by Lea Wait
Then Nell paused and seemed to look right at me. “No one living person controls a life. Only the spirits know what shall be.”
That had to be Nell’s answer to my question.
She raised a folded sheet of paper. “Why does your uncle control your life?”
It was my question! How had she known?
Mr. Allen stood up and glared at the audience. “That question was inappropriate. Miss Gramercy has been suffering from exhaustion and headaches. Since this audience clearly does not respect her abilities, she will now retire to her room.”
Nell opened her mouth, as if to say something, but her uncle pulled her up and pushed her toward the door closest to the table. The astonished crowd was still sitting down when the side door to the ballroom swung open.
“News!” It was Miss Averill, the telegraph operator. Her voice was high and loud. “News of our brave troops, just in over the wires: Fort Sumter has fallen! Fallen to the Confederates!”
Chapter 14
Saturday, April 13, 8:30 p.m.
The room fell silent.
“Fort Sumter fell at 2:34 this afternoon, after thirty-four hours of fighting,” Miss Averill announced, loudly enough so all could hear.
“How many killed?” someone called from the back of the room.
She shook her head. “No one on either side.”
Nell was still standing a few feet away from the door, and was about to speak when her uncle pushed her toward the door. He turned back to the stunned crowd.
“If your questions were not answered tonight, you can blame the impertinent idiot who had the audacity to question my loyalty to my niece. She will only be available for private consultations during the next week.”
But by that time no one was paying attention to him.
Fort Sumter had fallen. The Confederates had won. The ballroom filled with noisy conversations as people stood and put on their wraps. The headline wrote itself inside my head: FORT SUMTER LOST.
“How awful—how insulting to Miss Gramercy, that someone asked her that question,” I heard one man say. His voice seemed very far away.
“That was the shortest evening’s entertainment I’ve ever paid for. And for twenty-five cents,” complained another.
“She would have stopped anyway after Miss Averill came in. Fort Sumter’s fallen. We’re at war now.”
“What’s Lincoln going to do?”
“Guess Captain Tucker, and anyone else with business in the South, just lost their incomes,” said another man. “Buy you an ale at the tavern?”
“You will not,” interrupted a woman’s voice. “I’m taking my husband home. If President Lincoln starts calling up troops, who knows what will happen. I want my Henry to be home as long as possible.”
“What wonderful things Miss Gramercy knew,” said another woman nearby. “I must register for one of her private sessions. Who knows what messages she might have for me?”
War. That was all I could focus on. I moved through the crowd toward the door, passing two women congratulating Mr. and Mrs. Bascomb on the impending birth of their child. Normally such an event would not be spoken of until the possibility of a child being born was clearly visible, but Mrs. Bascomb was blushing and nodding. Nell must have been right, although it would be months before anyone would know if her prediction of another brother for Owen was correct.
Charlie came up behind me. “What a night! Nell Gramercy answering questions like that, and Fort Sumter falling! I only wish she’d been able to answer more questions, so we’d have had more time to figure out what she was doing. Who do you think asked such a brazen last question?”
Not waiting for an answer, Charlie led the way to his small room, where he began pacing from one side to the other. “When will they start signing men up to fight?” he wondered out loud. “What will happen to the soldiers captured in Charleston? What will President Lincoln do? Where will the next battle be?”
“Hold on, Charlie!” If Charlie got all churned up, he’d be of no use to me—and I needed his help. “We got this week’s issue of the Herald out just in time. No one will fault us for not including the results of the battle. But now we have to write up another special edition, get it out tomorrow if we can.”
“You can count on me,” said Charlie, finally sitting down. “We’ll want it out before we do the interview with Nell Gramercy on Monday. Which reminds me: I wonder who asked her that last question?”
“I did,” I told him.
“What?”
“I asked her the question about her uncle that made him so angry.”
“But why? Why did you ask her that in public?” asked Charlie. “We’re going to talk to her Monday. Now her uncle knows someone thinks he’s running her life.”
“Well, he is,” I said. “But, more important, you want to prove she’s a fraud. How can we do that without evidence? She spoke for such a short time tonight. We didn’t find out anything. Although she did say that she’d talked with some of the people in the room before; maybe she’d already met the people whose questions she answered. If so, she’d have known their concerns.”
“Who was that first man whose question she answered—the one with the beard?” asked Charlie.
I shook my head. “I’ve never seen him before. He said he was headin’ to Belfast. Few people are traveling by road this time of year.”
“And he said he’d be going tomorrow. There’s only one way he could do that and not be delayed by the mud.” Charlie looked at me.
I nodded in agreement. “By water.”
Without saying another word we left the Mansion House and headed down to the north end of Water Street. We passed groups of men talking about the defeat at Fort Sumter.
There was no sign of the bearded man from Belfast. “He’s probably at one of the taverns,” Charlie said. “If he’s a fisherman or a mariner, he’ll no doubt be at Bailey’s. That’s the one closest to the wharves.”
We both hesitated. Neither of us wanted to admit it, but our parents would be furious if they heard we’d gone into the disreputable public house owned by Major Ben Bailey. Maine, of course, is a dry state. Whiskey can’t be sold except for medicinal purposes, by doctors or pharmacists. Folks order it shipped from Massachusetts for personal imbibing.
