Part 1: London Mary Saunders is a highly intelligent girl living in poverty in 1760 London. She is repelled when her mother Susan encourages her to become a seamstress, wanting nothing to do with the "wretched trades". She feels that she deserves better, and envies the hair ribbons and brightly coloured gowns of a prostitute she often sees. She agrees to kiss an old peddler for a scarlet ribbon, but is instead raped and later finds that the ribbon she was given is brown. When the resultant pregnancy becomes evident, Mary's family disown her and she is beaten and raped by a group of soldiers. She is later awakened by Doll, the prostitute she admires. Although Doll says that it is "every girl for herself", she shelters and cares for Mary. Doll helps Mary with her appearance and teaches her how to attract customers so that she can pay for an abortion. After Mary recovers, Doll keeps Mary safe while she learns the trade, with much of their time at leisure: drinking, attending the theatre, strolling through parks, and visiting friends. After a year together, Mary notices a decline in Doll, who has dark moods, little appetite, and drinks beyond excess. Although Doll often said "a girl's clothes are her fortune" and should never be sold, she begins pawning her clothing and often has trouble paying the rent. Mary finds their roles reversed as she often watches out for Doll and goes as far as to buy back her clothes. Mary becomes sick as a harsh winter approaches, and Doll convinces her to go to the
Magdalen Hospital for penitents. Two months later, Mary is upset by a sermon about the choices women make, feeling that she has lacked any choice in her personal life. She leaves the hospital and finds Doll frozen to death in an alleyway with a bottle of gin. Mary finishes the last of the gin and takes a red ribbon from Doll's hair before covering her with a blanket. In their room, Mary finds Doll's clothing hidden under the floorboards, and is grieved to think that Doll died rather than sell them. The landlady says that Doll owed money and demands the clothes, but Mary fights with her and flees from the resident pimp. In fear for her life, Mary buys a modest dress and boards a
coach for her mother's hometown of
Monmouth, Wales. Lacking sufficient funds for the entire fare, Mary plays the part of a scared girl and maneuvers Joe Cadwaladyr into sleeping with her. He pays her out of guilt, and Mary borrows his writing things to forge a deathbed letter from Susan, asking for her mother's childhood friend Jane Jones to watch over Mary.
Part 2: Monmouth Jane Jones and her husband Thomas feel compassion for Mary and take her in as a dressmaker's apprentice to Jane. Mary is adored by their young daughter Hetta, and is tempted to become a normal girl with a normal family. She considers marrying Daffy, Mr. Jones's apprentice and master of all work in the house. However, after sleeping with him in a field, she breaks their engagement because he has no higher aspirations and because she cannot provide him with children, as she was left barren following her abortion. Joe Cadwaladyr operates a local tavern and offers to pimp for Mary. She accepts this after a time, realizing that she wishes to return to London and that prostitution is the quickest way to raise the required funds. She is able to maintain anonymity by prostituting under the name Sukie, but Mr. Jones happens to see her waiting on a customer and, in a panic, she entices him with sex. Mary is later reluctantly whipped by Mrs. Jones for laughing at a customer, though Mary suspects it was ordered by Mr. Jones for tempting him. While Mrs. Jones cares for Mary's injuries, she comes across Mary's money and confiscates it. Their relationship worsens, though Mrs. Jones cares for Mary when she subsequently falls ill. Mary asks for her money back but learns that it was donated to the church. Mary snaps and smashes open the family safe with a kitchen cleaver, taking the money which is less than what she'd lost. She drinks from a bottle of wine and changes into one of the dresses she had made. When Mrs. Jones confronts her, Mary confesses: to being a prostitute, that her mother is alive and hates her, and that she slept with Mr. Jones. Mrs. Jones orders Mary to take the dress off and get out, and tries ripping the dress off when Mary fails to comply. Mary then takes the cleaver and lodges it in Mrs. Jones's neck. Mary tries running but is caught and held in
Monmouth Gaol for three months before being hanged. == Characters ==