THE MIRROR: PART 3, CHAPTER 9: 1884

I watched Carrie change in the weeks after her affair.  She became quieter and more reserved, even to me.  She used to confide in me, but she got to the point where she would just stare into my glass with an empty sadness.

She also tried to flirt with her husband more, but he had grown colder and more aloof.  He hadn’t wanted to be with her in several months.

Then one day, she walked into the room and set a leather-bound book on my vanity.  She walked back out of the room, but quickly came back with an ink well and pen.  She sat down in front of me and slowly opened the book.  To my surprise, it was blank!  What new kind of human weirdness was this?  Had they learned to read without words?

Carrie took a deep breath, dipped her pen into the ink well, then methodically wrote the words: “I’m pregnant.”

I did the mental math for myself and came to a horrible realization.

I watched as she continued to write:

“I’m pregnant and there’s no way the baby’s Jacob’s.  I’m terrified that he will find out – even as I write these words, I’m terrified he will find them.  He can be so angry, so violent, when someone goes against his ways, and this is far worse than disagreeing on opinion.  I knew this was wrong, and I did it anyway.

“Jacob will not lay with me,” she continued, “so I am unsure of how to make him think the baby is his.  I do not want to start a life of lies to cover my transgression, but I fear I must do something to protect the baby inside of me.

“Oh how I wish I had never gone to see Abraham!  I did not even know him as well as I thought.  And now I must carry the guilt of my actions, and continue to transgress into lies and deceit to try to hide them. 

“I now understand David’s lament in Psalm 51: ‘Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy lovingkindness: according unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions.’

“My heart does cry out to the Lord!  Forgive me!  Protect me and the child I am bearing in sin!”

Carrie’s head jerked up quickly.  She looked toward the closed door, then opened a drawer and slid the book without words inside.  There was a sheet of paper on the vanity, and she began to write: “Dearest Mother…”

Jacob came into the bedroom.  “What are you doing in here?”

“I am composing a letter to Mother,” Carrie said, looking up at him.

Jacob peered over her shoulder.  “It has taken you some time to write, ‘Dearest Mother.’”

Carried sighed.  I could not tell if it was a guilty sigh or performed as an act.  “Yes, I have spent much time trying to figure out what to say. Not much has changed with us.  It is time to plow, but they know that.  I feel like it is my daughterly duty to write, but I am unsure of what to say!”

“Hm.”  Jacob looked rather dubious.  “Well, one of the servants had a question about dinner for you.  Go and assist her, then maybe you can find some intelligence to write a decent letter to your mother.”

“Yes, Sir,” she said, quickly standing and walking out of the room. 

Jacob looked at the top of the vanity.  He seemed to be thinking.  I wondered if he was going to start looking through the drawers, but instead he turned and followed his wife out of the room.

Carrie returned about half an hour later and finished writing both the letter to her mother and in the blank book.  The letter she placed in an envelope, the book she placed back in the drawer.

Carrie began to write in the book regularly.  She never let Jacob see it, and he never had reason to look for it.

To Carrie’s strained relief, Jacob did lie with her a few weeks later, and she did not begin to show for a several more months.  To the outside world, everything seemed normal.  Inside Carrie’s mind and journal, however, there was a strong tempest that raged with guilt, fear, and sadness. 

Dark emotions flowed out of Carrie through both her tears and her pen.  Jacob blamed it on the pregnancy.  How little did he knew how both very right and very wrong he was!

During her pregnancy, Jacob treated his wife with much more love and tenderness than he had ever showed her before.  I had hope for them, and even Carrie began to let her guard down and smile around him again.  It was so good to see her smile.

At night, Jacob would talk about all the things he would do with his son.  The things he would teach him.  The plantation and legacy he would leave.  The wealth he hoped to leave.  Their son would have everything.

Carrie asked what he would do if the baby was a girl.

“It will be a boy,” Jacob said, with a smile and a certain arrogance.

Then in late summer, the baby was born.  Everyone thought the baby was coming too early, and pretended to be concerned. She and I both knew better.

