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Galveston: Between Wind And Water (A Historical Literary Fiction Novel Filled with Romance and Drama)

Page 23

by Rachel Cartwright


  Gabrielle looked anxiously around at the people struggling through the streaming water amidst the rising yells of men, women, and children calling out to each other. “I’m . . . I’m not sure.”

  Bret lowered his arms and made a few playful splashes in the shifting water with his hands. “Which one is it, Gabrielle? Not sure about my house withstanding another of mother nature’s temper tantrums, or not sure about riding out a storm with a murderer alone in his house?”

  Gabrielle stamped her boots on the floorboards. “I didn’t say you killed Timothy!”

  “That’s right. You haven’t said a damn thing.” Bret turned and started trudging away from the cab through the water.

  Another booming thunderbolt struck down from the sky. A more vast and dense spreading of black clouds swept over Gabrielle’ head as the water rose again up the sides of the cab’s wheels. She stood from her seat and called. “Bret?”

  He kept moving through the water, shifting his shoulders and hips from side to side.

  This time she took in a deep breath and raised her voice. “Bret!”

  His back was still toward her, moving steadily away from the stranded cab.

  “Bret McGowan!” Gabrielle screamed. “You’re the coldest, cruelest man I’ve ever known! How dare you leave a woman alone like this! Get back here this instant!”

  Bret stopped and turned around. “Just testing the current, my dear.” He smiled. “I was deciding whether to carry you or let you work your way through it like everybody else.”

  Gabrielle put her hands on her hips. “And?”

  He shrugged. “You’re a big girl now, Gabrielle, and your riding attire will go a long way in protecting your modesty from the elements.” Bret smiled. “And I’m sure most Galveston ladies wish they were dressed the same at this moment.”

  “You bastard! Why, I never—” She looked down at her boots. The water was already covering the floorboard.

  “If you’re coming, Miss Caldwell, you’d better get a move on. Storm and tide wait for no one.”

  Gabrielle gritted her teeth and gripped the inside door handle. She turned around with her back to Bret and lowered her leg over the edge into the swift-moving water until she felt the crunchy top of the shell-covered road.

  Summoning her courage against the dark current, and the infuriating man who stood in the middle of it, she lowered her other leg, submerging herself up to her thighs.

  Still clutching the handle for support, she was afraid to let go of the only thing grounding her to that spot. “Bret . . .”

  “Don’t worry, Gabrielle.” His strong, wet hand was on her shoulder, helping to guide her down. “I’ll be right here with you. I told you. It’s going to be all right, darlin’. Everything is going to work out just fine.”

  In the sudden agony at the thought of changing her mind, Gabrielle held onto Bret, her cheeks flaming against the cold wind and her heart falling like a weight into the rising current.

  CHAPTER 24

  Saturday, September 8, 8:00 a.m.

  The grandfather clock in the parlor of the McGowan home chimed at 8:00 a.m. The heavy, sweeping rains battered against the thick storm shutters and on the small, circular windowpanes for which there was no protection.

  Each torrent of water was driven on by a vicious wind, the likes of which Philip Harper could scarcely remember since the storm of ’86. The great McGowan mansion creaked and heaved on its raised foundations under the impact of the strongest gales.

  Still feeling the cold damp after changing his clothes, Philip looked out once more at the barometer hanging outside a small window in the parlor.

  He shivered, his breathing becoming short and uneven again at the sight of the steady fall of the red line of mercury. Should have kept going and caught that last train for Houston. I've done my best, Lorena, but he just won’t listen. Only old men and young fools turn back and try to fix something they can’t.

  Philip rubbed his hands together, trying to knead the warmth back into his aching bones and muscles, the warmth that had disappeared with strike after strike of gale winds against his face and hands.

  What did he really want to tell Bret anyway? It didn’t matter what he saw back then in the worst times of the war. And who was going to believe dead William McGowan’s old house nigger anyway?

