Stockings, garters, and a lace chemise or two dangled from a string Merinda had tied from over the top of the hearth to the French doors bordering our parlor. Our delicates and dainties were on display for everyone to see. A line of negligees. My best corset!
âMerinda, canât we send the washing out until Mrs. Malone gets back?â With our clientâs arrival imminent, I whisked the underthings from the line and into a basket crooked in my arm.
I wasnât fast enough. The bell rang, and I opened the door to greet a well-dressed lady adorned in a dark blue day suit and a feathered hat. She raised an eyebrow at the basket of lingerie. I blushed, hurrying to the kitchen to make tea while Merinda greeted our client and showed her into the sitting room.
I was still assembling the plate of biscuits when I heard an emphatic âNo!â Quickly gathering up the tea service, I returned to the sitting room and began pouring out three cups.
âNo?â The woman recoiled at Merindaâs vehement denial. âBut I can pay! Iâm told that most of the work you do for immigrant women is done out of the goodness of your hearts: I am a paying client.â The well-dressed lady settled on our doily-ornamented settee, gingerly sipping the hot black tea I supplied her.
âYes, you can pay.â Merinda sounded bored. âBut my mind cannot handle your case.â
I smirked: âToo complex, Merinda?â
âItâs a cat, Jem,â she hissed at me.
âNot just any cat,â the woman said. âPepper!â
Merinda made a sound I cannot emulate in prose. She stretched her legs and narrowed her eyes. âNo. No cats! I donât even like cats!â
âMs. Herringford, please. Please. My husband is Clinton Walters. I will pay you whatever you wish.â
I took in a hiss of air. Clinton Walters was a shipping magnateâone of Torontoâs most prosperous citizens. But Merinda seemed unimpressed by the name. âYouâll pay for a mangy cat?â
âMerinda.â I leaned forward in the armchair opposite the hearth and spoke carefully. âWe could use the money.â I opened my blue eyes wide and bored them into her, willing her to understand what I hesitated to say aloud: Our accounts were close to empty.
âOh, cracker jacks. Very well! Weâll find your wretched cat!â
âBrava!â Mrs. Walters clapped her gloved hands and reached into her pocketbook. âConsider this an advance for your services, Ms. Herringford.â She unscrewed the cap from a heavy pen and wrote out a check for a generous sum, finishing with a bold flourish on her signature.
Merinda, mumbling something about needles in haystacks, wasnât paying attention to the check held out to her. I rose instead and accepted it politely.
âThank you, Mrs. Walters,â said Merinda. âIâll let you know when we find Peepers.â
âPepper,â I said quickly.
âI am much obliged to you. Here.â Mrs. Walters lifted a locket on a long chain from underneath her high collar and opened its delicate clasp. Inside was a portrait of an ebony cat with one ear. âThis will help you recognize Pepper.â
Merinda didnât even turn as Mrs. Walters rose and I walked her to the door, ducking under our laundry line. âJem, take her particulars!â Merinda bellowed.
âIs she always like this?â asked Mrs. Walters in a low tone.
âYouâre lucky to find her in such a pleasant mood,â I said.
I returned to the sitting room, waving the check. âThis is quite a tidy sum, Merinda. And how hard can it be to find a cat?â
Merinda had rather brilliant cat eyes herself, and they were eyeingme skeptically. âJem, this is a big city. Lots of black cats. We ought to just find the first one that crosses our path and present him to Mrs. Walters.â
âBut she is awfully attached to him. He is her best
Esther Friesner, Lawrence Watt-Evans