The Nine Lives of Charlotte Taylor (37 page)

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Authors: Sally Armstrong

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BOOK: The Nine Lives of Charlotte Taylor
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When they return to the cabin, Charlotte slips the legal document in with her treasured books and marks the date on the wall. Married to Philip Hierlihy, September 11, 1787.

P
HILIP’S FIRST TASK
as her husband is to build another addition. A bedchamber for the girls is tacked on, making the place look like an old man’s squashed top hat. New beds are built, without mattresses but laden with furs to cushion the boards and warm the children on them.

By October 1787, she is pregnant again, and the New Year is hardly begun when she discovers John Humphrys is claiming ownership of Lot Fifty-three, the very lot she bought from him just seven months earlier. She threatens to harm the man if he doesn’t quit the property, and when he defies her, she sends a memorial to John O’Dell, the provincial secretary in Frederick Town, dated January 7, 1788, demanding retribution.

She capitalizes the words she wishes to emphasize, penning her blunt demand in flourishing letters that make the page look more like a work of art than an accusation. She reads it aloud to Philip before dispatching it. “I shall sign my name as Charlotte Blake since that is the name under which I made the purchase,” she says.

Honourable Sir
,

You have Desired me to send a Certificate of what cleared
land was on No. 53 South side of the river but the man will
not sign it for me as he means to try to get located for it himself after the Selling of it and Giving a Deed which Sir you have in your office which is Drawn by Mr. Ledwiny and Signed by John Wilson Esquire
.

Honourable Sir I hope you will see me testifyed in this affair and have me Registrate for said Lot as it seems to me that he have a mind to try to cut me out of it after I buying of and paying for it
.

Charlotte Blake

N.B. The man is John Humphrys

 

She’s still waiting for a reply when the first Hierlihy child arrives in the midst of a howling nor’easter in June. She names him Philip, after his father, who behaves as though this is the first child who has ever been born, despite the evidence to the contrary all around him.

Jimmy, now a strapping young man, announces that he’s leaving them for a job in Frederick Town the same week as Philip gets himself appointed assessor of rates and surveyor of roads for Northumberland County Middle District. Philip makes so much fuss of his new station in life that she feels like she’s barely had a moment to acknowledge that Jimmy is leaving them. The morning he sets off, though, Charlotte makes him a gift of William Wishart’s winter boots, and his great coat. And for a time he hugs her like the colt of a boy he once was.

Soon after, Philip is sworn in by the grand jury in the newly established premises for the Court of General Session up by the forks. Watching him, Charlotte’s pride is somewhat tempered by the fact that he appears to like his new title overmuch, the status it confers more than the duty. She’s been keeping him off the rum, but she can’t deny that his bad temper and
brawling style in public threaten the position that is so clearly dear to him.

Barely a year after Philip’s birth, the second Hierlihy child arrives. Eleanor Helene raises the tally to three children under the age of four and five over the age of eight. Philip wears his large family like a badge of honour, the beginnings of his empire.

That same winter William Davidson dies from the effects of exposure after falling through the ice in the river. It’s a painful loss for Charlotte. She trusted him, enjoyed his company and found comfort in the fact that he clearly approved of her nonconformist behaviour. Not so her husband, who has begun to remind her incessantly that she should behave more like the wife of a man with a position in the government.

Although Philip disapproves, she continues to go with Elizabeth, and sometimes Janet Murdoch, to the Indian camp to help the women and children. It’s on the way back from the camp one spring day, with baby Eleanor tied to her mother’s back—Charlotte, a little short of breath as she is pregnant again—that Elizabeth mentions that she wants to stop at Duncan Robertson’s lot to deliver a parcel.

“A parcel of what?” Charlotte wants to know.

She’s taken aback when Elizabeth confesses that she’s made strawberry tarts for the handsome young man on Lot Five, who came to the river after serving with the 42nd Black Watch regiment in the American War. He’d recently been appointed by the government to act as the attorney on the river. Elizabeth’s cheeks turn crimson when her surprised mother asks what such a gift is meant to convey to Duncan Robertson.

