Also by Michaela MacColl
Always Emily
Nobody’s Secret
Promise the Night
Prisoners in the Palace
In memory of my dear friend,
Catherine Topp Amon
(1957 – 2014)
All quotations are from Little Women by Louisa May Alcott.
Copyright © 2015 by Michaela MacColl.
Jacket photograph, woods, copyright © by Mark Owen/Trevillion Images.
Jacket photograph, girl, copyright © by Susan Fox/Trevillion Images.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form
without written permission from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
MacColl, Michaela, author.
The revelation of Louisa May : a novel of intrigue and romance / by Michaela MacColl.
pages cm
Summary: Louisa May Alcott has problems–her mother is taking a job over a hundred miles away to earn some money, leaving to it to Louisa to care for the family, her father refuses to work for money, a fugitive slave is seeking refuge in their house, and a slave catcher has been murdered, making the Underground Railroad much more dangerous.
ISBN 978-1-4521-3357-7 (alk. paper)
ISBN 978-1-4521-3801-5 (epub, mobi)
1. Alcott, Louisa May, 1832-1888–Juvenile fiction. 2. Underground Railroad–Massachusetts–Juvenile fiction. 3. Fugitive slaves–United States–History–19th century–Juvenile fiction. 4. Families–Massachusetts–Concord–Juvenile fiction. 5. Murder–Massachusetts–Concord–Juvenile fiction. 6. Concord (Mass.)–History–19th century–Juvenile fiction. [1. Alcott, Louisa May, 1832-1888–Fiction. 2. Underground Railroad–Fiction. 3. Fugitive slaves–Fiction. 4. Slavery–Fiction. 5. Family life–Massachusetts–Concord–Fiction. 6. Murder–Fiction. 7. Concord (Mass.)–History–19th century–Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.M13384Re 2015
813.6--dc23
2014028073
Design by Sara Schneider.
Typeset in Hoefler Text, Copperplate, and Shelley Allegro.
Chronicle Books LLC
680 Second Street
San Francisco, CA 94107
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CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE 1
CHAPTER TWO 10
CHAPTER THREE 19
CHAPTER FOUR 34
CHAPTER FIVE 48
CHAPTER SIX 61
CHAPTER SEVEN 74
CHAPTER EIGHT 86
CHAPTER NINE 94
CHAPTER TEN 103
CHAPTER ELEVEN 116
CHAPTER TWELVE 129
CHAPTER THIRTEEN 137
CHAPTER FOURTEEN 151
CHAPTER FIFTEEN 161
CHAPTER SIXTEEN 170
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN 181
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN 190
CHAPTER NINETEEN 200
CHAPTER TWENTY 213
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE 225
EPILOGUE THREE MONTHS LATER 236
AUTHOR’S NOTE 238
FURTHER READING 247
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 249
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
CHAPTER ONE
“Don’t you wish we had the money papa
lost when we were little, Jo?
Dear me! How happy and good we’d be,
if we had no worries!”
You’re leaving me?”
Her father’s words floated through the cracks in the door.
Louisa stifled a cry. Marmee would never leave them. Through all their suffering, the one constant was that the family must and would stay together.
Abandoning her desk, Louisa pressed her ear to the door that led to the parlor. She strained to hear her mother’s answer.
“Bronson, you’ve left me no choice.” Marmee’s voice was tight, as though her vocal cords had been wrung like a wet rag.
Louisa opened the door with one finger, just a bit, to see her mother pacing back and forth across the narrow parlor. With a ripple of shock, Louisa noticed that Marmee’s dark gray-streaked hair had come loose from her bun. Louisa stroked one of her own untidy braids in solidarity.
“I can’t economize any more,” Marmee said. “We’ve used up our credit in every shop in Concord. We can’t afford to stay in this house or buy necessaries for the children.” Her voice grew stronger, then faded as she paced away from the door. “If you won’t work for money, I shall have to. It’s a good job. They want me to run the hotel and manage the water cures.”
