The Strange Death of Mistress Coffin Read online

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  He was about to speak, but she slowly turned away. Just before disappearing into the room, she loosened her headcloth, and a thick coil of dark blond hair escaped to the small of her back. In the firelight the hair was abundant and lustrous, seeming to him so vigorous as to exist separately from the exhausted woman herself.

  He glimpsed the shifting light of flames against the entry wall from a fireplace in the second room. He thought he heard the murmurings and turnings of sleeping children also. There was a soft rumble of firewood from the other room. Then the house grew still enough to redouble the noise of the snowstorm.

  Browne pulled the bedrug around himself now and settled into the rude chair. He looked about the room, noticing more of the implements and materials of her labors. Her spinning wheels had been moved from the small chamber above, he imagined, closer to the hall fireplace. Bits of flax and what might have been cotton wool lay about by the wheels. He now saw on the floor a child’s poppet made of some kind of straw or rags lying below a rough little go-cart of the sort toddlers would use to scoot about under their working mother’s eye. These children, he thought, would have much more work to do in the absence of their father.

  The fire swooped with a gust of wind. He smiled and murmured ironically:

  Let my Enchantments then be sung, or read.

  When Laurell spirits ’ith fire, and when the Hearth

  Smiles to it selfe, and guilds the roofe with mirth. . . .

  At times a child stirred or groaned in its sleep. But otherwise the compact house grew as quiet and concealed as the brackish shifting river hidden under its new cover of ice and deepening snow.

  II

  Browne found the house of Balthazar Coffin upriver from the Higgins’ house, well above the falls where the river turned fresh. It was an imposing house of two stories with an overhang in the front, a further half-story in the gable tops, and a long lean-to roof steeply sloping low into the first story in the rear. The central chimney was the largest in this settlement of houses with generous chimneys. The clapboards had turned an unusual light gray, as if made of unfamiliar wood, but the neatly riven roof shingles were burnished to a more familiar gray tinged with deep browns. Upon the front door lay a heavy iron knocker in the shape of a fantastical rampant boar.

  Once inside, Richard Browne sat with Balthazar Coffin at a long library table constructed of a single plank of wood nearly three feet wide. The room was disordered by books lying about in trunks, in cases, and on the floor. The table top was cluttered with manuscripts and dried plant specimens. They had exchanged some desultory talk before sitting, and now a cup of warmed rum sat before each man. The late daylight that penetrated from without tinged the room with a solemn golden hue.

  Coffin’s beard was neatly trimmed after the Flemish style, and his eyes, though intelligent, were bleary. His dress was somber and plain, after the manner of grave doctors or ministers. And despite his leanness there was about him a certain solid self-possession—a force of identity that perhaps a master would have captured in the man’s portrait—which was to Browne the most extraordinary thing about him.

  “You have spoken to many others about the matter, Mr. Browne?” Coffin asked.

  “Only to Mr. Cole and Goody Higgins.”

  “Has the woman gossiped every manner of tale?”

  “She’s much troubled.”

  “Ah, she is troubled.”

  “There is sleeplessness, some pain, and visions. Much trouble in head and heart.”

  “Mopishness,” Coffin said. “Suffocation of the mother.” He flipped his hand in dismissal. “Any number of things.”

  “I think not,” Browne said. “But we shall see. Her losses distress her, certainly.” Browne hesitated but there was no reply. “She’s my first charge, so to speak. Mr. Cole asked that I look after her and the strange disappearance of her husband.”

  “You are staying with the Coles?”

  “Just this first week until I arrange lodging. I come here to Robinson’s Falls by way of mutual acquaintances, at Mount Wollaston, between my father and Mr. Cole. I seek to regain a substantial portion of my own lost patrimony. I would, you see, make my way here anew, make this wilderness yield up its riches. So I’ve placed myself at the service of Mr. Cole. I mean to plant a property to be granted me in the spring. My father had long prepared me to manage his estate.”

  “Your father is a peer?”

  “He is now deceased. But was in the House of Commons, a man educated by the marketplace in the ‘Exchange of Christendom,’ as they say.”

