by DiAnn Mills
Jenny shivered. She held the very words Jessica had written for her. Again, she turned the journal over in her hand. Her sister had left a genuine legacy: Rebecca and the words written in the navy book. A deep desire to read and memorize every word rose inside her. Beneath these pages she could reacquaint herself with the sister of her youth.
“Thank you.” Jenny peered into Ellen’s face. Her hazel eyes reflected love and compassion, and her smile gave Jenny the reassurance that no one was to blame for Jessica’s death.
Her friend stood and strolled a few feet beyond the shade, and in the sunlight her strawberry blond hair glistened as though she wore an angel’s halo. “I’m not sure I understand my own words.” She laughed softly. In the next moment, she grew melancholy. “At times, Jessica got an odd, somewhat frightening look about her, but she wouldn’t discuss it. About a month before Rebecca’s birth, she told me she was in danger. Refused to say why. Didn’t want me to fret. Anyway, she told me about the journal shortly thereafter and asked me to keep it safe for her. The times she needed to record things, she’d ask for it, then return it to me for safekeeping.”
If only I’d been a loving sister . . . and friend. “This means more to me than you can ever imagine. I am so ashamed of my attitude and the way I treated her.”
“We all have regrets,” Ellen said. “There’s nothing we can do about them but learn from our mistakes and go on.”
“My life is so much richer since I’ve come to Kahlerville. There are days I don’t ever want to leave.”
Ellen’s sweet smile warmed her fragile spirit.
“I’d love for you to settle here, and I know all of Grant’s family is fond of you.”
“And I’m devoted to them.” She avoided Ellen’s eyes for fear she’d ask about Grant.
The two spent the rest of the afternoon sharing and laughing about their experiences with Jessica. Ellen told her about Jessica’s pranks, and Jenny revealed her sister’s antics in their younger days. They exchanged stories until near suppertime. Ellen begged Jenny to stay, but Jenny insisted Frank needed to spend the time with his new bride. The women promised to get together again very soon.
Jenny hurried back to the boardinghouse with the treasured journal tucked under her arm and her revolver resting inside her reticule. She thought of walking outside of town far enough to practice, but she had an even greater urgency to read the journal.
Goodness, Ellen hasn’t even read this herself. I’m not so sure I could have been so resolute.
Still, she marveled at Jessica’s sensitivity—and at the love she professed for Jenny. What kind of danger could she have detected? Who could have been so evil as to threaten the life of a young woman with child—unless it was one of her past customers or Rebecca’s father? Nevertheless, tonight Jenny intended to find the answers to all her fervent questions, for she planned to read the journal in its entirety.
Chapter 21
At the boardinghouse Jenny carried a dinner tray of chicken and dumplings to her room. She didn’t want to waste a single moment of the evening. Already the sun had begun its descent, and amber shadows danced across the faint light from the window.
Pulling her chair close to the small nightstand, she lit the wick of the kerosene lamp and positioned herself comfortably for the hours of reading ahead. Mindful of the task before her and with an air of solemn reverence, she lifted the journal’s cover and examined the inscription. The pages were ivory in color and the lettering in royal blue ink. Instantly, she recognized her mother’s handwriting:
Given to: Jessica Kathryn Martin
Date: 22 January 1888
From: Mother and Father
Cautiously, Jenny turned to the second page:
22 January 1888
Today is my eighteenth birthday. I wonder why Mother and Father gave me this journal. They must believe I will record my deepest thoughts, and when I am not at home, they can read it. I do plan to record everything about my life, but this journal will always be with me. It will be my friend and companion, for I have neither one. No one understands or even dares to know me.
Sometimes I think even Jenny is fearful of me, and I cannot blame her. I even loathe myself. For certain, she is afraid of our parents. Father continually lectures her, and she cries more than she laughs. That too is probably my fault. I wish I understood why he treats her so harshly simply because her school marks are not the same as mine. Perhaps he fears she will become like me. How could she when she possesses such a gentle spirit?
I am so miserable with myself and with Mother and Father. I despise the things I do, but I cannot stop them. My heart and mind tell me to be kind, but my actions do otherwise. Perhaps I am a monster. If I thought someone cared, I would gladly try to resist this senseless defiance and find meaning in my life. Although I believe my greatest rebellion is within me.
What if I never change? Even if I placed my whole being into the purpose of rearranging Jessica Kathryn Martin, who would care? Does anyone fathom the destruction of my soul? I have ruined any notion of a relationship with everyone I touch. And dear Jenny . . . oh, how I love her.
A demon lives inside me. I’m convinced of it. An ugly creature that derives some sort of morbid satisfaction in hurting others. I’ve spent the afternoon debating this very issue within me. Perhaps the only solution is to do away with myself, but I am a coward. Death has such a sweet call. It whispers my name in the darkest of hours. And as the night beckons me into the shadows of shame, my heart longs to be at rest, to sleep peacefully without wild thoughts pulling and tugging at me. How merciful is the song of death when my heart aches to be free of this troublesome world.
