The One Who Waits for Me (2 page)

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Authors: Lori Copeland

BOOK: The One Who Waits for Me
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“Same goes for me,” Peach said. “A roof to call my own. I can't wait to sleep in a decent bed.”

“And take a bath,” Pierce added. “Hot water and clean towels.”

“Sissies,” Gray Eagle said. “Clean beds, hot food. Didn't the war make men out of you?”

“Look at the coin!” the other two shouted.

Grinning, Gray Eagle began, “Now, gentlemen. You're—”

Pierce reached for the scout's hand and pried open his palm. Three pairs of eyes focused on the coin.

Tails.

Pierce groaned. “Flip again.”

“Sorry. We ride west.” Gray Eagle slid the coin back into his pouch. “Don't worry. We probably won't be delayed more than a couple of days at most.”

Saddling up, Preach said, “You could take the shorter route, Captain. A coin flip doesn't mean we have to stick together.”

“You certainly could go your own way…if you were a fool.” Grinning, Gray Eagle reined in beside his friends. “Which you aren't. Right, brother?”

Sometimes Pierce wondered, but he knew the wisdom of the scout's words. He'd counted the hours till he'd be back home since he'd ridden away five years ago, and it irked him to waste even a day. Delay was pure aggravation. Tightening his hold on the reins, he said quietly, “Okay, but we pick up the pace. If the roads are better and we have fewer rivers to ford, we should be able to make it in the same amount of time.”

Preach frowned. “You're sure anxious to be home.”

“I thought you were too.”

“I am, but a couple of days isn't going to sour the milk.”

Pierce nudged his mare's flanks. “No, but there's no point in delaying.”

Nodding, Preach shifted in his saddle leather. “Okay. Let's go home.”

Pierce fell in behind the two men and the group started off again.

Home.

Peace and quiet.
Thank You, God
.

He was sure he'd seen the last of misery.

One

J
oanie?”

Beth's sister stirred, coughing.

Beth gently shook Joanie's shoulder again, and the young woman opened her eyes, confusion shining in their depths.

“Pa?”

“He passed a few minutes ago. Trella will be waiting for us.”

Joanie lifted her wrist to her mouth and smothered sudden sobbing. “I'm scared, Beth.”

“So am I. Dress quickly.”

The young woman slid out of bed, her bare feet touching the dirt-packed floor. Outside, the familiar sound of pond frogs nearly drowned out soft movements, though there was no need to be silent any more. Ma had preceded Pa in death two days ago. Beth and Joanie had been waiting, praying for the hour of Pa's death to come swiftly. Together, they lifted their father's silent form and gently carried him out the front door. He was a slight man, easy to carry. Beth's heart broke as they took him to the shallow grave they had dug the day before. Ma's fever had taken her swiftly. Pa had held on for as long as he could. Beth could still hear his voice in her ear: “Take care of your sister, little Beth.” He didn't have to remind her that there was no protection at all now to save either of them from Uncle Walt and his son, Bear. Beth had known all of her life that one day she and Joanie would have to escape this place—a place of misery.

It was her father's stubborn act that started the situation Beth and Joanie were immersed in. Pa had hid the plantation deed from his brother and refused to tell him where it was. Their land had belonged to a Jornigan for two hundred years, but Walt claimed that because he was the older brother and allowed Pa to live on his land the deed belonged to him. Pa was a proud man and had no respect for his brother, though his family depended on Walt for a roof over their heads and food on their table. For meager wages they worked Walt's fields, picked his cotton, and suffered his tyranny along with the other workers. Pa took the location of the hidden deed to his grave—almost. Walt probably figured Beth knew where it was because Pa always favored her. And she did, but she would die before she shared the location with her vile uncle.

By the light of the waning moon the women made short work of placing the corpse in the grave and then filling the hole with dirt. Finished, they stood back and Joanie bowed her head in prayer. “Dear Father, thank You for taking Ma and Pa away from this world. I know they're with You now, and I promise we won't cry.” Hot tears streaming down both women's cheeks belied her words.

