CROSSING THE DEADLINE
Text Copyright © 2016 Michael Shoulders
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Shoulders, Michael, author.
Title: Crossing the deadline : Stephen’s journey through the Civil War / by Michael Shoulders.
Description: Ann Arbor, MI : Sleeping Bear Press, 2016. | Summary: Stephen, an accomplished bugler in the town band, joins the Union effort in the Civil War and endures trial after trial, from battle to Confederate prison and the shipwreck of the steamboat Sultana, but through luck and fortitude, Stephen survives.
Identifiers: LCCN 2015033876 | ISBN 9781585369515
Subjects: LCSH: Musicians—Fiction. | Soldiers—Fiction. | CYAC: United
States—History—Civil War, 1861–1865—Fiction.
Classification: LCC PZ7.S558833 Cr 2016 | DDC [Fic]–dc23
LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015033876
Cover art:
Stars and stripes graphic © pashabo/Shutterstock.com
Soldier graphic by Felicia Macheske for Sleeping Bear Press
For Debbie Shoulders
Contents
Prologue
Part One: Centerville, Indiana
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Part Two: The South
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Part Three: Homeward Bound
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Author’s Note
About the Author
PROLOGUE
April 17, 1861
“You have to hurry, Stephen,” my brother, Robert, called as he swung around the fence post and into the corral. He was out of breath from running to Clem’s Livery, where I was mucking stalls. “Dad’s going, and it’s happening soon.”
I’d been expecting that moment for days, dreading it. Dad had coughed up blood all the night before. The air in our room at the boardinghouse was filled with the stench from his soiled sheets. The doctor told us it wouldn’t be long. I shouldn’t have left the house when I did, but cleaning up after the horses for my uncle was better than having to watch it happen.
Robert turned and ran home, but I took time to scrub the pitchfork and hang it back next to the buckets on the wall. Scraping manure from my boots with a stick ate up a couple more minutes. I’d never seen anybody die, and Dad did not need to be my first. For months, consumption had slowly been eating his body like a flame chewing a candle.
Telegraphs from relatives in Pennsylvania and New York had arrived, expressing regrets of his pending death as if witnessing last breaths was as sacred as attending church. “Sadly, we’re unable to accept the solemn honor of accompanying James at his death,” an aunt wrote.
What honor?
On the way home, Paddy’s Run, a creek just north of town, appeared on my right. It reminded me of the summer before and how we’d picnicked there every Sunday. Dad chased Mom with crawdads around trees, bushes, and into the creek. He threatened to let them pinch her. She shrieked like a train whistle, all the while knowing he’d never allow anything to harm a hair on her head. One time Dad fell asleep under a tree, and Mom offered a nickel to me or Robert, whoever came back first with a crawdad. Robert, seven years older than me, beat me and presented her with a large brown one. He pinned its tail on the ground while Mom squeezed its back between her finger and thumb. Lifting the crawdad with a firm hold, she placed its pinchers above Dad’s lip until it found his nose and latched on tight as a tick.
I never heard Dad yelp so loud or Mom laugh so long.
When I arrived, the boardinghouse was quiet; a rarity since there were six rooms rented on the second floor. It was wrong, but as I closed the door I said a quick prayer asking God to have taken Dad during my walk home. I made my way past the large dining room, where we ate with strangers. Mother hated mealtime because we shared a table with renters who came and left with the wind. Most of the time we ate in silence as if everybody were wooden statues.
Mother had said many times, “Boys, one day we’ll have a place of our own and a dinner table where we can talk and say anything without a care in the world.”
But consumption took every penny my parents had put aside for a home. Dad hadn’t worked in months—his weight melted away. Mom worried what she would do with two boys once Dad was gone. Lines she called crow’s-feet appeared at the corners of her eyes, and she’d gaze into space for the longest time, as if in a trance. But I knew she was thinking, worrying, and wondering about how she was going to get by with three mouths to feed.
I climbed the stairs, opened the door to our room, and crossed to my bed. The doctor stood nearby, looking on, and Robert leaned against the wall, arms crossed. Dad’s head was cocked back, almost facing the wall behind him, his eyes closed and mouth open wide like he were trying to catch snowflakes on his tongue. Beneath a blanket, his chest heaved and stalled for several seconds and fell back down. Over and over his body repeated the motion. Mom sat holding Dad’s hand soft-like as if she had a butterfly between her palms.
Out of nowhere the smell of gardenias or honeysuckle filled the air, impossible in April, but I clearly detected a sweet scent. Dad’s chest rose and fell faster and faster as the aroma grew stronger. If anybody else noticed, they didn’t say. The blanket lowered, and I studied it like it were a fishing pole and we were waiting for a fish to take the bait. Then, as if somehow the doctor and the smell were tied together by an invisible thread, the aroma became overpowering and pulled the doctor nearer the bed, where he placed two fingers on Dad’s wrist.
