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“’Tis true . . . for our tea on the morrow.” Taking him by the
elbow, Maggie aimed him toward the cookhearth. “Remember,
berry tarts, aye?”
“Amen t’ that. Amen t’ berry tarts, sez I.”
Maggie sent Figg off with a little shove and a gay wave. “Till
tomorrow.” Arms crossed over her chest, Aurelia came to stand
beside her. Maggie hugged the jug. They watched Figg as he am-
bled off in his odd way with arms swinging to and fro, to join
Connor under the tarp.
“D’ you think he heard?”
Maggie shrugged. “He’s a dunderhead.” She tapped a fi nger to
her temple. “A clouty dumplin’ for a brain. His only concern is
for his tea.”
Connor glared daggers from across the yard. Aurelia fl ustered.
“I’d best get back to my chores. I don’t want him comin’ over
here, nosin’ around.”
“And I promised his lordship a tonic.” Maggie turned in to the
cabin, feeling Connor’s nasty bug eyes drilling a hole in the back
of her head. She shut the door, found her basket, and set it on the
small table where Tempie prepared her simples. As Maggie dug
down to the bottom, salvaging the sorrel leaves squashed under
the rope, she went over Seth’s instructions again.
Set the water
barrel near the chimney . . . wait for the dark of the
—
A muffled commotion erupted outside. The door flew open and
Brady Moffat stormed into the cabin. His eyes swept the room
and settled on the basket. Maggie lunged for it. He caught her by
the arm and scattered the leaves in the basket to reveal the rope.
“You little fool.” Grabbing the basket, Moffat dragged her out
into the fortyard.
Maggie stumbled over tree roots and stones, struggling to keep
up with Moffat’s long stride as he jerked her along. Their tussle
caught the attention of henchmen and slaves, who began to wander
toward the blockhouse like strings of ants drawn to spilled honey.
Moffat pushed Maggie to sit on a tree stump next to Aurelia and
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
333
went inside the blockhouse with the basket. The laundress sat with
head bowed, the palms of her hands pressed together and trapped
between her knees. Tearful eyes met Maggie’s. “Figg told ’em,” she
hiccuped. “And then I had t’ tell ’em . . . tell ’em
everything
.”
Maggie put her arm around Aurelia’s slim shoulders. “Dinna
fash. Ye had no choice.”
Figg came through the door, oblivious to their presence. He
leaned against the frame, happily munching on a large piece of
shortbread.
Maggie laid into him. “Ye huge telltale! Ran straight to Con-
nor, did ye?”
The giant shook his shaggy head; shifting his weight from one
foot to the other, he stuttered, “O-over th’ wall, ye sed . . .” His
squinty eyes were glued to the bulbous toes of his hobnail boots.
“There go my berry tarts, sez I . . .”
“Fuckin’ eidgit!” Maggie bent, grabbed a stone, and flung it at
him. “Great bag o’ guts! More guts than brains if ye think I’m
goin’ t’ fix any tarts for ye now.” She pitched another stone at
him, hitting him square on the forehead.
Figg cowered against the wall, whimpering, “Th’ end of the
sweeties, I s’pose . . .”
“Amen t’ that.” Maggie snatched up another stone. Aurelia
grabbed her by the wrist.
“Leave him be. He’s a simple fella—concerned for his tea, just
like you said.”
Maggie heaved a sigh. The stone tumbled from her unclenched
fist. “I am a fool undone by a fool.”
A crowd gathered—more than a dozen backwoodsmen lean-
ing on their rifles, some puffing on queer long pipes. Slaves called
in from the field formed a second, larger group, hovering loosely
nearby. Maggie could see Justice and Achilles had come around
to stand vigil in front of the forge. Sweat-drenched, the smith
stood with muscular arms folded over his bare chest, shining in
the setting sun like a piece of polished ebony.
334 Christine
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The blockhouse door creaked open—wraithlike Connor the
first to slink out followed by grim-faced Moffat. Figg pulled up-
right, snuffling and swiping his snot onto his sleeve. Castor and
Pollux scurried out to take up positions at either side of the door-
way. Aurelia grabbed hold of Maggie’s hand. The muttering
crowd quieted and inched forward when Cavendish emerged.
