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The Virgin Cure: A Novel
The Virgin Cure: A Novel
The Virgin Cure: A Novel
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The Virgin Cure: A Novel

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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From #1 international bestselling author Ami McKay comes The Virgin Cure, the story of a young girl abandoned and forced to fend for herself in the poverty and treachery of post-Civil War New York City.

McKay, whose debut novel The Birth House made headlines around the world, returns with a resonant tale inspired by her own great-great-grandmother’s experiences as a pioneer of women’s medicine in nineteenth-century New York.

One summer night in Lower Manhattan in 1871, twelve-year-old Moth is pulled from her bed and sold as a servant to a finely dressed woman. Knowing that her mother is so close while she is locked away in servitude, Moth bides her time until she can escape, only to find her old home deserted and her mother gone without a trace. Moth must struggle to survive alone in the murky world of the Bowery, a wild and lawless enclave filled with thieves, beggars, sideshow freaks, and prostitutes.

She eventually meets Miss Everett, the proprietress of an "Infant School," a brothel that caters to gentlemen who pay dearly for "willing and clean" companions—desirable young virgins like Moth. She also finds friendship with Dr. Sadie, a female physician struggling against the powerful forces of injustice. The doctor hopes to protect Moth from falling prey to a terrible myth known as the "virgin cure"—the tragic belief that deflowering a "fresh maid" can cleanse the blood and heal men afflicted with syphilis—which has destroyed the lives of other Bowery girls.

Ignored by society and unprotected by the law, Moth dreams of independence. But there's a high price to pay for freedom, and no one knows that better than a girl from Chrystie Street.

In a powerful novel that recalls the evocative fiction Anita Shreve, Annie Proulx, and Joanne Harris, Ami McKay brings to light the story of early, forward-thinking social warriors, creating a narrative that readers will find inspiring, poignant, adventure-filled, and utterly unforgettable.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateJun 26, 2012
ISBN9780062194169
The Virgin Cure: A Novel
Author

Ami McKay

Ami McKay started her writing career as a freelance writer for CBC Radio. Her work has aired on numerous public radio programs throughout Canada, the United States and around the world. Her documentary, 'Daughter of Family G' won an Excellence in Journalism Medallion at the 2003 Atlantic Journalism Awards. She lives with her husband and two sons in an old birth house on the Bay of Fundy in Nova Scotia.

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Rating: 4.1891891891891895 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I have absolutely loved this book. If you have some great stories like this one, you can publish it on Novel Star, just submit your story to hardy@novelstar.top or joye@novelstar.top
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    truly remarkable. couldn't put it down
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    g
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Not nearly as good as The Birth House. Quite a disappointment by comparison, in fact. The story follows Moth, a kid of a Gypsy mother who sells her daughter out and the kid eventually ends up being groomed for prostitution. I'm not sure why so many pages are devoted to the pre-Miss Everett era...maybe to prove there was little other hope for Moth? Anyway, I was thinking there'd be more into the 'profession' for Moth than there was. Really, aside from Moth being so young and the aspect of syphilius (which only really comes at the end) the whole thing is a bit glamourized and attractive. The book's format -- "margin notes" and news clippings, plus Dr Sadie's diary entries -- is similar to the format I just read in Wickett's Remedy but not nearly as effective as in Wickett's Remedy. The margin notes were usually just scientific facts and nore relevant or even interesting. (In Wickett's, they added a layer to the story.) There's also no personality in Dr. Sadie. She's a detached doctor who does what is good and kind, but is without emotion otherwise. I found all the characters except maybe Mae to be rather flat. Actually, I would consider this book almost YA, though that may be because the POV is 12 or 13 year old Moth. Skip this one and read The Birth House or Wickett's Remedy instead.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Set just after the Civil War, the story follows the life of a young girl, Moth. When her father abandons her and her mother, Moth’s existence becomes even more precarious until her mother sells her as a servant to a woman who abuses. When another servant helps to free her, Moth finds her mother gone and herself on the street with nowhere to go until she meets Mae who takes her to a prostitute trainer where her virginity will be sold. However, the interest of the female doctor allows Moth to see another way of taking care of herself. A clear look at the issues of women and poverty but with a hopeful aspect of rising above the circumstances.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    (based on Canadian edition, read September 2011)McKay knocks this, her 2nd novel, out of the park! Her prose is tight and haunting - giving us settings and characters one can see, hear and nearly touch. I feel this story sheds a light on a time and era in NYC's history of which little is known. (4-stars in 2011)May, 2012:Re-reading U.S. uncorrected proof, for work.5-stars in 2012. This story holds up after a re-read and I fell in love with Moth even more. Which I didn't think was possible. The supporting characters are well done and i felt just as strongly that McKay's writing evokes the senses and puts the reader squarely in the time of the story.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I absolutely LOVE historical fiction that teaches me something. This book really captured my heart from the very beginning. I really fell in love with the character Moth and her life story. I learned so much about the New York society from the 1870s in The Virgin Cure. Astonishing stuff. I highly recommend this book to . It really did leave me wanting more. I devoured this book whole!!

