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Crossing Ebenezer Creek
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Crossing Ebenezer Creek
In memory of those sturdy black bridges, male and female, I was blessed to have as family.
ALSO BY TONYA BOLDEN
Finding Family
Tonya Bolden
Crossing Ebenezer Creek
CONTENTS
Prologue
Then She Heard the Thunder
Riddleville Road
Green Eyes
Rag-and-Bones Belongings
Moon in the Middle of the Day
Bitter
Wings as Eagles
More Than a Misty Memory
Moving Wound
Stroking the Scrub Oak
Savoring the Sight
Learn Their Stories
Copper-Skinned Boy Was Ben
General Reb
At the Cusp of Dawn
Camped at Davisboro
Spilling Memories
Secesh
Behold a Pale Horse
Many Thousand Gone
Goodness Like Mint
So Beat Down
Lashing Fury
Driver!
Tightrope Walker
Offered Him a Chocolate
Till We Meet Again
Family
Night Became a Wishing Well
Relish in Destruction
Texas
No Longer with Us
Dear Lord!
Cry Mercy?
Power
Monsters
No More!
Well?
Blue Glass Beads
Stone of Help
Freedoms
On the Eden Road
Epilogue
Author’s Note
Research and Sources
Acknowledgments
Crossing Ebenezer Creek
PROLOGUE
In a southeast Georgia swamp, when a driving rain drenches an early December day, bald cypresses seem to screech, tupelos to shriek, Ebenezer Creek to moan.
Science minds try to explain it away with talk of air flow, wind waves, and such, but others shake their heads. Not so. They say it’s the ghosts of Ebenezer Creek rising, reeling, wrestling with the wind. Remembering.
Remembering desperate pleas, heartrending screams.
Remembering hope after hope, dream after dream, and—
Mariah, who had dreamed of a long life with Caleb and at least one acre, she first remembers that twelve days before she reached Ebenezer Creek, a hungry hush sent a shiver down her spine.
THEN SHE HEARD THE THUNDER
She dropped the scrub brush, sprang to her feet, peered through the cookhouse window. Sudden quiet too queer.
Yonder in a sweet gum tree, a crowd of crows rose up. They hung in midair for three heartbeats, then swept east.
Something was coming. Good or evil the girl couldn’t tell, but she knew it best to bolt.
Lithe and long-legged, she bounded through the back door, raced to a little boy picking up pecans from the ground.
On the outskirts of her mind, she heard a bell tolling frantic, glimpsed others dashing, scattering.
“Come on!” She grabbed the boy’s hand. Their hiding place was in the root cellar. A dugout beneath a pile of croker sacks.
Amid the musty smell of red clay, sacks of onions and potatoes, bushels of beets, rutabagas, parsnips, and carrots, she listened for sounds in the distance, for gunfire, for—
Then she heard the thunder—pictured a thousand horses, full gallop.
Hands went quick over the boy’s ears when the Big House front door was kicked in.
Next she heard Callie Chaney screaming bloody murder.
Then a thud.
The sound of dust settling ensued, followed by the crash-and-shatter of china and glass.
Voices low, muffled. No way to tell. Outlaws on the prowl? Or was it—
Then came flashbacks of Callie Chaney’s scare talk.
“Yankees are monsters!” the woman used to shriek. “Devils! Pure devils!” Wagging a bony finger in her face, Callie Chaney had warned, “You go traipsing off after bluecoat brutes, you won’t reach nowhere but dead.”
Cellar doors creaked. She clamped a hand over the boy’s mouth.
A pistol clicked.
“Anybody down there? Come out now if you know what’s good for you!”
The voice was hard, quick. Not one word had a curl or dragged out long. It had to be a Yankee!
Praise God!
The girl had never believed the scare talk. She had prayed for Yankees to come her way ever since the war broke out forty-one months ago. Forty-one long months of huddled, quivering hope.
