Seth and the Barbarian
- 4 years ago
- 51
- 0
1865
The first snow of the winter was a total surprise. The citizens of the Capital area awoke one morning late in November, and there it was, milky white and tombstone quiet, a half-foot deep and still coming down in flakes the size of silver dollars. The field where Seth and his brother had been cutting hay lay buried, the uncut stalks now bent low into mounded hillocks near the old road, both parts of which had all but disappeared. The wet snow even clung to the deep loops of the telegraph wires.
"Guess we won't have to cut that," Seth said to himself, looking out the upstairs window and rubbing his callused hands together. A light glowed in his uncle's store, and he could see a figure with a broom, shoving aside the snow piled up at the edge of the front porch. It was the only sign of life in the wasteland before him.
Seth had not noticed the disappearing boot prints Robert had made in going to work only a half hour before, but now he understood why his brother had not bothered to awaken him. He had moved back in with Robert after his mother decided that the young man was well enough to put up with Seth's snoring.
"Won't have any school today," Seth said to himself as the fat flakes blew sideways for a while and then seemed to reverse direction making the store disappear behind a gauzy curtain. The leafless limbs of the trees clacked against each other. The fenceline by the deep old road in front of their house was barely discernible in the swirling waves of drifting snow, and the tall pine trees to the west were bent with the weight on their limbs. The storm seemed to suck the color out of the landscape.
"You don' like school anyway," Annie said from the hallway, still dressed in her long flannel nightgown and wearing knitted booties.
"Yes, I do, " said Seth, "it's that confounded lady teacher that's the problem. She's a consarned pain."
"Miss March," Annie said, "she's nice. You just hate the chores."
"I don't mind keeping the stove going," Seth said as he pulled on his heavy britches. "Or chopping wood either. But I sure don't like taking out the ashes or teaching you brats to add up your numbers or print neatly."
"Anyhow, we can get to school if we try."
"We don't have a sleigh, silly. 'Sides, I'druther stay home and read."
"We can go with the Connors. You know those girls will be going, and they travel right by here. Miss March rooms with the Perrys so she'll be there."
Seth buckled his belt and held his tongue, looking for his shoes.
"Mary Beth's sweet on you, ain't she," Annie said.
"Don't say ain't. Momma'll get you."
"Ain't, ain't, ain't," Annie cried running back to her mother's room and slamming the door. Seth dressed quickly, putting on two pairs of heavy stockings and Robert's old sweater, the one that kept unraveling at the elbows, positive his mother would ask him to make a path to the outhouse.
"What time did Robert go to work?" Seth asked when he got down to the warm kitchen, hoping to delay his mother's request.
"Not sure," she said, stirring something in a big bowl, "early. Can't say what roused him, north wind likely, rattling the shutters."
"I didn't hear it," said Seth, sitting on the edge of his chair and spooning up his honey-laced corn mush, wondering about the privy, needing to go.
"You always were a better sleeper," his mother reminded him, toasting a piece of bread in front of the grate with a long-handled fork.
"When's he going to get married? I'd like to have my own room back."
"You don't like sharing?" His mother dropped the toast on his plate and pointed to the apple butter with her blackened fork.
"T'isn't that," said Seth, not at all sure what it was but knowing he wanted someplace to be by himself now and then, a door he could close.
"Well, I don't think Robert is going to get married any time soon. He hasn't even gone to a dance or visited a girl yet, least not that I know about."
"Who was that he courted before he went in the army, the Conway girl? No, Amy Preston wasn't it? They were always making eyes at each other, especially up at the fair. I saw 'em holding hands."
His mother nodded. "She had a brother killed in the war, a Confederate trooper, up at Sharpsburg."
"Oh," said Seth. "Guess she wouldn't marry any Union man then."
"Probably not," his mother said, pouring hot water into her enameled basin. "It will take a while. I'm glad he's working."
"He sure don't talk much."
"Doesn't, not don't. Be patient."
"I thought he'd go back to school, maybe down to Georgetown."
"He talked about the law now and then. Guess he might read with somebody up at the courthouse." His mother raised her head from her small washtub, the one she used in the winter. "Annie, get yourself down here. The churn's waiting for you," she called loudly. "And Seth when you finish, make us a good path to the necessary and milk the cow."
At Luke Williams' general store, Robert and his uncle sat across the counter from each other on high stools, drinking coffee from thick, stained mugs and frying bread on the glowing pot-bellied stove. An open tin of strawberry preserves sat between them. Neither expected any customers before the snow stopped, and it showed no signs of doing that.
"Wha' you weigh now?" Luke Williams asked, seemingly out of the blue.