Returning to the shanty, Joanie removed her nightshirt and put on boy's clothes. Dressed in similar denim trousers and a dark shirt, Beth turned and picked up the oil lamp and poured the liquid carefully around the one-room shanty. Yesterday she had packed Ma's best dishes and quilts and dragged them to the root cellar. It was useless effort. She would never be back here, but she couldn't bear the thought of fire consuming Ma's few pretty things. She glanced over her shoulder when the stench of fuel heightened Joanie's cough. The struggle to breathe had been a constant companion since her younger sister's birth.

Many nights Beth lay tense and fearful, certain that come light Joanie would be gone. Now that Ma and Pa were dead, Joanie was the one thing left on this earth that held meaning for Beth. She put down the lamp on the table. Walking over to Joanie, she buttoned the last button on her sister's shirt and tugged her hat brim lower.

“Do you have everything?”

“Yes.”

“Then go outside and wait.”

Nodding, Joanie paused briefly beside the bed where Pa's tall frame had been earlier. She hesitantly reached out and touched the empty spot. “May you rest in peace, Pa.”

Moonlight shone through the one glass pane facing the south. Beth shook her head. “He was a good man. It's hard to believe Uncle Walt had the same mother and father.”

Joanie's breath caught. “Pa was so good and Walt is so… evil.”

“If it were up to me, he would be lying in that grave outside the window, not Pa.”

Beth tried to recall one single time in her life when Walt Jornigan had ever shown an ounce of mercy to anyone. Certainly not to his wife when she was alive. Certainly not to Beth or Joanie. If Joanie was right and there was a God, what would Walt say when he faced Him? She shook the thought aside. She had no compassion for the man or reverence for the God her sister believed in and worshipped.

“We have to go now, Joanie.”

“Yes.” She picked up her Bible from the little table beside the rocking chair and then followed Beth outside the shanty, her breath coming in ragged gasps. Pausing, Joanie bent and succumbed to a coughing spasm. Beth helplessly waited, hoping her sister could make the anticipated trip through the cotton fields. The women had planned for days now to escape if Ma and Pa both passed.

Beth asked gently, “Can you do this?”

Joanie held up a restraining hand. “Just need…a minute.”

Beth wasn't certain that they could wait long; time was short. Dawn would be breaking soon, and then Walt would discover that Pa had died and the sisters were missing. But they had to leave. Joanie's asthma was getting worse. Each gasping breath left her drained and hopeless, and Walt refused to let her see a doctor.

When Joanie had mentioned the notice in a discarded Savannah newspaper advertising a piece of land, Beth knew she had to buy the property and provide a home for Joanie. Pa had allowed her and Joanie to keep the wage Uncle Walt paid monthly. Over the years they had saved enough to survive, and the owner was practically giving the small acreage away. They wouldn't be able to build a permanent structure on their land until she found work, but she and Joanie would own their own place where no one could control them. Beth planned to eventually buy a cow and a few setting hens. At first they could live in a tent—Beth's eyes roamed the small shanty. It would be better than how they lived now.

Joanie's spasm passed and she glanced up. “Okay. You…can do it now.”

Beth struck a match.

She glanced at Joanie. The young woman nodded and clutched her Bible to her chest. Beth had found it in one of the cotton picker's beds after he had moved on and given it to Joanie. Her sister had kept the Bible hidden from sight for fear that Walt would spot it on one of his weekly visits. Beth had known, as Joanie had, that if their uncle had found it he'd have had extra reason to hand out his daily lashing. Joanie kept the deed to their new land between its pages.

After pitching the lighted match into the cabin, Beth quickly closed the heavy door. Stepping to the window, she watched the puddles of kerosene ignite one by one. In just minutes flames were licking the walls and gobbling up the dry tinder. A peculiar sense of relief came over her when she saw tendrils of fire racing through the room, latching onto the front curtain and encompassing the bed.

“Don't watch.” Joanie slipped her hand into Beth's. “We have to hurry before Uncle Walt spots the flames.”

Hand in hand, the sisters stepped off the porch, and Beth turned to the mounds of fresh dirt heaped not far from the shanty. Pausing before the fresh graves, she whispered. “I love you both. Rest in peace.”

Joanie had her own goodbyes for their mother. “We don't want to leave you and Pa here alone, but I know you understand—”

As the flames licked higher, Beth said, “We have to go, Joanie. Don't look back.”

“I won't.” Her small hand quivered inside Beth's. “God has something better for us.”

Beth didn't answer. She didn't know whether Ma and Pa were in a good place or not. She didn't know anything about such things. She just knew they had to run.

The two women dressed in men's clothing struck off across the cotton fields carrying everything they owned in a small bag. It wasn't much. A dress for each, clean underclothes, and their nightshirts. Beth had a hairbrush one of the pickers had left behind. She'd kept the treasure well hidden so Walt wouldn't see it. He'd have taken it from her. He didn't hold with primping—said combing tangles from one's hair was a vain act. Finger-picking river-washed hair was all a woman needed.

Fire now raced inside the cabin. By the time Uncle Walt noticed the smoke from the plantation house across the fields, the two sisters would be long gone. No longer would they be under the tyrannical thumb of Walt or Bear Jornigan.

Freedom.

Beth sniffed the night air, thinking she could smell the precious state. Never again would she or Joanie answer to any man. She would run hard and far and find help for Joanie so that she could finally breathe free. In her pocket she fingered the remaining bills she'd taken from the fruit jar in the cabinet. It was all the ready cash Pa and Ma had. They wouldn't be needing money where they were.

Suddenly there was a sound of a large explosion. Heavy black smoke blanketed the night air. Then another blast.

Kerosene! She'd forgotten the small barrel sitting just outside the back porch.

It was the last sound Beth heard.

Two

T
he sun topped the crest of Spanish oak that hung thick with moss. Long rows of white dotted the landscape. Cotton pickers with their heads swathed in white cloth straightened to shade their eyes and watch the passing spectacle. Two soldiers wearing Confederate gray and one wearing Union blue rode past. Men going home to waiting family. Two baritones sang “Dixie.”

The Union solider, singing in a deep bass, led the strange pack with a rousing “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” The result was an odd clatter of

“Mine eyes have seen the glory!”
“Oh, I wish I was in the land of cotton!”
“Of the coming of the Lord!”
“Old times there are not forgotten!”

Puzzled gapes followed the strange procession as the men's laughter trailed them down the road. The war ended months ago, and the sight of troops moving along the road was nothing new to the pickers. No doubt it was the returning men's strange way of celebrating that caught their attention.

Preach broke into the second verse of “Dixie,” wincing when a wadded-up hat hit him in the back. Grinning, he lifted his chin and sang louder.

The men's infectious laughter filled their surroundings. Pierce drew in a deep breath of the hot, stifling air. Freedom. The word had never sounded so good.

“I can taste those mudbugs now,” Preach declared. “And potatoes, onions, and corn.”

“Hah!” Throwing back his head, Pierce laughed. “We will celebrate the joy of living, my friends.” Closing his eyes, he soaked in the soft breeze playing across his face.
Thank You, God, for bringing me home
. Breathing in another deep draught, he paused, frowning.

Smoke?

They rounded a curve in the road, and ahead of them a bellowing black cloud filled the horizon.

“Grass fire?” Gray Eagle wondered.

Pierce lifted a brow. “Might be.” His gaze rested on the heavy blanket of smoke sweeping across a nearby cotton field. The light wind was catching the fire and spreading it across dry fields. “Could be a homesteader burning off his land.”

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