Read Songs of the Shenandoah Online
Authors: Michael K. Reynolds
Tags: #Christian Fiction, Historical
“I need no apology.”
“Yes.” Anika looked down. “I am afraid we discussed it and we won't be of any assistance to you. Besides the meal, of course, and you can stay the night.”
“The morning you leave.” Pieter lifted the weapon and placed it across his lap.
“I understand,” Muriel said. Davin could sense she had regretted bringing them here. Perhaps it was the knowledge of the risk they might have brought if they had been followed. Maybe this was what was bringing her such unease.
Yet the more he observed Muriel, the more he became fascinated with the posture she took, the subtle bending of her lip, the shifting away of her blue eyes, the lifting of her light red brows. Something about this journey was shifting her countenance, was lowering her pretenses. The tough, and at times surly woman, was yielding to inner fragilityâa gentle rose, someone more vulnerable, more conflicted. This made him even more drawn to her because though she was speaking with their hosts, he knew she was communicating with him, welcoming Davin to the inner reaches of her soul.
“It's just . . .” Anika struggled to get the words out. “It's just that all of this is a bit odd to us. We help people come up north. There isn't anything we can do about assisting you to go south.”
“We only need guidance in how we can evade the soldiers.” Muriel stood. “I don't know this area, but there must be a way to get around them.”
“Most unusual,” Pieter droned.
Anika sighed. “I wish there was something we could do.” She looked at Seamus with eyes of compassion. “Do you think it wise to take this minister any farther on this journey?”
Davin put his bowl down. They were getting nowhere. He had no energy to explain what they were doing, and it was obvious the old man wanted no part of this. They would have to find a way on their own.
“I help the preacher man.”
The voice, deep and weathered, startled Davin who rose to his feet. There, blending in the shadows of the doorway leading to another room in the house, was a tall black man, whose white cotton shirt was unbuttoned and hanging loosely on his muscular frame.
“I take these folks.”
“Jacob.” Anika didn't seem surprised, and her tone retained her tenderness. “But you only just arrived.”
“Dat means the path still in my head the ways I see it.”
“Where did you just come from?” Davin asked.
Jacob stepped into the light of the room, revealing gray, tight curls and scars on his face and chest, ones that had long since healed. “I just comes up from 'Lanta.”
“You mustn't allow Jacob to do this.” Anika stepped toward Muriel. “They'll kill him. He barely made it in and he's still healing from the bites from the hounds he shook.”
Davin saw an unfamiliar emotion rising in Muriel. Was she losing herself in all of this? She was biting her lip as if to fight back tears. The gesture of this man had affected her in some strange manner.
Jacob walked over to Seamus, bent down, and put a large hand on his chest. “He dyin', the preacher is.”
“Yes.” Davin went over and grabbed his brother's hand. “We know. We're just trying to bring him to his family before he . . . passes.”
“Then we don't wait.” Jacob's eyes were soft and tender, seemingly so misplaced in this man's body, which Davin assumed was chiseled from many years on the plantations he had heard so much about.
How could he ask this man to risk everything, when his brother had little chance of making it home? Unless this, like Muriel and Mr. Miller, was another angel sent to protect the soldier of God.
Davin began to choke with emotion on the thought of this notion. Even on the brink of death, Seamus was teaching him about faith.
“Come,” Jacob said, this time with authority. “We need it dark. We go now. Or the preacher, he die.”
Chapter 43
The Patriots
“Ma'am. You seriously want to go there?” The ferryman pointed at the Manhattan skyline, which was blackened with smoke.
Clare got shoved backward, as refugee passengers disembarked on the Staten Island port and blended into the large, frantic crowds along the shore. The July heat and heaviness of the air only added to the foul disposition of the people. She waved an arm up to the man with the bushy beard and tired face, who was leaning down over the railing of the ship, and he merely shook his head.
“My family is there. I must go.”
“Listen, ma'am, even if I wanted to, I couldn't haul you back.”
She wasn't finished. After what she had gone through to get from Gettysburg to this point, Clare was determined to swim across the Hudson if she must. What should have amounted to a three- or four-day trip ended up taking her an excruciating week, with all of the delays in available transportation, checkpoints, and carriage breakdowns. And through it all, she wrestled with sleepless nights, anxious about what might be happening back home.
Clare went to shout up at the ferryman one more time, but he turned and disappeared out of sight. She lifted her luggage and forced her way through crowd, moving upstream against the flow of angry currents.
After being battered with elbows and insults, Clare made it to the gangway and climbed up, trying to make progress while avoiding being seen. By the time she made it to the top, she had a moment of relief, only to bump into the ferryman who grabbed her arm with force.
“Our orders were quite clear, ma'am. We can take passengers out of the city, but no one goes inside. Can't you tell? Manhattan is under siege. It's not a place for a woman. Or for anyone.”
“You don't understand. I am with the
New York Daily
. A reporter.”
“You could be Mary Lincoln herself and I ain't taking you across. Those are United States Navy ships out there with young eager lads looking for an excuse to fire those cannons.”
A short, stocky man came up to the two of them. “What is the problem, Emmet?”
