Authors: Laurie Halse Anderson
“Slaves don't read,” Mr. Robert said. “I should beat you for lying, girl.”
Pastor Weeks held up his hand. “It's true. Your aunt had some odd notions. She taught the child herself. I disapproved, of course. Only leads to trouble.”
I spoke up again. “We're to be freed, sir. The lawyer,
Mr. Cornell, he'll tell you. Ruth and me, we're going to get work and a place of our own to sleep.”
“That's enough.” Mr. Robert narrowed his eyes at me.
“But Mr. Cornellâ,” I started.
“Shut your mouth!” he snapped.
The pastor cleared his throat. “Perhaps we should inquire ⦔
“Where is this Cornell?” Mr. Robert demanded. “Newport?”
“He left for Boston before the blockade,” the pastor said. “Took his papers with him.”
“The girl is lying, then,” Mr. Robert said. “She knows the lawyer is absent and her cause cannot be proved. The sooner I'm rid of her, the better.”
“It's the truth,” I blurted out. Ruth looked up at me anxiously and gripped my hand tighter.
“I said, silence!” Mr. Robert yelled.
“Isabel, remember your place.” Pastor Weeks fumbled with the latch on his Bible. “You and your sister belong to Mr. Robert now. He'll be a good master to you.”
My insides went cold, like I'd swallowed water straight from a deep, dark well. This couldn't be happening. “Couldn't you send a message to Boston, seeking Mr. Cornell?”
“The matter is settled.” Mr. Robert pulled on his gloves. “If I might borrow your wagon and man for the drive to Newport, Pastor, I'd be grateful. These girls should bring a decent price at auction.”
“You're selling us?” The words flew out of my mouth before I could weigh them.
“Hush, Isabel,” Pastor Weeks cautioned.
The cold inside me snaked down to my feet and up around my neck. I shivered in the warm spring sunshine. Ruth bent
down and picked up a shiny pebble. What if we were split up? Who would take care of her?
I fought back the tears. “Pastor Weeks, please, sir.”
Mr. Robert knocked the dust from his hat. “They should go quick. Your wagon will be back by nightfall.”
The minister placed the Bible in his leather satchel and pulled it up over his shoulder. He studied the ground, his hands, Mr. Robert's horse, and the clouds. He did not look at me. “You'll be wanting to bring their shoes and blankets,” he finally said. “They'll fetch a better price that way.”
“True enough.”
“I'll have a word with Ben. Explain matters.”
Pastor Weeks walked toward his own slave, keeping a hand on the satchel so it didn't bump against his side.
My heart wanted to force my feet to run, but I couldn't feel them, couldn't feel my hands, nor my arms, nor any part of myself. I had froze solid, sticking to the dirt. We were sold once before, back when Ruth was a tiny baby, not even baptized yet. They sold all of us from the plantation when old Mister Malbone run up his debts too high. His bankers wanted their pounds of flesh. Our flesh.
One by one they dragged us forward, and a man shouted out prices to the crowd of likely buyers and baby Ruth cried, and Momma shook like the last leaf on a tree, and Poppa ⦠and Poppa, he didn't want them to bust up our family like we were sheep or hogs. “I am a man,” he shouted, and he was Momma's husband and our father, and baby Ruth, she cried and cried, and I thought Momma would shatter like a bowl when it falls off a table. Poppa fought like a lion when they came for him, the strongest lion, roaring; it took five of them with hickory clubs, and then Momma fainted, and I caught baby Ruth just in time and there was lion's blood
on the ground mixed with the dust like the very earth was bleeding, and we left there, we three in Miss Mary Finch's wagon, and everything in the whole world was froze in ice for near two years after that.
I opened my mouth to roar, but not a sound escaped. I could not even mewl like a kitten.
RUN-AWAY FROM THE SUBSCRIBER, LIVING AT No. 110, WATER-STREET, NEAR THE NEW SLIP. A NEGRO GIRL NAMED POLL, ABOUT 13 YEARS OF AGE, VERY BLACK, MARKED WITH THE SMALL-POX, AND HAD ON WHEN SHE WENT AWAY A RED CLOTH PETTICOAT, AND A LIGHT BLUE SHORT GOWN, HOME MADE. WHOEVER WILL TAKE UP AND SECURE THE SAID GIRL SO THAT THE OWNER MAY GET HER, SHALL BE HANDSOMELY REWARDED. âNEWSPAPER ADVERTISEMENT IN THE
ROYAL GAZETTE
(NEW YORK)
The snake took us to Miss Mary's house to collect our blankets and too-small shoes but nothing else. We couldn't take Momma's shells, nor Ruth's baby doll made of flannel bits and calico, nor the wooden bowl Poppa made for me. Nothing belonged to us.
