$10.95
March 2010 (reissue)
ISBN: 978-0-9843256-0-3
The river brought a handsome
stranger to her. Would the river also take him away?
Originally published 1985
Now back in print!
Book 1 of The River series
Return to top
Add
to Shopping Cart
The river brought a handsome stranger to
her. Would the river also take him away?
From her Alabama mansion on the banks of
the Chattahoochee River, Lily watches the steamboats pass and dreams of
falling in love with the perfect man, giving him her whole mind and
spirit. But when the river gives her an irresistible steamboat captain,
Lily is torn between him and her pledge to marry the wealthy man her
parents have chosen for her. Torn by her love for the mysterious
captain, she struggles with duty, honor and faith. Like the river's
dangerous currents, her choice will change the course of her life
forever.
Jacquelyn Cook is the author of acclaimed
historical novels and historical romances, with over 500,000 copies
sold. Her classic, four-book River series authentically recreates the
romance and drama of the Civil War era in historic Eufaula, Alabama.
Formerly collected in a popular anthology titled Magnolias, the River
series is now offered to readers in these updated editions. Visit
Jacquelyn at
www.jacquelyncook.com.
Return to top
Add
to Shopping Cart
Coming soon!
Return to top
Add
to Shopping Cart
Chapter
1
Uhmmmmm! Uhmmmmm!
The
insistent drone of the steamboat's whistle floated up to Lily Edwards in
the belvedere atop her father's home, interrupting her daydream.
Somewhere, someone waited who could be one with her in mind and spirit
as well as heart. She would not be rushed.
Uhmmmmm! The rousing blast drew her irresistibly to the rail.
Looking across the treetops at billowing black smoke, she knew she must
share in the excitement when the steamer docked. Mama would be angry if
she went, but Mama wore a constant scowl these days, because at
eighteen, Lily was rapidly passing the age to make a suitable marriage.
Wheet! Wheet! The short blasts of the whistle, punctuated with
black puffs, told her that the paddle wheeler was nearing the wharf.
Lily
tossed her long, dark curls, compressed her mushrooming skirt to fit the
narrow staircase, and hurried down, singing out, "Emma, Emma, come
quickly!" Her maiden aunt was the perfect chaperone for all occasions.
Emma Edwards, still unmarried at twenty-five, was dependent for her
livelihood upon the bounty of her sister-in-law's family. Young enough
to sympathize with Lily's commitment not to marry simply to satisfy
social custom, Emma sometimes wavered in her stand because she knew the
heartbreak of being an old maid.
"Emma,"
Lily called again. She left the observatory and negotiated her
voluminous crinoline through the attic and down another zigzag staircase
to the second floor. She stood for a moment to catch her breath beneath
the large, round grate in the hall ceiling. Barbour Hall was a
magnificent white-frame mansion built in perfect symmetry. Since its
construction in 1854, four years earlier, it was considered to be one of
the finest examples of Italianate architecture in the South.
"What's
the excitement?" Emma's calming voice answered, as she emerged from the
upstairs sitting room. Her features were set as usual in a placid
expression that concealed her emotions as she waited to see what had
evoked such enthusiasm.
"A
steamboat's coming!" Lily exclaimed, "It's the signal for the Wave."
Her brown eyes sparkling, Lily tugged at Emma's elbow. "Come with me.
Hurry. We can't miss the landing!"
Emma
hesitated but she so desired to be part of the crowd flocking to the
riverfront. Nervously, she clutched her fists against her chest and
twisted her fingers in the faded gray muslin. "You know your mother
expects me to make you behave like a lady."
"Oh,
Emma, please." Lily's liquid brown eyes became wistful. Her dainty face
alight with curiosity about life, she bounded from one foot to the other
while Emma considered.
Emma
laughed. "You're as ebullient as a soap bubble and just as impossible to
keep from floating away. We'll go—but you cannot be seen in that
short-sleeved frock," she said in her measured, quiet way. "You must
take time to put on a proper street toilet."