Other taverns in town respected the law by having men bring their own liquor in and “renting” glasses, or by selling food and “giving” whiskey away with meals. Not Major Bailey. His customers were mostly visiting mariners and those that were down and out. He sold whiskey openly. Sheriff Chadbourne closed him down now and again, but Pa’d told me that most upright Wiscasset folks liked the way things were. Bailey’s Tavern kept rough and rowdy mariners down on the north end of Water Street, away from the rest of town. The gentlemen and ladies who lived up on High Street liked it that way.
“We’re newsmen,” said Charlie defiantly. “We need to interview that man from Belfast.”
I was younger than Charlie. I couldn’t show him I was more than a little afraid of this place. When we reached Bailey’s Tavern, I pushed open the door.
The inside of the low-ceilinged room was dark with tobacco smoke and stank of whiskey and rum and hard-living men. Some stopped their conversations to look at us curiously.
“Up past your bedtime?” jibed one mariner with a wide red scar on his left cheek.
“Does your mother know where you are?” asked another, raising his tankard in our direction.
“We’re seeking a man headed to Belfast,” I said, raising my voice above the din. “Has a full, dark beard, and was up to the Mansion House an hour or so ago.”
“What’re you wanting with him?” answered a deep voice from the corner.
I turned. It was the man we’d been looking for. We made our way through the crowd, who’d quieted down to hear what we had to say.
“Could we talk with you for a few moments?” asked Charlie. “It’s about Nell Gramercy.”
“Lovely young lady she is, indeed,” said t
he man. “And her uncle, a real gentleman. Supplied us all with rum this night, he did.”
Charlie and I looked at each other.
“What do you mean, supplied you all with rum?” I asked.
“Earlier this week I was down to the wharves, checking my vessel, like any mariner would in this weather, when that citified Allen fellow came up to me. He inquired whether I knew many folks in town. I told him, no, I hailed from Belfast, but was tied up here due to business concerns. So he asked if I’d like to be making some hard cash. I said I was willing. He said I wasn’t to tell anyone. But the money’s been exchanged and drunk by now, so what’s he to do?”
“What did he pay you for?”
“He gave me this fancy ring,” the sailor said, taking the velvet sack out of his pocket and showing the boys the ring within. Up close they could see it wasn’t real—only gold-painted tin.
“He told me as how his niece wanted to impress folks in town, so he asked me to get all excited, like, about what she said, and pretend it was a message from my mum.” He grinned. “Paid me ahead of time, and it worked real well, I’d say. Always had a taste for the stage, I have. And I was back here at Bailey’s by quarter past the hour.”
He stood up and staggered a few steps toward the boys. “That answer your questions, young fellows?”
“Yes,” I said. “Thank you.”
“If you’d like, you could buy me another drink, you know. To thank me real good. Allen’s money disappeared faster than I planned.”
“We don’t have any money,” said Charlie, backing toward the door but taking out his notebook. “What’s your name? We write for the local newspaper, and we’d like to use you as a source.”
“Name’s Daniel Obadiah Jacobs,” said the man, breathing heavy fumes in our direction. “And ‘Esquire’ would look real good in print, too.”
“Thank you again,” I said as we rushed out the door and back onto Water Street, the laughter of the men inside following us.
We’d run a few steps down Water Street and were on Main before Charlie spoke.
“That’s our proof, Joe—proof that Nell’s performance this evening was staged.”
I had to agree.
“At least the first part of it was. You were right; her uncle planned it.” I hated to think Nell had lied to me. “And maybe she’d met with those other people earlier, and could guess what they’d be asking, too. But how did she know what folded question she’d pick next? And how did she know what I asked?”
Chapter 15
Sunday, April 14, morning
“The newspaper can wait this once,” Ma had said firmly. “With the world turning upside down, this is no time to be skipping church services. No discussion.” So instead of heading to the Herald office as early as I’d planned on Sunday morning, I was stuck going to church with Ma and Pa.
To be straight with you, they only knew I needed to get the extra edition out for its news value. They didn’t know I had only eight days left until Mr. Shuttersworth drove up in his wagon to collect his money—or my press. I didn’t want their pity, or their money. The Herald was my business. I had to manage it myself.
Yesterday’s Herald had sold forty-six extra copies, so that was ninety-two cents, and the business cards for Mr. Dana had brought in $2.60. My account book now read $46.40. But how would I get the remaining $18.60 in only eight days?
I hoped God wouldn’t mind if I snuck in an extra prayer for a small personal miracle. I figgered it wouldn’t hurt none, and I could use all the help I could get. April 22 was looming close.
Seemed like everyone in town was thinking like Ma and Pa. The Congregational Church was full to overflowing. Reverend Merrill had hung the largest flag he could find above the entrance, so we all walked beneath the Stars and Stripes as we filed inside.
No one questioned whether church and state should be separate on this April morning. Most folks in Wiscasset were churchgoers, and we were all patriotic citizens. What conflict could there be?
