Glimmers of Change (57 page)

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Authors: Ginny Dye

BOOK: Glimmers of Change
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“I don’t know. I ain’t heard the threats myself. Some of the fellas told me to tell you to be real careful, though. So I’m telling you.”

Jeremy shrugged, too tired to be alarmed. “Alright. I’ve been warned. Can you just get me home to dinner now?”

Spencer chuckled as he slowed the carriage to turn a corner. “I reckon I can do that.”

The large rock was hurled from the shadows. It barely missed Jeremy’s head as it slammed into his shoulder. He grunted as he fell back against the seat, stunned by the sudden attack.

Spencer groaned and yelled to the horses to run. It was too late. Four men appeared from the shadows, grabbing the horses harness and holding them in place.

Six more men sprang from the darkness, swarming into the carriage.

Jeremy tried to fight back, but a vicious blow to the head blurred his vision and made him nauseous. He could feel the fists and boots slamming into his body, but he was powerless to stop the attack.

He closed his eyes and wondered if he was going to die. An image of Marietta’s glowing eyes filled his mind, followed by Rose’s laughing face. He struggled to remain conscious, but he could feel the blackness descending. He could hear Spencer’s grunts as the darkness deepened. The last thing he remembered was the sound of yelling and running feet.

Chapter Twenty-Six

 

 

 

 

 

Thomas settled back in his chair, a broad smile on his face as he gazed around the dinner table. It was so wonderful to have Matthew and Peter with them for a few days. He glanced at the clock on the wall. “I’m hoping Jeremy will get home in time to eat with us.” He had already explained the broken machinery that had delayed him.

Abby picked up her napkin, a troubled expression on her face. “Shouldn’t he be here by now?”

Thomas shrugged. “I have no way of knowing how long it will take to fix the machinery.” He watched her carefully. “Is something bothering you?”

“Nothing concrete,” Abby murmured. “Just a feeling…”

Her words were drowned out by the pounding of horses pulling a rattling carriage at a fast speed. “What in the world!” Thomas exclaimed, jumping up from the table to rush to the window. “No one should be driving that fast on this road. Someone will get hurt.”

Abby was beside him in an instant, peering into the darkness. “Who is it?”

“I don’t…” Thomas stopped speaking when the carriage plowed to a stop in front of the house.

“Mr. Cromwell! Mr. Cromwell!”

“That’s Spencer!” Abby gasped.

Moments later all four of them were racing down the sidewalk. Miles and May stood on the porch, their faces grim with fear.

The light from the street lanterns revealed the open cuts and swelling on Spencer’s face. One eye had already swollen shut, the other was a mere slit. “Spencer!” Abby cried. “What happened?”

Spencer shook his head and gestured toward the back seat. “They got Jeremy!” he gasped, pain making his voice hoarse. “They beat him up real bad!”

Thomas groaned and sprang forward. Jeremy was crumpled lifelessly in a heap on the seat. His face was even more battered than Spencer’s. Both arms were cocked at odd angles.

“Is he…alive?” Abby asked in a broken voice.

Matthew stepped forward and held his finger against his neck. “He’s alive,” he announced, motioning Peter forward. “We have to get him in the house.”

“Should we move him?” Thomas asked between clenched teeth, fear and fury pulsing through him in equal measure.

May had joined them on the road. “Get him out of that there carriage,” she commanded firmly. “Take him up to Miss Carrie’s old room and cover him up good with some blankets to keep him from going into shock.”

Thomas blinked at his housekeeper.

“What? You think I didn’t learn plenty from Miss Carrie when she been treating all them people in our house?” May’s gaze swung back to Matthew and Peter. “Matthew, you go after Dr. Wild once you get Mr. Jeremy inside. I hear he still be in town. Somebody at Jackson Hospital gonna be able to tell you where he is. That’s who Miss Carrie would want to treat these two.”

Thomas felt completely helpless as he watched Matthew and Peter lift Jeremy as gently as they could. Matthew cradled his bloody head against his chest in order to keep him as immobile as possible.

“Thomas…” Abby whispered. “How could this have happened?”

