A Light in the Wilderness: A Novel

A Light in the Wilderness: A Novel

by Jane Kirkpatrick
A Light in the Wilderness: A Novel

A Light in the Wilderness: A Novel

by Jane Kirkpatrick

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Overview

Letitia holds nothing more dear than the papers that prove she is no longer a slave. They may not cause white folks to treat her like a human being, but at least they show she is free. She trusts in those words she cannot read—as she is beginning to trust in Davey Carson, an Irish immigrant cattleman who wants her to come west with him.

Nancy Hawkins is loathe to leave her settled life for the treacherous journey by wagon train, but she is so deeply in love with her husband that she knows she will follow him anywhere—even when the trek exacts a terrible cost.

Betsy is a Kalapuya Indian, the last remnant of a once proud tribe in the Willamette Valley in Oregon territory. She spends her time trying to impart the wisdom and ways of her people to her grandson. But she will soon have another person to care for.

As season turns to season, suspicion turns to friendship, and fear turns to courage, three spirited women will discover what it means to be truly free in a land that makes promises it cannot fulfill. This multilayered story from bestselling author Jane Kirkpatrick will grip readers' hearts and minds as they travel with Letitia on the dusty and dangerous Oregon trail into the boundless American West.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780800722319
Publisher: Baker Publishing Group
Publication date: 09/02/2014
Pages: 316
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Jane Kirkpatrick is the New York Times and CBA bestselling author of more than twenty-five books, including A Sweetness to the Soul, which won the coveted Wrangler Award from the Western Heritage Center. Her works have been finalists for the Christy Award, Spur Award, Oregon Book Award, and Reader's Choice awards, and have won the WILLA Literary Award and Carol Award for Historical Fiction. Many of her titles have been Book of the Month and Literary Guild selections. You can also read her work in more than fifty publications, including Decision, Private Pilot, and Daily Guideposts. Jane lives in Central Oregon with her husband, Jerry. Learn more at www.jkbooks.com.

Read an Excerpt

A Light in the Wilderness

A Novel


By Jane Kirkpatrick

Revell

Copyright © 2014 Jane Kirkpatrick
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-8007-2231-9


CHAPTER 1

Having an Opinion


1844—Platte County, Missouri

Letitia preferred the shadows, avoiding the skirmish before her. But the child tugged on her hand and led Letitia to the dust in front of the Platte County courthouse. Men's voices sliced the air like the whips of a field marse, sharp and stinging. The air was heavy as a wet, wool quilt, yet dust billowed around the two men as it did when bulls scraped the earth. "She was contracted for, fair and square. She failed to do the work!" Letitia knew the speaker, Davey Carson, once of Ireland, now of Carroll Township, Platte County, Missouri. Today, full of consternation. Bushy eyebrows with the tint of auburn formed a chevron of scowl over his nose. "Sure and I did nothing like she says I did. Not a thing. The girl didn't work, I tell ye!"

Letitia shrank back, grateful his anger wasn't directed at her. She tugged at the child's hand to move toward the Platte City store.

"We'll settle it in court then." The second man brushed past Davey, leaving the Irishman like a shriveled pickle in the bottom of a barrel, no one wanting to touch it.

Davey's red face scanned the disappearing crowd. When his eyes caught Letitia's, she glanced down. Hot sun brought out sweat on her forehead, intensified the scent of coconut oil and honey she'd used to smooth her crinkly hair. She turned her head to the side. "Let's go." She started to reach for the child's hand.

"I suppose you believe that too," he accused.

She halted.

"That I'm a madman capable of beating a young lass and misusing her, slave or no! Is that your opinion, woman?"

Was he really speaking to her? She should walk away. She didn't need to get in an argument with a white man. She was in the town getting buttons and bows for Mrs. Bowman and looking after Artemesia, who had begged to come along. The child stared, slipped her hand inside Letitia's. It felt wet and warm.

"I gots nothin' to speak of, Mistah Carson. I gots no opinion. I jus' stayin' out of the way." She did have an opinion, though. He had been kind to her the year before, not long after she'd arrived in Platte County, when she'd asked him to take her money and buy a cow with it.

His voice rose again. "I may be an old mountain man not accustomed to town ways, but I know how to take care of property." He threw his hands into the air. "I never touched her. Never! It was a trick all along, I tell ye. They told the lass to run away so they'd have their property and my money and I'd be without her labor and my money both." Davey stomped up the courthouse steps past the black and white cornerstones. Letitia was dismissed.

Each American was due his "day in court," or so she'd heard. She hoped he was successful in his lawsuit. She wasn't sure why. Taking sides wasn't her way. Her heartbeat returned to a steady pace.