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved reading Ami McKay's The Virgin Cure. I was swept away into Moth's world on the first page of the book and finished reading it in 3 days. I enjoyed reading the story from Moth's perspective and I especially liked the footnotes and accompanying pictures which added to the atmosphere of the novel. I would definitely recommend this book! Thumbs up for this one!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "I am Moth, a girl from the lowest part of Chrystie Street, born to a slum-house mystic and the man who broke her heart." So begins The Virgin Cure, a novel set in Victorian New York in the year 1871. As a crowded, sweltering summer of riots and poverty comes to a close, twelve-year-old Moth's journey is just beginning.My Thoughts:I loved everything about this quirky book. It was different from some books simply because it had footnotes and descriptions within the book and lovely victorian illustrations.I loved the story and the characters and will look forward to the next book which is coming out to continue the story of Moth. The book held my attention right up to the last page and I was hoping thtat there would be a positive out come for Moth. Moth tells her tale in a very chatty way and I enjoyed following her about. I did find that some of the content was quite disturbing in the fact that young girls at sent to brothels and their viginity is sold to the highest bidder.Overall I loved this book and would highly recommend it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I enjoyed this story of 12-year-old Moth, a girl from the slums of 1871 New York City. Moth lives with her mother, until she is sold to a wealthy woman as a maid. From there, it is downhill for her, as she is abused and then recruited to work in a brothel. For me, this book raised several questions about morality. People prey on poor young girls, often in the guise of helping them. Moth has to make complex moral decisions at a very young age. The story brought these issues to light, in spite of the fact that few of the characters (and certainly none of the males) seemed to question the choices they were making for themselves and others. For the characters, "it is what it is" seemed to be the prevailing philosophy. Yet, Ms. McKay has nevertheless created a thought-provoking story -- in part because of the characters' acceptance of the constraints (or privileges) they live under.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Moth is a 12 yr old girl, living with her single mother (who happens to be a Gypsy fortune teller) in the mean streets of 1870s Lower Manhattan. One day her mom sells her as a lady's maid to a nasty wealthy woman. Moth goes from there to living on the streets, and eventually ends up being groomed to become a hooker.Although the situations and topics in the book were all interesting, the book did not hold my attention. I always found it a struggle to make myself read it and was easily distracted from it once I did begin reading. I think the book lacked sparkle, and it was completely without nuance or complexity. As one of the women in my book club said, "it's an edgy, gritty story, but told in a very clean way." Sort of like a Disney movie.Recommended for: I was the only one in my book club who gave it a thumbs down, and the reviews here at LT are strongly positive, so maybe it was just the mood I was in? But I found it to be a piece of very pedestrian historical fiction. Recommended for readers who like a linear storyline and no plot points to ponder.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Moth and Sadie, prostitute and doctor in NY
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I loved Ami McKay's first book, The Birth House, so I was eager to read this one without even knowing the synopsis. This book did not really live up to the quality of the first book, but I did still enjoy it. While the title conveys the idea that the focus of the book is this social problem of the myth of the "virgin cure", in reality the book was really about the life of the main character, Moth. The virgin cure only plays a part in two small events, and serves better as a footnote to Moth's life.Moth is quite an interesting girl from the start, having the maturity of a much older person as she deals with her mother's methods of making money along with her drinking habits, even as she finds her own ways of survival. Despite being of such a young age, she is aware of the struggles of the people around her and knows enough to recognize what a better life would look like for herself - even beyond the trappings of wealth. While sold by her own mother for the price of a sack of coins, Moth still longs to impress her and return to her. From there, she encounters one horror after another, many hidden behind a veneer of wealth and privilege. Her desires propel her to take on a different name in an effort to change her very identity into the kind of person she longs to be.Dr. Sadie's intervention into Moth's life provides a nice contrast to what Moth lived with day-to-day. As McKay's original protagonist, she provided another appealing way of life other than one of wealth and privilege. Her journal entries in the book also showed how Moth appeared to others. Despite the struggles that Dr. Sadie endured as a female physician, I liked the part she played in Moth's life and the things she showed Moth.As for the format of the book, I found it a bit strange sometimes. The pages often held side notes that had little to do with the plot, and were better at serving as distractions, plus chapters often began with poems or quotes that were vague at best and required some intelligent deciphering to figure out how they contributed to the book. The journal entries of Dr. Sadie that peppered the book held the most valuable writing, as it fit in with the timeline of the plot. I think the book would have fared better with less distractions, more plotting, and a better title.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I enjoyed the historic content of this book. Such a world for children to live in. I can't imagine a mother selling her child to live in a house as a servant. I can't imagine being groomed in such a way to lose a virginity and it is hard to read about how girls were subjected to the sexual abuse of men, especially such young girls.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Moth, an unusual and mystical-sounding name given her by an errant father, is one of the unfortunate born into poverty and misfortune, and yet she is...gifted. She is special.Moth is smart and adaptable and almost fearless. A twelve-year-old girl, she is forsaken by her mother, a local mystic and fortune-teller, but she determinedly finds her way, via a path to an "infant school". An infant school would be considered very upsetting and disturbing to any woman of this generation, but for a young girl on her own in the late 1800s of Manhattan, it could be her only saving grace. Some of these girls came to the "school" of their own accord, others were sold to them by poverty-stricken relatives.In "infant schools", young girls were taught all about how to charm a man, how to intrigue him and entice him, and hold his interest. How to drive up her own worth in his eyes, so that he would be willing to pay a large sum for her "innocence". Then her virginity would be sold for a pretty penny, and the girl could then opt to leave the school to fend for herself, or to become a professional prostitute.I loved this story, and I found author Ami McKay's writing to be very effective and moving. The book also has little tidbits and notes in the margins that give you a glimpse into the era and at times explain a little about a topic in the story. One of things you learn from one of these tips is the disturbing reality that in 1871 "under common law, the age of consent was ten years of age. (In Delaware it was seven)" How's that for shocking?The one complaint that I have is that sometimes it was hard to discern the transition from the story to a news article or a "diary entry" or letter by the doctor. Perhaps they could have used different typeface and margins and such to make it easier to indicate the switch?My final word: At times shocking and disturbing, but overall a very moving and satisfying read, I highly recommend this book. This story isn't for the faint of heart, but this rare gem is perfect for someone looking for a new kind of heroine-- a heroine perhaps not as delicate and fancy as one of those frilly butterflies, but a Moth gritty and spunky enough to knock the dust off her wings and take flight once again...
