Mariah didn't answer, pulling herself up slowly from the stack of pillows. She remembered now, being helped to the house, her arm slung around the blacksmith's shoulder. The family had laid her on top of the covers, wrapping her in a shawl for warmth against the growing chill. On the table beside her, a candle was lit, the light of day fading behind the muslin curtains.
“How long have I been this way?” she asked.
“Three hours,” the girl replied, shutting the heavy Bible she had taken from Mariah's shelf. “Papa said you must be worn out from traveling so many miles these past days.”
“Yes,” she agreed, knowing this was only partly true. “There is a tiredness on me. It must have been too much, the extra miles I walked today.”
Had the girl noticed the rash that crept just above her dress collar? She pulled the shawl closer around her, saying, “I should be able to care for myself now. Please tell your father I'm grateful for his help. It was only exhaustion, as he said, and shouldn't trouble me again if I rest.”
“Yes, of course.” Hesitating a moment, the younger woman pulled an envelope from beneath the book in her lap. “You dropped thisâwhen you fell,” she said, a blush spreading over her cheeks. “I hope that nothing in it was the cause for your fainting.”
The way she bit her lip in quiet suspense told Mariah that she hadn't read its contents. Such restraint deserved no small amount of admiration and trust, considering her obvious devotion to the man who penned the words. She must have been in terrible suspense, having the news of his fate right before her, yet unable to grasp it without another's permission.
Taking it from her, Mariah stroked the paper gently between her fingers. “He's been wounded,” she told her. “Shot during the skirmish a few weeks ago. Now, he writes the doctors' fear he may catch an infection from the other patientsâ” Her voice broke, her gaze lifting to meet Nell's eyes, already wide with fear. Swallowing, Mariah cleared her throat to regain some of her control. “I'm afraid for him,” she said. “Afraid he may die there or even if he does come home, that I won't be able to help him.”
Across from her, Nell's face had turned pale. Her hands trembled against the leather volume she still held, lips opened for a long time before any words came out. “Thank you for telling me,” she said, at last. “Now I can pray for him with more understanding of the danger he faces. He's always been strong of faith.”
Mariah shook her head. “Even that has been taken from him. The things he's seenâ¦there's little to give him faith, he says. I don't blame him for thinking so,” she added, bitterness lacing the tone.
“Neither do I,” said Nell with surprising bluntness. “Although,” she added in a gentler tone, “I hope it is only a temporary doubt that makes him feel this way. Perhaps he will come through this with a faith stronger than before.”
She had not read the letter, of course. Mariah supposed her naivety was partly due to her youth, as well as her relative inexperience with life's hardships. “You can't understand,” she told her. “He's seen men torn apart by artillery's blaze. Consumed by wildfires and waters deep. There's no healing for such a grief.”
Across from her, Nell's gaze drifted down to the book in her hands. “I can understand a little. What happened to poor Charley, when he died⦔ She paused, voice faltering with the memory.
Neither of them had spoken of that night before, avoiding the subject for both their sakes. Now the doctor realized how terrifying it must have been for a girl who admitted to never witnessing a death before. A child's death, then, must have been especially shocking to behold.
“I had never seen anyone suffer that way,” Nell continued, fingers stroking the Bible absently. “He was so desperate and scared. His hands reached out like they were trying to grasp the air and pull it inside him.” Tears escaped her eyes. “I can only imagine how much worse the memory is that haunts Arthur's thoughts,” she said. “It will take him a whileâmonths perhapsâbefore he can feel the Savior's hand guiding him again.”
“What makes you think he ever will?” Mariah wondered. “There is so much death and painâeven we've seen it around us for days now. How do you explain God's presence in all this? If He hears your pleas, He doesn't answer them.”
“I think He provided for us in different ways. One way in particular.” Looking up again, she said, “No one believed we would find a doctorânot a place this poor. Yet our need was met by one in equal want of a helping hand. He led us to you that day, something I believe this crisis proves more than ever.”
