by Loni Lynne
“So those are the original barrels smuggled by the patriot cause during the Revolutionary War?” Camden breathed in awe. He’d read the historical articles. Actually, Dr. Moreland spoke excitedly about the findings in his classes. Knowing one of his brightest pupils, Dr. Branford-Miles had been in charge of the rare findings.
“Yes they are the exact ones. I am not as familiar with the actual history of the barrels as my wife, but I do believe the son of the tavern keeper at the time was one of the rascals calling themselves the Sons of Liberty. He was part of an illegal smuggling of rum from the West Indies during the triangle trade between England, the islands and the colonies, which avoided the English tax levied on the supplies. Put a burr up ol’ King George’s bottom…”
“Not to mention Parliament’s.” Camden answered.
“Yes, my father was none too happy about that! The old geezer,” Kenneth fussed, lost in thought.
“Your father?” Camden asked in confusion.
“Huh? What?” Kenneth shook himself out of his spell. “My father…well, he holds a grudge. As it was, being the descendent of one of the men who sat on the House of Lords at the time of the colonial fiasco, he…um, still feels that the colonies betrayed England…and…well…”
“I understand. It’s a family honor thing.”
“Yes…Exactly! That is it, my good man.” Kenneth laughed slightly, slapping him on the arm in a manly embrace. “Shall we make way to the pub for a pint?”
“Of course.”
Camden stopped short, remembering another article he’d read about the renovations of the springhouse. “Wasn’t there a report of finding skeletal remains when they unearthed the rum barrels?”
“Yes. They went to the Maryland Forensic Lab for examination.”
“There were rumors that they might’ve been the body of Millie Taylor the tavern wench who’d worked here during the late 1700s. Whatever became of the findings?”
Kenneth looked away momentarily as if contemplating the thought. “I think, if I remember correctly, the results of the findings were inconclusive. There was no true link.”
“Wow. Still, wouldn’t it be interesting if the walls or the original springhouse and cellar could talk? I wonder what secrets they might reveal.”
A sly smile danced across the millionaire’s face. “One never knows…but sometimes the mystery of the unknown is the most exciting part. Now let’s go see Millie for a pint, shall we?”
Chapter Five
“How are you and Mr. Phillips getting along?”
“Not,” Tonya replied, disgustedly blowing a curl of hair off of her brow as April reviewed her weekly report.
Each Friday morning, April wanted full reports on the updates of data and historical findings they’d discovered each week. Most of the time it was basic research into some local family history or archiving a piece of paperwork or journal from one of the big names in the Kings Mill social circles, someone of importance now or in the past.
The determined look over April’s reading spectacles hit her full force.
“He’s a pain.” Tonya sighed. “He’s a non-believer, not even wanting to give Miss Vickie a chance. We are talking about your great-aunt…the salt of the earth, the hostess with the mostess. He degraded her, her belief’s…”
“Tonya, I think you are exaggerating a bit. Not everybody is a believer. We have to accept that and be professional and polite. You were born with your gift and have accepted it whole-heartedly despite what your mother put you through when you were younger. You never wavered in your true beliefs. Not everyone is able to be so accepting.”
She sat forward in her chair. “But he saw the soldiers with his own eyes…and denies it.”
“Some people want to try and keep a scientific reasoning to what they saw. They are not ready to understand the truth. You need to be more accepting of his beliefs.”
“He doesn’t have any.”
“Then accept that he doesn’t. He’s here to study history, not ghosts.” April handed her back her report. “Speaking of which, according to his application Dr. Moreland sent me, Camden needs more Civil War research. I thought you could take him to Gettysburg.”
“Do you know what his paper is about? The Economics of the Civil War and Reconstruction. How blasé can you get?”
“Really, Tonya… Don’t be a downer.” April leaned across her desk in conspiracy. “Not everyone can have the connection to history that we possess. Can you imagine how boring it would be if everyone believed in the paranormal?”
“I guess we wouldn’t be so unique then, right?”
