Authors: Lea Wait
“I thought you'd want to know the news when you woke in the morning.”
Pa swept up the sawdust.
“There's more news now, Pa. Bad news. The Confederates fired on Fort Sumter down in Charleston Harbor early this morning. We're shootin' back.”
Pa stopped sweeping. “Ever since Mr. Lincoln was elected, this country's gone from bad to worse. But he had to take a stand somewhere. If he let those cotton states think they could just pack up and start their own country, then what would stop any state from getting its britches in a knot and doing the same? And that would be the end of this United States your great-grandfather fought so hard to create.” He shook his head. “I hope the differences are settled soon, Joe. I hate to think what it will mean for all of us if they're not.”
“The fighting's just in South Carolina, Pa. The only one in Wiscasset who might be affected is Captain Tucker. He has an office and ships in Charleston, doesn't he?”
“He does. And I pray you're right, Joe. I do.”
“In town, no one's doing anything but waiting for news. Charlie and I are going to stay close to Miss Averill at the telegraph office today. We're going to lay out the rest of tomorrow's
Herald,
and leave the front page for tomorrow, to be sure we include the latest news. Maybe the conflict will be settled by then.”
“Well, good news or bad, this door had to be fixed, and the world will go on. Would you hold the door so I can fasten the last hinge?”
As the final screw was twisted in, Ma opened the door from the shop. “What a sight! My two men working together, and handsome new hinges on that broken door.” She looked around the room. “The kitchen hasn't looked so tidy in weeks.”
“I'm sorry, Ma,” I said. “I've been so busy with the print shop.”
“I know you have; I understand. But still, I'm pleased to have extra help here.” Her smile was for Pa. She hadn't smiled like that when I'd done 'most everything for the past year and a half. “Joe, did your father tell you what happened last night?”
Pa had told Ma about the spirit circle. It had to be that. “No. He didn't say anything.”
“Joe, I heard from Ethan last night.” Pa's voice was proud and excited.
I sat down. I mustn't let them know Charlie and I had been at the Mansion House.
“I went to hear that spiritualist. You left the broadside on the table, or I wouldn't have known about her. She's very youngâtoo young to understand all she's saying, I suspect. But she spoke to Ethan. He said he was well.” Pa's smile was the most relaxed it had been since Ethan's body had been found on the mudflats. “It was a miracle, but it happened. That Nell Gramercy heard him.”
“Your father's bought tickets for us both to go to her session tomorrow night,” added Ma, “and he's arranged for us to have a private session with her next week. If she can get in touch with Ethan, then I want to hear, too.”
“It was amazing, son. She knew things about Ethan that only one of us would have known. After I knew he was well, and not angry with me, I slept better last night than I have in months. I don't know how that girl's able to get in touch with those who have passed on, but she does. She brought messages from old Mrs. Quinn's husband and son, too, and told Captain Tucker that one of his ships was in a storm. That âstorm' might have even meant the battle you just told me about!”
“Battle?” asked Ma, turning to me. “What battle?”
“Down in South Carolina. The Confederates fired on Fort Sumter, and the Federal forces fired back. It began early this morning,” I explained.
“Just when we were beginning to feel at peace about Ethan,” Ma said, sitting down hard on one of the kitchen chairs and reaching for Pa's hand. “Let's pray war won't take our other son from us.”
Chapter 9
Friday, April 12, mid-morning
I walked slowly back to the
Herald
's office. The sun was higher in the sky and the chickadees were still calling to each other, but I focused on kicking pebbles into the deep puddles in the street. They plunked with a satisfying sound.
Political arguments had always seemed boring and far awayâsomething politicians in Washington and businessmen like Captain Tucker worried about. Of course, for years I'd heard people talking about why slavery should be ended. Why,
Uncle Tom's Cabin,
Mrs. Stowe's book that described the evils of slavery, was written in Brunswick, just twenty miles down the road. A person in this town'd have to be deaf, dumb, and blind not to know about abolitionists and their campaign to end slavery in all the states, not just here in the North. Slavery hadn't been allowed in Maine since 1783, way back when we were still part of Massachusetts. Families like Owen's had lived here freely since then.