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In 1870 over thirty thousand children lived on the streets in New York, and at the age of twelve Moth, the main character becomes one such child, if only for a short time. Had no idea the numbers were so large and that what happened to these children so heartbreaking. This is the story of Moth and also of Dr. Sadie, who tries to help the indigent in whatever small ways she can. Enjoyed this book, and the newspaper articles and small asides were a big plus, helping the reader really enter into this time period. Would have given it a four if not for the ending, which I thought was a bit anticlimactic and rushed. Dr. Sadie was actually modeled on the author's great great grandmother, which T think is wonderful. Very good book for understanding New York in this time period and for fully immersing the reader in the lives of two very interesting characters.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I didn't enjoy this book as much as I thought I would. The storyline felt voyeuristic and I was uncomfortable with Moth's narration and some of the dialogue. I liked the nineteenth century (or faux-nineteenth century) advertisements and newspaper articles (although sometimes the text in them was very small on my ereader) but overall I was not gripped by Moth's story and felt that there were too many threads left dangling: what happened to Nestor and Mrs Hetherington, for example.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is the story of Moth - a young girl so named by her father who insisted that she be named such before he abandoned her and her mother for another woman. Moth's mother is ostensibly a fortune teller but she is mostly an alcoholic and cares not a jot for Moth except for the price that she can bring once she is old enough to be sold into servitude. As soon as possible that is arranged and Moth is sold to a an abusive woman who is also just a little bit crazy. With the help of the household butler Moth is able to escape but he also uses her to his own end.Moth finds herself on the street where she is "recruited" by a young woman into house where a woman sells young virgins to the highest bidder. Moth being very, very young she does not fully understand the ramifications of the food and new clothing she is receiving. A female doctor tries to dissuade Moth from the house but Moth likes her new found freedom and she thinks she is in control of her life. Little does she know....What a horrifying story. What a fascinating story. What a look into the ghettos of New York at the turn of the century when children were a commodity and no one cared for the lesser among us. Ms. McKay has written a world that is dark and terrifying but where there is a little bit of light for these poor souls to find. The writing creates the mood and the reader is pulled back in time to a world that hopefully will never reappear. The characters are well drawn and quite compelling; Moth in particular as one would expect in the heroine. Despite the bleak world and the dark subject matter I had a hard time putting the book down. I found myself quite drawn into Moth's world as she navigated her way from child to adult looking for the simple basics of life; food, a place to live and the simple comforts of a loving touch from someone that loves you.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Twelve year old Moth was given her name by a pear tree and in 1871 is sold into service by her mother, a fortune teller in the slums of New York. Having grown up in abject poverty, Moth, while terrified, is also fascinated by having food, a bed, and a dress that isn’t rags. But the position, as a ladies maid to a sadistic wealthy woman, turns into a horror story that makes even life in poverty look good. Back on the street, now not having even a filthy room with her mother, things look very bad when sudden rescue comes from an unusual person: a well dressed young girl who takes Moth to an elegant house where she is welcomed, bathed, and given a soft feather bed. This seems to be the most wonderful thing that could happen, and Moth swears that she will do anything to remain in this situation. But the house is a brothel that specializes in training very young virgin girls to be highly sought after prostitutes. Is this what Moth wants to do? Is the prospect of physical luxury worth risking venereal disease, pregnancy and possibly sadism? Is it worth possibly ending up as part of the titles superstition; that intercourse with a young virgin would cure a man of syphilis? Told from a mixed point of view- Moth’s; that of Dr. Sadie, a physician who treats the poor and the prostitutes of Manhattan; and the dispassionate descriptions from newspaper clippings- the novel gives us a well rounded picture of the time and venue. Moth sees the things to be gained from a life of prostitution; Dr. Sadie sees the bad things and tries to get the girls out of the life. Thankfully, none of the characters is a caricature; it would have been so easy to make the madam a monster but she is, for the most part, forthright about what she expects from the girls. Dr. Sadie is not a moralistic prude. The other prostitutes are just people caught in poverty, a situation that was very bad for everyone but especially bad for girls.I couldn’t put this book down; other readers have said that there were too many slow, descriptive passages but I found these filled out the story. Clothing branded the wearer with their station if life; the description of the nuances between the clothing of a high class prostitute and that of a upper class doctor shows us how people knew at a glance who that person was and how – or if- to approach them. And how better to understand why Moth would consider becoming a prostitute if one does not have a grasp of her living conditions before and after entering the brothel? I think the book balanced description and action just right.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I didn't know if this would draw me in as deeply and as thoroughly as this authors first book. But it certainly held me well enough to keep me reading. Moth, a girl who longed for nothing more than love. Her father walked away..her mother sold her into servitude, and didn't bother to watch her leave. She was taken into the home of a woman who felt herself above the laws of God, andat that time, there were no laws of man to help to protect the child. For child, is what she was. This is the story of Moth's struggle to live, and if she managed that first step,she wanted to be happy. An angel who came to her aide was a woman who had her own struggles in the world. Her chosen profession was looked down upon. So sad, becauseSadie looked down on no one, and her avocation led to her vocation. This led her ina circuitous path to Moth. The little girl who had been named by a tree. There are two heroines in this story. Both of whom will bring tears to your eyes at times.They will also help you to remember that in those days, as well as in our own time, there aresome who are special in ways you might never notice. But, they are there, and the lives that they touch are the better for for even a few moments of their company. Sadly, we are also reminded of ignorance and evil, as well. Don't miss this one, I cannot recommend it highly enough.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    McKay is an amazing writer and the story was intense and beautiful and heartbreaking and awful all at the same time--completely riveting. Kind of made me hate men a little bit (thankfully I know full well that not all men are like the ones in the book--and she wrote about good guys, too. And awful women. I guess it's just that stories that reflect humanity as it really was (and is) and the history that shapes gender and cultural mores and attitudes in general always gets to me a bit. Very thought provoking and great read though and through!p.s. Don't let the "seriousness" of my comments make it seem like the book doesn't hold up on its own purely as a wonderful story. I stayed up all night (or 'til 4:00 a.m. anyway) to read it in one stint (just one more chapter, no, just one more . . . ah, rats, hardly any left, I might as well read the whole thing! :D)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I really enjoyed this book! I loved how the author was able to describe the city so I felt like I was right there.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Poverty.Prostitution.Syphilis.Virgins.Moth daugther to a "slum house mystic" lived on the run down side of town known as, "Chrystie St." in New York City. The poverty on Christie St. was smothering and rarely escaped. Bitterness over her husband walking out mixed with overwhelming poverty, Moth's mother performed a heartless act. Moth was sold by her mother at 12 years old.Moth's duties as a "lady's maid" for rich Mrs. Wentworth started out as bearable and not to mention she was provided with enough food and sufficent clothing. At the slightest oversight, Moth began to suffer severe physical punishment at the hands of Mrs. Wentworth. With the help of another servant Moth escaped. Once she returned to Chrystie St., Moth discovered her mother had gone without a trace. Moth was left homeless and begging.One day while struggling to break free from an attacker, Moth was saved by a well-dressed friendly young girl. This girl, Mae, introduced Moth to Miss Everett who happened to run a brothel that specialized in selling virgins to the highest bidder. After being looked over by the a female doctor named, Sadie, Moth was accepted into an elite trio of girls. Moth, Mae, and the gentle Alice were all virgins being groomed for a their special night. Dr. Sadie instantly liked Moth and was determined to see her free of Miss. Everett's clutches. Dr. Sadie knew that Moth and the other young women were making themselves susceptible to the disease plaguing the city, syphilis. Men were on the prowl for the virgins they thought could cure them.The quality I like most about McKay's novels is that her young women leading characters are some "boss chicks" that remain emotionally intact amid some overwhelming circumstances. Moth Fenwick from The Virgin Cure and Dora Rare from The Birth House both have that quiet calm reserve about themselves like that of Jane Eyre. I could do without McKay's seemingly signature inclusion of advertisements from the time sprinkled throughout her novels. The reader will also be drawn to the firece loyalty that Moth possessed to her neighborhood and the city of New York. There was no "spark" to The Virgin Cure. It was a good steady read yet not compelling.