Charlotte can’t imagine how the girl has managed to make strawberry tarts without anyone noticing. But remembering the
moments she stole with Pad as a girl, she knows that a young couple can and will find a way. And here she thought fifteen-year-old Elizabeth had just been slipping away from the cabin because she wanted a rest from incessant child care. Unlike her rambunctious sister Polly, Elizabeth is shy; she’s sweet with the younger children and is always an adoring daughter. It never occurred to Charlotte that she could be seeking the company of a man.

Elizabeth looks at the ground, shuffles her feet in the pine needles and says in a barely audible voice, “I want to marry Duncan.” Charlotte whirls around to face her so fast, little Eleanor almost swings right out of the sling.

“Marry? You really want to marry this man?”

Charlotte stands on the bank of the river, as still as the trees all around her, confronting her first-born child, the daughter who was conceived in England and born in Nepisiguit and has been by her side for almost sixteen years. Other local girls Elizabeth’s age have become wives, she knows, but she is utterly perplexed that she has missed the cues that her girl was even interested in men. Elizabeth is looking stricken and so guilty that Charlotte, finally, simply has to laugh and give her blessing. She is the last person on Earth to want to stand in the way of love, knowing how short a season it is in bloom.

The day before the nuptials, Charlotte calls her daughter to her bedchamber so they can be alone, and she twists two strands of silver into a bracelet around her delicate wrist.

“This was your father’s. He wore it with the pride of a man who dared to dream of a larger future. I saved these strands for you to wear at your wedding. When you look at them, spare a thought for the father who would have smiled on your sweet face and loved you just as much as I do.”

On September 22, 1791, a very pregnant Charlotte, her husband, Philip, and their brood of seven children travel to Bettvin, known to some as Bay du Vin, to witness the ceremony, performed by James Horton Esquire, now a Justice of the Peace. Charlotte’s heart lurches only a little when he pronounces that “Elizabeth Willisams and Duncan Robertson, both residents of the Parish of Newcastle, are married by law.”

The wall at the back of the cabin is now marked with births, deaths, and the marriage day of her first-born child.

CHAPTER 11
The Miramichi
1791
 

F
or a brief time, there is one person less in the cabin, but James Hierlihy is born just before the river freezes over in November 1791. Space has become an intolerable issue at Blake Brook. Mealtime is chaotic as six children vie for their portion of stew, and the seventh one cries for his mother’s breast. Bedtime is worse. They’re packed in, two and three to a bed, with the infant James in a cradle. Philip has managed to find another homeless boy, Donovan, to tend the livestock. He sleeps in the shed, not the house, but they have to find him a place at the table.

Elizabeth has been coming every day to help her, treading the well-worn path from her “marriage home,” as she likes to call the tilt Duncan has built on Lot Five, to the Hierlihys’ collection of huts. But now she is expecting her first child, and her mother decides she has to wean herself away from her support. Elizabeth cannot be expected to tend to her brothers and sisters when she’ll be feeding her own child. So Charlotte decides to seek a girl to help with the children. What’s one more under her roof ?

Still, when she calculates the crops she can grow that spring and the number of mouths she has to feed, the tally tells her they are on the short side of even. So they rent more land, plant more potatoes, buy more livestock. She knows of one family that sold a cow in the fall to buy eight bushels of potatoes; another traded three sheep for a half a hundredweight of flour. She doesn’t want to be in that boat, and she likes to remind her husband that she is resourceful. “I once ground buds and leaves into the grain to make it stretch when the crop produced so little it might as well have failed.”

But another daughter, Honnor, is born in February 1793, and life begins to feel like a constant game of stretching. A month later, Elizabeth makes Charlotte a grandmother when she gives birth to Duncan Junior.

One evening after she has visited the new mother, and spent some time on the snowshoe journey back thinking about the future her children and grandchildren now face, Charlotte tells Philip about the place William Wishart visited, about the huge meadows, the easy access to the river, the ocean teeming with fish. The fact that no one lives around there but the People in their camp, and maybe one lonely hermit. It’s a place they can settle their entire family and start anew.