“He’s gone,” he pronounced quietly. Just as fast, the sweet smell left the room, and Mom began to weep softly.
It was mid-April, and our stay was paid up for the month. If Mother had figured out what she was going to do, she hadn’t shared it with anyone. Dad was always the loving husband. As if he wanted to give her one last gift, he died with two weeks left in the month. Mother would have time to plan where the thr
ee of us would live come May.
The night of the funeral, after we went to bed, I heard Mom and Robert whispering. “I’m looking for work in the morning,” Mom said. “You’ll need to go ask your uncle Clem if he’ll rent his spare room to us. We have to be out of here in ten days.”
* * *
“I’ve moved a few things under the stairs and fit in an extra bed for the boys,” Uncle Clem said, glancing at Robert and me. “It may be a bit cramped.”
Mother looked down at the floor and said, “We’ll make do, Clem. Won’t we, boys?”
“We’ll be fine,” Robert said, smiling.
I squeezed Mother’s hand. “Yeah, don’t worry about us.”
“Are you going to be able to pay every month?” Uncle Clem was more concerned with making money from the room than seeing to it that his brother’s family was okay.
“Dutch posted he needed a servant to clean floors and carry coal and hot water to guest rooms,” Mother said. “He offered me the job, and I begin tomorrow.”
“You’ve never worked before. Can you handle it?”
“Well, there’s no better time to learn,” she said.
“What’s he paying?” Uncle Clem pried.
“Five dollars a month, plus meals on the days I work.”
Uncle Clem grunted in approval.
Through late spring and summer things seemed fine. Mother left home after putting breakfast on the table and stayed at Dutch’s Mansion House until early evening. She came home and cooked for the four of us before dropping dog-tired into bed. But it wasn’t long before Uncle Clem got an itch to get more money out of her.
“Weren’t you paying twice what I charge when you were at the boardinghouse? It seems five dollars is practically giving my room away.”
“You weren’t getting anything for it sitting empty,” Mother replied.
“That’s not the point. It’s what the room is worth that’s important.”
“I also cook and clean for you, Clem. So I think what I pay is more than fair.”
Robert, with disgust wrinkled across his face, got up from the kitchen table to leave the room. My uncle raised his arm and braced himself against the doorframe, blocking Robert’s path. “Maybe the three of you’d be better off at the poorhouse, where they take in people who can’t afford to live on their own.”
Mother pursed her lips and left the kitchen through the side door that led into the yard.
“Stephen, I need to talk to your brother,” Uncle Clem said. “Go down to the hardware and get a pound of nails. I need to work on the porch tomorrow afternoon.”
That night, after they thought I was sleeping, Robert told Mother how he was tired of Uncle Clem complaining about how she was not pulling her weight. “I’m the man of the house now that Dad’s gone,” he whispered. “It’s my responsibility to take care of you and Stephen. I don’t want us living off charity.”
“It’s too dangerous,” Mother pleaded.
“What skills do I have?” Robert asked. “I’m eighteen and can soldier for the Union Army. I won’t gamble any pay away, so you don’t have to worry about that. I promise I’ll send as much home as possible.”
Mother wept, knowing his mind was made up. “I don’t know if I can do it . . . worry about you every day you’re gone.”
“Maw, the war’s been going on for five months and won’t continue much longer, maybe a couple months at most. It will give us a chance to decide what to do. Besides, while I’m gone, you and Stephen will have a roof over your heads. Neighbors will pitch in if things get desperate,” Robert reassured her.
A week later we said good-bye to Robert at the train depot. He dug into his pocket and produced a shiny gold object. “Here, Mother, I bought you something to remember me by.” It was a neck brooch, the size of a dollar piece, with a quarter moon smiling at a sky of stars. “I want you to think of me every time you wear it.”
Mother nodded and stared at the gleaming object in her hand. She turned it over and over, crying. She glanced at Robert’s face but only for a split second. Her eyes darted back to the brooch. “It’s beautiful,” she whispered between quiet sobs.
Robert gently retrieved the brooch and with his right hand lifted her chin. He unclasped the pin and fastened it beneath her neck.
PART ONE
CENTERVILLE, INDIANA
CHAPTER ONE
August 5, 1863
“They should spell that piece of trash the W-E-A-K-L-Y,” Richard Charman says late one afternoon, spying a copy of Harper’s Weekly folded on the bench beside me. He glares at me with deep-set eyes. His brows, thick and wide-spreading as a robin’s nest, give the impression that he looks out on the world from within a cave. Charman is Centerville’s highest-paid lawyer for good reason. Arguing against him is fruitless and usually ends in defeat. It doesn’t matter whether his clients are right or wrong. They almost always win with him on their side.
