Copyright
Copyright © 2011 by Leanna Renee Hieber
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Contents
Front Cover
Title Page
Copyright
June 1, 1880
June 3
June 5
June 6
June 8
June 9
June 10
June 11
June 12
June 14
June 15
June 18
June 19
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Back Cover
To all who have struggled to make their voices heard, historically and presently
New York County, Municipal Jurisdiction
Manhattan, July 31, 1880
New York City Police Record Case File: 1306
To whoever should have the misfortune to review this closed—but still unresolved—case, I extend my condolences. I tell you truly that all persons involved have been insufferably odd.
All we know directly of Miss Natalie Stewart, disappeared at age seventeen, is what you will read here in what was left behind as an absurd testimonial.
Herein you shall find pertinent newspaper articles enclosed by Miss Stewart regarding Lord Denbury and his infamous portrait. There are also letters from involved parties.
I am left to conclude that everyone involved is a certifiable lunatic. Should you wish to indulge yourself and read a young lady’s foolish reveries on such highly improbable events, so be it. Should you believe any of it, I hope you have no business with the New York Police Department now or in the future.
Regards,
Sergeant James Patt
This Journal is the sole property of:
Miss Natalie Stewart
As a gift to mark this, her exit from
The Connecticut Asylum
June 1, 1880
Sister Theresa handed me this farewell gift with such relief that it might as well have been a key to her shackles. I’m a burden to her no more. Someone else will have to glue her desk drawers closed and exchange her communion wine for whiskey.
But now I trade the prison of the asylum for another. The prison of home.
Oh, I suppose I ought to clarify the word asylum, as it has its connotations.
The only illnesses the students of the Connecticut Asylum have are those of the ears and the tongue. The mute, or the deaf, are not the mentally ill. Those poor souls are cloistered someplace else, thank God. We had enough troubles on our own.
But now that I’m home, a prison undercurrent is here too. The desperate question of what is to be done with me lingers like dark damask curtains, dimming the happy light of our dear little East Side town house. For unfortunates like me, firstly, a girl and, secondly, a mute girl, life is made up of different types of prisons, I’ve learned. If I were a man, the world could be at my command. At least it would be if I were a man and could speak.
Every night I pray the same prayer: that I may go back to that year of Mother’s death and startle my young self to shake the sound right out of that scared little girl. Maybe I’d have screamed. A beautiful, loud, and unending scream that could carry me to this day. A shout that could send a call to someone, anyone, who could help me find my purpose in this world. But since that trauma, I’ve yet to utter a word. Not for lack of trying, though. I simply cannot seem to get my voice through my throat.
I’ve often thought of joining a traveling freak show. At least there I wouldn’t have to deal with the ugliness of people who at first think I’m normal and then realize I can’t speak. I hate that moment and the terrible expression that comes over the person’s face like a grotesque mask. The apologetic look that thinly veils pity but cannot disguise distaste, or worse, fear. If I were already in a freak show, people would be forewarned, and I could avoid that moment I’ve grown to despise more than anything in the world. But would I belong beside snake charmers and strong men, albinos and conjoined twins? And if not, where do I belong, if anywhere?
• • •
As a child, I heard a Whisper, a sound at the corner of my ear, and saw a rustle of white at the corner of my eye. I used to think it was Mother. I used to hope she would show me how to speak again or explain that the shadows I see in this world are just tricks of the eyes. But she never revealed herself or any answers. And I stopped believing in her. I stopped hearing the Whisper. But what does remain are the shadows that come to me at night. There are terrible things in this world.
I don’t have pleasant dreams. Only nightmares. Blood, terror, impending apocalypse. Great fun, I assure you. (Perhaps it’s good I can’t speak; I’d share dreams at some normal girl’s debutante ball and send her away screaming or fainting.) There are times when I feel I need to scream. But I can’t.
I’ve so much to say but don’t dare open my mouth. The sounds aren’t there. I tried, years ago. Therapists soon gave up on me, saying I was too stubborn. But it wasn’t me being stubborn. I was anxious, nerve-racked, afraid; I hated the foreign, unwieldy sound that crept out from behind my lips so much so that I haven’t dared try since. Perhaps someday.
That’s why I was given this diary. Other girls were given lockets or trinkets. When I’ve nothing to occupy my mind or my hands, I resort to mischief. Now if the asylum had just had more books (I’d read them all, twice, within my first two years), I’d never have bothered with the communion wine. I wouldn’t have had the time for glue, tacks, or spiders.
I’d have been reading about trade routes to India, the impossible worlds of Gothic novels, or even the tedious wonders of jungle botany—anything other than this boring, dreary world we live in. And so, dear diary, you’ll bear my written screams as I yearn for a more industrious, exciting life.