The room was full of hustle and bustle, women running in and out, carrying hot water for the pregnancy, cold water for the mother’s head.  There was the usual screaming that accompanied the birth of a child – mostly from the mother and then, the baby.

The room grew hushed.  Carrie began to cry.  The women assisting her continued to tend to her and the baby, but concerned looks were passed between themselves as they went.  I was afraid something was wrong with the baby, but everything I could see and hear seemed the same as previous pregnancies I had seen.

Then a blanket slipped and I saw the reason for the concern.

It was a girl.

THE MIRROR: PART 3, CHAPTER 8 (1881 – 1883)

Carrie was wed and I was once again loaded into a wagon and hauled away.  I didn’t get to see the wedding, or even the bride beforehand.  And I had never laid eyes (or rather, glass) on the groom.

I was loaded into the wagon even more roughly than before, but the drive wasn’t as long as the last one.  Since they didn’t even take the care to cover me with a blanket to prevent scratches, I was able to see the trees, fields, and streams as we drove by.  It really was beautiful scenery, which gave me something peaceful to focus on as I was scarred from other furniture. 

There were so many men helping load the wagon, I couldn’t tell who Carrie’s groom was until we arrived at their home.  He was tall and had an angular face, but his stony expression made me think more of a chunk of rock than a human.  His eyes were dark and his mouth formed a tight line.

Men came and helped unload the wagon.  Compared to Carrie’s new husband, they were walking skeletons.  And where the husband’s eyes were sharp, their eyes seemed empty.  A few seemed to have anger simmering under the surface.  Since they had darker skin, I assumed they had been former slaves, but if that was the case, why weren’t they better fed now, like their employer?  I assumed that if he was well fed, those working under him would be, too.   

The first night with Carrie in her new room was not a pleasant one.  She started talking sweet to her new husband, and he forced herself on her.  Oh how I wish I had eyes to close!  She wasn’t hurt physically, but judging from the tears that fell in torrents from her eyes after he left the room, she had still felt pain. 

Future nights were better, but there was still no romance in the room.  Nor was there fighting, like with Zechariah and Sarah.  There was just a quiet, empty sort of being.  They performed the duty of husband and wife like machines. 

Carrie’s tears became less frequent over time until they dried altogether.  She started spending her husband’s money – his name I finally learned was Jacob – on fancy clothes and fashions.

One day, she sat in front of me after having put on a new silk dress with a sash across the front.  She brushed her hair, staring, but not seeing, anything in my glass.

“He said he loves me.  That we can see each other without Jacob knowing.  I know it’s wrong, but isn’t it also wrong to live in a loveless marriage? Isn’t the way Jacob treats me, so cold and uncaring, wrong?”

She paused, then continued.  “He never claimed to love me.  He said we would look well together, but I truly through I could make him love me.  Or at least treat me like he loved me.  I thought he would at least care.  I thought we would have fun times.

“I guess I’m glad he thinks I’m beautiful.  He wanted me to hang on his arm like a golden thread.  Only I can complete his look, to help him rise among other plantation owners.  It’s my job and duty to make Jacob look good.”

Carrie lapsed into silence and began to braid her hair.

Then she continued: “But how could I get away to Abraham?”  (At this I wondered who Abraham was.)  “Jacob can be so controlling, so demanding.  He needs to be in order to keep the plantation running with the insubordinate staff” – she said the word ‘staff’ with a bit of distain, like she didn’t see them as people to assist her but as underlings to serve her – “but I still wish he could show me a little tenderness.”

Carried tied off the braid, then began to twist it around her head.

“I could tell him that I’m going to visit my parents for a few days.  Surely he wouldn’t say no to that.”

I didn’t hear the discussion between Carrie and Jacob, but the next morning, Carrie was throwing clothes into a suitcase with urgent, jerky motions.  The clothes packed were not packed neatly, but quickly and haphazardly.  They were also not clothes appropriate for a visit to see family.

Only I knew where Carrie was really going, and I couldn’t do a thing to stop her.