Craning her neck, Louisa could just make out her father’s face, as handsome and stubborn as ever. But his voice shook as he said, “It’s so far. Waterford is a hundred and fifty miles away. What if the children need you?” Father was reclining on the comfortable sofa, his hands interlaced behind his gray-streaked blond head, his long legs stretched out in front of him. But his indifference was a pose; he would be lost without Marmee. They all would be.
“What the children need is to go to school,” Marmee said. “But we can’t afford it.”
“Bah! What better teachers could they have besides me, Emerson, and Thoreau?” he asked with his usual confidence. “Millionaires would pay a fortune for their children to have such an education.”
“But their education, such as it is, lacks method and discipline.”
“All the better!” Bronson exclaimed. “You know my methods. Our children thrive without the confines of a schoolroom and a harsh schoolmaster.”
“Anna is only seventeen and she has to work for her living far from home. And what about Louisa? She should be going to parties and enjoying herself, as I did when I was her age.” Poor Marmee—her voice was so tired and discouraged.
“When I was their age I was working on the farm,” Bronson argued.
“But I enjoyed Boston’s finest society, going to the theater and to parties. I want the girls to have some fun in their lives.”
Huddled against the door, Louisa slid down to the floor and sighed. She definitely would prefer the theater to working for a living. Louisa knew she should find a job like Anna had, but she hated teaching and sewing and all the respectable ways she could earn money. And anything that pulled her away from writing her stories and poems was a waste of her time.
“A little sacrifice is good for them,” Bronson said. “Our daughters must seek fields of richer thyme than we grow here. Let each of them make honey for herself, since all lasting enjoyments come from one’s own exertions.” Louisa heard him get up and rummage about the small desk in the parlor.
Louisa pushed open the door a little further. Her father was writing in one of his leather-bound journals. “That bit about bees is quite good,” he muttered. “I might work that into one of my Conversations.”
Marmee stood, her profile to Louisa, watching him write. The line of her back was rigid, and her hands were clenched. “You haven’t had a paying Conversation in months, Bronson,” Marmee said hotly. Then with a deliberate calming breath, Marmee moved close to her husband and placed her work-worn hands on his shoulders. “Come with me!” she murmured in his ear. “The hotel would like you to come and teach classes. They think you would be a great attraction.” Her voice became husky. “You’d be supporting the family, and we could be together.”
“Ah,” breathed Louisa. So this was Marmee’s plan.
Her parents had moved to a part of the room where she couldn’t see them. Just as she moved to nudge the door open, she heard footsteps, light but firm, crossing the floor. She pulled back. The door closed with a decisive click.
She pressed her ear against the door,
straining to hear her father’s response to Marmee’s entreaty.
“My dear, my work is in my mind and in the hard labor I do to grow our food and fix our house.” Father’s voice was only slightly muffled by the oak door. “I have no calling to work for others. Do not ask me to compromise my principles for money!”
“You would have us starve for your principles instead?” Even without seeing them, Louisa could tell her mother was close to tears.
Her father’s voice took on a wheedling sound that put Louisa’s teeth on edge. “Abba, you used to be proud of my ideas and principles. But you’ve changed, grown cold and unsympathetic. Now you complain like the most common housewife that there isn’t enough money for fripperies.”
Louisa glanced up at the few dresses hanging in her narrow closet. Each one was a hand-me-down from some rich relation, turned out and resewn to make a serviceable gown. Fripperies? She’d gladly settle for a fresh bolt of calico.
“Fripperies? Bronson, there isn’t any money to pay for firewood. Or flour. Or your precious journals.”
“Your family . . .”
“My family’s generosity has been exhausted time and time again. Even my brother, who admires you greatly, wonders why you will gladly take the money that others have worked for, but you won’t work yourself.”
