Sorry if this has been discussed before, I had no idea how to "search" for it since about 2000 answers probably would have popped up!
Anyway...according to Bridget's testimony, everything was just fine at the Borden residence. She was paid reasonably well, not mis-treated, had plenty of time off (compared to lots of other young Irish maids), and she swore that all was bliss--or nearly so--in the Borden home.
So why did she ask repeatedly to leave?

Maybe I'm being dense, but if her testimony was true, she had it pretty good. Yet I've read that more than once she asked permission to be "let go". The only thing that kept her there, apparently, was Abby, who would say she was lonely and begged Bridget to stay. Which I find odd in itself. I imagine poor Abby
was often lonely, and Bridget seems to have been a kind-hearted young woman (which is allegedly why she agreed to stay)--but how many maids and ladies of the house acted more like dear friends than employer/employee in that day and age?
So why was Bridget so eager to leave an apparently decent job? Why did Mrs. Borden plead for her to stay? And exactly why did Bridget always defer to Abby despite her obvious desire to get out of that house???
