off to join the others.
Seth barely recognized Peavey with his long braids cropped off
and his hair clean of grease and soot. The renegade still sported
the regimental red coat, but he’d replaced moccasins and deer-
skin leggings with boots and breeches. Simon Peavey had not re-
linquished all of his Indian trappings—a clutch of bright feathers
and silver charms dangled from the stock of his rifle. Seth could
not help but sneer. “Yer lookin’ almost white, lad.”
Staying true to his Shawnee upbringing, Simon registered no
reaction. He looked beyond Seth as if he did not exist and an-
nounced, “There’s a good mule and pig back there.”
“Handle this.” Connor slipped the rifl e from his shoulder and
264 Christine
Blevins
handed it to Peavey. “It’s puttin’ a crick in my neck. Find Figg
and have him tether the beasts—”
“NO!” In three strides Seth stood toe-to-toe with Connor.
“Ye willna take my beasts.” Not a big man, Seth still stood taller
and heavier than the tiny Irishman.
“FIGG!” Connor squawked, and fumbled to extricate a fl at
leather wallet from the front of his baggy shirt.
“Fiiiggg!!”
Moffat and Peavey stood passive while Connor tugged papers
free from the wallet, sputtering and waving the documents in the
air. “We’ve a charter . . . granted by King George himself. A writ
of dispossession . . . signed by the governor in Williamsburg . . .”
Seth snatched the papers from Connor. Unable to read any
of the fl owing, offi cial- looking script, he ran a callused fi nger
over the green wax impression that bonded a loop of scarlet
ribbon to the parchment. “Seal of the Realm,” he said, shaking
his head.
“FIGG!” Connor shouted.
“Fiiigggg!”
Figg appeared at the cabin door and performed a series of
contortions to fit his huge shoulders through the opening. He’d
abandoned his menacing club and in his right hand carried a
round loaf of bread, clutched like a biscuit. His left fi st strangled
the neck of Seth’s last bottle of whiskey and his happy smile was
bedaubed with yellow globs of half-chewed cornbread plastering
the gaps between his stained teeth.
Brady Moffat moved in quick to snatch the bottle from the giant,
thumping him on the back. “You done good, Figgy. Real good.”
In a spray of crumbs and spittle, Figg giggled. “Amen to that,
sez I.”
Connor marched over and slapped the bread from Figg’s hand,
sending it rolling in the dirt. “Ye great gobshite! Where are ye
when I need ye? I’ll tell ye where—stuffi n’ yer piehole—
Jaysus!
”
The little man gave the giant a shove. “Arrah now, fetch the mule
and the pig from the byre.”
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
265
“STOP!” Seth ran to where big and little stood near the cabin
door. He handed Connor the documents. “We’ll leave th’ land,
no quarrel,” he offered, trying to stay the panic rising in his
throat, “but ye canna have the hog—I beg ye, man—that hog is
the difference between life and death for us.”
“Are ye dim?” Connor rattled the parchment in Seth’s face
and jerked a thumb over his shoulder. “Yer man there takes what
he wants, and he wants it all.”
Seth followed Connor’s thumb. The wind had calmed a bit—
the tall cornstalks moving but gently, to and
fro, creating a
soothing, undulating backdrop to Seth’s worst fears realized.
Mounted on a jet-black Andalusian, Julian Cavendish sat still as
a military statue at the edge of the cornfield, monitoring his hire-
lings from afar.
Seth could hear his heart drumming in his head. “All I need’s
a bit more time—can ye ask him t’ give me but a day or two?”
“Give ye?” Connor scrunched his face and snorted. “That bas-
tard wouldn’t give ye the steam off’n his piss.” The Irishman
folded and returned the documents to the wallet. “Na, yiv been
cast adrift, boyo. The price ye must pay for squatting on what
belongs t’ another.”
The sight of the king’s seal and Cavendish aloof on horseback
served to sap all strength from Seth. There was no beating a man
who had the means to purchase the power of the law and the
lawless. Seth turned his back on Connor, shuffled away, and
dropped down to sit between Maggie and Susannah. “Everyone
intae the cabin,” he droned. “Gather your things.”
