Never Too Late

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Never Too Late Page 21

by Michael Phillips


  “I still don’t like it,” I said.

  “Neither do I. But da time’ll go by an’ den we’ll be together again.”

  I felt tears beginning to drip down my cheeks.

  “But why do you have to go today?”

  “I reckon I don’t. But my daddy’s married now an’ dis is da day he’s makin’ a new beginnin’, an’ it seems like it’s a good day fo me to make my new beginnin’ too. I talked to my daddy ’bout it. I wudn’t leave if it wud make his special day sad fo him an’ Josepha. But he said dat maybe it wuz fittin’ dat he an’ me start new on da same day. So he said I cud go wiff his blessin’ an’ it’d jes’ be dat much sooner I’d be gettin’ back.”

  It was quiet for a minute or two.

  “I got somefin’ for you,” said Jeremiah, “—kind er like a present ter help us remember.”

  I glanced over at him as he stuffed a hand into one of his pockets. I hadn’t noticed him carrying anything. What could it be?

  “I know it ain’t da same or as fancy as da one you call da Tear Drop dat your mama had. But I figger it’ll help you remember me an’ remind us bof dat we’ll be together agin soon enuff.”

  He held out his hand and gave me a little silver cufflink with the letters JP on them.

  “Oh, Jeremiah, it’s pretty!”

  “I axed Mrs. Hammond ter order dem fo me. I ain’t altogether even shore what cufflinks are for, but dey’s always two ob ’em, so I figger we cud each keep one, kind er like a promise ter each other.”

  “This is even more special to me,” I said. “The Tear Drop was my mama’s to remind her of my papa. I treasure it because it reminds me of her and Papa. But this is my very own and will remind me . . . of the man I love.”

  “An’ da man dat loves you. An’ I do, you know, Mayme. I do love you more den anyone in da world. You always been da only girl fo me.”

  “Thank you, Jeremiah,” I said.

  I scooted closer to him on the log. He put his arm around me and we sat for a long time like that together, not saying a word.

  When we got back to the house, the men were outside talking and laughing with Henry, a few of them smoking cigars, and the women were just finishing up inside. Henry and Papa and Uncle Ward saw us walking toward them hand in hand, but they didn’t call out to us. They too knew that Jeremiah was planning to leave Rosewood that same afternoon.

  Jeremiah went to get the last of his things.

  When he was ready, the rest of us gathered with Jeremiah by his horse, where the few things he was taking, and as much food as Josepha and I’d been able to pack for him, were tied behind his saddle.

  “You take care of yourself, you hear,” said my papa, shaking Jeremiah’s hand.

  “Yes, sir, Mister Templeton. I will.”

  Then he shook Uncle Ward’s hand. Katie stepped forward and gave him a big hug. When she stepped back, she was crying. Josepha nearly swallowed him up in her embrace. She was crying too.

  When she stepped back, Jeremiah looked at his father standing beside her.

  “You two look good together,” he said. “Congratulations agin. I hope you’s bof be real happy.”

  He took a few steps forward, and the father and son embraced. Henry whispered something I couldn’t hear. Jeremiah looked up into his eyes, wet like the rest of ours, and smiled and nodded, then stepped back.

  Finally Jeremiah turned to me. By then I was bawling like a baby! He took me in his arms and we held each other tight.

  “I love you, Mayme,” he whispered.

  “I love you too, Jeremiah,” I said. “And you better do like Papa said and take care of yourself!”

  “Don’t you worry none . . . I will.”

  He gave me one final squeeze. He nodded to Papa, and Papa reached his left arm over my shoulder and shook Jeremiah’s hand again. Jeremiah stepped back, looked around at everyone else again with a last smile of farewell, then mounted his horse.

  We all stood watching as he rode off in the direction of Mr. Thurston’s. He looked back as he came to the bend in the road, waved one more time, then disappeared from sight.

  I turned my face to Papa’s chest and cried again while he held me close.

  ENDINGS

  41

  Papa and Uncle Ward had tried to talk Henry and Josepha into going on a honeymoon. But the thought of having their very own house, paid for in full with their very own money at a final price of fifty dollars, was more exciting to them by far than a honeymoon trip somewhere else.

  When Josepha heard of the negotiations over the price, if negotiations they could be called—with the sellers trying to lower the price and the buyers trying to increase it—she insisted on paying her fair share along with Henry. She had saved nearly thirty dollars of her own since gaining her freedom—which she kept beneath the mattress of her bed in her upstairs room in the house. She insisted on contributing at least ten dollars toward the house.

  So the price eventually went from twenty-five to forty and finally to fifty, and the newlyweds began their life together with a new house and thirty dollars between them.

  For two former slaves, it was wealth untold! If any two people in Shenandoah County, North Carolina, not to mention the whole country, were happier than Henry and Josepha Patterson, I don’t know who they were.

  There was nothing they were more anxious to do than to stay right at Rosewood and spend their first days together under a roof they could call their own.