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "Mama sold me the summer I turned twelve." These first words in the first chapter of The Virgin Cure introduce a theme that most readers would consider repugnant but were acceptable a scant two lifetimes ago. In the following pages, Ami McKay masterfully teases out the story over, under, around and through Moth - a child destined to be victimized. It is the sub-themes that make this book entirely interesting for the modern reader. Similar to The Birth House, the deuteragonist is a woman, with little standing in mainstream society, who uses her medical skills and heart to change what she can. Society's larger perspective is told with cited excerpts - some actual and others of the author's own devising. Comparison of these excerpts with the individual story suggests that society's belief about itself is not always supportable. This reader wonders what societal beliefs we currently hold that will eventually be toppled.Despite the author's solid writing style, I found the first three-quarters of the book difficult to read. I am glad that I pushed through the unpleasantness and learned about Moth. My resulting involvement with the protagonist and to the story proved highly gratifying in the climax and resolution. I recommend this book for every reader who is interested in the seemier aspects of our history.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    “Mama sold me the summer I turned twelve.” (Ch 1)Moth, born into abject poverty in 1870s New York City, lived thus until age twelve when she was orphaned: abandoned first by an irreverent father and then sold into domestic service for a pittance by her Gypsy mother. Moth escapes her abusive employer, but finds herself destitute on the city’s lurid streets. Still a child, she is taken in by brothel keeper, Miss Everett, who sees she can turn a profit on the child by selling her virginity to one of the numerous affluent society “gentlemen” who frequent her establishment. At Miss Everett’s, Moth meets Dr. Sadie, who compassionately sees to the needs of the young girls. Not surprisingly, syphilis is rampant in contemporary New York City. Through the doctor we learn of the myth which is “the virgin cure” – that a man suffering from syphilis might “cleanse his blood” and cure his disease by deflowering a virgin. Naturally, the more money one has, the easier one might procure just such a remedy. The doctor, horrified by the corruption which perpetuates the unthinkable, works tirelessly to help the disenfranchised: “The law is in bed with the brothel keepers, corruption all around. The idea of a girl selling herself horrifies me, and yet I find myself in the middle of that world. Where is the line? How young is too young?” (Ch 18)McKay is a gifted storyteller, and I found myself drawn effortlessly into Moth’s New York, lost in Moth’s narration. For me, a constant ingredient in fine literature is its ability to cross boundaries – social, cultural, and time – and still be relevant. McKay does an exceptional job of illustrating the social tragedy that results when a society’s disenfranchised is subjugated by its influential – because it is by turns both profitable and pleasurable. Highly recommended!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The protagonist is 12-year-old Moth who lives in the tenement slums of Manhattan's Lower East Side in the early 1870s. Moth's mother, a gypsy fortune-teller, sells her as a servant to Mrs. Wentworth, a wealthy but abusive woman. Because of her mistreatment, Moth runs away and soon finds herself under the tutelage of Miss Everett, the owner of an upscale brothel specializing in prostitutes-in-training. Here Moth meets Dr. Sadie, an idealistic physician who tends to prostitutes and the poor and tries to entice Moth away from Miss Everett before her imminent, premature and possibly life-threatening deflowering.This book includes vivid historical realism, especially in its depiction of misery and poverty. There are several examples of Dickensian cruelty. Sidebars (e.g. Dr. Sadie's notations, newspaper stories) are inserted throughout and they add to the historical authenticity of the novel. The book is a powerful exploration of the issues facing women in that time period, including the lack of options for women, especially poor women. The power imbalance between the sexes is certainly emphasized. Unfortunately, the myth of the virgin cure for syphilis endures in some parts of Africa as the virgin cure for AIDS.The one weakness is that Moth seems rather innocent at times. She is streetwise and, given her hardscrabble existence, one would expect her to be more worldly. In her training to be a prostitute, she isn't given any instructions about sexual relations?Readers who enjoyed McKay's first novel will undoubtedly enjoy this book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The title 'The Virgin Cure" seems surprising, until one learns that in Victorian New York, men afflicted by syphilis believed that they could be cured by the blood resulting from deflowering a young, untainted virgin girl. This historical fact forms the premise of this story.Based on historical fact, the Virgin Cure is the most entrancing novel. I was totally immersed in the desperate and impoverished streets of Victorian New York City, along with narrator and protagonist, 12 year old Moth." Moth" was born to a gypsy fortune teller and a father that she never knew. By the age of 12, Moth's mother abandons her, selling her into servant hood to a lady of means. Unfortunately this lady of means is also cruel and unbalanced ,and eventually Moth makes her escape. Finding no one to turn to, Moth tries to make a home on the streets of New York City.Rats, death, and crime are rampant for those living on the streets.Over time, Moth is lured into a upscale brothel, known as the the " Infant School." Young Moth is still 12, and on one hand street wise, but on the other hand , innocent of knowledge concerning menstruation or sexual relations. Miss Everett, the proprietor of the Infant School, trains young virgins to be "men's companions". Miss Everett's area of expertise is that of providing wealthy gentlemen with young, clean girls , for the purpose of the " Virgin Cure." Female physician Dr Sadie, following her social conscience, has devoted her life to working the the poor and and with prostitutes. She endeavors to help young Moth leave what is essentially a whorehouse.The Virgin Cure is a wonderful read. The world of impoverished Victorian New York is brought to life with great detail, and the characters, very believably drawn , come vividly to life. Dr Sadie and the strong willed, intelligent young Moth provide strong female protagonists.At times the the subject matter of the novel is painful to read, but I was entirely swept away into Moth's world. A fascinating tale, in which the author has taken pains to supply historical detail pertaining to the novel, The Virgin Cure almost reads itself, such is it's thrall.A wonderful read!4 stars.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Ami McKay's first novel The Birth House was a phenomenal success. I have no doubt that her newly released second novel - The Virgin Cure - will also be bestseller. And, it's one of my favourite reads for 2011.I was hooked from the opening line..."I am Moth, a girl from the lowest part of Chrystie Street, born to a slum-house mystic and the man who broke her heart."And so begins the story of Moth, born into the slums of Manhattan in New York City. In 1871 Moth's mother sells her - to a wealthy woman looking for a young servant. When that situation becomes untenable, Moth runs away and finds herself alone on the streets with no prospects. Until the owner of a brothel in the Bowery that 'caters to men looking for young companions who are 'willing and clean' takes her in. In Miss Everett's "Infant School", the most desirous of all are virgins, for it is said that a virgin can cure a man of that most scurrilous of diseases - syphilis.One bright light in Moth's life is Doctor Sadie, one of the first female physicians in New York City, who attends the girls at Miss Everett's establishment. The idea for the Virgin Cure was based on McKay's search into her own roots. Her great-great grandmother was a physician in New York City.What did I love so much about this book? Well, everything! McKay's characterizations are rich, detailed and believable. I became so invested in Moth and Dr. Sadie, sharing their fears and dreams. Both of these characters are strong, strong female leads, staying true to themselves despite the obstacles put before them. The setting is just as much of a player in the novel. McKay's depiction of 1870's New York conjured up vivid scenes crackling with detail. McKay includes historical side notes, newspaper articles, pictures and more throughout the book. I found myself on the Internet many times following up with the history she presented.Ultimately - it's a book that is so engrossing, so readable, so fascinating that I wish I could give it six stars. I just can't seem to articulate what a great read this is from such a skilled Canadian story teller. Highly, highly recommended!