  Philip heard the latch on the front door turn.

  The door pushed open and a thick shower of rain sprayed across the hallway carpet. Bret and Miss Caldwell, drenched head to toe and shivering, stumbled into the house.

  Philip took a deep breath. He stood, rushed forward and slammed the swaying door tight behind them. For a moment he stared at the shuddering, soaked couple in silence, resisting the overpowering urge to embrace them like his lost children finally returned home.

  Bret’s expression was flat, his eyes pale, weathered away by more than the rain. Then . . . a twinkle of blue and a crinkle in the corner. “Miss your train?”

  “Trains run every day, sir. There’s always another one tomorrow . . . or the day after that.”

  Bret chuckled. “Damn it, man. You're looking at me like I’ve just risen from Davy Jones’ Locker.”

  “Miss Caldwell and you keep standing there dripping in those wet clothes, then I believe that’s exactly where you’ll be headed. Now get inside here, both of you.”

  Philip put his hands on their shoulders and led them toward the parlor.

  Gabrielle looked up at the grandfather clock in the parlor as it chimed at noon. The storm had increased its howling intensity again, forcing Bret’s house to rasp and scrape increasingly with every passing hour.

  She finished rolling up the sleeves of a workman’s torn flannel shirt, then turned up the cuffs of the groundskeeper’s worn blue jeans. “I fancy my stylish lady’s ensemble will make quite the impression at our next gala. What do you think, Bret?”

  Gabrielle stood and laughed, cinching the rawhide belt tightly against her waist. She laughed again hoping to provoke Bret into a little good-natured kidding but try as she might, she could not penetrate his detached, menacing expression.

  Bret remained in his father’s old upholstered chair near the growing flames in the fireplace. He clenched and unclenched his hands with quick, jerky motions as he gnashed his teeth like a cornered animal.

  Philip stirred the embers and fanned the fire.

  “Are you sure?” Bret asked Philip. “Nothing at all?” He rubbed his wet hair with the towel again.

  Philip sat on one of the stuffed Ottoman chairs, massaging his temples with his thumb and index finger. “Coming home I saw Colonel Hayes with his man, Oscar, leading their horse. Colonel says the wagon bridge and all three train trestles were washed out around sometime after midnight. Had to leave their buggy with the rest and wade through waist-high water just to get home . . . and the wind . . .”

  He shook his head. “That’s the worst part. Oscar said down near the water it’s rolling up tin roofs like lids off a sardine can and blowing telephone poles around like hay stalks. I tried the telephone soon as I got back but the line is dead.”

  Gabrielle started for the wall telephone in the hallway. “But I have to talk to my father and tell him I’m safe.” She reached for the earpiece on the cradle.

  “I told you, Miss Caldwell, I tried and it’s no use. The telephone lines are down and we’re cut off from the mainland. All of us . . . we’re going to have to wait this one out here.”

  Thunder boomed, exploding across the battlefield of the sky, rocking the great house again on its raised foundations.

  Gabrielle let the silent earpiece fall limp and dangling on its cord. Through one of the portal windows, she watched the rapid plunging of the last remaining daylight into the raging darkness of the storm.

  CHAPTER 25

  Saturday, September 8, 6:45 p.m.

  All day the winds had battered against the exterior walls, ripping storm shutters off their hinges and shattering windowpanes into the parlor. Bret’s great house shud
dered, rattled, and swayed against the onslaught and still continued to retain its footings.

  When the ferocity decreased for a few minutes, Gabrielle felt relieved that the worst was over until the brief reprieve gave birth to a renewed blast that shook the house and everything in it to their foundations.

  “The storm will die down soon,” she said, trying to comfort herself as much as the rest. “It’s been hours. The wind can’t keep up like this.”

  A sudden gust of wind shot open the shutters on the far wall. Philip ran to the open window. He pulled the swaying shutters closed and turned the latch from the inside. “Yes, Miss Caldwell, and that can’t come soon enough. We have more wood and nails in the cellar don’t we, Mr. McGowan?”

