Rhett Butler's people (24 page)

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Authors: Donald McCaig

BOOK: Rhett Butler's people
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"Swooning at your feet?"

"A sad lot. One poor soul was the wife of the worst officer I've ever commanded. I lied shamelessly. By the time I finished singing Major Wilkes's praises, he was more vital to the Cause than Lee himself."

Andrew caressed the soft skin on the back of Rosemary's hand: an exquisite touch on the boundary between pleasure and pain. "But Rosemary, here I am describing tiresome people with the loveliest woman in Charleston at my side."

Rosemary recaptured her hand and sat up straight. "You forget I am a wife and mother, Andrew."

"Why, so you are. That is as it should be. Happy mother, satisfied wife."

As they rolled past the burnt district's ruined homes and churches, Andrew recaptured her hand. "Remember how it feels when you take a good

148

horse over the jump, that instant when you trust the horse, give it its head, and it sails up and up, as if you are sailing into the blue, and you know in the next second, you are immortal. Do you remember, Rosemary, how it feels to be immortal?"

Rosemary spoke ever so softly. "No ..."

"We soldiers scurry and wait and suffer saddle sores and weather and awful food, and some days if it weren't for Cassius's banjo, I swear we'd all desert to the enemy. But one morning, we meet our foe in all his awful glory, and in that moment time stands still. Rosemary, isn't this your house? May I come in?"

"Yes," Rosemary said.

Servants know everything. Servants change rumpled bedclothes, and scrub undergarments; they hear ecstatic cries behind closed doors.

Next morning, Cleo told Cook, "That Colonel fellow, he get to the withdrawing room, but he never got past it, and when it looked like he was a-goin' to, Miss Rosemary, she ask me bring Miss Meg down so the colonel could admire her. Little Meg don't take to him. No she don't. The child starts a-carryin' on and a-kickin' her feet, so Miss Rosemary takes her off, and though the Colonel, he waits in the withdrawing room for near an hour, Miss Rosemary never come back."

Disappointed, Cook said, "They didn't do nothin'?"

"Oh that Colonel, he surely wanted to do somethin'. He was like a stallion prancin' 'round a mare, snufflin' and showin' his teeth, and might be Miss Rosemary wanted to, too, but God tell her, 'Don't you dare! Keep yourself for your husband!' Good thing that Colonel din't look at me the way he look at Miss Rosemary, 'cause I swear I never seen no handsomer man."

Cook shook her head, "Nothin'?" She brightened, "I'd wager the white folks will think they did."

Andrew strode rapidly down the Battery, taking no notice of those who recognized him. Cassius trotted beside him. Although Andrew banged the door knocker of the Fisher mansion, it

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was some time before his wife, Charlotte, came to the door. "Andrew!" she gasped. "You're home. I've prayed -- "

Andrew brushed by her, waved Cassius inside, and slammed the door on all the world. "Where's the damned houseman? I was knocking forever!"

Charlotte's smile flickered. "I had no idea you were coming.... Oh God ... so very glad ..." Charlotte hurled herself into his arms and kissed him full and hungrily on the lips. Charlotte pushed him to arm's length, the better to drink him in. "Are you home, then, dear husband? Are you truly home?"

The hall was dim, the tables and chairs shrouded. Overhead, the unlit chandelier glittered like icicles. Andrew shivered.

"Juliet and I don't heat the front of the house anymore," Charlotte explained. "We're living in the family room."

"But, the servants ... surely ..."

"Dear me, Andrew. They're gone. Jolly and Ben and Martha ran away. When our negroes reach Yankee lines, the Yankees emancipate them." She glared at Cassius. "You won't run away, will you?"

"Oh no, Missus. I'ze a good nigger."

Andrew sent him away.

Charlotte said, "Juliet will be so glad to see you. She's gone to the market. There is still food to be had, but it is frightfully dear."

The family room's windows looked out on the winter garden. Formerly, this had been where children did their lessons and Fisher women could undo their stays and drink a cup of tea. Grandmother Fisher had always taken breakfast here.

Now, Charlotte's and Juliet's pallets flanked a four-plate cookstove, and the long table had been pushed against the window wall to serve as pantry, bearing enameled canisters, graduated from largest to smallest, and a five-gallon cask beside the Portland clock from Grandmother Fisher's office.

Charlotte stuffed wood into the stove. "We'll have a nice cup of tea, Andrew. Unless ... if you'd rather -- we've so much brandy and wine. Juliet and I haven't made a

dentin

Grandmother's wine cellar."

"Tea will be fine."

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As if Andrew were a luxury she couldn't get enough of, Charlotte didn't take her eyes off her husband. She filled her kettle from the cask, chattering all the while. "We draw water from the cistern every morning, so we have water all day. Juliet and I take turns carrying it in. Oh Andrew, I am so glad you're home!"

Wisps of smoke squirted from the stove grates.

"Charlotte, dear Charlotte ... I have something to tell you...."

"Yes dear?" Charlotte splashed water on the stove. Smoke poured from the grates as water beaded and popped. "Oh dear, what have I done?"

Andrew opened the damper. "I'm afraid you smothered your fire."

Coughing, Charlotte opened windows to let the smoke escape. "Oh Andrew, I'm sorry I'm useless. I'm the worst domestic on earth. We ladies were never expected to know how to start a fire or cook our supper or make our own beds. I'm sorry to be so helpless!"

Andrew took the kettle from her and set it on the quieted stove.

"Sit down, Charlotte. Please, just for a minute. You don't need to do anything now. Tomorrow, I'll buy new servants."

"But Andrew ... Just as I start to get to know them, they'll run away."