"No idea," Robert said, a bit surprised by the question. He patted his flat stomach. He was feeling a lot better and sleeping more soundly, too.
"Next time you go over to the French's, get on that there freight scale he's got in his barn. Bet 'chu go a hundred and thirty these days."
Robert guessed his uncle might have weighed twice that. "You heard anything about their business. He was doing real well before the war."
"Humph," said his uncle, "that guano near done him in." He shook his head and refilled his cup. "Ahead a'his time, I guess. He bought high and the price collapsed. And he didn't make no friends during the war neither."
"Guess not."
"Thought him and Mr. Bouve was gonna have a punch up right here in the store 'fore that poor man's son got hisself kilt."
Robert nodded, trying to picture the young Bouve boy.
"Course, I got tired a'explaining why you was wearin' blue."
"When are people going to forget it? War's been over six months."
"Not never, boy," Luke Williams said, wiping his mouth with his hand. "It's somethin' you're gonna have to live with."
Robert picked up the first order to be filled that day.
"Always," said his uncle to his back. "Always."
"Good day, Robert," Mr. French said with a smile. "Glad to see you."
"Brought that order you dropped off. Had to wait for our delivery of kerosene. Driver said the road was drifted over down around the Tenallytown hill." The young man rolled the small barrel off the back of his sturdy wagon and placed it carefully on the empty frame.
"Good thing that snow melted so fast. It would have been right dark around here in a day or two." Richard French smiled at Robert as he shouldered a bag of wheat flour and headed toward the kitchen. "Stop a minute, and Maude'll get you some coffee. Might even have some hot corn bread."
In the steaming kitchen, where the huge iron stove occupied the place of honor, Robert unwound his scarf and removed his heavy gloves after nodding a hello to the large, black cook. He unbuttoned his wool coat, one that had been his father's, and took the offered chair. "Stowed the flour in the pantry," he said.
"Been meaning to talk to you," said Mr. French, raking back his sparse hair with his fingers and hanging up his coat on the back of the door. "This is as good a time as any. I've rented a place up in Rockville, but I don't want to give up the store in Georgetown." He rubbed his chilled hands together.
Robert waited, enjoying the smell of baking corn bread.
"Can't be two places at once, obviously. How about you running the Rockville end of my operation for a while, t'aint very big. You know a lot of people out this way, and I guess you've worked for your uncle since you were about knee high." He held his hand a couple of feet off the floor and lifted an eyebrow. "Feed, grain and fertilizer, maybe farm equipment later."
"Didn't the Bouic brothers open a place just last year?"
"It's mostly a general store, like many of the others; like your uncle's. I plan to specialize."
Robert looked out at the windrows of snow still hiding in shady places. His stomach churned for some reason, and he uncrossed his legs. Why would I worry about a job, he thought. It's just a job. Things are moving faster, I guess.
"Most farmers get their fertilizer from Georgetown, buy it from Baker or old Dunlop. We'll sell directly to them. Should be able to beat the delivered price." Mr. French leaned back and waited, hands behind his balding head.
"Oh," Caroline said, banging open the kitchen door and letting in some chilled air from the unheated dining room, "didn't know we had company. Don't get up please."
Robert glanced at the girl dressed in an oversized sweater and faded pinafore, obviously ready to do her afternoon chores, his mind on her father's offer. She shrugged into her wine-colored winter coat, tied a kerchief about her head and hurried out the door, her feet in high-topped boots and her long hair thoroughly hidden. "Cow's waiting," she said as she turned up her collar and disappeared, wondering why she had felt so glad to see the lean young man in her kitchen. She hurried across the yard, jumping muddy puddles left by the fast-disappearing snow.
"As to money," Caroline's father said, making sure the outside door was tightly closed, "I don't know what your uncle is paying, but I can promise you that if this business thrives, and I think it will as soon as the older farmers see that the ones using the new fertilizer are getting rich, we both can do very well. We are not just talking about guano, you know. Many new products will soon be on the market, super phosphates and bone mixtures. I'll start you at ten dollars a week and promise you a raise every six months if business warrants it."
"Very generous," said Robert, doing the annual arithmetic in his head and liking the idea of earning five hundred a year.
"I'd expect you to keep your own books and decide who gets credit, that sort of thing," French said. "I'll show you the system I use, nothing very complex, just three columns. You know your uncle's accounts, how that works. I've already hired a black man to take care of the deliveries and the warehouse end, one of the Snowdens, a good man, and he's taking on a helper by spring, least I'm hoping he'll need one."
