[Troublesome Creek 01] - Troublesome Creek (42 page)

BOOK: [Troublesome Creek 01] - Troublesome Creek
4.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
She sighed and took a sip of her tea before walking to her room. The air was frigid when she opened the door, so she left it cracked and hurried to her bedside table. She pulled the drawer open and pushed aside the gift Simon had sent her for Christmas—a heart-shaped locket—then retrieved a bundle of unopened letters tied with pink ribbon. What to do, what to do? She knew if she read just one page the decision would no longer be hers to make, for Simon stirred her senses and weakened her resolve without even being present.
Between Mam and her dresses and Simon and his missives, she felt bombarded with the desires of others, and she wanted to be true to herself. Wasn’t that what was ultimately the most important thing? To be true to oneself? She held the little packet of his correspondence pressed to her chest, the weight of his words like a stone on her heart.
Across the room under her brothers’ bed she could see the ends of two trunks. One was hers. It was nearly full of frilly under-things, gowns, wrappers, slips, and several new dresses, not to mention shoes and hose. The other trunk was her family’s, making ready for their departure to Philadelphia. If she was married they wouldn’t need to wait until she turned eighteen. Copper knew Mam hoped to move and get the family settled before a new school term started in the fall. If she didn’t marry, she would disappoint Mam greatly. If she did, she might disappoint herself.
Copper tapped the unopened letter against her chin thoughtfully, then put it on top of the others and secured them all with the silky pink ribbon. She took up the locket. Its fine gold chain was twisted around the basket necklace John had carved for her. She unknotted it and warmed the precious metal in her hands, then pushed the little clasp. The locket sprang open, and Simon looked out at her. She traced his dark mustache with one finger. He was so handsome. A tear started in the corner of her eye.
Leaning across the bed, she pulled aside the heavy curtain Mam had fashioned to keep out drafts. It was almost dusk. She’d have to hurry to get the milking done before supper. Sitting on the edge of the bed, she put on her scratchy woolen stockings. The sound of Daddy’s laugh made her smile. The oven door creaked, and she smelled corn bread and brown beans, saw in her mind’s eye her family gathering around the table, heads bent and hands clasped. But she didn’t see herself there.
She missed them already.
 
“Laura Grace. Laura Grace.”
Copper was curled under her quilts, toasty warm in her bed. She didn’t want to wake up, but Mam shook her shoulder persistently.
“What? What is it, Mam?”
“Your father’s ill. Come and help me.”
She struggled out of the nest of blankets, Willy and Daniel curled on either side. She hadn’t even noticed when they’d snuck into her bed.
What did Mam say? Daddy’s sick? Probably just that cough again.
Her long white nightdress flapped around her as she hurried to their room.
He lay back against the pillow, heaving for breath. She could hear the whistle of his lungs.
“Mam, help me set him up. He’s smothering.”
They wrestled him up and stuffed the pillow bolster behind his back. Copper put her ear to his chest. She could hear a gurgling and feel heat against her cheek. “I’ll be right back.”
She ran to her bed and reached under the mattress for the medical book she kept secreted there. The boys didn’t even stir. She thumbed it as she hurried back to Daddy. “I’d guess he’s got pneumonia, Mam.”
Mam’s hand flew to her throat. “Oh no, Laura Grace. What can we do? Who will help us?”
Copper held up her hand, palm out. “Just a minute.” She turned up the lamp wick and studied a few pages. “Mam, go heat some water.” She heard the clanging of the heavy iron teakettle as she knelt on the bed. “Daddy! Wake up. Can you hear me?”
He wheezed and strangled but opened his eyes. “Cop . . .” He struggled. “My remedy.”
She bustled into the kitchen and pulled on her boots.
“Where are you going?” Mam asked. “What are you going to do?”
“Squeeze a lemon and measure out some molasses,” Copper directed. “I’ll be right back.”
The clouds had lifted, and a million sparkling stars greeted her run across the barnyard. The cold, clean air seared her lungs as the wind whipped around her. She pushed the barn door open and stood for a moment, orienting herself. Where had she seen that jar? The grain box. Tucked way down inside, the little gray jug was buried in the cow’s feed.
The kettle whistled on the stove and Mam was piercing the lemon with a sharp knife when Copper stepped back inside the house.
“What is that?” Mam asked. “Where did you get—?”
Copper plunked the jug on the table and pushed out the little cork with her thumb. The tang of spirits stung the air. “Corn liquor, Mam. Uncle Daniel makes a little now and then. Daddy takes it for his cough.” She poured a dollop into an ironstone mug, followed by a squeeze of lemon and a tablespoon of molasses. After that, she topped it off with a measure of boiling water. “Bring the footbath in. We’ll want to soak his feet to break the fever.”
Mam caressed her right temple, a look of pain clouding her features.
“Mam!” Copper demanded, seeing the familiar hesitation. “Get the footbath.”
“I’m sorry,” Mam replied. “It’s just that I can’t bear sickness.”
“That’s all right,” Copper said, taking pity. “Just help me—
I know what to do.” And she did. Copper had cared for every sick and injured animal that had dragged itself her way since she was a child. Not to mention caring for all the twins’ various ailments. It was her gift to make people feel better.
It took both of them to hold him upright and put his feet in the hot water. His hand trembled and the medicine sloshed out. Copper steadied the mug, and he gulped a long drink. “Get a clean shirt, Mam. We’ve got to keep him warm and dry.”
She turned her head and held her father steady, while Mam slipped the wet garment off and replaced it with the flannel gown she’d made him for Christmas.
“Okay, he’s starting to sweat,” Copper said a moment later. “Let’s get him covered up.”
They eased him back against the bolster and pulled the quilts around his shoulders.
“I’ll warm a blanket,” Mam said, her voice shaking.
Copper followed her into the kitchen. Mam put lumps of coal on the grate and laid a folded woolen blanket on the hearth. Rummaging in the pantry, Copper felt a cold sweat of fear break out on her forehead. When had Daddy last been sick? Seemed like just a few weeks ago. His cough was much worse than usual this winter . Had he lost weight? Finding the tin of salve they used when one of the boys had the croup, she pried it open with a butter knife. Mixing a tablespoon-size dollop of the camphor salve with a slug of kerosene, she smeared it on a piece of red flannel rag warmed by the fire.
“Here, Mam. Put this on his chest.” They could hear a deep, rumbling cough from the bedroom. “I’ll bring the blanket.”
The salve must have helped because he slept the rest of the night. Copper’s fear abated, and she grew confident that he would recover quickly. He’d probably just had a bad cold. . . .
But in the morning her father didn’t get up.
“I’m just feeling a little puny,” he said around a frog in his throat. “I’ll be fine tomorrow.”
Anxious to keep him comfortable, Copper and Mam moved the twins’ narrow bed out in front of the fireplace, and he slept there wrapped in quilts and the wool blanket. He slept and slept, and every time he woke Mam fed him more of the medicine Copper had made.
Copper carried in the wood and coal to heat the house, hauled buckets of water from the well, and fed the animals. Everything in the house felt strange with Daddy laid up. It felt like someone had sucked the air out so she could hardly catch her breath.
 