  “Ah, you are frank, Mr. Browne.”

  “I do not relish subtleties in such circumstances. I have learned, moreover, that it’s best to be direct when you seek information.”

  “Indeed. Well, Cole is a good ruler. The people respect him. His concern is for all of us. Goody Higgins and her husband are another matter. There has been much talk of this, as you say, disappearance.”

  “And so will I have to speak with many others to gather direction. Of course I have heard of these tragic events of last . . . June? My deepest sympathies, Sir.

  “There is much hidden,” Browne went on. “And there may be a connection to Higgins’ disappearance. I do not even know how people regard him now. Might he have been forced to flee by some? His culpability remains at issue, I take it.”

  “Indeed!”

  “There are records of proceedings, inquiries? I understand you withdrew your action against him. . . .”

  “Mr. Browne, you are an educated man. It is ever a joy to meet such a one in this wilderness. My household welcomes you. My library, such as it is, is at your disposal. But this matter of my murdered wife I cannot dwell on with good humor. She was my wife but five years. As your training tells you, where certain evidence is lacking or in contradiction with other testimony, and accusation is countered by less supportable charges, and so on into voids of speculation, then withdrawal is the better part of justice and sense. And where the name of one’s wife is at stake, and a deceased wife at that, one’s duty is to withdraw. Who murdered my poor Kathrin in such a manner I know not. That Higgins was negligent at the least, at fault in our contract, and ultimately slanderous is plain. But my case against him did not proceed as it should—too little to incriminate him.

  “Higgins is a practical man, Mr. Browne. He is esteemed for his skill, not of mind but of hand. He has many cohorts, a strong reputation, audacity, courage. He has explored much in these parts, trades with the natives, wrests his living from this wilderness by shrewd doings and labors. Indeed, many owe him a debt. I may be the first to doubt his credibility.”

  “I see.”

  “I have absolutely no idea where he has got off to. But it is not unlike him. He has often been at some curious adventure or discovery.”

  “But on such occasions of absence he would tell his wife of his intentions, would he not?”

  “So one might expect. Yet I cannot answer for their habits, for what is between them.”

  Browne sipped his rum. This man Coffin seemed forthright. There was, however, a sorrow that seemed to hang like a vestige of illness about his vigorous body.

  “I can tell you little more, Mr. Browne. My wife was as good as any, but a sharp wit and without reticence.”

  “Can you tell me of the inquiries arising from your action?”

  “The inquiry became protracted. I will supply you a list of those connected with it.” He got up to gather pen and paper. “Might you not discover something in my favor as well?” he said, seating himself again.

  While Coffin wrote in a flowing, clear hand, Browne asked: “Where are the records of these inquiries now? Among the Norfolk County Court papers?”

  “Whatever records remain. A magistrate of the Associate Court, one Dr. Cotton, seems to administrate these sessions and records. Without sufficient cause to pursue action for more serious crimes—for ‘trials of life, limbs, or banishment,’ as the magistrates say—the records at Boston would bear no fruit
. The absence of a criminal case must be why Cole called upon you. My initial action was heard at the Hampton Quarterly Session. You might inquire there, or try Salisbury if nothing turns up.” He finished writing his list and handed Browne the paper.

  Browne rose. “I’m sorry to have troubled you with painful events.”

  At the front door, Browne added, "Absit invidia, Mr. Coffin.”

  “Of course not, Mr. Browne. My household and library welcome you.”

  Browne stepped over the threshold to the ground. “That is pleasant indeed, having left behind in England my own library, which I plan to recover at some later time. I have a particular collection of our English poets—famous and unknown—that perhaps one day I may show to you.”

  “Of course, you won’t find much of that here I’m afraid; few of our recent poets, certainly. But what I have is at your pleasure. Our plantation needs men like you. Age quod agis, Mr. Browne. Wisdom go with you.”