As I folded the blankets, Mr. Robert went out to the privy. There was no point in grabbing Ruth and running. He had a horse and a gun, and we were known to all. I looked around our small room, searching for a tiny piece of home I could hide in my pocket.
What to take?
Seeds.
On the hearth stood the jar of flower seeds that Momma
had collected, seeds she never had a chance to put into the ground. I didn't know what they'd grow into. I didn't know if they'd grow at all. It was fanciful notion, but I uncorked the jar, snatched a handful, and buried it deep in my pocket just as the privy door creaked open.
As the wagon drove us away, Ruth turned to see the little house disappear. I pulled her into my lap and stared straight ahead, afraid that if I looked back, I might break.
By midday we were in Newport, following Mr. Robert up the steps of Sullivan's Tavern. I had never been inside a tavern before. It was a large room, twice as big as Miss Mary's house, with two wide fireplaces, one on each of the far walls. The room was crowded with tables and chairs and as many people as church on Easter Sunday, except church was never cloudy with tobacco smoke nor the smell of roast beef.
Most of the customers were men, and a few had their wives with them. Some seemed like regular country folk, but others wore rich clothes not useful for muck shoveling. They made haste tucking into their dinners, playing cards, paging newspapers, and arguing loud about the British soldiers and their navy and taxes and a war.
Ruth didn't like the noise and covered her ears with her hands. I pulled her toward me and patted her on the back. Ruth was simpleminded and prone to fits, which spooked ignorant folk. Noise could bring them on, as well as a state of nervous excitement. She was in the middle of both.
As I patted, her eyes grew wide at the sight of a thick slice of buttered bread perched near the edge of a table. We hadn't eaten all day, and there had been little food the day
before, what with Miss Mary dying. I snatched her hand away as she reached for it.
“Soon,” I whispered.
Mr. Robert pointed to a spot in the corner. “Stand there,” he ordered.
A woman burst through the kitchen door carrying a tray heavy with food. She was a big woman, twice the size of my mother, with milky skin and freckles. She looked familiar and caused me to search my remembery.
“We'll have Jenny fatten up the British navy and make their ships sink to the bottom of the sea!” yelled a red-faced man.
The big woman, Jenny, laughed as she set a bowl in front of the man. The proprietor called her over to join us. She frowned as she approached, giving Ruth and me a quick once-over while tucking a stray curl under her cap.
“These are the girls,” Mr. Robert explained.
“It don't matter,” the proprietor said as he put his hand on Jenny's back. “We don't hold with slaves being auctioned on our front steps. Won't stand for it, in fact.”
“I thought this was a business establishment,” Mr. Robert said. “Are you opposed to earning your percentage?”
“You want to listen to my Bill, mister,” Jenny said. “Advertise in the paper, that's what we do around here.”
“I don't have time for that. These are fine girls, they'll go quickly. Give me half an hour's time on your front steps, and we both walk away with heavier pockets.”
Jenny's husband pulled out a rag and wiped his hands on it. “Auctions of people ain't seemly. Why don't you just talk quiet-like to folks? Or leave a notice tacked up, that's proper.”
“I recall an auction not twenty yards from here,” Mr. Robert said. “One of Brown's ships brought up a load
of rum and slaves from the islands. They must have sold thirty-five, forty people in two hours' time.”
“Rhode Island don't import slaves, not for two years now,” Jenny said.
“All the more reason why folks want to buy what I have to sell. I want this done quickly. I have other business to tend to.”
“Is that our problem, Bill?” Jenny asked her husband. “He says that like it's our problem.”
“Ease off, Jenny,” Bill said. “The girls look hungry. Why don't you take them to the kitchen?”
Jenny looked like she had plenty more to say to Mr. Robert, but she gave Ruth and me a quick glance and said, “Follow me.”
Mr. Robert grabbed my shoulder. “They've already eaten.”
“No charge,” Jenny said evenly. “I like feeding children.”
“Oh.” Mr. Robert released me. “Well then, that's different.”
