whipcord clean with a scrap of leather—drops of blood and bits
of fl esh plopped into the dust. Maggie doubled over and emptied
her stomach to splash on Connor’s boots. The somber crowd
burst into laughter.
“Fuckin’ bitch!” Connor swore, shoving Maggie aside. He
plucked the never-used kerchief from Figg’s pocket, wiped his
boots clean of puke, and handed it back. Figg stuffed the stink-
ing thing back into his pocket, then threaded Maggie’s lead
through the ring at the top of the post.
Like the sound of a bagpiper gone mad, a screeching hum
droned in her ears as her arms were pulled taut above her head.
Panic choked her vomit-stung throat upon hearing the fi endish
zing of Connor’s blade drawn from its sheath.
Moffat stayed the Irishman’s hand. “White women are fl ogged
clothed.”
“Himself said ‘peeled and scourged.’” Connor jerked away.
“White or no, the lass will be stripped.” His pinched face screwed
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
339
into an angry twist. With eyes bulging and Adam’s apple bob-
bing, he cut and ripped Maggie’s clothing to ribbons, exposing
every inch above her waist to the whip.
Hot with humiliation, she shivered, the eve ning breeze carry-
ing a chill to her sweaty, bare skin. In a struggle to maintain
composure, she focused on the moist, dark circle staining the
beam—the spot where Aurelia had leaned her forehead.
Maggie squeezed her eyes tight and pressed the length of her
body into the whipping post—trying to become one with it—
stout, strong, and lifeless. The rough wood grain bit into her
breasts. Her heart pounded in her ears.
The first crack of the whip, sharp as a pistol shot, snapped
Maggie back into the moment. Moffat rained five strokes in
quick succession. Searing lines crisscrossed her back from shoul-
der to shoulder. The smell of fear and blood drifted in and out
her nose, the copper taste of it in her mouth where she chewed a
hole in her cheek to keep from crying out.
Her knees weakened, but she forced herself to maintain her
stance, grateful for the post propping her. The strain on her in-
jured shoulder added to the pain she bore. Blood oozing from the
lacerations drizzled down her back and itched like the devil.
A shower of ruby droplets scattered through the air with each
resounding thwack of Moffat’s whip. By the tenth stroke Maggie
no longer cared about courage. Nor did she care who saw her
writhing naked—or heard her scream and beg for mercy. Life con-
tinued to rush through the chambers of her heart, pumping a steady
stream of torment straight to the very marrow of her bones.
After the twentieth stroke her eyes fluttered. She gazed up to
the North Star, visible in the darkening sky, and gasped a fervent
prayer, “Kill me now.”
Stepping back, Moffat tossed the whip to land in a sinister
wriggle at Maggie’s feet. “That’s enough,” he said.
Connor sputtered, “Thirty lashes have been ordered . . .”
“I don’t care. I’m done. Twenty’s more’n plenty.”
340 Christine
Blevins
The crowd joined in. “Aye, Brady’s right.”
“More than enough . . .”
The viscount’s malevolent voice cut through the maelstrom of
pain in Maggie’s head.
“Take up the whip, Mr. Moffat, and apply the punishment
with precision,” Cavendish ordered—terse—almost shrill.
The wounds on her back began to cool on the breeze. Maggie
turned her head, pressing cheek to post, blinking hard to clear
her eyes of tears. The viscount stood waiting on Brady’s response,
a cut-crystal goblet of claret glistening like a precious gem in his
hand.
“Apply them yourself, if you’re so eager,” Moffat replied, kick-
ing the handle of the whip toward him. One of the bystanders
handed Brady his rifl e.
Cavendish bristled. “I will not abide blatant insubordination.”
Many of the rifl es formerly on shoulders now rested in crooks
of elbows, faces glaring, Moffat’s among them. Connor sidled up
to the viscount.
“Think twice, m’lord,” the Irishman hissed. “Some of these
men are dispossessed by yer hand. They are discontent and
armed. Yer better off forgivin’ the lass a few tickles o’ the lash
than risk fomenting mutiny amongst ’em.”
