Authors: Beverly Swerling
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #General, #Fiction, #Historical
“Yes, of course.” She stood and gathered her embroidery hoop and the little spools of many colored cottons that had been spread in her lap. “I’ll send Runsabout, and Jeremiah to help her.” Jeremiah was the stable master. He had long experience of rubbing unguent into sore limbs.
“Don’t say anything to Quent. Not yet,” Ephraim repeated. He wanted to add that whatever was going to be between his younger son and the small but he thought very independent women who had stumbled into their lives, it should develop naturally, with no false pressure put on by notions of inheritance. He hadn’t the strength to explain. “Not yet,” he repeated.
“As you wish, Ephraim. You have my word on it.” Lorene glanced out the window once more as she left the room. The wagon was gone. Quent and Nicole were on their way to the sawmill to see Solomon the Barrel Maker. As she’d promised. It had been her suggestion that Nicole go along—she’d given her some things for the newborn to take to Matilda—but it was obvious that Quent would have invited the girl even without his mother’s manipulations. Lorene thought of the long journey to the sawmill and back. Just the pair of them. She smiled.
If he’d taken a horse, Quent could have covered the distance in an hour; with a wagon it took two. His original excuse had been that he was taking some kegs of ale to the Davidsons, their quarterly supply according to the tenancy terms.
Might as well come along,
he’d planned to say to her.
Since I’m taking the wagon.
She rode, he knew. They’d talked about it once. But Lorene never had, and Jeremiah had informed them there were no sidesaddles in the Shadowbrook stables. “Pohantis and Mistress Shoshanaya, they be the only womans ever rode a horse on this place, Master Quent.”
Both Pohantis and Shoshanaya had ridden bareback and astride, like all squaws. Next time he was in Albany, Quent promised himself, he’d order a sidesaddle made for Nicole. Should have thought of it this last visit, except he’d been too fixed on Corm’s story and finding out what he could. Less than nothing, as it turned out.
“What are you thinking?” Nicole asked.
“Nothing much.”
“But we have been traveling for some time and you haven’t said a word.”
He glanced around and realized they were almost at the sugarhouse. “Sorry. Lost in my thoughts, I guess.” He had no intention of mentioning Cormac to
Nicole. Even after what she’d told him, he couldn’t bear to remember the two of them together. “We could stop at the sugarhouse. It’s on the way. If we do, we can bring some jugs of rum to the Davidsons. Maybe one for Solomon while we’re at it.”
“Are the slaves permitted rum in this place?”
“Far as I’m concerned, the slaves can do as they like, long as the work’s done.”
“Your brother doesn’t seem to share that opinion.”
“My brother is a fool, and cruel with it.” He pulled gently on the reins and the horse obediently made the turn onto the spur road that led to the sugarhouse.
“I’ve three pies here.” Nicole looked into the basket that had been packed for her by Kitchen Hannah. “We could give one to Mistress Frankel if you’ve a mind.”
“Women’s business,” he said. “Do as you think best.”
“One for Sarah Frankel, then,” she said, lifting out the top pie. “From your maman.”
It was just the sort of thing his mother would have done. And like her, Nicole did it instinctively.
The sugarhouse was idle. “All the sugar from last year’s used up,” Moses Frankel told him.
“More soon,” Quent said. He nodded toward the gristmill down the hill, idle too. “Everything ready?”
“Ready as ever it can be.”
Frankel was the miller, as well as in charge of the distilling. When the wheat harvest started coming in he would open the dams that allowed the race that powered the gristmill to fill and roar down the sluices. The great wheel would turn and set the huge stones to grinding, and the wheat would become flour to fill the bellies of the poor black bastards who were enslaved to the cane. Maybe not fill their bellies, exactly. Ward off starvation, more like. All the same, the Carribean plantations required every bushel of flour Shadowbrook could produce above what they needed for themselves. Last time Quent heard the count there were better than sixty thousand African slaves in the Leewards alone. And that didn’t include Jamaica or Barbados.
