Read Quarantine: A Novel Online
Authors: John Smolens
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery & Detective
to withdraw. “I’ll show you,” she whispered. But then she noticed it, and she leaned even closer, until her nose was within inches of his shirt. She inhaled deeply. Straightening up, she smiled.
“Vinegar and perfume, Doctor?”
R
Leander had a raging headache. He could tell that Benjamin
had one, too. After breakfast, when the morning’s duties were
being announced at breakfast, Mr. Penrose did the honors
himself—something that he usually relegated to his son. And
Penrose, for all the whiskey they had consumed, seemed in fine
form. When he looked at Leander, his right eyelid drooped in
an attempt at a wink, and he told him there was pruning to be
done in the gardens.
This was easy work. Ordinarily. With the shears you moved
along the hedges, snipping branches that had grown beyond the
square shape of the bushes. And there was plenty of it—the rows
of shrubbery lined every path. Such a chore was, really, a gift
from Mr. Penrose.
But with the heat, not to mention his condition, Leander often
needed to pause for a drink from his water pouch, which he kept
slung over his shoulder. He was swilling cool water when sud-
denly he saw a small procession come down the steps from the
courtyard and walk along the gravel path that bordered the east
side of the garden. Mrs. Sumner led, a blue parasol shading her
from the sun, and she was followed by Dr. Wiggins, who was in
turn followed by the butler Fields. There was something both
regal and comical about the way they filed through the gardens.
Mrs. Sumner’s poise and Fields’s stiff, pompous manner seemed
deflated by the doctor’s weary gait. His shoulders were pushed
forward and the black leather bag in his hand seemed too heavy a burden. Leander wondered if the doctor, too, might be suffering
from the effects of last night’s excess.
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They followed the path around the fish pond, its calm surface
largely covered with lily pads, and stopped when they came to
the mausoleum. This was a substantial granite structure that had been under construction for some time. It was intended to imitate some famous building in ancient Greece—or was it Rome? Leader
wasn’t sure. Upon first arriving, he had been told—often with a
smirk or a roll of the eyes—that Mr. Sumner intended this to be
his final resting place. In the front of the mausoleum there was a heavy wooden door, which Fields opened. Leander couldn’t see
inside, so he quickly continued down the row of bushes, snipping randomly as he went, until he spied a pair of legs—clothed in
purple britches, white silk hose, and no shoes—stretched out on
top of a granite slab inside the mausoleum. They could only be the knobby knees and spindly legs of Mr. Sumner. After exchanging
a few brief words, Mrs. Sumner led Fields back toward the house, while Dr. Wiggins stepped inside the mausoleum.
Leander continued to prune the bushes, moving slowly to his
right, until he reached a spot where the acoustics of the stone
mausoleum and the surface of the pond conspired in a way that
allowed him to hear some of what the two men were saying.
He sat down next to the row of bushes, thankful for the shade it offered, and took a sip from his water pouch.
Mr. Sumner’s voice was extremely weak, but Leander heard
him say, “What ails me has nothing to do with this fever that’s
been plaguing Newburyport.”
Dr. Wiggins murmured something, but as he had his back to
the open doorway, Leander could not understand him. Leander
could see through the branches, and he watched the doctor lean
over his patient.
“My bile?” Mr. Sumner said, irritated. “No, it is not black.”
Dr. Wiggins spoke at length, until Mr. Sumner made an effort
to get up. “It is not from the drink, nor does it have to do with any consorting I might have done.
That,
I assure you, keeps me in the
pink.”
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Dr. Wiggins replied again, this time until Mr. Sumner got
to his feet. Leander could see him now, and despite the fact
that the light was dim inside the mausoleum, he was startled by
the man’s face. His complexion had taken on a greenish hue.