Battle of Fort Sumter … First Manassas … Second Manassas … Sharpsburg … Lincoln’s great and mighty Emancipation Proclamation … Gettysburg … Cold Harbor.
With the others she had been stitching things together from news overheard while tending guests or spied during stolen glances at a Macon Telegraph meant for trash.
Days ago word came of Atlanta licked up in flames and how on the heels of the hurt he put on that city, a Union general named Sherman had his army marching southeast.
Let them come by here! the girl prayed every day. Atlanta was more than one hundred miles away from where she was held. When she heard that Yankees had stormed Milledgeville, some thirty miles away, she prayed harder. Lord, let the Yankees come by here.
And in the last two days, there was gunfire and smoke from Sandersville. And now—
“Anybody down there? Come out now if you know what’s good for you!”
Trusting her gut, she shouted from beneath that pile of croker sacks, “Don’t shoot! We coming out!”
RIDDLEVILLE ROAD
When Caleb turned off Riddleville Road and headed for the Big House, he heard a woman’s screams and the breaking of things.
Under a canopy of oaks he rode down the long driveway thinking about where he’d start loading first. A half mile back the squad had come across an old colored man who told them what they’d likely find.
At first the man had just stared at Caleb and the thirty or so mounted white men. “Y’all what’s left of Sherman’s army?” the old man asked, utterly dejected.
Captain Galloway instructed him on how to catch up with a larger force. He also told him that when the squad was done scouting out provisions, it would head for this same force. The man was welcome to travel with them.
The old man, now smiling, eased over to Caleb. “How many in what he call the larger force?” he whispered.
“Thousands,” Caleb whispered back.
The old man decided to make tracks for the larger force right then and there. Before he did, he told them about the Chaney place up ahead. “Not what it once was, but she still is wukked and got a top tanner.” He then sketched out the place, Big House to barn.
“Is the place for the Union or the Rebellion?” Captain Galloway asked.
“Secesh!” the old man replied. “Two hundred percent and higher. Not a place around here for the Union.”
“How many white men on the place up ahead?” Captain Galloway also asked.
“Nary a one I know of now,” was the old man’s response.
Caleb knew that news of a pro-Rebel place with no white men about ginned up some of the Yankees to go in hog wild, no matter what Captain Galloway said. Not wanting to get caught up in that, as they got closer to the Chaney place Caleb put a little distance between his wagon and the rest of the forage squad, slowing his horses to a trot.
Captain Galloway kept his horse at a canter, shouting out to his men, “Order! Remember, all in order!”
Caleb was almost at the end of the driveway when he brought the buckboard to a stop. He took off his duster, balled it up behind his toolbox
, took up the reins again.
“Giddyap!”
Smokehouse … corncrib … root cellar. Caleb played a guessing game of how many sacks of this and bushels of that he could fit in his wagon. Then he reminded himself to leave room for a person or two. After all, the old man said the Chaney place was still being worked. If any of the colored were of a mind to take their leave, like always Caleb would gladly give them a ride.
GREEN EYES
Two scruffy, scraggly bearded soldiers in sky-blue trousers and dark-blue sack coats flanked the root cellar doors. Musket rifles at the ready.
From astride a bay steed, a third white man—crisp, clean-shaven, long, lean—looked down on her and the boy.
“Captain Abel Galloway, United States Army,” he boomed, holstering his pistol. “Is the owner of this place for the Union or for the Rebellion?”
From the tone of his voice, the girl sensed the man knew the answer. She took him to be the orderly type. Sounded to her like he was exampling for the scruffy ones.
“Rebellion, sir.” She kept her sharp, dark eyes trained on the ground, the boy tight by her side.
“And you have been held in slavery?”
“Yes, sir.” The jackknife in her apron pocket got a nervous pat.
“No more!” announced the captain. “No more slavery for you. You now own yourselves.”
Something in his voice made her chance a glance up.
The keen-faced captain was smiling. Jet-black hair gleaming. Green eyes sparkling. He could have been singing “Joy to the World” on Christmas Day.