Jenny abruptly shut the journal. She covered her mouth in horror at her sister’s statements. A steady stream of liquid emotion dripped from her eyes. Never, no, never, had she perceived the intensity of Jessica’s tormented mind. Taking a deep breath, she read more.
The journal shifted from dismal days of gloom to ones of uncontrollable excitement. She wrote every day—the journal truly did become her friend and companion. During a time of almost maddening exhilaration, Jessica decided to take the step from innocence into womanhood. She discovered by using her body she received favors from men who walked all roads of life. She used them as they used her, but soon this no longer provided a challenge or an escape from her misery.
She acquired a taste for liquor, but the telltale odor on her breath infuriated her parents. They attempted to curtail her activities, but she always found a way to escape their watchful eyes. Weeks and months passed, and Jessica sank lower into depression.
Jenny glanced about her. She’d found such contentment in Kahlerville. If only Jessica could be with her now. Together they’d work through her dear sister’s agony.
Suddenly, new people, new sights, and new sounds stirred Jessica’s mind into a frenzied whirl of euphoria. Her behavior followed a pattern of utmost joy followed by prolonged tears. For nearly two years the cycle repeated itself. Each time the melancholy threatened to take her life. However, the moods evened when she met a particular captivating gentleman:
I met the most delightful man tonight. Oh, but he is handsome. I have never gazed into such deep violet eyes, and his thick blond hair looks as though it were kissed by the sun. His name is Robert, Robert Jacobs, and his words are as rich as fresh cream and flow from his lips like sweet honey. He is a man of many talents—an actor by profession. Mother and Father would be appalled. But I don’t care. I am in love.
Jenny paled in the twilight of her room. Robert . . . Robert Jacobs. He fit the same description as Aubrey Turner. She read on.
Robert enjoys gambling. I stood behind him tonight and watched him play cards with remarkable expertise. I did exactly as he instructed: masked my face with no emotion and drummed on his shoulder a code of what the other gentlemen held in their hands. It was such fun! He won, of course, and the profits were grand. He gave me three hundred dollars for acting as his assistant, and later we went to his hote
l room to celebrate. I barely made it home before dawn. Tomorrow I shall see him again.
Jenny discovered how Jessica formed an instant alliance with Robert. She accompanied him to his card games and took great delight in helping him secure winning hands. His smooth speech and extremely good looks drew Jessica ever closer to him, and he became her shining knight, the one designated to save her from herself. She attempted to change her habits to please his every whim and successfully covered her troubled emotions in his company, but then she unleashed them in full force upon returning home. The lies and deceit mounted. Nothing mattered to Jessica but Robert, and she treasured the earth beneath his feet. When he asked her to pose as his wife and travel with him, she eagerly accepted.
In the beginning their relationship blossomed. They enjoyed the gambling, and their clever cheating brought in more money than the two could conceivably spend. Jessica continued to hide her old ways until she could no longer keep the demon captive. When Robert began experiencing Jessica’s moods, he responded violently, and she tasted his frightening temper. Together their passions ruled selfish and cruel:
Today, Robert killed a man on board the River Queen. He said the man accused him of cheating. It terrifies me to think that he enjoyed the gunplay, especially since the man’s accusation proved correct . . . This is not enjoyable anymore. I am frightened, but there is nowhere to go, no one to help me.
On another day, Jessica wrote:
Robert takes all the money and gives me little to survive. It is impossible to save a thing, and he knows it. He is not sane. I am sure of it. Oh, we are a matched pair with our madness. Tonight, he told me I was nothing without him, and later he told me he loved me. I cringe at his affections. I only want to be free.
A week later Jessica’s pain had increased:
My life is more wretched than ever. Robert is vicious, and I think he enjoys hurting me. He takes on the stage characteristics of his most villainous characters until I wonder who he will become next. My only refuge is to feign a nap each afternoon—to think and plan a way out of this nightmare.
Jenny gasped in recalling Aubrey Turner’s comment about Jessica’s naps. In the heat of the summer evening, she pronounced judgment. Aubrey Turner and Robert Jacobs had to be the same man. But why had he changed his name? He’d admitted to being Jessica’s fiancé.
Days later in the journal, Jessica’s tone changed:
I have devised a scheme to free myself. I know where he keeps his money. It will work, if I can just endure a few more nights with him.
Robert is deplorable, repulsive. I cannot bear for him to touch me, but I must. He must not suspect what I plan to do.
Jenny felt her sister’s fear but was astonished by what Jessica wrote just two days later:
Today, Robert asked me to marry him. He wants to travel to San Francisco and purchase a theater and gambling house. Acting is what he loves best, and he promises not to hit me any more. Perhaps I should consider his proposal. He might truly change.