“It’s that woman, our mother, I tell you.” Though the doctor
tried to restrain him, Mr. Sumner staggered out the mauso-
leum door, where he raised an arm to shield his eyes against
bright sunlight. “I’m burning up, I say.” He stumbled across
the gravel path and descended the small grassy knoll toward the
pond. “My insides are burning up, and my
skin
—even my
hair
aches!” He discarded his yellow silk vest, and began tearing
away his white blouse as he waded out into the pond. “She’s
killing
me! Don’t you under
stand?
I
know
her—her and my son.
I
know
what they’re
about!”
When he was bare-chested, Mr. Sumner fell forward with a
great splash and sank quickly out of sight.
Dr. Wiggins looked like a man who had just witnessed a
miracle. He stood still, his mouth agape, as though he were trying to comprehend what he had just seen—and suddenly he rushed
down the knoll, peeling off his coat. But at the water’s edge he paused, startled, as he stared across the pond.
Without thinking, Leander was on his feet. It was like the
moment when his father had selected him to run and fetch the
doctor. It was a matter of confirmation, of duty. He leaped over the row of bushes and dove into the pond. The water was a relief from the heat, but his limbs were entangled in the lily pads. The silt bottom was soft under foot. He waded across the pond, until he saw Mr. Sumner beneath the murky water.
Others approached now, their shouts and the sound of run-
ning feet coming from all directions. Leander crouched down in
the water and took hold of Mr. Sumner—his skin was slippery,
unpleasant to touch. He was dead weight in Leander’s arms, dif-
ficult to bring to the surface, but finally his head was above water and he began coughing.
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Dr. Wiggins waded out and took hold of Mr. Sumner’s feet,
and together they carried him back to the grassy knoll.
R
“You did a brave thing,” Giles said to Leander as he buttoned up the clean shirt. He said this for Fields’s sake, who had brought a dry change of clothes out to the mausoleum and now stood at
attention in the path. “That will be all, Fields.” No doubt the
butler would report directly to Mrs. Sumner.
“You require nothing else, Doctor?”
“No. When my clothes are washed and dried, have them sent
over to the pest-house.”
“So that will be all, sir?”
Giles had been sitting on the slab in the mausoleum, trying
to get his long narrow feet into the fine black shoes Fields had brought. He regarded Fields a moment; the butler peered back
toward the house with the attention of a well-trained hunting
dog. “Well, yes, actually, there is something else,” Giles said. “Tell the cook to make sure that Mr. Sumner gets plenty of tea. And
soup. Clear broths would be best. Nothing too rich. Certainly no creams. Just broth, with a little chicken perhaps.” He noticed the faintest twitch in Fields’s jowl. “And tell my mother that I’ll be back to look in on my brother tomorrow morning.”
“Very well, Doctor.” Fields’s tone was one of restrained dis-
appointment, and with some relief he began to walk toward the
house.
“And Fields,” Giles said.
The man’s footsteps paused in the gravel path, but he did not
turn around. “Doctor?”
“These clothes—whose are they?” Giles took hold of the
excessive fabric of his shirt. “This is fine silk, and there’s quite a lot of it.”
“Those are garments belonging to young Mr. Sumner, sir.”
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“Indeed. This would be his size.” Giles glanced at Leander, who
was trying to keep from smiling. “And I’ll wager these were tailored in Paris—this is really very fine . . . very fine, indeed.” Giles raised his head and saw that Fields had ventured to look in his direction, though careful not to make eye contact. “So then, Fields. Please convey my appreciation to Master Samuel for the use of his garments.”
“Of course, Doctor.” Fields marched on, his step slow but
deliberate as he moved through the gardens toward the house.
Giles turned to Leander, who had removed his wet shirt and
had a towel draped over his shoulders. “And you should get into
some dry clothes yourself.”
“Yes, Doctor. I’ll just go up to my quarters and change. But to
tell you the truth, I feel better having gotten soaked. I was feeling a bit under the weather before.”
“Really?” Giles said. “How are they treating you here?”
“Can’t complain, sir.”