  Everybody stayed at Rosewood most of the afternoon after the wedding, and except for Jeremiah’s absence, we had such a good time. I felt both happy and sad together. That evening we all left the house and walked Henry and Josepha down to their new house like an old-fashioned wedding processional.

  The whole week before the wedding they had made final preparations to get the house finished and ready. The bed had arrived along with most of the other furniture. There were kitchen supplies and rugs and food and so many other things to think of that they could use. A lot of it Papa and Uncle Ward had bought from Mrs. Hammond, and they took quite a bit from the big house too—extra tables and chairs and a sideboard and wardrobe that weren’t being used, and we had more than enough pots, pans, and plates and knives and forks to share. The new house, being small, filled up pretty fast. And just seeing Josepha at the kitchen counter—her very own kitchen counter!—and Henry sitting at the table . . . well, it was as homey as if they’d been there all their lives.

  As we walked them down to their new house we all were talking gaily. Then somebody started singing and pretty soon we were all loudly singing “Jimmy Crack Corn.”

  We reached the new house and everybody quieted down.

  “Well, Missus Patterson,” said Henry, “welcome ter our new home.”

  Again, one by one, everybody shook Henry’s hand and gave Josepha one last hug, then stepped back.

  Henry turned to us all.

  “We’s bof mo grateful ter you all den we kin say. You’s all da bes’ frien’s a man an’ woman cud hope ter hab.”

  Then he turned and led Josepha inside.

  EPILOGUE

  SEVEN OR EIGHT MONTHS LATER, WHEN THE visitor arrived at Rosewood and was invited into the house for a serious talk with Ward and Templeton Daniels, it was a conversation that would, in the months that followed, change the lives of everyone in the Rosewood family forever.

  Their visitor from town sat down. They offered him a cup of coffee, but after a brief sip and imperceptible grimace, he set the cup aside.

  “So, those two girls of yours are gone, eh?” he said.

  “Yeah, and it’s too quiet around here!” laughed Templeton.

  Behind them the door opened.

  They glanced up to see Josepha walk in, followed by Henry.

  “Are we glad to see you!” said Templeton. “We need a fresh pot of coffee. We’ve been drinking what’s left from breakfast and it’s not too good.”

  “Hello, Henry,” said Mr. Watson.

  “You didn’t gib
Mr. Watson my ol’ stale cold coffee?” asked Josepha, glancing at the cup in front of their guest as she walked toward the cook stove.

  Ward nodded. “It was all we had.”

  “Well, you jes’ wait a minute or two till I put on a new pot.—You didn’t by chance bring any mail from town fo us from dem two girls?” she asked, turning toward Mr. Watson.

  “No, I’m sorry, Josepha,” he replied, “I didn’t think to check.”

  “Still no word yet!” she said, half to herself. “It been too long. Dey shoulda wrote by now.”

  “I’m sure they’re fine,” said Templeton. “Probably just busy, that’s all.”

  “I still think it’s been too long. I don’t like it.”

  “From that look on your face, Herb,” said Ward, “I’d say you got something serious on your mind.”

  Herb Watson tried to laugh with him, but without much humor in his tone.

  “I suppose you’re right,” he said.

  “Anything you got to say, you can say to us all.”

  Watson nodded. He might as well just get down to the business of his call.

  “I’d hoped, as much as I didn’t want to do it, that letting your boy go,” he said, glancing in Henry’s direction, “would take care of things. But I’m still getting pressure. And unfortunately, with the law on their side . . .”

  He did not finish. Except for Josepha at the stove, the kitchen fell silent.

  “Come on, Herb, out with it,” said Templeton at length. How bad can it be?”

  “It’s bad, boys. I can hardly bring myself to say it.”

  “Come on, just give it to us straight.”

  Watson sighed.

  “I guess what I’m trying to say is that maybe it would be better for everybody if you’d get your lumber and supplies elsewhere—just for a while, until things settle down.”

  “You don’t want to sell to us?”

  “Come on, you know it’s not like that. But I’m being pressured, and . . . well, why should we intentionally alienate them? There are other places.”

  “What about our cotton, Herb?” asked Ward.

  “I don’t know—that’s still several months off. It’s only May—let’s worry about that when the time comes.”

  “If we don’t sell this crop of ours this fall, we’ll never meet our taxes,” said Templeton. “We were a little short last year and they gave us a year’s extension. But they won’t look kindly on us being short again.”

  “Yeah, I know that. But like I say, maybe things will have cooled off by then.”

  Ward shook his head and drew in a deep breath. “They’re trying to squeeze us out,” he said. “It’s beginning to look like, after all we’ve put into this place, they might finally do it.”

  “I’m sorry, boys,” said Watson. “I’ll think on it and see if there isn’t something I can come up with.”

  He rose to leave.

  “Don’t you want a cup er hot coffee?” asked Josepha.