  As Browne made his way back to the Cole’s house, the snow on the frozen river, burying the marsh grass and covering the thickets, was reddened by the final rays of sun. The air was turning sharp, and a flutter of small wintering birds was gathering the thin warmth and protection of hemlock trees. He recalled now how it was the air that had struck him most upon his arrival in the New World two years ago. The peculiar, pleasant odors at each season enlivened him as if medicinal in whatever month of the year.

  He passed the gristmill, now quiet in the freezeup, its huge wheel and buckets hung with snow and icicles on the opposite, east bank of the river. Higher up by the second falls on the west bank the new sawmill, long and narrow, open at both ends, was glowing and still in its sheath of unweathered shingles.

  Goody Higgins’ accusations puzzled him now. Could this man he had just met have presented nothing more than a mask? The man reveals no more than he has to, Browne thought, but I think there is no maleficium, not by this man’s hand. He would have to search the court records.

  III

  THE EXAMINATION AND DEPOSITION OF JARED HIGGINS,

  This Fifteenth Day of June, Anno Domini 1648,

  Being Sworn, saith:

  My name is Jared Higgins, planter at Robinson’s Falls since 1640. I have thirty-four years, am married, and previously of Nottinghamshire, England, Parish Gotham; thence of Charleston, Massachusetts Bay in New England.

  Assistant Magistrates: Now, Goodman Higgins, the events at Dover Market suggest on the face of them negligence on your part. You are aware of the divers actions to be brought against you at the next session of the Court. Would you explain, as you understand them, the terms of your agreement with one Mr. Balthazar Coffin.

  Higgins: It was all plain, Your Honors. I to receive three percent of the sale price of several head of cattle upon completion of her affairs. For that sum, I was to convey Mistress Coffin by my canoe along the river and bay to market at Dover, and home again. Twenty-fifth of May, I believe it was.

  Mgts.: And you discharged such agreement?

  H: I could not, Sirs.

  Mgts.: Could not?

  H: She never returned to the wharfs, Your Honors.

  Mgts.: You both had appointed a time?

  H: Roughly, Sirs. I was there early and stayed late.

  Mgts.: Had you looked well? Had you made inquiries? Had you any conjectures from such inquiries?

  H: I went to market myself, Sirs, on my own accounts. Then I bought a dram at the ordinary, spoke with some who know me. When at the time we agreed to meet she did not appear, I tied my canoe aways beyond the wharf and went back to seek her, guessing she dallied at market once the trading was over.

  Mgts.: You had no success?

  H: I saw her not, Sirs.

  Mgts.: What thought you? And what were your actions when you found her not?

  H: I was in the dark, Your Honors. I asked after her. Some had seen her at market, but not leaving, alone or with anyone. But she had her ways, Sirs, to charm the beard from Beelzebub, ask me. Proud of her sharp bargaining and of her husband’s faith in like accomplishments. She wasn’t the kind to hide her skill. More like to hold it up for all to know. And more than that, she wasn’t above the pride of woman, truth be known.

  Mgts.: But her absence, Higgins, how considered you that?

  H: Darkness, as I say, to me, Sirs. I searched; I waited. I presumed a sudden notion took her to be away. Why? With who? I know not. Perhaps she struck a passion in one among the crowd. In time, I came to trust only that she lost herself.

  Mgts.: You insinuate, man? Be clear on these matters. Keep to what you know to be true, by your sworn oath.

  H: Sirs, I left for home without payment promised me. Thus am I also out my fee. I know only what I have said, Sirs. The day was hot, as if Nature had been wrenched in May to some late summer’s noon. Once we were well upon the water she dropped her cloak. Then unfastened her cap. Loos’d her bodice, free as that. There was such heat I pulled my shirt loose as well. But you, and Mr. Coffin too, ought to know she left herself too undone, and caught the eye of more than one waterman and planter along the quay.

  And I to wait for such a one ‘til the sound of Doomsday? Agreements are kept so long only as both parties keep to measures.

  I know nothing more. I heard her fate like all the rest. The marks on her body once found, the sores of lust, the bite of serpents old as the earth.

  Mgts.: Enough.

  You know nothing more of what became of Mistress Coffin, upon your oath, Higgins?

  H: That is so, Your Honors.