The third night was the longest. Mam was sitting up and Copper was dozing, enjoying the warmth provided by her sleeping brothers’ sturdy little bodies, when Copper heard the front door slam against the wall followed by Mam’s short, high scream. Copper jumped up.
Mam stood by Daddy’s borrowed bed, her eyes round with fright, her Bible splayed across her chest. The door stood open; a wild icy gale howled into the room. It was the middle of winter, but still lightning flashed across the black sky and thunder shook the window glass. Daddy slept on.
Copper crossed the room and pushed the door closed against a strange fierce weight. She leaned her back against it.
“It’s just the wind, Mam. The wind blew the door open.” But she took the seldom-used key from where it hung on the jamb and twisted it in the lock. “There.”
Mam stood by her chair, trembling. Her long, graying hair hung in a plait over her shoulder. “I thought . . . I thought . . .” She reached out her hand toward Copper.
“He’s all right, Mam. See, he’s just sleeping.” Copper struggled to keep her own fear at bay, knowing she had to be strong enough for both of them. The last thing she needed was for Mam to get the vapors now. “Do you have any of that resting powder Dr. Corbett left for you?”
“Just a little, but I couldn’t. I shouldn’t leave him.”
“He’s breathing easy, Mam. I’ll sit with him.”
Copper fetched the little paper packet and mixed a drink. Mam took it straight down, then went to sleep in Copper’s bed. “Call me,” she said from the doorway. “Call if he needs me.”
Copper settled in the chair beside her father’s bed. He didn’t seem any worse, and his breathing was unlabored. She propped her feet under his covers and opened the book she’d kept hidden under her mattress for years:
Dr. Chase’s Family Physician, Farrier, Bee-keeper, and Second Receipt Book
. She’d discovered it and pulled it from the bookcase one day years ago, when she was dusting. Even though Mam had fixed the whole top shelf for her with storybooks and nature studies, Copper had still reached for the forbidden shelves Mam had warned her not to touch. Her favorite had been Dr. Chase’s medical book, and she had slipped it out every chance she got—until one day when Mam caught her with it and had a fit. She’d jerked it out of Copper’s hands and whacked her legs good with a yardstick.
The next time Copper had dusted, there was the book in its rightful place, but with many pages missing. It was just about the worst thing Copper could think of, destroying a book. So she’d stolen it. She put another volume in its place, and Mam never missed it. Copper had slept on the lump of it from then on.
She shook her head now at the memory, then turned down the lamp and dozed awhile, Dr. Chase’s writings and ramblings open on her lap.
She woke with a crick in her neck when the clock struck 3 a.m. The fire was dying down so she stoked the embers and put more chunks of coal on it, then decided to make herself a cup of tea. She’d hung the teakettle in the fireplace earlier, so it wouldn’t take but a minute for the water to heat. She put some black tea leaves in a tea ball, set it in her cup, and was reaching for the kettle when Daddy started choking.
He coughed and gagged, sucking in air as if he were drowning. She rushed back to his bedside and held a rag to his mouth as he retched into it.
“Feels better,” he wheezed. “Something stuck in my throat.”
“Do you want some more medicine, Daddy? or something to eat? What if I make you an egg?”

Other books

Liza by Irene Carr
Flying High by Titania Woods
Compulsively Mr. Darcy by Nina Benneton
Afterlife by Merrie Destefano
Millionaire Teacher by Andrew Hallam
Kill Your Friends by John Niven
Waiting for the Electricity by Christina Nichol