Cavendish shrugged Connor off and heaved his goblet at the
post. Cut crystal exploded into diamond shards; a stream of fi ne
red wine ran a rivulet down the post and puddled under Maggie’s
toes.
“I will not bend to the will of this rabble.” The viscount
snatched up the whip, whirled it over his head, and released it to
strike.
Figg flailed out one immense arm and caught the sting of the
blow, the leather cord whipping around his thick forearm. In an
almost elegant motion, the giant jerked the whip from the vis-
count’s hand and sent the thing sailing over the stockade wall.
Moffat stepped up to cut Maggie down.
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
341
“LEAVE HER!” Cavendish shouted. He and Moffat locked
eyes. “You overstep your bounds, Mr. Moffat.
My
bondwoman
stays as she is until I order otherwise. Move along and be about
earning the generous wage I pay you.”
Brady Moffat hitched the gun on his shoulder and took a step
back; mumbling “I-I need a drink,” he turned and marched to
the cookhearth.
Cavendish faced the griping assembly still suffering the throes
of witnessing the whipping gone awry. “Drinks all around!” he
announced. “Double ration of grog for all who apply at the cook-
hearth.”
Appeased and diverted by the lure of rum, the sedate mob
shuffled and grumbled away. Smiling, Cavendish tipped his hand
in mock salute as the crowd disbanded. “Gentlemen! I commend
you on the pliability of your conscience!”
He turned to Connor. “Send two bottles of the Canary and
Brady Moffat to me.”
Connor nodded, but before he could scurry off, the viscount
grabbed the Irishman by his stringy arm. “Best have a chat with
your brother—Figg forgets his place.”
Maggie moaned and closed her eyes.
Footfalls crunching—dwindling—dwindled away.
Time passed with the tick of her blood dripping drop by drop
into the dirt. A gravelly caw and ominous wing thumping caused
Maggie to roll her head back and glimpse a row of greasy black
crows collected to perch along the top of the stockade wall. The
hated whipping post now Maggie’s only friend, she leaned into
its embrace and whispered one last prayer.
“Death—come with speed . . .”
22
Angels and Demons
A whisper.
“Catch her . . .”
Her arms dropped weighty to her sides.
Caught in strong arms and laid onto a sheet, wrapped tight.
My shroud.
Lifted at legs and shoulders and carried away.
Maggie watched the black sky move above her—watched the
sliver of the waning moon dip into the grasp of a six-fi ngered
cloud. Her ragged breathing caught the solid night
smell—
earthworms and fresh-turned soil. The trek to the other side
proved endless and she bounced along pondering the shadowy
shapes carrying her to her grave.
Angels or demons?
Completely numb, save for her arms crawling with ants, she
tried to speak. Her tongue, fat and dry as if coated with cotton
lint, kept her questions caked in her throat. The sky, the clouds,
and the moon soon disappeared into inky, total darkness.
They came to a place fraught with horse sweat on leather—
beasts snorting and stamping in anticipation of a journey. God’s
low whisper prepared her. “You’re going t’ ride now.”
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
343
“T’ h-heaven?” Maggie croaked.
No one answered.
Lifted by many hands onto horseback. A dark angel clasped
her in warm arms—kept her steady in the saddle. He fl icked the
reins and all moved
forward—creaking saddles and jangling
tack—many hooves muffl ed in thick, damp humus.
Cool fingers pressed her cheek and forehead. “She’s burnin’
up . . .”
“Gib her de drink,” another voice suggested.
Maggie’s angel rider held a bottle to her lips, and very thirsty,
she drank deeply, then gagged, spitting and sputtering—the hell-
ish water bitter and brack.
“Keep her quiet till we reach the river,” God warned.
“I’ve nae gold . . .” Maggie worried, agitating, trying to free
her arms trapped in the winding sheet. “I need coin . . .”
“Keep her still!”
God’s whisper grew harsh.
“I hav’ nae coin . . .”
Her angel’s rough hand covered her mouth, stifling her moans.