"Yes,
of course, but do hurry." Lily's lilting voice came in excited bursts as
she pulled her toward the spacious bedroom they shared. "At least my
hair is already dressed." She looked at her reflection in the mirror
over the marble-topped walnut dresser and fingered her dark brown hair
that was pulled back from her face with tortoiseshell combs into a
cluster of long curls in back.
Whispering conspiratorially, they dressed quickly. From a tremendous
walnut armoire in the back corner of the room, Lily chose a green silk
dress with wide lace ruffles beginning at her shoulders, meeting in a
point to emphasize her tiny waist, and spreading again to flow to her
feet over the skirt held wide by her petticoat of stiff crinoline. She
especially liked the sleeves with their lacy fullness at the wrists. The
skirt Emma chose was elaborately trimmed with braid, and the frayed
bodice she covered with a canezou, a dainty jacket fashioned with
horizontal rows of smocking.
When
they had donned tulle bonnets and gloves, they picked up tiny silk
parasols against the bright June sun and tiptoed into the back bedroom
where a closet concealed a hidden staircase. Silently, they slipped down
the dark passageway, hoping they would not meet the servants.
Emerging in the back hallway, they hurried across the wide veranda that
spread as gracefully around the house as the girls' billowing skirts.
Indeed, Lily often fancied Barbour Hall looked like the belles of the
day. The glassed belvedere formed her airy hat; the wooden balustrade,
her neck ruffle; the green shutters on the upper story, her canezou;
and the porch spreading around the first floor, her hooped skirt.
Lily
had infected Emma with her sprightliness, and the girls bounced down the
steep steps and ran along the cleanly swept path through beds of
fragrant summer flowers until they reached the stables.
The
buggy ride took nearly half an hour as they proceeded down West Barbour
Street, trimmed by China trees. They descended the hill, passed the fine
brick storehouses and many churches of Eufaula, Alabama, and continued
to the west bank of the Chattahoochee River.
From
this high bluff, they could look across the wide, dark blue water into
the state of Georgia, which flaunted ownership of the river. Georgia had
been one of the original thirteen colonies, but this side of the
Chattahoochee had long remained territory occupied by the Creek Indian
nation.
Eufaula
was a junction of stage lines with six-horse coaches going out into the
frontier of Alabama. There were no railroads here, but the bluff, one
hundred-fifty feet above the low-water mark, had become a steamboat
landing even before the Creeks had been driven out. Because steamboats
had plied the Chattahoochee since 1828, Eufaulians were cosmopolitan.
Turning
the buggy to the left, the girls followed Riverside Drive past the
Tavern, a two-story, English type building with double galleries. Built
in 1836, it was the first permanent structure in town. Thus far, it had
served as riverboat inn, private residence, and temporary church. The
girls laughed about what it might become next as they rode on around the
bend in the river and descended the hill to the wharf located at the
foot of the bluff just north of the Tavern.
Reining
the horse at a high vantage point, they looked down as the tremendous,
flat-bottomed boat, fully one hundred seventy-five feet long, belched
fire and black smoke from her two towering smokestacks and glided to
rest at the wharf. The huge, round paddle box, which covered the
machinery of her side wheel, was emblazoned with the name, Wave,
and above that was her insignia, a painting of a descending dove.
It was
evident that Emma had forgotten her fear of Cordelia Edward's wrath.
Quivering with excitement, she leaned forward to gaze at the upper deck
where Lily was pointing.
"Would
you look at that gown!" Lily exclaimed. "Umm, my favorite green. It must
be straight from Paris." She laughed as the lady fluttered her fan
coquettishly and looked back at the young gentleman who strutted behind
her like a peacock. Around them swirled bright colors of silks and
satins as the fifty first-class passengers milled about, chattering
gaily, waving handkerchiefs, and promenading about the deck. They seemed
to ignore the cacophony of piercing whistles, clanging bells, and
shouting workmen.
Bales
of cotton, piled everywhere along the wharf and on flat-bottomed barges,
waited to be poled out for transfer to the steamer when the Italian
marble, favored by Eufaula merchants and planters for the imposing
mansions they were building in the Bluff City, was unloaded.
Emma
motioned toward the police escort for the men carrying huge bags of
silver, funds from the sale in Liverpool of the cotton crop that
continued to grow larger each year.
