The Impeachment of Abraham Lincoln (37 page)

BOOK: The Impeachment of Abraham Lincoln
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Making his way from room to room, Jonathan was stopped by Charles Eames, his host, who was journalist, lawyer, inventor, and much else besides. There was a rumor, it seemed, that Stanton was going to testify against the President.

“Ridiculous,” said Jonathan, with all the conviction he could muster.

“You’re certain?”

“Yes.”

“But there is some sort of fissure, isn’t there, between Mr. Lincoln and his Secretary of War? Serious differences over Reconstruction?”

Scarcely able to believe that the story had spread that fast, Jonathan nevertheless found a smile somewhere. “Yes, of course. I believe that they plan to arrest each other just as soon as they settle on neutral ground.” Eames laughed dutifully. Jonathan, more worried still, resumed his fruitless search for Bessie.

At last he spotted Mary Henry and Lucretia Garfield, two of Bessie’s closest companions. He charmed his way into the little circle of which they formed a part, and set himself to listen.

He did not have to listen long.

“You must be terribly unhappy, Mr. Hilliman,” said Crete Garfield, eyeing him in that sideways manner so in fashion among ladies who, like Mrs. Garfield herself, expected to become First Lady.

Jonathan gave a small bow. “And why would that be, Mrs. Garfield?”

Mary and Crete exchanged a look. It was Mary who spoke. She was a long-waisted woman, awkward and somehow wobbly, who had grown up in the Smithsonian tower, and lived there still. “Poor lamb,” she said, a sepulchral grin on her pallid face. “Nobody’s told you, have they? Senator Hale arrived yesterday. He’s packing up his Bessie and moving her back to Spain.”

CHAPTER 28

Urgency

I

WITH THE TRIAL
set to begin on Monday, the experienced Dennard had decreed that the Sabbath would be a day of rest. Nobody was to go near Fourteenth and G. “Spend the day with your families,” he commanded. And so on Sunday morning, Abigail enjoyed a surprisingly tranquil breakfast with Nanny and Louisa and Michael, who had shown up unexpectedly last night and stayed over in his old room. Nanny Pork made a huge fuss over him, and Abigail fought the urge to jealousy by reminding herself of the story of the prodigal son.

When, over breakfast, Nanny pointed out that Abby was spending all of her time with white mens, Michael came to her defense: The white man, he said gently, held all of the money and all of the power. If their race did not learn to be comfortable around the people who mattered, they would never move forward.

Louisa offered enthusiastic agreement. Nanny sighed and shook her head. Abigail wondered what her brother was up to and why he was suddenly so solicitous. But, being Michael, he could never remain at peace. He began to rail against President Lincoln, who would be remembered, he declared, as the savior of a people perfectly capable of saving itself. “All he did was give white folks a reason to feel proud,” Michael declared. “And now we’re supposed to be grateful.”

Rather than be drawn into an argument, Abigail excused herself from the breakfast table, and decided to take a walk. At Oberlin she had found the beauty of nature a tonic for her unsettled soul.

“Let your brother drive you,” said Nanny, for whom the only purpose of walking was to get from one place to another.

“It’s just a walk,” said Abigail, and braced for a lecture about the highwaymen lurking behind every tree.

“No, no, it’s fine,” said Michael, catching his sister’s mood. “I have errands to run anyway.”

She was careful to make sure that her brother departed first, because she did not want him chasing her down. Finally, she set off, strolling up Tenth Street, free to wander through her own mind. Soon her own home was out of sight. The sky displayed that perfect eggshell clarity that heralds spring. Abigail felt her spirit calming. She waved to old Dr. Sandrin, who was climbing into his trap. As she came abreast of the mansion of the sisters Quillen, she saw Patsy, the older Quillen, on the porch, rocking. Abigail liked the Quillens. Her mother, of course, had never let her daughters go near them, worried, she said, that the girls would become what the sisters Quillen were: that is, not married, and also not sisters. As a child, Abigail had no idea what her mother was talking about. Now she did, and although Nanny maintained the same prohibition, Abigail had come to like them.

And so she stopped for a moment to chat.

Patsy said she was proud of Abigail. Lately, everybody seemed to be on her side. It helped.

“Say,” said Patsy, as Abigail stood to take her leave. “That was some fire last night, wasn’t it?”

“I’m afraid I missed it.”

“Working late again.”

“I think I’ll be working late for the next month.”

“That’s the way,” said Patsy, and resumed her rocking. “Too bad about Sophia, though. I always liked her.”

Abigail, who was halfway down the steps, turned back. “Sophia?”

Patsy Quillen nodded. “Sophia Harbour. Madame Sophie. Her establishment burned to the ground last night, with Sophia in it.”

II

Abigail ran. Ladies never exerted themselves, least of all in public, and her mother would have been scandalized, but she ran anyway, all the way back home, where she told Nanny she was very sorry but she had to take the wagon. Of course, Nanny pointed out that if she wanted
to drive she should have gone with her brother, and Abigail said,
Yes, Nanny
, and
I know, Nanny
, and
I’m sorry, Nanny
, and took the wagon anyway.

“Please, God,” she kept saying as she drove the horse much too hard. “God, please, don’t let it be, don’t let it be!”

With Whit Pesky gone from the city, there were only two people left to testify of their own knowledge that Rebecca Deveaux was not a prostitute, and one of them had burned to death last night.

