he explained, prying Maggie’s fingers from his wrist. “I’ll come
right back . . . I promise.”
A shot rang out, followed by deep wing thumping as a pair of
turkeys flapped cackling over the treetops. “Get in there.” Tom
shoved Maggie to her knees and went to disguise their trail.
She threw herself on her belly, snake-crawling through loose
loam and over rotting berry pulp, tugging Tom’s rifl e along.
Prickles and thorns tore at her hair, caught on her clothes, and
gouged the flesh on her arms as she wriggled deep into the dim
leafy innards of the Berry Hell.
“Hurry.” Tom’s gruff whisper accompanied by a two-handed
shove to her behind gave Maggie cause for relief. She shifted
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
149
over. He shimmied in alongside her, pulling bramble down to
disguise the entry to their hiding place.
Tom fl ipped over to lie flat on his back. Maggie nestled against
him, her head on his shoulder. She draped her free arm over his
belly, fitting her fingers into the spaces between his ribs. Tom
squeezed her tight, caught her eye, and pressed a finger to his lips.
Distinct voices drew close and closer, speaking throaty, com-
plicated words, reminding Maggie of the Welsh tinkers that trav-
eled through Glen Spean. Soft- soled moccasins scrunched the
earth accompanied by a rhythmic, silvery jangle—sounding like
the tinker’s cart bumping along a rough road.
Maggie dug her fingers into Tom’s flesh. She turned to breathe
in the comfort of his strong body. The smell of him blending with
the sweet scent of ripening fruit helped to quell the hysterical
scream rising up into her throat.
The grove seemed thick with savages talking and, surprisingly,
laughing with one another. Through a thinning in the bramble
she spied tawny buckskin—a hank of Irish-red hair curled along
one fringed legging. She squeezed her eyes tight, heart thumping,
the brambles quivering as the Indian gathered handfuls of berries
before running off to catch up with his comrades.
The war party continued to move past, unaware of the man
and woman entangled in the tangle beneath their very noses.
Voices and footfalls moved into the distance, fading . . . fading . . .
gone. Maggie opened her eyes and her breath escaped in a soft
whoosh
. Tom pressed his lips to her forehead and whispered,
“Hush now . . . there may be stragglers.”
Overhead, clusters of ripe berries dangled beneath furry
green-gray leaves. Tom plucked a particularly large beauty.
Maggie opened her mouth like a hatchling in the nest and he
dropped the juicy morsel in. They lay there quiet, feeding each
other berries for some time.
“I think we’re safe,” Maggie ventured.
150 Christine
Blevins
“Safe for now,” Tom said as he rolled to lie atop her, bread-
and-butter fashion, propped on his elbows. “But you won’t be
truly safe until I get you inside the station.” He smiled into her
eyes, then kissed her handsomely on the mouth.
Maggie moaned and, wriggling her hips, arched up against
him. Tom shifted to the side.
“I’d better shuckle on out this squirrel hole afore you get a no-
tion t’ plant a knee t’ my parts.” He took his gun and scrambled
backward. Maggie crawled out after him, a knee to his bollocks
the furthest thing from her mind.
She fished the tree root from the stream and concluded she
could get by with just the thick end. Maggie called to Tom, who
accommodated her request, whacking off a goodly chunk with
three well-placed blows.
“Arm yourself.” He handed her the two-foot cherry- root club
and the hatchet. She slipped the hatchet handle into her skirt,
hanging the blade end on the waistband. Maggie trailed on Tom’s
heels as he wandered around the bramble, studying the jumble of
tracks in the dirt.
“Thick as dog hair.” Tom whistled and shook his head. “At
least fifty warriors . . . we sure don’t want to run into these fellas
again.”
Maggie wagged her head in vigorous agreement.
“I think we’d best climb up over the saddle of Humpback
Ridge.” Tom pointed to the steep hill sloping up beyond the
Berry Hell. “Then we’ll double back, skirt Tuggle Mountain, and
come upon Roundabout from the rear. All right?”