Book preview

The Virgin Cure - Ami McKay

One

Board for a Young Lady.—

A woman wishes to obtain board in a private house

of respectability for her daughter, where she would receive a

proper upbringing and firm supervision.

Mama sold me the summer I turned twelve.

Everything stuck like corn silk that season—my dress to the small of my back, the catcalls of the bootblack boys, the debts Mama owed every man with a Mister in front of his name for five blocks around. There were riots just after the strawberries, and people went mad from the heat all June, July, and August. Miss Lydia Worth, the seamstress next door, got sliced across the face with a knife by Mr. Striech, the butcher, just because she refused to marry him. The woman who lived above Mama and me, Mrs. Glendenning, hid her baby away in a stovepipe when it died because she didn’t know what else to do with it. I listened at our door when the police came to take her away. She’d only been able to afford swill milk, and she was sure it was the milk that had killed her child. She wailed and sobbed, her cries of sadness filling the dark of the stairwell like the howls of a dying dog.

In the evenings, when it was too hot to sit inside, I’d leave Chrystie Street and walk up Second Avenue. Moving between pushcarts and passersby, I’d get as far away from Mama and our rooms as I dared. The journey was safe enough, even for a girl, alone, as long as I paid attention to the alleys and corners. Crossing Houston, my heart would twist, not because there was any danger to it or Mama forbade me to go there, but because reaching the other side of the street always made me feel as if I were headed more toward home than away from it.

Peering through windows, I’d gaze into people’s gaslit homes, keeping track of all the things I wanted for myself. Number 110 Second Avenue held a handsome gentleman, resting his arm on a mantel, mouth rounding into a satisfied O each time he puffed on his cigar. In the parlor of 114, three little boys were sprawled out on their bellies across a flowery rug, rolling marbles in the channels of petals and leaves. At 116, two lovers were sitting together on a settee, their elbows barely touching. A thin-lipped woman stood watch over them, her arms crossed in front of her chest as if to say, Don’t you dare. Glowing, moving pictures of ease, they made me want to lick my lips, my longing burning the sides of my tongue as if I’d been lucky enough to have too much sugar.

Businessmen paraded by me in fitted, neat suits, their shoes perfectly black. Street vendors pushed and pulled their carts, the wares still looking orderly and fresh, even at the end of the day. The pigeon man came blowing a bosun’s whistle, carrying braces of birds across his back. Shopkeepers cranked up their awnings and swept off their stoops, forcing clouds of dust to fly up around their feet. They scowled as the dirt settled back down into the cracks between the cobblestones, staring after it as if it ought to be ashamed for coming too near their door. If it weren’t for Mrs. Riordan once telling me you had to cross the East River to get there, I would have sworn I’d walked all the way to the beautiful place she called Brooklyn.

At the corner of St. Mark’s Place and Second Avenue was a grand house on a large plot, rising five stories above the street. Although the other houses surrounding it had been divvied up into a’s and b’s to accommodate the growing number of merchants who were setting up shops in the area, this house, with its bloodred brick and white marble trim, belonged to just one person, Miss A——Keteltas.

Quite particular about the house and the gardens that surrounded it, Miss Keteltas had placed several notices on the lawn to keep strangers at bay.

BE ADVISED, I AM NOT DEAD AND

THIS HOUSE IS NOT FOR SALE.—Miss A. Keteltas

ALL VISITORS WITHOUT AN APPOINTMENT

(GOOD INTENTIONED CLERGY INCLUDED) SHALL BE

TURNED AWAY.—Miss A. Keteltas

CURIOSITY SEEKERS SHALL BE MET WITH SUSPICION

AND A STICK.—Miss A. Keteltas

PLEASE DON’T FEED THE PEACOCKS.

—Miss A. Keteltas

Although the peacocks were long gone, the tall iron fence that had been erected around the gardens to keep the birds from escaping still remained. Menacing black spikes ran along the top and bottom of it, bayonets against the wild impulses of rioters, boys, and dogs.

I liked to run my hand along the fence as I walked past, my fingers slapping the pickets just hard enough to make the metal hum. If I took hold of one of the posts while it was still singing, a delicious tickle would come between my lips, like paper over the teeth of a comb, or a whistle made from a blade of grass. I liked to think that this set the house to buzzing as well and that Miss Keteltas was somewhere inside, sitting at the dining room table or even reclining on her bed, suffering pleasant tremors of laughter without knowing why.


Miss Keteltas generously donated her peacocks to the Central Park Menagerie two months after she acquired them. This practice was quite common with ladies who mistakenly wished for peacocks, or forty-two white swans, or perhaps a bear cub, or three sweet-faced monkeys. Thus a zoo was born, to save the fine ladies of New York from their misguided gamekeeping and guilt.


To the rear of the house one of the pickets was missing, leaving a space in the fence just wide enough for me to slip through. It means she wants me here, I told myself when I first discovered it. It’s a sign.