  “Thanks, but I’ve got to be getting back. Sorry to put you to the trouble, but this wasn’t a very pleasant errand. I feel like a scoundrel having to say what I did.”

  “It’s not your fault, Herb,” said Ward.

  “By the way,” Watson said, “how is your boy doing, Henry?”

  “Doing good,” answered Henry. “Though he ain’t much ob a letter writer.”

  “He’s found himself work in Delaware,” added Templeton. “He’s making pretty good money, trying to save enough to marry that daughter of mine.”

  “I’m glad to hear it. Give him my regards when you hear from him.”

  “We’ll do that.”

  “Sometimes I think we all ought to pack up and join him,” sighed Ward. “Probably save everybody a lot of trouble.”

  “We can’t give in, Ward,” said Templeton. “We’ve got to fight this. We’ve weathered plenty of crisis times before now.”

  “We always had the cotton to bail us out. And I’m not sure it’s worth it if it gets someone killed.”

  “Well, thanks for letting us know, Herb,” said Templeton. “I’m sorry our troubles keep landing on you.”

  “Nothing’s landed on me yet. I just hope we can figure out a way to keep this mess from landing on anybody.”

  As Herb Watson headed back to town, and Henry and Josepha made their way back to their own house, the two brothers sat back down in the kitchen that had once been so full of life and activity. The whole house seemed far too big, far too silent, and far too empty for just the two of them. It seemed deserted.

  More had changed around here than just the attitude throughout the South toward Negroes. Rosewood had changed too. They weren’t so sure they liked it.

  AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY

  * * *

  MICHAEL PHILLIPS BEGAN HIS DISTINGUISHED WRITING career in the 1970s. He came to widespread public attention in the early 1980s for his efforts to reacquaint the public with Victorian novelist George MacDonald. Phillips is recognized as the man most responsible for the current worldwide renaissance of interest in the once-forgotten Scotsman. After partnering with Bethany House Publishers in redacting and republishing the works of MacDonald, Phillips embarked on his own career in fiction, and it is primarily as a novelist that he is now known. His critically acclaimed books have been translated into eight foreign languages, have appeared on numerous bestseller lists, and have sold more than six million copies. Phillips is today considered by many as the heir apparent to the very MacDonald legacy he has worked so hard to promote in our time. Phillips is the author of the widely read biography of George MacDonald, George MacDonald: Scotland’s Beloved Storyteller. Phillips is also the publisher of the magazine Leben, a periodical dedicated to bold-thinking Christianity and the legacy of George MacDonald. Phillips and his wife, Judy, alternate their time between their home in Eureka, California, and Scotland, where they are attempting to increase awareness of MacDonald’s work.

  MORE FROM MICHAEL PHILLIPS

  * * *

  If you enjoyed this book, you will be sure to enjoy the companion series to CAROLINA COUSINS—SHENANDOAH SISTERS, the four books about Katie and Mayme and their scheme at Rosewood. The first book in the series is entitled Angels Watching Over Me.

  For more exciting stories about the Underground Railroad and how Amaritta helped runaway slaves get to freedom, don’t miss Michael Phillips’ other newest series: AMERICAN DREAMS—Dream of Freedom and Dream of Life.

  To read about Alkali Jones and the adventures of the Hollister family in California during the gold rush, read THE JOURNALS OF CORRIE BELLE HOLLISTER starting with book one, My Father’s World.

  For contact information and a complete listing of titles by Michael Phillips, write c/o:

  P.O. Box 7003

  Eureka, CA 95502

  USA

  Information on the magazine Leben—dedicated to the spiritual vision of Michael Phillips and the legacy of George MacDonald—may also be obtained through the above address.

  Books by Michael Phillips

  * * *

  Is Jesus Coming Back As Soon As We Think?

  Destiny Junction • Kings Crossroads

  Make Me Like Jesus • God, A Good Father

  Jesus, An Obedient Son

  Best Friends for Life (with Judy Phillips)

  George MacDonald: Scotland’s Beloved Storyteller

  Rift in Time • Hidden in Time

  Legend of the Celtic Stone • An Ancient Strife

  Your Life in Christ (George MacDonald)

  The Truth in Jesus (George MacDonald)

  AMERICAN DREAMS

  Dream of Freedom • Dream of Life

  THE SECRET OF THE ROSE

  The Eleventh Hour • A Rose Remembered

  Escape to Freedom • Dawn of Liberty

  THE SECRETS OF HEATHERSLEIGH HALL

  Wild Grows the Heather in Devon

  Wayward Winds

  Heathersleigh Homecoming

  A New Dawn Over Devon

 
SHENANDOAH SISTERS

  Angels Watching Over Me

  A Day to Pick Your Own Cotton

  The Color of Your Skin Ain’t the Color of Your Heart

  Together Is All We Need

  CAROLINA COUSINS

  A Perilous Proposal • The Soldier’s Lady

  Never Too Late

 

 

 


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