"You know," Robert said, aware he was opening a sore topic, "because of your politics, some folks might not do business with you. I won't help, not a bit. You might be a lot better off hiring one of the rebel veterans. There's a lot of them around." He wondered if the man was going to put his name on the store.
Mr. French nodded. "Time will heal the wounds, I'm sure." He stuck out his hand, and Robert stood and took it, surprised at the hardness of the businessman's grip and at his own quick decision.
"When can you start?" French asked. "Lease starts the first of the year."
"That's fine. I'll find somebody to work for Uncle Luke. Maybe Seth can take my job for a while. He's weary of being the oldest one at school." He buttoned his coat and stepped out into the cold wind, pulling on his gloves and wishing he had worn a hat.
"Leaving so soon," Caroline asked, her face reddened by both weather and work, a bucket half-filled with milk in one hand and a basket of chicken and duck eggs under her arm. She carefully locked the chicken coop with the peg that dangled there. "I wanted to ask you something."
"I'm going to work for your father," Robert said, still a bit surprised. "We just agreed." They stepped into the shed together, out of the wind.
"Well good," said Caroline, setting down her milk pail, stimulated by what she was planning to say. "He's talked about you several times. The old man that's with him now ought to be put out to pasture. He looks like something out of Dickens; you know, Marley's ghost."
"Not down in Georgetown, in Rockville, up near the courthouse."
"He didn't tell me about that," Caroline said, looking grieved, but her mind on something else, something exciting.
"First of the year," Robert smiled at her chapped face and picked up the reins.
"We're planning a cotillion up at the Academy, at the Montgomery Hotel actually," Caroline said rapidly, "the week before Christmas."
Robert looked behind him to make sure he had closed the tail gate, hitting with the flat of his hand.
"Would you go with me?" Caroline asked, standing by the front wheel and looking up at the young man, noting that his eyes no longer seemed to be sunken into his skull. She was not sure whether she felt brave or foolish.
"Me?" Robert said, looking down at her over his knees, truly surprised. "Me?" He jabbed a finger into his chest.
"Well, you know how to dance, don't you?" Caroline gave him her best smile. She really hoped he would do it, hoped she could show up some of the prissy girls in her new school by bringing a real, full-grown man to the dance.
"Some," he said, ready to beg off and wondering why. "A little, reels and things like that. I'm better at baseball and mumblety peg."
"Say you'll come. All the girls have to invite somebody and, and, well, you're almost the only man I know other than my father. Some of them are bringing their brothers. Can you imagine? Poor things." She made a face.
"How awful," said Robert, feigning horror with a dramatic gesture, forearm at his forehead. "The poor things indeed."
"Be nice," Caroline said, putting a hand on his wet boot as he pulled the horse's head around. "It's only a couple of miles, at the hotel's assembly room. We'll have punch and a real band, not just a fiddler. That's what they say."
"I know where it is," Robert said, making a mock bow and pretending to doff his nonexistent hat, "and I will be honored, Miss French, if you don't think I'm too old to accompany you. Do I have to wear shoes?"
"And a shirt," Caroline said with a giggle, "and comb your hair, and not cuss or chew tobacco." She almost said 'and shave' but choked that back despite the ragged condition of Robert's auburn beard. At least most of those things on his face had healed up, those ugly sores.
"Very strict, goodness, a high class affair to be sure," said Robert, clucking to his horse. She waved and hurried toward the house, overjoyed by her success.
By damn, he thought as he went down their long lane, how did I get roped into that. How old is that girl? Seth's age I suppose. Pretty little thing. Well, not so little either. Oh well, I'll meet some girls up there, about time I got back in circulation. She must be about the youngest one in that school. He took a deep breath, enjoying the surge of his blood, the stirring he had not felt for many months and trying to recall the color of Caroline's eyes. He still could not remember the Preston girl's name. Becky Preston, hm, he thought, doesn't sound right. Betsy? Now she was a real beauty whatever her name is. Rebecca?
"You know how to dance?" Robert asked Seth a few weeks later.
Seth shook his head, his mouth full of corn bread and creamed chicken.
"Durn," Robert said, proud that he had avoided another 'damn' which would have annoyed his mother. "I was kind of hoping you might get me out of something I got myself into."
"What's this?" said Mrs. Williams, napkin at her lips.
"About a month ago Caroline French snagged me for a school dance next week, the girl's academy out in Rockville," Robert said, "and now I've got a chance to go to a house party that Saturday, the Spencers. He came by the store and invited me, Charlie did. Sarah Spencer and her older sister, Genevieve, they're having this." And that Preston girl, whatever her name is, she might be there. He shook his head, annoyed at his bad memory.