Mama was always talking of signs to the women who came to our place to have their fortunes told. I’d watch from behind the curtains as she sat at her round-topped table with whichever woman had shown up at our door, looking for answers. Putting a finger to the small, heart-shaped birthmark on her right cheek, she’d gaze into her witch’s ball or stare at the lady’s palms; then she’d give the woman the news. Sometimes good, sometimes bad.

I liked it best when a woman was willing to pay Mama enough to converse with the spirits. This called for both Mama and the lady to rest their fingertips on an upended glass. Then Mama would start humming and sighing, and soon the glass would go sliding over the wooden tabletop, dancing between the letters and numbers she’d painted there to help the spirits spell out fate. Even though the spirits said the same things time and again, it was still quite a thing to see. You’re gonna die young, Mama told every woman with fat wrists. But that’s all right. There will be flowers at your funeral and nobody will say a bad thing about you. Then she’d squeeze the woman’s hand, tears coming to her eyes, making them shine. We should all be so lucky.

The evening I decided to steal into Miss Keteltas’s yard and across her lawn, a light shone from a wide window into the garden. No one had ever come out to stop me from touching the fence, and I’d never seen so much as a hint of Miss Keteltas or her stick. All good signs, I thought, leading me to this very moment. I decided that if I got caught, I wouldn’t lie. I’d simply say, There’s a hole in your fence, Miss Keteltas. You really should have someone fix it.

When I reached the window, I could see into a parlor meant for the lady of the house. Miss Keteltas wasn’t there, but right next to the window was a pair of birds inside a cage. They were brilliant green, like the first leaves of spring, all except for the feathers on their faces, which were a deep pink, making them look as if they were blushing.


Lovebirds mate for life. Thus, pains should be taken not to separate an established pair. A lonely bird will engage in destructive behaviors such as pining, biting, and plucking out its feathers. If you are faced with a single bird, you must become what the bird longs for and lavish all your attentions upon it, lest it lash out at you.


I watched as one of the birds took a single seed from a bowl and fed it to its mate. The second bird kindly bowed its head and returned the favor. They went on like that, their stubby beaks pinching and putting, gentle and fair, until all the food was gone. Then they took turns preening and nuzzling each other’s necks, stopping every so often to puff up their feathers in delight. Stout little things, they’d wobble apart and then together again, dancing along the length of their perch. Finally, the larger of the two seemed to tire of it all and closed his eyes. His mate tilted her head and stared at him while he slept, her wings folded tight behind her back. She looked just like Mrs. Riordan did whenever she was having a hard time hearing what I had to say.

Before long, a maid came into the room. As soon as I saw her, I went to my knees, crouching beneath the window and holding as still as I could. For a moment, I was certain I’d been caught, but then the light went out and the garden became dark enough for me to sneak away.

As I walked home, I didn’t think about how late I’d be getting back to Mama. I just kept thinking of how much I wanted to be inside Miss Keteltas’s parlor, with nothing to do but watch those lovely little birds. I wondered if any two people had ever cared for each other like that. Not my mother and father, I thought. Mrs. Riordan and her husband, perhaps.

Although Mr. Riordan had died long before I was born, Mrs. Riordan still spoke of him often, her voice catching in her throat whenever she said his name. Twenty years without my teeth or my husband, and still it’s Johnny I miss most.

Mama was on the front stoop when I got home, fanning herself with a folded newspaper. It’s too dark for you to be out, she said, glaring at me. Go inside and get to sleep.

When she came to bed, she didn’t speak to me. Even though she didn’t ask where I’d been, her silence on the other side of the mattress we shared made me feel as if somehow she knew. Maybe her glass and the table had spelled it out for her. M-o-t-h w-a-n-t-s t-or-u-n a-w-a-y.

The next morning, my boots were gone.

Shoes in summer are nothing but a waste, she said when I went crawling under the bed, searching for them.

They weren’t the nicest pair of boots in the world. The leather had begun to crack across the toes, and they were nearly too small for my feet, but they were mine. I’d paid Mrs. Riordan a nickel for them. She’d gotten them off the body of a girl she’d dressed out for burial. The girl had died of consumption, and her mother had told Mrs. Riordan that she should have the boots, it was the least she could do to thank her.

A girl with shoes can hold her head a bit higher. She can run away.

Where are they? I asked Mama.

Gone.

Where?

Mr. Piers . . . but don’t bother asking him about them, he took them apart for scraps right on the spot.

A knife grinder by trade, Mr. Piers had a pushcart he wheeled up and down Chrystie Street. His hands were shiny—not greasy like a butcher’s after handling lard, but slick with the oil that made a blade sharp and exact. Mr. Piers wore his hair in two long braids, and his eyes were almost black. All the women thought he was the handsomest man they’d ever seen. I felt that way about him too, until he had my shoes.


Godfrey’s Cordial—a soothing syrup, concocted from the purest ingredients! (sassafras, caraway, molasses, tincture of opium, and brandy). For all manner of pains in the bowels, fluxes, fevers, small pox, measles, rheumatism, coughs, colds, restlessness in men, women, and children, and particularly for several ailments incident to child bearing women and relief of young children breeding their teeth.


Mr. Piers also shaved people’s lousy heads, and sold bottles of Godfrey’s Cordial. He’d sit on the street at night, his feet pumping the grinding wheel, sparks flying, looking like the devil’s man as he waited for women to come and ask him for his best.

Mothers called the cordial quietness, because their teething babies would stop wailing as soon as they rubbed it on their raw, red gums. A few drops under the tongue, and the child would fall into a deep sleep. Mama said it did much the same for her, so she’d drink half a bottle of the stuff whenever she felt weary from life. I didn’t see it quite like that. I thought it just turned her too tired to find her way around the room. I hated those square bottles, with their fancy, boastful labels.

With the heat of summer, Mama’s fortune-telling business had dropped off. The hotter it is, the less people like taking a chance on getting bad news, Mama would say for every day that went by with no customers. Come September, it’ll pick up. You’ll see.

When our cupboards got bare, anything we didn’t need got sold to Mr. Piers. By July, Mama was taking things to him every few days, in exchange for a bit of money, or more often in trade for a bottle of Godfrey’s. My boots had gone toward the cordial, along with Mama’s tortoiseshell hair combs and the amulet she wore around her neck to protect her from the evil eye.

I’ll get you a new pair, she told me. Come September.

