To punish him for his tergiversation, she said, âOf course, Oroonoko is out of the question now.'
That hit home. His hand came up to cup his chin and his forefinger tapped against his lips as he considered.
Actually, she was rather sorry herself. To have indulged in the wickedness of the theater while expunging its wickedness, making trumpery serve a fine cause, had been an intriguing prospect. She'd actually been enthused. And Aaron had been so excited by it . . . So had Jacques . . .
The project had arisen while they were all at supper in the inn outside Bristol. Murrough had just returned from his day of doing whatever it was that had kept them waiting for him (and what could that have been?).
They'd taken a private room and Jacques was sitting next to the actor, whom he seemed to admire, listening to every word spoken. His tutor was eating with his usual disregard for anything else. She'd still been wild, talking of expending every penny she possessed on buying slaves and setting them free.
âDear girl, you can't buy them all,' Aaron had said.
The actor agreed. âUnfortunately, ma'am, there's not that much money in the world.'
âYou didn't see her,' she'd said. âYou didn't see the child. You didn't hear her. If I buy enough, maybe they'll be among 'em.'
She hadn't been able to stop talking about it, sketching the captain and the clerk for them. Oddly enough, it was the memory of the clerk Briggs that obsessed herâthe captain she set aside as mere brutish clay.
But Briggs . . . She'd drawn him well because she'd encountered him a thousand times. In Boston, he'd been in the British customs sheds, incorruptible and exacting to the last penny. She'd come up against him in prisons, in tax offices, in harbor masters' huts where he ignored the entrancement of sea and sail and concentrated on his figures, the epitome of bureaucracy everywhere, neat, dutiful, going home to his wife and children and small garden, attending church on Sundays.
âI'll wager he has a hobby,' she'd said. âHe collects coronation medallions or grows pumpkins. He counted those slaves in and he drew a line on the list when they'd gone. He didn't think it was wrong. He was doing a job.'
And the actor had said, âI know him. We have him in Ireland. The banal functionary. Cruelty
en masse
couldn't do without him.'
Which, she had to admit, described the man exactly.
âI've got to do something,' she said.
âThere's the Abolition Society,' Aaron said, doubtfully.
âI've joined. But it ain't enough, they're too slow, and they're preaching to the converted half the time. It'll take years for Parliament to vote in abolition. If it ever does.'
It was then the actor had turned to Aaron. âYour sister saw it, d'ye see? Not three thousand miles away in the slave ships and the cotton fields, it was in front of her, she heard the cry. She
saw
it, Aaron. What if we make thousands see it, hear it?'
And Aaron's eyes had widened and the actor had smiled and both together they had uttered an owl's hoot.
âOroonoko.'
âWhat's that?' she'd demanded, irritably.
âIt's a play. Listen, Makepeace ...'
They'd been offered the use of a playhouse; it was why they had come.
Lord Deerfield, an Irish peer, had seen the
Othello
Aaron had put on in Dublinâwith Murrough as Othello. Joining them in the Green Room afterwards, his lordship had mentioned that he'd bought almost an acre of the City of London's decrepit alleys near the river as a speculation with a view to knocking down its buildings and raising on it a club and a square of gentlemen's houses.
âHe's bribing every alderman he can get hold of for the licence to build but in the meantime he's losing money on his investment.'
âYe-es,' said Makepeace, dubiously.
The actor chimed in. âAnd on that blessed, dingy piece of land, dear lady, there stands an ancient altar to Thespis, the father of Greek tragedy. . . .
Thespis, the first professor of our art, at country wakes sang ballads from a cart . . .'
âIt's called The Duke's Theatre,' interrupted Aaron. âThe Duke's Company played there before they joined up with the Theatre Royal. It's been renovated since, of course ...'
âBetterton strode those boards, Kynaston, Gwynn ...'
â
Nell
Gwynn?' asked Makepeace, sharply. The name of Charles II's mistress had always been synonymous with the Whore of Babylon for Puritan Boston and, for her, still carried an automatic charge of disapproval.
âThe point is,' Aaron said, âit's been empty for years but we persuaded Deerfield to let us have it at a reduced rent and a share of the profits until they pull it down.'
âAnd what better opener could we have to touch minds and consciences than a tragedy whose hero is enslaved ...'
âThomas Southerne dramatized it from a book written in the days of Charles IIâthis will attract you, Makepeaceâby a woman.'
It didn't attract Makepeace; she hadn't got over Nell Gwynn.
The two men kept on, however, overlaying an image of oranges and bare breasts with assurances of
Oroonoko
's Christianizing effect on audiences. âIt's a certain touchstone. Tell her, Aaron. Didn't we do it in Cork and didn't it have them in tears and didn't a bunch of them rush off to free Captain Bulmer's second coachman who was black?'
âThat's it, you see, Makepeace. There'll be no change for the better until the mass of the public
demands
a change; people have got to be affected. We could have petitions in the foyer for when the audience comes out ...'
âWhat happened to that second coachman?' Makepeace wanted to know.
âWell, actually, he went back to Captain Bulmer; turns out he was content in his job. But the point is ...'
They made it again and again. With the Abolition Society pushing and
Oroonoko
pulling, audiences, people, could be brought to see slavery for the evil it was. The outcry would force Parliament into submission.
âWe'll invite the King and Queen to the first night ...'
âTo hell with the King and Queen . . .' This was Murrough and, actually, the moment when Makepeace was caught. âIt's Mrs Briggs we want at the first night and every night. When we've done London we'll tour the country, Bristol, we'll play to the Mrs Briggses, the women, that untapped force of true persuaders ...'
Yes
, she thought.
The mountebank's right. I suspect his reasons but he's hit the nail.
