for Horace’s direction interrupted yet again . . .

“Excuse me, my very dear madame, I beg of you—Yeovil!” the fat man yelled. “Yo, Yeovil, come back here, blister it!”

He was the senior, then, reflected Abigail with a sigh. Or a bachelor-fellow, by the look of him. And privileged to preempt the junior’s request for ale, which had preempted the sophomore’s demand for his wig to be taken to be curled . . .

The fat student’s companions were stamping and slapping each other and smothering with laughter to such an extent that none of them saw another man—crimson-gowned and a few years older than they—until he had crossed the yard from the gate and reached Abigail’s side. “Pugh, aren’t you getting a little old for this kind of trick?” he asked in a quiet voice.

Pugh turned, piggy eyes sparkling in their pouches of fat. “Dulce est disipere in loco, my dear Ryland . . . Have you a quarrel with educating the wealthy in the arts of humility?”

“When it involves rudeness to a stranger,” replied his dear Ryland, “yes, I have. How may I serve you, m’am? My name is Joseph Ryland—Are you here in search of someone?” With a gesture he led her away from the group and farther into the quadrangle.

“I’m looking for Mr. Horace Thaxter, yes, thank you. I am Mrs. Adams, his aunt.”

“I’ve heard him speak of you, m’am. Did Mr. Fairfield write to you, then, about Thaxter’s illness?” Mended red gown billowing, Mr. Ryland led Abigail cattycorner across the yard to the old brick building that enclosed its southern end. “I’m sure it isn’t as serious as Fairfield thinks it—”

“What happened?” asked Abigail, startled.

Ryland made a gesture of frustration. Unlike the refulgent Mr. Pugh and his friends, the young man—she guessed his age at nearly thirty, her own age . . . A tutor, then, or a bachelor-fellow waiting for an appointment somewhere—wore his own hair, long and only lightly powdered; he spoke with the accents of Pennsylvania. “To be honest, Mrs. Adams, I think it was the food in the Hall. Do what they will, the Governors cannot keep the kitchen staff from buying the cheapest slops they can come by and pocketing the difference, and I know Horace’s constitution is a delicate one. I was going to let the matter go another day—I am the Fellow in charge of Massachusetts Hall—and then write his parents . . .”

They entered the building by the most westerly of its several doors, and Mr. Ryland led her down a wide hall and then up one of the residential staircases. “He’ll be in Captain Fairfield’s room—he fags for Fairfield, a noxious custom . . .”

As they reached the first landing, a young man stepped from the room on the right, his dusky face and black Indian braids startling against the white of his neckcloth and shirt, and the sober darkness of waistcoat, breeches, and stockings. Ryland said, “Weyountah, how is Thaxter? Mrs. Adams, this is Weyountah—Mr. Enoch Wylie—one of our best men in the sciences. Weyountah, Mrs. Adams of Boston, Thaxter’s aunt.”

“Good Lord, get that woman out of here!” called a voice from the left-hand room, and the door opened to reveal a fair-haired, cheerful young man with a weather-burned complexion and a gray coat rather heavily laced with gold on the sleeves. “I knew it—Ryland’s trying to get the lot of us sent down for bringing a female in here . . . Diomede!” he called back into the room behind him. “Get on out here and bring a rope—tie up Mr. Ryland and throw him into the river—”

“Don’t be a fool, Fairfield, this is Thaxter’s aunt come to see him.”

“Doesn’t matter,” said Mr. Fairfield, in the slurry drawl of a Virginian. “The Governors will never believe a gang of towsers and tosspots like us . . .”

Spots of color appeared on Mr. Ryland’s cheekbones, and he stepped back—with rigid reserve—as Fairfield led the way briskly into the left-hand chamber. The Indian Weyountah bowed to Abigail and gestured her to precede him, then followed her in, leaving Mr. Ryland upon the landing and the door open behind them.

Horace got quickly to his feet from the desk where he sat by the window. The chamber was the usual one for the College : small, very tidy, furnished with a desk by the window, a couple of chairs that young Mr. Fairfield had obviously brought with him from Virginia, a small fireplace, and a little table. On a neat sideboard were ranged a coffee-roaster, pot, and a lacquered Chinese canister, presumably for coffee beans; there was a smaller caddy for tea, spouted blue-and-white pots for tea and water, and tidily arranged cups and saucers, not all of them matching.