  Gabrielle looked at Bret. He sat hunched, appearing to gaze into the crackling fireplace at some unseen expanse, some dark, hidden place that was meant to be seen by his eyes only.

  Bret had taken the last of his medicine hours ago. He would have to wait until the storm passed before they could return to her home and fetch Caden’s remedy.

  After everything that had happened and now being in the middle of the storm, she had almost forgotten about . . . Gabrielle gasped. My God. Could she really trust him now? She took a deep breath and put the idea out of her mind just as quickly as it had entered. No. How could you think that? Caden’s offer to help Bret had occurred days before Tim’s death.

  Gabrielle brushed back her hair and thought of her wonderful lunch with Caden at the new seafood restaurant on the boardwalk. He had been sincere then and perhaps, after further reflection under the extraordinary circumstances, she had been too quick to judge his actions.

  Robberies and murders took place in Galveston just the same as any other city. Perhaps Tim resisted, they struggled, and the weapon fired. But father said it was Bret’s derringer and Bret says he found it on the street next to Tim’s body.

  Gabrielle shook her head. There had to be another explanation but that would be for the police and judge to decide after the storm.

  She stepped beside Bret. “How are you feeling?”

  “I was hoping the scotch would stop the chills.”

  “I told you it wouldn’t.” She stroked his damp hair. “ But I’m glad you stopped after two when I said so.”

  Bret took her hand and kissed it. “Looks like you picked a hell of a night to try and save me from my own pig-headed self.”

  He gazed up into her eyes and smiled. “But I’ve been thinking about what you said. When this is over I want to get better and I’ll do anything I can to—”

  A crackling volley of lightning ricocheted outside from the direction of the gulf. The roaring sound passed over and rumbled off into the distance.

  The house creaked, its entire structure shifting and lurching to one side. The wind seemed to punch the house down with the storm’s fist as if it were nothing more than an old shipping crate.

  Gabrielle screamed as she was thrown down on the floor by the force of the impact. Bret toppled over in the chair and fell beside her. The moment he reached out and grabbed her arm, she heard it.

  The breaking sounds of snapping timber and smashing glass coming down from above. They looked up at the ceiling. Rapidly running cracks chipped off the plaster, first in a fine dust, then in large chunks, showering down upon them.

  The four walls trembled, knocking down pictures and ornaments, overturning all the corner cupboards and casework furniture.

  “Get up! Get up!” Philip was yelling at them from the open cellar door. “Quick, get down to the cellar!”

  Within seconds, the ceiling fractured and popped along the top of the north and east walls, and as if the hand of God was reaching down, it lifted off the timber and hurled it in pieces over the east wall. Nothing visible of the roof remained. Their only remaining protection was the partially demolished ceiling above.

  Gabrielle wrapped her arms around Bret’s chest and stared up into the whirling maelstrom of the hurricane. For one horrifying instant, as though she had been made privy to the enigmatic, malevolent secret of the Almighty’s wrath, she watched the murky, jagged chaos descend upon the remaining corner of the ceiling.

  “Quick!” Philip yelled. “Over here!”

  Gabrielle felt Bret pulling her toward the sound of Philip yelling. She could see the old man reaching out to her, his strong grip against her skin, then—

  The grim torrent beat down on them; a sudden smashing force burst all around, blinding Gabrielle with pelting rain and gale winds.

  A moment later she screamed and was ripped away from the men’s hands; the ferocious hurricane lashed out at her, hurling her across the disintegrating parlor through the open space of the shattered east wall.

  The life that had always kept her safe vanished in moments behind the wailing, spiraling winds lacerating her face.

  Gabrielle closed her eyes, feeling herself being thrown forward by the storm—tumbling through its terrifying space—until she felt her head fall back, submerged under cold, salt water.