Finally, the weekend is here and it’s time to get Seth's birthday party ready. My boyfriend Seth, is turning twenty-five and we talked last night about how many people we should invite to his party, he just wants his closest friends from work here, so that's who is coming to his party. Tomorrow night we will go out to dinner with his family to celebrate with them. As his family are very religious, they wouldn't approve of the alcohol that will be served here tonight, so we will just go out...
ReluctanceSeth woke in a large, open field along the Darnestown Road just west of Rockville's court house. His hands were tied together, and for a moment he wondered where he was. He stretched carefully and felt pain knot his leg muscles and his backside. His knee hurt, too. He bit his lip to keep from crying out and massaged his calves and thighs, but he could not move freely because one of his ankles was tied to the leg of the snoring man lying next to him. The hazy sky grew slightly brighter, and...
"Who was that you were talking to out there?" Seth's mother glanced at him as she put down her ladle and began slicing carrots into the soup pot. "That's what I was trying to tell you, Momma." Seth watched the orange rounds plop into the bubbling soup, the slices getting larger as the carrot got smaller. "He's a soldier. A cavalryman, a rebel soldier, Momma." Seth watched his mother for some reaction, but she kept chopping carrots without missing a beat. "And he cut the telegraph...
The rebel soldier led Seth's horse a few hundred yards along the all-weather road toward Washington, past the place where two wagons had overturned and burned the previous summer while the others tried to escape Jeb Stuart's whooping horse soldiers. At the top of a rise they crossed the dirt track beside the macadamized road and stopped in the shade of a small stand of locust trees. The boy sat on his horse, saying nothing but watching his captor carefully and considering his situation....
For what seemed like a long time there was no sound in the dining room of the Williams's farmhouse except for the ticking of the clock, the flutter of the curtains and the whirr of insects. "Yes, I recognize him," Mrs. Williams said to Seth, her face white but her voice steady, and then to the soldier, "How may we help you, sir?" The man stood in the doorway with his weapon held loosely in his right hand, pointed more or les at the floor. Seth noted with some pride that it was a Sharps...
Seth licked his fingers, scooped up the last bits of his second piece of pie and gulped down his third cup of milk. Jefferson sat stiffly at the kitchen table with his frayed hat in his lap. Annie and Caroline watched the boy eat and listened to a disorganized story that seemed like the odd-shaped pieces of a jig-saw puzzle. Mrs. Williams busied herself at the stove, but Seth could tell that she was listening, too. Between bites and gulps the boy had told them, in disjointed fragments, where...
Confederate General Jubal Early and most of his staff spent Sunday evening near Gaithersburg, Maryland, a few miles north of Rockville, at the home of a very angry slave owner and Union sympathizer named John DeSellum. Mr. DeSellum was particularly unhappy because passing Rebels had pretty well cleaned him out of food and fodder before someone on the General's staff decided that his home would be a good place to locate the invading army's headquarters for the night. The few dark hours of...
Sweating junior officers called squads of soldiers from the walls, trenches and firing pits of Fort Stevens, and at a sergeant's insistence, Seth and Jefferson joined a shuffling chow line. The busy cooks never looked up as they served everyone a piece of gristly meat, a hunk of dark bread, and a cup of thick bean soup. The soldiers stood or squatted in the shadiest areas eating and joking about the probable age and source of their meat. They could not decide whether it was mule or camel,...
The President joined his wife and the other sightseers in a place of relative safety behind the fort's thick wall, and General Wright went back to his troops. Seth left the fort and crossed the crowded turnpike. The eager spectators pressed forward, excited by the increased activity. Seth elbowed his way through the mob, most of whom seemed to be in a holiday mood. He moved into the scrubby woods and past the piles of cleared brush where he had seen the New York soldiers disappear. He wanted...
The French's winding farm lane met the long-traveled Pike about a half mile north of Luke Williams' general store. At the open gate Jefferson pulled the faded, gray wagon into the shade of a weeping willow near a dried up brook. The three of them listened. Insects whirred and a faint breeze rustled the dry leaves. Seth walked out into the middle of the worn, hard-surfaced road on stiff legs. He could not see anything out of the ordinary. He had expected cavalry patrols racing back and...
In a few minutes Seth looked back again. The Confederates were nowhere to be seen in the dappled sunlight. The boy sighed and relaxed, feeling his heart thumping. "What was you so concerned 'bout back yonder?" Jefferson asked in his normal bass rumble. "I knew you could act crazy-like. I warn't worried none." "I think one of those soldiers, that sergeant, he recognized me. I'm pretty sure I ate breakfast with him out in Rockville early this morning." "Aw, come on now, Seth. How...