She lowered her eyes as the man continued his say. “By proclamation of President Abraham Lincoln, on the first of January in the year of our Lord 1863, you are free!” He cleared his throat. “And as a member of the United States Army I am obliged to maintain your freedom.”
“Thank you, sir.” She curtsied, as she had been trained to do not long after learning to walk.
“Always curtsy, no matter their station,” said her ma one day while at the loom. “And never look whitefolks in the eye.”
“Never let ’em know what you think,” her pa had told her on another day while planing pine wood. “Better still, don’t even let on you can think.”
When the girl saw the boy peek out from behind her skirt, she remembered another lesson on survival. Scared stiff that he’d speak, she clamped a hand over his mouth. She was looking past Green Eyes now, wondering about Josie, Jonah, Mordecai, the rest.
“Anyone else in the cellar?” the man asked.
She lowered her eyes again. “No, sir.”
“Much food in there?”
“Fair amount.” She glanced up, saw him wave the two scruffy ones down into the cellar.
“Remember, Private Sykes, Private Dolan, don’t take it all,” he said. “Rebel-she though she be, it’s not for us to make her starve.” With that, off he galloped.
A split second later, little boy in tow, the girl took off for one of the dismal mud-daubed log cabins that bordered the woods. Heart pounding and the words from Green Eyes a song to her soul, she outright wanted to fly. No more! … No more slavery for you … You now own yourselves … You are free! At last she was getting away from the Chaney place! At last she was—
But she had a fright when she entered her cabin.
Ladder-back chair overturned. Water jug in pieces on the floor. Cedar trunk lid thrown back.
Thank goodness, the trunk had only been rifled through. Nothing taken. Not her second dress, not the boy’s second britches, not other bits of clothing, her sewing things. Safe, too, the pouch of keepsakes.
From a nail on the wall, she grabbed a sling sack and stuffed it with the contents of the trunk. She tried not to tremble.
Just hurry! Hurry! Hurry!
After praying for this day, after planning how she’d pack up quick—she wasn’t prepared for the rush-and-roll of emotions, for the trembling.
On she packed while the boy spun in circles smack in the middle of their one small room. Smiling, he flapped his arms every turn or so.
With one sack filled and another begun, the girl let the boy be.
Tin cups. Wooden bowls. Quilt from their bed. Candles from the crate beside it. Bucket by the hearth that ka-lanked with fishhooks, weights, a deadfall trap, snares. Last in, the calabash canteens that hung by the door near her cloak.
“We settin’ off.” She helped the boy into his wool jacket a size too small. “We leavin’.” She had told him that this day might come, told him they’d have to move cottontail fast, but she never knew how much he understood.
“Freedoms?” The boy jumped up, yanked his cap from his jacket pocket, and put it cockeyed on his head.
She looked into his big brown eyes, as round as his chestnut face. “That’s right, freedoms.” She straightened his cap, pulled it down tight on his head. And just then the porch steps creaked. Heart in her mouth, the girl froze.
She didn’t breathe easy till she saw who was at the door.
It was freckle-faced Josie, like a big sister. Josie’s baby girl, Sarah, was against her bosom and her son, Little Jack, hung on to her skirt. No bundles, no sacks. The girl knew what that meant.
They’d talked about Josie’s rock and a hard place many times after her husband, Big Jack, got the hire-out.
“Can’t do it.” Josie’s tears flowed. “Jack’s comin’ through this. He’ll head back here, I know. If we go, he won’t never find us. Never.”
“But, Josie, are you—”
“Sure. And sure we’ll be fine. Will stay in prayer and keep a machete by my side.”
Josie’s mind was made up, the girl knew. “Till we meet again,” she said, trying not to cry as she hugged Josie, kissed baby Sarah, patted Little Jack’s cheek.
“Till we meet again,” Josie sniffled.
