Part 1: Andrea Meriwhether
Savannah, Georgia. 1816.
The drop of condensation trickled its way down the side of the crystal glass, full of lemonade. Andrea watched it slide closer and closer to the table, before finally touching down, disappearing into the tablecloth.
It was so hot. What Andrea wouldnβt give to close her eyes. Maybe she would melt away, too. She blinked heavily.
βAndrea?β
Her head sank down. The air felt like a warm, wet blanket, pressing in on her from all sides. Soβ¦hotβ¦
βAndrea!β
She jerked back up in her chair. βYes, Mother?β
Her mother, Edith, was staring at her across the garden table, a taught smile on her face. βAre you feeling all right, dear? You are falling asleep before our eyes.β Her tone was light, but there was absolutely no humor in her motherβs expression.
Andrea brushed a stray curl off her forehead, her thin gloves dry against her skin. βIβm very sorry, Mother.β She turned to the other woman seated at the table. βMissus Whitfield. It must be the heat.β
Missus Harriet Whitfield was the lady of the neighboring estate, and Edithβs best friend. She visited for drinks almost every other day. Which meant Andrea had to join them almost every other day.
Harriet smiled, knowingly. βNo need to lie, sweetheart. Itβs all right if weβre boring you.β
βWell.β
βAndrea!β Edith snapped.
Harriet laughed. βNo, no, Edith. Sheβs right. I canβt imagine anyone but us two would find further discussion of your new table linens very interesting.β
βOhβ¦β said Edith.
Andrea swallowed a smile. Her mother could have talked about those linens for hours.
Harriet stared up into the sprawling branches of the live oak tree that shrouded the garden. βNow, what can we bring up that a young girl would find exciting? Ah, I know!β Harriet leaned forward. βAndrea, are you attending the dance at the Lancaster estate?β
Andrea held back a sigh. Sheβd nearly forgotten about the blasted upcoming dance. Sheβd been hoping everyone else would forget about it, too.
βOf course she is,β Edith answered automatically.
What if I just got up and walked away? What would she do? Maybe theyβd just keep on talking without me.
βGood,β Harriet said. βFrom what I hear, itβs going to be quite the affair. Plenty of young people, from far and wide. Excellent news for you, Andrea.β
Andrea lifted an eyebrow. βIs it?β
Harriet took a sip of her lemonade. βWell. Darling. Youβre what, twenty-one? That window of youth is closing fast, and Iβm sure youβre ready to be married.β
βOh, am I?β said Andrea. How wonderful that her motherβs gossipy friend knew exactly what she needed in her life.
Her mother gave her a hard stare across the table before turning back to Harriet. βIβm not so sure about running off with some stranger at a dance. Our family has more dignity than that, Harriet.β
Missus Whitfield flapped a hand. βI know, I know. Just a tease. But letβs see. Well, now, what about Emery? The Lancaster boy? Heβs grown into quite the good-looking man.β
Andrea folded her fingers below her chin. βLucky him. Looks will be all heβs got if the Lancasters keep running their business into the ground and throwing stupid dances.β
Harriet made an appalled, clucking sound.
βAndrea. Would you go get some more lemonade, please?β There was a controlled fury concealed in Edithβs voice.
As always, that was her cue to leave. Andrea rose and left the garden table, not bothering to even pretend to be graceful, and marched up the wide steps and into the Meriwhether manor house.
Finally. Relief from the blazing sun and heavy air. Andrea closed the French door behind her and stepped into the welcoming shadows of the plush carpet and dark purple walls of the living room. She had absolutely no desire to return to the garden, with or without lemonade. Her behavior would earn her a scolding from her mother later, but that was almost a daily occurrence.
The swishing sound of her skirts echoing up to the high ceilings, Andrea left the living room and exited into the hall. Near the far corner, across from a tall oil painting of her grandfather, the door to her fatherβs study stood open.
βAndrea? Is that you? Come in here,β called a voice as she approached.
She smiled, entering the study and breathing in the comforting smells of paper and pipe tobacco.
Her father, William Meriwhether, stood over his ornate wooden desk, a large roll of paper spread out before him.
βYes, Papa?β Andrea said from the doorframe.
βI thought you were outside having lunch with your mother.β
βIβve been sent in for lemonade,β said Andrea, flatly.
βExcellent idea. Bring me some as well. Itβs such a hot day.β William fiddled with a measurement device, moving it across the paper.
βPapa, βAndrea go get some lemonadeβ is Motherβs code for βAndrea get out of my sight, youβre embarrassing me.ββ
βIβd count your lucky stars, if I were you. Your mother keeps such tiring friends.β William straightened up and waved her over. βHere, come take a look at this.β
The document William had been examining was a plan of the estate and its surrounding plantation land. A thin sheet of tracing paper had been laid on top of the plans, showing a different configuration of plots.
βAre these the new crop distributions for next summer?β Andrea asked.
βThat they are. Smart girl. What do you think?β
Andrea looked up at her father. βWeβre really switching over from cotton to indigo?β
βIt was your idea.β
βI suggested we start diversifying our output,β said Andrea. βYouβre the one who pushed for a complete overhaul.β Though the plantation had been set up by her grandfather ages ago, times were changing, and more and more owners were breaking into the trade. It meant more competition, which they could beat out if they worked fast. After reading up on indigo as a crop, and how well it took to southern soil, Andrea had pitched the plant to William as a possible supplement, but heβd gone even further.
βWhat can I say? I like the sound of it!β William tapped his finger on the logo that adorned the new plans. βMeriwhether Indigo. If all goes well, weβll be the first producers in this part of Georgia.β
Andrea looked closer at the drawings. βHmm. The plots should be farther apart. Here to here, maybe,β she said, indicating a larger space with her fingers. βIndigo grows tall, from what Iβve read. We donβt want any of it to be in the shade.β
βAh. Very good thinking,β said William. βIβll take a look at the measurements and redraft.β He smiled, the ends of his graying mustache curling up. βWhere would I be without you, Andrea?β
She ducked her head. βProbably doing just fine.β
William sniffed. βFine is not enough,β he said, raising his voice. βFine is not the Meriwhether path of excellence! We root out those opportunities and succeed. And that drive is in your blood, through and through. Youβre going to help this business in big ways.β
Excitement and anxiety twisted around Andreaβs heart. He often said things like this, but it was hard for her to tell how much he meant and how much was just talk. Her father was boisterous and didnβt always think things through. Andrea had started educating herself about the family business when she was fifteen, in addition to her other studies, and with the right influence and subtlety, sheβd been able to pass her ideas to her father. Now that she was an adult, the next logical step was that she be brought into the business officially.
βIβd really love that, Papa,β she said, trying to read his expression.
William nodded. βMm. Now then. Fetch that lemonade. Donβt keep your mother waiting.β
β
Andrea slid her knife across the breast of the game hen on her plate, watching the white flesh part, releasing a curl of steam. At one end of the table, her father was chatting eagerly to no one in particular about the previous monthβs profits. At the other end, her mother was fixated on the floral centerpiece. Before dinner had been served, sheβd been fussing with the arrangement of the hydrangeas. Andrea felt her thoughts slipping away, as they usually did during family meals.
The unfortunate thing was that there was nothing else remarkable to think about. The dance at the Lancaster estate had come and gone. Much to her motherβs and Harriet Whitfieldβs chagrin, Andrea hadnβt returned home that night with marriage offers. She wasnβt the type of girl who attracted attention at dances. At least, not the positive sort. It was well known throughout Savannah society that Andrea Meriwhether was an incredibly poor dancer. She had, however, met a man who was quite eager to tell her the intricacies of the distillery he was building, which Andrea had found extremely engaging. Savannah was a port after all. There was a chance for a profit to be found in such an enterprise.
The sound of silverware tinging against crystal brought Andrea back to the present. William had stood, his glass raised, and was staring at her.
βI cannot stand the suspense anymore,β he said. βDarling, we have a surprise for you.β
Andrea looked at the other end of the table. Edith was beaming at her, as well. Something cold settled in the back of Andreaβs throat. βYou do?β she said, setting down her fork.
βYour mother and I were just finalizing the announcements. Congratulations, my girl. This autumn, youβre to wed Emery Lancaster.β
Her organs seized inside her. The smell of the food in front of her made her stomach churn in discomfort.
βItβs a perfect match,β said Edith. βYour dress has already been commissioned and was delivered this afternoon.β
William nodded in approval. βThe Meriwhethers and Lancasters are both of good standing in this community. Not to mention, they are flush with the farming machinery that we will need as our crops expand. Iβve spoken with Horace, and he has some very interesting investments lined up. Itβs like you always say, Andrea, itβs better to stay ahead of the times.β
βIt will be the event of the season.β
βUndoubtedly. This wedding couldnβt be coming at a better time.β
If Andrea didnβt say something soon, she was certain she would vomit on the table. βWait, stop,β she said, raising her hands. βI havenβt agreed to this.β
Her parents looked at her, blankly.
