Somerset

Chapter Fourteen



I have no idea where your son has gotten himself off to,” Eunice said to Carson at breakfast. “He’s been gone all night. Elfie will be so disappointed if her nephew is not here to greet her when she arrives.”

“He’s out with the Night Riders,” her husband remarked, intent on reading his newspaper. “He’s determined to catch the culprit stealing from us.”

“It was only two hams,” Jessica said, uneasy at the thought of her brother and his lackeys out and about the countryside when she drove Sarah and their cargo to Charleston.

Carson glanced at her. “How do you know it was two hams?”

Jessica thought quickly. Willie May had told her, but just as well her father did not know the source of her information. He would no longer take Willie May into his confidence. “It’s no secret about the theft, Papa. Everybody in the Yard knows it.”

“Tippy, carrying tales again.” Her father harrumphed.

“You have to admit, Carson, that the girl has outdone herself with the decorations this year. I can’t wait for Elfie to see them.”

Carson harrumphed again, but there was no denying that Tippy had created amazing holiday wonders from ribbons, pinecones, evergreen branches, mistletoe, candles, colored paper, wooden ornaments, popcorn balls, fruits, nuts, gingerbread, and glass balls from Germany. Eunice had been so pleased that she had rescinded her husband’s order committing Tippy to work in the weavers’ cabin, where the smoke from the fireplace was not good for her lung.

“It’s a waste of her talents, Carson,” Eunice had stated in a tone declaring she would not budge on the matter. “The girl belongs in the sewing room. Jessica and I are both in need of new frocks for Silas and Lettie’s nuptials.”

Her husband never shrank from a battle unless in those rare instances prudence trumped valor. With the exception of Willowshire, his wife was the love of his life, and he would do nothing to jeopardize his demonstration of it at night in their bedroom. He gave in gracefully, conceding, “You’re right. We must put her where we get the most value.”

Jessica said, her heart beginning to hammer, “Papa, have you ordered the carriage around? Sarah’s ship departs at three o’clock, about the time Aunt Elfie’s arrives, and I want to get us there in plenty of time.”

Carson looked up from his newspaper. “Yes, but I wish you’d wait a little longer for your brother to drive you. I don’t trust the weather this time of year, and the almanac says to expect snow sometime this week. Your aunt’s trunks might be a problem for the two of you to manage.”

“I’ll get a porter to help us,” Jessica said, folding her napkin and beckoning a servant to draw out her chair.

“But how will you get Sarah Conklin’s luggage into the carriage?” her father persisted.

“We’ll manage,” Jessica said, hoping with all her heart that Michael did not appear. “Now, if you’ll excuse me…”

“They want to be alone for girl talk, dear,” she heard her mother explain as she hurried from the room.

“In that case, I’d think Jessica would be taking Tippy along since the girls think she’s one of them,” Carson said with a snap of his paper.

Jessica snatched up her bonnet and cloak and was out the door and onto the carriage seat before her father got the idea to send the coachman with her. Daniel could be trusted, but she would not involve him in her perilous mission.

“Thank you, Daniel,” she said, “but no need to fuss with that. I’m in a bit of a hurry,” she said when he attempted to spread a blanket over her knees. She must get away before Michael rode up and insisted on going with her. He would not miss an opportunity to have the captive company of Sarah Conklin.

Jessica realized that her arms and shoulders were aching from tension by the time she’d made the five-mile trip into Willow Grove and turned down the lane of the church property to Sarah’s front door. She let out a long frosty breath as she drew the carriage to a stop and forced herself to relax. The most stressful part of the journey was behind her. No one was about to see their cargo loaded, and in two shakes of a lamb’s tail she and Sarah would be on their way to their destination unobstructed on this bright winter afternoon six days before Christmas. There would be time in Charleston to enjoy a last cup of tea together before Sarah embarked. Jessica would miss her brave friend, but oh, how much Sarah was looking forward to a reunion   with her little nephew and rest of her family. Jessica shared Lettie’s concern. Would Sarah want to come back to them after being home for the holidays?