“Or you won’t,” Giles said. “Well, now that you’re Mr. Sumner’s
‘savior,’ you should be treated quite favorably around this house.”
Leander turned his head and gazed down at the pond. “Not
by everyone, Doctor.”
Giles gave up trying to fit the shoes on and kicked them aside.
He stood in his bare feet, stepped out into the sunlight, and walked tenderly across the gravel path. “I suppose you may suffer some
jealousy.” When he reached the grass he said, “Yes, that’s better.”
“Doctor,” Leander said. “I need to tell you something—some-
thing that’s been on my mind.” He hesitated and looked about the gardens, and whispered, “I think it may be important.”
“What is it, Leander?”
“It’s about the medicine.”
“The medicine?”
“It was stolen, am I right?”
Giles decided to walk. He clasped his hands behind his back
and began to move slowly alongside the path, the grass cool and
slick beneath his feet. “Go on, Leander.”
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“I think I know where it’s hidden.”
“And where is that?”
“In a barn, out on Simon Moss’s farm in Newbury.”
“How did you come to know this?”
“I saw it—crates of quinine water, and other things.”
Giles stopped walking and turned to Leander. “You’re sure?”
“Yes . . . I am.”
“But you hesitate.” Leander’s eyes grew troubled and he looked
away. “What is it?”
“There was . . .” He shook his head and appeared to be chastising himself. Then he came to some decision and stood up straighter.
“There was someone there, watching over the medicine.” He
looked at Giles now, and his gaze was clear and direct. “And there was my father’s satchel, which he often carried over his shoulder.
It didn’t burn in the fire—it was in the barn, too. They must have killed him. They put him in the house and set it on fire.”
“But why would they do that, Leander?”
“Because he found out, he learned about them stealing the
medicine. He was a hard man in many ways, but honest. My father
was an honest man.”
“I have always believed so,” Giles said. “You must miss all of
them terribly.”
Leander said nothing. They were all gone—his mother, his
sister, his grandfather, his father—yet he could say nothing. It was too immense for words. If he spoke now, he feared he might lose
what little he had left.
Slowly, Giles placed his hand on Leander’s shoulder.
R
There was a faint rap at the door, polite yet imploring, which
Miranda recognized all too well. “What
is
it, Fields?”
The latch was raised with a click and Fields swung the door
open. “Excuse me, Ma’am, but it’s the doctor. He has a request.”
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“What now?”
The afternoon had become increasingly sultry—it was too hot
even for needlepoint. Miranda had pulled her rocker over to the
open window overlooking the courtyard, where there was the
slightest movement of air. A great commotion had disturbed the
house when Enoch was brought in soaking wet from the pond.
She had not left her room through it all, but gave instructions
that her son was to be dressed in a dry sleeping gown and put to bed immediately.
“Ma’am, Dr. Wiggins says he needs the use of a wagon.”
“A wagon?”
“Yes, and he would like the new boy to accompany him.”
Miranda turned in her chair. Fields’s hand was still on the door latch and he faced the far corner of the room, where her chair was usually positioned. It was hard to tell with Fields, but he seemed perturbed. “Whatever for?” she asked.
“He did not say, Ma’am. Only that it was urgent.”
Miranda gazed out the window again. “And Samuel, where
is he?”
“He rode out in the chaise some time ago, Ma’am. If I’m not
mistaken, I believe his intention was to take in the air on Water Street.”
It was a euphemism, one of the many she and Fields employed.
“My son has been a worthless reprobate for so long. If he must go whoring, he should at least do so in the dark of night, not in this heat. The last place he should be right now is in those warrens of sin—it’s where most of the cases of fever come from, you know.”
She stared down at the courtyard long enough that Fields finally took it upon himself to issue a polite cough. “Oh, what’s the use,”
she sighed. “Why would I deny the doctor this request, when he
has administered to this household for so many years?”
“And the new boy as well?”
“Yes, yes. The doctor brought him here in the first place.”
“He does seem to take a proprietary interest in the lad.”