After the first rush of confusion produced by the sound of the big guns to the east, the men of Fort Reno settled back into an afternoon of disciplined routines. Now only the occasional crack of a sharpshooter's rifle reminded General Hardin's men to keep their heads down as they went about their tasks. They fired off a few heavy rounds to harass the people on the old turnpike and then settled back to wait and watch. Jefferson and Seth found a safe place for flop-eared Ben and Mr....
Hamare pariwar me 4 sadasya hai. Meri mom savita umra 34 saal, papa hansraj, umra 38 saal, joki gaon ke sahukar ke pass accountant ka karya karte hai. Mai dilip umra 19 saal, kaksha 12th ka chatra, aur meri choti bahan vidya umra 18 saal, and kaksha Kabhi hamara pariwar bhi hasta khelta pariwar tha. Papaji bahot mehnati the aur sahukar ( seth dilawar khan ) ki un par khas inayat thi. Seth jee ke yaha bade bade log aate jaate the, jaise ki collector, police captain, tahsildar, bade bade afsar,...
1876 "Caroline," Seth said as she gathered up the soup plates from their supper, "Got a minute? Need to talk to you." He looked very serious, and he felt very nervous. He licked his dry lips and attempted to slow his breathing. He could feel his heart thumping. And he almost lost his nerve. The young woman nodded and furrowed her brow at her brother-in-law. Winter was finally easing its frigid grip; the maples were showing some dark red buds, and a lot more migrating birds were out in...
Seth sat quietly beside Jefferson rubbing his wrists and flexing his cramped fingers. The trooper lay sprawled on his back with his arms extended. He did not seem to be breathing. "Didn' mean to hit him so hard," whispered Jefferson, still holding an ax handle in his huge fist. "We jus' sort'a run together at the corner there. He turned an' I whacked him. I heered you comin' up the hill, Seth." The boy put his ear to the man's chest. "He's not dead, Jefferson. His heart's still...
1866 "Love is certainly a funny thing," said Seth's mother, steadily snapping beans while she looked out her kitchen window. Rustling leaves now filled the fruit and shade trees and the trumpet vine on the outhouse wandered in glorious bloom. "A very funny thing. Don't you think so, Annie my sweet?" "I dunno," her daughter said, scratching her shaggy head. "And don't you say anything 'bout Jimmy Willson jus' 'cause he throws acorns at me." "Right," said her mother, smiling...
Disbelieving, shocked, frightened, Seth watched as his mother faced this angry soldier holding a gun. He felt frozen to his chair as if time had stopped. Unconnected images and sounds flashed in his memory: Mr. Willoughby, his skinny teacher yelling there was no school because a war had started; his Aunt Hope screaming in anguish when he told her that the soldiers had taken Uncle Luke away; the blue-clad men whistling as they smashed down his father's fence; his mother reading and rereading...
1865 "Uncle Luke wants to talk to you," Seth told his brother breathlessly. "Right now." He had run all the way back from the store with that request and stood panting beside Robert's old rocking chair on the back porch. The kitchen door stood open as it nearly always did, and two guinea hens seemed to be discussing whether or not they would explore the house. The cat dozed. "About what?" asked Robert, crossing his ankles the other way and holding up the boat hull he was carving, a...
1874 In mid-March with the wind playing tricks in the bare-limbed trees, Caroline, Johnny and Seth rode out the Pike in the Williams' farm wagon and found Zedediah Snowden at his small home in the black section of Rockville, an area called various demeaning names by the local whites but most generally referred to as "the run." Zed put down his hoe and welcomed Caroline with a smile, and then he shook Seth's hand. "Too soon to dig nohow," he said, wiping his hands on his heavy thighs....
In the barracks behind Fort Reno, a broad bar of golden sunlight slid across Seth's face while the boy dreamed of his mother's sewing circle. His tiny grandmother Axminister, red-faced Aunt Hester who always smelled of camphor, his maiden aunt who was called Miss Vidy, and his mother were knitting at his house. He could hear the needles clicking. Annie sat on a stool playing with her doll. Seth crouched back in a corner, watching and listening. All the women were saying nasty things to his...
In the French's dark, dry barn that smelled of hay and horses, Corporal Wainder swam back to consciousness after the repeated thud of distant cannon fire. He lay some six miles north of Fort Stevens, but he could clearly hear echoes of the guns' booming reports and even feel the ground beneath him shake. He looked around his horse-stall prison and saw nothing but piles of straw and worn, pine boards. "Water," sounded in his parched throat, but he was not sure whether or not he said the...
