Patricia Potter

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Authors: Rainbow

BOOK: Patricia Potter
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ainbow

 

Patricia Potter

Copyright © 2012, Patricia Potter

For the Potter clan, one and all

Contents

 

Title Page

Copyright Page

Prologue

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Epilogue

P
rologue

 

Seaton Plantation,
Vicksburg, Mississippi, 1839

 

MEREDITH SEATON
tried not to tremble.

She struggled desperately to stand up straight, to keep her lips from quivering, as she defied her father for the first time in her young life.

He was so big, so tall, and his mouth was frowning in an all too familiar manner. That expression was always the beginning of a rage, and rage meant punishment. Though she couldn’t stop the fear that shook her legs, she had to let him know how important Lissa was to her. Perhaps, just this once, he would understand and relent.

Meredith had thought about it all day, ever since she found Alma in tears that morning, and was told she could no longer play with Alma’s daughter, Lissa.

Meredith had listened in stunned astonishment. Lissa, who looked like her own self, had been her playmate since she could remember. They had done everything together except sleep. Meredith retired at night to a beautiful large room while Lissa shared a bed with her mother in the slave quarters.

They were only two years apart in age: Meredith was now eight and Lissa six. In spite of that small difference, Meredith had always felt motherly and protective about Lissa, giving her many of her toys and dolls, and directing their games. She loved Lissa, who looked up to her with faithful adoration, and followed her lead in everything. Meredith didn’t really have anyone else. Her mother had died when she was a baby, and her father, who had never remarried, was distant and harsh. She had one older brother, but he thought her a nuisance and paid attention to her only when he scolded her for one mischief or another.

There was only Alma, who was the closest thing she had to a mother, and Lissa, who was almost as light as she and who had the same dark brown eyes. Only their hair was different. Lissa’s was black while her own was blond.

That morning, when she ran downstairs to the kitchen, she did not find Lissa in her usual place beside Alma. And she saw that Alma’s eyes were red with weeping.

“Where’s Lissa?” she asked hesitantly, suddenly afraid.

The question brought a new burst of tears, and Meredith moved to place a comforting hand on the woman who had done the same to her so many times. But Alma jerked away and looked at Meredith as if she hated her.

Meredith stepped back. “Alma,” she whispered.

The black woman glared at her through tears shining in dark eyes. “It’s your fault,” she said. “The master saw you givin’ your new doll to Lissa and decided you were too familiar.” She spit out the last word, bitterness flowing from her like lava from a volcano, boiling and deadly. “Familiar!” she said again, and laughed, but the sound was ugly to Meredith’s ears.

“And why shouldn’t sisters be familiar?” Alma continued in her vitriolic tone.

“Sisters,” Meredith whispered. “But Lissa is a—”

“A slave,” Alma said. “A slave to be sold. Even by her own father.”

“Father…?”

Meredith didn’t understand any of it. She knew they had slaves, and many of them, particularly the house servants, were her friends. Some disappeared occasionally, but she had never questioned that. As for Lissa, how could she be her sister? They looked alike, of course, but Lissa was…

Lissa was what? Meredith had never thought much about their different status. Lissa was required to help her mother in the kitchen, while Meredith spent hours in the classroom. She had asked once why Lissa couldn’t share her studies—it would be much more fun—but her governess had only said Lissa had other duties and changed the subject. No one had seemed to object when the two of them played, though, not if she had finished her lessons and Lissa her chores.

Until yesterday. Meredith had just given Lissa one of the dolls she received for Christmas and Lissa was hugging it to her when Meredith looked up and saw her father watching them closely, a grim look on his face.

“Go to Alma,” he had directed Lissa. Then he turned to Meredith with a frown. “And you, miss, have you no studies?”

“I’m all through, Papa,” she said.

“Then I shall have to ask Miss Wentworth to increase her efforts.”

“Yes, Papa,” Meredith said obediently. She couldn’t remember when he had said something kind to her, or touched her with affection no matter how hard she tried to please him.

“Why does Lissa have your doll?” he asked abruptly.

“I gave it to her,” Meredith replied, surprised at his attention.

“That doll was a present to you from your brother,” her papa said.

“But I have others…and Lissa admired it.”

“Lissa has no need of such things,” he said. “It just gives her ideas.”

“But—”

“That’s enough, miss. Go up to your room and stay there.”

Meredith recognized the tone of voice. It scared her. It always scared her, ever since the first time she had unknowingly angered him and felt his belt on her back. She retreated and went up to her room, wondering what she had done.

It was several hours later when, restless and unhappy, she had ventured carefully downstairs to get one of Alma’s cookies. She heard voices in her father’s office but didn’t understand what they meant.

