Eighteen
Have you spoken to the constable?”
Abigail’s tone of genuine concern seemed to have its effect, for the girl’s guardedness faded, and wry resentment took its place. “Oh, aye,
“I daresay,” remarked Abigail, “if Mrs.—Morgan, is it? It would be. If Mrs. Morgan’s friend had ever instructed some one of the Town Council to quash objections by Mr. Munn”—she named the Charles Town constable, a member in good standing of the Sons of Liberty—“concerning Mrs. Morgan’s way of life, he might well turn spiteful —”
“You probably ought not to have,” said Abigail encouragingly, “since you’ve your position to think of. But, though I’ve always counted myself a Christian woman, I’m afraid I agree with you—” She let the end of the sentence hang with an unspoken question.
The servant said, “Dassie. Dassie Mitchell. Please do come in, m’am; it won’t do you any good if you’re seen standing outside this house, the way folk around here talk as if they hadn’t anything better to do with their days. Belinda!” she called out, as she closed the door behind Abigail and her party. “Nancy! No word,” she said, to the two young ladies who appeared in an inner doorway, a blonde and a brunette clothed, like Dassie, as maidservants, but in dresses far newer and more stylish.
Abigail guessed it was Dassie who did the actual work in the house.
“This is Mrs. Percy. She came—Who was it who told you to come, m’am?”
As they crossed through the beautifully furnished parlor and proceeded to the kitchen, Abigail spun her story—freely lifted from events that had befallen one of her father’s parishioners some fourteen years ago—of the daughter of a fictitious elder brother who had been lured into a pretend marriage with a Frenchman, who had (she said) abandoned poor Pamela in Boston. A friend of the family had recommended Abigail inquire of the proprietress of the Avalon in Charles Town, Pamela being young and very pretty—“That frightful mother of hers seems to feel that sin is sin and that the Avalon is no better than some of those . . . those
“Your sister-in-law must be related to half the women in Charles Town, then,” remarked the dark-haired Nancy drily, as she poured out her mistress’s tea. “And to my stepmother and aunts as well. It’s not like this is a sailors’ knocking-shop, begging your pardon m’am for speaking so free—”
It was in fact, Abigail gathered, what John (and several English novelists) referred to as a House of Accommodation: a venue where those who could afford it could bring their mistresses for a few hours’ congress. Mrs. Morgan provided for the rental of clean, youthful temporary mistresses along with the rooms more as a sideline than a principal business—
“Though mind you, m’am,” said Dassie earnestly, “you’d think those sniffy mamas in this town would be glad the girls are here, when you think that if those boys over at the college didn’t have a place to come visit—as boys will—”
Blonde Belinda winked at Weyountah, who inclined his head to her politely and passed her the plate of slightly stale cakes.
“Why, think what trouble they’d get into with the respectable girls in the town! Like your poor niece!”
Abigail’s mind—always ill-regulated concerning points of doctrine and morality—momentarily scouted the question of whether this was more or less sinful than an out-and-out house of prostitution: it actively encouraged double adultery rather than simple fornication. Then she glanced sidelong at Katy, who was looking around the kitchen with great curiosity and obviously didn’t connect any of this tale of falsified marriage-vows and wheedling seducers with herself. Did she really believe that the young heir to five thousand acres of Virginia tobacco would genuinely marry the daughter of the head hostler at the Yellow Cow?
And if she did, what then? That he’d take her home to the master and mistress of a plantation and present her to them as their daughter-in-law?
And a dyed-in-the-wool patriot to boot?
Gradually—by dint of interest, sympathy, and letting the three confused and worried servant-girls simply talk—the story emerged. Wednesday afternoon—May fourth—Mrs. Morgan had gone for a walk, as she generally did before dinner . . . dinner being served at the fashionable hour of five, rather than at three or four as working-folk did. The girls didn’t think much of it when she didn’t return for dinner. It happened—not frequently—that Mrs. Morgan’s particular friend would cross over from Boston where he lived, and they would meet to go driving. Only when night fell—the moon being on the wane—did they begin to worry, but there was a gentleman scheduled to come calling Wednesday night with a lady friend, and with one thing and another, none of the three of them— Nancy, Dassie, nor Belinda—quite knew what steps to take.
“And did not Mr. Grimes or Mr. Hicks have anything to suggest?” inquired Weyountah, which caused the girls to look at one another worriedly. “It is Mr. Grimes who has charge of Mrs. Morgan’s stables, is it not?” he asked, as if the matter were common knowledge, and Nancy nodded.
“They said not to worry, that she’d most likely met Mr.—met her friend—and would be back late.” With her long face and wide, rather mannish shoulders, Nancy was nowhere near as pretty as Katy or Pattie, Abigail judged, but she had a smooth briskness to her and a lovely velvet voice.
“Might she have gone to Mr. Chamberville’s house near Concord with him?” asked Abigail smoothly. “I believe you said she had a key—”
Again the girls traded frowns, not remembering whether one or the other of them had mentioned Mr. Chamberville’s name and, if they had, whether they’d also mentioned the Concord house or whether or not Mrs. Morgan had the key to it. It was Dassie who said, “I don’t think she’d have gone there, m’am. Not with rebels all over those parts, as they are, and every sort of rumor flying about. Mr. Chamberville hasn’t been next or nigh Concord in months.”
“And did
“M’am, to tell you the truth we haven’t the least idea what it’s best we do,” replied Nancy. “’Twould be different if any of the three of us had family, or a friend who’d so much as acknowledge us in the street—not that a one of’em would recognize our
“Here he comes!” Belinda, who’d been sitting near the window, sprang to her feet.
“Grimes—?”
“Cornishman.”
“Hide us,” commanded Abigail sharply, and Nancy flung open the door of the backstairs, then caught Weyountah’s arm as Abigail and Katy darted up the narrow, boxed-in flight.
“You stay. He knows someone’s here—”
The door shut. Much as she wanted to get a look at one of the men whom she strongly suspected of breaking into her house, Abigail knew how these narrow, concealed kitchen flights carried the sound of ascending footfalls. If she stayed for a look through the door-crack, she couldn’t later flee upward if the Cornishman had enough imagination to disbelieve the girls and checked the backstairs. Pushing Katy ahead of her, she ascended in almost