Author’s Note: This is for all those who have told me my stories need a noir bent. Here is proof that I write modern fairy tales. I love my characters too much to do noir. To make it scarier, I edited it myself. The Cotillion The elevator wasn’t moving fast enough. I watched the dull red numbers change from floor to floor, seven, eight… They seemed to be moving slower, almost like the building was getting tired. A four letter word caught in my throat. I would have let it loose if I were...
They met very few travelers on the highway, passing only two mule-drawn farm wagons headed toward the city, one loaded with a jumble of furniture. That surprised Seth since there had been a lot of traffic heading south the previous couple of days. A half-dozen Union cavalrymen clattered past, Illinois boys, heading toward Rockville with hardly a glance at the two dusty riders going the other way. Seth noticed that many of the farms along the old road seemed abandoned. Some of the houses and...
As Mr. French's buggy topped the hill near the Bethesda Meeting House, Seth looked back, but Jefferson was not in sight. He probably took that shortcut that fords the creek, thought the boy. Mr. French had been full of questions, but Seth had been more interested in looking at the damage done along the Pike by the retreating troops. The fences were gone and so were the flocks of chickens. The blacksmith shop where Jefferson had sought information on the way into town was closed and the...
It had been dark for some time. Fireflies flickered in the smoky gloom when General Jubal Early sent for Kyd Douglas. With former vice-president Breckinridge and John B. Gordon, Early had been discussing the long, hot campaign. In a month they had accomplished most of General Lee's basic purposes. Crops were being harvested in the Shenandoah Valley. Hundreds of horses and tons of supplies were on their way to Richmond. They had not suffered very many casualties, perhaps a thousand, but many...
Robert weighed barely a hundred pounds when he came home. His yellowish skin looked like old parchment, his joints seemed only tenuously connected and his cloudy eyes hid deep in dingy hollows. His lank body bore a multitude of sores, some of which had scabbed over but many remained open and running for a long time, seeping a greenish pus. Seth, along with his mother and young sister, made the morning-long trip into Washington City to retrieve him from the crowded hospital near the Capitol....
1873 After several days of iron-willed control, the young woman was exhausted. "But Daddy," Caroline wailed, a sour knot in her throat, "he was only thirty. It's so unfair. We were just getting started." She beat weakly on her father's chest with one fist, her confused baby trapped between them. Mr. French held his daughter as best he could as she cradled her youngest in her crooked arm and had her other two children hanging to her skirt and legs, impatient to be somewhere else,...
The wobbly farm wagon and its happy outrider proceeded up the long hill to Tennallytown at Ben's steady pace and then, at what was called Gloria Point, turned a sharp left across the Georgetown-Rockville Pike by the old tavern. The sporadic firing had quieted again, and the only sounds Seth could hear were the familiar creak of the wagon and the clip clop of the mule and horse. Now I'm in the other army, he thought as they arrived at the huge fort's impressive back gate, Robert's army,...
1872 Two late snowstorms blanketed the area and gave Robert Williams plenty of time to read his borrowed law books as business all but disappeared. He found that he enjoyed it, completely lost track of time some days, and by March had struggled his way through most of the Maryland code, at least those parts he found interesting and relevant. In the back of one of his ledgers he had accumulated several pages of notes and, with lawyer Anderson's help, a list of Latin terms and their...
1865 Despite the late August heat, Sunday dinner at the French's large farmhouse, which lay less than a mile away "as the crow flies," turned out to be a pleasant affair. Mr. French insisted that Robert and Seth doff their coats and roll up their sleeves as soon as they arrived, and his sweating cook served a meal of cold fried chicken, German potato salad, pickled string beans and thin-sliced beets with onions along with tall glasses of cold milk, iced cider and fresh-baked bread. All...
At about half past ten that sultry night someone knocked at the seldom-used front door of the Williams' dark farmhouse. The air was still warm, stirred only by the slightest breeze. The night was full of the cicadas' song and the churr of crickets. Lightening bugs flickered in the fruit trees, and heat lightning flared quietly out toward the hills. Seth's mother, still dressed as she had been when her younger son had been taken from her, carried a small lamp to the door. "Who is there?"...
Seth's mother offered him some more cold pork and fresh-made applesauce, but he said he was not hungry. He sat staring into space and ate what he had without tasting it. He rubbed at the small swelling above his right eye, a reminder of Wainder's visit to his house. He could barely feel it now. "Don't you worry," his mother said as she moved about her kitchen doing the familiar things that were somehow comforting in their ordinariness. "Caroline's going to be all right. Her father...
