Authors: Chet Hagan
“I'm a horse breeder. I'm building an estate out by Richland Creek, on the former Duncan trading-post property.”
She smiled beautifully at him. “Oh, an estate! Not just a farm, but an
estate.
”
“Yes,” he said defensively, annoyed by her sarcastic tone, “that's what I intend it to be. The finest estate in western Tennessee.”
“I'm pleased for you, Mr. Dewey.” She turned to leave him.
Charles placed a restraining hand on her arm. “Perhaps I can show it to you some day?”
“Perhaps.” Once more she tried to move away, but his hand stayed on her arm.
“Perhaps tomorrow,” he said insistently.
She stared at him for a moment, as she shook loose his light hold. “It must be a
grand
estate, sir.”
“Well, not right now, butâ”
“I mean, if I must see it immediately,” she teased, “I imagine there is a marvelous house, with the most modern of appointments, andâ”
“No,” he admitted disconsolately, “I live in a log house.”
“Log houses, Mr. Dewey, are easily seen here in Nashville, without riding way out to Richland Creek.”
He knew she was making fun of him, but he persisted. “Miss Jackson, what you'll see there nowâand what you'll see there in two, three yearsâwill astound you.”
“But, right nowânot much?”
“Not much,” Charles admitted.
“Two years, or three, would be soon enough to see the
magnificence
of your estate, wouldn't it?” Her eyesâthey were what Charles thought of as spring greenâsparkled. “Explain to me, Mr. Dewey, why I must see it now.”
His mouth was suddenly dry. The words he was about to speak seemed not to be his; he felt they were being forced out of him.
“Because I intend that you, Miss Jackson, shall be the mistress there.”
The girl laughed loudly, all heads turning toward them. Charles flushed.
“You are entertaining, Mr. Dewey.” She paused, looking into his eyes. “I take it that you're serious.”
“I am.”
She stepped back away from him, running her eyes over him from head to foot and back again.
“Attractive enough,” she said quietly. Not to him. To herself.
Her candor left him without words.
“Now, Mr. Dewey,” she went on, “do you have a staff on this grand estate?”
“I have blacks, yes.”
“And you live there alone with your slaves?”
“No,” he replied hesitantly, “I ⦠uh ⦠have five children.”
She gasped.
“Five children!”
“Yes.”
“And your wife?”
“She died.”
The auburn-haired girl offered him no false words of sympathy. “And so you see me as a nursemaid.”
“Good Lord, no!”
“What
do
you see me as?”
“As the beautiful mistress of Bon Marché.”
“Hmmm ⦠Good bargain?”
“Yes, that's what it means.”
“I'm to be a good bargain, too, I imagine?”
He was suddenly angry. Her continual sarcasm did that. He wanted to end the conversation.
“Miss Jackson,” Charles said in formal tones, “perhaps I spoke too hastily, too boldly.”
She pouted. “Oh, you're withdrawing your kind offer?”
“It seems you wish me to.”
Another beautiful smile. “Very well, Mr. Dewey, you've won me over. I'll see your
estate.
You may call for me at my father's store at noon tomorrow. You
do
have a carriage?”
“Of course.”
“Noon, then.”
She started to turn away from him. “Oh, by the way, my name is Matilda. Mattie, to my friends. You may call me Mattie, if you wish.”
V
C
HARLES
was nearly an hour late in arriving at the store for Mattie Jackson the next day.
“I'm terribly sorry,” he explained to the annoyed young woman, “but our servant girl picked this morning to have a baby. I simply had to be there.”
“You must have a strong paternal feeling for your blacks.”
“Yes, I do.” He drew a deep breath. “You see, Angelica was my late wife's housemaid, andâ”
Mattie interrupted his explanation: “I like that about you, Charles Deweyâyour concern for your blacks.”
While she still spoke candidly, the sarcasm of the night before had disappeared. They chatted incessantly during the carriage ride to Bon Marché, with Mattie telling him that she was a second cousin to Andrew Jackson.
