Home > An Uncommon Woman(11)

An Uncommon Woman(11)
Author: Laura Frantz

Zadock cut the string with a swipe of his new knife. Her eager fingers did the rest. Even Ma sighed with pleasure when Tessa held up a tiny vial. Toilette water? She’d heard of such among fancy folk. Uncorking it, she shut her eyes and breathed in a distillation of rose and lavender and something she couldn’t name amid her brothers’ chuckling. Though impractical, it made her heart sing and the rough-hewn log walls fade away.

She smiled her thanks, setting the tiny bottle on the table for all to see or pass around. But her brothers merely regarded it dismissively as if too manly to touch such. Next came something silvery. Shaped like an acorn, it fit in the palm of her hand, the initials of TS engraved on the shiny top. She looked at Jasper in question.

“Pocket grater,” he said. “Open it.”

She twisted it apart, finding a curious brown nut within.

“Nutmeg,” he told her, swiping Lemuel’s refilled tankard of cider.

To her astonishment, he grated a dusting of the russet brown atop the drink and bade her taste it. She did, brows arching. The fine spice elevated simple cider to the sublime.

“Brother spoils you,” Ross teased. “You won’t be worth a hoot and a holler ’fore long.”

The cider was passed round. A small bag of nutmegs was next, enough that she would not hoard the one. Dropping the grater into her pocket alongside the rag doll, she turned her attention to the final gift. Candlelight gave the creamy linen a special sheen. Finely sewn and flounced, the petticoat was a snowy marvel, more art than garment.

“Nary a cinder speck to be found,” Jasper remarked, reminding her of her hole-ridden garments from where the hearth fire threw sparks.

Leaning nearer, she kissed his bristled cheek. “All this took a passel of furs, I reckon.”

He shrugged broad shoulders, his mind clearly on another matter. “Heavily laden as I was, I took care to come the untrammeled way.” He lit his pipe, the fragrant smoke hinting of Tidewater tobacco from eastern Virginia. “Came upon a party of two men and two women near the north fork of Drowning Creek. They knew what they were about, leaving little trail. Though I tried, I could never catch up to them. The white woman in particular drew my notice. The white man I believe to be Colonel Tygart. I heard the black man in their party call him by name.”

“Tygart’s wed then?” Zadock looked surprised. “Bringing his bride to the wilderness?”

Tessa digested this, dismay hollowing out her middle. But why? Because she’d heard he was handsome. In his prime. Many a settlement maiden would be sorely disappointed. Ruth, foremost.

“If you’re here, then they’re there,” Cyrus surmised. The Swan homestead was south of Fort Tygart just a league.

“Reckon they’re causing a stir at the garrison then.” Lemuel lit his own pipe from his new tobacco pouch. “Makes me wish I was forting up for once.”

“Not me,” Ma said, pushing away from the table to clear the last of the supper dishes. “Good enough to see you safely home again, the door barred.”

Tessa set her disappointment over Tygart aside. In this circle of candlelight and kinship, Jasper’s return was gift enough.

The men continued talking in low tones as she took her new belongings to her corner. The flounced petticoat soon hung from a peg, the toilette water on the shelf. Already she wished for something more to dust with nutmeg. Gingerbread or warm milk or applesauce.

With all the fuss, sleep was long in coming. What had Jasper said about happening upon that party of four?

The white woman in particular drew my notice.

It wasn’t like him to say such a thing about a woman who might be another man’s wife. Yet no one questioned him about it. Something else begged considering. Jasper was unsettled by the woman, enough to mention her.

Why?

 

Leave it to Maddie to convince Keturah Braam to change garments before they entered Fort Tygart’s gates. Clay admired the way Maddie managed it. Slow and gentle-like, making much of the beadwork and fringe before wrapping the Lenape doeskin and trade cloth into a tidy little bundle hidden away in a saddlebag.

Thankfully, Maddie was skilled with a needle, fingers flying nimbly to remake her best dress into a garment the white woman would wear, without any sign of haste or secondhandedness.

Clay rued that the indigo cloth made Keturah’s eyes even bluer, the cut of the dress far more form-fitting than her looser Lenape garments. Biting his tongue till it nearly bled, he kept himself from reversing Maddie’s choice to cushion Keturah’s return to the white world.

No doubt shedding the Lenape clothing had cost Keturah something, yet she had consented. Still, her sunny braid hung unaltered to her hips, the center part of her hair painted Lenape red.

Once Fort Tygart’s gates swung open wide in welcome, a barrage of questions was sure to pepper them like buckshot. He, Maddie, and Jude would be all but invisible when the women-hungry men spied their comely captive.

His gaze swept across the heavily forested valley that led to the rocky bluff forming the foundation of the distant garrison. Compared to the sprawling Fort Pitt, Fort Tygart was in miniature. Yet four sturdy blockhouses stood at its far-flung corners, a few hats showing above the white oak pickets impaling the sky.

A welcoming volley of shots ushered them in. They’d been seen and now recognized by some who’d served under him prior. Those few men were firmly behind him. Others—strangers—would need proof of his authority. Mustering a militia and assigning spies to scout the woods would be the least of his challenges.

Though their horses went at a slow walk, they raised the dust. Aggravated by a south wind, it partially obscured the gates as they groaned open. Several men lifted two fingers to the battered brims of their hats as he rode past. Others gawked openly at Keturah Braam. She kept her eyes down, dismounting after he did but from the right side of her horse, Indian fashion. This surely did not go unnoticed either.

To Maddie he said quietly, “Take Miss Braam to the nearest empty cabin.”

Maddie nodded, gaze already roving the enclosure where twenty-odd cabins hugged the fort’s inner walls.

“Colonel Tygart, sir.” A burly, balding man extended a firm hand. “Glad you’ve arrived unimpeded.” His homespun clothes belied his cultured voice and vocabulary. “I’m Joseph Cutright, storekeeper.”

After shaking a good many hands, Clay made a short speech about the impressive appearance of the garrison and his priority of mustering the militia in hopes to spread the word that more hands were needed. Answering questions about the latest news from the east and Fort Pitt took time. Able to sum up a man quickly, Clay made quiet note of those who looked to be leaders before he took possession of the blockhouse.

After the sparseness of the trail, the edifice assumed a rosy glow. Smelling of green wood and chinking, its cavernous hearth bore a small cook fire, a kettle over the coals. An assortment of empty pots dressed the fieldstones. At the room’s center a trestle table and six rare Windsor chairs garnered his attention, but it was the hefty desk with its smooth walnut top and the nooks and crannies along the wide back wall that bespoke the commandant’s domain most of all. Upstairs were his sleeping quarters, gained by a wide set of roughly hewn steps.

“There’s a granny woman in the next cabin who’ll cook for you,” said Cutright. “Unless you brought your wife along . . .”

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