βWhat do you mean?β asked Edith.
βOn what grounds would you disagree?β
They werenβt considering her at all. They hadnβt even asked. βOn the grounds that I donβt want to marry Emery Lancaster.β
The blank stares continued.
βI donβt want to marry anyone,β Andrea said, loudly. She had never understood the rush, the pressure. If getting married meant becoming someone like her mother, who lost sleep over table linens and centerpieces, a death sentence would be preferable.
Edith tossed her napkin onto the table. βAndrea, please donβt ruin this with one of your ridiculous tantrums.β
Andrea looked pleadingly at her father. He patted at his lapel and slowly sank back in his chair. βThis is a shock, my girl. You expressed such interest in becoming a part of the family business. I thought youβd be pleased.β
βI do want that, Papa, but not like this.β
William squinted his eyes. βWhat other way is there?β
The nausea in Andreaβs stomach grew hot, morphing into something angrier. βI want to be your partner. Not just some pawn you can trade around, like livestock.β
βBe reasonable,β Edith said. βPlaying in your fatherβs office is one thing, but no daughter of mine is going to be unwed, working as, what, some clerk.β
βThatβs rich, acting like you give a damn about what I do,β Andrea spat.
Edith was on her feet. βAndrea! Language! William, do something.β
βNow, see here,β he said, slowly. βPerhaps we should have broken the news to you in a different way, but try to contain your emotions and look at the facts. Iβm glad to see you so invested in this family, but thereβs no world in which I can go into business with my own daughter.β A smile played at Williamβs lips, as if he were restraining a laugh. βWhat would people say?β
The words stung about as much as sheβd expected them to. All the work sheβd put in over the past years had been to convince him of her value. So that when they got to this day, her father would be on her side of this argument. That heβd put her first. Sheβd put her trust in him, and heβd failed.
Andrea felt her heart pound, her blood pumping in her neck. βMaybe theyβd say that I should be the one running things. Maybe theyβd realize that the only reason this estate is still worth a penny is because of me. Theyβd say that William Meriwhether is a pompous buffoon who couldnβt tell a healthy cotton plant from a dying one, even if it was sprouting out of his ass!β
A dark purple vein had appeared on her fatherβs forehead. βIs that so? Wicked girl! Thatβs been your game all along, has it?β
Andrea rolled her eyes. Let him twist her words. Let him wail. She was too angry to care.
βGo to your room, Andrea,β Edith said, thrusting a finger toward the stairs.
Andrea kicked her chair away and stomped toward the dining room doors.
βNo!β William shouted from behind her. βI wonβt have some scheming, rebellious beast living under my roof! I want you out! Out of this house!β
Andrea clenched her fingers into a tight ball. She refused to give her father the satisfaction of seeing her react to his theatrics. In a rush of skirts, she flew across the foyer and up the grand staircase, heading for her room.
β
The bedroom door slammed behind her, rattling the paintings on the wall.
He wanted her gone? Fine. Sheβd leave. She wanted to leave. This house grew more and more suffocating by the day.
Andrea tore at the clasps of the large trunk sitting at the foot of her bed, popping open the lid. It was hard to see straight. She whirled around her bedroom, unfocused, tossing anything within reach into the trunk.
How dare he? How dare both of them?
Something sparkled in the corner of her eye, drawing her attention to her bed. Laid out on the covers was a wedding dress. Silver white silk, drowning in beads, with the longest train sheβd ever seen. All it took was one glance to see that her mother had requested something similar to Princess Charlotte of Walesβs gown, whose marriage had been celebrated a few months prior. Anything to prove Edith Meriwhether was a master of trends. The whole thing must have been ridiculously expensive.
Andrea had a terrifying vision of herself, stuffed and tied into that dress, gazing sweetly into Emery Lancasterβs face as they bound their lives together for all eternity. Her stomach lurched.
Never. She snatched up the airy fabric, piling all of it into the trunk before shutting the lid.
Andrea dragged her trunk down the grand staircase, hoping she was denting the wood with every thunk.
Her parents stood in the dining room doorway. Edith clutched her hands to her chest as Andreaβs trunk rumpled the hallway carpet runner.
William had his arms folded, his face still flushed with rage. βYou will not be welcomed back here. Thereβs a harsh world waiting out there for you. Iβm sure you imagine yourself smart enough to handle it.β
She stared him dead in the eye. βI will root out opportunities, and I will succeed. Itβs the Meriwhether path of excellence.β With each word, she felt fury radiating off her skin. She hoped it would sting. She hoped he would choke.
βYou better become a damn good thief, Andrea, because no one is going to pay a cent for that face.β
Andrea did not reply. She left.
β
Andrea settled herself into the new coach. Above her, she heard the driver spur the horses into action and they pulled away from the staging station, out into the busy streets.
Getting money had been the easiest part of her plan. Visiting the bank was one of the regular errands she did for her father, and Mister Wagner, their banker, knew her well. It hadnβt taken much convincing for him to withdraw five hundred dollars for her.
As the coach rattled on, Andrea took a few of the dollar coins from the larger bank bag, and stowed them away in a small purse that she was able to hide beneath her stays. When she rested somewhere for the night, sheβd break it up more.
The ultimate destination, sheβd decided, was Charleston, South Carolina. Her aunt Sabrina, on her motherβs side, lived there, and hopefully, wouldnβt mind putting Andrea up for a spell. They had only met a few times, but she was the closest relative Andrea could think of.
She didnβt allow herself to relax until the coach had left Savannah behind and was rumbling along rural roads thick with trees. Andrea leaned back on the plush seat.
She was actually doing this. Leaving home had been a fantasy sheβd only indulged in when her mother had been particularly infuriating, but sheβd never thought sheβd actually go through with it.
She never thought the final blow would have come from her father.
Andrea rubbed her temples and stared out the window, watching the trees roll by. She allowed her mind to glaze over. Goodbye to all of that. And good riddance.
β
The sky overhead had shifted to the purple of twilight, the forest reaching up toward it, like silhouetted towers. Andrea was trying to calculate how far theyβd traveled, when the coach pulled to a stop.
Andrea held her breath, waiting for any sign of movement from the driver above her. Nothing. She peered out the window. They hadnβt stopped anywhere that seemed significant. Just a random spot in the woods.
Andrea opened the coach door and leaned out. βIs something wrong?β she asked. βIs it too dark to continue?β
The driver hopped down from his seat. βNo, but I think weβve gone far enough.β
Andrea had gotten a good view of him while waiting at the staging station. The driver was a skinny man who wore an ill-fitting moss green coat and a ridiculously large tricornered hat, adorned with a black feather.
Or had been. Looking at him now, his hat now sported an even larger red feather. He must have swapped them at some point during their journey.
Why would he do that? Who would see it?
Andrea froze. She looked up, staring into the trees. Sure enough, a group of men were emerging from behind the shadowy trunks, some leading horses, walking out into the road, surrounding the coach.
Andrea bit down hard on her tongue to keep her face steady. This had been a set up. The feather had been a signal. She was about to be robbed.
She tried to close the coach door, but the driver wrenched it from her grasp and seized her arm, yanking her out of the carriage.
βI donβt have anything for you,β she said.
The driver smirked. βCome now, little liar. We all know thatβs not true. You took quite a fat purse out of the bank this evening. Why donβt you make this easy and just hand over the money, hm?β
Andrea cringed. So, this man had been targeting her. She glanced around at the other men drawing closer. There were four of them, all in various stages of scruffiness. Typical highwaymen. This was the kind of story Andrea always skipped reading in the papers. Only now, she was the stupid victim who should have been much more careful with her valuables.
βFine, then,β she said. βItβs inside. Take what you want.β
The driver looked her up and down, his eyes narrow. Heβd probably been expecting her to cry or scream or something any other girl would do while being robbed. βRiggs, hold onto her.β
One of the men behind Andrea grabbed her arms and pinned them against her back. She shot a glare over her shoulder at the manβs patchy beard and dirty face.
The driver emerged from the coach, hefting the large purse with one hand, grinning at his compatriots. βWeβre eating well tonight, boys!β
βWonderful. Are we done here?β Andrea said. She felt the leers of the other men. Hopefully, the money was all they were after, and this wouldnβt turn into a truly tragic tale for the papers, ending with her assaulted or dead.
The driver tossed the purse from one hand to the other. βSuch an impatient lass. Who would have thought sheβd be so generous underneath that frown?β He laughed before nodding to one of the other men. βCheck the trunk.β
Something popped behind Andreaβs eyes. She hated this. Why did these thugs think they could simply have their way with her and her belongings? And worse still, why was she letting them?
