Cover
Title Page
The Discovered
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Tracy Winegar
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Omnific Publishing
Los Angeles
Copyright Information
The Discovered, Copyright © 2016 by Tracy Winegar
All Rights Reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without prior written permission of the publisher.
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Omnific Publishing
1901 Avenue of the Stars, 2nd Floor
Los Angeles, California 90067
www.omnificpublishing.com
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First Omnific eBook edition, January 2016
First Omnific trade paperback edition, January 2016
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The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
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Library of Congress Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
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Winegar, Tracy.
The Discovered / Tracy Winegar – 1st ed
ISBN: 978-1-623422-23-3
1. Civil War—Fiction. 2. Historical Romance—Fiction. 3. Union Troops—Fiction. 4. Female Soldiers—Fiction. I. Title
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Cover Design by Micha Stone and Amy Brokaw
Interior Book Design by Coreen Montagna
Dedication
For Ben.
Chapter 1
WHEN I LOOKED AT THE MAN feverishly taking notes, I could detect the incredulity on his face, and I could understand why. He was probably not accustomed to hearing stories like mine. I myself was sometimes amazed by it. I waited for him to finish writing, and then his eyes met mine with the most concerned of expressions. I knew he was eager to find out what happened next.
“You were discovered?”
I smiled. I had him hooked, and I liked the feeling of it. “Yes. After that, Sam knew I was a woman.”
“What did you do?”
“Well, Mr. Franklin, it was difficult to know what to do. The answers were not clear to me at the time. When you have woven such a tale and lived by it for so long, it feels as if your world has ended and the bottom has dropped out when someone finds out the truth. Back home in Richfield I knew who I was, I knew I was Serena. I was the daughter of Matthew and Rebecca Stark, the sister of Caleb Stark. I was to be a school teacher. I was to have my life play out in the small town known for its cheeses.
“Perhaps one day I would have married, maybe someone I might have been at least fond of. I don’t know if I could have loved him as I love Sampson Barlow, the mill owner’s son. But who’s to say that I might not have been content—an ordinary life for an ordinary girl.”
“An ordinary girl? You were no ordinary girl, ma’am,” he argued.
“I felt perfectly ordinary. And should I have chosen to stay in Richfield, I’m sure things would have transpired as they should have. I would’ve known nothing more than my small existence, and perhaps it would have suited me.”
“Yes, but that didn’t happen,” he pointed out. “Should have, would have, all conjecture. I’m interested in finding out what really happened, not the guesswork.”
“True. It wasn’t the path I chose. I took a different route entirely.”
“You intend to leave me in suspense?” he asked with a twinkle in his eye. He knew very well I wouldn’t. He must have surmised if I’d told him the beginning of my story then surely I would share with him the end. After all, old people are sentimental fools who long to leave something behind, even if it is nothing more than their humble stories.
Once again, I thought about how it was my brother who had determined my future. If he’d lived, then perhaps I would have been home instead of in that cherry orchard the night Sam learned my secret. If I were home, Mrs. Dilly would be getting supper, the fire on the hearth warm and inviting, the evening calm and still there on the farm, as the katydids hummed in the darkness. I would never have known the hardships of army life, or the horrors of battle. And I would never have grown close to Sam or spent the last eight months with him. But then I realized it was something I wouldn’t have traded for anything, despite my terrible predicament. Because my time spent with Sam was so precious to me.
If I had never gone to war, if I were with my father and mother over supper, Sam wouldn’t have discovered I had deceived him and betrayed him, that was true. I wouldn’t be wishing I’d never met him or fallen in love with him. I would’ve been in Richfield, and I’d have been safe from the dreadful emotions I was feeling. In exchange, I would have also given up the greatest adventure and the most meaningful relationship I’d ever experienced. What a high cost for peace of mind.
I thought it nothing short of a miracle I was not killed in that orchard. I couldn’t pretend to understand why, but God preserved my life. Just the right angle, the way the bullet struck me, and the ball from the Reb boy’s rifle bounced off of me like a rock skips over the water. It cut through my skin deep and terrible, making a trench big enough for my little finger to fit partially into, while it followed the route of my ribs, breaking a few of them as it ran its course.
Unfortunately I wanted nothing more than to die, and all it did was to cause me a great deal of discomfort. Had it pierced my heart, it would have done less damage. How would I go on humiliated and shamed as I was? If only it wasn’t Sam. If only it was some stranger I would never have to face again who found me out. For just under a year I was able to somehow conceal my real identity, to hide the fact I was a girl, Serena Elizabeth Ann Stark of Richfield, New York.
Now the keeper of my secret was the very person I’d struggled so hard to hide it from. Sam. Oh, Sam. He sat there in shock, in disbelief, and I was too frightened and in too much pain to do much more than put my arms across my chest to cover my nakedness. I lay on the ground unable to move. For a time it was quiet. Sam acted as though he was in a trance, and I did not dare disturb him.
