Online Book Reader

Home Category

Slammerkin - Emma Donoghue [0]

By Root 987 0
Slammerkin

Emma Donoghue

* * *

A Harvest Book • Harcourt, Inc.

San Diego New York London

* * *

Copyright © Emma Donoghue 2000

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced

or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,

including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval

system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be

mailed to the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc.,

6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887–6777.

www.HarcourtBooks.com

First published by Virago Press

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Donoghue, Emma, 1969—

Slammerkin/Emma Donoghue.

p. cm.

ISBN 0-15-100672-5

ISBN 0-15-600747-9 (pbk.)

1. Saunders, Mary, d. 1764—Fiction. 2. Great Britain—History—George III,

1760–1820—Fiction. 3. London (England)—History—18th century—Fiction.

4. Women—England—London—Fiction. 5. Monmouth (Wales)—Fiction.

6. Women murderers—Fiction. 7. Murder—Fiction. I. Title.

PR6054.O547 S58 2001 00-049867

Text set in ACaslon

Designed by Cathy Riggs

Printed in the United States of America

First Harvest edition 2002

A C E G I K J H F D B

* * *

This book is for my agent

and tireless ally, Caroline Davidson.

* * *

Contents

Prologue • [>]

PART ONE London

1 Ribbon Red • [>]

2 Magdalen • [>]

3 Liberty • [>]

PART TWO Monmouth

4 The Whole Duty of Woman • [>]

5 Thaw • [>]

6 Bloom Fall • [>]

7 Punishment • [>]

8 As the Crow Flies • [>]

Note • [>]

* * *

Naked came I out of my mother's womb,

and naked shall I return thither.

—THE BOOK OF JOB, 1:21

Slammerkin, noun, eighteenth century, of unknown

origin. 1. A loose gown. 2. A loose woman.

Prologue

THERE ONCE was a cobbler called Saunders who died for eleven days. At least, that was how his daughter remembered it.

In the year 1752 it was announced that the second of September would be followed by the fourteenth. The matter was merely one of wording, of course; time in its substance was not to undergo any change. Since this calendrical reform would bring the kingdom of Great Britain in line with its neighbours at last, what price a brief inconvenience, a touch of confusion? London newspapers printed witty verses about the 'Annihilation of Time,' but no one doubted the Government's weighty reasons. Nor did anyone think to explain them to persons of no importance, such as Cob Saunders.

He knew this much: injustice had been done. There were eleven days of chiselling shoe leather he'd never be paid for, eleven dinners snatched away before they reached his lips, eleven nights when he was going to be cheated out of the sweet relief of dropping down on his straw mattress.

On September the fourteenth—New Style, as they called it—Cob Saunders woke up with a hammering head and knew that eleven days of his life had been lost. Stolen, rather; cut out of his allotted span the way you might nick a wormhole out of an apple. He had no notion how those days had been done away with, or how he might fetch them back; his head was fit to split when he tried to figure it out. He was a man eleven days nearer to his death and there was nothing he could do.

But perhaps there was. When the Calendar Riots began—though Cob had no part in the starting of them—he joined in with all the breath he had, tossing his rage onto the general bonfire. The cry went up: Give us back our eleven days.

The Government was merciful; Cob Saunders wasn't executed. He died of gaol fever.

Christmas came eleven days early, that year. The clamour of church bells pulled the air as taut as catgut, and the cobbler's five-year-old daughter Mary knelt below the window, watching for snow that never fell.

Eleven years later Mary Saunders was back on her knees, herself in gaol.

Like father, like daughter.

The night room in Monmouth Gaol was twenty-two feet long and fifteen feet wide. She'd measured it by pacing, her first night. Four walls and no windows: here the men and women

Return Main Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader