1867 . . . Southern lawyer and Civil War veteran,
Reed Jackson, returns to his family’s plantation in a wheelchair. His father
deems him unfit, and deeds the Jackson holdings, including his intended bride, to
a younger brother. Angry and bitter, Reed moves west to Fenton, Missouri, home
to a cousin with a successful business, intending to start over.
Belle Richards, a dirt poor farm girl aching
to learn how to read, cleans, cooks and holds together her family’s meager
property. A violent brother and a drunken father plot to marry her off, and gain
a new horse in the bargain. But Belle’s got other plans, and risks her life to
reach them.
Reed is captivated by Belle from their first
meeting, but wheelchair bound, is unable to protect her from violence. Bleak
times will challenge Reed and Belle's courage and dreams as they forge a new
beginning from the ashes of war and ignorance.
May 19, 1867
“Need some help,
mister?”
“I’ll be fine,
thank you,” Reed Jackson said.
The conductor
approached through whirls of black smoke and repeated, “Do ya need some help?”
The whistle blew
as Reed replied. “I’m a cripple, not deaf, you jackass. I said I’d be fine.”
The conductor
squinted through ashed air and hefted himself onto the train’s step. “OK, son,”
he shouted.
The train pulled
away and Reed struggled to pull his bag on to his lap and wheel himself to the
step of the station house. A sign, swinging in the locomotive’s draft, read ‘Fenton,
Missouri - Population 6,502.’
“Is there a boy
about who can get my trunks to the hotel?” Reed shouted into the dim building.
The scrawny station manager shaded his eyes as he stepped into the dirt street.
“Where ya be
headin’?” he asked.
“The Ames Hotel,”
Reed replied.
Reed contemplated
the man who was now rubbing his jaw and eyeing his wheelchair; the last,
hopefully, in a long line of nosy, prying half-wits whom Reed had encountered
on this tortuous journey. The man knelt down and touched the leather strapping
of the wheels.
“Please don’t touch
the chair, sir,” Reed said.
He stood, eyes
still perusing Reed and his belongings. “In the war?”
“Is there someone
able to bring my trunks to the Ames Hotel?” Reed repeated.
“From the sound of
that drawl, I’d bet my Helen’s berry pie, you was wearing gray,” the
stationmaster added.
The man’s
self-righteous smile did nothing to lighten Reed’s mood. He was tired, his leg
hurt, and he wanted nothing more than complete and utter silence, followed by a
long soak in a tub. But this was to be his new hometown. His fresh start. This imbecile may need his services as an
attorney if he killed his pie-making wife, Reed thought.
“I served in the
confederacy, sir.”
“Damn. I was
right. A Johnny Reb, huh?”
“I consider myself
a U.S. citizen,” Reed replied.
“Well, yeah but .
. .”
“Excuse me,” Reed
said as reached his hands to the wheels of his chair. “I must get to the hotel.
I’m expected.”
The stationmaster
turned as a man and woman approached. “Reed?” the man called.
“Henry.” Reed
recognized his cousin from the remarkable likeness the man had to Reed’s
mother. Tall and dark with great smiles marked the Ames family.
Henry clasped
Reed’s hand and shook, turning to a petite blond beside him. “Reed, this is my
wife, Mary Ellen. Mary Ellen, this is my cousin, Reed Jackson.”
“Pleasure to meet
you, sir. How was your trip?” she shouted over the clang, roar and bedlam of
the station.
Mary Ellen Ames
wore an expensive, up-to-date gown and filled it most attractively, Reed
noticed. He smiled his best Southern charm and held her dainty, gloved hand in
his. “Dirty, hot and long.”
She laughed and
turned to her husband. “Our traveler is weary, Henry. Let’s get him out of the
sun and the dust.”
Reed was thankful
this woman, his hostess was gracious and mannerly. So unlike the passengers
he’d been forced to sit beside and occasionally converse with. He was sick of
boorish behavior and basked in the delightful smile Henry’s wife bestowed upon
him. Henry must have married as well as he possible could have in this
God-forsaken town. His mother had told him that her brother’s son had come west
before the war, married and was a successful businessman. She apparently was
right.
Reed looked at the
stationmaster as he listened in on their conversation. “I was trying to hire
someone to bring my trunks to the hotel when you came.”