His voice cooed in her ear, “Don’t worry. I have a whole bagful
of gold . . .”
Maggie relaxed in Simon’s arms, her head fl opped forward.
He shifted her weight to rest against his chest, muttering, “Why’s
she fussin’ so fer gold?”
Coming to ride alongside, mounted on a stolen gelding, Justice
rasped, “She thinks she’s passed on.”
In the lead, Achilles turned in his saddle, whispering, “An’ she
need gold to pay de ferrymon . . . to cross over de riber of
death . . . to dat place beyond . . .”
“All of you—
pipe down!
” Moffat admonished from the rear.
Maggie began to thrash again, mumbling about coins and salt.
“Swallow yer medicine,” Simon whispered in her ear, and held
the bottle to her lips. The astringent smell of the boneset tonic
revived her to thrashing. Simon struggled to keep her from pitch-
ing out of the saddle and implored, “Aurelia, can y’ talk to her?”
344 Christine
Blevins
“Aurelia’s in heaven,” Maggie moaned, “an’ I’m goin’ t’
hell . . .”
“We ain’t dead yet—” Aurelia’s weary voice sounded like a
clear bell pealing in the dark. “And we ain’t goin’ t’ hell, crazy
girl—we’s just runnin’ away.” H
Tom hit the trail before dawn and kept to it hours after dusk,
traversing the many overmountain miles from the hunting camp
to the Martin homeplace in a scant seven days. Upon seeing
Seth’s cornfield open bright at the end of the forested trail, he put
a kick in his gallop and ran the last few yards.
Not a breath of smoke rose from the chimney of the familiar
cabin perched on its rise. Tom lost the spring in his step passing
through the dusty gleaned field, infested with crows cawing and
flapping. He wound down to stand in a dooryard void of dogs,
children, and chickens, listening to the open door and window
shutters creak a lonesome song on the eve ning breeze.
Too late . . .
Tom wandered the dooryard, got down on his hunkers, and
traced fi ngertips over the hard-packed dirt, trying to make sense
of the dim jumble of tracks. Rain had obliterated most of the
sign.
They’re gone some days now—hard to tell where to.
He’d thought for sure he’d catch them before they left. Tom
leaned in on his long rifle, caught off guard by the depth of his
disappointment. Unused to the business of love and still a bit be-
wildered by the notion of being so tethered to a woman, he
stared at the forlorn cabin and a tremor of unease whiffl ed down
his spine. The prospect of sharing the rest of his life with Maggie
brought him peace. But the counter—the possibility of spending
life without this partic u lar woman—cast a dark shroud over his
heart near to suffocating.
Someone at the station’s bound t’ know something . . .
Tom
turned on his heel and made for the ridge trail to Roundabout.
Midwife of the Blue Ridge
345
Seth had teased him once—he said Maggie had caught him in
her snare—and Tom recollected how he had scoffed, offended by
the mere notion.
Seth sure had the right of it.
Tom had marked Maggie in his
sights aboard the
Good Intent
, and the first moment her deep
brown eyes met his, like flint to steel, a spark flew between them.
He marched along the ridge trail at the quickstep. The sooner he
found Maggie, the sooner he could gather her into his arms.
And under that perfect sky, I will bury my face in her hair and
beg forgiveness for all my rank foolishness.
Bounding down the final set of switchbacks that led to the val-
ley, Tom stopped cold in his tracks at the base of the trail. A pil-
low of turned dirt was mounded in the shade of a young chestnut
tree, evidence of the sad news Duncan had relayed.
NAOMI MARTIN
1735–1763
Crude block letters incised upon a jagged slab of limestone
marked her resting place. A tin lantern and three withered bou-
quets tied with precious bits of red ribbon were propped around
the base of the tombstone.
Heart-wrenched, Tom fell to one knee at the graveside, pictur-
ing Winnie and Jack with Battler in hand, gathering only the
prettiest flowers for their mam. He wondered at the spent lantern
perched there, imagining poor Seth grieving into the dark of
night. Tom pressed the flat of his hand to the grave and whis-