My name is Anna. I am the apothecary’s sister. I normally help my brother, Andrew, around the shop, mixing herbs and cleaning up after his messes. When he has to leave to treat a patient, I tend to the shop with my sister in law, Ingrid, and watch over the apprentice, if he isn’t doing as well.
My brother and I came from England with some others a while back, back to about 1620. We now live with just enough to live comfortably, but I fear that somewhere in the future we will run out of money. Andrew doesn’t think the same, but he isn’t the brightest when it comes to money. He’s a good apothecary, sure, but I think that the women in this town could be a little bit more kind and caring if given the chance.
Each day I must take the money that my brother earns from trade and healing and hide it away in his tiny little cottage, for I fear that he will spend it, unknowingly, on spices that he will never use or tobacco. We aren’t poor, but we also aren’t considered rich. Our stuffy little shop brings in more customers in the winter, for it stays so warm with scents of dust and dried herbs. I used to cough and sneeze when it reached my nostrils, but now I don’t notice it. Though I do love it here in the new world, I wish that I was at home, where our rags were traded for riches and we could be with my parents.
Henry, my husband, is the shoemaker. Our tiny little house has close to no room at all, but at least his and Ingrid’s children aren’t screaming and running around everywhere anymore. When I walk into our shop, it feels as if it is somehow snowing inside because of the herbs drying overhead. My brother doesn’t see it though; my brother who has no imagination. He does everything that he needs to but no more, always walking around in his blood-stained coat because it “shows his experience.” If I get sick at the sight of it, wouldn’t everyone else? I just don’t see why anyone would want that on their coats. Thomas, the surgeon, agrees with me and hates the awful sickly-sweet smell.
My own husband, Henry Michalson, is the shoemaker in our small town. He is very kind, but I didn’t know him until we married. Our parents set us up with letters, and soon we were sending some of our own. At least I got lucky with someone who treats me nicely. My friend, Alice, wasn’t as lucky, and she ended up marrying an awful, drunken hag. She now has to live with him for the rest of her life. He is the blacksmith, so he isn’t at home most of the time, but Alice still comes over to the house that Henry and I share. It isn’t nearly as small as my brother’s cottage, but it also isn’t as big as some of the gentry class’s houses. Those things are huge, with too much room for living. While I work in a long, black skirt and an apron, these people are wearing big, poofy ballgowns just go outside! Some people are just too rich.
My daily schedule consists of waking up early, eating breakfast, and going to the shop to get ready for the day. Some time after that my brother Andrew comes around with his eyes half shut, continuously splashing cold water on his face from the well out back. The apprentice comes at about the same time as him, always apologizing because he was so late. He says it won’t ever happen again, but then the next day the cycle repeats. My sister in law comes at about the same time that I do.
I guess waking up early is just something that women can do better. This is about the time that all of the shops start opening up. There’s the millner and shoemaker’s shops next to me, and Thomas’ surgery shop across the street. We all know each other very well by now after doing this for about 5 years.
Every day someone comes in, asking for a cure for a cough, and we pound up some licorice in our stone mortar and pestle. This continues throughout the day, but with different things. Sometimes someone is looking for a cure for a rash, or a sore throat. We once again mash up the remedy in our mortar and pestle, and give it to them in small mason jars.
Every once in awhile, someone comes running in, begging for help. We ask them to calm down and catch their breath, and eventually they can tell us the problem. Normally someone has broken a bone, or is on the verge of death from a sickness that they thought they could handle by themselves. Sometimes we even get a need for a midwife, because the midwife and surgeon are both busy. We have been trained for this moment when we were apprentices, back in England.
Some people have the soul to walk into our shop and walk straight out because it is run by mostly women. Ingrid and I just look at each other and shrug, because we know that we are better at healing than they will ever be. It does make me mad sometimes, that people have the nerve to do that, but I know that I have asked for that position. Ever since I was little I have been in love with the idea of doing something to benefit people. I always thought that because most of our population lives to about 25 or 30 years old, I could at least try to take that number to 35. I am 27, Ingrid is 28, and Andrew is 28 as well. This means that our lives are nearly over, but at least we all know how to heal most of the sicknesses out there.
I even heard a rumor back in England that someone in Germany said that there was this thing called “germs” that made you get sick. I think that I might even believe that, and so did Ingrid. We are too afraid to talk to Andrew because he will think that we are challenging his way of thought. Sometimes I just wish that women had the same respect as men, but I know that I will get punnished for thinking that. Ingrid, Alice and I talk this over sometimes after work, when Andrew and Henry are still cleaning up the shop. We have agreed that we will try to be better than every man out there, so that they can’t ignore us. Don’t get me wrong, I love my life here in the new world, but I wish that we would be treated better as people.