With my eyes welling up with tears and unable to keep the emotion from my voice, I finally managed to murmur, “Sam…” The trance was broken. He cleared his throat and shook his head as if to empty it. The forlorn expression changed to determination. Sam pulled himself together and drew himself up.
“We must get you back to camp,” he said. Although his voice was a forced calm, there was a definite edge to it. He would not look at me. It was as if he were trying to appear unaffected by the revelation I was a girl, trying to behave as though he didn’t know or didn’t care. I attempted to move quickly to shut my shirt and hastily button it, but my body rebelled against me and I was forced to laboriously work at such a simple task through my pain.
He helped me up from the ground, but each movement was more excruciating than I thought possible. The pain radiated through me, spreading hot and insistent from my side and outward, taking my breath away. I cried out.
“Oh, oh! It hurts!” I groaned.
“I think you may have broken some ribs,” he said.
It was an awkward silence between the two of us. I couldn’t begin to imagine what he might be thinking, and I was in such pain and so troubled by what had just transpired I didn’t know what to say. I wished he would just leave me behind. I didn’t want to face what was to come.
Chapter 2
GETTING BACK TO CAMP was painfully slow progress. Each movement rendered such agony I thought I must be upon the threshold of death. Sam did not speak to me. He walked apart from me. It was suddenly as if we were strangers. The familiarity we’d had between us before was gone.
When we got back
to camp, Reed Haney called out a hello to us, his face fully visible next to the fire, although his eyebrows seemed to arch menacingly in the shadows it cast upon him. Sam gave him a little wave without really looking his way.
“Good evening, Reed.”
“What have you two been up to?” he asked.
“No good,” Sam joked, his chuckle sounding nervous and forced. Was it as obvious to Mr. Haney as it was to me? I certainly hoped not. With such poor theater skills as Sam’s, I would be found out for certain. I tried to keep moving, picking up my pace. This only brought on more unbearable pain.
“Is he all right?” Mr. Haney asked, motioning toward me with a nod of his head and looking me over with a suspicious eye. I was doing my best to act as normal as possible, although it hadn’t fooled him. “He don’t look good.”
“No, he’s not.” I immediately grew alarmed. Was Sam going to tell? But then he said, “Got hold of some cherries that weren’t ripe yet and ate a good lot of them before he realized it, so now he’s feeling mighty poorly.” At least it was something, a plausible excuse with only a moment’s notice. I had to give him credit.
“Ya don’t say,” Mr. Haney replied. “Well, now that will certainly do it.”
“I should get him back to his cabin,” Sam said.
“Well, good night to you,” Mr. Haney told us. “Hope you’re on the mend in no time, Frank.”
I couldn’t manage to reply. My concentration was occupied elsewhere. I spotted our shabby little cabin and trained my eyes upon it. Almost there, and yet it seemed so far away. Why must Mr. Haney keep talking? But to be honest, I was only vaguely aware of his and Sam’s conversation. It was difficult to keep my attention focused on anything but my pain and misery. My mind was racing.
“Good night,” Sam said, answering for me.
Sam made a beeline, with me close behind. He ducked in and I followed him, moaning at the discomfort of stooping over to get through the door. Such a sense of dread consumed me that I thought for a moment I should run. I didn’t want to be there, I didn’t want to be anywhere. I wanted to dissolve completely and totally from existence, erase the day of my birth, strike my name from the family Bible, and dissipate like salt in water. None of these things being an option, I stayed quiet and tried to keep from bursting into tears.
“Is it your side?” he asked me. I nodded my head yes. I could feel the sweat wetting my face, making my hands slick and damp, trickling down my back, leaving me chilled and uncomfortable. I wiped my forehead with the sleeve of my coat.
“May I have a look at it?” he asked. It seemed peculiar how polite he became with me, all of a sudden very proper. He was asking permission this time, not fumbling and fighting me as he had before. I hesitated. I didn’t feel it was proper at all for him to be examining me. But I really didn’t have a choice. I reluctantly nodded again.
“Can you take off your jacket?”
I unbuttoned the brass buttons with some difficulty, and he helped me shrug my arms out of it. I winced and muttered beneath my breath, “Oh, it hurts.”
As he pulled the jacket away, the chain on Caleb’s watch pulled loose and it tumbled from my pocket. Sam bent to retrieve it, dangling it before my eyes for my inspection. The silver casing was bent and warped, resembling the jam cookies my mother made when I was a child. She always let me press my thumb into the unbaked cookies before she would dollop a bit of raspberry jam into the well my print left in the dough. Like the cookies, it looked as if someone had pressed a thumb into the metal. I shuddered once I realized what I was seeing. The watch in my breast pocket, Caleb’s watch, had deflected the bullet. The injuries I sustained came after it collided with metal and ricocheted off. If it hadn’t been for the watch, I would surely be dead.
“Saved your life,” Sam commented. I took the watch from him and clutched it tightly in my fist, terrified anew by how closely I had come to my demise. I silently thanked God for sparing me.