But now the men at Fort Sumter weren't talking. They were shootingâand being shot at.
I maneuvered my way through the crowd near Mr. Johnston's store. The clock in the window read ten-thirty.
“Are they still fighting down in Charleston?” I asked Mr. Sayward, who was standing near the door.
“Last message in said batteries on both sides been shelling steadily since a little past seven.”
“So no one's won,” I said.
“Or lost,” Mr. Sayward confirmed.
I nodded, and turned back through the crowd.
Charlie was waiting at the print shop.
“Where've you been?” said Charlie. “And where's Owen? You were going to get him.”
“I got distracted.”
“I've got good newsâeven though it won't help for this issue. Mr. Allen was at the tavern, as I thought. I gave him a copy of last week's
Herald
and told him we'd like to cover the meeting Saturday night, and interview Miss Gramercy for our next issue.”
“And?” I asked.
“He's given us each free ticketsâpress passes, he called themâfor Saturday night. And we're to meet with Miss Gramercy and her aunt at one o'clock on Monday afternoon.” Charlie pulled two tickets out of his pocket and waved them in my face.
“Did he give you a ticket for me, too?” asked Owen, who'd just appeared in the doorway.
“Owen! Good. Joe was just about to go and get you. We can use your help today,” said Charlie.
“Can I go to the spirit meeting Saturday?” Owen repeated.
“No; the tickets are just for Joe and me,” answered Charlie. “We'll be writing the article.”
“I'm learning to write, too,” said Owen. “I could help.” He picked up the broom and started sweeping the floor.
“Not this time, Owen. And Joe, between seeing Miss Gramercy the other night, and Saturday, and then again Monday to ask her questions,
she won't be able to keep any secrets from us. After all, she's just a girl.”
“A girl who'll have her aunt with her,” I pointed out.
“We're lucky it's just her aunt; her uncle had another appointment then. After all, it wouldn't be proper for her to meet with us without a chaperone. Her aunt won't be answering our questions.”
Owen knocked the broom against the wall as he put it back in place and stomped over to the font cases, where he'd practiced setting type for a business card last week.
“What if Nell Gramercy doesn't have any secrets?” I asked. “What if she
can
talk to people in the spirit world?”
“That's impossible,” said Charlie. “All we have to do is find out how she does itâhow she knows what to say to people.”
“It may not be that easy.” I kept thinking of how excited my parents were to have heard from Ethan. “She was very convincing last night. And not everyone in Wiscasset may want to hear that Nell is fooling them.”
“That's next week's problem,” Charlie said dismissively. “Today we have to set type for tomorrow's edition.”
“Right,” I agreed. “Owen, would you like to set a couple of the ads?”
Owen looked up and nodded, grinning. “I can do it, Joe. I can!”
“Then let's get started. I have the social news and some ads already set, but there are empty spots on pages two, three, and four, and we'll have to redo the first page with the news from Charleston. Owen, there are three spaces left to fill with ads on page four. Why don't we finish those first, and then check the telegraph office?” I kept thinking of what Pa and Ma had said about the fighting. “We could talk to people
there, and to those at the tavern and the inn, and find out what they think the attack on Fort Sumter means to the country, and to us here in Maine.”
“Good plan,” said Charlie. “That way we could quote people and put their names in the paper, too. People buy copies of a newspaper when their names are in it.”
Owen was already carefully setting the type for an ad for the Mansion House. Charlie and I took trays to work on the other two pages. All was silent as we each reached for the pieces of type we needed.
Owen was the first to speak. “Do you think many soldiers will be killed down at Charleston Harbor?”
“Could be,” answered Charlie. “Men die in battles, and what's happening at Fort Sumter sounds like the closest thing to a real battle the United States has been in since the war with Mexico.”
“What do you think it would be like to be a soldier?” Owen asked.
Charlie stopped for a moment and gazed off into space. “And fight for the honor of our nation? It would be glorious.”