I’m sitting beside the front steps of the Mansion House, watching Conestoga wagons pass, when Charman spots my copy of the newspaper. He shakes a finger at me, squinting his eyes together like I’ve been bad. “That paper doesn’t take a strong enough stand against slavery,” he chides me, as if I personally wrote every line in the newspaper.
“Well, I don’t know anything about that,” I tell him. “I read it to know what’s going on in the war.”
“What good is the news if you can’t trust the source?” he asks.
That’s a good point, I think.
“They should be straightforward and call slavery what it is.’
“Don’t listen to him, Stephen,” Jake Vandervite says, patting my shoulder. Everyone calls him Dutch because he emigrated from Europe a few years ago. He owns the Mansion House where Mother works. The hotel is a three-story oasis for travelers coming through town, most of them headed west. “Come inside,” he says. “Got a fresh paper this morning for you.” Travelers bring copies of the paper with them. They leave them in rooms or on tables after breakfast when they’ve finished reading them. Dutch saves them for me, and sometimes Mom brings them home with her. Ever since Robert left two years ago, I study anything about the war I can get my hands on.
When we reach the bar, Dutch says, “Pay Charman no-never-mind. He’s got nothing better to do than stick his nose into everybody else’s business.”
Dutch is taller than everyone in Centerville, and stronger, too. He has to be in order to manhandle rowdies when they get too many drinks in their bellies. Once, he carried two men, one on each shoulder, out of the Mansion House’s gambling room and dumped them smack on their haunches in the street.
I look up at him and notice light passing through his thinning blond hair like it’s delicate lace. “I have something else for you besides the newspaper,” he says.
“How many questions do I get this time?”
“Oh, this one will be hard to get, so I’ll give you two extra guesses: an even dozen,” Dutch says.
Besides newspapers, guests sometimes leave other items behind, and Dutch gives them to me if they’re interesting. But I have to guess what they are.
I pause several seconds and stare deep into his blue eyes, trying to read his mind. “Is it candy?”
Dutch makes a fist and raises his thumb toward the ceiling. “One,” he announces, starting the count. “It’s not candy this time.”
“A whistle that sounds like a train?”
“Nah,” he says as he raises a finger beside his thumb. “You’re not ready to guess yet, son. You need more clues. Narrow down the possibilities a bit.”
“Is it man-made?”
“Now that’s using your head, son. No, it’s not man-made. Three.”
“Is it a plant?”
“Yup, Mother Nature herself made it. Four.”
“Does it grow up north?”
“Nope. You’re not even close. That’s five tries gone.”
“I think I know. I’m sure of it this time.”
“What?” Dutch interrupts me. �
�You think you know? You better take your time with more clues. You must guess it in twelve, or I give it to somebody else.”
“Oh, I’ll be right,” I say. I scratch my chin, cock my head to one side, and ask, “Is it an orange?”
A slap on the counter rattles nearby glasses and bottles. “You cheated,” he says, wagging his finger at me and grinning. “There’s no way you got it with the questions you asked.”
I double over in laughter.
Dutch turns around and looks at the bar mirror hanging on the wall. “No, really, did you see it in the mirror?” he asks. “It’s impossible for you to have guessed it with those clues.”
“I saw Mrs. Jensen trade a dozen eggs to one of your guests for an orange this morning,” I confess. “I figured you’d end up with some of them, too.”
Dutch reaches down behind the bar and tosses a perfectly round orange into the air. “You always were a sly one, Stephen.”
I catch the fruit and roll it over in my hands several times. It’s bigger than Dutch’s fist, and that says a lot. “How did it get all the way to Centerville without spoiling?” I ask.
“By train, would be my guess. This beauty came all the way from a place called Saint Augustine, Florida.” Dutch winks. “You might like to look at this, too.” Dutch stretches his long arms three feet over my head and dangles the latest copy of Harper’s Weekly. “Gotta jump for it.”
I leap for the paper, and my shirt rises above my belt.
“My goodness, Stephen!” Dutch says, pointing. “How’d you get that bruise?”
I pull down my shirt. “What?” I ask.
“On your side . . . there.” he says, pointing again. “It’s bruised something fierce. Your uncle Clem didn’t have anything to do with that, did he?”
“Oh, no,” I say, turning away. “I . . . was . . . ah . . . shoeing a horse. He was favoring it and got spooked when I was checking it. That’s all.”
“Everyone knows Clem’s temper is at the end of a short fuse. You sure he didn’t have anything to do with it?”
“He’s got a quick temper,” I agree. “But this was from a horse.”
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