Philip’s expression is sober as he listens to her. “It’s not that the prospect is unappealing, Charlotte,” he says. “And it may be what we turn our minds to achieving. But we cannot quit this land until the deeds are signed to us, or all that we’ve worked so hard to accumulate will be lost.”

She knows he is right.

But in the meantime, she lures him on an adventure to find this Tabisintack. “If William told me right, the journey there and back will take a day, the weather being fine.” Though Philip can
be a hard man, he knows that now is not the time to deny a woman with so many children a little hope.

On a fine day in May, they leave their brood with Elizabeth and set out for what Philip has jokingly started to call the promised land. Going by canoe means they don’t have to fear a keel getting caught in the sandbars of the shoals; they slip across them with ease and paddle along to the north side of the bay without incident. The voyage through the open water thrills Charlotte, though they stay close to shore, avoiding the swell of the sea.

J
UST AFTER MIDDAY,
they spot the opening to the Tabisintack River, just as William had described it. There are half a dozen islands, separated by deep water, layering the entrance to the river. Long sand dunes lick into the sea and dense seagrass covers the islands. Coves and creeks along the banks beg for exploring and fish swim in massive schools just under the surface of the water. Flocks of ducks and geese dot a huge salt marsh.

As soon as she lays her eyes on this land, Charlotte knows it is the place they must settle. She also knows, as though she’s been here a hundred times before, exactly where the house will stand. The setting is magnificent: a point surrounded by water on three sides, the site for the house a half-acre back from the water, safely away from the rising tides and with a clear view to the meadow behind it and the wide-open salt marsh.

“A two-storey house,” she tells Philip as he paddles them in to shore, “with proper rooms up the ladder for the children and, on the lower floor, a place to cook and sit by the hearth, and our own bedchamber.” So anxious is she to put her feet on this
land, she’s out of the canoe too soon, sloshing in knee-deep water, nearly losing her balance.

They wander up and down the river’s edge, cross the marshland to the woods, measure out the lots they will need for each of the children when they are grown. She thinks she sees sign of the Indian camp on the other side of the river but isn’t certain, though the acrid scent of old fire mixes with the sharp whiff of brine in the air.

A soft wind blows low to the ground, which turns her thoughts to William. How reverently he spoke of this place. She looks out over the water and wonders if he’s out there watching over her, and could possibly be happy that she’s here.

Philip interrupts her reverie. “If we leave this minute, Charlotte, we can make it back to Black Brook before dark.”

“It’s Blake Brook,” she corrects, for the thousandth time, as she reluctantly follows him back to their boat.

T
HE YEAR
1795 turns out to be a watershed for Charlotte. On April 15, she writes in her diary:

I’ll be forty years old this month. Hard to believe I’ve been here for twenty years. From wilderness to settlement, from isolation to community, from a girl to a mother of nine children and already a grandmother. And at last the new Elections Act says land-holding women can vote so I will cast my ballot with the men after all
.

It’s ten years since I sent the memorial to Papa. Ten years of wondering—did he receive it, destroy it, misplace it? Did his reply go astray? I think of it less often now but still it prickles my soul
.

Philip and I plan to leave this cabin on the brook and
start again in Tabisintack as soon as we possibly can. He has his flaws and his demons, but we are well-suited in our mutual plan to settle a new part of this frontier. It takes land, and lots of kin working the lots, to make the life I have been seeking ever since I set foot on the bay. My boys will build and plough, my girls will work beside them. The family will set roots deep into that soil. It will be another beginning
.

 

T
HEY MAKE CLANDESTINE VISITS
to Tabisintack over several seasons, mark the fields for growing, take down timbers to clear land for planting as well as for building.

On the Miramichi, the family is by no means idle. Elizabeth and Duncan have another child, Polly weds Duncan McCraw, who’d also served with the 42nd Regiment of the Black Watch, bringing another ally into the plan to settle Tabisintack. John Junior wins a position in the land assessment office of the province, another valuable placement for the success of her project, she thinks. But they are still waiting impatiently for their deeds.

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