“We have to do it.” Her father’s voice came through the door. “She and Meredith look too much alike and they’re much too friendly. It’s not proper. I should have done it years ago before it went too far, but Alma…”

Her brother’s reply was soothing. “You can always get another black wench. There’s Ruby for instance. She’s real fine in bed. Pretty, too, and eager.” His tone hardened. “I don’t fancy seeing a black half-sister here.”

“It’s done, then,” her father said. “I’ll send for Sanders in the morning.”

“You better lock the girl up. Alma might try to take her and run.”

“You’re right. I would hate to have to punish her.”

“She’ll get over it. She’s just a nigra. She always knew it would happen.”

Meredith heard footsteps and scampered back upstairs. None of it had made much sense until now as she looked at Alma’s ravaged face and blazing yet hopeless eyes.

“Lissa?” Meredith said, an enormous dread spreading from the pit of her stomach.

“The master’s selling her,” Alma said. “She’s in the slave jail until the slave trader arrives.”

Meredith backed away. “No. He can’t. Not Lissa. She’s my friend.”

“Bein’ your frien’ is gettin’ her sold,” Alma said, sinking into a chair. “God knows what will happen to her, pretty and light as she is.”

“But…”

Alma’s usually impassive face was ugly with pain and hate. “They will put her on an auction block, all alone and terrified. To be sold like a horse or a mule or…” She couldn’t say anything else. Years of hiding her feelings, her hurts, her humiliation while she serviced a man she despised were ending in the final terrible tragedy. Nothing mattered anymore. She looked at the motherless girl she once pitied. She had tried to give the child love, and her efforts resulted in the sale of her own daughter, the only source of happiness in her hopeless life. And now she hated Meredith, as she hated the girl’s father. “Go away,” she said tonelessly.

Meredith felt her world crumbling. Alma and Lissa had been her only allies, their friendship the only haven in a lonely world.

“I’ll talk to father,” she said. “Maybe I can change his mind….”

And Meredith, despite her fear, tried. How she tried as her knees quaked and her heart pounded.

“She’s my friend,” she said.

“Slaves aren’t friends, they’re property. To be bought and sold,” her father said. “I’ll hear no more about it.”

“Please…I’ll do anything. I’ll be ever so good. I won’t talk to her anymore, if you wish.”

“That’s enough,” her father roared. “Get up to your room.”

Meredith bravely stood her ground. “But—”

Her father picked her up roughly and carried her to her room. Once there, he pulled up her bulky dress and petticoats. Meredith bit her lip.
I will not cry. I will not.
She felt the heavy blows as pain coursed through her, but although tears formed in her eyes no sound came from her lips. The blows finally stopped and she heard his footsteps retreat, the door open and close, and the sound of a key turning in the lock.

For hours she lay on her bed silently, tears flowing, her heart hurting. Finally, she rose and walked over to the window seat where she could see the road in front. She tried to sit, but it hurt too much, so she stood there, watching through the branches of the tree that shaded the room.

Meredith didn’t know how much time had passed before she saw a wagon come up the long drive. A man, unkempt and fat, stepped down and talked briefly to the overseer. Minutes later Lissa, her face streaked with tears, appeared and was placed in the wagon. Horrified, Meredith saw a chain locked around her ankle.

“Mama!” her friend screamed. “Mama!” Meredith saw Alma run out, only to be caught by the overseer who struck her to the ground.

“Miss Merry!” the terrified girl in the wagon yelled. Meredith felt her heart crumble. She had to go to Lissa, had to help her. She opened the window and reached out for one of the branches of the huge tree. In agonizing fear, she began to climb out. But her hand lost its grip, and she screamed as her body tumbled through the air, her own terrible screech mixing with that of Lissa.

C
hapter 1

 

Lucky Lady,
New Orleans, 1855

 

QUINN DEVEREUX
looked around the spacious cabin of the riverboat. After the eight years of hell he had endured, it seemed like Eden. He often wondered if he would ever become accustomed to its luxury.

He had personally designed everything in the cabin. A large bed dominated the room, reminding him only too well of the nights he had been squeezed together with other convicts in a portable prison wagon. Books, which he had craved during years of loneliness and boredom, lined the mahogany walls. Soft comfortable furniture welcomed the few visitors he permitted inside. A cabinet, filled with the finest wines, sat in a corner.

Windows lined two sides of the cabin, wide spacious windows that he could open to welcome the fresh breeze flowing in from the ocean or river. Centered on the back wall was an oil painting of a rainbow, and as his eyes hovered on the canvas, an odd dissatisfaction gnawed at him. The damned picture, at times, seemed to taunt him.

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