"Chelsea Quinn Yarbro - The Spider Glass" - читать интересную книгу автора (Yarbro Chelsea Quinn)тАЬCharles,тАЭ Twilford protested, тАЬyou canтАЩt be serious. Nine times great-grandmother!тАЭ
тАЬOf course I am,тАЭ Whittenfield said, astounded at being questioned. тАЬSerena was born in 1817. Her mother, Eugenia, was born in 1792. Her mother, Sophia, was born in 1774. SophiaтАЩs mother, Elizabeth, was born in 1742. Her mother, Cassandra, was born in 1726. CassandraтАЩs mother was Amelia Joanna, and she was born in 1704 or 05; thereтАЩs some doubt about the actual date. There was flooding and fever that winter and they were not very careful about recording births. Amelia JoannaтАЩs mother, Margaret, was born in 1688. Her mother, Sophronia, was born in 1664тАФтАЭ тАЬJust in time for the Plague and the Fire,тАЭ Dominick put in. тАЬYes, and only three of the family survived it: Sophronia, her mother, Hannah, and one son, William. Terrible names they gave females in those days. Anyway, William had four wives and eighteen children in his lifetime and Sophronia had six children and even Hannah remarried and had three more. HannahтАЩs mother was Lucretia and she was born in 1629. Her mother, Cesily, was born in 1607, and it was her mother, Sabrina, that the story concerns. So you see, nine times great-grandmother of my Great-aunt Sabrina.тАЭ He gave a grin that managed to be smug and sheepish at once. тАЬThat Lucretia, now, she was a sad oneтАФ married off at thirteen to an old reprobate in his fifties who kept two mistresses in separate wings at his principal seat as well as having who knows how many doxies over the years. Lucretia turned nasty in her later life, they say, and there was an investigation over the death of her tirewoman, who apparently was beaten to death under mysterious circumstances. The judge in the case was Sir Egmont Hardie, and heтАФтАЭ тАЬCharles!тАЭтАШ thundered his cousin. Whittenfield coughed and turned his eyes toward the ceiling. тАЬAbout Sabrina. Let me see. She was one. It is a little hard to tell about these things after so long, but apparently certain difficulties had arisen between Sabrina and her husband. Sir James had quarreled with his father when he got into trouble with his commanding general, and ran off to the Continent, which was a damned silly thing to do, considering the times. He tried a little soldiering, which was the only thing he knew, and then got caught for some petty offense and was flung into gaol, leaving his wife with two children to feed and no one to help her, and in a foreign country, to boot.тАЭ тАЬWell, sheтАЩs not the first woman to earn her bread on her back, but I shouldnтАЩt think youтАЩd bring it upтАжтАЭ one of the guests was heard to remark. Whittenfield shook his head. тАЬMost men prefer whores who can speak to them, which Sabrina could not. And her children were inconvenient for such a profession. She knew some French and had been taught a few Italian songs as a child, but for the most part she was as good as mute.тАЭ He drained his glass again. тАЬShe was greatly distraught, as you might suspect, and did not know which way to turn.тАЭ тАЬThatтАЩs a female for you,тАЭ the same guest said, and the sixth guest turned to him. тАЬWhat makes you believe that a man, in those circumstances, would fare any better?тАЭ The sixth guest clearly did not expect an answer, and the man who had spoken glared at him. Charles went on as if he had not heard. тАЬShe sold all that she and Sir James possessed, which was not much, and then she began to sell their clothes, so that they had only what they wore on their backs, and that quickly became rags. However, she was able to afford a few bits of food and to hire mean lodgings in a back street of Antwerp. By doing scullery work at a nearby inn she got scraps to eat and enough to |
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