1871 Robert leaned on the small oak table in the sitting room of the farmhouse where he and his family had lived for more than two years. The clapboard home with its two frail-looking chimneys perched on a rounded hilltop near the road to Darnestown, barely a mile from the center of Rockville and the busy store where he worked ten or more hours a day, six days each week. He could hear his wife upstairs getting their children to bed, his son squalling as usual about wanting to stay up...
I am Richard King, now the author of nearly 100 stories on Storiesonline.net, but that isn’t what I always did. When I was younger, I mean not yet a teenager, maybe sixth grade – I didn’t even think about girls. I had two sisters, but they’re my sisters ... and were nothing special to me. Kinda cute! I also had an older brother, but this isn’t about any of them. The first time I met a girl whom I thought was pretty, it was the initial night that I went to Cotillion. Yeah, that’s where I got...
1866 The store just off the wide main street of the bustling county seat opened very early on Tuesday, January 2, 1866. It was near the livery stable and the hotels, diagonally across Montgomery Avenue from the courthouse. The dark green sign with gilt lettering that hung above the deep-set door and many-paned window read "Montgomery Farm Supply." Robert Williams, who had hiked the four frigid miles from his home long before the sun appeared, and Zedediah Snowden, who lived within easy...
1873 "Caroline," said Mrs. Williams, coming quietly back into her kitchen, "my dear, you have a visitor." Two worry lines had appeared above her sharp nose and her voice had an unusual stiffness. The young woman dried her hands on her apron and went into the front room of the Williams' farm house. There stood a well-dressed man of middle years with bushy sideburns and polished boots. To Caroline he looked vaguely familiar. He smiled at her. A round diamond glittered in the middle of...
1876 M. Peter Holmes stared down at the man with the big pistol in his hand, feeling his pulse quickly increase, his stomach churn, his eyelids flutter. The flickering gaslight was behind the gunman, and Holmes could not make out his bristly face. He quickly reached for his whip, and the man smashed his forearm with the barrel of his heavy weapon, a Navy Colt from the look of it. "Git down," he demanded. "Be quick about it. Ain' gonna tell you agin." Holmes stepped to the brick street...
1865 Caroline French had just turned fifteen when Robert came home from the war and took up his position on the back porch. He always seemed to be sitting in the shade, whittling sticks or peeling apples for his mother, his feet raised on a piece of stove wood and his skinny ankles crossed, often barefoot. She had known Robert almost all her life and, as a child, had admired his quick wit and friendly nature. Both now seemed to have disappeared. He usually returned her cheerful greetings...
1865 MacNeal Peter Holmes stood in the paneled bar of the Willard Hotel, his dark suit, fancy weskit, glowing boots and silk cravat helping him blend in with the dozens of prosperous-appearing men about him. The room was thick with tobacco smoke. He touched the diamond-looking stickpin at his breastbone and sipped his watered brandy, patiently waiting for his drinking companion to find the end of a muddled story about some inebriated duck hunters on the Eastern Shore. "So," his young...
1866 In the week before the wedding, after considering a room in Mrs. Hardesty's boarding house, Robert and Caroline fixed up make-shift living quarters in the front part of the storage space above the store, both saying repeatedly that it was only temporary. They smiled at each other a great deal. The room had two small, casement-type eyebrow windows that looked out on the cobbled street and a low ceiling which sloped toward the back of the brick and frame building plus a very steep and...
1866 Mac Holmes licked his cracked lips, stubbed out his thin cigar and took a deep breath. "Whisky," he said to the rotund bar tender, "not rye, Jimbo. Some good stuff. And not any of mine, please." He chuckled. Holmes looked around the smoky room, found the face he wanted and drained the glass without tasting the liquor. He crossed the room, nodding to several men he knew. "George," he said happily as he pulled out a chair, flipped aside his coattails and sat, pulling down his...
1866 Robert and Caroline awakened to the odor of smoke. Night lay on the town, chill and moonless, a harbinger of the coming winter. The trees stood nearly bare. Dead leaves covered the courthouse lawn and filled the gutters. "Smell that?" Caroline asked as her husband got his feet on the floor. "Um," he said, padding to the window. He could not see anything or anyone, but tendrils of twisting smoke rose before his eyes. "I'd better go look." Barefoot and in his nightshirt, Robert...
1867 The fruit trees were blooming and wild flowers lined the old road when their baby arrived. Caroline labored for most of a night and nearly the whole next day with the midwife's help. It was a tiny girl, a fine, pink, cooing little girl, and they named her Amanda after Caroline's late mother. Amanda was almost seven months old when she died. Pneumonia the doctor said over her swollen body. The ground was not frozen yet so they buried her near Robert's father in the hillside cemetery...