Lily,
however, was looking at the lower deck just above the water's edge where
grizzled, unwashed passengers crowded amongst machinery, crates of
merchandise, and all manner of freight. The steamboat mirrored Southern
society; there was no middle class. A woman whose hair was stringing
about her wrinkled face pulled at four dirty children. Lily thought that
her skirt drooped indecently around her limbs without the required
number of petticoats.
Lily
cocked her head to one side and pursed her lips in puzzled interest as a
handsome young man, dressed in light, slim trousers and a dark
frock-tailed coat, moved into view behind the tired mother. Lily
wondered why he was on the lower deck.
At that
moment, a roustabout staggered backwards under the weight of a barrel
and bumped into the especially well-dressed gentleman. His tall silk hat
fell, revealing a head of neat blond curls. As he whirled around, his
chiseled features contorted with a rage his well-tended beard could not
conceal.
Lily
grimaced, glad that she could not distinguish his words, for they were
obviously a curse. Regaining his balance, the young man raised his
gold-headed walking stick to deliver a blow. A slightly older man in a
dark blue flannel uniform with a gold braid indicating that he was the
captain, stepped quickly into the fray. He placed a restraining hand on
the uplifted arm. Quietly, his face and manner pleasant, the ship's
master reasoned with the hotheaded young man. The cowed roustabout
retrieved the hat; and the tall captain, obviously joking, clapped a
hand on the petulant fellow's shoulder and guided him down the deck.
Admiring his calm self-assurance, Lily watched him intently as he went
striding away. Seeming to feel her eyes upon him, he turned. Swiftly
spanning the distance between them, his clear-eyed gaze met hers with a
lively interest that made her blink and swallow as he stopped
openmouthed and held his breath midlaugh. His smooth, tanned face warmed
with a smile, lifting his dark mustache.
Sighing
deeply, Lily tilted her head and lowered the silk fringe of her pink
parasol. She smiled beneath it in spite of herself, for she responded
immediately to the look in his eyes. The pressure of Emma's hand on her
arm reminded her wordlessly that this man was far beneath her social
station. Knowing she would never again have a chance to meet anyone this
exciting, she dropped her thick lashes and shielded her face with the
parasol. "Let's go to Papa's office," she said.
Making
their way through the jostling crowd past clean-smelling cypress lumber
and the less pleasing aroma of salted fish, the girls entered the Cotton
Exchange. In spite of the fact that Clare Edwards was surrounded by men
all talking at once, he came forward to meet his daughter and sister
with doting smiles and affectionate kisses.
Lily
hugged her father lovingly. He was fifty-one, and when she thought of
his growing so old, it made her sadly vow to keep his last days happy.
"I'm
delighted to see my favorite beauties," he beamed, "but you should not
be here."
"Oh,
Papa, everyone in town is here."
"Yes,
yes, but I mean you especially should not be here today." He hesitated.
"It will seem forward."
Puzzled, Lily merely looked at her father, who rubbed his hand over his
balding head in confusion.
"There's something I should have told you." He faltered. "Come into my
private office." He said nothing more until he was ensconced behind the
enormous desk that Mama had bought for him. "You know how concerned your
mother has been because you haven't . . ." He cleared his throat and
hesitated. "Haven't, uh, decided upon one of your beaux . . ."
"They
are all just shallow boys!" Lily wailed. "I know Mama wants me to have
the proper social position and security." She sighed disgustedly. "But I
want more than that. I want a husband I can talk with, enjoy being with.
Most of all, he must share my faith in God!"
"I
wouldn't trust my girl with less than a Christian gentleman," Papa
replied. He cleared his throat again and his voice croaked, "But give
this young man a chance."
"What
young man?" Lily stirred uneasily, wondering how much longer she could
struggle against Mama.
"Well,
your mother wrote to her relatives in South Carolina. And if all has
gone according to schedule, your distant cousin, Green Bethune, has
journeyed aboard the river steamer Wave. You must leave quickly
now before he comes in and thinks you are here to inspect him."
Return to top
Add
to Shopping Cart