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Barbara Hambly - Patriot Hearts: A Novel of the Founding Mothers

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Patriot Hearts: A Novel of the Founding Mothers: summary, description and annotation

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When Martha Dandridge Custis marries her second husband, George, she never suspects that the soft-spoken Virginia planter is destined to command the founding of a nationor that she is to be Lady Washington, the woman at the first Presidents side. Only a select inner circle of women will know the cost of sharing a beloved man with history . . . and each will draw strength from the unique treasure given to them by a doomed queen. Seeing farm and family through each harsh New England season, Abigail Adams is sustained only by the fervent reunions stolen between Johns journeys abroad. She will face the terror of an ocean crossing to join her husband in Franceand write her own page in history. And there she will cross paths with kings, commonersand young Sally Hemings. Just as Sally had grown from a clever child to a beautiful woman, so had her relationship with Thomas Jefferson grown from a friendship between slave and master to one entangled in the complexities of black and white, decorum and desire. It is a relationship that will leave Sally to face an agonizingly wrenching choice. Dolley Madison, too, must live with the repercussions of a forbidden love affairalthough she will confront even greater trials as a Presidents wife. But Dolley will become one of the best-loved ladies of the White Houseand leave an extraordinary legacy of her own. A lushly written novel that traces the marriages tested by the demands of love and loyalty, offers readers a dazzling glimpse behind the scenes of a revolution, from adversity and treachery to teatime strategies, as four magnificent women shape a nations future.

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For my parents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Far too many people contributed to the final - photo 1

For my parents

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Far too many people contributed to the final version of this book for all of them to be listed here, but I would like to express my appreciation of the staffs at Mount Vernon, Monticello, Montpelier, Philadelphias Congress Hall, and Colonial Williamsburg for the way in which they have brought the past to life. Special thanks go to Buzz Harris and the staff of the Arisia Science Fiction Convention in Boston, for getting me into the Adams houses in the middle of winter and for taking me out to Old Sturbridge Village. Thanks also to Nancy Smith with the National Park Service at the two Adams houses in Quincy, Massachusetts.

Thank you to my dear friends Laurie, Hazel, Ev, and Nina for putting up with me on the Colonial Death-March through Virginia doing research: I could not have done it without you.

And as always, thanks to my agent Fran Collin; to my editor Kate Miciak; to Kathleen Baldonado for her untiring devotion to detail in preparing the manuscript; and to Nita Taublib, for the original idea of this novel.

AUTHORS NOTE

Patriot Hearts is a work of fiction. It is notand cannot bea history of the United States in the Revolutionary and Federalist periods; it cannot even be a comprehensive fictionalized biography of any of the four women about whom it is written. There are acres of territory I would have loved to cover, had my intent been simply to write the accounts of four womens lives (and to end up with about half a million words at the lowest reasonable estimate).

I would have loved to go on at greater length about the scandal that rocked the Washington Administration in the aftermath of the Whiskey Rebellion, about the circuslike atmosphere of Congress in the 1790s, about the skullduggery surrounding the treaty that ended the Revolution. I would have loved to include Abigail Adamss reaction to Ben Franklins Parisian girlfriend, the details concerning Martha Washingtons illegitimate half-caste East Indian stepgrandchildren, and the more Gothic ramifications of the eccentric family into which Jeffersons daughter Patsy married.

But all of these things, I found, wandered from the focus of the story.

Patriot Hearts is a book about the relationships of four womenMartha Washington, Abigail Adams, Sally Hemings, and Dolley Madisonwith their families, with their men, with the societies they lived in, with the choices their men madeand with one another. They were four women who lived in astonishing times, and they were called upon, as women usually are, to perform the age-old juggling-act of caring for their children while following their hearts, insofar as they were permitted to do so by the world in which they lived.

My children give me more pain than all my enemies.

JOHN ADAMS

Picture 21814Picture 3

DOLLEY

Picture 4

Washington City

Wednesday, August 24, 1814

9:00 A.M.