Winnie and Jack took the little ones by the hand and did as
they were told, but Susannah and Maggie did not budge. The
women stayed at his side. Seth buried his face in his hands. He
was beat—beat hollow and thin as a tin cup. A thick torpor of
hopelessness clouded his brain.
Lightning cut the clouds, soon followed by rolling thunder,
266 Christine
Blevins
and Alexander woke squalling. After a momentary discreet
fidget, Susannah began nursing him under the shawl draped over
her shoulder and the infant quieted.
Lightning flashed again. “We better get a move on,” Moffat
advised. “You know how his lordship hates the wet.”
Connor glanced over his shoulder at Cavendish and barked,
“Figg! Would ye g’won now an’ fetch those beasts so we can be
on our way?”
Figg veered off the path to the stable and wandered toward the
tulip tree. Squatting on haunches in front of Susannah, he tilted
his huge head in slack- jawed fascination, trying to catch a glimpse
beneath the shawl.
Bristling like an angry hedgehog, Maggie leaped to her feet
and gave the big man a two-handed shove that sent Figg sprawl-
ing bung end into a pile of corncobs. “Away wi’ ye—ye great gal-
lumpus. Leave the woman nurse the babe in peace.”
Seth groaned. “Maggie . . . have a care . . .”
Connor ran over. “Jaysus, Figg! Get up—get up, I tell ye!”
Figg struggled mightily to draw his massive frame upright.
“But, Connie, I want to see th’ wee baby . . .”
“Never mind the baby! Go fetch the bleedin’ beasts like I told
ya.” Connor brushed the dust from him, gave him a push, and
Figg lumbered away.
Connor turned to the women. “Can ye believe it?” Shrugging,
he offered a half grin. “The big oaf fancies babies.”
“Fancies babies?” Maggie plopped back onto the bench. “For
what? His breakfast?”
“He meant no harm,” Connor defended staunchly. “He’s sim-
ple.”
“Aye,
he
may be simple,” Maggie retorted, “but what’s yer
excuse?”
Brady Moffat burst out laughing.
Pink-faced, Connor grabbed Maggie by the hair and snarled,
“Yer a fuckin’ mouthy cunt! On yer prayer bones and beg
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
267
mercy . . .” Pulling hard, he bent her head back at an unnatural
angle, forcing her down to knees in the dirt.
Quicker than a hawk’s talon snatching up prey, Susannah
reached out and clamped her hand between Connor’s legs. “Let
Maggie go,” she said.
A fistful of Maggie’s hair in his right hand, Connor fumbled
unsuccessfully to draw a pistol snagged on his belt with his
left.
Seth leaped to his feet. “Susannah! Stop!”
A sweet smile curled the corners of Susannah’s mouth; her
grip tight and steady as a vise, she continued to nurse Alexander
without interruption.
As shrill as a choirboy on Easter morning, Connor squeaked,
“
MOF
- fat!
PEA
- vey!”
Leaning on their rifl es, Brady Moffat and Simon Peavey stood
by, much amused. Moffat called out, “Take care, Connor. That
one chopped the head clean off’n a Shawnee brave—she may
well pinch off your prick.”
“Susannah,” Seth pleaded, “dinna be sae reckless . . .”
Susannah blinked once and gave Connor’s parts a twist.
The wee man’s beet-red eyes near bugged out of his skull.
“Awright!” he yelped, and released Maggie.
Susannah let loose. Connor stumbled backward, doubled over,
gasping in pain.
“It wouldn’t be hard at all, pinchin’ off a nubbins like his,”
Susannah said blithely, pinkie fi nger extended.
“Woo- hoo!” Moffat hooted, slapping his thigh. Maggie gig-
gled and even stoic Simon Peavey cracked a smile.
Connor turned and kicked Susannah’s bushel basket, sending
kernels of corn flying through the air like a spray of bird shot,
screaming, “Drive them off!
Do it!
DO IT!”
Moffat sighed. “C’mon, Peavey. Let’s finish this up.” The gun-
men moved in, rifles raised, herding Seth, Maggie, and Susannah
to the center of the dooryard.
268 Christine
Blevins
Seth grabbed Brady Moffat by the arm. “Can ye let us gather
a few things fi rst?”
Moffat jerked away and slugged Seth upside the head with the
butt end of his rifl e.