Abigail charged around fancy carriages, and, pressing, even beat a railroad train to a crossing. She turned left and sped along B Street.

“Please, God. Please, God. Please, God.”

She stopped outside a dying hotel, tied up the horse, jumped down, tossing a coin to the valet. Then she was running again, around the corner and down the same alleys. Silver Place looked little different from three days ago. The thaw had snatched most of the snow, but nothing else had changed. The same garbage lying in the same heaps, the same angry eyes staring from the same windows. Abigail expected any moment that someone would accost her, but nobody did. She made her way into the rear lobby of Judith’s building, crept through the darkness toward the same swinging lamp, and climbed the same treacherous stairs to the third floor.

She knocked on her sister’s door … and everything was different.

The door was not locked, and the apartment was empty. No crying baby. No Judith. And nothing intact. Pictures, books, even furniture had been smashed to pieces.

Backing into the hall, Abigail nearly crashed into the same ancient man she had encountered on the night she came up here with Jonathan.

“They’s gone,” he said, grinning madly. Once more, his aged fingers were scrabbling everywhere.

“Where? Where did they go?”

“They’s gone.” He took a shaky step toward her. His aroma was, if anything, more pungent than before. “Mama and baby both.”

“When? Do you know when they left?”

His grizzled face was already so wrinkled that it was difficult to tell whether he was frowning, but, certainly, he paused in his constant scratching, and his eyes fixed on a point in the middle distance. “Yesterday,” he finally said. “Maybe the day before. A man comes to see her, and a minute later she takes the baby and flies the coop. Doesn’t even close the door behind.” He peered past Abigail into the devastation. “I
reckon some of the folks who live hereabouts has needs,” he explained. “They finds what they needs where they can.”

Or someone was looking for something; and Judith, praise God, was already gone.

Because she was warned?

And it happened within the past two days: not long after Whit Pesky received his transfer orders.

“This man who called just before Judith left,” said Abigail. “Can you describe him for me?”

Again the old man fell into thought:
fell
because he seemed to lapse into an entirely different existence, where he could sift, at leisure, through the memories of what was no doubt a fascinating life. He smiled a bit as he pondered, even laughed, then shook his head as if in pain, and shut his eyes briefly, shuddering.

“Thin,” he finally said.

Abigail was growing exasperated. She had been taught to revere old age, and to respect those who reached it, but just now could hardly stand still. “Is that all?”

“White,” he murmured, after an aeon.

“Please, sir. Can you recall anything else? Was he tall? Short?”

A slow nod. “Yes. Yes.” He began to scratch again. “Well spoken, like. Not from around here. A real nervous kind of fella. Like, maybe he didn’t wanna be here.”

“Nervous?” An idea struck her. She made a washing motion. “Did he rub his hands like this?”

“Nothing like that, no.”

Not Plum, then. “Is there anything else you can tell me?”

Again the old man drifted into his netherworld. And again, after a bit of reflection, he returned. “He had those big whiskers.” Brushing his fingers along his cheeks. “But he was all bald and shiny up top. Sounded educated. Young fella. Thirty, I reckon. Not too much more, anyway.”

Descending the stairs, Abigail strove to calm herself. There had to be a hundred men in Washington who fit that description. A thousand. Even so, she would at that moment have given a great deal to know where exactly Noah Brooks, private secretary to the President of the United States, might have been on the night Judith Canner disappeared.

CHAPTER 29

Managers

I


GENTLEMEN,

SAID CHIEF
Justice Salmon P. Chase, “the Senate is now sitting for the trial of articles of impeachment. The President of the United States appears by counsel.” A learned frown in their direction. “The Court will now hear you.”

Chase sat upon the high dais usually occupied by the Senate’s presiding officer. Between him and the Senators, two long tables had been set. The prosecution sat to Chase’s right—the left of the audience—and the defense counsel opposite. Now the Chief Justice rapped his gavel. The tittering in the audience ceased.

Abigail watched from the crowded gallery. There were few vacant seats, but two of them bookended hers. It was just past noon on Monday, March 18, and the faint sunlight of late winter lazed through the clerestory windows high in the walls. The gallery ran like a mezzanine around three sides of the chamber.
This is where they debate the future of my race
, she kept thinking.
This is where they vote
. She craned her neck, trying to take in the opulence. She had lived in Washington City all her life but had never been inside the legislative chambers of the Capitol. Even after the frenzy of recent weeks, an unexpected excitement seized her. Although she allowed nothing to show on her face, Abigail fancied that others could hear the swift, unladylike pounding of her heart.
This is where
. The Senate Chamber was a great oval, several stories high, all marble and polished wood. In Washington most things were filthy, but here even the spittoons gleamed. The Capitol building, with its granite
and marble and sparkling new dome, was beautiful and vast, designed to intimidate even European dignitaries, who had vast, beautiful buildings of their own. But, for all its outward glory, the Capitol was really a glorified men’s club, purchased at enormous expense by the people of the United States for the benefit of those who ruled them without ever quite representing them. The part of Abigail that had learned under the tutelage of Professor Charles Finney to adore the republican principle was repelled by the presumption of aristocracy that the building presented. Professor Finney used to say that the Congress could as well meet in a theater or an auditorium, dispensing with the ostentation.

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