“Exactly.” April shut down her laptop and prepared for the end of the work week. “Now I am going to recommend that perhaps a trip up to Gettysburg this weekend be in order since Mr. Phillips isn’t familiar with the area, I thought it might be a nice gesture on your part to show him around.”
Tonya let out a breath. “I suppose you are not making a ‘suggestion’ as much as a ‘demand’?”
“Take it however you want. I’m not asking you to go out on a date with him. This is purely research. And since I hold the strings to your acceptance into William & Mary this fall…well, let’s just say, helping him out might be a good idea.”
“That’s blackmail, and you know it, April.”
She smiled, slinging her laptop bag and purse over her shoulder. “True. So true.” Her sing-song reply echoed merrily through the office as Tonya followed her out of the office and into the lobby. “See you Monday morning.”
Tonya grumbled, knowing she didn’t really have a choice if she wanted April’s recommendation letter to get her into the prestigious school. She dreaded facing Mr. Doubt-a-Lot but found a smidgen of courage to play nice and see if he wanted to go to Gettysburg with her this weekend.
#
“Will you look at this crap?” Camden pointed to yet another ghost tour shop as they traversed Steinwehr Ave. in Gettysburg. “Ghost tours. Anything to get people’s money and make them believe in ghosts. Ooooh.”
“Listen, I told you I was taking you here for research. If you don’t shut your yap, I will leave you to fend for yourself. Stop being an ass,” Tonya hissed under her breath as they passed a couple of visitors making arrangements for a ghost tour later that night.
She wished she’d had more time to prepare for her trip, but Camden had been offered an opportunity to work at the Mill over the weekend, so he’d suggested coming to Gettysburg after work. Tonya had planned on doing some meditation the next time she was in Gettysburg but hadn’t planned on taking anyone along with her. Maybe she could sneak off while he was busy.
Hunger had stopped them before they could start. It was relatively early in the afternoon since they only worked a half day on Fridays. Gettysburg was less than twenty minutes away from Kings Mill so it wasn’t far.
“Why don’t we grab a bite at the Springhouse Tavern before heading on over to catch a battlefield tour?”
Camden shrugged but followed her a half a block to the Dobbin House. One of the oldest buildings in Gettysburg was known for great food and the historic Underground Railroad hiding place in the upper part of the historical home. What Tonya preferred was the underground tavern with its natural rock walls, tallow candles, and great French Onion Soup.
They were between the lunch and dinner rush so it wasn’t a long wait. Seated in the wooden pew-like booths with rough-hewn tables, the only light came from flickering candles in colonial, spiral release, cast-iron holders. Their candle had burned down to a stub, dripping icicled wax formations that Tonya peeled off and fed to the fading flame, watching it drip hot wax into the liquid pool surrounding the pewter base.
“I’ll get you a new candle along with some drinks. What would you like?” the waitress in period colonial attire asked.
“Iced tea, sweet,” Camden said.
“We don’t do sweet tea, but you can add your own sugar.”
“That’s fine. I forgot I’m in the North,” he teased.
&
nbsp; “Lemonade for me, thank you,” Tonya ordered.
They ordered the French Onion Soup and the Adam’s Delight, a salad plate of fresh summer fruit, cheeses, and a sweet yogurt dip, with thick slabs of sweet date nut bread and cream cheese.
Talk was random and didn’t pertain to anything in general just going over what they’d been doing the past few days at work. Tonya didn’t want to bring up ghosts and Camden didn’t either. In general, not a bad afternoon meal. And Camden paid for their meals. She was hoping he wasn’t considering this a date, but she accepted his gesture.
They moved on to the Gettysburg Battlefield Visitor’s Center to catch a possible tour. Instead of the group tour, they decided on buying a CD and taking the auto tour themselves. Camden wasn’t able to do any research but was given references to contact for possible information.
It wasn’t a loss. They enjoyed the late afternoon and early evening, stopping along all the starred sites, listening to the narrator before getting out and exploring a bit on their own.