As the first latch on her trunk clicked open, Andrea moved. Using all the force she could muster, she kicked backward, trying to connect with the legs of the man who held her. She felt her heel meet the soft flesh and muscle of his thigh.
He yelped in surprise and squeezed her arms tighter.
With the sharp and heavy heel of her shoe, Andrea dragged it down the inner side of his leg, pressing as hard as she could, feeling the resistance and pressure as she scraped over the joint of his knee.
Now the man cried out in pain, and let her go. Andrea stumbled forward, but managed to catch herself. The ruffian who had been leading the horses dropped the reins and lunged toward her. As his coat flapped open, he reached down, and pulled a pistol from his belt, taking aim at her.
βThompson, what are you doing?β called the driver.
βYou stop all this flailing about,β the man, Thompson, growled at Andrea.
A weapon changed things. Andrea held still. The air seemed to settle around them. None of the other men moved. Something had shifted. Thompson had taken things too far, and now the others were nervous. They were fine with being thieves, but probably didnβt want to be murderers.
If they all wanted to flee, Andrea was happy to give them a reason.
She bent down and surged forward, ramming her shoulder into Thompsonβs gut. The force of the tackle sent them both to the ground. Andreaβs sole focus was the gun, which tumbled from Thompsonβs grip as he fell. As quick as she could, Andrea crawled over his stomach, reached out, and seized the pistol.
The other men who had been rushing forward to aid Thompson stopped and backed away as Andrea rose to her feet, pointing the gun at them.
It was heavier than sheβd thought it would be. It took all she had to keep her arms from shaking. βEnough!β she yelled. She moved to stand between the coach and the five men. βYou have the money. Leave. Just go.β
The driver, the only one without his hands raised, reached up and tipped his hat. βThat we do, miss. That we do. And thank you, for giving us a bit of a show for our troubles.β He laughed, and the other men joined in. The driverβs confidence oozed into them and Andrea could tell, she was no longer a threat in their eyes, gun or otherwise. Her arms shook. She wanted to shoot this man. She wanted to know that sheβd fired the bullet that would pierce his heart. Or better yet, his face. Take out an eye. Blow out the back of his head. But even as the anger coursed through her, the trigger wouldnβt give. The gun felt awkward and heavy, too big for her hands. She knew she was doing it wrong.
And she knew the men were watching her fail. With another chorus of laughter, the marauders mounted their horses and rode away, leaving Andrea, the coach, and the trunk behind.
β
Andrea pushed a dollar coin across the counter. βA room and a meal, please.β
The tavern hostess looked at her with a combination of pity and curiosity. She took the coin. βOf course, dear. Make yourself welcome.β
Andrea dragged her trunk across the floor, not caring about the racket she was making, and sat down at one of the empty benches.
Somehow, sheβd managed to piece together how to operate the coach and get the horses moving after being abandoned in the woods. Sheβd ridden through the night, looking for somewhere to stop, but finding nothing. She had just been considering pulling off the side of the road and sleeping amongst the trees, when the woods had parted, revealing a tavern. Dawn was approaching, but the lamps were still lit.
It was a small building with uneven wooden floors and a roaring fireplace. Even at this early hour, there were a few patrons dotting the trestle tables.
The hostess placed a bowl of some sort of greasy-looking porridge in front of her. βThere you are.β She set a key down next to the bowl. βYour room will be just βround the corner. First door on the left.β
βThank you,β Andrea said, nodding to the woman as she glided away.
She took a spoonful of the porridge and restrained a grimace as it slid down her throat. Food was food, after all.
As Andrea ate, she let her eyes wander around the tavern, taking in the other early risers. In one corner, sat the broadest man Andrea had ever seen. His wide shoulders and height seemed to fill up that entire portion of the tavern. His dark skin and closely cropped black hair and beard stood out against the white fur that lined the collar of his long coat. A small pair of pince-nez were perched on the bridge of his nose and he was about two-thirds through a book. Andrea couldnβt make out the title from where she sat.
Draped across a stool near the staircase, was another man, much scrawnier when compared to the broad man, wearing an incredibly faded and worn uniform of some kind. With a generous guess, it might have once been blue. A long rifle lay across his lap, the strap dangling down by his feet. A gray stocking cap was pulled down over his eyes. Andrea was about to rule him as asleep, when he lifted the tankard in his right hand and took a swig.
A high peal of laughter pulled Andreaβs attention to the pair sitting in front of the fireplace. In one of the wingback chairs was the most garishly dressed man Andrea had ever seen. His long, crossed legs sported knee high boots and white and green striped trousers. His waistcoat, overcoat, and ascot were all mismatched as well, the red of the ascot clashing brilliantly with the manβs red hair. Just looking at him hurt Andreaβs eyes. He certainly knew how to dress, but had no eye for color. He continued to laugh with one of the serving girls who was tending the fire.
As Andrea stared, the colorful man glanced her way. She looked down at her porridge, quickly. Sheβd been worried about making a spectacle of herself, a lone woman, dragging a trunk around the backwoods of Georgia, but when compared to men like these, perhaps she wouldnβt make much of an impression after all.
After finishing her meal, Andrea made her way to the room sheβd rented. It was a modest chamber, with no decoration to speak of, but at least seemed clean. She pulled her trunk inside and locked the door behind her.
β
Exhaustion crept through the back of her mind, dulling her thoughts. Sleep was going to overtake her soon. Andrea looked down at herself. She was still wearing the dress sheβd worn to dinner. It already felt like days since sheβd been the proud daughter of the Meriwhether house. Who was she now?
Andrea reached around and untied every lace, hook, and eye on her dress, letting it drop down to the floor. She wished, not for the first time, that going about your day in just your shift was acceptable. It would certainly save a lot of time.
The trunk sat in the middle of the room. After all sheβd gone through to protect it, Andrea wasnβt even sure what sheβd ended up packing. Upon examining the trunkβs contents, it was mostly disappointed. Sheβd been too angry to pack logically and had wound up with a few seasonally inappropriate dresses, a mismatched pair of shoes, one of the pillows from her bedβ¦
β¦and of course. The wedding dress.
That would be the first step, then. To make her way to a city and sell the wretched thing to a dressmaker.
Andrea looked at the last item in her trunk. Thompsonβs flint-lock pistol. She was still upset with herself for not being able to fire it. Had it really been just because she was unsure how to operate it? Or had a part of her been afraid? Andrea squeezed her eyes shut. She hated the thought of being afraid of anything. Fine, then. Sheβd learn how to use it. And the next time she was in a situation where she needed to, sheβd be ready.
Andrea repacked her trunk, minus the pistol, which she slipped underneath the limp pillow on the bed before collapsing herself.
β
ββ¦could do this in any other way, Theo.β
βItβs no use trying to reason with him, Julius. You know that.β
βYou both are no fun at all.β
The voices wove their way through Andreaβs dreams, disrupting the comfortable nothing of oblivion. Her body felt heavy and unresponsive. She had to wake up, though. She had to wake up very quickly.
βThe poor thing. She must have been quite tired to have slept this long.β
She. Her. Someone was talking about her. Finally, Andreaβs body and mind stopped miscommunicating and reached the same conclusion.
Someone was in her room.
Her eyes snapped open and she pushed herself up. She had fallen asleep just after sunrise, and from the absence of light coming through the curtains, Andrea could tell night had fallen once again. The room, however, was not dark, as someone had lit the sconces on the wall, as well as the oil lamp on the bedside table.
Those βsomeonesβ became incredibly obvious. Standing in her room, looking completely casual, were three of the men from the tavern, the broad man with the long coat, the military man with the rifle, and the mismatched man.
Andrea went still. Is this happening again? Was I targeted again? She knew she ought to scream, but truthfully, all she felt was tired. Tired and annoyed.
The broad man nodded toward her. βTheo. Sheβs awake.β His voice was deep, rumbling through the air in a pleasant way, even though he spoke quietly.
The colorful man turned to the bed, his face illuminating with a bright smile.
βAh! Good morning, my dear lady! Or should I say evening?β He bowed. βTheodore North, at your service.β
Andrea didnβt reply. Carefully, she slid her hand underneath the pillow behind her, feeling around for the pistol.
βAllow me to introduce my associates,β Theodore continued. βMay I present Mister Julius Hunter,β he said, gesturing to the broad man, βand Mister Maxime Auclair,β indicating the thin man.
Andrea still said nothing.
Theodore spread his hands, his smile never faltering. βIβm sure youβre wondering what weβre doing here in your room, but first, might I have the pleasure of learning your name?β
Andrea was mostly positive this wasnβt some strange dream or hallucination brought on by stress, but it was hard to be sure. Her fingertips grazed against the polished wood handle of the pistol and she felt her breath come a little easier. βAndrea Meriwhether,β she said.
