“All this effected in a matter of days.”
“In our absence,” lamented Serena.
“I can hardly believe it.”
“And why not, Jeremy?” Serena scolded him.
Francis put up a hand to the young ones. “Jeremy, they’re out to supplant the issue of Andros with the frightful issue of—”
“Witchcraft, of course.”
“There is an election coming on, and they are political animals, whatever else they might be called.”
Jeremy swallowed hard as if it hurt to do so. “I should’ve seen this coming.”
“Why? No one else did. Williard passed me the suit papers on the heels of the warrant for Rebecca’s arrest. Their names aren’t on it, no, but their stamp of approval certainly is. They mean to call it Towne land by her being a Towne, and that it’s a disgrace that a government granted land parcel has fallen into the hands of a so-called witch and an old seaman.”
“A scheme that gets Parris and Putnam what they want,” sputtered Serena, her anger rising.
“Access to our acres, the rivers, the timber.” Francis sighed heavily. “I’d give it all for Rebecca, all of it.”
“Have we any other choice, Father? No!”
Jeremy nodded. “They also mean to give the villagers the blood of witches.’
“The land,” muttered Francis. “What they’ve squabbled about since the day I married Rebecca.”
Jeremiah shook his head in disbelief, even as he asked himself, What’s not to believe? “What plans have you? Any?”
“John Proctor’s wife’s been arrested too, and John’s ranted and publicly attacked the ministers and magistrates for their—how’d he say it? Idiocy. I’ve had to calm John as there’s a good chance he could be arrested next, and I need him beside me.”
“Proctor runs a lumber mill, right?”
“He does, and it’s as attractive as Corey’s grain mill, and like I said, Mrs. Corey’s been jailed as a witch, made to implicate her husband, and he is on the run.”
“I begin to see the pattern.”
“Good! But you and I are in the minority. Others see it as God’s will be done at last. Those who’ve long been our enemies in that cursed village yonder!” His hand flew up, a flourish in the general direction of the village.
Jeremy fingered his empty cup. “So what are you doing next, sir?”
“Every legal means I have, I am taking. I’ve a petition got up, and many have willingly signed, giving witness to Rebecca’s goodness, her life, and devotion to God.”
“Has it had any effect?”
“None, but I keep trying to get it into Stoughton’s hands.”
“I see. But lately that has become a near impossible task. I still have that copy of Parris sermon on me.”
“Can’t get it past Hathorne. He and Corwin’ve become the front men here for people like myself who might be an annoyance.”
“So, you’ve joined me as an annoyance?”
“We’re in the minority, Jeremy,” he repeated. “And it is an extreme minority, growing smaller each day.”
“Fear will do that to people,” said Serena. “Where do we go to get Mother back? What do we need to sign?”
“Wish it were that easy, my girl.”
“We must regain Mother at any cost!”
“Don’t you hear me, child? Your mother will not hear of being traded for a single acre!”
“You are the head of the household, the man here, Father, and you have a duty to override her wishes!” The argument had grown heated.
“So, what would you have me do? Break my promises to her? It’s a mistake, your coming back here, you two! You make me more vulnerable than ever. Jeremy, you must please take Serena as far from Salem as you possibly can.”
“Take Serena away from here?” She snapped at her father. “I am not some bundle of hay to be carted off at the first sign of trouble. No, we’re here to help, not to run!”
Serena marched noisily about the porch, collecting their empty ale cups, and she put one foot indoors, going to refills when she stopped in the doorway, “What kind of daughter do you think you raised?”
“It’s what your mother wants—her final wish of us, she calls it; it’s why she sent you to Boston in the first place.”
“I’m here to fight for her,” said Jeremy.
“And so am I,” added Serena. “To get her out of that hole they’ve thrown her into, Father!”
“The two of you will be sucked into this and arrested, and where will that leave any of us!”
“Not if we work cautiously,” countered Jeremy.
“Caution does no good against the kind of insanity in the village.”
Jeremy thought of the scene in the apothecary where Mary Wolcott had ‘danced’ with the devil. “I suspect you’re right, but we can’t just walk away from this, not now, not with Mother Nurse’s life in the balance.”
“Sign the petition and go. It’s all you can accomplish.”
“I intend to talk to the justices from Boston,” countered Jeremy, and to locate Cotton Mather if he is indeed in Salem.