“So what exactly are you looking for in your research? We might be able to tell by the unit they were in as to where they might’ve been during the battle,” Tonya recommended.
“I don’t know. Never really thought about it.” He shrugged. “Maybe where the troops from South Carolina were fighting?”
“That’s always a good idea. Let me look it up.” Tonya searched the Internet on her phone while Camden walked around the rocky overlook of Devil’s Den. She managed to find some great leads.
“Any ideas?” Camden asked upon his return, wiping sweat away from his brow.
“According to two sites I checked out, General J.B. Kershaw was in charge of the South Carolina Brigade under Longstreet’s First Corps. Kershaw led the eighth, third, and second South Carolina charge against the Federal troops at the Peach Orchard.”
“Where is that?”
“It’s one of the next stops on our tour.” And one of the places Tonya had felt a unique connection to the last few times she’d been to Gettysburg. She wanted to have time to test a theory but wasn’t sure if she’d be able to with Camden around.
A few moments later, they arrived to the stop with a sign reading: The Peach Orchard.
“This is it?” Camden asked, looking around after reading the plaque describing the battle that had taken place upon the hallowed ground.
It wasn’t much, just an open field east of Emmitsburg Road, bearing a few barren peach trees that were basically decorative. But to Tonya, it wasn’t the trees she cared about.
“I’m heading back to the car. It’s too hot out and this isn’t what I hoped for,” he growled in frustration.
“Give me a minute. I want to check something out.” Tonya drifted off in the opposite direction, barely listening to Camden’s grumblings. Let him go. From where she’d parked her car, there was just enough of a rise in the field that hid her from view. He could go sit in the air conditioned car and play games on his phone. This was an opportunity she’d been waiting for.
Sitting cross-legged between a couple of gnarled old peach trees, she closed her eyes, focusing on one of the lessons Vickie had instructed her on when making connections with hallowed ground.
Breathing deeply, she let the late afternoon sun warm her body as she let her mind open to another dimension. Placing her hands on the prickly grass, she could hear the beating of her heart thumping loudly in her chest, echoing in her ears. She didn’t want to be in the middle of the battle that might be raging on but just to connect with one of the mortally wounded.
Her fingers dug into the hard earth, ripping up the dried grasses and turning the layers of dirt. Each motion brought forth another layer and another. Cool, moist dirt surrounded her digits. Her heart beat slowed, replaced by a faint echo of what sounded like a shot from a cannon, then another repeating seconds behind the first, but the shots seemed distant.
A part of her wanted to open her eyes and look around her, another part feared she’d be lost in another time. She couldn’t look. She knew she wasn’t allowed. This wasn’t her time.
A single male voice called out.
“Dear God in Heaven…”
“I’m here. I know you’re in pain. The pain will pass…let it be. Be at peace. Be at peace,” Tonya whispered fervently like a prayer to the agonized voice. She figured it to be a soldier from the battlefield. The consecrated earth beneath her was soaked with the blood of the wounded and dying… The blood over a hundred and fifty years still carrying the memories and energies of the men lost on this battlefield. “Take my hand. Let me help you to pass,” she urged.
Sure as the sun rises in the east, she felt a connection. The feathery touch of fingers clung to hers like a lifeline. She curled her fingers, still grounded in dirt to wrap around those seeking her.
“Tonya, where the hell did you go?”
Opening her eyes abruptly, Camden stood before her, incensed and confused.
“What are you doing? Oh puhleese don’t tell me you’re meditating out in a battlefield? Are you expecting to go back in time or something?” He snorted. “And here I was thinking we would be able to finally get along okay, and then this?” He gestured wildly to her position.
She didn’t say anything as she stood, slapped the dirt from her hands, and brushing off her shorts she walked passed Camden Phillips to her car. He followed and got into the passenger side.
Without speaking, they discontinued the auto tour. She pushed the eject button on the stereo and tossed the silver disc over her shoulder into the back seat and took off down Emmitsburg Road.