He straddled a bench. "Please, Charlotte. Do sit down. We'll talk about servants later. I have a confession."

Charlotte's happiness became alarm. She sat slowly.

"When Juliet comes home today, she will have news of ... of ... a new scandal."

"Scandal? Dear Andrew; you just got here. You haven't had time for a scandal!"

"Rosemary and I ..."

Charlotte's lips firmed. "No, Andrew. Not Rosemary. Rosemary's marriage -- well, it isn't everything she wanted, but Rosemary wouldn't hurt me! Not... not... Not again!"

Andrew touched his heart. "I was rash, Charlotte. I was alone with Rosemary in her home. I was careless of her -- of

your

reputation. But I swear before God that nothing happened."

Charlotte sagged. She moistened her lips. "Rosemary was always prettier than I. Everybody loved Rosemary even when we were little girls. Andrew,

151

I know you have not always been faithful to me. Don't lie to me now. Please ..."

Andrew's eyes tried to reassure her.

"I would particularly hate it if you betrayed me with Rosemary. I don't know if I could live on if you betrayed me with Rosemary."

He took his wife's unresisting hand. "Charlotte, dearest. On my honor, I did not."

Charlotte considered her husband while a minute ticked by before she rose and slid the kettle to the back of the stove. "Then that's settled."

"Rosemary ..."

She tapped his lips "Hush," she said, "I believe you, Andrew. I have always believed you. Please go down to the cellar and fetch a bottle of champagne. It's been so long since we had occasion to celebrate."

As Andrew had predicted, Juliet Ravanel learned Rosemary Haynes and her brother had spent two hours alone together. Her informant's eyes gleamed with malicious pleasure. Inadvertently, Juliet fanned the very fires she intended to damp when she snapped, "Dear, what could Andrew and Rosemary have possibly done in that short time?"

You may imagine what Charleston's wits made of that.

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Chapter

Chapter Fifteen

A Child's Refuge

Fruiting wood glistened pink and bluebirds fluttered in Pittypat's garden. After the springtime roads were firm, the mighty Federal juggernaut would head south to crush the Confederate nation, and Major Ashley Wilkes was with the ragtag army that would confront it.

Without mentioning their prayers to one another, Pittypat, Melanie, and Scarlett prayed separately for Ashley first thing on waking and last thing before sleep.

On April 29, 77,000 Federal infantry and 3,000 cavalry crossed Virginia's Rappahannock River on the five pontoon bridges General Joseph ("Fighting Joe") Hooker had constructed.

General Lee's forty thousand met them in a scrub forest near Chancellorsville.

Fighting Joe boasted, "I've got Lee just where I want him."

Six bloody days later, an ashen-faced Abraham Lincoln learned of Hooker's army's destruction. "My God, my God," the President whispered, "what will the country say? What will the country say?"

In mid-May, Melanie was in the kitchen placing crab-apple cuttings in a vase when Uncle Peter answered the front door. Scarlett was at the breakfast table, stirring oatmeal she claimed "wasn't fit for horses."

Uncle Peter popped in to announce, "Mr. Tarleton in the parlor, Misses." Scarlett gasped, "Tarleton? Which Tarleton?"

153

The grinning soldier wore a Federal officer's coat, dyed butternut and reenlisted in Confederate service.

"Why, Brent Tarleton." Scarlett smiled at the young man who had been one of her most ardent suitors. "Lordy, it's good to see you."

"Miss Scarlett!" Spontaneously, the young man dropped to one knee. "Marry me!"

Scarlett picked up her cue and fluttered girlishly. "But sir," she cried dramatically, "aren't you plighted to my own dear sister Careen?"

"Hang Careen!" Brent's gesture consigned Scarlett's sister to the rubbish heap. His bright eyes were wide and happy. "You cannot refuse me this time, Miss Scarlett!" The young soldier's too-serious mien faltered. His mouth twitched and he burst into laughter, which the delighted Scarlett joined in. Brent brushed his trouser knee. "Dear Scarlett! Were we ever so young as all that?"

She shook her head. "I'm not sure I remember." Scarlett took the soldier's hands fondly. "Brent, you are a dear boy and it's wonderful seeing you again. Tell me, how are your brothers?"

"Well, Boyd's a captain now and my feckless twin, Stuart,

was

a sergeant until he punched our lieutenant. Somebody had to punch him, and Stuart won the toss." Brent patted his breast pocket, "I have here a letter from Private Stuart Tarleton to Miss India Wilkes. It is a rare curiosity -- the first letter Stuart ever wrote to anyone! Brother Boyd's in the infirmary with soldier's disease and brother Tom is lazing about on General Ewell's staff; we tease him unmercifully."

"Ashley?" Melanie put in eagerly.

"Your husband's fit as a fiddle, ma'am." Brent dove into his pocket for a thick packet. "Major Wilkes is more accustomed to letter writing than brother Stuart."

When Melanie took Ashley's precious letters, she shivered as at her husband's touch.

Brent Tarleton had been furloughed for the spring planting.

Melanie breathed, "Might Ashley be coming home, too?"

"Reckon not, ma'am. I reckon the army don't need Brent Tarleton bad as it needs Major Wilkes."

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"Then I must be so grateful for his letters." Melanie swallowed her disappointment. "Won't you take breakfast with us? It's only oatmeal, but we have maple syrup yet."

"If you don't eat, Pitty's horse gets it," Scarlett said.

"Ma'am, I'm obliged to you, but I got to get on home. I've been thinking on Miss Careen." He fingered his officer's coat. "Do you think Ca-reen'd want a Yankee's sword for a souvenir? I could've brought one, but I thought maybe she wouldn't care for it."

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