“You think God uses
me
to accomplish His work?” Mariah laughed, breath threatening to turn into a cough. “An unbeliever to save the believing,” she murmured. “That is not something I expected to hear from a person of your kind of faith.”
The girl nodded, hand reaching to grasp Mariah's on the bedspread. “He must have known this trial would come to us and made sure we found the right person to see us through it. There was a reason He sent you to us, and I think it was for your sake as well as ours. There's a plan for you in this, I'm sure of it.” When Mariah said nothing, Nell closed the Bible and set it on the bedside table. “You should take some water,” she advised, studying the doctor with concern. “Or some tea. Let me bring some from the kitchenâ”
“This will do fine,” Mariah replied, indicating the half-empty tumbler on the bedside table. “I won't be taking any supper tonight but will try and rest instead. If anyone calls to see me or asks for medicine, you may come and wake me.”
The girl rose and went to the door. Pausing, she turned and said, “Call out to me if you start feeling poorly. I'll be awake for several hours more in case any of our neighbors should need my help.” She waited.
Mariah nodded.
Nell slipped out, shutting the door behind her.
Mariah stayed seated on the bed, the letter clasped between her hands. Its words came back to her with a heavy feeling, the weight in her chest growing the same as Arthur described in his own misery. Reaching to the bedside table, she found the vial of medicine she'd been dosing herself with these last few days. The bitter smell drifted from its depths when she uncorked it, bringing to mind the image of another sick chamber long ago. For this reason, she drank its dose as quickly as possible, coughing some of it back onto her sleeve. The vial was returned to the table, where it clinked softly against the tumbler. Beside them, placed there by Nell during their conversation, was the worn Bible.
The feel of its coarse leather inspired memories of a different sort from her childhood. She pulled it slowly into her lap, rustling the pages, as she thought of nights spent looking through it with her mother in the house where she grew up. “This is my greatest possession,” her mother had told her. “Not the book itself, but the faith it stands for. I have it with me always, right here,” she said, rocking the child in her arms closer to press their hand over the place where her heart beat.
Confusion wrinkled the young Mariah's brow as she studied the verses she couldn't yet read. “I thought faith was a feeling,” she said, tracing the letters with a stubby finger. “You can't use feelings for anything realâcan't make medicine with them,” she added, thinking of her father's supply of vials and powders in the room below.
“Faith is stronger than any medicine,” her mother said. “If we put our faith in God, He can use it to do anything. He can save people who are lost to all else.”
Mariah frowned. “But Papa saves people, not God. I've seen him do it lots of times.”
Sighing, her mother pressed a kiss to the braided hair. “Your papa helps many people,” she agreed, “but his kind of medicine only makes them better for a little while. God's kind of healing lasts forever. It takes away the power of death by writing our names in the Book of Life.”
“Your name's in this book,” Mariah cried, eager to show off some of the only words she'd learned to recognize in her new school lessons. Flipping to the Bible's first page, she looked for the familiar name among the list of ancestral signatures. That of Jemima Harriet Moore came near the bottom, the most recent of the family to inherit the Holy volume. “See?” she said, jabbing excitedly at the signature. “Here's your name.”
“Yes.” Jemima laughed, squeezing her daughter affectionately. “My name is in this book, tooâso is yours, and one day, your children's names will be there as well. An earthly sign of our devotion to the One who makes a place for us above.”
They would read that way for many a night, until her mother could read no more. In her final weeks, her lips had struggled to form even a smile for Mariah, who sat at her bedside. Her mother's mind went somewhere else, concentrated on the pain that racked her body at all times.
Grown-up Mariah opened the volume's cover, seeing the same name inscribed there on the page, a little faded and smudged with the passage of time. She touched it, trailing fingers over her mother's handwriting, loops that dipped and curved in elegant formation.
Tears welled in her eyes, body trembling as she lowered her forehead to meet the words on the page. Her breath came harsh and loud against it, her words only a murmur. “Please⦔ she trailed off, struggling for more, some faint connection between her and this God who gave her mother such hope. “If You hear meâ¦if You care at allâ” She let out a sob, regaining her voice enough to say, “I need You to help me; show me what to do. There is nothing left to me, nowhere to turn. Please hear me, Lord. Tell me what I should do.”
