Chapter 14
The day after Clara returned to her father’s home she spent the afternoon helping him pack his bags for a trip to New York. That evening he would depart for a conference of the American ministers who were working toward educational reform. It seemed such a shame that she had only just returned to her father’s house before he had to dash off on business, but after all, he was the Reverend Lloyd Endicott, and a man of his position had important responsibilities.
Clara also found refuge at the piano, hoping the lyrical melodies of Franz Schubert could soothe the tension that had gripped her ever since she’d seen her father wandering down the street with a bloodied forehead.
On some level, she felt responsible for the ongoing unrest, since her article calling attention to Daniel’s peculiar business practices had helped to reignite simmering labor tensions. Riots had been occurring once or twice a week when she arrived in Baltimore, but now they were a daily event. For most of his career, Daniel had been able to avoid troubles with labor since his employees were limited to a handful of engineers and innovators who worked alongside him in his wonderfully eccentric laboratory. That had changed five years ago when they diversified their business by purchasing railroad lines. Now Carr & Tremain had hundreds of employees working on the lines, replacing railroad ties and soldering new rails. Thanks to Clara’s article, these workers were only just learning of the profit Daniel was rejecting by refusing to license technology to Forsythe Industries. Some of that money could surely have been used to supplement their wages. The smoldering embers of discontent were stoked as the workers realized they were the pawns of wealthy men in a private feud.
And this morning’s newspaper brought another salvo in the war between Daniel and Forsythe. On page two of The Baltimore Sun was a full-page advertisement bearing the logo of Forsythe Industries and block text calling for Daniel Tremain to relent in his retaliatory business practices. A table beneath the text contained current wages paid to Forsythe workers, and another table outlined what he could pay should his company have access to Daniel’s technology. Alfred Forsythe’s advertisement would only further inflame the public’s animosity toward Daniel. She lowered her head. Was she any better than Alfred Forsythe? It made her cringe to realize that her article, well-intentioned though it had been, was little different from Forsythe’s in laying the blame at Daniel’s feet.
When Clara’s father saw the advertisement, he agreed with her. “I’m sorry Forsythe placed this advertisement, as I don’t think it is helpful in easing the current tensions,” Lloyd said. “Unless Daniel relents soon, this is the sort of thing that will only fuel the flames of discontent.”
“But do you really think Forsythe would pass that profit on to his workers?” Clara asked. “He is not as wealthy as Vanderbilt, and that fact keeps him awake at night. He has the reputation of bleeding his workers white in order to increase his earnings.”
Lloyd took the newspaper from Clara and adjusted the spectacles on his nose as he studied the columns in the advertisement more closely. Finally he shook his head. “Now that Forsythe has gone public with what he is prepared to pay should this feud come to an end, it will be hard for him to back out of it,” Lloyd said. “He wants to run for governor, and if he rescinds this promise, his political career would take a thrashing from which he could never recover. It is Daniel’s move now.”
Clara let her gaze drift to the fading light outside the window, and a horse and rider pulling up before the house caught her attention. He was a nattily dressed gentleman, but Clara was certain she had never seen him before. “Do you know this man, Father?”
Her father knew half of Baltimore, but he failed to recognize the man, either. When they answered the three brisk knocks on the door, the man did not even bother to introduce himself.
“I am here to see the editor of The Christian Crusade,” the man said abruptly.
“That would be me,” Lloyd said.
Before her father had even completed his sentence, the stranger thrust a roll of papers into Lloyd’s hands. “You are hereby notified of a pending lawsuit in the Circuit Court of Baltimore. I wish you a good day, sir.”
The moment the door closed behind the officious stranger, Clara and Lloyd unrolled the thick stack of documents. Clara gasped in shock.
“We are being sued by Daniel ?” she gasped. Clara felt the beginnings of tunnel vision, but forced her gaze to keep scanning the pages. A multitude of legal terms smacked her in the face: slander, libel, interference with a private corporation, invasion of privacy. Each word sliced at her like an ice pick. They were the same charges she had faced in London, only this time it was her father’s newspaper she was sinking. A long list of attorneys’ names, lined up like soldiers ready to do battle, was affixed to the document.
“Well, he certainly is thorough,” her father said. His normally brisk voice sounded thin and tired.
Clara’s legs felt too weak to support her. “I’m so sorry, Father,” she whispered through pale lips. She had hoped her article would help bring this feud to an end, but Daniel was just getting started. He was barricading himself behind a team of lawyers and banishing her from his life. She should have known when she saw the cold steel in his eyes the morning he confronted her in the garden. Daniel was finished with her. He had flung her out of his life in the same abrupt manner in which he walked away from Forsythe Industries.
She knew the way Daniel’s mind operated. If she didn’t do something to stop him, the wall he was building to shut her out of his life would calcify into a structure nothing could tear down.
The setting sun was casting long shadows across the downtown streets, and Clara hurried to reach Daniel’s office before he left for the day. It made no sense to confront him at his home, where he could easily toss her off his property. It would be much harder to make a scene at his office with dozens of employees as witness. Not that she didn’t think he would hesitate to do it, but she might have a few seconds to break through to him before he surrounded himself behind his squadron of attorneys.