The sling sacks dug into the girl’s shoulders as she headed out. She looked around, back into the woods, called out, “Jonah … Mordecai … Dulcina …”
Yankees laughed, cussed, sent up whoops and hollers. Yankees grew louder with her every step.
Stuffing hams into sacks.
Stringing squawking chickens to saddle-flaps.
Corralling horses.
Bringing hogs to a halt with bullets and bayonets.
She stopped at the root cellar, now ringed with sacks, bushel baskets. Tightening her grip on the little boy’s hand, the girl searched the faces of Yankees tramping, galloping by. She was sizing them up, waiting for one it felt safe to ask, “What now?”
RAG-AND-BONES BELONGINGS
He was drawn to her, like a river to the sea, the minute he saw her emerge from the root cellar.
Caleb was out of earshot but close enough to see how she avoided Captain Galloway’s eyes, kept her words few. She was cloaking her strength, just pretending to be simple, he knew. And so protective of the boy, must be her—
Was her man on the place too?
When she spirited away, Caleb had an impulse to go after her, let her know that he would give her a ride. But what if she had hurried to the quarters to get her husband? Besides, he couldn’t come up with an excuse for following her. Nothing to load up back there. Anybody who wanted to escape with the Yankees didn’t have to be sought out or called for.
Only once had Caleb gone into the quarters to fetch somebody. Back in Sand Town, on that rainy afternoon, when a half-naked little chocolate girl ran to him crying her heart out. Her granny couldn’t walk.
Caleb pulled off his jacket, put it on the child, then had her take him to her cabin.
What a wretched hut. Roof leaking. Holes in the walls stuffed with rags. The room reeked of misery.
The girl’s granny lay on a pallet. Mouth twisted. Left hand like a claw. Holding his breath against the stench, Caleb lifted her up, bedding and all, carried her to his wagon. Once he got her positioned safely and a blanket over her body, he helped in the little girl with her rag-and-bones belongings.
“You give your granny some water,” he said,
handing her his canteen. “And you have some, too, if you want.” From his pocket he brought out a biscuit from that morning’s breakfast, gave her that too. Wide-eyed and willowy, the little girl reminded him of his sister, Lily.
“I’m Caleb. What’s your name?”
“Cora Lee,” the girl whispered.
About an hour later, when Caleb reached the campground, he discovered that Cora Lee’s granny was dead.
“She went up to be with God,” said Caleb to Cora Lee. He closed the woman’s eyes, pulled the blanket up over her face.
Cora Lee was a fountain of tears, clinging to Caleb with all her might.
“But just think, Cora Lee, up in heaven your granny will be able to walk again, move about free all she wants.”
Caleb held Cora Lee until she quieted down to sniffles, then reached for an empty sack, filled it with some of the day’s forage—salt meat, sweet potatoes, corn. He scanned the crowd of colored people already camped. With Cora Lee by the hand and that sack over his shoulder, Caleb headed for the first two young women who struck him as capable. He explained the situation, asked them to take in the girl.
Cora Lee latched onto Caleb again. “Please don’t leave me!” she cried out.
“Now, now,” said Caleb. “These young ladies are two of the finest in the land. They will take good, good care of you.”
“Come here, darlin’,” said one of the women, holding out an apple to Cora Lee.
Once the little girl was in the woman’s arms, Caleb took his leave and dealt with the corpse. That done, he thought about going back to where those two young women had camped, make sure Cora Lee was settled and all right. In the end Caleb decided against it. No attachments, he told himself.
No attachments, he reminded himself on the Chaney place, after loading some hay from the barn, finding the smokehouse almost empty, and heading for whatever Privates Sykes and Dolan had brought up from the root cellar.
MOON IN THE MIDDLE OF THE DAY
A two-horse buckboard pulled up. Fella at the reins not one bit familiar. She tried to make sense of him from the moment he leapt from the wagon till he reached whispering distance. He brought to mind sightings of the moon in the middle of the day.