After that she started talking of other mothers who’d had great success in arranging positions for their daughters—as housemaids or cooks’ helpers, as seamstresses and laundry girls. Lingering over the details, she made them sound more like saints than servants. They were nearly at the end, you know—no food in the cupboard, no money to speak of. Sighing with admiration, she’d go on, It was the daughter that saved them. If she hadn’t stepped up, the whole family would be dead.

Her stories were always the same. First, a sad, worn-out mother would manage to save up enough pennies to place a help-for-hire ad in the Evening Star. Then, a week later (no more, no less), the woman’s daughter, a bright and willing girl, mind you, would be plucked from the slums and miraculously placed in a situation that paid more than enough to keep her family from starvation. She’s living with a fine, well-bred lady, all the way up on Gramercy Park. Her mother says there are at least a dozen other maids in the woman’s employ, and the house has too many rooms to count. Can you imagine?

I could not. At least not in the way Mama hoped I would.

Whenever I tried to imagine a place that grand, I always wound up picturing myself not as a maid or a cook, but as the lady of Miss Keteltas’s house, floating through ballroom and conservatory wearing a dress made from the finest silk. Sometimes the dress would be forget-me-not blue, sometimes it was a demure lilac. More often than not it was petal pink, with yards of black velvet ribbon looped around the hem. No matter the color of the dress, the vision would end with me smiling and lying naked on a feather bed. The mattress was so deep I could hardly find my way out of it. Mama didn’t know that her uptown mansion with too many rooms to count only made an appearance in my head if the house and all that was in it were mine.

Thirteen, I’d tell myself, any time Mama started to go on about servants’ quarters and maids’ wages. I’ll stay with Mama until I’m thirteen. I hoped by then to find a way of becoming something on my own, something beyond Mama’s expectations.

She came to me, pushing at my shoulder while I was asleep. Ignoring her, I curled myself into a ball on my half of our sagging straw mattress.

Wake up, Moth, she nagged. Get out of bed and get dressed.

Her voice wasn’t right. It was thin and tight in the wrong places, and all I could think was that there must be a fire.

Mama loved watching buildings go up in flames. We had a collection of sooty bric-a-brac on the front windowsill to prove it. She’d pulled things from the rubble of every fire she’d ever chased. A gentleman’s shaving mug cracked in two; a blackened doorstop shaped like a dog; countless bits of melted glass—brown, green, blue; even a tiny porcelain chamber pot meant for a dollhouse. It had words painted around the rim: PISS OR GET OFF THE POT. Mama had a scar on the palm of her right hand from where the thing had burned her.

You go on without me, I mumbled, my tongue feeling thick with sleep. I don’t need to see it.

Get up, she insisted, twisting the fine hairs at the back of my neck until the pain of it made me sit up and open my eyes.

The hoops she always wore in her ears were winking at me, shimmering in the light of a candle she’d just lit. Reaching to the post at the end of the bed, she grabbed my dress and tossed it at me. Then she began taking my things out of our dresser drawers and throwing them on the bed: a pair of stockings with the toes worn through, my old petticoat, the rag doll I carried around as a child and called Miss Sweet. The doll’s arm came off in Mama’s hand, and the rest of Miss Sweet fell to the floor. She picked up the thin, limp body and looked at me.

You still want her? she asked.

Yes, I mumbled, as I pulled my dress on over my head.

Mama took the doll and its arm and pushed them into an empty pillowcase. Then she held the case out to me and looked to the pile on the bed. Put the rest of your things in this.

What’s happening? I asked, as she reached around my middle to tie the sash of my dress. Is there a fire? Are we in trouble?

There’s no fire, and there’s nothing for you to worry about, she said, working my hair into a loose braid down my back. I heard the slither of a length of ribbon being made into a bow, felt the ache of it being pulled tight. She turned me so I was facing her and brushed a stray hair away from my brow. You’re going on a little trip, that’s all. I’ve found you an excellent position, but you have to leave tonight. Putting the lumpy pillowcase in my hands, she took me by the arm and led me to the front room.

There was a woman sitting next to Mama’s fortune-telling table, resting in our velvet rocker, one of the few things of value that Mama hadn’t sold. She was wearing a fine, dark dress with a long matching cape that pooled around her in her seat. Her face was soft looking, her eyes moist and shining at the edges. The wide bow of her hat was tied under her chin, and the flesh of her neck folded against it as if she were made of butter and cream. Looking at me, she picked up the front of her skirts and shifted in her seat. I could see her shoes peeking out from her petticoats—black leather boots with scalloped trim around the buttons that reached far above her ankles.

Say hello to Mrs. Wentworth, Mama said, as she pushed me toward the woman.

Still staring at her boots, I stumbled, nearly falling into the lady’s lap.

Mama smiled at her apologetically. It takes her a while to warm up to strangers. You understand.

Mrs. Wentworth stood and held her hand out to me. How do you do, Miss . . . ?

Speaking up before I could, Mama said, Miss Fenwick will do. Then she looked to me and nodded as if she’d just named a stray dog.

Fenwick wasn’t my father’s name, or even my mother’s. It was the name on the label that was peeling off an old biscuit tin Mama kept with the rest of her fire souvenirs. The box had been painted to look like it was made of gold, and from a distance it seemed as if it were meant to hold some great treasure. Up close, the thing was a disappointment, with rusty holes eating away its underside, and a dented lid that wouldn’t stay shut. FENWICK BROTHERS SHORTBREAD, A CUT ABOVE THE REST.

Mrs. Wentworth took my hand in hers. A pleasure to meet you, Miss Fenwick, she said. Looking me over with her large, watery eyes, she added, I’m sure we’ll be very happy together.

Mama stared at me not with sadness, but with pleading. She was thinner than I’d ever allowed myself to notice, looking more like a child than a woman. I wanted to believe she knew what was best for me. I wanted to believe she was like every other mother and that she loved me more than I loved her. I hoped, if I followed her wishes, I would finally make her happy.

There were no tears at our good-bye. I knew Mama wouldn’t stand for it. Tears offended her more than just about any other wrong a person could do. That’s enough, she’d say, scowling and stomping her heel on the floor whenever my eyes showed the slightest sign of being wet. American girls never whimper.

After Mrs. Wentworth led me out of the house, I heard Mama shut the door behind us, turning her key in the lock.

Come now, Miss Fenwick, Mrs. Wentworth said, taking my hand and urging me down the steps to the street.

Looking back, I saw Mama’s arm reaching to close the curtains on the front window, her figure changing to a silhouette. Led by the tired bend of her neck, she moved to turn the lamp down, making the room go dark.