Crowds started to gather outside the Presidents House not long after breakfast.

Tis a good sign, remarked Dolley Madison, setting down her coffee-cup with a hand she hoped wasnt visibly shaking.

When they were girls together in Hanover County, Virginia, Dolley had always striven to live up to her friend Sophia Sparlings elegance, and Sophie, she observed now, almost forty years later, awaited news of the invasion with perfect calm.

Because she hath less to lose?

Or for some other reason entirely?

It was true that Sophie was only a dressmaker these days, and Dolley the wife of the Presidentthe man whom the British commander had sworn to bring back to London in chains.

Jemmy Madison had ridden out in the black predawn cool, to join the militia camped by the Navy Yard. Since first light, Dolley had been at the window with her spyglass, watching the road from the Chesapeake shore.

Sophie half-turned from the parlor window, raised an eyebrow. Even in the thick summer heat she wore her usual widows black. Theyre waiting to see if youll flee. Taking bets, I shouldnt wonder.

Excellent. Dolley touched the coffee-pots gay green-and-cream cheek with expert fingers, poured another half-cup for her friend while the brew was still warm. In spite of the grinding millstone of anxiety behind her breastbone, she made her voice light. If enough people remain in the town to loiter about watching what I shall do, the British cant be all that near. When they flee She nodded toward the windows, through which, beyond the ragged lawn and groves of half-grown poplar trees, could be seen the southern wall of the grounds topped with a frieze of boys and young men, I shall know to worry.

A gunshot cracked the morning air and Dolleys hand jerked, giving the lie to her calm. The coffee-pots foot caught the handle of her cup and sent the smaller vessel and its saucer somersaulting to the floor. In her cage beside the open window, Polly spread her gaudy wings and screamed appreciatively, Merde alors!

The hall door flew open and Paul came in, fifteen, slender, and very grave in his new duties as valet. Its all right, maam, he said quickly, hurrying to the table as if it were a point of honor to clean up the mess before his mistress could stir from her chair. Some of those white gentlemen outside the house got guns, and more than one been drinkin by the sound of it. Thats all it is.

He whipped the folded towel from its place on his shoulder and wiped the spilled coffee from the woven straw mat that was the parlors summer flooring. If it was the British, youd be hearin more than one shot, thats for sure. I get you a clean cup, maam.

Dont trouble thyself, dear, said Dolley. Mrs. Hallam and I are quite finished here, are we not, Sophie?

As she gathered the newspapers shed been perusing when Freeman the butler had announced Sophie, her eye touched again the printed columns: We feel assured that the number and bravery of our men will afford complete protection to the cityIt is highly improbable that the enemywould advance nearer to the capital

Will you flee? Sophie asked abruptly.

Dolley turned to face her. Grilling sunlight already made the yellow parlor uncomfortably hot, and her light muslin gownfashionably Greek and mercifully appropriate for Washington Citys swampy summer climatestuck to her thighs. The parlor windows, open to catch the slightest whisper of breeze, admitted no sound but the occasional uneasy mutter of voices beyond the trees and the wall.

Further than that, silence lay on the Federal Citys marshy acres of woods and cow-pastures like fevered sleep.

No, she answered quietly. No, I am staying.

To meet Admiral Cockburn? Im sure hell be flattered. Fifteen months ago, Cockburns marines had sacked and burned the Maryland port of Havre de Grace. In addition to parading James Madison through the streets of London as a trophy, the Admiral had announced his intention to bring Dolley Madisonthe Presidentress, they called her, and foremost hostess of the upstart Republicto walk in fetters at her husbands side.

When Jemmy had come back late last night from a day in the saddle at the militia camp, hed been so exhausted he could barely speak: A forced journey even under the mildest of conditions would surely kill him.

And she knew, from her own experience and that of a dozen of her acquaintance, how swiftly situations could deteriorate to violence, among armed men savage with victory.

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