“At least,” she laughed, “that's what Daddy claims. It seems that he had a cousin in North Carolina who may have been a cousin to Andrew Jackson's father. It's all pretty vague, really. But we have fun with it. I call him Cousin Andy and he calls me Cousin Mattie, and everyone is comfortable with that. It really doesn't matter to me, one way or another. Cousin or not, I admire him immensely.”
“He seems a unique man,” Dewey commented.
“A
great
man!” she corrected him.
Charles was at ease with her. He told her of Paris, of the days in the navy, of his guardian spirit, and of the decision it made for him to become an American. Of Elkwood and of Fortunata. Of the trip west and of Martha's death.
Once again he omitted the fact of his desertion; he hadn't told Marshall Statler about it, or Martha, or even Andrew MacCallum. He saw no need to tell Mattie about it. That secret, he was determined, would die with him.
At the Richland Creek property, he guided her around, proudly showing her what had been done.
“My horses will be here in late July or early August, and then you'll see the beginning of what this”âhe swept an armâ”is meant to be.”
The afternoon passed swiftly. Looking at the sun moving westward, Charles said to her: “We ought to leave in a few minutes if I'm to get you home before darkness sets in.”
“I haven't seen the new baby yet.”
“Oh, that won't be necessary.”
“I
want to,
Charles.”
Reluctantly, Dewey led her to the cabin built for Horace and Angelica. Horace bustled about importantly as he greeted the visitor. Angelica, her face impassive, was sitting up in her small bed, nursing the light-skinned baby.
“Oh, it's darling,” Mattie cooed. “A boy or a girl?”
“A son,” Horace replied proudly. “His name's Marshall.”
Charles explained: “Marshall Statler was the master of Elkwood plantation, back in Virginia.” He tried to prod Mattie. “We really ought to be leavingâ”
“May I hold him?” Mattie asked of Angelica as she finished the nursing.
The black mother extended the tiny bundle to her without comment.
Mattie took the baby in her arms, rocking it gently, cooing, thoroughly enjoying herself.
After another few minutes: “Mattie, if we're to be back before darknessâ”
“Oh, very well.” She surrendered the baby to Angelica. “Thank you.”
Angelica nodded. She didn't smile.
On the drive back to Nashville, Mattie was exuberant about the children. “Corrine and I could be good friends. She's a very self-assured young lady.”
“Like you, I think.”
Mattie looked over at him. “Yes, isn't she? If I ever have any children of my own, I hope I'll have a daughter like Corrine.” Grinning, “Franklin, though, is not so sure about me. I suspect that he sees me as a potential intruder.”
“Franklin will love you,” Charles interrupted. “He above all the others would accept you as a mother. He's a very realistic, sensible young fellow.”
“Aren't you getting a little ahead of yourself?”
“What?”
“Talking of me as a mother of those children. I love children; you could see that, I'm sure. But a ready-made family is
not
what every young girl dreams of.”
“Butâ”
“Charles, I went along with your suggestion that I might be the mistress of Bon Marché only because I thought it was a ploy, a way to meet me, toâ”
“I was totally serious!”
“And ridiculous,” she said forcefully. “I discovered today that I enjoy your company. That I like your children. That your dreams of an estate in this wilderness are challenging. But you've read too much into my acceptance of your offer to take this carriage ride with you. Much too much!”
“I apologize for that.” Mattie had made him angry again.
They rode along in silence for a time, Charles getting into the horse for more speed. He wanted to get her home.
It was she who broke the silence. “That babyâyou're the father, aren't you?”
Not looking at her, a scowling Dewey whacked the reins down on the back of the horse. He didn't give her an answer, but he had the horse at full trot now.
“I'd be thankful,” the young woman said stonily, “if you'd slow the carriage a bit.”
He obeyed her, but without comment.
“You
are
the father, aren't you?”
“Yes.” It was a mumble, barely audible.
They were within sight of Nashville before Mattie spoke again. “Do you want to court me, Charles Dewey?”