No longer dressed in an invalid’s nightshirt and robe, he had
donned a crisp shirt with lace cravat. A sober black waistcoat
topped buff breeches—fit to his leg without a
wrinkle—and
gleaming oiled boots. He stood with his back to the two women,
riding crop in hand, and addressed the crowd.
“Escape,” Cavendish announced, officious and clipped. “A
most serious offense.” He tapped the crop to his boot.
Tot. Tot.
Tot.
“It is compulsory for all to witness the miscreants peeled and
scourged at the post. Mr. Moffat shall lay thirty lashes on the
bondwoman for intent to escape and incite insurrection.” The
crowd began to buzz. Cavendish raised his voice. “And fi fteen
lashes on the mulatto laundress for her complicity.”
Maggie shot to her feet, aghast. “Aurelia’s innocent! ’Twas my
doing.
Mine alone!
”
The viscount turned on his heel and marched inside. The
twins hurried after, closing the door behind. Moffat stepped up
with a length of leather cord and bound Aurelia’s wrists, handing
the dangling lead to Figg.
“Brady, please!” Maggie beseeched as he bound her wrists in
like fashion. “Ye canna mean to whip Aurelia . . .”
He wouldn’t answer—would not even meet her eye.
Figg and Moffat pulled Aurelia and Maggie by their leads like
a pair of sheep being led to the shearing. Rifles shouldered, the
crowd shifted to shuffle along. Maggie cast around in despera-
tion; searching faces in the crowd, she spotted Simon Peavey or-
biting the periphery and called out to him,
“Simon!”
Their eyes
met for a moment—and in that brief moment, despair doused the
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
335
tiniest hope flickering in her breast as Peavey shook his head,
turned, and disappeared from her fi eld of vision.
Thirty lashes . . . fifteen for poor Aurelia . . .
The sentence the
viscount levied rang in her head like a cacophony of church bells
clanging on Christmas morning.
Thirty lashes . . .
One of the seamen aboard the
Good Intent
had taken twenty
lashes for stealing rum and Maggie had treated his wounds. A big,
burly lad, and he couldn’t walk for days after.
Thirty lashes . . .
Brady tugged on her lead, pulled her to the center of the fort-
yard where the whipping post loomed. A single iron ring pro-
truded from the top of the stout oaken beam—raw wood, a foot
and a half square by seven foot tall—planted upright in the dirt.
Aurelia looked over her shoulder, eyes wide, her lower lip caught
on her teeth. The crowd fell into a half circle facing the post.
“We’ll start with the nigger lass,” Connor announced. Figg
led Aurelia to stand to the right of the post. Aurelia raised her
face to the crowd and changed before their eyes. Like bright liq-
uid lead hardening to dull gray, her features lost their life light.
She stood stoic and stiff, emotionless and blank.
Aye . . .
Maggie thought.
Aurelia kens well what happens
here
. . .
Connor stepped forward, drawing a large knife from the
sheath on his belt. Maggie gasped, but Aurelia did not even suf-
fer a flinch—did not struggle or protest when the Irishman sliced
through the laces on her bodice. She stood still as a stone statue
while Connor ripped and tugged her clothing, rendering her na-
ked from neck to waist.
Maggie’s stomach lurched. She craned her neck to look be-
yond the forest of rifl e barrels and the wall of white men surging
forward. The black slaves who had gathered to hear the judg-
ment floated along the fringe with fearful eyes. She could see
Tempie, sitting with her hands clenched in her lap on the bench
outside their cabin door. Justice, Achilles, and Simon stood in a
row before the forge.
What could they do? Nothing.
336 Christine
Blevins
With hands bound, Maggie turned and clutched Brady’s sleeve
in both fists. “’Twas my doing . . . lay Aurelia’s lashes on my
back . . . let me stand in her stead . . .”
“You’re mad.” Brady pried off her grasping fingers. “Your own
thirty will be hard to take. Forty-fi ve would kill you certain.”
“Ye would do me a service, Brady, for I’d be dead and happy
for it.”