Theodore blinked. βGoodness.β He glanced at his compatriots. βI feel like Iβve aged ten years by the end of that name.β
Maxime chuckled, while Julius shook his head.
Andrea narrowed her eyes. βLook, if youβre here to rob me, do you mind getting it over and done with? Iβve had my fill of highwaymen today.β
A look of genuine concern crossed Theodoreβs face. βYou were right, Julius. She was accosted.β
βYoung girls donβt often end up driving their own coaches through happy means,β Julius said. βWe offer our deepest apologies, Miss Meriwhether.β
βThank you,β Andrea said, flatly. Try as she might, she couldnβt asses what their aim was.
βAs luck would have it, it is precisely that coach of yours that has piqued our interest,β Theodore said, lifting his eyebrows.
βYou want to steal the coach?β
βNo, no, no!β Theodore flapped his hands. βMy suspicious miss, we want to offer you a bargain. Allow us the use of your coach for a certain delivery we must make, and in return, we will escort you to wherever your final destination is.β
Andrea let the request hang in the air. The corner of Theodoreβs shining smile twitched.
βAnd you thought this was the best way to ask me?β Andrea said.
Maxime snorted loudly. βHe thought coming to your room was better than following you down the road. We told him there was no way to do this without looking like a villain.β His voice carried a slight French accent.
βYou should have listened to your friends,β Andrea said.
Theodore pursed his lips. βI, unlike these two nonbelievers, wanted to give you the benefit of the doubt that you would understand. Despite how we did it, the request remains. What say you, Miss Andrea Meriwhether?β He elongated each syllable of her name, pretending to run out of breath.
Determining, for the moment, that she wasnβt in immediate danger, Andrea let the practical part of her mind take over. As far as offers went, it wasnβt a bad one. If she continued traveling alone, there was a chance that more misfortune might befall her. Just a few miles from her home and sheβd already been disastrously unlucky. Traveling with three men would bring some safety. There was, however, their condition.
βI would need to know more,β Andrea said, sitting up straighter. βWhat sort of delivery are you making?β
Theodore shot a look at Julius. βWe are in possession of some goods which need to be sold. With haste.β
βGoods?β
βYes.β
βWhat sort of goods?β
βGoods of a most precious variety.β
βSpeak plain.β
Julius sighed. βItβs no use, Theo.β He turned to Andrea. βMiss, if you are seriously considering our proposal, we promise to tell you everything. If you do not wish to be involved, simply say so, and we will leave you in peace.β
In all honesty, her choice had been made minutes ago. βTell me more.β
Julius nodded and moved to stand in front of the door. Maxime removed the rifle from his back and propped it against the wall next to him, sagging down to sit on the floor. They both looked expectantly at Theodore.
Theodore fiddled with his bright red ascot. βThis really is a story more suited for telling with a round of drinks rather than in a ladyβs bedchamber, but all right. If you insist.β
He propped one booted leg on the lid of her trunk. βThe year is 1775. My grandfather, Captain Gabriel North, is the finest privateer sailing the Atlantic. The drums of revolution are pounding and fledgling America is hungry for supplies. You name it, Captain Gabriel North could get it through any British naval blockade, like that.β He snapped his fingers. βHe amassed a sizable fortune, and it fell to my father and I to carry on the tradition. I was raised on the salt of a sea breeze, the ocean was my wet nurse. Of course, I join the Navy as soon as I reach the age of reason and maturity.β
Andrea recalled a troupe of traveling actors she had come across while running an errand for her father some years ago. The leading player had been a man with a large belly and even larger voice, shouting his way through the most flowery, most overwritten monologue sheβd ever had the misfortune of hearing.
That actor had nothing on Theodore North.
βMeanwhile,β Theodore stepped down from the trunk and gestured with both arms toward Julius, βelsewhere in the world, a young Julius Hunter, educated abroad by Christian missionariesββ
Julius scoffed. βThatβs generous.β
Theodore continued, not missing a beat. ββand taken on as an apprentice to a renown shipbuilder, is setting sail aboard his mentorβs newest endeavor, a vessel designed for speed. Able to trim weeks off the voyage across the oceans. Such an innovation could be earth-shattering, and Julius is determined that the voyage be a speedy success.β
Theodore crossed the floor with a flourishing spin, before stopping in front of Maxime, presenting him as he had Julius. βTo the north!β he cried. βMaxime Auclair, the skilled and sought after fur trapper is loading up his victorious hides, tracked relentlessly through the woodlands of Canada. It wonβt be long now before he is back on French soil and raking in the profits of his trade.β
βSo much mink,β Maxime mumbled. βSuch a waste.β
βBy now, Miss Meriwhether, it is the year of our Lord 1812. What sort of fate do you imagine could have befallen three disparate, seafaring men?β
Andrea didnβt have to think very hard to come up with an answer. The war itself had only drawn to a conclusion a year ago. βThe war,β she said. βYou were caught up in it.β She felt herself soften, slightly.
βMore than caught up,β Maxime said. βWe were caught. Boarded and shackled by those British pigs.β
βIt was a common trick for them. Claiming sailors were, in fact, British citizens and forcing them into naval service,β said Julius.
Andrea had read about press gangs. It was a barbarous practice, through and through.
Theodore returned to the center of the room, taking up the tale once again. βWith their prisoners secure and bound for England, these three ships make contact over the ocean, and transfer their captives to a larger frigate, The Shearwater.β
Upon hearing the name, Maxime spat, his saliva striking the floorboards with ferocity.
βThat is the harrowing tale of how we three heroes met.β Theodore paused.
Despite herself, Andrea found sheβd been holding her breath. βAnd then?β
A small grin crossed Theodoreβs face before settling into a pained, suffering expression. βThe days aboard The Shearwater were endless. Monotonous. Grim as grim can be. We were lucky enough to have each otherβs company, but we knew it wouldnβt be long before weβd either be forced to fight for the enemy, or face a death sentence.
βBut!β Theodore clapped once, and Andrea started. βThe twin, fertile goddesses of Freedom and Fortune were on our side! The Shearwater came under American fire and surrendered, most triumphantly. We, and our fellow prisoners, were escorted back to these fair shores.
βThere, we three were faced with a decision. Do we part ways as friends and return to the lives weβd led?β Theodore looked at both his comrades. βNo. How could we? The spirit of my grandfather, Captain Gabriel North, smiled down on us that day, and I was struck with a brilliant idea. What better way to both drown ourselves in riches and to get revenge on the British than to sell their own goods right under their plump noses?β
The suspicion that had been slowly leaving Andreaβs mind as she listened to the tale suddenly drew up her guard once again. So that was it. They were smugglers.
βI spent months being called a slave, which I am not,β Julius said. βThen being labeled a deserter, which I never was. I want what Iβve always wanted. To work my way toward a healthy wealth.β
Maxime tipped his head to the side, cracking his neck. βAll I want is to see those idiot British pigs suffer. If I make money while doing it, all the better.β
In two steps, Theodore had crossed the room and sat on the edge of her bed, leaning in, earnestly. βWhich brings us to your bedroom this evening, my lady. As I said before, we are in possession of some goods which we need to no longer possess quite soon, for they will undoubtedly be missed. The fourth member of our band was a man we met at the shipyard, who promised to provide transport and a contact to whom we could sell. He has, however, turned tail, displaying his no good yellow belly.β
βAnd probably reported us by now,β said Julius.
βSo we are stuck here, at a roadside tavern with three barrels of stolen molasses and no one to sell it to. And no way to get there, even if we did.β Maxime pulled his cap down over his eyes, as he had when Andrea had spied him this morning.
βYou are holding the pen with which you will write the end of our story, Miss Meriwhether,β Theodore said. βThe choice is yours.β
Andrea considered the tale sheβd heard. In several ways, these men were very much like her. Frustrated at the way of the world, hungry for something different, something better, and theyβd found a way. A way to work outside of societyβs lines. Their choice was criminal, but who had decided that in the first place? Why did everyone have to follow the same set of rules? Why couldnβt the rules be rewritten? Though the situations werenβt the same, there had been days when Andrea had felt very much like a prisoner in her own home. She understood how it felt to be fenced in on all sides.
Which brought her to the problem at hand. The longer they held onto this stolen molasses, the longer they were at risk. If Julius was right, and their fourth man had betrayed them, time was even more of the essence. Loading up the coach and sticking to backroads was an option, but supposing they did reach a city, what then? If there were any way they could sell the molasses before setting out to travel any great distanceβ¦
Molasses. The word stuck in Andreaβs mind like the sticky substance itself. Her eyes went wide. βHow far are we from Savannah?β
βNot far at all,β said Julius. βA few miles?β
βWhy do you ask?β said Theodore.
