At a quarter to nine, wrapped in our cloaks against the cooler weather, Jack Donovan and his little family, including several of his Dutiful Servants, began the Royal Progress toward St Anne’s where our (very) late benefactor, William Paca, had served as a vestryman from 1771 to 1773.
I attended St Katherine’s Episcopal Church in West Annapolis where my friend Eva Haberman served as rector, so I didn’t know whether the black-robed rector who greeted us when we passed through the door was a regular at St Anne’s or some ‘talent’ that LynxE had brought in for the day. Would we get to sit through an hour-long sermon delivered by a firebrand like Peter Muhlenberg from Woodstock, Virginia who, in 1776, threw off his clerical robes and stood before his startled parishioners wearing the full uniform of a Virginia militia officer declaring, ‘It is a time for war!’ Or would the service be more or less business as usual for the nineteenth Sunday after Pentecost?
Little had changed with the actual language of the Anglican service since the 1662 Book of Common Prayer was first published. Even Thomas Cranmer (who began working on the first version more than a century earlier) would have been right at home that day in Annapolis, Maryland. Priestly vestments hadn’t changed much since then, either, but gratefully, the Reverend Thomas Dyer kept them on as he delivered a long, rambling monologue based on the parable of the Good Samaritan.
Next to me, his arm often brushing mine, sat Jack, listening intently, nodding in agreement whenever Reverend Dyer made a point with which he agreed. Amy sat in the pew directly behind me, between the two Donovan children who had to be separated. They’d been squabbling over an origami frog that Gabe had folded out of a scrap of his father’s fine vellum writing paper.
‘Some among you may not appreciate the do-gooder interpretation of this parable,’ Dyer was saying when Amy tapped me lightly on the shoulder with her gloved hand, as we had arranged.
‘I don’t feel well, Mrs Ives,’ she whispered feebly. ‘I need to visit the necessary.’
‘Perhaps, then, it could better be characterized as the parable of a man who is saved by an enemy.’ Dyer droned on.
I patted Amy’s hand and whispered back, ‘Go ahead.’ I turned slightly, observing with an obvious show of motherly concern as Amy gathered her skirts close about her and eased past Gabe, out of the pew and into the aisle. She dipped her head in reverence to the cross, then spun around and drifted toward the rear of the church.
A sudden movement in front of an elaborately carved screen in the north transept drew my attention. Chad, Steadicam attached to his chest like a phantom twin, was making a move to follow.
I caught his eye, glared ferociously and mouthed ‘bathroom,’ which seemed to settle him down.
The service wore on, and Amy had yet to return. The final hymn – ‘O For a Closer Walk with God’ – was appropriate to our century, having been written by William Cowper in the 1700s and set to Caithness, a seventeenth-century tune. I noted this arcane fact as I paged nervously through the hymnal, trying to distract myself and not worry about Amy.
She had still not returned when, from the chancel steps, the Reverend Thomas Dyer raised a hand in blessing. ‘The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be with us all evermore. Amen.’
‘Amen,’ I repeated softly, desperate to leave, but the singing of the final hymn intervened.
As the last note of the organ died away, I tensed, ready to bolt for the door, but Jack looped my arm through his and escorted me down the aisle, greeting the congregation, nodding and smiling, paternally patting my hand where it lay in the crook of his arm, acting oh so lord of the manor.
In the narthex, I reclaimed my hand. ‘I need to check on Amy,’ I told him.
He looked puzzled. ‘Amy?’
‘In the necessary,’ I said, bobbing my head in the direction of the restroom. Jack hadn’t even noticed that my lady’s maid had gone.
‘Very well,’ he said. ‘We’ll wait outside.’
But Amy wasn’t in the restroom, and there was no sign that she had ever been there. I checked all the stalls. No discarded clothing, no telltale twists of toilet paper, no messages scrawled on the mirror with a bar of soap.
Amy Cornell, my lady’s maid, had disappeared.
FOURTEEN
‘I have no idea where Gabriel has gotten to this morning. It’s hard to keep track of him in a house this large. I worry that he’s spending too much time hanging out with Dex, the cook’s boy, and wonder if it’s appropriate for him to fraternize so much with the servants, and then I remember, this isn’t for real, Jack. When it’s over, we go back to Texas.’
Jack Donovan, Patriot
Founding Father was not going to be happy.
Neither was Jack Donovan.
I needed to think. I scrunched up my petticoats and backed into one of the stalls, sitting myself down on the toilet-seat lid and leaning back against the tank.
One of two things had happened. Either Amy had decided to leave the show voluntarily, or she hadn’t. In which case, Drew – or someone he’d hired – had kidnapped his wife. Unless Amy had done a one-eighty turn since our talk the previous morning, I figured her departure had not been by choice. But before I blew the whistle, I needed to be sure.
When I rejoined my family on the lawn in front of the church, they’d already attracted a crowd. Jack had gone all pater familias, gathering his sullen offspring around him, grinning broadly for the cameras. When he spotted me standing on the church steps, he waved me over. ‘Mrs Ives! Join us. I have good news.’
I dredged up a smile from somewhere and pasted it on for the benefit of our audience, then sashayed in their direction with my skirts sweeping the brick sidewalk. ‘Indeed, Mr Donovan. Pray tell, what news is that?’
Jack withdrew a familiar buff envelope from his waistcoat pocket. A message from Founding Father, dammit. He waved it in the air. ‘We’re to have tea at Reynolds Tavern,’ he announced. ‘Come along, or we’ll be late.’
If I hadn’t been preoccupied with worries about Amy, I might have guessed as much. Derek had already positioned himself on the corner where Church Circle meets Franklin, preparing to film our grand entrance into the historic tavern, another authentic colonial treasure, built in 1749 by Annapolis hatmaker, William Reynolds, who dubbed it the Beaver and Lac’d Hat. Except for stints as Farmers National Bank and later, the Annapolis Library, it’d been a tavern and B &B ever since.
Jack answered my next question before I could ask it. ‘I’ve sent Jeffrey home to tell Cook that we’ll have dinner somewhat later,’ he said in a rare display of sensitivity to the rhythms of the household. ‘But, where’s Amy?’
‘She’s ill,’ I lied gracefully as he guided me across the street. ‘I’ve sent her home, too.’
‘I hope it’s nothing serious,’ Jack said. ‘It’ll be hard to manage without her.’
‘It’s that green ham, I’ll bet,’ Melody chimed in. ‘Gross.’
‘Nonsense, Melody,’ said her father. ‘That ham is cured, and it’s perfectly safe.’
‘“Do you like green eggs and ham; I do not like them, Sam-i-am. Would you like them here or there? I would not like them anywhere.”’ Gabe channeled Dr Seuss as he trailed into the tavern behind us.
‘Behave, Gabriel,’ cautioned his father. ‘You’re being watched,’ he added unnecessarily, as if none of us had noticed Derek’s camera.
Tavern staff attired in colonial garb seated us in the elegant front dining room, next to the fireplace. Over the mantel hung a portrait of our recent dinner guest, Colonel George Washington as painted by Rembrandt Peale. Although servers laid a grand ‘Savory Tea’ out on tiered trays in front of us – scones, tarts, and an assortment of finger sandwiches – I could barely taste my food. As I sipped tea out of a flowered Wedgewood cup, I kept staring out the window at St Anne’s Church, praying that Amy would reappear on the steps at any minute.