Read Becoming Americans Online

Authors: Donald Batchelor

Becoming Americans (46 page)

      Sarah Alice opened her eyes to surprise and comfort. The huge fireplace— where she's spent so many childhood hours turning the spit or stirring the large iron pot—was exactly as she remembered, but the walls of the room had been whitewashed, and there were pewter candlesticks and tankards on a shelf. The smell of baking bread was familiar, but the colorful rug that covered what had been her parents' bed, added a touch of light and gaiety to the room.
      She turned and smiled at Mary.
      "How adorable," she said.
      "Adorable, is it?" Mary repeated. "It ain't much, but some of us ain't been so lucky as others, I guess."
      For a moment Sarah Alice was amused by what Mary said. Few women could have been luckier than the former Mary Bourne, after all. She'd come from nothing to marry into a respectable family. She had four living children. The woman had never lost even one child! But, Mary had nearly spat out the words, and Sarah Alice realized that she again had spoken in the superficial tone of the Harrison and Byrd and Randolph families that had so often cowered her. She switched to the tone of genuine sincerity that they tried to use with inferiors.
      "The whitewash and Indian coverlet add such light and warmth and color," she said.
      Mary had heard her own biting sarcasm, and didn't catch the patronizing politeness of her husband's sister.
      Stephen came back into the room from looking-in on his sleeping brother, and stood by the frightened Sister Mary as he blurted out questions. He was interrupted by his Uncle Thomas, who hastily explained the change in plans and made an immediate retreat.
      Stephen saved the women from all but the most perfunctory conversation with each other with his questions and his tales about the last thirty-six hours. His questions were mostly about his dogs, his brother, and of what food there was to eat.
      Mary rattled trenchers and tankards in getting refreshment for the guest who sat perched on the edge of a new chair that Joseph had just purchased. One made in Charles Town.
      Stephen's oldest sister, Ann, was married and living in Princess Anne County. Twenty-year-old Sister Mary was like a family pet, and his older brother, James, was sick again, so the nine-year-old took it upon himself to offer his parents' bed to his Aunt Sarah Alice. She demurred, but was encouraged by Mary. It was the best bed, and it was in the separate, quiet, and cool parlor that held the new chamber pot and matching basin that Joseph, in rare extravagance, had ordered with the chair. Sarah Alice was a compliant guest, and after eating a cold piece of chicken and a chunk of day-old pone, she begged leave to be excused for bed.
      In the fortnight that followed, Sarah Alice visited the Crafords—her former in-laws—and was much made over by the local gentry. The Harrison family was on a level higher, even, than that of the Crafords or the Thorowgoods. Now, Sarah Alice Harrison was back for a visit, and the elite of Norfolk and Princess Anne Counties—as well as the Boushes and wealthy merchants of Norfolk Town—were vying to entertain her. Not only was she a connection to the most powerful men in the colony, she was going home to Britain. It was rumored that her fiancé, Major Dorsey, had connections at the Queen's Court!
      Mary Williams was amused. She remembered the former little girl with a runny nose who now accepted such state and attention as her due. Many of the invitations arriving by servant did not include Mary, and she was glad of it. The few which had been issued to include her were refused. She'd go nowhere that her parents weren't welcome.
      Daniel and Mary Bourne were very old, and didn't covet such entertainments for themselves. They'd never attended social occasions except to return for parties in the Swamp, where they were known, respected, and envied. Joseph Williams had given the Bournes a lifetime interest in some acreage of his estate! If the Bournes could rise to the life of comfort and acceptance among decent folk, there was hope for others in the Swamp. Stephen's grandparents watched Mistress Harrison at a distance and with some distrust, however. The Harrisons were friends of the Isle of Wight family from whom they had escaped so many years before.
      Stephen was anxious for his Aunt Sarah Alice to be gone. Then he wouldn't have to stay around the house so much and listen to her telling stories about people he didn't know, or if he did, not well. Like his Uncles Edward and Richard and their children, his cousins. He knew his Grandmother Fewox. She'd come to visit, twice, and he'd gone to Scuppernong to visit her, once, when his father thought that she was dying of something. The woman in the stories Aunt Sarah Alice told didn't sound like the woman he knew as Grandma Fewox.