Maggie nodded. This man did not hesitate to put his life at
risk for hers—a solid man of action he was. Save for Tom Rob-
erts, her black hair would now be a bloody prize dangling from
the belt of a Shawnee brave. She rubbed the top of her head and
settled down on a stone to watch Tom make ready for the trail.
Before shouldering his weapon, he checked it thoroughly. He
adjusted himself within his breechclout and tightened the knee
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
151
garters on his leggings and laces on his moccasins. He fooled
with his felt hat, shaping the crown and bending the brim until it
rested just so on his head.
“Ye are a winnin’ lad. What I mean is . . . yer a brave man,
Tom. And I thank ye for saving my hide.”
Tom grinned. “Well, I seem to fi nd myself partial to that hide
of yours.” He headed toward the trackless slope with long strides,
raising his eyes to study the dark clouds massing in the eastern
sky. “Better get a move on. Looks like it’s going to weather soon.
Are you comin’ or no?”
“Aye . . . I’m comin’!” Cradling her cherry root like a new-
born in one arm, she hiked her skirts and ran to catch up.
Tom took the fi rst difficult steps up the steep slope. “It’s a
hard go. A tough trail lies ahead . . .”
“Tell me what to do, Tom Roberts, and I’ll do it. Just show me
the path, an’ I’ll follow ye straight down intae th’ middle pits o’
hell.”
Tom held a hand out, a wry smile crinkling the corners of his
eyes. “For now, Maggie, just give me less with your jaw, and
more with your feet.”
She put her hand in his.
Pa rt Two
H
My brothers! My friends! My children! Hear me now:
We must now, from this time forward, cast out of us the anger for
what ever ill has risen up between us in the past. We must cast it
away from us and we must let ourselves become one people, whose
common purpose it must be to drive from among us the English dogs
who seek to destroy us and take our lands!
pontiac, ottawa chief,
addressing the council
gathered on the river
ecorces, april 27, 1763
Could it not be contrived to send the Small Pox among those
disaffected tribes of Indians? We must on this occasion use every
stratagem in our power to reduce them.
postscript in a letter to
col o nel bouquet,
signed, sir jeffrey amherst,
governor general,
british north america, 1763
In 1763, the tribes unite to commence the deadliest and most successful
of all Native American uprisings.
12
Forting Up
Maggie flipped from back to belly, and then she fl ipped from
belly to back. Shifting hip bones and shoulder blades, she laced
fingers to rest her hands on her stomach as she pondered the ceil-
ing above. Dusty gloaming light—the tail end of a long summer
day—seeped quiet through the chinks between the roof shingles.
A pair of yellow flies buzzed in tight circles, dangerously close to
a huge web spanning two roof timbers.
The straw-stuffed palliasse, diligently shaken, aired, and beaten
with a stout stick that morning, was pressed thin as a fl apjack by
her turbulence. Maggie bent her knees and scrubbed the callused
soles of her dirty feet against the osnaburg canvas. She could feel
the fabric, rougher than a cow’s tongue, prickling her skin right
through her sweaty shift. Maggie heaved a sigh, wistful for her
goose-down tick left behind at the Martin homeplace.
Upon the alarm to fort up ten days ago, over one hundred
souls crowded through the gates with what they could carry,
seeking refuge behind the station’s sturdy walls. The ten cabins
lining the long palisade wall were reserved for women and chil-
dren, each cabin crowded with bodies, bedding, and personal
belongings.
158 Christine
Blevins
Maggie turned to her right side and leaned up on one elbow.
Battler, deep asleep, lay sprawled between herself and Naomi.
She pressed the back of her hand to his sweaty, flushed face. Smil-
ing, she rested her head on one bent arm. Battler’s fever, broken
three days before, had not returned.
The cabin was thick with eve ning damp and the hot breath of
the others sharing the dirt floor. Even with an open doorway, the
rank miasma of a dozen unwashed bodies combined with a half-
filled night soil bucket and the odor of sour baby spittle to hover
over them like a dense swarm of no-see-ums. Across the room, a
cabinmate broke wind.