Clearly Reverend Merrill saw none, as he prayed for our soldiers and for those misguided souls in the Confederacy. He prayed for President Lincoln and Vice President Hamlin, and for the Cabinet, and for all the senators and representatives, and for Governor Washburn up in Augusta. He prayed for peace, and for the healing of our nation without bloodshed. We all sang “Am I a Soldier of the Cross?” as we left services.
I was itching to get down to my office, but no one else outside the church seemed in any hurry to rush off. Most Sundays folks chatted on the Green after services before leaving to fix Sunday dinner. Today a group of boys had found sticks and were racing about, pretending to shoot Confederate soldiers. About a dozen men headed directly from the church down toward the telegraph office. Had more news come in? I hoped Charlie’d checked. He hadn’t been in church. How long would Ma and Pa want me to stick close to them? We’d done our praying, and I was getting more edgy by the minute.
“Ma, can I go down to the Herald office now?” I finally asked.
“Go on home and change out of your good clothes first,” admonished Ma. “And put something in your stomach when you’re to home. I do wish you’d stay for a decent dinner one of these days. We’ve hardly seen you in the past week.”
“The boy’s getting out the news,” said Pa, winking at me. “He’s a man with a job. You get on, Joe. Your ma and I have some planning to do for the store. If this war lasts more than a few days, it’s going to make a difference in what folks are going to be looking to buy.”
“Bound to be shortages, too,” Ma said. “The first stores to get orders in will make out best. We have to decide how much of our savings we’ll gamble on what inventory,” she added. “We’ll see you when you finish up for the day.”
“Thanks!” I said, taking off toward home before they changed their minds. I was at the Herald’s office within fifteen minutes.
Owen and Charlie had beat me there.
“News?” I managed to get out as I raced up the stairs and through the door, breathing deeply. “Any news?”
“Where’ve you been?” said Charlie sharply. “It’s practically the middle of the afternoon. This is your newspaper, and I’ve had to set almost the whole first page myself. Did you think you could take Sunday off just because you felt like it?”
“My parents expected me to go to church with them. And it’s not the middle of the afternoon. It’s not even noon.”
“Well, la-di-da. I didn’t know you were so religious. I thought you were a newspaperman.” Charlie slammed a type tray down. “Godfrey mighty! I’ve been here since early this morning. Even Owen has been here since eight o’clock. Nice of you to take the time to stop in—or maybe you thought you were helping by praying for us?”
“What needs to be done?” I knew better than to argue when Charlie was angry. I was just glad they’d both been there working.
“I’ve started printing a one-pager with today’s news. Major Anderson surrendered, as expected. And there was one death at the fort. I had to rewrite the story twice as details changed, and then set the type by myself.”
“I thought no one had died in the fighting,” I said.
“No one did. But one of our gunners decided to give a last salute to the flag before the surrender. He was loading his gun when it exploded, and blew off his arm. He bled to death.”
“How awful.” I shook my head. “He died for no reason.” I started re-filing pieces of type that Charlie had discarded and left on the table.
“What do you mean, ‘no reason’? He died for his country,” snapped Charlie. “What better death can there be?”
“A death that accomplishes something. That makes a difference to those still living,” I said. “Not bleeding to death because your gun blows up.”
“He died a hero,” said Charlie, turning to me and standing a little too close for comfort.
Owen managed to squeeze between us. “Joe, while Charlie does the printing, would you help me hang the pages so they’ll dry f
ast?” He was holding the rope we usually strung across the room.
“Of course I’ll help, Owen.” I stepped backward, avoiding a confrontation. “We all want to get that page finished as soon as we can. You’ve both done a great job this morning. I can’t believe you worked so quickly.”
“President Lincoln should make an announcement soon,” said Charlie. “He’ll tell us what he’s going to do, and what he wants the country to do. After all, we’re at war. Everything’s going to be different from now on.” Charlie started to print copies. “This is probably the most important time of our lives.”
“That will mean a lot of special issues of the Herald, right?” said Owen. “We’ll make a lot more money.”
“We may,” I said.
I hadn’t yet told Owen about possibly losing the press; I’d hoped I would never have to.
“Special issues are just the beginning, Owen!” said Charlie. “There’s no telling how different our lives are going to be from now on.” He was grinning, working the press faster than I’d ever seen before. “Changes are coming, Owen. Just you wait and see! Nothing’s going to be the way it was before Fort Sumter fell.”
He made it sound as though war was the best thing that could have ever happened to us.
Chapter 16
Sunday, April 14, late afternoon
One of the first changes because of the war was that schools were to be closed on Monday. No one questioned the decision. This week families felt a need to stay close. Talk of the war was on everyone’s lips as Owen and Charlie and I walked from home to home late Sunday afternoon, selling our one-page bulletin announcing the fall of Fort Sumter and Major Anderson’s surrender.
Most people in town bought a copy.
“I’ll be saving this,” said old Mrs. Dunham. “I’ll put it with my Bible. I suspect I’ll be doing a lot of praying from now on—praying for all of us, and for our nation. For what’ll be coming next.” She reached out and hugged both Charlie and me, to our surprise and embarrassment.
“She didn’t hug me,” said Owen as we left her house.