      To everyone's surprise and relief, Joseph returned home earlier than expected, Aunt Mary having died while John and Joseph were in Williamsburgh. He gave his first attention to James, then noticed with pleasure that his wife and sister were still speaking to each other. Mary admitted to her husband that she'd been surprised at how undemanding her sister-in-law had been. Mary even felt some pity for this helpless, beautiful woman who'd never had a happy life since she was a child.
      Sarah Alice was eager to be off to Carolina, but Joseph reminded her that his first obligation was to his family and his plantation. He needed his men to harvest corn. More convincing to his sister were reports of snakes and other creatures chased to the high ground of the Carolina Road by summer rains.
      In the following weeks, Sarah Alice settled in but was delighted, and most relieved, to receive any overnight invitations that took her away from the Williams plantation. The house smelled of the sick boy, James, and Sarah Alice was afraid of any sickness. She was frightened, too, of the twisted Sister Mary. Sarah Alice liked going back to the odor of cured tobacco. She found that at the plantations of friends she'd made as a Craford and as a Harrison. But the aroma of cedar and juniper filled some quiet moments she had at Joseph's house, and when that happened there were sweet memories of her father riving shingles.
      In late September, crops had been gathered, so Joseph had his bondsman, Tyler Jones, busy himself with preparations for the overland trip to Currituck. Late summer rains had stopped and the road was passable. Some improvements had been made to the Carolina Road since Governor Nicholson had visited nearly twenty years earlier. The Swamp—slowly being drained for cultivation around its edges—was skirted completely. The Carolinians had built a bridge at Maddog's North West River Landing. If a traveler were lucky, passed at a time of dry weather, met no robbers from the Swamp—nor herds of swine being driven north for sale into Virginia—the trip could be made in one uncomfortable day. After all, they were only going down a ways, then cutting over to the Currituck Sound landing of John Williams.
      Joseph infuriated his wife and delighted his youngest son when he said that he, himself, was going—taking Stephen with him—to Scuppernong. He would take the news of Aunt Mary's passing—may she rest in peace—and a present from Aunt Mary to his mother. Maybe he would then accompany them all to Bath for the farewell. Tyler Jones could finish the bundling of shingles due for shipment to Saint Christopher Island.
      Sarah Alice had rarely seen a woman behave in the way Mary reacted. Mary's voice carried through from the chimneyed great-room to Shaw's logaddition parlor. Sarah Alice stood by the closed door, listening to vocabulary she hadn't heard since, as a child, she and Edward and Richard had participated in forcing a neighbor's bonded boy—stolen from a Bristol prostitute—to recite all of the words for body parts and bodily functions. The sound of broken crockery was heard, then the sobs of Mary begging for forgiveness. Sister Mary was whimpering. Sarah Alice wondered if the "swamp woman" would blame her, too, and poison the pone she was making for the road. Then, the stench of her ill nephew softened her heart. Sarah Alice still dreamed of her own lost children.
      Mary cooked late into the night, roasting fowl and preparing wheat bread and puddings for the trip. She awakened Stephen early and told him to get to his chores. His surly grunt brought a quick slap to the bottom from his mother.
      Stephen led the horse that pulled the two-wheeled cart holding Aunt Sarah Alice's belongings. His father rode ahead on the narrow road. Sappers sometimes drained the roadside pines, then left the trees to die and fall, littering the road until someone was forced to pull the trunks aside. County overseers were often lax in recruiting local taxables to maintain the roads.
      Sarah Alice had dressed in preparation for the journey. She had, of course, a beautiful riding dress of coat, waistcoat, petticoats—and a feathered hat—all trimmed in silver lace. She wore no such fashion for this ride. No hooped skirt, either. For comfort, she'd worn a gown with the bodice and skirt made in one piece. She permitted herself the old-fashioned ruffles to fall over her elbows, hopefully keeping away the mosquitoes she'd been plagued with during this visit. Over all, she wore a heavy canvas safeguard to keep her clothes clean from splashed mud, and to protect them from tearing briars or branches.
      She rode on a pillion that Joseph had borrowed. The padded seat cushion and wooden form was strapped to the horse behind the saddle. There was a metal handle attached to the framework for her to hold onto. A platform stirrup, or footboard, hung down the side for her feet. For this trip, she'd borrowed Mary's hair style, and pulled the hair back and away from her face. No one who mattered would see her, certainly, and she'd been told that tall and elaborate hair styles attracted bats. She'd not wear a wig in this heat! What would the Harrison women have said to that, she wondered?