Louisa had only the vaguest memories of her father ever working for his living. When she was three, he had a school in Boston. His revolutionary ideas included fresh air in the classroom, no corporal punishment, and the strange idea that children could also teach the teachers. At first wealthy parents had flocked to the school, but Bronson’s other ideas about religion had frightened them away. When Bronson admitted a black girl as a pupil, he lost his final backers. Almost sixteen now, Louisa couldn’t recall her father working for money any time since, no matter how bare the larder. Father’s willingness to let the family suffer for his ideals had been proven beyond a scintilla of doubt.
Marmee went on, ice in her voice. “I’ve been offered a contract for three months and you give me no choice but to take it.”
Bronson sank into an armchair and wiped his brow. “But who will take care of me?”
Louisa pressed her forehead against the doorjamb, steeling herself against the answer.
“Louisa will,” Marmee said. “She’s a fine housekeeper.”
Louisa scrambled to her feet and burst into the room. “Marmee! You can’t leave me here to do everything! Beth’s no help—she’s still recovering from her winter cold. And baby May won’t do anything but draw. You expect me to do all the cooking and the cleaning and the shopping and take care of them, too? I’ll never have the chance to write.” She was running out of breath, so she made sure to finish with a flourish. “It’s not fair that just because Father won’t get a job I have to be a slave!”
“Louisa!” both Marmee and Bronson cried at once.
“A young lady never stoops to eavesdropping,” Marmee said in a forbidding voice.
“Honest labor to care for your family is not slavery!” Bronson scolded as his wife took a breath. “You’ve met true slaves. You know the cruelty they suffer. By comparing yourself to a slave, you demean both you and them.”
Louisa closed her eyes and pressed her fists against her eyelids. “I’m sorry,” she whispered.
“Go back to your room,” Marmee said. “And quietly. There’s no need to wake your sisters. We’ll talk later.”
Her eyes averted from her parents, Louisa slowly crossed the parlor to her room, closing her door behind her. When they had bought Hillside House a few years ago, the house had been too small for Father, Mother, and four Alcott daughters, not to mention all the constant visitors. So her inventive father had cut an old workshop on the property in two and grafted each half onto opposite sides of the house. Louisa’s tiny room, the first she had ever had to call her own, was in one half of the repurposed building, with a second door that opened directly into the garden.
Louisa shoved her bare feet into her boots, jerked her shawl from its hook, and slipped into the garden. Her ability to sneak out at night was her private antidote to the press of so many people. The chilled night air stung her skin and a breeze stirred her nightdress about her knees. Perched on a bench her father had fashioned from an old log, she brought her knees up to her chin.
Marmee couldn’t leave them. Father could and did, traveling often to talk to other philosophers. But Marmee was their rock. Their shield against poverty and despair. Their financial situation must be even worse than Louisa knew for Marmee to consider leaving. But Louisa had only been thinking of how it affected her. She was ashamed of her own selfishness.
Money. Money. Money. How she hated being dependent on the kindness of friends and family. Louisa was tired of being grateful. She had looked for a job in Concord but there were none to be had. It was a pretty place, but dull. The townspeople thought the Alcotts were wild and strange. It was only because of Mr. Emerson that they had moved there. If it weren’t for him and Mr. Thoreau, Concord would indeed be the “cold, heartless, brainless, soulless Concord” Marmee called it. But even Mr. Emerson couldn’t conjure up work so Louisa could contribute to the family’s finances.
The house faced busy Lexington Road, although it was mostly quiet at this hour. From the corner of her eye, Louisa caught a glimpse of movement in the shrubs by the front windows. She retreated to her door and reached for the stout walking stick she kept there.
“Who’s there?” she called, forcing a quaver down.
A cracking noise of a foot on a twig, then a deliberate silence.
“I said, who is there?” Holding the walking stick up in front of her face, she stepped forward and peered around the corner. Next to the parlor’s big bay window there was a dark figure, barely visible against the olive color of the house. Suddenly, the figure blinked, revealing the frightened whites of his eyes. She realized that his darkness was not the cover of night but the color of his skin.