Jenny closed the kitchen door behind her and motioned for Ruth and me to sit at the table in the middle of the room. A cauldron of stew hung above the fire in the hearth, and two fresh pies were cooling by the window.
“Eat first,” she said. “Then talk.”
She cut us slices of brown bread and ham and poured us both big mugs of cider. Ruth gulped hers down quick and held out her mug for more. Jenny smiled and refilled it. I made short work of the food, keeping one eye on the door in case Mr. Robert walked in. The back door to the kitchen was wide open to let in the breeze. Should I grab Ruth's hand and try to escape?
Jenny read my mind. “No sense in running.” She shook her head from side to side. “He'd find you right away.”
I scowled at my bread and took another bite.
“I'd help you if I could,” she said. “It'd be the least I could do for Dinah.”
I wasn't sure I had heard her right. “Pardon me, ma'am?”
“You're Dinah's girl. Knew you when you walked in the door.”
“You knew my mother?”
Jenny stirred the cauldron of stew. “Your mother and your father both. I held you when you were just a day old. I heard she passed away last year. My condolences.”
She cut two pieces from the apple pie and gave them to Ruth and me. “I was indentured when I was your age. Old Mister Malbone had five of us from Ireland, along with near thirty slaves. Worked us all just as hard, but after seven years, I could walk away, thank the Lord. Dinah was real friendly to me when I first got there, helped me get used to a new place, and people ordering me around.”
“I thought I knew you,” I said.
She smiled warmly and snatched a piece of apple from the pie plate. “You always were the best rememberer I ever saw. We used to make a game of it. Tell you a line to memorize, or a song. Didn't matter how much time passed, you'd have the whole thing in your mouth. Made your parents proud.”
A serving girl came through the door and the talk stopped. Once Jenny had loaded up her tray and sent her back out, she sat down next to me. “How did you come to be with that man?” she asked. “I thought you were at Miss Finch's place.”
I quickly explained the dizzy events of the last two days.
“There's no telling what happened to the lawyer,” Jenny said when I was finished. “Boston is a terrible confusionâfirst the King's army, and now Washington's.”
“What should I do?” I asked. The words came out louder than they should have.
Jenny gently covered my mouth with her hand. “Shhh,” she warned. “You got to use your head.”
I grabbed her hand. “Could you take us? Please? You knew Momma ⦔
She slowly pulled her hand from mine, shaking her head. “I'm sorry, Isabel. I dare not.”
“Butâ”
Bill opened the door and poked his head in. “He wants the girls. Best to hurry.”
A thin woman stood next to Mr. Robert. Her plum-colored gown was crisp and well sewn, and expensive lace trailed from the small cap on her head. She was perhaps five and forty years, with pale eyebrows and small eyes like apple seeds. A fading yellow bruise circled her right wrist like a bracelet.
She looked us over quickly. “Sisters?”
“Two for the price of one,” Mr. Robert said. “Hardest-working girls you'll ever own.”
“What's wrong with them?” the woman asked bluntly. “Why such a cheap price?”
Mr. Robert's snake smile widened. “My haste is your good fortune, madam. These girls were the servants of my late aunt, whose passing I mourn deeply. I must quickly conclude the matters of her estate. The recent unrest, you know.”
A man joined the woman, his eyes suspicious and flinty. He wore a red silk waistcoat under a snuff-colored coat with silver buttons, a starched linen shirt, and black breeches. The buckles on his boots were as big as my fists. “And what side do you take in the current situation, sir?” he asked. “Are you for the King or do you support rebellion?”
Conversation at nearby tables stopped as people listened in.
“I pledge myself to our rightful sovereign, the King, sir,” Mr. Robert said. “Washington and his rabble may have taken Boston, but that's the last thing they'll take.”
The stranger gave a little bow and introduced himself. “Elihu Lockton, at your service, sir. This is my wife, Anne.”
Mr. Robert bowed politely in return, ignoring the muttering at the table behind him. “May I offer you both some sup and drink that we might be better acquainted?”
They all sat, and Jenny swooped over to take their orders. Ruth and I stood with our backs against the wall as Mr. Robert and the Locktons ate and drank. I watched them close. The husband was a head taller and twice the girth of most men. His shoulders rounded forward and his neck seemed to pain him, for he often reached up to rub it. He said he was a merchant with business in Boston, New York, and Charleston, and complained about how much the Boston uprising cost him.