1871 The election registrars met in one of the smaller courtrooms on the first floor of the old courthouse. Robert Williams sat on a narrow, wooden bench along with about twenty other men, two of whom were black. As each man's name was called by the clerk, the would-be voter rose to stand at the end of the long, bare table. Sometimes the registrars asked him a question or two but most often the group's secretary simply stamped the paper and handed it to Mr. Meriwether, the head registrar,...
1871 Robert Williams flopped into a high-backed chair, rubbed his sore calves and smiled weakly at his wife who sat nursing their daughter in the corner by the stairs, well away from drafts and out of the lamp light. For Caroline it was a pleasant time, a time she looked forward to and knew would soon end. "How was your day?" she asked quietly, crossing her feet on the wooden stool between them. "Where's Johnny. It's too quiet for him to be home." "He's sleeping at the Crowleys,...
1873 After the chill rains brought forth a glorious spring, track laying on the twin rails of the Metropolitan Branch of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was finally completed. Ballasting work continued steadily, but the sweating crews missed a mid-April and then an early May date that officials had announced for an long-heralded opening celebration. A special excursion train did travel up to Cumberland one weekend, proving that the tracks were actually finished, but it made no stops. When...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – For best effect, read parts 1-16 before this part. The main character, Sethy, is based upon the real woman who is an active member of the XHamster community (Sethy is not her XHam name). Sethy is an avid supporter of the Sethy series. This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in part or in entirety without express written consent of the author. Sethy – Part 17 – 22 footballersSETHY“Wake up! Wake up you bitch! Wake up!” I heard Hiro’s voice. How long...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – For best effect, read parts 1-15 before this part. The main character, Sethy, is based upon the real woman who is an active member of the XHamster community (Sethy is not her XHam name). Sethy is an avid supporter of the Sethy series. This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in part or in entirety without express written consent of the author. Sethy – Part 16 – The AuctionSETHY“Wake up bitch! Wake up!” I heard Hiro’s voice and then felt him pinch my...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-13 before this part. The main characters, Sethy and Shinny, are based upon the real women who are active members of the XHamster community, and much of these characters reflect the true women. The photos included in this story of Sethy and Shinny are of the real women and are here with their permission. Both are readers of and supportive of the Sethy series. Be advised there is no sex in this part of the...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-12 before this part. My apologies for the long interval of time between part 12 and this chapter. The artistic process runs on its own time. The main characters, Sethy and Shinny, are based upon the real women who are active members of the XHamster community, and much of these characters reflect the true women. The photos included in this story of Sethy and Shinny are of the real women and are here with...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-11 before this part. The main characters, Sethy and Shinny, are based upon the real women who are active members of the XHamster community, and much of these characters reflect the true women. The photos included in this story of Sethy and Shinny are of the real women and are here with their permission. This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in part or in entirety without...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-10 before this part. The main character, Sethy, is based upon a real woman who is an active member of the XHamster community, and much of Sethy reflects the true woman. The photos included in this story of Sethy are of the real Sethy and are here with her permission. This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in part or in entirety without express written consent of the author....
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-9 before this part. The main character, Sethy, is based upon a real woman who is an active member of the XHamster community, and much of Sethy reflects the true woman. The photos included in this story of Sethy are of the real Sethy and are here with her permission. This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in part or in entirety without express written consent of the author. ...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-8 before this part. The main character, Sethy, and the new character Shinny are both based upon real women who are active members of the XHamster community, and much of these characters reflect the real women they represent. The photos included in this story of Sethy and Shinny are of the real women and are here with their permission. This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-7 before this part. The main character, Sethy, is based upon a real woman who is an active member of the XHamster community, and much of Sethy reflects the true woman. The photos included in this story of Sethy are of the real Sethy and are here with her permission. This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in part or in entirety without express written consent of the author. ...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-6 before this part. The main character, Sethy, is based upon a real woman who is an active member of the XHamster community, and much of Sethy reflects the true woman. The photos included in this story of Sethy are of the real Sethy and are here with her permission. The photos of Linda were used with permission as well.This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in part or in...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-4 before this part. The main character, Sethy, is based upon a real woman who is an active member of the XHamster community, and much of Sethy reflects the true woman. The photos included in this story are of the real Sethy and are here with her permission. This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in part or in entirety without express written consent of the author. Sethy – Part...
AUTHOR’S NOTE – This story is partly fantasy, partly true. For best effect, read parts 1-3 before this part. The main character, Sethy, is based upon a real woman who is an active member of the XHamster community, and much of Sethy reflects the true woman. The photos included in this story are of the real Sethy and are here with her permission. This story is the property of the author and cannot be copied or used in part or in entirety without express written consent of the author. Sethy – Part...