In the store, they waited. The mercantile owner had customers to keep happy, and serving those white people first was a given. Letitia spread her hands over the smooth bolts of cloth, the new dyes tickling her nose. She lifted the lacework on the shelf, fingering the tidy stitches. Irish lace? She shook her head. People were trading their finery for hardtack and flour, getting ready for travel west.

Letitia was going to Oregon too, with the Bowmans. She wasn't certain how she felt about that. She'd learned the rules of Missouri, showed her papers when asked, endured the sneers and snarls of "free black" as though the word meant stink or worse, a catching kind of poison spread by being present near her breath. But good things had happened to her since she'd been in this state too. She'd earned money helping birth babies, enough to buy a cow. Davey Carson had in fact made the purchase for her, taking her money to acquire the cow that she paid the Bowmans for feeding—along with her own keep.

But she'd heard that the Oregon people wanted to join the states as free. She'd be free there too, and without slavery and its uncertainty hovering like a cloud of fevered mosquitoes. Maybe in Oregon she'd try her hand at living alone. Or if she married and had children, they'd be born free there and no one could ever sell them away from her. What property she had would be hers to keep. Like the cow she owned. She eyed a silver baby rattle on the mercantile shelf. She felt its cool weight. For when ... if ever again. No, Mr. Bowman said they could only take essentials. A baby rattle wouldn't qualify.

Still, Letitia chose to go to Oregon with them, chose to help Sarah with the laundry and care of the children. She felt free to call her Missus Bowman whenever they were in public, even though at the log cabin she could call her Miss Sarah, like an older sister. Though they weren't ever so close as that.

While Artemesia ogled the hard candy counter, Letitia wandered the store, placing a set of needles into her basket, looking at a hairbrush, her face reflected in the silver back. Coal black hair frizzing at her temples beneath her straw hat, damp from humidity heavy as a dog's breath at high noon. Dark brown eyes set into a face the color of the skinny piano keys. Sadness looked out at her, reminding her of all those eyes had seen in her twenty-six years. The set was nothing she could afford.

A gust of wind burst sand against the store's windows. Outside the weather worked itself up into a downpour. Getting home would drench them. She ought to have remembered the slicker for the child, but it hadn't looked like rain. She didn't want the child to catch cold.

A sewing box caught her eye. Tortoiseshell with green and blue silk lining the inside. She opened it and saw the ivory spool holders. She could make a false bottom and put her paper there, somewhere safe and secure.

"What can I do for you, Miss Artemesia?" The shopkeeper spoke to the child. He and Letitia were the only adults now, all other customers serviced and gone, scampering through the rain with the umbrellas the shopkeeper loaned them.

"Mistah Bowman will be in tomorrow to pick up these things." Letitia handed him a list, careful not to touch his fingers even though she wore gloves. "I's buying the needles."

"This your mammy, Miss Bowman?" He nodded toward Letitia. "Yes sir. She's Aunt Tish."

"She has money to buy needles?"

Letitia raised her voice. "I has money Suh."

He frowned. Letitia handed him the coins. "Bowmans pay me. I's a free woman."

He harrumphed. "So you're all really going to Oregon then, Miss Bowman?"

Artemesia nodded.

"Must say, you'll be missed, little lady." He turned to put Letitia's money in the till. "Half the town seems to be heading west. I see the wagons rolling." He sighed. "Wouldn't mind a change of scenery myself now and then. Not sure though that I trust those letters sent back about all the good things Oregon has awaiting."

"We able to borrow one of your umbrellas, suh? It rainin' harsh."

"Should have remembered to bring one."

"Yessuh, but didn't see no storms walkin' in. Don't want the chil' getting' sick."

He nodded. "Wouldn't want that on my conscience either. Here you go."

Letitia didn't give her opinion of letters sent and received. He wouldn't care. Few asked her opinion. Miss Sarah didn't invite suggestions for how to clean the bedrolls of fleas or how to lessen morning sickness. Mr. Bowman acted like she didn't exist except to help break hemp or butcher hogs. But Davey Carson had asked her opinion of his lawsuit, now that she thought about it. She wore a little shame that she'd sidestepped his question, didn't answer that she found him to be a kind man, unlike what he was accused of. He had treated her as though she was more than a post. That so rarely happened, she'd been shocked and was now surprised at the feeling of warmth arriving on the memory.
(Continues...)


Excerpted from A Light in the Wilderness by Jane Kirkpatrick. Copyright © 2014 Jane Kirkpatrick. Excerpted by permission of Revell.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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