Slumping to his knees, Seth saw double and fingered the knot
rising near his temple. Maggie pushed past Moffat and knelt at
Seth’s side.
“There was no need to wallop him . . . yiv no right . . .”
Connor stormed in with pistol drawn and pressed the barrel
end to the back of Maggie’s head. “Yer the one with no rights,
missie.”
Clack- clack,
the tumbler notched into fully cocked.
“Mr. Connor! Holster that weapon!” The viscount trotted
into the dooryard, ordering his henchman in a voice as clipped as
the Andalusian’s iron- shod hooves on the sunbaked soil. Display-
ing expert horsemanship, the nobleman maneuvered his stamp-
ing and snorting mount to dance a tight circle around the group.
Mouth agape, Connor flinched under his master’s scrutiny.
Immediately uncocking the lock on his pistol, he stuffed the
gun back into his belt, stuttering, “N-no need for concern,
m-m’lord . . .” The little Irishman scuttled like a roach exposed
to the light of day, hurrying to be the first to grab the stallion’s
halter and aid the viscount in his dismount.
Brady Moffat’s slack posture stiffened and he shouldered his
weapon infantry style. “Everything under control here, sir,” he
hiccuped, and scurried with Connor to curry favor.
Peavey’s eyes narrowed at the nobleman’s uncharacteristic in-
trusion. He tipped his head sideways much like a curious hound,
took three long, slow steps back, and dropped his rifle to rest in
his elbow.
The hog came snuffling and grunting into the dooryard, fol-
lowed by Figg, besmeared with and reeking of pig muck. The giant
man held tight the lead he’d tied to the hog and he tugged Ol’ Mule
along by the harness. Cavendish grimaced; pulling a lace-edged
handkerchief from his voluminous sleeve, he held it to his nose.
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
269
Connor waved Figg away. “Stay downwind of his lordship,
hear?”
Amid this shabby company, the viscount gleamed like a looking
glass tossed on a refuse pile. Wigless and simply dressed in a bril-
liant white shirt tucked into fawn-colored breeches, this man was
quite different from the powdered fop Seth had encountered aboard
the
Good Intent
. With his sleek dark hair queued in a red satin
ribbon that fluttered on the breeze, Julian Cavendish looked every
bit the country lord.
Maggie and Susannah helped Seth up onto his feet. “Take his
offer.” Maggie spoke quick in his ear.
“What?” Seth swayed, knees buckling. The women on either
side propped him up. He steadied and rubbed his head, trying to
recover his wits and the ability to depend on his legs.
“He’s come to make an offer—take it!” Maggie said.
“She’s right,” Susannah hissed. “Look at him—he wants her
bad.”
Seth blinked and focused. The viscount brushed past his obse-
quious henchmen, tapping his riding quirt against the burnished
leather of his boot. Much like a man judging the fitness of a
horse, he paced to and fro with deliberate regard, attention riv-
eted on Maggie.
“The bastard . . .” Seth muttered.
Maggie urged. “My contract . . . trade it for corn.”
“No!”
“Dinna be a fool. Strike a bargain.”
“Sign ye over to tha’ fi end?” Seth shook his head.
Maggie squeezed his arm. “Send me word when yiv harvested
the corn . . . I’ll run and meet up wi’ yiz . . .”
“Too risky—I willna—”
“Ye must, Seth,” Maggie rasped in his ear. “Yiv no choice.”
Cavendish approached their group slowly. Maggie stood be-
side Seth, staring straight ahead with eyes hard as fl int. Her
waist-length hair had long since tumbled free and the braid-
270 Christine
Blevins
crimped strands writhed about on the wind like beckoning
arms.
Connor simpered after his master. “You’ve a good eye, yer
grace. She’s a fine piece of goods.”
“Yes . . . she is quite the thing, isn’t she?” Cavendish stepped
close to catch a tendril of Maggie’s hair. He held it to his nose
and breathed deep. He turned to Seth. “You seem inordinately
blessed with a preponderance of females, yeoman.”
Seth did not respond immediately, and Moffat prodded him
between shoulder blades with the barrel end of his rifl e. “His
lordship’s talkin’ to you . . .”
“Leave me be, ye kiss-arse.” Seth shrugged Moffat off with a