The boats that ran the trade, were each owned by a consortium of merchants dependent on the captain to make them a profit by finding the best deals. They were even now headed for Albany. He’d heard talk of little else when he was in the town. The two-masted brigs would arrive and cast anchor in the deep middle of the river, riding low, heavy with sugar. Smaller craft—a couple of sleek sloops spreading yards of canvas, and countless little boats propelled by a determined tar and a single sail run up a sturdy pole—would leave their moorings at the town wharves and hurry to take aboard the rich, dark product of the cane, the single greatest cash crop the world had ever seen. Much would go to the sugarhouses
where rum was made to supply the grog shops and taverns of Albany. Still more would head downriver to settlements at the Manor of Livingston, the Great Hardenburgh Patent, and the Patent of the Nine Partners. A goodly share would come upriver to Shadowbrook, and the boats that brought it would ferry the produce of the Hale Patent back to the brigs. There was no better flour to be had anywhere in the valley. The big ships would remain moored in Albany—square sails furled, most of the crew riotously ashore, filling the town’s coffers—until the Hale harvest ended and they’d laded all they could carry.
The harvest was almost upon them. At Shadowbrook they would begin bringing in the wheat in a couple of weeks’ time. They were already making hay. And Quent had seen small farmers closer to the town gathering corn and potherbs in plenty. “Looks to be a good year.”
“God willing,” Frankel added piously. Then for good measure spat to the north, into the devil’s face, as the old saying had it.
The women were coming out of the house, heading for where the men stood by the wagon. They sounded like a flock of small birds. Ellie Bleecker kissed Nicole farewell, and Sarah shook her hand warmly. Even Deliciousness May beamed at her.
“The Frankels like you,” he said when they were once more on the way to the sawmill.
“I like them. I was sorry not to see the little ones again. Lilac and Willie.”
“Where were they?”
“Helping with the haying, according to Deliciousness May. Seems they’re gone until late at night.”
He heard the distress in her tone. “It’s not always like that. There’s much of pleasure for young folks on the Patent.”
“You think it a good place for children, then?”
He glanced at her. There seemed to be no special meaning behind her words. “It can be.” When the harvest began in earnest Lilac and Sugar Willie would work twenty-two hours out of twenty-four for weeks on end. To be fair, Ellie’s children would work almost as hard, but in the winter when there was less to be done they’d be sent to the big house to learn to read and write. Anyone who tried to teach those skills to Runsabout’s twins would suffer mightily. Particularly if John had anything to say about it. Quent had always been fairly certain it was his brother who had fathered those babes on Runsabout, but that didn’t change his brother’s feelings toward the youngest slaves.
“The slaves, what is to prevent there being a small wage paid them?” Nicole did not realize she was going to ask until the question was out of her mouth.
“Far as I can see, only money.” Quent’s tone gave away nothing of the fact that lately he had been thinking on that same equation. Could the Patent be made to
show a profit and at the same time pay the slaves something for their efforts? So they wouldn’t, strictly speaking, be slaves.
The workman is worthy of his hire,
said the Rhode Island Quaker he’d met at Do Good all those years ago.
“We are almost there, are we not?” Nicole’s voice interrupted his reverie. “That little path between the two rowans, I remember it from last week when I came with Madame Hale.”
“Rowans,” Quent said, repeating the name she’d used. “In these parts we call them mountain ash.” The two small trees were heavy with bright orange berries. Shoshanaya had said they were talking trees, because when the berries were thick on the branch the way they were now, you knew it would be a hard winter, with much snow. “Did my mother take you down that path?”
“No. We drove right past it.” Nicole noted something odd about the set of his jaw, a kind of hardness that she did not remember seeing before.
Quent reined in the horse and stopped the wagon. “I want to show you something, but we’ll have to go by foot. Path’s not wide enough for the wagon.”
“Very well.” Nicole reached into her pocket and brought out the white moccasins. “I have these. May I take the time to put them on?”