“Oh, yes siree,
sir. Right away, sir.”
“Thank you.” Reed
wheeled himself along beside Henry and Mary Ellen as they walked away from the
station. As the roar of travel sounds dimmed, Reed turned to his cousin. “So
what is life like here in the wild West?”
Henry stopped,
looked at Reed’s serious face and leaned back, laughing. “The wild West? Fenton
is hardly wild, Reed.”
“Well, we are west
of the Mississippi, Henry? I was raised to believe civilization begins in the
heart of the South,” Reed said and smiled.
“You’re teasing,
Mr. Jackson. Why we have churches, shops, theatres, and even a small hospital.
The fine ladies of the Aid Society consider Fenton a bastion of civilization.”
Reed regarded her
sincere countenance. “Why, of course, Mrs. Ames. Forgive me.”
“Please call me
Mary Ellen. We are related, and I want you to feel comfortable in your new
home.”
“I would be
honored if you would call me Reed or Jackson, in kind,” he replied.
The streets of
Fenton were busy with wagons, horses and people. He watched as he wheeled and
found some staring strangely at him, many on their own way, paying him no mind.
He dodged horses’ hooves, children running and the hems of calico dresses.
“The sidewalk here
in the main part of town runs right in front of the hotel. Let me get you up
the first step,” Henry said, taking the handles behind Reed’s chair and turning
him around.
It was humiliating
to depend so entirely on others. Strangers, Reed didn’t mind, but the thought
of a relative helping him merely negotiate the street riled him.
“I’m fine, now.
Which way are we headed?” Reed said and caught an embarrassed glance from
husband to wife.
Mary Ellen Ames
motioned forward.
Reed pardoned
himself many times on the narrow sidewalk. He passed the Fenton National Bank
and a dreary theatre beside it and waited for Henry to move a pickle barrel a
few inches back in front of the general store.
Mary Ellen turned
onto a wooden sidewalk lined with flowers.
“Here we are.”
The Ames Hotel was
indeed grand, yet to Reed’s thoughts, homey. A wide porch held wicker furniture
and guests reclined and chatted there. Reed looked up at the large brick
building, seeing three floors, curtains blowing softly out of tall windows.
White gingerbread trim edged the porch pillars and roof. His gaze fell to six
wide wooden steps, their backs white, the footfalls, forest green.
“You’ve done well
for yourself, cousin. A very inviting hotel and busy from the looks of things,”
Reed said.
Henry put his arm
around his wife and looked up to the building. “We’ve been very fortunate.”
The couple’s eyes
met, and Reed felt the intensity from feet away. They stared at each other,
glowing, and Mary Ellen’s hand raised to her husband’s chest. This must be
quite an accomplishment out here in the prairie; they rightly deserved to be
proud, Reed thought.
Henry motioned
Reed to follow him around the side of the hotel. A swing under two shade trees
held a mother reading to a child. Pots of flowers lined the walk until Henry
came to a gate. “We use this entrance, Reed. Rarely use the front. I’ve lowered
the latch so you can come and go as you please.”
Reed followed his
cousin and his wife through the gate. The back of the hotel was a sea of
activity. Sheets hung in the breeze near a huge pot. Two women, their hair held
back with red kerchiefs, straightening from their stirring, turned and stared.
A round man in white carrying dead chickens, emerged from a shed and stopped
abruptly. An old man painting a fence halted his brush, mid-stroke. He sat his
bucket down, pulled a paint-stained rag from his pocket to wipe his hands and
hobbled in Reed’s direction.
“Mr. Ames, Mrs.
Ames, I sees your company’s here,” the wizened man said.
“Arlo, this is my
cousin, Mr. Jackson,” Henry said.
“Pleased to be
meetin’ ya,” the rough, wrinkled man said and held his hand out to shake.
Reed lifted his
hand. “Likewise, I’m sure.”
“Looks like yer
chair will fit after all.” The man circled Reed, nodding. “I done worried for
no use.”
Reed looked at the
man quizzically until Henry motioned to a back porch. The wide steps were
partially blocked by a series of elevating ramps. Reed stared. He looked up to
his cousin with questions. Reed knew that all in the yard listened intently,
but it did not stop his comments.
“Your father’s
letters implied that I’d have no trouble getting into the hotel. That a back
entrance was level.” He struggled to maintain a polite tone but could not.
Henry rushed
forward. “You won’t have any trouble, Reed. Arlo and I built this ramp.”
Reed watched his
cousin’s nervous face and hurried gestures. He wheeled himself to the base of
the ramp while his audience waited.
“Let’s all get
back to work, now,” Mary Ellen said to her employees. “We have a full house.”
Reed wheeled
himself up the first ramp, stopped and turned on the landing. The next level
appeared steeper and Reed pulled the wheel hard to get some momentum. Near the
top, he began to roll backwards. Reed caught himself and concentrated on the
last ramp. From the corner of his eye, he saw the laundresses and cook slyly
watching his progress.
Arlo however could
not restrain himself. “I tolds ya, Mr. Ames. We needed another foot to make
that second piece not so steep.”
Henry spoke
softly. “We couldn’t lengthen the ramp anymore without covering the coal
cellar. It’s fine.”
Reed pushed
himself up the last ramp and onto the porch.
“Yeeha,” Arlo
shouted and threw his hat in the air. “I done told ya it’d work.”
Reed heard Mary
Ellen hush the old man and smile approvingly to her husband. She climbed the
steps and faced him. “That went well, don’t you think?”
Reed Jackson took
a deep breath and nodded cautiously. He had yet to decide if he was insulted or
thankful. Reed’s eyes were drawn to a tall Negro woman in the doorway. She wore
a black dress with a white scarf at her neck and carried a large, wooden bowl
of beans. Their eyes met, and he felt a flash of anger in her stare. The woman
looked out over the work in the yard, and Reed noticed a quicker pace from all.
“Beulah, this is
my husband’s cousin, Mr. Jackson,” Mary Ellen said.
The woman’s head
nodded once, and Reed was surprised when she spoke. A rich cultured baritone
met his ears. “Pleased to meet you, Mr. Jackson.”
But Reed knew she
was anything but pleased. Truthfully, Reed was shocked into silence. He had
never imagined his cousin keeping a darkie. His father referred to the Ameses
as nigger-loving liberals, Northerners with no sense as to how the southern
economy and ways, worked. “Beulah,” Reed said.
“Henry, dear, I
saw the guests from San Francisco on the porch. I want to fuss over them a
bit,” Mary Ellen said to her husband and turned to Reed. “Do excuse me. Henry
will show you your rooms, and I’m sure you two have much to talk about.”
Reed inclined his
head. Beulah moved past him, down the steps and into the yard. He heard a
laundress reply to her low words. “Yes, Miss Beulah.”
Reed’s eyes and
brows rose to his cousin. “Miss Beulah?”
Henry smiled
tight-lipped and gestured Reed to follow him into the hotel. He unlocked a door
and handed Reed a key. Reed looked around the rooms that were to be his home.
The rug was flowered, the walls covered in pale blue paint with two large
windows overlooking the side yard that held the porch swing. Reed wheeled
himself into the bedroom and the attached bathing room. In the main room a
large desk sat between the two windows. Amazingly, someone had remembered to
remove the chair. An overstuffed settee faced a small fireplace with flowers
gracing the mantle.
“Very nice,
Henry,” Reed said as he looked around the room.
“Arlo’s painting
book shelves for the corner. I thought you may want to work from here for a
while.”
“It seems you’ve
thought of everything,” Reed replied. “I thank you.”
Reed watched as
his cousin turned away uncomfortably and sat down in the upholstered chair.
“There are some
things we need to discuss, Reed.”
“Of course,” Reed
said and wheeled closer.
Henry shifted in
his seat and leaned his elbows on his knees.
“I fully expect to
pay my way, Henry. I wrote your father as much,” Reed said. Perhaps the hotel
was not as profitable as his mother claimed. Reed knew that appearances could
well be deceiving.
Henry’s hands flew
forward, and he grimaced. “The money’s nothing. We’ll come to an agreement.”
Reed waited for
the man to continue and wondered what was causing his cousin such distress.
Henry and Mary Ellen had offered him a home. If not the money . . .
“It’s about
Beulah.”
Reed shrugged,
relieved. “Rest assured. I’d never let on to your family that you keep a
darkie.”
Henry turned, his
eyes glittering. “I don’t keep a ‘darkie,’ Reed. She is an employee.”
Reed sat back in
his chair and tilted his head with a smile. “Whatever you want to call it is
fine. I understand your reluctance.”
“No, Reed, I don’t
think you do. Beulah manages this hotel with Mary Ellen and me. We couldn’t do
without her. And she gets paid at the end of each week like the white employees,
except more. I know many Southerners came west with their slaves. There are
some here in town. Neither seems able to change. Not the white master, nor the Negro
slave. And they’ve continued on as before the war, here some two years after. Beulah
however is a free woman.”
Reed nodded and
lowered his eyes. “I see.”
“Will you, ah . .
. will you be comfortable with this?”
Reed wondered whom
the man would choose if Reed was, in fact, uncomfortable. The Negress or his
own flesh and blood? “It’s a new world, Henry. The choices weren’t mine.”
Henry nodded and
sighed. “Damn complicated subject, Reed.”
They sat quietly
until Henry stood. “I imagine you’ll want to get settled. I see your trunks
being brought around. We eat together at four and feed the guests at five-thirty.
Turn left out your door, and you’ll run into our kitchen.”
“Thank you, Henry.
And be assured, I don’t plan on being a burden.”
Henry opened the
door when someone knocked and motioned the men forward hauling Reed’s luggage.
“Yes, bring it right in here.” He turned to Reed with a smile as he stepped
through the door. “I can’t imagine you being a burden, Reed. This is your home
for as long as you like.”
Reed directed the
men carrying his trunks where he wanted them, tipped them and went to the
bedroom. Close up to the bed, Reed pulled himself onto the top coverlet. His
mangled right leg ached from travel, hoisting himself on and off train cars and
in and out of hotel beds. Reed pulled and shifted his leg till it was comfortable.
The stub below his left knee followed. His eyes closed, and he listened briefly
to the fairy tale the woman read to her child as they sat in the swing near his
window. He soon slept.
* * *
Reed’s eyes
opened, gritty from sleep and exhaustion. He pulled his gold timepiece from his
pocket. Hell’s fire. After four. Reed pulled himself into his chair and went
straight to the sink in the bathing room. He washed his hands and face, combed
his blond hair and dug through a trunk for a clean shirt. Reed muttered,
knowing he was late and cursing these heathens for eating the evening meal in
the middle of the day.
Reed struggled to
button his jacket and wheeled himself to the kitchen. The sight he beheld
stopped him. A large, clean spacious kitchen, humming with aromas from bubbling
pots with spices and herbs above, hung to dry on racks. A huge table down the
center of the room was covered with a gingham-checked cloth, and every person
Reed had seen so far sat around it. Others, he didn’t recognize. Henry sat at one
end, Mary Ellen on his right and Beulah at the other end with her back to Reed.
“Apologies for my
late arrival,” Reed murmured.
Mary Ellen rose
and came to him. “I told Henry I’d bring you a plate tonight. You must be
exhausted.”
“I admit I napped.
Something smells delicious.”
A young girl,
seated beside Beulah, stood. “Mrs. Ames, I got to get home now anyway. Your
company can have my seat.”
“Thank you,
Constance. Tell your mother I hope she feels better,” Mary Ellen said as she
pulled the girl’s chair away. Clean china and a fresh napkin appeared at the
now vacant spot.
Reed wheeled
himself in and looked around at the curious stares. They employ Negroes, eat in
the middle of the day and do so with their employees. He noticed the only
person at the table not smiling or eyeing him was the woman to his left. Beulah
continued to eat as if he had never entered. Arlo sat on his right and handed
Reed a constant flurry of bowls and platters.
“Pickles, Mr.
Jackson? Miss Beulah, hand Mr. Jackson the pickles,” the old man said.
She turned to
Reed. “I’m sorry. I didn’t hear Mr. Jackson ask for the pickles.”
“They do look
tempting,” Reed said.
Beulah did not
move her gaze from her plate. She gently dabbed her mouth as the other diners
began to talk again amongst themselves.