  Be there much mystery here? Pride, Sirs. And Vanity. A woman’s curse, Devil’s tools, man’s humiliation, as we know. What temptings might not lead to what sorrows? What might not befall one so near the snares and pits?

  Wait, Sirs.

  Had you seen her you would agree Balthazar Coffin must be unwitted to let such a woman, a widow and his wife, stray so far to market. He had best think on his own suit in such light. Would not your own advice and wisdom steer him toward his own negligence?

  Ask those who know me—there are many. There is no evil done this woman, or any other, here!

  Mgts.: Neither the causes nor the wits of Mr. Coffin are the question at this moment.

  H: Indeed so, Sirs! But, with respect, he paints her a model Christian soul. So she may seem to him. Yet if in the sight of others that which one takes for truth is not upheld, then neither Truth nor Law stay sightless to let such accusations fall against me.

  Her nature was otherwise, Sirs. Ask after that.

  Mgts.: Cease this rant. You know nothing more of this woman’s disappearance and end?

  H: Only that there was some enchantment over her ripe and plucky beauty, Sirs. I make no mistake: something in her ways to disturb Christian men and women, truth be known.

  Mgts.: Your answer is no, Higgins? Nothing else? Is that so?

  H: Yes, Your Honors, my answer is I know nothing more.

  Mgts.: Then keep yourself available for further examination at the pleasure of the Court. You are scheduled for the September session in Mr. Coffin’s action.

  IV

  By early March, Richard Browne, wrapped against the cold, sat at a small table poring over court records, searching for any possible clarification of Mistress Coffin’s death. With his gloved hands he occasionally scribbled notes to himself. On still another piece of paper he listed document numbers and titles as he flipped through them, reading rapidly. On top of a separate small set of papers he had placed Higgins’ deposition.

  He sat alone in the cold room, his breath smoking before him. An elderly clerk had unlocked the door for him after Browne had completed a lengthy interview with Dr. Cotton. Cotton—a large, gouty, red-faced, magisterial person—was a fellow Cambridge man. Although he had in common with Browne, as it turned out, several academic acquaintances, his Cambridge years predated Browne’s. Cotton had attended Sidney College as a classmate of Cromwell.

  At the moment Browne was feeling discouraged. He was surprised at how lit
tle he had been able to discover here. There was nothing to explain more fully Coffin’s sudden retraction of his cause against Higgins. Nor was there anything to clarify Higgins’ reciprocal retraction of his counter action for slander against Coffin. Nor was any greater light, finally, shed upon the woman’s disappearance and death. Higgins was indeed implicated in nothing more than possible negligence and contractual failures. The examination and deposition of Coffin clarified further only certain relations between families in the town and certain features of the settlement’s governance.

  Only the examination of one Darby Shaw, a cohort of Higgins, intrigued Browne. He could not say just why he was so intrigued. But he placed Shaw’s deposition on top of those papers containing Higgins’ deposition and sat back. He was tired from picking his way through it all, not only the record of the Court but the waste books filled with preliminary records. He had passed through deeds, inventories of estates, contracts, attested copies, apprentices’ indentures, inquests, and writs. His mind wandered; his body grew slack with fatigue.

  There had been, of course, moments of entertainment. He had stumbled here through all the ancient passions and vanities, the comic oddities, the upstart rebellions and enduring desires given expression in the New World. Many had been presented for being disguised with drink. One dissident woman appeared again and again among the pages. She had threatened to tear one man’s flesh to pieces; she had displayed her contempt of the Court and magistrates. Browne had skimmed through charges and counter charges of abusing the watch or other persons as proud saucy boys, malapert boys, rascally and jackanapes boys. There were persons brought up for failure to train or attend meeting; for stealing and vandalizing cocks of hay; for making an uproar in the street (wives as well as husbands); for theft of apples, petticoats, and money; for “second drunks,” selling strong waters without a license, excessive drinking, vain mirth and singing with frequent oaths, lascivious songs and gestures; for suspicion of adultery; for sleeping in time of public ordinances and breach of Sabbath; for beating wives, husbands, or neighbors.