Unless I find an occupation or a husband, which in my condition is laughable, I’m destined to languish in solitary silence. Most men of Father’s station would have whisked me off to some country ward upstate never to be seen again. (I’ve been continually reminded of this by scolding teachers who insist I ought to be more grateful for a doting father.)
And I am grateful for sentimentality on Father’s part. I look too much like Mother for him to have sent me off, and goodness, if my sprightly nature doesn’t remind him of her. So I’ve always felt a certain security in my place here a few blocks from Father’s employer, the ten-year-old Metropolitan Museum of Art. A building and an institution I’ve come to adore.
Tonight, Father’s having a dinner party with his art scholar friends. They’re quite boring, save for his young protégé, Edgar. I could suffer Edgar Fourte’s presence under any circumstance. But make no mistake, I
positively hate that wench he proposed to. If only I could have fashioned some mad plot and sent Father away, I would have thrown myself at Edgar’s mercy and become his lovely, tragic young ward. I’d have made myself so indispensable to him, not to mention irresistible, he’d never have considered another woman.
I’ve been told I’m pretty. And he’s a man who likes quiet. What could be more perfect than a pretty wife who doesn’t speak? But alas, I’ll have to find some other handsome young scholar with a penchant for unfortunates since Edgar stupidly went and got himself engaged to one. So what if she’s blind? She can’t see how beautiful he is. What a waste!
Ah, the clock strikes. I must help Father with preparations and then make myself particularly presentable, if nothing else than for Edgar’s punishment. I’ll return with any notable gossip or interesting thoughts.
Later…
They’ve clustered into Father’s study for a cigar, having stuffed themselves as scholars do at a meal they didn’t pay for themselves, leaving me a few moments with these dear pages.
We’re in luck; they did discuss something fascinating at dinner.
An odd painting is coming to town. An exquisite life-sized oil of a young English lord named Denbury is about to arrive for a bid. And they say it’s haunted.
Now if there’s one thing I can’t help but adore more than Edgar Fourte’s face, it’s a ghost story. Perhaps it stems from that long-ago Whisper. Or the shadows I see at night. Wherever the thrill comes from, I can’t deny my obsession.
Evidently Lord Denbury simply disappeared one day. Locals assume that it was suicide, that he was overcome with despair at losing his family. But it was odd, for he was so well loved by everyone in town. Such a tragedy! Only eighteen years old with no siblings, he lost his parents when they died in a sudden accident. Having to take on such a mantle of responsibility must have weighed heavily upon him, or so everyone supposed. He inherited money and lands with his title, but with no surviving family to help him, he simply went and drowned. A fine piece of clothing bearing a pin with his crest washed onto the bank of a quieter part of the Thames. A damaged body was later found farther downriver and assumed to be his, but was that conclusive?
In such a troubling case, people tend to seek a reason. Once they find one suitable, they’ll close the matter in their minds and hearts for their own comfort. But I wonder…
He was devilishly handsome, they say, and studied medicine. Supposedly he helped open a clinic for the underprivileged in the heart of London. So absorbed in learning medicine, he hadn’t taken the time to court anyone, though he was continually sought after. He attended a Greenwich hospital nearly round the clock, absorbing all the knowledge he could. I should like to have known him and commended him for being a credit to his class. They say he was a good-natured fellow, if not a bit mischievous, as most clever boys are, and had a way of talking to all sorts of people. Perhaps he could have found a way to help me.
All that survives him is a grand portrait by an artist who remains unknown despite the vast sum paid for the commission, as recorded in Denbury’s personal ledger. Considering the portrait is of such fine quality, it’s odd that no one sought attribution. Discovered behind a curtain by surprised housekeepers after Denbury’s disappearance, the painting is said to appear nearly alive with the soul of its subject.
How a group of men like Father’s friends managed to absorb and retain this fantastic gossip is beyond me, but since it involves art, it comes into their territory. Mr. Weiss suggested that when the item makes its way to New York, where the estate broker plans to sell the piece, my father and the Metropolitan ought to consider buying it.
I desperately want to see it. To see him. I must convince Father he ought to at least put in a bid, so that “the Met” seems fashionable. The supernatural is all the rage these days, and America’s foremost art museum must stay ahead of the times.
Dear me, I’ve forgotten their coffee, and they’ll be clamoring for it. I’ll return once I’ve served them and given Edgar an unbearably sweet smile. Did I mention that his cheeks went red when I descended the staircase and waved? Perhaps there’s something about a girl back from boarding school that makes a man see her differently. Too late, Edgar, too late. Not that I’d fault you for breaking off your engagement…maybe there’s a way I can assure it…Drat. Coffee first. Schemes later.
Later…
I hate them. All of them. Especially Edgar. Don’t they know I might be at the door at any moment? I may be mute, but I am not dumb.