“Questioning them and their methods can only bring down this hell on you and Serena, Jeremy.”
“We’re going nowhere, Father.” Serena’s tone put an end to it. “I’ll make us all some breakfast. It’s far too early for all this drinkin’ you two are doing.” She disappeared inside, the ale cups in her hands clanking.
“Sounds just like her mother,” Francis said with a slight mirth.
“Where’s that petition?”
“Circulating. Ben’s been hell-bent to go down to the village with guns to take Mother by force. He’ll get himself killed, that boy.”
“But you managed to get his attention and put him to work on the petition?”
“Precisely.”
Jeremy stood over the old man now and placed his hands on the stooped shoulders. “I am terribly sorry that this horrible business has come to your doorstep, sir, in this time of your lives, you and Mother Nurse.” In the winter of your lives.
Francis, a tear coming to his eye, patted Jeremy’s left hand with his right where it rested. “If I thought you were capable of it, I’d press you to get my daughter from here, Jeremy.”
“She has a mind of her own.”
“When those madmen fail to get a confession of witchcraft and murder from my Rebecca, and I know they will not, what befalls this family next? They will arrest her sisters, and when that fails.” He glanced over his shoulder to determine if Serena was still nearby. “When that fails, they will come for my children in their effort to get me to agree to their demands.”
“I think you have the lay of their scheme, sir.”
“Then you must get Serena away. You must convince her. You two must stay above the fray at all cost.”
“I will do all in my power to protect your daughter, sir. I love her as you love her, as you love Rebecca.
Chapter Eight
Across the land stretching to the village, at the Thomas Putnam home, Mrs. Putnam, Anne Carr, was trying desperately to find sleep—alone again—and again listening to the voice of her dead brother, Henry.
“I killed myself for her, because of you, Anne,” Henry’s voice held no emotion despite the terrible words he’d left her with on his deathbed that night twenty years ago. Why now? Why return to me now, all these years later? She could not fathom it—unless he meant to warn her of impending doom. Why does he put images of us as children in our father’s house in Salisbury into my head?
“The girl was a witch, Henry!” she shouted at his ghost now again as she had so many years before. “She’d’ve used you up! A witch! And she never loved you, Henry, not like I did.”
She saw snatches of their incestuous affair, images he pressed upon her mind with his renewed vigor and presence here today. Now little Anne up in the loft had been caught doing much the same with the servant girl. Perhaps it ran in the blood, this awful sin of sins. She’d finally convinced Thomas to remove the offending Mercy Lewis from their home despite her daughters rantings and pleadings that she keep Mercy, that Mercy was more ‘mother’ to her than she!
It only sealed the need, her saying that to her own mother. So Mercy was gone, sent off now to the home of Bridget Bishop, and there Mercy had, if rumor were true, fallen into another of her newfound fits and had in a vision seen where that Bishop woman kept her voodoo dolls—dolls stuck full with pins.
The authorities had ransacked Bishop’s Inn and had found the witchcraft makings jammed behind some loose bricks at the hearth in the basement. Exactly where Mercy had sworn they’d be. Thomas had confided the story the night before, and he added how proud he was of Mercy, and that Mercy was heroic to do as he and Reverend Parris had asked—to go into that witch’s lair to unmask her. Bishop was now back in a cell where she belonged. Imagine a woman running a road house like that.
“You were a weak boy, Henry,” she said to the specter standing at the foot of her bed now—not really standing but floating there. In morning light, a shaft of it bathing him in brilliant jeweled life like nothing she’d seen before—as his visits had always been in dead of night before, but now he was being damned insistent, saying, “Anne . . . a-and you were cruel.”
“And you a feeble excuse for a man, like Thomas now! Damn you, I had no hand in your dying. I-I—”
“Death by broken heart, Anne.” She heard his voice inside her head, as if behind her, whispering in her ear. Yet his shape remained in the shaft of light at the foot of the bed.
“Nonsense. You fell sick of the fever.”
“Broken spirit.”
“Nonsense.”
She felt his weight on the bed now, as if a cat had leapt onto it, and the feel of it crept up alongside her, and she shivered. She denied any guilt in her brother’s end. “That Martin girl is still a witch, an old one now, and she give you not one thought! Not like I do!”
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