Andrea stared hard into his pale blue eyes. βI think I can do you one better than just providing transport.β
β
They waited. Waited until they were out of the house, waited until the coach had carried them through the gates, waited until the sparse trees of the thinning forest covered them once again, and Robert Matthewsβ estate was far behind them.
Then they broke into cheers.
Maxime pulled the coach to a halt and hopped down.
Julius, Theodore, and Andrea all spilled out from inside.
βIt worked!β Theodore cried. βAndrea! You genius!β
Andrea beamed. She had led them to the home of Robert Matthews, the distiller she had met at the Lancaster dance. No one had been more shocked than he at seeing her again, not to mention with a business proposition. Andrea had reasoned that a man in the early stages of his enterprise might not be too hesitant about purchasing supplies. If Mister Matthews had suspected anything about their cargo, he hadnβt said anything to that effect. In fact, he was quite eager to buy and asked very few questions.
βI feel like I should have flattered him more,β Andrea said. βI could have gotten you a better price.β
βNonsense. He was eating out of the palm of your hand,β said Theodore.
Julius nodded, counting the stack of bank notes. βThis is already much more than we could have hoped for.β
Maxime punched a fist into the air. βAnother blow to fat King George!β
Three barrels of molasses was hardly a revolution, but Andrea held her tongue.
After a bit of footwork, Theodore spread the tails of his coat and dipped into a low bow before her. βYou have done us proud, miss. Now I believe it is our turn to serve you. Where might we escort you and your lovely trunk?β
Oddly, Andrea felt some of the joyful rush that had been filling her veins subside. βI was attempting to get to Charleston. South Carolina.β
Theodore blinked. βGood God, whatever for?β
Andrea pushed her lips together, defiantly. βIβve an aunt who has a small estate there. Iβm paying her a visit.β
Julius exchanged a glance with the other men. βHave you no other family nearby?β
βI do,β Andrea replied. βThatβs precisely why Iβm leaving.β
Another round of glances. They did know she could see them, didnβt they?
Theodore broke the silence by clapping his hands. βA deal is a deal, as they say. South Carolina it is. Weβll travel for the rest of today and make camp tonight. Rest assured, we shall endeavor to make the journey pleasant, swift, and free from all danger.β He opened the coach door and extended a hand to Andrea.
She took it, more of a reflex drilled into her after years of etiquette training, rather than because she needed assistance. βYouβre certain of the way?β
βMiss Andrea,β Theodore said, βthere is no more powerful team of navigators on this Earth than Julius Hunter and myself. Be it sea, forest, or swamp, weβll get you through it. And any ruffians that attempt to stop us will be halted most assuredly by Maximeβs trusty rifle.β
The Frenchman slung the weapon around from his back and winked at her.
Andrea looked at the three of them from the coach steps. When sheβd spied them in the tavern only a day ago, though it felt like ages, sheβd never expected their paths to cross. As she sat down on the plush seats inside, and for the first time since sheβd been subjected to that awful dinner with her parents, Andrea smiled.
β
Just as Theodore North had promised, the journey was smooth an uneventful. Julius was indeed an expert navigator, and easily brought them from town to town, making quick work of the woodlands that stood in between. Maxime remained perched on the coachβs roof for most of their travels, and they came under no threat of further robbery. In the interest of saving these men their newly earned coin, Andrea had insisted that they camp each night, rather than spend on an inn, to which they had consented. They gave her the privacy of the coach, though she often wondered if they had the better deal, getting to stretch out under the stars.
The sun was setting on their fifth day of travel. Theodore had scouted out a clear spot for the night, and Julius and Maxime set to work preparing a fire and food.
Andrea had grown accustomed to the rhythm of these men. For the most part, she tried her best to stay out of their way. As kind as they were, there was always the chance theyβd grow bored of the arrangement and maroon her one night if she caused too much trouble. She spent most of her time observing them. She watched how Maxime handled his gun. She picked up on Juliusβs pathfinding notations. She listened to Theodoreβs stories and asked him about finding oneβs way by the stars. The amount of information sheβd learned would have taken her months to research and parse out from books. In exchange, she told them the truth of what had driven her from her home, the stifling life, the arranged marriage, and the godforsaken dress at the bottom of her trunk.
Her thoughts were interrupted by a light rapping on the window of the coach. Andrea leaned over to push the door open and Theodore climbed inside.
βSo,β he said, settling himself on the seat opposite her. βJulius reckons weβll be crossing into South Carolina tomorrow. I do hope youβve enjoyed the journey.β
βI believe I did,β Andrea said. βIt would have been so much slower if youβd stolen the coach and Iβd had to go on foot.β
Theodore tossed his head with a light laugh. βMay your future be full of exceedingly better scoundrels.β
A silence fell between them.
He leaned forward, propping his elbows on his knees and his chin on his hands. βAndrea Meriwhether.β In the days since sheβd met him, sheβd never heard Theodore sound even remotely serious, but now, his tone was even and calm. βI have a question for you, and itβs one I want you to consider closely.β
Andrea tilted her head. βAll right.β
His blue eyes bored into hers. βYou are trying very hard to leave something behind. Thatβs a place Iβve been before. Youβre ready. Ready to walk away from a past thatβs done nothing but beat you down. I can see it in your face. And I wonder, if running to your aunt is the best way to do it.β
Her shoulders stiffened. She felt scrutinized. And annoyed. Once again, he was spinning webs of pretty words instead of just saying what he meant. βCould you speak plainly for once? What are you getting at?β
βForget about your aunt. Come with us.β
His words reverberated in her ears. βAndβ¦what? Smuggle?β
βYouβve a head for business. The way you wrung out that rum baron? I would trust you as the negotiator for all our future endeavors. Weβll make a fortune.β
βYou donβt even know me.β
βAnd yet somehow, you are so familiar.β
Nothing about him was joking. Nothing about him was teasing, or sarcastic, or playing her. βYouβre serious.β
βI am.β
Andrea could see the forking path in front of her. Along the road sheβd been walking was simply more of the same. Staying with her aunt would only mean a slightly smaller estate, and maybe fewer society parties. More hardship, more loneliness. It was what sheβd known. It was safe. But the other pathβ¦
Theodore reached out and took her hand. βI promise you that wherever weβre going is bound to be much more exciting than anything you could get up to in Charleston.β
It wasnβt in her nature to play it safe. Her fatherβs words echoed in her head. We root out opportunities and succeed.
Once again, her choice was made. She met Theodoreβs gaze. βYes. Iβll come.β
A smile as bright as the sun illuminated Theodoreβs face. His grip on her hand tightened and he flung open the coach door, pulling her along with him.
βMen! Listen up!β Theodore strode around the campfire Maxime had built. Julius put his book down. βOur fair Andrea has decided to join our merry band. What once was three is now four. Let the festivities commence! Maxime!β he shouted. βFind that godawful rum we got from the distiller!β Maxime and Theodore raced around to the back of the coach, popping open Andreaβs trunk, where theyβd stashed the majority of their possessions for the journey.
Julius looked at her over the lenses of his tiny glasses. βIs this true?β
βIt is,β Andrea said, taking a seat on the log next to him.
βAnd itβs what you want?β
βI think it is. Theodore was right. Whatever I want, itβs not in Charleston. Itβs somewhere else. And for the time being, Iβd like it to be with you three.β
Julius nodded deeply. βQuite wise. And quite bold.β
Theodore and Maxime returned, handing out slim bottles to the rest of them.
βLetβs raise a glass! To Andrea Meriwhether!β
In unison, they all took great swigs of their drink. Andrea shivered as the cool liquid turned into a warm trail from her mouth to her stomach.
Maxime promptly spat his mouthful to the ground.
βGod! That is horrible!β Theodore shook his head like a dog shaking off the wet before taking a seat next to the fire. βNow then,β he said, βI believe the first thing we need to do is get rid of that name.β
Andrea blinked. Her name? Theodore had been joking about it from day one, but he honestly expected her to change it? But even as the thought came to her, she didnβt feel affronted or appalled. What did her name matter anymore?
βWhat are we thinking? Annie? Andie?β
Except, not those. Andrea made a face.
βIβm sensing distaste,β said Theo, wagging a finger at her. βSomething more dignified, then. Anastasia? Andromeda?β
βDo I look like a painting to you?β Andrea said, lifting an eyebrow. βBesides, I thought you wanted something shorter.β
βDrew,β said Julius, his bass rumbling through the night air.
Theodore looked at him, wrinkling his nose. βA touch masculine, donβt you think?β
βItβs simple. It suits her well.β
Andrea perked up. It was a name sheβd never heard before. Something different. βI like it.β
βWell, thatβs that, then,β Theo said. βDrew it is. What about a surname?β
Maxime appeared from around the back of the coach, holding something up to his chest. βMcBride.β He let the fabric fall from his hands, revealing it to be Andreaβs wedding dress.