Thomas bit back the bile in his throat as he fully realized just how serious Jeremy’s injuries were. His brother’s face was an ashen gray. The only thing convincing him he was still alive was the sporadic heaving of his chest. “We had a guard for you,” Thomas snapped, the sight of Jeremy’s broken body fueling his anger and guilt. “I never thought to make sure Jeremy had one, too.”

Abby spun around to face him as Matthew and Peter disappeared into the house. “This is
not
your fault,” she said firmly. “It’s not possible for someone to be with all of us every moment. Jeremy and Spencer both carry guns.” She shook her head. “How did this happen?”

“They came out of nowhere,” Spencer gasped.

May had stayed outside while Jeremy was carried in. She turned on Spencer now. “You get out of that carriage right now,” she ordered. “Get into the kitchen where’s I can take care of you next.”

“Nonsense,” Thomas said quickly. He motioned to Miles. “Help me get Spencer into the room behind the kitchen. I don’t want him climbing the stairs to the upstairs bedrooms.”

Abby rushed forward. “It will take me just a minute to get the bed changed.”

“He’ll be needing some…”

Abby interrupted May. “Yes, I know he needs some blankets. We’ll get him settled, May. Please go check on Jeremy now,” she said gently.

May nodded, exchanged a long look with her, and then ran up the steps. Thomas put one arm around Spencer, waited for Miles to move in on the other side, and helped him up the stairs.

“Jeremy be the one hurt real bad,” Spencer groaned.

“You’re both hurt very badly,” Thomas replied. “Thank you for getting him back here, Spencer. We’ll get you settled and then check on Jeremy. There’s not much we can do until the doctor gets here.”

Thomas heard Matthew clatter down the stairs and then run across the porch. Moments later he heard the carriage rumbling down the road. He prayed Dr. Wild would arrive quickly. When they had Spencer prone on the bed and covered with a thick blanket, he told Miles to stay with him, and then he and Abby raced upstairs.

Jeremy was lying unconscious under a mound of covers. His skin was gray and clammy. Blood from deep gashes in his head had already turned his pillows bright red. His breathing was shallow and rapid.

May looked up when they walked in. “This boy be in shock,” she said crisply. She motioned to Thomas and Abby. “Get me all the pillows you can find. We gots to elevate his legs and thighs.” Then she turned on Peter. “I ain’t leaving Mr. Jeremy right now, so you gots to listen real close and do what I tell you.”

“Anything,” Peter said, his own face almost gray as he looked at Jeremy.

“I wants you to go downstairs and make me up a shock formula. You start with one cup of warm water. There should be enough in the tea kettle. Then you gonna add in two tablespoons of honey and one tablespoon of apple cider vinegar. You gonna find both of them on the first shelf of the pantry,” she instructed. “Now this be the most important part. You gonna add in one teaspoon of cayenne.
One teaspoon.
You got all that?”

Peter nodded. “I got it. I’ll be back as soon as I can.”

May held up her hand. “I wants you to make up two batches. Make Spencer drink one of them. I don’t care what he says. Just make him drink it. Shock don’t always set in right away. He got beat up real bad, too,” she said grimly.

Peter nodded, turned and disappeared.

Thomas and Abby finished positioning Jeremy’s legs on the pillows. “What now?” Thomas asked.

May inspected their work carefully before she nodded her approval. She turned to Abby. “I need you to go to Carrie’s medicine cabinet and find that bottle of shepherd’s purse tincture she made up last year when Moses be so sick. It needs to go in them drinks Peter be making, but I didn’t think he could remember everything. That tincture be the best thing to bring up Mr. Jeremy’s blood pressure and…”

Thomas knew what she wasn’t willing to say. “He could have internal bleeding,” he said quietly after Abby disappeared. “The tincture could help stop it.”

May nodded reluctantly. “Don’t know for sure, but he got beat up bad so we gots to act like there be bad things going on in there.” She closed her lips firmly, turning as Miles entered the room with a basin of warm water and a bundle of clean rags. “Thank you. I was gonna send Mr. Cromwell for that next.”

“You ain’t be the only one who learned things from Miss Carrie,” Miles said, his eyes fixed on Jeremy’s gray face. “The boy gonna be alright?”

“He will be if I got anythin’ to say about it,” May replied sharply. “How’s Spencer?”