  Gabrielle splashed her arms, struggling to gain a foothold in the neck-high current rushing by her face. Coughing and gulping at the air, her drenched clothes wrapped around her shivering body like a heavy, soaked shroud. She bobbed on her feet, touching ground, but a few moments later she lost her foothold again.

  She didn’t know which street she was on—the homes and buildings on either side were demolished or rapidly being torn apart by the merging fury of hell’s wind and water.

  The screams of parents reached out from behind the thick, gray sheets of rain toward the cries of children, lost somewhere within the rising muddy waters.

  People clung to broken pieces of their homes—furniture, anything that would float— while bodies of men, women and children were carried along with dead horses and livestock by the swiftly rising current.

  At the last moment, Gabrielle gasped and ducked under the water as a flying piece of slate flew toward her head.

  When she came up for air, something bumped into her back. Thrashing about in the cold, turbulent water, she saw the headless body of a boy float past.

  She closed her eyes, clenching her jaw and mouth shut. She couldn’t scream, couldn’t afford to open her mouth only to have it filled with salt water a moment later.

  On the far side of the street, in one of the alleyways, people struggled up the fire escape stairs leading to the upper floors of the last remaining brick building.

  Gabrielle pushed herself through the flood water, kicking and paddling to keep her head above the waves the best she could, determined to reach the only thing standing fast against the monstrous upheaval roaring all around her.

  She maneuvered around the drifting debris of shattered homes, sometimes holding onto a piece of wood to rest and get her bearings.

  Floating, half-naked corpses of people, their bodies sliced and mutilated with pieces of wind-whipped glass and metal sticking out of their flesh, careened off the sides of the wreckage, then continued on with the current.

  Gabrielle kept her eyes focused straight ahead, never turning to discover if any she had seen were someone would have known.

  The hand railing leading up from the street level was already half under water, but it would only be another few feet before she could touch—

  A crashing wave slammed into the front of her body, lifting her upwards and throwing her away from the building.

  When she resurfaced, she was swimming on the far side of the road. In a matter of seconds it appeared as if the entire ocean had deluged from the gulf, spreading out over the city like the biblical flood.

  Tossed about like the debris around her, Gabrielle fought against the rolling waves to keep her head above the breaking crests. Her limbs felt colder, heavier than they had only a few minutes before.

  For a moment, she felt the frenzied urge to pray, to succumb to God’s will and make her final peace. Moving images of her impossible love affair with Bret, her family, and the life she had known glided
through her mind carried on a current of uncontrollable regret and sorrow.

  She could have had a family of her own, but she had waited . . . waited for the only man she had ever loved, only to lose him just at the moment his feelings toward her had . . .

  The building seemed so far away now.

  Gabrielle kicked and thrashed, trying to swim against the current to a large, raft-shaped piece of broken wall floating by. Dear God, no . . . She prayed. I beg of you. Not like this. Gabrielle clawed at the side of the passing remnant, trying to clutch the splintered wood and cracked paneling.

  For a few moments, her grip was secure and she was pulled along with the wall by the increasingly swift undercurrent. She tried to lift her knee over the edge but a wave came crashing down, throwing her back underneath the surging waves.

  Unable to catch her breath and her lungs almost bursting, Gabrielle struggled against the current and swam up toward the dark surface.

  Finally bursting forth, she suddenly felt her wrist and forearm gripped by a pair of painfully strong hands. Somebody yanked her up and over the edge of the floating wall, her legs still thrashing in the water. She gasped for air.

  “Don’t struggle! I’ll pull you over!” Bret yelled.

  Gabrielle lay under his arms, her arms wrapped around his waist, shivering like a child. My God, he’s alive. Bret’s alive! She clung to his waist. If they were to survive, they would survive together.

  Battered again and again by the waves, they almost lost their embrace, but each time Gabrielle squeezed her arms tighter against his steadfast body. “Bret . . . Oh God!” She was breathless, almost unable to speak more than a few words. “The house . . . I thought you were dead!”

 

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