Thirteen, I’d thought, would be my time to go.

Mama thought, Twelve.

Two

Mother, if you love her—

Mother, if you love her, keep her clean.

Mother, if you love her, keep her—

I’d always felt my future was waiting somewhere else, far across Manhattan. It called to me in the clip-clop of the streetcar horses, begging me to chase after it. Up on my back, off in a crack; Child, tell your mother that you won’t be back.

The notion that I was meant for something far beyond the slums had set up shop in my brain somewhere around the same time my heart started to beat. My life held great promise, I was sure of it, but finding my way there was another matter altogether.

The week before Mrs. Wentworth took me away, I’d dared to bring out Mama’s witch’s ball for a secret consultation. Cradling the thing in the palm of my hand while she was asleep, I’d stroked and flattered it, telling the bubble of blue glass that I believed in its magic more than I believed in my own mother. When I asked it to reveal what was in store for me, it just sat there, reflecting my questioning eyes—too scared to give anything away for fear of upsetting Mama.

It knew as well as I did that if she were to catch me with it, she’d throw a fit. What questions could you possibly have? To be taken into the house of a true lady, that’s what you want—even if it’s only to wash her stockings and serve her tea. Now that would be a lucky fate, indeed.

As Mrs. Wentworth’s carriage took me away from Chrystie Street, I wondered what the witch’s ball might have shown me if it had been brave enough. Would I have seen Mrs. Wentworth sitting in our chair? Would I have noticed the great relief that came over Mama’s face as I was led away? I couldn’t help but long for answers. How many other girls were already in Mrs. Wentworth’s employ? Was she kind to them? Would they become friends, or enemies?

The velvet curtains in the cab of the carriage were tied shut, leaving me with little sense of where I was headed. I tried noting the turns, left or right, east or west, counting hoofbeats along the way, but I soon lost track. The farther I got from Chrystie Street, the more I struggled to decide which was worse—my fears of what lay ahead or my regret over having stayed with Mama too long.

In the end, I chose to push them both aside and wish myself into a pleasant dream. I closed my eyes and reimagined everything that had happened, from Mama shaking me out of my sleep to sitting now across from silent Mrs. Wentworth in the dark of the cab. I told myself it was simply fate’s way of playing a trick on me. In my musings, the woman sitting across from me wasn’t named Mrs. Wentworth at all. She was, instead, Miss Keteltas, come to take me home at last. She’d even arranged to have a welcome party waiting, at this late hour, with ladies in evening gowns and men in coats with tails, all lined up to meet the girl who was named by a pear tree, the girl who knew how to make a house hum and sing.

You’re to go right to bed, Mrs. Wentworth announced as the carriage wheels rolled to a stop. I want you rested for tomorrow.

Yes, ma’am, I answered, startled out of my dreaming by the sharpness of her voice.

As the door to the cab opened, cool night air rushed in and clung to my skin. Clutching the pillowcase Mama had given me, I followed her from the carriage to the house. Shuttered and dark, the building looked nothing like Miss Keteltas’s mansion. It most certainly was not a home to cheerful gardens and sweet-faced lovebirds.

Inside, the place was dimly lit, with only a few lights flickering on the stairs and in the hall. Even so, I could see it was a house made from great fortunes: the floor of the entryway was tiled in marble, and the ceiling, piped with plaster ribbons and roses, soared far above any practical height.

A man dressed in a fitted coat and handsome silk tie greeted us. He was a proper-looking gentleman in every way except for the terrible scar that ran across his left cheek. Long and curved like a frown, it looked as if whatever had caused it had also come close to cutting the man’s lip in two. Gone white and catching light, it spoke of another life, of knife fights and bloodied ears. It reminded me of the knots the roughs around Chrystie Street all sported on the bridges of their noses. Billy bumps, they called them with a puffed-up sense of pride, because they’d gotten them as the result of tangling with the police.

I bowed to the man, assuming he must be Mr. Wentworth.

Looking down at his shoes, the gentleman cleared his throat and waved me up.

My face went red with embarrassment. I hadn’t even considered Mrs. Wentworth might have a butler.

Nestor, Mrs. Wentworth said, as she motioned for him to assist her with her cloak. This is Miss Fenwick. Please show her to the servants’ quarters, and make certain she’s comfortable.

Yes, ma’am, he responded.

No sooner had he taken the cloak off her shoulders, keeping a polite distance from the sweep of her skirts, than she was making her way toward the wide staircase that curved up from the entrance hall.

The banister that graced the stairs was made from handsome, polished wood and decorated with aloof-looking cherubs that stood guard at every landing. Six angels in all, they balanced frosted globes of gaslight on their chubby shoulders. It was all I could do not to reach out and touch the cherub closest to me, to stroke its smooth, perfect toes. Appearing and disappearing as she passed them by, Mrs. Wentworth’s tired face glowed turnip yellow in the lamplight.

After she was gone, everything was still, except for the ticking of a tall clock in a nearby alcove, its pendulum glinting as it slipped back and forth. According to the clock’s face it was quarter past one. I imagined there must be an army of maids asleep somewhere under the roof, and I was glad I’d soon be joining them.

This way, Miss Fenwick, Nestor instructed, as he lit an oil lamp that was sitting on a marble-topped table. Time for you to get some sleep. The lamp sputtered when he took it up, giving off a trail of greasy smoke.

Following the butler down a long corridor, I did my best not to brush up against the thin-legged stands and scallop-edged tables that lined the walls. Each one held a delicate-looking vase or some precious object that needed to be kept safe under a glass dome. Paintings of gentlemen and ladies from days past hung on the walls, their dour faces making me feel as if they’d caught me walking on their graves.

Watch your step, Nestor instructed as we came to a second staircase at the rear of the house, this one unadorned, narrow, and steep. He held the lamp to one side as he went up the stairs, so I could better see the way.

The shadow of his figure crept beside us—a looming, faceless version of himself. It made me think of all the frightening stories I’d heard that summer, told on front stoops and in back courtyards, of girls being snatched up and dragged away by strangers. They were true tales that had happened right in the heart of the city, printed in the newspapers and weeklies for all to see. It was the fair-haired, well-off girls gone missing who’d made the headlines of the New York Times and the Evening Star, but there were plenty of poor girls with immigrant blood who’d disappeared as well. (Of non Americanized parentage, the papers said when referring to them, hushing them away in the tight, distant Police Briefs and News from Neighbors columns.)


There is much talk, even

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