Julius and Theo burst into laughter as Maxime proceeded to prance around the campfire, batting his eyelashes and swooning.
βOh, please say yes, Drew,β Theodore wheezed, wiping the tears out of his eyes. βIt has to be that.β
Grinning, Andrea rose to her feet and snatched the garment from Maxime. She held it aloft as she faced her three companions. βAllow me to reintroduce myself. Drew McBride. Happily unmarried. Professional smuggler.β
Theo had been right. She was ready to leave everything behind. She brought the hem of the dress to her mouth, biting to tear the seam, and then ripped. The long skirt split in her hands, spraying beads in every direction.
The men cheered.
Part 2: Drew McBride
Newburyport, Massachusetts. 1840.
The streets of Newburyport hummed with activity as ship after ship pulled into port and unloaded their wares. The shipyard brimmed with sailors and soldiers hauling crates and barrels. Merchants walked along the planks, checking and rechecking their inventories to see that all their goods had arrived safely.
It was easy to go unnoticed in a crowd like that.
Drew McBride stood at the mouth of an alleyway, the hard corners of the bricks pressing against her spine. She reached into the pocket of her jacket and pulled out a cigarette, fishing with her other hand for a match.
Her focus, however, was several yards behind her, where, in the shadows of the alley, a half-rotted barrel sat abandoned, its wood dark and waterlogged. Toward the barrelβs back, impossible to see unless you were looking for it, was a hole the size of a manβs fist.
Drew had done her part. All she needed to do now was watch and wait. She let the noise of the city fall away and sharpened her hearing. The ash glowed at the end of her cigarette and she let the sweet tobacco smoke fill her other senses.
There. A slight shuffling behind her. Someone drawing to a halt.
Rather than turn around, Drew looked across the street at the newly erected barbershopβs shiny glass window. A combination of the relative darkness inside the shop, the sunβs light, and the angle from which she watched allowed Drew a near perfect view of what was happening behind her in the alley.
It was why sheβd chosen this spot as the drop point in the first place.
In the reflection, she watched a young man stop at the barrel, glance around, and then bend down, reaching into the hole at the back. He withdrew a small object and quickly stashed it into his coat.
An object that Drew knew to be a parcel of opium.
He reached out again, this time placing something back into the barrel.
Their payment.
Drew watched as the man walked past her and inserted himself into the throng of people. He was fresh-faced, barely out of boyhood. Probably his first time. Theo sure knew how to pick βem.
She enjoyed her cigarette down to the butt before dropping it to the ground. She turned and started down the alley, giving herself an off-kilter swagger. When she passed the barrel, she leaned hard to her left, colliding with it.
βJesus! Godβdangββ she muttered. The barrel toppled to its side and rolled across her path. In its wake, having fallen out while the barrel fell, was a small purse. Drew bent down to haul the barrel back upright, and in the same motion, scooped the purse into the deep pocket of her coat.
She continued her faux drunken stumbling until the alleyway made its first turn. This little street cut across two of Newburyportβs city blocks, and was one of Drewβs favorite passages. Easy to tell if you were being followed, and easy to lose someone if they were on your tail. She emerged on the other side, closer to River Street, and proceeded to follow a path to the door of The Lovesick Gull.
Even in the late morning hours, the tavern was teeming with customers. Tankards practically flew through the air on trays, in hands, across countertops and tables. Chatter and laughter filled every corner.
Despite the crowd, it was as easy as ever to pick out Theo. Heβd been favoring mauve recently. Said it illuminated his palette, whatever that meant.
Drew picked her way through the tavern mess and straddled the bench next to him.
βDrew!β he said brightly. βWe were starting to wonder if youβd fallen into the sea.β
βI would never,β she said around her cigarette. βCanβt swim.β
βDid you have a nice walk?β asked Julius from across the table. Beneath it, she felt the slight bump of his large knee brushing against hers.
She pulled the purse from her pocket and slipped it into his waiting hand under the table. βYep. Weβre lucky,β Drew said, lowering her voice. βThese were kids. First time theyβd done a drop like this. I could smell it on them when we met them.β
βAt least it went smoothly,β Theo said. Heβd been the one to make the smuggling arrangement with the young sailors in the first place. Drew gave him a hard stare until he looked appropriately sheepish.
Julius scribbled down some numbers in his small black book. βNot a bad month for us.β
The message was becoming familiar. All the months theyβd spent in Newburyport had been good months, and they were closing in on eleven of them. The port town had become a thriving place of operation for their particular trade, with desirable goods consistently coming in, and buyers that were willing to operate in the city. Itβd meant theyβd been able to place more roots here than they had anywhere for the past twenty years. Drew liked the security. It was a nice change. She liked the money even more.
βWhoβs on schedule?β she asked Julius.
He turned to the meticulously detailed calendar he kept at the back of the small book. βThe Alexandra is set to make port in about a week.β
βSpanish wine,β said Theo with a wink.
βHuxford Arch will be back in town at the end of the month.β
βFirearms.β
βAnd weβre owed a shipment from The Crownβs Courage men.β
βAh. Lace!β
βEverythingβs in order. I like it,β Drew said, blowing smoke from a fresh cigarette into the air.
Theo coughed.
Thereβd been a time, several years ago now, where work hadnβt been this easy. Theyβd done the dirty basement dealings, and negotiated with their own lives, and traveled the miles, and evaded more military men than she could ever hope to count. Not to mention, they werenβt young anymore, not like that child Drew had watched in the window, fumbling through the alley, who couldnβt have looked more suspicious if he tried. Drew had turned forty-five this year. Julius was well in his fifties. Theyβd earned a little leisure and the steady work that came with their reputation.
There was a commotion near The Lovesick Gullβs entrance, and before Drew could look over, Maxime stood at the head of their table, panting.
βYou are not going to believe what I am about to tell you,β he said.
βYou havenβt given us the chance,β said Theo.
βI have found us a job, mes amis!β
Maxime placed his hands on the table and leaned down, a grin pulling at his cheeks. Drew hadnβt seen him this excited in a long time.
βYou say that like weβre in need of one,β Julius said.
βBecause we are. A job like this? Oh yes, we need it.β
βSlow down and hush up,β said Drew. The last thing she wanted was attention if Maxime cried about their line of work as loud as the tavernβs namesake. βWhat happened?β
Maxime took a seat. βI was walking through the shipyard, and I noticed these two people wearing weird sort of, uh, robes, I donβt know. I thought they might be foreigners of some kind so I tailed them for a while. Followed them to the posting board.β
Close to the shipyard, there was a large signboard where various businesses could post advertisements, available rooms, work needed, et cetera. It was a popular stop for recently landed sailors looking for a quick job in between voyages.
Maxime continued. βThey looked at the listings for a while but apparently, didnβt find what they were looking for. So before they could leave, I introduced myself. They need something done. Something transported. And, mon dieu, are they willing to pay.β
Drew had been waiting for a number. βHow much?β
βThree. Thousand.β
βDollars?β said Julius.
βNo, chickens. Of course, dollars!β
Drew watched her partnersβ eyes blaze at the prospect of such a sum, but she wasnβt about to celebrate just yet. βDetails?β
Maxime shook his head. βThatβs all I know for now. They want to meet us tonight, at the wharf.β
β
Drew stared out at the gentle waves of the ocean, their crests illuminated by the light of the full moon above. She tipped her foot back, digging the heel of her boot into the soft, wet wood of the long pier. Theo, Maxime, and Julius were some distance away, posted up in an alley. For a potential job this big, the party had unanimously voted that Drew handle the negotiations.
Before long, two figures who could only be Maximeβs marks, emerged from the shadows of the streets and stepped out onto the pier. Heβd been right, they were both wearing long robes, like members of a church choir. It was hard to tell in the darkness, but Drew guessed they were a deep blue. The voluminous robes disguised their bodily features, but Drew took in what she could. Average height, light builds, one man and one woman, hoods covering most of their faces.
If Theo had dug through his vast wardrobe and tried to come up with an outfit that read βsuspiciousβ from a hundred yards away, even he wouldnβt have stood out as much as these two. A grin tugged at her lips as she remembered Theoβs greatest failure when it came to incognito; a three piece black suit with a long silk coat and mask modeled after a medieval plague doctor.
The robed figures approached. βAre you the associate of Maxime Auclair?β asked the woman.
Heβd given these strangers his full name? Drew resisted rolling her eyes. βI am. Heard you two might have some work you need done.β
βYour Frenchman claims you are the best.β She had an accent that Drew couldnβt place.
βNot a claim. Itβs true.β Drew struck a match in the darkness, holding the flame up to the cigarette she held in her lips.