Reed looked at her
and the plate of dill spears just out of his reach. She nodded regally in
conversation to her left.
“Would you pass
the pickles?” Reed asked.
“Pardon, Mr.
Jackson,” the woman said with a tight smile.
Obviously she had
heard. She was less than a foot away from him. Reed smiled and looked down at
his plate. He turned to her and spoke clearly, “Miss Beulah, would you
please pass the pickles?”
The woman nodded and picked up the plate. “Certainly
Mr. Jackson. Do be careful of this dish. It’s one of the good set.”
Reed could not
stop a slow smile. Beulah made clear her boundaries over a plate of pickled
cucumbers. This adversary may prove a challenge, he thought. “I will be
careful, Miss Beulah. My momma says I can be clumsy.” The woman turned back to
the laundress on her left.
Reed watched the
diners as they stood to leave, one at a time, and carried their dishes and
glasses to the wash sink. He laid his napkin down and pushed back from the
table, satisfied. His cousin knew how to choose a cook. Reed watched the round
man, now fluttering from pot to pan, stirring and shaking.
Arlo stood. “Lets
me git that dish for ya, sir.”
“Thank you,” Reed
replied, feeling better with a stomach full of food.
It was then he
observed his cousin and wife carry their own dirty dishes away. Mary Ellen
giggled at something Henry said and Reed saw them smile flirtatiously at each
other.
“I’ve got some
bookkeeping and such to get done. I’ll bring a brandy by later,” Henry called
to him.
“That would be
grand,” he replied.
Reed spent the
evening filling the chest of drawers and unpacking his things. He placed a
picture of his mother and father on the table. Reed stacked books on the huge
desk and on the floor beside it. He wrote a short letter to his parents and
brother Winston, assuring them he had arrived safely.
Much had been made
of his traveling alone, especially as great stretches of the southern tracks
were still being repaired. His trip to Missouri had been a tortuous trek with
multiple stops and some day or more layovers. His mother was convinced a
companion should accompany him, but Winston could not take the time and the
plantation’s finances needed no further stretching. He was crippled and he knew
he must learn to negotiate his own way without staff or servants. His mother
had compromised by making arduous arrangements with hotels and station masters
by letter over the course of six months.
“Come in,” he
replied to a knock at his door.
“As promised,”
Henry said as he came in, bottle and glasses in hand.
“I was hoping you
remembered,” Reed said and moved to the small table where Henry was seated and
accepted a glass.
“So,” Henry said
between sips, “tell me about your family.”
Reed rolled the
brandy over his tongue. “What do you want to know?”
“Father said you’d
be tight-lipped. Wasn’t trying to be nosy. Just hoping they were in good health
and all.” Henry crossed his legs and
looked away.
“Forgive me,
cousin. Mother and Father are fine. Winston is well and set to marry in the
fall.”
“Sounds like
things are getting back to normal. The girl Winston will marry, do you know
her?”
Reed smiled and
raised his brows. “Quite well.”
“Will they be
living at the plantation? Father said your family managed to hang onto it.”
Reed wondered how
much his cousin knew. “Father made enough in gold running blockades to pay the
taxes and begin again. Winston brought his first crop of cotton in without
slave labor.”
“I’m glad your
family business survived. I am sorry about you brother Franklin. Terrible loss,
a sibling.”
“Thank you,” Reed
replied.
The two men sat in
companionable silence, listening to the hushed chatter of guests as the hotel
quieted for the night.
Henry leaned
forward and stared at Reed. “I know I shouldn’t ask. Can’t seem to help myself.
But if the plantation survived, why didn’t you take it over rather than a
younger brother.” Henry looked at Reed’s stern face and hurried to continue.
“None of my business,” Henry said, smiling at Reed, “Anyway, why would a
successful lawyer want to plow and sow?”
“How is your family, Henry? Your father’s
letters to Mother were always interesting. I would like to meet them.”
Henry chuckled.
“Quite an assortment there. Mother and Father are fine. My younger sisters
drive my father crazy with a varied group of suitors.” Henry poured another
brandy from the crystal decanter and sat back. “Funny we never met. Our
families I mean. Your mother and my father corresponded regularly. Father loved
getting letters from Aunt Lily. Said she was the pride of the South.”
