Her Cherokee Groom. Valerie Hansen
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“I suppose you could put it that way.” Annabelle bent closer to whisper. “I don’t complain, though, and you shouldn’t, either. It’s very good of the Eatons to take us in and provide for us.”
The boy tugged on her hand, then looked around as if making sure they were alone. “I will run away. You can come with me.”
“What? Oh, no. We can’t.”
“Why not?”
“Because it’s wrong. What would your uncle Charles say if you did something like that?”
“I am the son of a chief’s son. I will go.”
“Please, don’t talk like that,” she pleaded. “Think of all the trouble it would cause if you left.”
She could tell by the child’s stoic expression that he was beyond listening to the pleas of a mere girl.
There was only one thing to do. She would have to send word to Mr. McDonald to stop by again and have a stern word with the boy before he and the rest of the delegation left town. Until then she’d keep a close eye on Johnny. A very close eye.
“I think you and I should take our supper alone tonight and get to know each other,” Annabelle suggested.
“Will they not miss you?”
“No,” she admitted sadly. “The family usually insists I be present only for formal dinner parties.”
She reached down to gently smooth his hair. “I’m certain they will want to present you to their Washington friends soon. Mr. Eaton is a very important man. Being secretary of war means he works closely with President Jackson.”
The child did not look impressed. Smiling, she offered her hand. “Come. We’ll explore the house together so you won’t get lost.”
“I never get lost,” he insisted.
“Good for you.”
Grinning, Annabelle started up the spiral staircase, explaining as she went. “Down the hall at the end is the guest room. You’ll sleep there.”
Before he could ask she added, “My room is right next to that one,” and sensed him starting to relax.
Poor little thing. He acted so brave and put on such a grown-up front it was easy to forget how young he was.
No wonder he’d thought about running away. He had to be frightened nearly out of his mind.
Shivering, she realized she, too, was worried about his future. It was easy to put herself in his place because she shared it. Neither of them truly belonged in this stoic family and neither could depend on fair treatment from their so-called parents.
John Eaton had always acted preoccupied and distant toward her. His new wife, Margaret, was far worse because she paid attention to everything and could be very vindictive if displeased, which was most of the time. The older woman had had a sordid reputation in Washington before her marriage to Eaton. The more Margaret and Annabelle interacted, the more credence the rumors of perfidy gained. And the more trepidation they generated.
Margaret had already fired every young female servant in the Eaton household and had made it clear that Annabelle’s presence was barely tolerable. There was no foundation for such jealousy but it nevertheless existed. Perhaps, because Johnny was a boy, he would not encounter so much of Margaret’s malice.
Until the child got used to his new life here in Washington City, Annabelle vowed she would protect and guide him. It would be no chore to teach him city ways and household rules. Truth to tell, she was looking forward to the opportunity.
The fact that he was a smaller version of his uncle gave her heart an added prick and reminded her that she must contact Charles McDonald as soon as possible and entreat him to return and lecture the child about fidelity.
Annabelle’s stomach clenched. If Margaret even suspected that Johnny was planning to run away, the whole household would suffer her fits of foul temper, probably for weeks on end.
Moonlight gleamed on the rippling surface of the Potomac, making the water shimmer like molten silver. If not for the noise of the city behind him, Charles might have imagined that he was standing on the banks of the Chattahoochee, back home, listening to a cacophony of frogs and the calls of night birds.
How much longer would Georgia be home to the Cherokee? he wondered. Some of his people had already migrated of their own volition but until the tribal elders had the solemn promise of the current president that their claim to lands farther west would be honored, he and many others were reluctant to pack up and go.
A flock of white egrets took to the sky, startled by something near the river’s edge. Charles instinctively slipped into a copse of trees.
“I seen him come this way,” someone said. “High falutin he was, too. Real fancy dressed.”
Another man chortled and spat. “Well, he can’t have gone far. We’ll get him. And then we’ll teach ’em to stay where they belong.”
“Don’t forget, I get his stickpin.”
Charles automatically reached for his pistol and grabbed empty air. The delegation had been instructed to exemplify peace. Consequently, he was unarmed.
Moving so slowly, so fluidly, that the roosting wild birds were not disturbed, he inched backward until his shoulders met the trunk of an enormous oak. Then he consciously calmed his mind and waited.
Leaves rustled. Nearby bushes shook.
The would-be assailants were nearly upon him.
* * *
Annabelle’s supper with Johnny had been uneventful except that he had eaten little. She felt so sorry for him she didn’t argue when he asked, “May I go up to my room?”
“Of course. I know you must be weary.”
“Are you coming upstairs?”
“In a few minutes,” she replied. “I have one errand to take care of first. Go ahead. I’ll be up soon.”
She watched him climb the stairs, then turned to check the empty hallway. There was pen and ink in a writing desk tucked into an alcove off the parlor. While the Eatons were dining, she could avail herself of the opportunity to write a short note to Charles—Mr. McDonald. The mere thought made her blush and hurry toward the desk. She must not be observed, nor did she dare let anyone see to whom her innocent letter was addressed. Not if she hoped to be able to carry out her plan and stop the child from fleeing.
She dipped the nib in the inkwell and began, “Dear Sir,” ending with her signature and placing his name on the outside of the folded note paper. Her penmanship was not perfect because she’d had so little chance to practice and because her hands were trembling, but it would suffice. It would have to.
Replacing everything