The robed figures shared a look. βWe need something taken away from this city. Far, far away. You must leave tonight.β
βWhy the rush?β Drew asked, though she was nearly certain what the answer would be. Legally obtained items rarely needed to be moved with haste.
βThese objects must not come into the wrong hands,β said the man, his voice slightly high pitched and wheezy.
βWhat kind of objects are we talking about, here?β Drew inhaled deeply. She kept her gaze locked on the two figures, staring hard into their shrouded faces.
Something stirred beneath the womanβs robes and her hands emerged, holding a flat chest, over a foot long. A golden lock, cast to look like the head of a roaring lioness, adorned the chestβs front.
βWe had hoped that our generous price would spare us from unnecessary questions,β said the man.
Drewβs eyebrows shot up. βThatβs not really how this works. Whatβs in the box?β
The woman adjusted her grip on the chest. βWe need it delivered to our associates in Canada. Weβre willing to pay you three thousand dollars if you are able to leave tonight. We can give you half now, and youβll receive the other half when you reach your destination. Our only condition is that you do not open this box.β
It wasnβt an outrageous demand, by any stretch, but Drew didnβt understand its purpose. Her mind cycled through all the contraband that could fit in a case like that. Gold bars. Drugs. Human hand.
A journey to Canada, hm? That would take them weeks. They hadnβt traveled like that in years. The money was tempting, but it wasnβt as though they were short on funds at the moment. They didnβt need to take this job.
Theo would be in, no question. Drew had seen the glaze of boredom that sometimes touched his eyes while they wandered the small Massachusetts city. Some days, Drew didnβt think he was too far away from sneaking aboard a ship just to see where heβd end up. Maxime was the same way. They were hungry for adventure. The comfort and security theyβd found in Newburyport was welcome, but stagnant. She knew Julius appreciated the regularity and safety, but his aspirations were elsewhere, too. Nearly a year had gone by, and looking back, Drew wondered if she missed the high stakes as much as they did. She felt a tiny prick of warmth in her heart as she remembered the first time theyβd traveled together, back when she thought her journey ended in South Carolina.
We root out opportunities, and we succeed.
She leaned back, raising her chin. βFive hundred more upfront, and we never crack the lid.β
βDone,β the woman said immediately.
Easy. Her choice was made. βWeβll do it.β
β
βAll Iβm saying is, it would be worth looking into.β Julius pulled his pack down from behind his horseβs saddle. βThe government is handing out these kinds of grants to anyone who will take one. Once the land is clear, we invite settlers and help them manage. Weβll be passing directly through northern New York. It makes sense.β
βJulius, I am the first person to agree if our future takes us out of Massachusetts, but from dashing, adventurous smugglers to, what, landlords? It feels like a downgrade.β The kindling Theo was stoking finally began to smoke as the fire lit.
βA downgrade? With the money weβre earning from this?β said Julius. βWhat were you planning on doing with your share, hm? Toss it on the floor and swim in it like a king?β
βThat sounds fun.β
Julius heaved a great sigh. βTheodore North, you are impossible.β
Theo rested his elbow on a log behind him and grinned up at Julius, towering above him. βI quite like that. βTheodore the Impossible.ββ
It was their tenth night of travel. After finalizing the deal and collecting half their promised payment and bonus from the robed figures, Drew and her partners had made quick work of their departure from Newburyport. Comfortable as the place had been, they were always ready to leave with a momentsβ notice. Acquiring supplies and horses had been simple enough, especially being flush with cash, and theyβd set out for their destination, a small settlement south of Toronto.
βIβve hunted in New York before,β Maxime said. βMostly beaver, I think. The land is good, from what I remember. Damn cold in the winter, though.β
βSee? Weβd freeze to death, and how can we spend our earnings as ghosts, I ask you?β
Julius didnβt respond.
βDrew, what do you think?β Theo asked.
Sheβd been busying herself with the horses. Even after over twenty years of knowing each other, Theo still had a habit of going too far. Drew turned to face him. βI agree with Julius. I think itβs worth looking into. I still remember enough about farming. We can see if the landβs any good and go from there.β
βThank you, Drew,β Julius said.
Theo made a noise somewhere between a whine and a sigh and aggressively poked at the fire.
Maxime let out a low whistle as he divided up their rations and a flask to pass.
Drew squatted down on a log next to Theo and patted him on the shoulder. βIf you can handle the slimy brig of a British prison ship, you can handle a cold night or two. I thought youβd be more excited. βNorthβ is your family name. Isnβt this destiny?β
That was all it took. βClever Drew! I hadnβt thought of it that way.β He smiled at her before springing to his feet. βRight, men! If Julius is taking the reins of this bandβs future, allow me to provide tonightβs entertainment.β
Though heβd never say it out loud, she could tell Theo wasnβt completely won over. Best to allow him to be a fool until he felt better. She took a bite of jerky, settling in for one of Theoβs stories, when he darted toward her horse and plunged his hand into her saddle bag.
βTheo!β she yelled. She knew what he was going for.
Her suspicion was confirmed as he turned back toward the fire with the odd chest they were transporting in hand.
βPut that back,β Drew said, her voice low.
βDrew McBride, my dear friend, do you know me at all?β
ββCourse I do. Why do you think Iβve forbidden you from touching that box?β
Theo pushed out his bottom lip. βItβs been ten days. I cannot stomach the suspense anymore. I have to know whatβs in here.β
Drew was on her feet now. βNot opening it was part of the deal.β
Theo gestured at the woodlands around them. βHow would they ever find out, hm? One little peek! Thatβs all I need.β He pressed his hand to his forehead dramatically.
βThe lock is quite simple,β said Maxime from across the fire.
βVery easy to undo,β added Julius.
Drew glared at the three of them. βSo youβve all been plotting behind my back?β
In unison, they smiled slyly at her.
No arguing with a three-to-one vote. βThere isnβt a shred of honor between the lot of you,β she muttered.
βOf course not, Drew,β Theo said. βWeβre smugglers.β He took a long pin from a place behind his coat lapel and inserted it into the lock. Maxime and Julius crowded behind him, watching over his shoulders.
Despite herself, Drew couldnβt restrain her curiosity either, and watched as Theo carefully worked the pick up and down. As heβd said, it was a simple lock, and opened quickly with a small pop.
Theo drummed his fingers on top of the case, and glanced up at his partners. βReady?β
βGo on, then,β said Maxime.
Theo took a breath and then opened the box lid.
The interior was covered in a black velvet that spread across the lidβs underside, as well as the box itself. On one side, held in place by metallic fastenings, was a flat, square sliver of stone, maybe four inches across. Its surface was completely covered in scratch marks and symbols. If it was writing, it was unlike any Drew had ever seen.
Next to the small tablet, nestled securely in the velvet, were four rings. Theo picked one up and held it so they could all get a good look. It was a very intricate piece of silver work, the band raised and sculpted to resemble a snake eating its own tail. Tiny red and green gemstones were set where the snakeβs eyes would be.
They were hideous.
βTheyβre beautiful!β whispered Theo. βAnd look at that! One for each of us.β He plucked out the remaining rings.
βI am not putting that on my finger,β Drew said, taking a step back and fishing in her pocket for a cigarette.
βNot your taste, Drew?β Theo already wore two of the rings himself.
βCreepy snake jewelry? No. But they seem plenty gaudy enough for you, Theo.β
βRight you are!β As usual, insults stuck to Theo like water to a duck.
βTheyβre very old,β Julius said, examining the ring, now adorning his left pinky. βBut well cared for.β
βThey are adders, thatβs for sure.β Maxime twisted his hand, letting the fire light catch the contours of the ring. βPerhaps a family heirloom.β
βI wonder why they needed to move them so quickly,β said Julius.
βPerhaps a stolen family heirloom.β
Drew wondered more about the strange tablet that shared lodging with the rings. Toward the bottom of the stoneβs surface, the lines of scratched symbols became less and less even, sloping downwards, the letters, if thatβs what they were, jumbling together. What would cause someone to write like that?
As if she needed any more reasons to be suspicious about this job.
β
The excitement of revealing their forbidden treasure waned as they settled in for another night. Juliusβs wide shoulders were propped against an equally wide stump as he read. Maxime sat a few feet from the fire, servicing his rifle.
Drew took up the half empty flask from where it had landed after dinner and walked over to Theo, joining him on his log as he stared absently into the flames.
She took a swig before passing it over. βSo. There a reason youβre so against Juliusβs land investment idea?β
Theo eyed her before taking the flask. βI wondered if thatβs what you wanted to talk about.β
Drew stayed quiet, waiting. A plume of smoke from her cigarette spiraled into the air.