I looked down at my side to the source of my pain. Where there should have been a growing and expanding stain of blood upon the white of my shirt, there was nothing but a small tear in the fabric and only a trace of red. He knelt down beside me, rolled my shirt up only enough to get a look at it, and pushed my suspenders out of the way. The cherries I’d stowed in my shirt tumbled to the ground.
It looked like someone had hit me, with a purple bruise the size of a man’s fist, and directly in the center of the discoloration was a brownish-red mark where the bullet burned my skin. He touched it gingerly with his fingers, inspecting it with a furrowed brow. I reacted by crying out in pain.
“Right there?” he asked, looking up at me.
“Yes,” I whispered, avoiding his eyes.
“Well, now, I still think it must be broken ribs,” he said. “We’ll have to wrap it.” He fished around for the bandages we used when his arm was injured after Salem Church. He brought them back.
“Might hurt a little,” he warned me. He slipped the suspenders off of my shoulders completely where they now hung slack from my waist, and I held up my shirt for him while he worked on me. His hands brushed against my skin as he held the bandage to my torso and then spun it around my rib cage, binding it good and tight.
“Ouch!” I cried. Sam winced, as though he felt the pain too.
“Sorry, but there’s nothing more to be done for it,” he said. “It’s a miracle you aren’t dead.” He finished his work and then asked, “Does it feel all right?” I nodded again, even though it didn’t. I wasn’t about to complain.
“I keep wanting to call you Frank,” he said cocking his head to the side and looking at me through narrowed eyes. “But that ain’t your name, is it?”
“No,” I admitted.
“You are Serena, aren’t you?” he said, as if it had just dawned on him. I suppose it wasn’t difficult to put it all together once he knew I was a girl. The cousin Frank no one knew about until the day we left Camp Schuyler, the letters to Serena from my father, Serena the sister of his good friend, the nurse he never crossed paths with. Perhaps he may have even had some vague recollection of me from before all of this, some glimmer of recognition that sparked a memory.
It took me by surprise he even knew my name at all. These many months I would have done anything to hear him call me by my given name. For once I wished he would forget who I was altogether. The thought of getting up and running away popped into my head again. If only I could get away from here and just keep going and never stop. I felt the walls closing in. I found it difficult to breathe, to expand my chest and fill my lungs. I began to panic.
“I can’t breathe…” I whispered.
“Does it hurt to breathe?”
I nodded. The less I spoke the better.
“Just try to relax,” he coaxed. “Perhaps I should fetch a doctor.”
That’s when the real alarm set in. I shook my head violently.
“No! No! You mustn’t!” I begged. “No one else must know. If they should discover me, it will be the end of me!”
“All right,” he tried to calm me. “All right.”
“Please, Sam, you must promise me,” I pleaded. “You mustn’t tell anyone.”
Chapter 3
I SWALLOWED HARD, watching him with wide eyes. If he knew, then he had a duty to report me. It was as simple as that. But I dared to hope it was not his intention to tell on me.
“It’s you isn’t it?” he asked. “Isn’t it, Serena?”
“I suppose you are very cross with me,” I managed to say.
“I am surprised,” he replied. “I’m not sure what I think.”
“Sam, you must not tell anyone,” I began again.
“You shouldn’t be here.” He said it with a calm conviction that made me feel sick. All of the blood drained from my face, and I thought I might faint for a moment. If he felt that way about it, then I might not be able to talk him out of telling on me.
“But I am here. And if you tell anyone about me…Well, I should forever after
live in disgrace. I would be sent home dishonored and everyone will know. That isn’t something a girl could ever hope to live down. Do you see?”
“What have you done?” He was not only sober but seemed sad too. It made me feel terrible, knowing I was the cause of his problems. All this time I talked myself into believing I was doing him a service, I was making his life easier, and I had carried on as a boy for him. I suddenly realized I didn’t do it for him at all. I did it for me, for myself. My motivation was completely selfish. I put him in a compromising position on account of what I’d done because I cared about me, about what I wanted.
“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean for this to happen. I certainly didn’t mean to put our friendship at risk. But you must swear to me you’ll tell no one.”
“I can’t make such a promise.”
What would I do? What would I do if he told on me? But he couldn’t. He wouldn’t. I would never have any kind of a life if he decided to report me. The future played out in my brain, and I could see no matter what was to become of me, it would not end well. It would be a tragedy, nothing less—forever after leaving a trail of gossips with their tongues wagging in my wake. I was positive I would never find a decent gentleman who would take me for a wife. What’s worse is that my father and mother would pay for it too. They would not escape the repercussions of my poor decision.
“If you have any sort of loyalty to me as a friend at all, you will at least think it over before you do something rash,” I said, my voice shaking with emotion. “If you cannot promise me you won’t tell, then promise me you won’t do it right away. That you’ll think of the consequences before you do anything.”
“How did you do it?” he asked, changing the topic of discussion completely. And he still didn’t promise me anything.
“What do you mean?”
“All this time. I look back, and well, I noticed peculiar things, but I thought it was on account of your youth and your inexperience in the world, and because you had no father.” I gave him a look I was sure was filled with chagrin. “The way you put on stockings…”
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