“Pride of the South,”
Reed whispered and sipped.
Henry turned the
framed daguerreotype around. “Father said my sister Susan was the spitting
image of her. He’s right.”
“How is your
father’s business?” Reed asked.
“Doing well.
Always be a market for coffee, I imagine.”
“Begs the
question, why would a coffee wholesaler’s son, move west and leave a prosperous
business behind?” Reed asked over the cut edge of his glass.
Henry chuckled. “Turnabout
is fair play, I suppose. I tried my hand at Father’s business for a while. Didn’t care for it much. Had a dream of
moving west. Wanted to watch this country grow. I love it here. I found a
beautiful woman and my life’s work. Oh, I miss my family and what I grew up
with, but I know I would’ve never been happy in Boston.”
Envy of a
clear-cut longing and the fulfillment of that goal filled Reed’s head. Nothing
seemed clear for Reed. He was schooled as an attorney, yes, but had practiced
little. Reed certainly missed nothing of his life after the war began. Had the
war not come, things may have been different. He would have continued on as the
second son to a prosperous cotton farmer and would have managed a great
estate’s affairs. But the war had
come. Gone were a genteel existence, his older brother, and Reed’s legs.
Henry corked the
brandy and stood. “Mary Ellen told me to keep this visit short. That you’d be
tired. I fear I’ve worn you out more than you already were.”
“My bed does seem
to be calling,” Reed said. “Thank you for the ramp. An ingenious invention.”
“Mary Ellen and I
both would like you to be happy. We have no family nearby and want you to make
your life here,” Henry said. “I know I’ll never replace your brother, I never
had one, of course, but it will be good to know I have someone to lean on. And
that you, too, can count me as family.”
The sincere
exposition touched Reed in a way that seemed foreign. His thoughts of family
were as muddy and murky as the bayou, filled with pride, resentment and the
undeniable knowledge that he may have done the same things under the same
circumstances. Maybe, just maybe, his mother’s encouragement to begin a new
life elsewhere came from the heart. And maybe she was right. He had best try
and forget the hurts and the wrongs of the past and make something of himself
in a new land. He had told Henry it was a new world, and perhaps this was the
place for a new beginning.
Reed watched Henry
turn the brass door handle. “My brother’s fiancĂ©e was to marry me. Her family’s
plantation adjoined ours,” Reed said.
Henry turned back
with a confused look. “I’m sorry, Reed.” He stood unmoving and smiled
wistfully. “Maybe it was for the best. If she loved your brother, you two
wouldn’t have been happy.”
“Had nothing to do
with love, Henry,” Reed said. “After Franklin was killed and I returned from
the war like this,” Reed said with a sweep of hands to his chair, “Father
decided that Winston should inherit. That I was not up to the task. Belinda was
part and parcel of the deal.”
Henry’s eyes
widened. His mouth opened and closed. “Oh.”
Reed watched the
man absorb and tackle that bit of Jackson family chicanery. This was the first
time Reed had spoken aloud this tale, and it sounded sordid and cold to his own
ears. What must this straight-laced
Bostonian think, Reed wondered.
“What shit,” Henry
said in awe, finally.
Reed laughed.
“Well put, cousin. What I think exactly.”
Henry shook his
head again and left Reed in his thoughts.
Reed wheeled
himself to the window and listened as human sounds faded and a night orchestra
began. Crickets chirped and an owl screeched in the distance over the low hum
of a faraway piano. Reed smelled rain in the heavy air. He remembered the
shocked look on Henry’s face and relived its source. Betrayal, anger and bitter
disappointment filled Reed’s head. But he could not hate his father even though
he wanted to. Reed knew that forging a new life in the devastated South would
require a man fit in all ways. His father bound and determined to resurrect a
lost cause with new rules to follow.
His cousin had
proven, against all odds in Reed’s mind, to be a man he could like. There was
no doubt of the sincere outrage in his eyes. And the straight talk had freed
some of Reed’s anger and cleared a space in his mind to look forward and not
back.
2 comments:
My daughter moved to Virginia and we visited several battle fields. Fascinating history but very sad.
debby236 at gmail dot com
Yes. Very sad but I believe there are always individual stories of courage. I think Reed's story is one of those.
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