βIβm not against it, per se, itβs justβ¦β He had doffed his mauve coat and his shirtsleeves hung loose as he rested his hands behind his head. βI donβt know. Something about the notion of settling down and changing up our business bothers me. Sometimes I feel like the only reason Newburyport didnβt drive me mad is because we were so close to the sea. I could get my taste of it, you know?β
βSure.β
βI know weβre getting older, and that itβs likely time to leave our days of adventure behind us, but I find myself very reluctant. It wonβt be the same.β
βThereβs nothing stopping you. If you wanted to hop on a voyage to Spain or Africa or the other side of the world, you could. It wouldnβt hurt our feelings.β
βSo quick to get rid of me?β
βYou know what I meant,β Drew said.
Theo let his smile slack a bit. βOf course I do. But no,β he said with a sigh, placing a hand on her knee. βFreedom and Fortune may shepherd my fate, but I know where my heart belongs. I would never just leave.β
A wave of something like relief washed over Drewβs skin. She placed her hand on top of his. βGood.β
They both stared at the crackling fire, slowly charring away the logs in its belly.
βYou can always think about it this way,β Drew said after a few minutes. βIf we become landowners, and eventually host some settlers, theyβre going to need someone to look up to. Some kind of local hero who can teach them survival skills like lock picking and how to dress for a dance. Youβll be adored.β
βYouβre trying to charm me. Itβs working.β
Drew snorted.
Theo turned to face her. βYou know, I should have guessed the moment I watched you tear through that lovely wedding dress with your teeth that youβd become this.β
βWhat?β said Drew, preparing for an insult. βA trouser wearing, ill mannered brute who smokes too much and doesnβt enunciate?β
βNo. A woman I greatly admire.β
Drew felt her chest tighten and heat up. In all her years of knowing him, sheβd become an expert on sorting out when Theo was being fanciful and when he was being honest. From his expression, this was something he believed with all his soul. She admired him, too. She hoped he knew.
βAlthough you do smoke too much.β
βHa ha,β Drew said, blowing a puff into his face with each laugh.
Theo coughed in protest.
Drew grinned and brought the rolled up paper to her lips again.
Theoβs coughing grew more intense.
βFine. Point made, Iβll put it out.β She flicked the butt into the fire.
But Theo didnβt stop coughing. He doubled over on their shared log, the fingers on his right hand digging into the bark.
βTheo? Whatβs wrong?β
Another string of coughs rose into the air. Drew whipped around. Maximeβs rifle had fallen from his hands and he was on his knees, coughing over and over and over.
Even more coughing. Drew spun to see Julius, his pince-nez knocked askew, tugging at his collar as his body was wracked with coughs.
βMaxime! Julius!β Drew shouted. What the hell? What the HELL? She lunged toward the water bucket and seized the ladle, bringing it to Theo. βCβmon, drink. Just drink this.β
Theo tried to take the ladle in his hands, but another violent cough sent it tumbling to the ground.
Drew vaulted the log and grabbed Theo beneath his shoulders, dragging him toward Maxime and Julius. She had to be able to reach all three of them. Theo didnβt resist.
She laid Theo down on the ground and rolled him onto his side. If he was choking on something, that might help. She yanked on Juliusβs shoulders to do the same, pulling him onto the forest floor. Maxime had already collapsed.
What could they be choking on? All three of them at once?
She went back to Theo, taking his face in her hands as he wheezed and heaved. βWhy canβt you breathe? Youβve gotta tell me. Show me. Youβve gotta help me here, cβmon.β Theoβs eyes were wide and watery.
Next to him, Maximeβs coughs were curling his body into a ball. Drew crawled to his side. All she could think of was what to do when someone has swallowed too much sea water, though that obviously couldnβt have been the cause of this. Gripping Maximeβs jaw in one hand, she took two fingers of her other and plunged them back into his throat. His body convulsed around her grip, and when another cough arose, she pulled out her hand, coated in saliva.
But Maxime didnβt vomit. His coughs sounded weaker. All of them did. Their breath sounded weaker.
βNo no no,β Drew muttered, rubbing his back, her gaze constantly going back to Theo and Julius. βJust cough it up. Please. Just breathe. Just one breath, please.β Her eyes stung hot and her heart fluttered like a flag in a hurricane. βHow do I help?β Her voice had never sounded smaller.
ββ¦Dβ¦Drewβ¦β The rasp was so different from Juliusβs normal deep, comforting bass.
Drew choked back a sob as she scrambled to his side. βJulius, Iβm here. Please.β
In a motion that seemed to take all his effort, he lifted his arm to tug back the collar of his shirt.
Encircling his neck and forking up toward his ears and throat was a large, black vein, standing out against the canvas of his warm brown skin. Drew pulled his shirt back farther, and the wicked path trailed across his left shoulder, twisting down, down, down all the way to his hand. All the way to his pinky.
Drew threw herself toward Maxime and Theo, tearing away at their sleeves. The inky black veins pulsed through their skin, too. Both of Theoβs arms were afflicted.
The rings.
The rings were doing something to them. Poisoning them. Killing them.
She seized Theoβs hand and dug at the ring with her fingernails. It wouldnβt budge. A guttural screech boiled up from her throat as she twisted and scratched and pulled, every failed attempt at removing the ring adding fuel to her desperate fire.
Get it off get it off get it off GET IT OFF!
βStop!β
Drew didnβt register the voice at first. She kept attacking her friendsβ hands, Maxime, Theo, Julius, again again again. The rings refused to move.
βDo not touch the rings!β
Someone seized her around her chest, pinning her arms to her sides and hauled her backward.
She thrashed against this mysterious assailant. βLet go of me!β Drew screamed.
βHold still.β
βNo!β She kicked back, striking at this personβs legs, bending down to bite the arm across her chest, anything. Anything to get away. Burning tears blurred her vision as she was dragged further from her friends.
βTell me. Did you touch the rings?β The voice said behind her. A man.
Drew tried again to free herself, but the man tightened his grip.
βDid you touch them?β
Sobs and words and screams clung together in Drewβs throat, making sound almost impossible. She nodded.
βAll right. Thereβs still time. I can save you.β
The words found their way. βNo! No! Forget me, save them! Save them!β
βI canβt.β
Drew screamed again and twisted wildly. The man released her and she fell to her hands and knees, hard. She scrabbled across the leaves and dirt to where Theo, Julius, and Maxime lay on the ground.
In all the commotion, she hadnβt heard the coughs subside. She hadnβt felt the last rise and fall of their chests. She hadnβt seen the final expressions their faces had frozen into.
She saw it all, now.
They were gone.
The man had crouched down next to her. βThereβs nothing I can do for them. But you still have time.β He took hold of one of her hands and yanked it up, holding it in front of her face. Tiny, spidery, black veins were spreading from the tips of her fingers, curling around her knuckles. Drew flinched away from the sight. She felt dizzy. She felt sick. She felt like she couldnβt breathe.
Her body wilted as the man took her face in his hands and began speaking slow rhythmic strings of words that made no sense to Drew. The world went black.
β
βFirst of all, maβam, please accept my deepest condolences for the loss of your comrades. I cannot imagine the shock and horror you must be feeling. I will do all I can to put this matter right.β
Drew was awake. The black veins were gone. According to the man who had saved her, it was only an hour later. He was sitting in front of her now, speaking to her, she was sure, but he might as well have been speaking that strange language sheβd heard before sheβd passed out, for all it was worth. Her gaze was trained on the three bodies, still laying on the forest floor. The man had covered them with the blankets from their travel supplies. Theo always used to complain about how scratchy the red one was. How would he feel now, with it covering his face? Julius and Maxime would laugh, for sure. She could almost hear it.
βIβm sure you have questions, and I will be able to answer the majority of them, but I need you to agree to something first. If you wish to know nothing and be brought to a place of safety, that can be arranged. If you wish to forget about this night completely, that can also be arranged. However, if you wish to know the truth, then Iβm afraid you will have to take the life you were living up to this point, and cut all ties with it, for there is no going back from this moment on.β
It didnβt seem like it mattered, really. They were dead. Knowing why wouldnβt change that.
This manβs words were so similar to the offer Julius had made her all those years ago. Saying yes to him had changed her life forever. She wasnβt sure if she could do that again. Not alone.
βDo you consent to this knowledge?β
She wanted to say no. She wanted to believe whatever this man was saying about making her forget this night. If that was possible, then yes, sheβd take that. Sheβd take that over the empty, echoing nothing that filled her now.
But how disappointed would Julius be if she gave up? How hurt would Maxime be if she didnβt do everything in her power to avenge them? How sad would Theo be if she didnβt see this story to its end?
βIβm sorry, I do need an answer.β
She looked away from her fallen family and toward the stranger who promised a new path. βTell me more.β
The man nodded. βMy name is Henry Davenport. Iβm a member of a society called Ordo Nocturnus.β
Copyright Β© 2022 by Rachael Huszar
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