Chapter 10
Friday, April 12, evening
Both sides in Charleston were still firing late that afternoon. Faces at Wiscasset taverns were getting grimmer, but only a few men still waited at the telegraph office. Events were happening more slowly than most had thought. Or hoped.
Meals had to be cooked, oxen shod, boats caulked, babies fed. Life must go on.
Owen and Charlie left the office to get their suppers, but I stayed to complete the week's accounts and ensure supplies for next week's
Herald
and any special editions were in order. Knocking on wood, I figgered I could just make it through the next ten days before Mr. Shuttersworth showed up with his hand out.
I'd said a silent prayer of thanks when Mr. Dana came by in the afternoon to order business cards for his pharmacy. Luckily, I had plenty of the heavier paper the cards required. It'd take a dozen special orders like his to come up with the cash I needed, but every order counted. I'd already started Owen setting type for the cards.
Warm daytime temperatures had fallen sharply. Now thick fog filled the streets. My boots skidded where the morning's puddles had frozen. I was glad to reach home and inhale the welcoming smells of chicken broth and baked bread. It was a minute or so before I realized Trusty hadn't greeted me at the door.
“Trusty?” I called. “Trusty?”
“Trusty's in the yard,” Ma called from upstairs. “I was about to bring him in. This dank fog's no weather for even a dog to be out in for long. Thank goodness you're home.”
I lit the tin kerosene lantern with the glass front and went outside. “Trusty?” No answering bark. I checked the dooryard fence for openings. Small paw prints were all over the muddy earth, but there were no holes in or under the fence. Trusty must have climbed the woodpile again and jumped over the fence into our neighbor's yard.
I held the lantern out as far as I could. Sure enough, a half-dozen logs had fallen from the top of the pile into the yard.
If Trusty had left the yard, he'd have headed for Water Street. I worked there, and Mr. Chase's butcher shop on Union Wharf was his favorite stop. Mr. Chase always gave him a treat. But no one would be at the butcher shop at this time of night.
“Ma?” I called up the stairs leading to our sleeping chambers. “Trusty's gotten out. He's probably headed toward the river. I'm going after him.”
Ma came to the top of the stairs. “Do be careful, Joe. The fog and black ice will be worse on the piers than here.”
“Trusty could slip into the Sheepscot.”
“As could you. Step sharply.”
“I will, Ma.”
By now, even the mud on the empty streets was freezing. Most people in Wiscasset were safe and warm behind shuttered windows glimmering with oil lamps. The telegraph office and taverns were open, but they weren't close to where I guessed Trusty'd gone.
I held the lantern ahead of me, low, hoping the light would be reflected in invisible patches of ice on the narrow street. I skidded twice, and once slid and landed on my rear, spilling some of the oil from the lamp onto the frozen mud. The oath that came from my lips was not the sort I'd print in a family newspaper.
Long wharves met the land at Water Street. Shops and stalls there sold everything needed by the mariners and their vessels that sailed from the Sheepscot River. A few tradesmen lived above the stores, but at this time of night the southern end of the street was left to the tides and bats and night birds.
Now was the season when small vessels were pulled out of dry dock for summer, shipyards launched winter-built vessels, and ships set sail for foreign seas after wintering in port for repairs and time ashore for their captains and crews.
“Trusty!” I called out, peering ahead through the mists. “Trusty, come!”
The fog was heaviest here, in some places obscuring vessels and piers entirely. Swirling in lacy patterns, it teased me, lifting momentarily to reveal a docked ship or shuttered shop. I aimed my lantern so its light wouldn't be reflected in the mist. I'd been confused by shimmering ghostlike reflections in past fogs. I shivered, remembering.
Every few minutes I called again. “Trusty!”
If there were spirits in Wiscasset, they would be here now. If the dead came back to what they loved, then Ethan would be here, for sure. He'd loved the sea, and the soft mysteries of the fog.
“Trusty! Come!” The masts on the ships anchored in the harbor looked like a forest of leafless trees that appeared and then disappeared. Where was that dog?