What an ass hat! The guy couldn’t even give her time to meditate and do her own thing. She’d made a connection, she knew she had and then he had to show up and ruin it. Tonya’s jaw tightened and she wanted so badly to just slam a solid fist into the side of Camden Phillips perfectly angular jaw.
Merging onto 15 South she checked her side and rearview mirror for traffic when sudden movement from the back seat had her slamming on the brakes and skidding to the shoulder before she could even merge.
“What? Are you going to make me get out and walk again?” Camden barked.
Tonya sat quietly, studying the rearview mirror momentarily before turning around and actually looking…
“What is this…thing?”
There, in the backseat was a strange, filth-covered man with a scraggly, matted red beard and dirty smeared clothing, examining the CD she’d tossed behind her only moments ago.
Camden turned around in shock. “Where the hell did the re-enactor come from?”
Tonya couldn’t speak. She was afraid to.
This couldn’t be happening…
“Who the fuck are you?” Camden asked. “And how did you sneak into our car?”
“Corporal Jared Evansworth of General Kershaw’s Third South Carolina Infantry and are you always so callous around gentle women?”
Chapter Six
Sitting silently and more than a little puzzled…oh hell who was he kidding, he was freaked out. Shock had taken a mental hold of him and shook him until his brain had rattled to a blank slate. He wasn’t even sure what Vickie and Tonya were discussing as the man, about his age in basic clothing from the mid-1800s, examined every item in the main room of the penthouse.
Unable to move, Camden watched as Jared kept opening and closing the French door styled refrigerator, trying to figure out if the light stayed on when he closed the doors. A curious push of the lever in the door and ice cubes tumbled out at his feet. Neither one of the ladies moved to stop his exploration, as they were lost in a series of verbally heated whispers and questions.
Finally when the ragged soldier tried to turn on the stove, watching the magic coils in the glass top heat up and burning his finger in the process, only then did Camden feel a need to keep the odd man from any real danger.
“That’s hot, dumb ass. It’s a stove…you know, it cooks food.”
“Where does the wood go?”
“It runs on
electricity. Um…a powerful current of energy created around the turn of the twentieth century. We use it to heat our homes, cook our food, and create light without candles.” Camden motioned to the classic Edison bulb fixtures Vickie had her house lit in. He went over to the light switch and turned it off and on.
“Where am I? How did I get here?” Jared asked, playing with the magic light switch.
“That is what we would like to know.” Vickie stepped forward and leaned over the breakfast bar separating the open kitchen from the rest of the main floor. “Can you tell us anything about what happened before you arrived in this time?”
“Time?” He shook his head. “I don’t understand.”
“What year is this?” Vickie asked.
“1863, July 2,” Jared answered without a doubt.
Vickie smiled and patted his filthy hand. “I’m afraid not, Jared. This is 2015. You’ve somehow managed to travel forward in time one hundred and fifty-two years.”
“How so?” He scrutinized Tonya. “You must be a witch then!”
“She’s not a witch.” Camden sighed, actually shocking himself for defending Tonya. The troubled, crestfallen look on her face when Jared had reacted made him want to protect her. This wild-looking man might do anything to her if he wanted.
“Then explain yourself.” He focused on Tonya. “Explain how you appeared out of nothing, sitting in front of me on that battlefield as I scouted out those damn Yanks for General Kershaw.”
“I…I…don’t know—”
“We are trying to figure that out,” Vickie added calmly. “But for now, no harm was done, so let’s sit down and see what we can do to help you.”
“Is he real? I mean, is he really…real?” Camden finally got up the nerve to ask.
“He’s as solid as you and I are.” Vickie shrugged scrutinizing Jared’s form. “I think we should contact April.”
Tonya dialed Dr. Miles on her cell phone.
“Oh yeah! That’s it. Explain to the historical director that we have an actual guy from the Civil War. She’s gonna laugh us right out of our internship.” Camden let out a crazed laugh as he paced. Tonya rolled her eyes and with one finger in her ear went to talk to April on the phone down the hall. “This is unbelievable. No one is going to believe this, least of all Dr. Miles.”