“Good idea,” he said, and turned away while she unlaced her boots. When he turned back, she had on Pohantis’s moccasins and was holding out her arms for him to lift her down.
Nicole felt his hands on her waist as he swung her to the earth and begged forgiveness of the Virgin. She could easily have jumped to the ground.
“This way,” Quent said.
And once more she was following him into the woods.
NICOLE ESTIMATED THEY
had walked for half a league, most of it uphill, before he stopped. The sun had disappeared and the sky was grayed over with heavy clouds, but still there was no breath of air and she was glad of the opportunity to catch her breath. She looked around, eager to see what it was he’d brought her to see. All around were tall oaks and elms, their thick black trunks interrupted here and there by the white of birch and the dark green of pine. Where trees had been felled, perhaps by the fierce rainstorms that had so astonished her in this New World, or by men needing them for the sawmill, saplings grew. Neither the small woodlots of France nor the neat fields and broad hedgerows of England had prepared her for this unspoiled land. “It is very beautiful. And so peaceful.” She looked at the weapon slung over his shoulder. “Why did you bring your gun?”
He paused, turned back to her. “I don’t know,” he said after a few moments, with that half smile that was her favorite of all his expressions. “Just habit.”
A habit of guns. She need only close her eyes to see the burning and the blood that day in the Ohio Country, and before that … No, she mustn’t. She had promised herself she would not. Nicole opened her eyes. She trembled, only a little and only for a moment, but he saw.
“What’s wrong?”
She shook her head. “Nothing.”
He wanted to put his arms around her, to promise her that she had nothing to fear, that he would always protect her, but he couldn’t. Once before he’d made such a promise when a woman feared his world because it was different from hers and had been unable to keep it. “Say my name.” He bit out the words. “Say it.”
“What … I don’t—”
“You promised you’d say my name.”
“Quent.”
He exhaled loudly, the demons banished by the sound of her voice. “Thank you.” He put out his hand. “Come, it’s only a short distance farther on.”
Nicole kept hold of his hand and let him draw her deeper into the forest. They’d gone only a short distance when she heard the sound of rushing water. “You’re taking me to see a falls.”
“The falls are part of what I want to show you.”
For a time they said nothing more, but the sound of the falls grew louder. They climbed a steep rise and suddenly, without warning, they were in a small clearing the shape of a half moon surrounded by a birchwood. There was a rushing stream, and a few willows grew close by the water. In the places where the shade was deepest, the ground was covered with dark green moss. A path of flat stones meandered through the trees and disappeared. She could hear the laughing falls, but not see them. “It is magic,” she whispered. “An enchanted kingdom.”
“I made this clearing. I brought Shoshanaya here after we were married.” He tugged her toward the stepping stones.
“Did you make this path as well?”
“No, Shoshanaya did that She …” He paused, and put up his free hand to signal silence. They waited a few moments, then he shrugged and moved forward again.
“What did you think you heard?”
“The wings of Shoshanaya’s eagle. Handsomest bird you’ve ever seen, with a beak that could rip out a man’s throat. She tamed him back on the Ottawa lands when she was a little girl. Taught him to eat out of her hand. When I brought her here, the bird followed. He used to come every few days and sit on her outstretched arm and she’d feed him parched corn, then he’d rub the top of his head against her cheek before he flew away.”
“And now?”
“I don’t know. After she … After we buried her the bird stopped coming. I hung around a whole year waiting for the danged thing, but it never came back.”
Truly it was an enchanted kingdom, and Shoshanaya was its princess.
They came to the end of the stepping stones. “Just here,” Quent said, pulling her around a great oak. “Look.”
The falls were neither very wide nor very deep, simply a drop down a shallow rock face, maybe twice as tall as she was. Even this close they were no louder than a tinkling melody. Quent pointed to a small wooden platform cantilevered out over the water. “I made that as well. Indians usually have more than one name; Shoshanaya’s woman-name was Laughing Brook Soon as she told me that, I knew I wanted to bring her here. We had a cabin in that clearing back there, but we used to come sit here lots of days. Some nights as well.”