Exhaustion overtook her as she lay beside the open volume. Her thoughts grew faint and incoherent beneath the medicine's effect until at last she fell into a restless sort of sleep.
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Water, deep and wide, stretched away from her to an embankment surrounded by trees. It wasn't the spring in Crooked Wood, though, or any other place she'd been before in her life. A river stained murky green, cold and vast. Mariah stood in it up to her knees, shivering through her work dress and shawl.
She wasn't alone. Something rippled the water. A figure hunkered on the shore across from her. Gray hair straggled in long locks to curtain the face, a thick, squat form that was dressed in tattered garments. Their hands were submerged in the river, rising to the surface to wring out a soiled garment.
Crimson dotted the water, traveling in different directions like tentacles. She watched as a streak came towards her, winding snake-like through the water.
Slowly, the woman on shore raised her head, revealing a face of deep crevices, warts, and pock marks, eyes sad but wild-looking, when she glanced into the river's depths.
Mariah followed her gaze, saw plants crawling and dirt clouding beneath her pale reflection. A blink, and her features gave way to those of a stranger. A man, eyes bulging and face swollen as he looked up from the bottom of the river. There were more around him, their features puffy and turning blue. Bloodstained coats, brass buttons catching the light above. As if pulled by her gaze, they turned upwards, stiff fingers reaching blindly towards the surface.
A silent scream filled her throat. She shrank from them, or tried to, but the water had risen to her waist without her even noticing. In a heartbeat, it rose to her shoulders, cold and slimy as it splashed her skin. She was stuck, frozen in place as the dead moved closer, closer, almost touching her as the waves came up to her chinâ
Gasping, Mariah came awake, her body racked with hoarse coughs.
The candle on the table had burned down its wick, the growing daybreak her only source of light as it seeped through closed curtains. She sat up, fumbling for the medicine vial on the bedside table. Instead, her hand struck the tumbler in its haste, knocking the half-filled glass to shatter against the pine floor.
Mariah leaned past the side of the bed, watching as water trickled into the cracks between the boards. Waterâ¦yes, she had dreamed of water.
A river of death, ghostly figures in rotting gray uniforms.
The washerwoman crouched on the shore to prepare their burial garb, staining the water red.
Water. That was importantâbut why? She felt thirsty, her mouth parched, yet something else tugged her thoughts, like a word just out of reach from her tongue.
She pushed her hands through tangled hair, sweaty strands catching on her frustrated fingers, body rocking back and forth, as if willing the memory to push to the forefront of her thoughts. Her gaze fell on the open Bible, still turned to the page that bore her mother's handwriting.
The prayer she'd said hours ago came back to her, parts of it tangled up with the memory of her dream. This was her answer, perhaps, a sign that death had come for her, the same as it did her mother years ago. For Charley and the Lesleys, the teacher and others. The soldiers perished in a muddy grave at the cornfield, their life choked from the blood and water that stirred around them.
“The water,” she mumbled, body ceasing to rock. “Waterâ¦yes,
water
. It must beâ”
She sat forward, hand covering her mouth to hold back the wracking coughs. An idea was forming as if rising from the depths of her consciousness. Her gaze flitted to the stain on the floor, and then the desk piled with papers in the corner. She needed to write it down, capture the notion before another stupor came over her.
With a groan, Mariah pulled herself from the bed. Bare feet avoiding shards of glass, she stumbled the few feet to the desk, clutching the back of the chair as nausea swept over her. Her eyes closed briefly in a silent plea, trembling limbs easing her slowly into the chair's seat.
Shoving aside the stack of textbooks, she let them drop to the floor with a loud thud. Her hands scattered papers in every direction until she unearthed the daybook and pen she used for making her medical entries. Flipping to the first blank page, she pressed her quill against the paper, writing in a shaky script that barely resembled her own.