She was surprised at how easy it was to get into his office. Perhaps he had not expected her to seek him out because no one tried to stop her as she strode across the oversized laboratory and knocked on the door of his private office.
“Come in,” she heard him say from behind the heavy door. Clara leaned her forehead against the door and prayed for strength. She took a deep breath and pushed her way inside.
Daniel’s eyes widened in surprise, but he quickly masked any sign of emotion as he turned his attention back to the papers on his desk. The white-hot fury of last weekend was gone, replaced by icy formality.
“We have no business to discuss,” he said without looking up from his papers. “The names of my attorneys are on the papers you received this morning. They are the appropriate people to discuss your concerns with from this point forward.”
She tried not to flinch as the coldness of his words sliced through her. “Stop it, Daniel. I won’t let you talk to me like that.”
“Like what?”
“Like you despise me,” she said. “I hurt you and I understand why you are angry with me, but I know you don’t despise me. Had I known you wanted that information kept private, I would have respected your wishes. Is there any way you can stop seeing me like a reporter you resent and return to treating me like a friend who cares about you?”
“You gave that up when you published that article.” The way he twirled a pencil between his long fingers might fool a casual observer into thinking he was bored, but Clara saw the anger in his clenched jaw.
“I’m not leaving until you at least look at me, Daniel.”
He dropped the pencil and finally looked up at her, but still maintained the coldly impersonal tone. “I see from yesterday’s newspaper that your father has called a meeting for all your wealthy parishioners to pray that Forsythe and I seek wisdom and understanding. Do you realize how insulting that is?” he said in a silky voice.
Clara stood a little straighter. “I know that my father has the best of intentions, but you are still looking for bombs to throw at Forsythe. This behavior does not flatter you.”
“The best intentions,” Daniel said with perfect equanimity. “This is the man who stole our letters and then dares to preach to me about godliness. The two of you are responsible for stoking the fire of this mess, so let’s not hide behind schoolmarm reprimands, shall we?”
It was so hard to keep looking at him. He had the same face, the same slightly tousled black hair . . . but everything she knew and loved about Daniel seemed to have disappeared.
“Why don’t you come to the prayer meeting?” she asked impulsively. “It would at least show people that you are open to listening to their concerns.”
“One thing you need to understand,” Daniel said. “This isn’t England, where disputes can be politely handled in a court of law. Nor is it a prayer meeting where we all hold hands and hope Jesus will help our enemies see the light. This is a tough, gritty world where arguments are settled with fists, and riots are broken up with bayonets.”
Daniel stood and strode around the desk, clamping the palm of his hand around her elbow. “Come along,” he said. “There is someone I want you to meet.”
Clara was so startled she let him pull her along as he strode out of the office, across the length of the laboratory, and down a long corridor filled with private offices. He gave three quick raps on a closed office door, then opened it and pushed her inside. A startled man looked up from behind his spectacles to stare at them both.
“Clara, meet Lou Hammond, my attorney. Any further conversation you wish to have with me will be funneled through Mr. Hammond’s office. Good-bye, Clara.”
When the door slammed behind her, Clara knew she had failed. Daniel had gone back to building his wall between them.
Something caused her to rouse from her heavy slumber.
Clara rolled over in bed, her mind groggy with sleep. Her bedroom was dark and still, nothing to cause alarm. But then she heard it, a clanging sound coming from far away. The urgent, rapid-paced ringing of bells was echoing through the night air.
She rose from her bed and rushed to the window, unfastening the latches and pulling the casement up. Now it was easier to hear the bells, coming from the north side of town. Riots? She waited to hear the distinctive one-five-one sound of bells that signaled a riot. But the clanging of the bells was a steady, ongoing staccato, indicating a fire, not a riot.
She went to the window on the far side of her room and could see the eerie red glow lighting the horizon. The fire was up on the high end of Guilford Street, where lots of well-to-do homes had been built in the last few years. It was where Daniel lived.
A sense of foreboding enveloped her. There were many houses in that part of town; any one of them could be on fire. But Daniel was one of the few company owners who lived that far north, and the one most likely to be a target should this be related to the recent troubles.
She hadn’t even finished the thought before she was pulling on a shift and overskirt. She would have to ride her father’s horse in order to get there. She would rather handle a nest of live hornets than mount a horse, but it couldn’t be helped. It was possible this would be a pointless ride that would end in nothing more than a lost night of sleep, but sitting here in this bedroom when there was a possibility that Daniel was in trouble was inconceivable. It took her less than two minutes to dress and be out the door.
Her father kept his horse at a private stable two blocks away. Clara hiked up her skirts and ran, breathless by the time she arrived at the stable. Then came the far more daunting task of saddling Old Soldier. She refused to let this ridiculous dread of horses stop her if Daniel was in trouble. Old Soldier did not like being pulled from sleep and kept drifting to the far side of the stall each time she tried to heft the saddle over his back. Twice the horse tried to push Clara into the side of the stall, nearly knocking the wind from her body, but at last she got him saddled, mounted, and grudgingly moving north.