Maggie’s eyes popped open. Rivulets of sweat tickled along
her hairline. She squirmed on her spartan bed, struggling for air,
feeling as if she were drowning. “Bloody hell!’ She scrambled to
her feet and plucked her skirt and bodice hanging from a peg
jammed between two logs.
Naomi blinked and bolted upright. “What? What is it?
Injuns . . .”
“Nooo . . . no Indians. Dinna fash, lass.” Maggie stopped
tightening the laces on her bodice to lay a hand on Naomi’s
shoulder. “I’ve got a bad case of the allover fidgets. I’m off for a
breath of air.” Naomi sank back into her pillow. Maggie didn’t
bother to pin up her hair, leaving it to swing in one heavy plait.
She tugged on her skirt and picked a path between prone bodies
and out the door.
Maggie dipped her kerchief in the water barrel strategically
placed to catch the runoff from the roofline and wiped her face.
Water collected from the stream once a day by an armed bucket
brigade was strictly rationed for cooking and drinking use only.
One never kens the worth of water till the well goes dry
, she
mused, tying the damp kerchief about her neck.
Mid-June, true nightfall was long in coming. Only a handful
of bright stars showed scattered across the slate-blue sky as she
headed to join the small group maintaining sentry at the block-
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
159
house. Maggie stopped dead in her tracks when she spied Bess
Hawkins sitting among them.
By mutual unspoken agreement, Maggie and Bess avoided
each other’s company—no mean feat when confi ned within
stockade walls. Just as Maggie was about to turn and head back
to her cabin, she spied Ada Buchanan leaving the cookhearth,
juggling a cloth-covered basket and a heavy jug.
Ada called out, “Maggie! Can ye carry this jug for me? A treat
for the lads on watch.”
Scant twenty men had stayed behind to defend the fort—the
men and boys who were too old or too young to join Round-
about’s able-bodied. Tom and Seth were counted among the forty
who mustered as militia to drive off the marauding Shawnee.
The militiamen marched out the gate nine days before and had
not been heard from since.
The half-dozen souls gathered around a small fire cheered and
broke into applause when Ada and Maggie joined them, armed
with fresh-baked raisin scones and the jug of sweet metheglin.
Alistair scooted over on his log to make room for the newcom-
ers. “Have a seat, lass.”
“I only came t’ give Ada a helping hand,” Maggie said, hand-
ing Alistair the jug.
“Och, sit a spell.” Alistair patted the seat beside him. “Ada’s
metheglin is akin to the nectar of the gods—not to be missed—
and John’s getting ready t’ play us a tune.”
The recollection of her sweltering bed and the promise of
honey wine overshadowed her distaste for Bess’s company. Mag-
gie settled next to Alistair.
John Springer sat across the way with his fiddle on his lap, re-
placing a broken sheep-gut string. Like a king’s consort, Bess sat
in a semi- recline on the stump beside John’s. With her auburn
hair glinting copper in the firelight, she cooled herself, waving a
painted parchment folding fan.
Smoking a clay pipe, Bess’s father- in-law, old Henry Hawkins,
160 Christine
Blevins
shared the neighboring log with young Jacob Mulberry and Will
Falconer. Captain Duncan Moon, a grizzled old veteran of the
French Indian wars, hobbled about on his peg leg, igniting torches
and lights. He handed Will Falconer a bright lantern. Young Will
slung an ancient musket over his shoulder and scrambled up the
ladder to the blockhouse roof to take his turn on lookout.
“Keep those eyes peeled, lad,” Duncan admonished.
Ada Buchanan orbited the circle with her basket. She served
lanky Jacob Mulberry three scones. “Eat up, lad. Ye need put
some meat on those sharp bones.”
“That’s true, boy,” Bess Hawkins piped in. “You’ll never get a
woman in your bed looking like a death’s head mounted to a
mop stick.”
Jacob accepted the advice with good humor, and falling to his