looking black cat sitting on an
upper windowsill of a tenement opposite, washing itself with the
stump of a missing forepaw. “He a’n’t crossed this threshold since
that day, an’ I can’t say as I blame him.”
“Because he still smells the blood, do you think?”
Abigail knew plenty of people who’d disagree with the enlightened
Mr. Gridley and attribute such reaction in an animal to
ghosts.
The little ex-soldier’s face hardened with hate.
“Blood my arse. The man who did it killed the other two, and I
found my poor lad hid behind the cupboard with his paw all but
sliced off, and cuts on his back where the man’d gone after him as
he ran about. There was blood on the step”—he nodded toward the
scuffed oak threshold, the shallow brick step outside—“where they
three would sit after dark, waitin’ for the Fishwire to let ’em in
for their dinners, an’ the two of ’em gutted like fish here in this
room, an’ the poor old Fishwire herself in the doorway there, that
goes to the back-kitchen. I was one of them as helped clear the
dead from Fort William Henry, after the Abenaki had massacred the
settlers there.” He shook his head. “This was near as bad.”
“That Father Scully,” put in Mrs. Gridley
insistently, “he blessed both this room and the kitchen, and the
doorway between ’em. There’s nought of evil, that remains here of
the deed.”
“No,” said Abigail softly. “Of course not.” While
Mrs. Gridley, Mrs. Kern, and others explained to Mr. Gridley every
detail of Abigail’s story about being the mistress of Mrs.
Fishwire’s niece, she walked around the little room, set up now as
a tailor’s shop, with boxes to hold the fabric for various jobs and
a little rack of spools of thread of various colors. The
resemblance between this place and Rebecca’s house lifted the hair
on her nape. And yet, she told herself, there was little variation
possible in these ramshackle dwellings. It was such a place as any
woman obliged to make her own living in the world would take, if
she could: a small house on one of Boston’s many inner courts, that
would be black as pitch once the sun was down, save for the dull
gold chinks of closed shutters . . .
“Were the shutters closed?” she asked. “The night
of the murder?”
“Oh, aye.” Mr. Ballagh nodded, from the doorway
where he’d gone to stand talking to Mr. Gridley. “With the species
of ruffians that spend their time in the Bull, you want to keep
things locked up tight, once the sun goes in. The Fishwire’d keep
her door open later nor most, for her trade, an’ she was always
havin’ trouble with ’em.”
Another neighbor nodded. “We was all ever havin’
trouble with ’em, m’am. One or another—sailors, sometimes,
sometimes just the riffraff that unloads the boats—”
“She’d get a gentleman, now an’ now, though.” The
informant—swarthy as an Indian with an Irish brogue that could have
been cut like cheese with a wire—explained to Abigail. “From the
Bull, y’see. Gentlemen’ll come for the cards, an’ maybe so-be-it
the deacons of their churches won’t see ’em takin’ a drink—”
“Maybe so-be-it they’re deacons theirselves,” added
a Mrs. Bailey, and got a general laugh.
“Well, sailor or gent, they’d come down here, see
the light, an’ maybe think it was a whore’s house. Or others’d come
and pound on her door and curse at her, and call her witch—”
“I throwed a man out, just the week before the
killing happened,” assented Ballagh. “One of the gentlemen,
he was, and cursin’ like a sailor at her, because he
couldn’t do his rifle-drill—beggin’ your pardon, m’am—with some
drab over at the Bull.”
“Lord, yes!” Mrs. Kern laughed. “And he wasn’t the
first or the only—You mind Abednego Sellars, that’s deacon at the
New South Meeting? He had a ladyfriend lived in rooms at the
Mermaid, in Lynn Street; he was here all the time at evening, all
cloaked up like he thought nobody here would see his silver shoe
buckles, to buy the where-withal to do his doxy justice. Then when
things didn’t work out just as he’d planned, he’d be back, midnight
sometimes, a-poundin’ on the Fishwire’s door and screamin’ at her
that she was a witch who’d put a word on him, to keep him from
doin’ the deed.”
There was general laughter, and Abigail traded a
startled glance with Surry. Both of them knew Deacon Sellars, if
not well, at least for a number of years. He was a pious and
prosperous chandler, a pillar of his church and—Abigail
knew—likewise a pillar of the Sons of Liberty, whose pamphlets he
was in the habit of taking out of Boston in his deliveries of soap
and candles to surrounding towns.
While it was true that Boston was a bustling town
that seemed both enormous and crowded to her—particularly when
first she had come to live there—she realized that in the five
years that she’d lived on and off in Boston, she had come to know,
at least by sight, scores of its inhabitants to whom she had never
spoken, and by reputation, many more. Those who, like Deacon
Sellars, had lived all their lives in the town would know its
byways, and where to come if they wanted to deceive their wives or
play cards or get drunk out of sight of the elders of their
respectable churches.
And heaven knew, you couldn’t throw a rock in
Boston without hitting someone at least sympathetic to the Sons of
Liberty.
On the other hand, she reflected, as she and Surry
made their retreat past the Blue Bull and out into Love Lane once
more . . . On the other hand, it was curious.
And it might behoove her to find out a little more
about Abednego Sellars. And she couldn’t keep herself from mentally
adding, Carefully . . .
It was nearly ten in the morning—and poor Pattie
was once again saddled with keeping the children at their lessons
and beginning preparations for dinner in between her own, heavier
tasks—and Abigail turned the corner onto Middle Street with a pang
of guilt. A door opened just ahead of her and three men staggered
out, dressed for some evening party and laughing with the exhausted
silliness of men who’ve spent the night in the back room of a
tavern (and the door was, indeed, of that description). Surry
leaped nimbly aside. Abigail, less quick, found herself with one of
them in her arms.
She stepped back and released him with an
exclamation of disgust.
“Pardon, m’am—pardon, m’am,” mumbled the stumbler’s
friend, catching the stumbler by the elbow. “M’friend’s not well,
not at all well . . .” The third member of the party hooted with
laughter.
“There, Percy, you’ve gone and offended a
respectable matron! Your wife will have words to say to you!” He
caught his two friends by the shoulders, and the three of them
staggered away down the hill toward Lynn Street, leaving Abigail
gazing after them, not certain if she should be troubled or merely
bemused.
The young man who’d spoken to her—drunk as a lord
and elegant in a coat of blue satin beneath his caped gray
greatcoat—looked a great deal like Jeffrey Malvern.