Figg tied Aurelia’s lead to the ring at the top of the post,
stretching her arms over her head, pulling the skin on her back
tight to receive the bite of the lash.
Aurelia drilled the balls of her bare feet into the loose soil,
planting them firmly. She leaned in and pressed her forehead into
the post.
Connor took control of Maggie’s lead and handed Brady a
coiled whip. The crowd stilled. Moffat stepped to stand beside
Aurelia. He loosed the coil of braided cowhide to unwind and
slither at his feet.
“Brady,
please believe me
!” Maggie threw herself forward,
falling to her knees with supplicant bound hands. “Aurelia did
naught to earn a single lash from yer whip . . .”
Connor grabbed Maggie by the arm and dragged her back.
“Please . . . Brady . . .”
“It’s not for me to say.” The words burst angry from Moffat.
“I but follow the orders of the man who puts silver in my pocket—
in all our pockets,” he added, drawing assenting grunts from the
crowd.
“And what sort of man does that make you, Brady Moffat?”
she spat back at him.
Connor gave her a shove that sent her sprawling. “Shut yer
gob!”
“What does that make any of ye?” she snarled at the crowd,
rising to her feet. “All of ye—supposed freemen doin’ the
bidding—th’ dirty
work—for the likes of that tyrant.
Arse-
lickers! Th’ lot of ye!
”
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
337
Connor grabbed Maggie up by the shoulders and shook her
like a rag doll. “I said shut yer gob or be gagged!”
Palpable unease wafted through the restless crowd. Men shuf-
fled their feet. Eyes cast downward, Maggie tore away from Con-
nor.
“I hoped it would be different,” Maggie declared. “Hoped th’
New World proved better than th’ old I left behind . . .” Connor
chased after her as she skirted along, appealing to the turbulent
crowd. “Are we doomed t’ bow and scrape t’ them what are called
our betters? Doomed to accept injustice piled atop injustice?”
“No!” Gruff voices joined in her dissent.
Connor slapped Maggie across the face and seized her by the
arm.
“We are all his slaves when we do naught to stanch the tyrant’s
hand,” Maggie screamed as Connor tugged her away. “Th’ whole
lot of us! Black
and
white . . .
SLAVES!
”
Connor shouted at Moffat. “DO IT!”
Moffat threw his arm. The whipcord whistled and hissed,
landing with a hard crack across Aurelia’s golden shoulders. Fol-
lowed by another . . . and another. Her toes dug into the ground;
spine twisting, she flinched in anticipation of every blow, taking
her punishment without uttering a whimper.
The crowd fell quiet, spellbound by the spectacle. Maggie
fought the urge to look away, wincing at the purple welts raised
with every stroke.
“Apply the whip with force, Moffat,” Connor warned.
Brady grit his teeth and glared at the scrawny Irishman. The
next stroke buckled Aurelia’s knees and plowed a bloody furrow
into her flesh. Aurelia began to tremble. The remnants of her
blouse and shift bunched red about her waist, soaked with blood
flowing down the channel of her spine. Her glorious curls tinged
as if dipped in crimson paint. Writhing in absolute agony, Aure-
lia loosed a scream at the tenth stroke.
Maggie turned away to see Simon and Achilles struggling to
338 Christine
Blevins
hold Justice at bay. She closed her eyes, but could not close her
ears to the whip’s malevolent hiss, or to Aurelia’s pitiful
screams.
Crack.
Crack.
Moffat delivered the final two strokes and cut the thong bind-
ing Aurelia to the post. She slumped into a bloody pile at its base.
Maggie made to go to her, but Connor held her back.
Tempie pushed through the crowd. She draped a sheet over
Aurelia. Scarlet blossoms bloomed where the linen clung wet to
the wounds. The root doctor whispered into Aurelia’s ear and
got her to stand on her feet. Justice broke through, and as Aure-
lia struggled to take her first faltering step, he scooped her into
his arms and carried her away. Tempie followed close behind.
Connor pulled Maggie to the post.
Maggie tried hard to be as brave as Aurelia, tried to move her
mind away from the chaos of leering faces. Moffat wiped the