Clare recognized the uniform. She held out her hand. “Captain. I am Clare Royce.”
He gave her a cold stare.
“Of the
New York Daily
.”
“I know who you are.”
“Captain, sir. I am seeking passage back. I'll pay anything you want. I need to get back. It is most urgent.”
It was almost as if he took satisfaction in her pleading tone. But finally he turned to the ferryman. “Send her to the lower deck with the others. Should make for some interesting . . . conversation.”
“But, Captain.”
“Do as I say. Then let's push off.”
“Yes, sir.” The ferryman went to lift up Clare's luggage, but she grabbed it herself and followed him. She wasn't sure what lay ahead for her, but at least she was on board. “Thank you, Captain.”
“You may want to wait on thanking me.”
The ferryman winded around the few remaining passengers and took her to the other side of the ship. Then he opened a wooden door that was lit below with lanterns. From the noise rising up, it appeared to be the engine room. He waved her in with mock formality.
Clare went down the wooden steps and after just a few, she saw there were about a half dozen brutish-looking men sitting around the large iron steam furnace, their faces blanched and their clothes damp with sweat.
One of the taller men, who had a green plug hat and bushy sideburns, had been leaning against the wall but he straightened. “What do we have here?” He lifted his hat and gave a bow. “Welcome to the revolution.”
She didn't respond but sought out a place where she could keep to herself. But as the door closed on them above, the only available choice was for her to sit on the steps. Clare set her suitcase down and noticed that each of the men were without any belongings other than brickbats and other crude weapons.
What had she gotten herself into?
“The name is Fergus.” The man leaned back against the wall. He looked her over as if he was trying to read her intentions. The boat lurched and the other men grabbed on to whatever they could to keep their balance. “And this would be the time where you would tell me yours.”
“Clare. Clare Royce.”
“Where you from, Clare Royce?”
What did he mean? “The city. Manhattan.”
Fergus smiled. “No. Before you came across the pond.” His brogue was heavy.
“Oh. Roscommon.”
“Donegal.” He nodded to the others, who seemed less interested in conversation. “Same as these lads. Although, not Donegal. Let's see. Two from Cork. A Dubliner. Then let's see . . . Connall from Mayo, right boy?”
One of the oldest of the men nodded and shifted his stick into his other hand.
“And then Jimmy there, he says he's from Waterford, but we can't believe anything he says.” He raised his arms. “Why we've got the makings of a right, proper Fenian party, don't you think?”
Every grain of wisdom in Clare told her to keep quiet, but her anger and disappointment in herself won the battle. “What are you doing, Fergus?”
There must have been something in the way she said it that caused them to exchange glances of surprise.
“Why, pretty lady, whatsoever could you mean?”
“A fine thing you're doing, making a shame of our people. You're going to go over there, smack a few heads, break some glass, and burn some buildings, all in the name of our oppressed people?”
This brought a mixture of laughter and angry faces. But she didn't relent.
“Who are you? Brian Boru? Hugh O'Neill? Rory O'Donnell? You one of the lost earls?” She tried to think of other Irish heroes of the past.
He crossed his legs and arms. “And suppose I was? Suppose I didn't want to stand by and continue to be bloodied and bludgeoned by everyone else in the world? Maybe we are tired of having boots pressing against our necks. Maybe this is our time. To be heard.”
“Do you know how many of our people have been slaughtered in this war?” The man named Connall spoke now, but without any attempt at charm. “They get old General Tommy Meagher, tell him to gather his countrymen like the fools that they be. Give him a green flag with a harp, name it the Irish Battalion and put them all on the front line. Call them heroes while their mothers are left childless. And now the wealthy and privileged want to take more of our babies while they stay home in their city mansions, peering out their windows from above?”
“So you fight back?” Clare spit out.
“You're right we do,” Connall said.
“You brave patriots. All of you.” Clare stood. “You get bullied, and what do you do? You become the bully yourself. You repay cruelty . . . with cowardice.”
“Wait,” Fergus said. “Now I recall you. You're that Negro-loving reporter from the
Daily
, aren't you, lassie?”
“That is the only true thing you've said.” Clare reached down for her suitcase.
Fergus pounded his brickbat on his palm. “And you are fine with us Irish dying so your Negroes can step over our bodies to take our jobs?”
Clare's moment of bravery was wavering, and she could sense violence roiled in the air. If they saw her shaking knees, it would betray all she had said to them. So she lifted her shoulders and spoke as firmly as possible.
“Let me be clear in saying this, and I mean this with every part of my heart. You, sirs, are not my Ireland. You are some foul creatures who crawled aboard ships or up through the sewers of these streets.
“Do what you want, as you will. But don't tarnish the name of our fair land. You, sirs, are not my Ireland. When you do your foul, disgusting deeds, lay down your banner and do it as the thieves you are. Don't you dare call yourself Irish.”
Clare stomped up the steps, drew her breath, and prayed that the door handle wasn't locked.
Chapter 44
Enemy Lines
The shattered glass crunched under the weight of Clare's boots, and she stared at the ragged hole where the front window of the
New York Daily
used to be.