Horace Thaxter hadn’t changed much in two years, Abigail reflected; she didn’t think his weight had increased by so much as an ounce, though he’d grown a good five inches, and he had not been short when last she’d seen him at fifteen. All elbows, knees, and spectacles, he wore an extremely shabby suit of faded black coat and breeches, clearly handed down from someone both shorter and more robust. He said, “Aunt Abigail—!” and held out a bony, ink-stained hand.

From the doorway, Ryland said, “I’m glad to see you on your feet, Thaxter,” a small crease of worry between his brows. “Captain Fairfield, if I may remind you—”

“I know, I know, dash it! That hell-begotten Greek class, may they all descend unto Avernus together—”

“Hades, actually,” put in Horace, stepping aside as an elderly black man—who’d been arranging wood and kindling in the hearth—gathered his hearth-brush and ashes and slipped from the rather overcrowded room . . . Presumably Diomede, Abigail guessed. And presumably the one responsible for the room’s spotless order. There was a chest in the corner that, by what John had told her of the Virginia and Carolina men when he had studied here, would contain the slave’s blanket, upon which he would sleep on the floor . . .

“Avernus being the Latin . . . Aunt Abigail, you truly shouldn’t have—”

“Horry, I shall smite you with the poker if you tell me once more the difference between Latin and Greek . . . Yes, yes, Ryland, take your duty to the Muses as given, and I’ll be along as soon as I’ve done my duty to decent manners.”

“I shouldn’t want you to be—”

“It’s my business if I’m sent down or not,” Fairfield snapped. “You’re not my dry nurse. Dash it,” he added, as Ryland disappeared into the shadows of the rather gloomy staircase, “now I’ve offended him again. If it’s not one thing, it’s another. Diomede”—he thrust open the door to the inner chamber—“go fetch some water for Mrs. Adams for tea—or would you be of the Rebel persuasion, m’am, like all the rest of the Adamses I’ve heard of, not to speak of every other scholar in this curst school? Or is the issue of tea now considered settled once and for all?” And he raised his brows in a quirky jest.

“Coffee,” said Weyountah, “is I believe the proper alternative. Or cocoa.” And he guided Abigail to one of the chairs beside the cold hearth.

“You sounded as if a visit would do you good.” Abigail took Horace’s hand with a smile and set her basket on the corner of the table. “You know your mother would never forgive me, were you left to languish without someone at least making sure you were still alive.”

“Cocoa, then,” said Fairfield, snapping his fingers as Diomede appeared in the doorway. “And sink me if that dashed Beaverbrook hasn’t stolen my cocoa . . . Go upstairs and get it, would you? And thrash the little maggot if he’s there. Shall we take ourselves off, Horace, while you visit with your aunt? I daresay Ryland only showed her up to make sure I came along to his Greek class and didn’t get sent down, which old Hogden promised he would, if I’m late again. When class is done, m’am,” he added with a bow, “I trust you’ll join us for dinner at the Golden Stair? Diomede”—he leaned through the staircase door to call after the ascending slave—“after you’ve provided cocoa for Mrs. Adams, run along to the Golden Stair and bespeak a dinner for five. Oh, and fetch me my—”

Patiently, the servant reappeared, took from the seat of the other chair the red gown and four-square cap of scholarship—Abigail could see Horace’s hanging on a peg on the wall—and held them out to his master.

“You’re a wonder, Diomede . . .” Fairfield called back over his shoulder as he dove through the door. “And if you don’t save me some of whatever’s in that basket, Thaxter”—his voice trailed back up the stairs—“I shall tell Mr. Pugh you’ve been tupping his mistress—”

Weyountah said, “I’ll be in the laboratory should you need me, Thaxter,” and with a bow to Abigail, departed.

The room seemed suddenly, echoingly quiet.

Horace’s breath blew out in a sigh. “Aunt Abigail, I beg a thousand pardons for having written. No consideration in the world would have induced me to do so, had I thought you would put yourself to the inconvenience—”

“Don’t be silly.” Abigail fetched her basket from the table and held it out to him; his pale face flushed slightly

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