Jenny shook her head, convinced that if Robert was the man she knew as Turner, he would not have changed. Her fears were confirmed as she read an entry a few pages later in the journal:
I wanted to write Jenny and tell her about the upcoming wedding, but Robert became furious. I can no longer bear his beatings. He has become an expert in hurting me where the bruises do not show. I have to get away.
Several entries later, Jessica wrote from San Francisco:
At last I am free—finally free, and I did not have to marry him. I vow to do whatever is necessary to earn a living. Any pride and self-respect I might have had is gone, but I will never allow a man to rule over me again. Most of the money is hidden away until I find a safe place to live.
Jenny learned how Jessica had stumbled into the town of Kahlerville. Prostitution was not new to her, and she lost no time in seeking out the town’s brothel.
Must everyday be the same? If only these men would do something else besides satisfy their physical needs. I deplore them, or maybe it is myself I long to destroy.
Days of deep hopelessness followed. Jessica’s life brightened when she met Ellen. For the first time, she found a true friend:
This afternoon I told Ellen about Jenny and Grandma Martin. Both are so dear to my heart. I remember how Grandma always said, “Goodness” when surprised or excited. When Jenny was four years old, I heard her use the same expression. At the time, Jenny and I were playing dolls beneath the lilac tree, and she said, “Goodness, Miss Suzanne has a frightful cold.”
My precious Jenny and Grandma, I miss you both so very much. I wish I had told you how much I loved you. I really wanted to be a good girl like I promised Grandma. My life has been a squander.
The entry for the following Sunday elaborated on what Jenny had already learned from the Rainers:
I visited Reverend Rainer this afternoon. He says that God loves me just as I am, and He will stay by me forever. I wish I could believe those words. It is simply impossible, too difficult for me to even conceive such an idea. The reverend says God sent His Son to die for my sins, just like Grandma used to tell me. Maybe for someone else, but not for the likes of me. Nothing could ever make me feel clean enough for God. But I’d like to think so. I truly would.
Jenny felt her sister’s fear and despair as she read the entry from two days later:
I must be pregnant. It has been over two months since my time. I have no idea who is the father. There are so many. I thought I had been careful, taken the precautions. How stupid of me. How could I have sunk to such lowness? Surely God has punished me for all the horrible things I have done. If He truly loves me, then why this curse?
Jessica wrote in her journal faithfully every day of her pregnancy. She tried to be fit company for Ellen’s sake, but the lowest of depression settled upon her. Near the end of her confinement, an unusual entry captured Jenny’s attention. It was a letter:
My dear sister,
I have a strange feeling that giving birth to this baby will cause my death, and I welcome it. I’d never be a fit mother. Why should I subject a babe to a mother who cannot control her behavior? Some days I fancy it might change my life and cure this madness, but I think not. I would rather die than subject my own flesh to this insanity.
I don’t know what will happen to my child, but I am sure Ellen will see the baby receives a proper home. She has been so good to me, priceless—much more than I deserve. I hope she leaves this sordid life and finds real happiness. Never mind my rambling, Jenny. I need to tell you about crucial matters.
I have carefully explained to Ellen that she must give this journal to you. I hope, in reading this, you will see I truly wanted things to be right between us. If there is a God, I pray He will press upon you to find this town. I know you will come. I must believe it.
I desperately tried to be like you. You are so pretty, so smart, and you found it easy to be obedient. How cruel of me to leave you to the mercy of Mother and Father, and I have regretted it a thousand times. I should have been stronger and stayed for your sake. For this I am truly sorry. Please forgive me.
Within the pages of this journal are the means of locating a large sum of money. Yes, it is the money taken from Robert, but he obtained it through ill means. It is for you and my dear baby, and I know you will do the best with it.
Please make sure my baby is loved and cared for, and please remember I love you. We had such good fun playing dolls beneath the lilac tree. Remember playing school and how I vexed you with my obsession with numbers? Remember the tea parties and the days of innocence? I believe those days were true paradise—no madness, no regrets, and no concerns about the morrow.
Jenny lifted her tear-glazed eyes from the journal. The hour chimed long past midnight. She ached from mental exhaustion and the pang of her sister’s troubled mind. The truth about Aubrey Turner or Robert Jacobs, whatever his true name, made her tremble. She clearly understood why he’d followed her to Texas. He wanted his money and thought Jenny knew
of its whereabouts. He lied to her and Ellen about his love for Jessica to secure his funds. No wonder Ellen kept her distance from him. She felt his evil, too.
Tomorrow she must talk to Ben about Robert Jacobs and the connection to Aubrey Turner. She also wanted to ask Grant to help her decipher Jessica’s journal. She didn’t want the money for herself—Grant could keep it for Rebecca.
My dear Jessica.
I was not a sister to you in life, but I promise you I will do my best to fulfill your dying wish.
Chapter 22
Ben scooted his chair closer to his desk, scraping the legs across the bare wooden floor. He wrote the name Robert Jacobs on a piece of paper and stared at it. “And Jessica said he posed as an actor and a gambler?”