“What’s your business here?” she asked, her voice stern.
“Excuse me, Miss.” The man’s voice was deep and hesitant. “Are you the Stationmaster?”
Louisa sighed. Exactly what the Alcott family needed right now. Another fugitive slave.
CHAPTER TWO
There were not in all the city four merrier people
than the hungry little girls
who gave away their breakfasts and contented
themselves with bread and milk . . .
Louisa put her finger to her lips and motioned for the man to follow her inside through her bedroom to the parlor.
Bronson and Marmee were sitting apart from each other on the sofa. They looked up, startled, when Louisa appeared in the doorway.
“Louy, I told you to wait for me,” Marmee said.
“Until you learn to curb your impatience,” Bronson said, “you will never discipline your mind.”
Louisa sighed and stepped to one side so they could see the fugitive standing behind her.
The man was big, boasting more inches than even Bronson, who had to duck going through the doors of his own home. The original parts of the house dated back over a century, when people built low ceilings to keep in heat. It was a sore trial to the Alcotts, who tended to grow tall.
Standing in the center of the parlor, hunched slightly, the fugitive kept his hands close to his thighs as though he was loath to touch the furniture or the whitewashed walls. A battered canvas knapsack hung over his shoulder.
Irritations and quarrels forgotten, Marmee flew from her seat and closed the curtains. Although most of their friends and neighbors hated slavery as much as the Alcotts did, one never knew who might be tempted by a reward for information about an escaped slave. And it wasn’t only the slave who was at risk; the Alcotts could be prosecuted for sheltering him.
Bronson stood and held his hands out wide. “My name is Bronson Alcott. You are welcome and safe in my home.”
The fugitive stared for the briefest moment, then smiled br
oadly. “God bless you, sir.”
“What is your name?” Bronson asked.
“My name is George Simmons. But Simmons was my owner’s name, and my first Conductor warned me that they’ll look for me under that name. So lately I’ve been thinking my name is George Freedman.”
“A noble name,” Bronson said, approval warming his voice. “Where have you come from?”
“I came from Virginia. I’ve been running for two weeks.”
“And where is your Conductor?” Marmee asked. “Why are you traveling alone? We had no message that we would be receiving a package tonight.”
“I stayed in Dedham last night. My Conductor had an illness in his house, so he sent me to Concord without him. He said I could count on the folks in the house set up against the hill on the Lexington Road.”
“Dedham is nearly twenty-five miles from here!” Marmee exclaimed. “You must be exhausted.”
“Ma’am, I feel as if I’ve been running forever.”
Outside a carriage rattled past, its lantern briefly illuminating the road. George froze and his eyes scanned the room as if searching for a hiding place. Louisa took pity and stepped to the window. Staying hidden behind the curtain, she parted the chintz drapes just wide enough to watch the stagecoach disappear down the Lexington Road.
“It’s all right. They have passed us by,” she said, filling her voice with reassurance. She had found George; he was her responsibility. Glancing over at the fugitive she recognized the look in his eyes. Hunger. “Marmee, shouldn’t we get George something to eat?”
“Of course,” Marmee said firmly. “You must be starving.”
“Yes, ma’am. The last time I ate was yesterday morning.”
“Louisa, warm up the leftover soup and feed George a proper meal.”
Louisa didn’t need telling twice. She turned on her heel, knocking a book off the bookcase in her haste. Once in the kitchen, she poked at the kitchen coals to coax a flame. She opened up the icebox and pulled out the pot with the leftover soup from dinner. If George hoped for meat, he would be disappointed. Bronson Alcott permitted no living creatures to be sacrificed for the family’s dinner. But they had plenty of vegetables from their own garden and enough potato to thicken the broth and fill an empty stomach.
The Revelation of Louisa May Page 1