“Complaining that we be wasting time taking care of him,” Miles responded. “I told him if he moved out of that bed that you wouldn’t never be saving another piece of pie for him again. He’s grumbling, but he’s staying put. Mr. Peter almost got them drinks made. I made Spencer promise to drink it.”

May nodded with satisfaction. “You go back down and see what you can do for Spencer’s face. I’s gonna need a big bucket of ice up here real quick.”

“I’ll do that,” Thomas offered.

May shook her head. “Nope. I needs you to massage Mr. Jeremy’s hands and feets to keep the blood movin’. Miss Carrie told me that be real important when someone be goin’ into shock.”

Thomas sprang to do her bidding as May began to gently wash Jeremy’s cuts. She wrapped a long cloth about the one that was bleeding the worst, tying it securely to hold it in place. When Peter arrived with the drink, she directed both of them to hold Jeremy’s limp body up against the pillows so she could ease the liquid down his throat slowly.

Abby arrived moments later with a basketful of tins. May managed a smile when she saw what was in the basket. “I guess we all be learning something from Miss Carrie,” she observed. “Give me some of that gypsy weed ointment to put in this water. It will help me get these cuts real clean.”

“I also brought some plantain,” Abby offered. “I saw Carrie use it on Clint’s burns. I remember her saying it’s also good for cuts.”

“It sho nuff be,” May said. “Honey be real good, too, but I’m figurin’ Dr. Wild gonna have to stitch up some of these cuts on his head. I can’t be putting nothing on them quite yet.”

Abby eyed her. “How did you learn all this, May?”

May shrugged, talking as she continued to gently bathe Jeremy’s head and arms, pulling the blankets back over him as soon as she had them clean. “I spent a whole lot of time helping Miss Carrie. First, it was Miss Georgia, and then Moses after he got shot. There weren’t hardly no time before we were taking care of Mr. Robert. I learned me a little bit more with each one. I asked a whole lot of questions. Miss Carrie always be happy to answer them. I reckon she figured the day would come when I would need to know it.”

“That day has certainly come,” Thomas murmured.

“Oh, I done been using it right along,” May said casually. “Lots of folks seem to know I learned a lot. They come to get me every now and again.”

Abby smiled. “I’m glad they have you.” She leaned down to look more closely at Jeremy’s face. “Am I imagining that he looks a little better?”

“His feet are warmer,” Thomas offered, “and his breathing seems to have slowed down some.”

May stared at him for several long moments before she nodded. “He not be quite so bad,” she announced. “I need him to wake up, though. We won’t really be knowing how bad off he be until he wakes up.”

Thomas stiffened at something he heard in her voice. “What are you saying?”

May hesitated before she answered. “Ain’t no use asking for trouble before we get it,” she muttered.

“But…?” Abby asked, suddenly frightened. “Just tell us what you are thinking, May. Please.”

“I ain’t
thinkin’
nothing,” May protested. “I just seen men take beatings like this that ain’t never quite right again,” she said reluctantly. “But there ain’t no reason to think that done happened to Mr. Jeremy. He’s bound to have a concussion, but I know lots of people who come back and be right as rain after one. Ain’t nothin’ but time gonna tell us how Mr. Jeremy gonna be.”

 

 

 

Almost two hours had passed before they heard the sound of a carriage rattling down the road. Abby leaped up and peered out the window. “It’s them,” she called over her shoulder. “Thomas, I’ll stay here with May and Jeremy. You and Peter go downstairs and tell them what you know.”

A few minutes later Dr. Wild appeared in the doorway. “Good evening,” he said cheerfully. “I do manage to spend quite a bit of time in this house. I thought that would die off with Carrie gone, but I see y’all are determined to keep me coming around. It took Matthew a little while to find me, but I’m glad he did.”

Abby smiled hesitantly, not sure how to respond to his cheerfulness. She was still too frightened for Jeremy.

Dr. Wild read the thoughts flitting across her face. “I believe Jeremy is going to be fine,” he said quickly, moving forward to gaze down at him. “Thomas told me his color has come back and that his breathing is steady again.” His face turned grim as he stared at Jeremy’s battered face. “Who did this to him?”

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