I’d hesitated outside the study, the coffee tray carefully balanced in my hands. Their cigar smoke wafted beneath the door, acrid tendrils making that threshold a foreign passage where women are forbidden to go—unless, of course, they are there in service. And then I heard my father say something he’d recently said directly to my face:
“I don’t have the foggiest idea what to do with her. I’ve no idea what would be best…”
Which was, sadly, the truth. It was the subsequent response from Edgar, of all people—I’d know his voice anywhere—that shocked me:
“Why don’t you just send her off to a convent, where you wouldn’t have to worry about her, Gareth? She could become a nun and change out her own communion wine for whiskey for a change. A vow of silence certainly wouldn’t be difficult!”
Before any of them had a chance to laugh or snigger at the insult, I threw wide the door, sending coffee spilling onto the tray. My nostrils flared as I narrowed my eyes and looked right at Edgar. He blushed again, this time not because he thought me pretty. Let him rot with guilt for everything he’s done to cause me misery. He’s never known how much I care—no, cared—for him, but surely now he knows I’ll never respect him again.
I may be an unfortunate, but Father taught me never to stand for being made fun of.
“Edgar, shame on you,” Father muttered.
There was deathly silence in the room as I served each of the men: first, Father, who was looking up at me apologetically, second, Mr. Weiss, who couldn’t look at me out of embarrassment, and then finally Mr. Nillis, who never has a single interesting thing to say but always has a grandfatherly way of patting my hand, which I’ll take over being teased any day. Mr. Nillis beamed up at me, entirely oblivious of the awkward moment, and patted me on the hand. I managed to offer him a grateful smile for his small, unwitting courtesy.
I turned and walked back out the door with the last cup of coffee, Edgar’s, in my hand. He would not be served. Now I sit sipping it myself as I write this account and stare out the window at Eighty-Third Street three stories below, golden and dappled beneath patches of shade in summer’s setting sun. Men in top hats and women in light shawls and bonnets stroll slowly along the cobbled street toward the gem that is our beloved Central Park for one last promenade before dusk. They have a slow but sure purpose to their movement, to their existence, which is more than I have. What am I going to do with myself?
Oh, Mother. If you hadn’t died, I’m sure this wouldn’t have happened. I’d speak. And you’d know what to do with me.
June 3
I was secretly terrified that Father would actually take Edgar’s advice and I’d wake to find my bags packed, a train ticket purchased, and a position in a convent secured. But perhaps the incident gave me leverage, for Father knew I was upset, and he hates it when I’m upset.
He came to me this morning in the parlor, where I sat in a patch of sunlight at the reading table by the window, enraptured by a newspaper article discussing the recent subject of intrigue, that of the mysterious—and delicious—Lord Denbury painting.
Now, Father doesn’t rightly know how to deal with me, it’s true. I must resort to writing notes as he still hasn’t grasped the particulars of sign language. But thankfully, he gives me money for newspapers. Any paper, every paper, and has always encouraged my reading and education. So I was the first in the household to see the etching of Lord Denbury himself. I was thoroughly engrossed in staring at it when Father inte
rrupted.
“Natalie, my dear girl, I apologize for what Edgar said. Perhaps he forgets that you can hear very clearly—”
My eyes surely must have flashed with anger, for Father was quick to clarify. “Not that it would have been an appropriate comment under any circumstance.”
I turned away. He sat across from me and waited until I decided to return his gaze.
“Tell me,” he began a bit nervously, “what would you like to do? I’ll try my best. Anything. What would you wish for in your adult life that a girl…in your condition…could reliably attain?”
I studied my father for a moment, as if weighing my options. But I knew what I wanted. The morning paper had made it clear. I scrawled capital letters on the blank end of the opposite page: ACQUISITIONS. Big, bold, and expectant.
Father blinked a moment. “Acquisitions,” he repeated slowly. “At the museum?”
I gave him an expression as if he were daft. Where else?
“Indeed…” After a moment, he nodded. “I think you’d make a fine consultant.” I nodded enthusiastically. He eyed me and then added, “Tell me. Is there something you’d like to acquire?”
Offering my most pleased smile—why, how lovely of him to ask—I pointed directly to the hasty charcoal likeness of Lord Denbury’s painting in the paper. The sketch alone was engaging so I could only imagine the piece in the flesh, or rather, the canvas. Something about that young lord called to me.
According to the paper, Mrs. Evelyn Northe, a wealthy spiritualist known for keeping interesting friends (wealth has a way of allowing you to be “interesting” when in other circles you’d be denounced as scandalous or mad), was closing in on the purchase of the Denbury painting. We simply couldn’t let her have it over the Metropolitan.
“The Lord Denbury nonsense?” Father’s nose wrinkled in disapproval. I nodded, undaunted. He examined the article.
“Well indeed,” he sighed. “If Mrs. Northe is considering it so seriously, I’d be called a curmudgeon, not to mention incredibly out of fashion, if we didn’t at least stake a claim…” Father rose, straightened his suit coat, and nodded crisply, as he always did when sealing a decision.
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