      A sandy path veered eastward from the road as they entered into Carolina. The small caravan continued along this path for another two hours before arriving at John Williams's plantation by the Currituck Sound. Gulls and pelicans soared overhead, and pounding waves could be heard from the beach on the bank across the narrow sound. Currituck's inlet to the sea was hidden by Knotts Island, but the group could see a two-masted briganteen waiting for the tide to rise so that it could pass the bar. Waiting at anchor was Edward's boat: a new, double-masted sloop. Joseph looked to it with many questions in his eyes. Brother Edward was doing better than anyone knew, evidently.
      Sarah Alice and Edward embraced, then looked closely at each other. They'd not seen one another for over fifteen years, and both marveled at what they saw.
      Edward had expected his sister to be beautiful and regal, John had prepared him for that. But Sarah Alice was amazed by the changes in her brother. He was a middle-aged man now; a handsome man, not a beautiful boy. His eyes were still a piercing blue, but he'd acquired the skin color of a man who spends time outside. He seemed vigorous and healthy, and the sight was the most welcome Sarah Alice had seen since leaving Williamsburgh. The sickly boy had become a dashing man. She was proud of him, she said, and was anxious to get to the Scuppernong so, after seeing their mother, she could see his prosperous plantation.
      "You see, Joseph. James will turn out fine! He just takes after his Uncle Edward!"
      The brothers and Stephen, with the help of John's overseer, ferried folks and goods to the boat. When Sarah Alice and Stephen were seated, the brothers took up poles.
      The shallow sound was navigated first by poling, then, when it reached deeper water, the sails were unfurled and Sarah Alice sat back to look at Carolina.
       The narrow Currituck Sound soon merged with the vast, dark Albemarle. The boat turned westward. Edward pointed towards Roanoke Island, to the south, and told her stories of ghost ships that were often seen; the ghosts of Sir Walter Raleigh's doomed expedition. He told her of blue-eyed Indians who lived on Hattorask Island and on the mainland to the south, near Richard's land, who claimed to be descended from those lost colonists.
      The idea of Englishmen breeding with the Indians was abhorrent to Sarah Alice, nearly as repellent as the sight of light-skinned slaves that were more and more visible in Virginia. It was not a subject often spoken of, but it was a trend that she and many of her class found distressing. The great and growing number of African slaves was not a totally good thing.
      "Obviously not so distressing to the fathers," Edward joked.
      The Albemarle Sound was calm and lovely, Sarah Alice thought. Many small boats, canoes, and large, masted periaugers plied the waters. Most were paddled or poled, but there were more two-masted New England traders like the one she'd seen waiting at the bar. She could see the northern and the southern shores, but the distant mouths of the Chowan and Roanoke Rivers were beyond sight. Trees grew from the water on both shores. She thought it all a strange combination of swamp and sea.
      The reunion of the two brothers and their baby sister brought forth old tales and bragging. Edward caught Stephen's attention with a story that Richard and Sarah Alice, themselves, had never heard. He told of an early memory he had of his father. He'd been alone with his father when, in that private moment, Stephen's Grandfather Williams had confided that he planned to move to Carolina, one day.
      "Your father and your Uncle John used to trade in Carolina with him. I never did. But I've seen more of Carolina than our father ever did!"
      "I've seen more of it than I ever wished to see!" Joseph added.
      Edward sailed near the Batts Grave Island that Sarah Alice had been told about, then tacked to the southern shore and the Bull Bay mouth of the Scuppernong River. She picked out the western headland and saw smoke rising from a chimney. Her heart beat faster as she looked to her smiling brothers and back to the smoke rising from her mother's hearth. She'd not seen her mother since the Fewoxes had left Deep Creek. She tried to imagine Anne Biggs Williams in this disreputable land. Edward warned her not to expect the same woman she last had seen. Life had been hard to their mother these last years, and her mind had never returned to the sharpness she'd had before Fewox lost everything and she'd tried to flee to Virginia in that winter storm of '97.

Other books

Gone to Ground by John Harvey
Linny's Sweet Dream List by Susan Schild
Midnight Flame by Lynette Vinet
The Black Rood by Stephen R. Lawhead
The Grapple by Harry Turtledove
Those Angstrom Men!. by White, Edwina J.
The Collection by Shannon Stoker