As she approached Guilford Street and the pungent scent of smoke tinged the air, Old Soldier got skittish and began sidestepping her attempts to move him forward. This was the point when she normally would give up and let the horse win, but Clara shortened the reins and squeezed her knees with every fiber of muscle she possessed, then squeezed again. At last she succeeded in spurring the reluctant horse forward.
No ride had ever taken so long, but she finally arrived within two streets of Daniel’s house. People were pouring onto the street, hauling buckets of water to douse their own homes and shrubbery lest the fire spread. The sound of the bells grew louder and finally Old Soldier refused to move any farther. She leapt from his back and secured him to a fence post before running the final few blocks to the site of the fire. The air got hotter as she rounded the corner and finally saw the source of the fire.
Daniel’s home was completely engulfed in flames.
She stood frozen as she watched men lift heavy canvas tubing from the water truck to shoot water at the houses on either side of the fire in a desperate attempt to stop the blaze from spreading. No effort was being made to salvage Daniel’s house. The fire had already eaten through most of the exterior woodwork, exposing the frame of the building. It was a waste to pour water on Daniel’s home when the neighboring houses might be spared.
Even worse than the heat of the fire were the sounds. The tinkling noise of glass as the windows shattered in their frames, the sound of wood popping and groaning as it twisted under the weight of the roof. The house was going to collapse soon, and firefighters were trying to move the crowd of onlookers farther back to a safe distance from the house.
Clara prayed that Daniel and Kate had escaped. She frantically searched among the crowd, but the glare from the fire made it hard to see any more than darkened silhouettes of people standing before the glare of the fire. Most of the bystanders were standing alone, but one man had his arm around a young woman . . . surely that was Daniel and his sister.
Clara raced toward them and grew dizzy with relief when she recognized Daniel and Kate. Daniel was staring at the fire as though hypnotized. His face was streaked with sweat and soot, but his eyes reflected the eerie flickering orange glow of the fire. “Daniel, thank God you are all right.” She stepped forward and laid a hand on his arm, but he pulled away from her and hugged Kate tighter to his side.
“Get out of here, Clara,” he said blankly. “This is no place for you.” He did not break his gaze from his burning house, just kept staring at it as pieces of timber dropped from the roofline and sent showers of sparks into the air when they hit the ground.
“You’ll need a place to stay,” Clara said gently. “Come to my father’s house. You can stay for as long as needed.”
“So that you and your father can preach to me about wisdom and understanding? Trust me, I understand the message that was sent tonight, so what more do you want, Clara? The sins of my riches are all burning before your eyes.”
She took a step back. “You know I had nothing to do with this.”
“Do I?” His voice lashed out like a whip and he turned to look at her for the first time. “I was never despised by the working people until you came here and started whipping up sentiment against me.”
Now Kate was looking daggers at her, as well. Clara straightened her shoulders. “I can’t leave until I know you have a place to go,” she said.
“Lorna will put us up,” Kate said. “At least we’ve always been able to depend on family.”
Clara did not miss the pointed barb. “You can depend on me,” she said firmly. Daniel had turned his gaze back to the fire, ignoring her, but Clara moved to stand directly in front of him and grabbed his shoulders. His face was steeped in resentment, but at last he met her eyes. “I will never turn my back on you,” she vowed in a fierce voice, loud enough to be heard over the menacing blast of the fire. “You are the best friend I’ve ever had and I won’t abandon you no matter how angry you become. I understand you, Daniel. I understand why you hate Forsythe and I understand what this house meant to you.” The glare he sent her at the mention of his house was scalding, but she wouldn’t give up. “I even understand why you are furious with me,” she continued. “No matter what terrible things befall you, I won’t ever abandon you. You can throw me off your property, or you can sue me to kingdom come. You can take out advertisements in every newspaper in the land proclaiming me a muckraking idiot, but I will always consider you my greatest friend.”
A tremendous groaning sound came from the house, and she saw Daniel’s eyes widen in disbelief. She swiveled her head just in time to see the entire roof collapse into the house, shooting a blast of sparks into the sky like fireworks. A wall of heat rushed outward and she took a step back. They were well away from danger, but it was an instinctive move as the blistering heat magnified and the blaze consumed the house.
Daniel’s attention had gone back to the house, ignoring her and his sister, as well. She laid a hand on his arm. “It’s going to be all right. It is only things that have been lost. Nothing that can’t be bought again.”
Daniel’s face looked to be carved from flint, a muscle ticking in his jaw as he clenched his teeth with anger. “Get out of here, Clara.”
The quiet intensity of his voice made her want to flee. Instead, she stood up and kissed him on his cheek. “I’ll be waiting for you when you are ready to come back to me,” she said.
And then she turned and left him standing before the ruins of his house.
The Lady of Bolton Hill
Elizabeth Camden's books
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- And Then She Fell
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- All They Need
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- Meant-To-Be Mother
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