She had raised her hand to knock on the door when from around each side of the house quietly emerged a cordon of men on horseback. Some she did not know, but others she recognized as a local gin operator, tanner, tavern owner, and a few farmers. All stared at her in disbelieving silence, their taut expressions dismayed. For a moment she couldn’t think. What were the Night Riders doing here? She heard a familiar whinny and turned to see Michael’s black Arabian tossing its beautifully arched neck in greeting and switching its high-carried tail. The saddle was empty, the reins held by one of the men. Fear froze her brain. Her whole body stiffened. Michael opened the door. He stared at her, his jaw slowly dropping.

“No, no, I can’t believe it,” he said. “Not you, Jessie. It can’t be you.…Tell me it isn’t you. You’re only here to pick up Sarah.…”

She could have lied, but all she could think of was Sarah. Blood rushed to her head. “What have you done with Sarah? Where is she?”

“Oh, God. You’re the pickup, aren’t you?” her brother said in a voice thick with anguish. His face had gone as pale as a bleached headstone. Even his deep, metal-gray eyes had lost their glint. Shock and incredulity had lightened them to the color of brackish ice. “We couldn’t get her to tell us who was coming for the boy. We had to wait and see.…”

Jessica pushed by the robust figure. “Sarah!” she cried, rushing through the parlor, into the kitchen, glancing into the open door of the storage room.

Michael seized her arm, stopping her. “She’s in the bedroom,” he said roughly, his face mottling with anger. “Go tend her. I’ve sent for liniment and bandages. Pack her things and get her dressed and into the carriage. Miss Conklin will not be returning to Willow Grove. I will escort you to the harbor in Charleston. We will bring our aunt home, and then I will deliver you to our father.”

Jessica yanked her arm free and ran into the bedroom. “Oh, my God! Sarah!” she cried when she saw the figure on the bed.

Her friend lay facing the wall, her night shift in strips and soaked in blood from the cut of whip lashes across her back. From the other room came a terse exchange of male voices, and Michael entered carrying a wrapped package. Jessica whirled to him. “How could you do this, Michael?” she screamed.

“You ask that question of me, little sister, when it’s the one I should ask of you? Believe me, our father will.” Michael threw the package at her. “There. Clean her wounds. My men are loading her trunk into the carriage now. You have thirty minutes to get your little abolitionist friend ready to leave our shores. After that, she’s food for the buzzards.” He strode from the room and Jessica tore open the package of gauze and lotion.


“I didn’t tell them, Jessie,” Sarah moaned as Jessica hurried to pour water into a basin from a pitcher on the lavatory stand. “They caught the agent and forced him to betray me. He tried to warn me.…I hoped—prayed—that you would not arrive, that something would prevent you from coming and that if you did, you’d think of something to tell your brother.…”

“Sssh, don’t talk, Sarah,” Jessie said as she knelt to remove the remnants of her friend’s night shift to dress her wounds. “Just lie quietly. Think of your little nephew and that you’ll be homeward bound in a few hours. You’ll never have to see the likes of my brother or his kind again.”

“They took the fugitive to Willowshire,” Sarah said, as if Jessica’s words had not registered. “He’ll be returned to his owner. They took him away with a rope around his neck. They made him witness my flogging.”

Jessica thought she was going to be sick. There was a tall magnolia tree behind the cottage. Michael and his ruffians had probably strung her up by one of its sturdy branches, and there was no one around to see or hear the sound of the lashing or Sarah’s wails, if she gave them the pleasure, but her friend had not betrayed her involvement. Working quickly over the lacerated back, Jessica pressed her lips tightly together to keep from weeping.

Sarah motioned her to come closer and lowered her voice to a whisper in case someone in the other room might overhear. Careful of her wounds, Jessica leaned forward. “I’m afraid for Willie May.…”

“Oh God. What does Michael know?” Jessica asked.

“The boy told him he’d heard of my safe house, and he came here. He didn’t mention Willie May, but if your brother is skeptical and questions him further…tortures him…he could talk.”

Jessica felt the blood plunge from her head.

“I’m afraid for you, too, my brave Southern friend, and for Tippy,” Sarah continued.

Dizzily, feeling as if she were kneeling on the deck of a weaving ship, Jessica swabbed at the cuts. “Don’t worry about us,” she said. “I’ll think of something to save us all. My father’s bark is worse than his bite when it comes to me. He’ll be furious with me, but he’ll forgive me. I’m his daughter. He has no choice.”

“Oh, Jessica, dear…” Sarah moaned.





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