Indeed, that was what he wanted. Yet the anger she had generated in himâbrought on by her unrelenting candor and the admission she had wrung from him about Angelica's babyâwould not abate quickly.
She waited a few moments for his answer. “Wellâ¦?”
“Yes, I do want to court you.”
It was a factual statement, devoid of enthusiasm. She recognized that.
“Very well, let's give it a try,” Mattie said. “But no promises. Not yet. I suggest that no promises be made on either side.”
“I agree.” He swallowed hard. “I was desperately afraid that when you learned about Angelica's babyâ”
“Who am I to make moral judgments? The only thing I wanted, Charles, was the truth. If you had lied to me, there would have been no talk of courtship, believe me.”
He exhaled a loud breath.
“Relieved?”
A smile came. “Yesâmuch relieved.”
She was laughing as he drew the carriage up in front of the Jackson store.
“Could you come for dinner Saturday night?”
“I'd be pleased to.”
“Don't be too pleased,” Mattie giggled. “The dinner means that you'll have to make some kind of announcement to my parents about your intentions.”
“Oh, Godâ”
“I know⦔ She patted his hand. “But Mother is one of those ladies who put a lot of store in such formalities.”
Dewey grimaced. “Suppose she doesn't approve of me?”
“Oh, she won't. Without a doubt, she won't. You won't measure up to her standards. She sent me to school in Boston hoping that I'd meet a young, wealthy New England merchant from an impressive family.”
Mattie edged closer to him, dropping her voice conspiratorially. “And I did meet such a young man. Mother doesn't know it, but I did. There was one little problem: he ⦠uh ⦠well, he had a rather serious quirkâhe wasn't attracted to women.” She laughed loudly.
Charles joined her laughter. “I don't have such a problem.” He leaned over, trying to kiss her.
She avoided him. “You don't have to prove that to me, you know. RememberâI saw the baby today.”
Dewey groaned.
“That wasn't kind, was it?” She kissed him lightly on the cheek. “Saturday, then. Seven o'clock. And please don't be late. You may not have as convenient an excuse as you had today.”
T
HE
mare writhed on the ground, sweating profusely, emitting sharp cries of pain, her legs thrashing.
“Don't nobody know what to do for her?” Abner Lower asked of the slaves who circled the stricken animal.
“It da colic,” Malachi, one of the older blacks, answered with a certainty born of experience. “Her gut done git twisted, Ah guess.”
“And what do we do?” Lower demanded. He disliked being in a situation where the Negroes knew more than he did, but he had never been involved in breeding horses and he had to rely on the slaves.
“Ain't nothin' to do, Mistah Abner. Da colic, it bad. She gonna die.”
The long-hunter looked at the position of the sun. It wasn't yet directly overhead, although nearly so.
“Shit, we could make another six to eight miles today if it warn't for this!”
“Yas, suh,” Malachi replied dutifully.
The mare's foal came up to her, nickering, trying to nuzzle one of her teats. He was kicked away by the pained mother.
“What happens to that foal if she dies?” the guide of the Fortunata party wanted to know.
“âNother mare might take âim, but it ain't likely.”
Lower frowned, walking away from the group, pondering. He glanced again at the sun. Moving quickly now, he went to one of the pack horses, and brought down a musket, and loaded it. The slaves melted away from the mare as the long-hunter approached.
“Ain't no point in standin' around here just waitin' for her to die,” Lower muttered. No one disagreed with him.
He put the muzzle of the gun to her ear and pulled the trigger. The once-proud head of the blooded mare jerked convulsively as the noise of the explosion reverberated through the wilderness.
“Now, the foalâ”
Malachi became bold. “Suh, he got ole Skull's blood runnin' in him. Mistah Charles, he partial to thet.”
Lower hesitated, lowering the musket. “You think another mare might take him?”
“Ah try, Mistah Abner.”
“How long?”
“It take time.”
Their guide sighed. “Well, try, then. We'll make camp here tonight.”
He spat in the dust, angry at the delay. “Shit!”
II
M
ATTIE
Jackson hadn't been wrong. Her mother didn't approve of Charles.