The transformation must be made in the home or not at all. Mrs Briggs, wife to the bureaucratic clerk, was the slaves' secret agent. She has children; no mother could hear the wail I heard and not be ashamed to the stomach. If Briggs's conscience lies anywhere it is in his hearth, which can be undermined.
And the neighbors
, she thought. Mrs Briggs won't like her neighbors looking down on her husband's job.
Makepeace was no upholder of women's rights; she thought Philippa's enthusiasm for them misguided. Like anybody who'd achieved a privileged position through hard work, she discounted the luck that had also attended it; if she could do it, so could others; it only needed a bit of spirit. But she did not underestimate, indeed she lauded, the influence of the wife and mother in the home. There lay woman's true dominion, in loving persuasion, in example, in nagging, in, as a last restort, shunning the offending mate's bed until he'd purged the offenseâMakepeace hadn't heard of
Lysistrata
but she'd have approved the method.
She was also a businesswoman. âWill it pay for itself?'
Ah, well. It
would
, undoubtedly it
would
. If the play ran long enoughâand that was a givenâit could make a small fortune. They would put on other popular plays during the course of the season and, well, a season at Drury Lane, for instance, could make a net profit,
profit
, of £6,500, and had. Naturally, there would be an initial outlay . . . just to get the theater into fettle after its long disuse . . .
âA little dusting, maybe,' the actor said.
âA lick of paint,' Aaron assured her.
âAnd mine's the initial outlay, is it?' Makepeace asked acidly. They weren't peddling the play to her this energetically just to get her blessing.
âA hundred pounds here or there,' Aaron said, airily. âMy dear girl, a minute ago you were going to spend all you had on a venture that could not have been maintained. Ours will alter the stars in their courses.'
The stars would probably stay in their courses but public opinion could veer slave-owners from theirsâthey had convinced her of that much. And if this outlandish-sounding mummery would help to do it . . .
At this point Jacques broke in. âThe theater, missus. It is full of mechanical devicesâPapa took me to the Comédie Français and a demon rose from the floor and there was magic,
toute mécanique
. How I should adore to work in the theater.'
âIt ain't run by steam,' she said. If the boy thought he was going to imperil his immortal soul by going anywhere near a playhouse, he could think again. But his enthusiasm emphasized the draw the theater had over the young. The next generation must also be persuaded.
âYou sure it's a Christian play, Aaron?'
It was the actor who answered. âMadam, it was the first outcry against slavery and still the best. It gives voice to the pain. You can't be more Christian than that.'
With a rich part in it for yourself, she thought. Always the double motive with you. âIt's your troupe, Aaron,' she said. âWhy ain't you taking the lead part?'
Her brother nodded towards Murrough. âBecause I saw him play it.'
She'd sighed, showing more reluctance than she felt. âI suppose you'd better go ahead, then.'
And, as they'd traveled homewards, their ceaseless discussion of the subject had drawn her further and further in so that, now, with Aaron
hors de combat
, with only anxieties for him and for John Beasley to contend with, the future looked unlit and flat compared with the flare that had so briefly illumined it. Now she must discover some other means of combating slavery.
The only comfort she could draw from the loss was that the play actor was more cast down than she was.
So much for you and Nell Gwynn
, she thought and, excusing herself, went upstairs to bed.
Â
Â
ALEXANDER Baines was at Reach House early the next morning and pleased to find Aaron better. âBut he's sore afraid,' he said, when he and Makepeace consulted outside the sick room door.
She knew that. During the night she'd been attentive to her brother's every movement, every moan. In the candlelight his eyes had beseeched her for reassurance that he would not die. He was afraid to move in case it instigated another attack on his heartâand it tore at her own to see the years roll him back to the days when it had been a possibility that the tortured muscles of his back might not allow him to walk normally again, and, almost as bad from his point of view, that the boiling tar had so scarred the back of his head that hair would never grow on it again. He'd had to wear a wig ever sinceâeven now, when false hair was out of fashion.
He'd done so well. True, he'd not achieved the eminence he might have liked, but he had overcome pain and humiliation to keep himself contentedly afloat in one of the most uncertain of professions.
âThere's no cairtainty it won't happen again,' Dr Baines said when Makepeace begged him for it. âBut we can employ his fright to his benefit; assure him that my regimen of diet and exercise will reduce the risk.'
âHow can he exercise on a broken ankle?'
It appeared that he could and must. There were limbering motions that could be made while he was in bed, and crutches to be used around the garden when he was up and around.
âI'll no' have him traipsing to London nor any playhouse,' the doctor told her, âTranquillity in the Lord's sweet air is the order of the day.'
From that moment the entire household was put on a diet of boiled fish and greens so that Aaron's nose should not be tortured by the smell of roast red meats rising, houri-like, from the kitchen. Philippa, who'd begun to be influenced by the growing movement for vegetarianism, would have been pleased but, as well as her care for Aaron's health, Makepeace's satisfaction lay in the restriction it would give to Murrough's gluttony. However, neither that night at dinner, nor any subsequent night, did he complain. Indeed, it looked as if the presence of the man might even prove an advantage; he seemed content to relieve herself and Jenny by sitting with Aaron, talking and reading in between the patient's bouts of sleep.
With her first panic over, she was now able to investigate Philippa's sudden departure for the north.
âHe did
what
?'
âThe dorty sod smeared the lass with his own sleck,' Hildy said. âThat Kitty Hays was there.'
âI'll kill him. Why?'
Hildy shrugged. âAh've not fathomed it yet. Summat about leading his missis astray.'
â
Philippa
?'
âAh said the syem, but afore Ah could get the sense o't, she was packed and off, all hell for leather.'
âThe bastard frightened her away?' That sounded even less like Philippa.
âNaa, naa.' Hildy considered. âAh'd not say she was feared, more determined like. Like she was set on summat.'
âSomething that meant going up to Raby?'