LaVyrle Spencer

Morning Glory

© 1989

Special thanks…

To Marian Smith Collins and Bob Collins for their help with the Calhoun setting and the law…

To Gunnery Sgt. Richard E. Martelli, United States Marine Corps, for sharing his invaluable knowledge of Marine history…

And to Carol Gatts, midwife and beekeeper, for keeping old traditions alive and for letting us glimpse them…

To my favorite authors,

Tom & Sharon Curtis

who by their writing

have taught, entertained and inspired.

With deepest admiration.

Prologue

1917

The train pulled into Whitney, Georgia, on a leaden afternoon in November. Clouds churned and the first droplets of rain pelted like thick batter onto the black leather roof of a waiting carriage. Both of its windows were covered with black. As the train clanged to a stop, one shade was stealthily lifted aside and a single eyeball peered through the slit.

'She’s here,' a woman’s voice hissed. 'Go!'

The carriage door opened and a man stepped out. He, like the carriage, was garbed in black-suit, shoes and flat-brimmed hat worn level with the earth. He glanced neither right nor left but strode purposefully to the train steps as a young woman emerged with a baby in her arms.

'Hello, Papa,' she said uncertainly, offering a wavering smile.

'Bring your bastard and come with me.' He turned her roughly by an elbow and marched her back to the carriage without looking at her or the infant.

The curtained door was thrown open the instant they reached it. The young woman lurched back protectively, drawing the baby against her shoulder. Her soft hazel eyes met the hard green ones above her, framed by a black bonnet and mourning dress.

'Mama…'

'Get in!'

'Mama, I-'

'Get in before every soul in this town sees our shame!'

The man gave his daughter a nudge. She stumbled into the carriage, scarcely able to see through her tears. He followed quickly and grasped the reins, which were threaded through a peekhole, yielding only a murky light.

'Hurry, Albert,' the woman ordered, sitting stiff as a grave marker, staring straight ahead.

He whipped the horses into a trot.

'Mama, it’s a girl. Don’t you want to see her?'

'See her?' The woman’s mouth pursed as she continued staring straight ahead. 'I’ll have to, won’t I, for the rest of my life, while people whisper about the devil’s work you’ve brought to our doorstep.'

The young woman clutched the child tighter. It whimpered, then as a jarring crash of thunder boomed, began crying lustily.

'Shut it up, do you hear!'

'Her name is Eleanor, Mama and-'

'Shut it up before everyone on the street hears!'

But the baby howled the entire distance from the depot, along the town square and the main road leading to the south edge of town, past a row of houses to a frame one surrounded by a picket fence with morning glories climbing its front stoop. The carriage turned in, crossed a deep front yard and pulled up near the back door. The mother and child were herded inside by the black-garbed woman and immediately a dark green shade was snapped down to cover a window, followed by another and another until every window in the house was shrouded.

The new mother was never seen leaving the house again nor were the shades ever lifted.

Chapter 1

August 1941

The noon whistle blew and the saws stopped whining. Will Parker stepped back, lifted his sweat-soaked hat and wiped his forehead with a sleeve. The other millhands did the same, retreating toward the shade with voluble complaints about the heat or what kind of sandwiches their wives had packed in their lunch pails.

Will Parker had learned well not to complain. The heat hadn’t affected him yet, and he had neither wife nor lunch pail. What he had were three stolen apples from somebody’s backyard tree-green, they were, so green he figured he’d suffer later-and a quart of buttermilk he’d found in an unguarded well.

The men sat in the shade of the mill yard, their backs against the scaly loblolly pines, palavering while they ate. But Will Parker sat apart from the others; he was no mingler, not anymore.

'Lord a-mighty, but it’s hot,' a man named Elroy Moody complained, swabbing his wrinkled red neck with a wrinkled red hanky.

'And dusty,' added the one called Blaylock. He hacked twice and spit into the pine needles. 'Got enough sawdust in my lungs to stuff a mattress.'

The foreman, Harley Overmire, performing his usual noon ritual stripped to the waist, dipped his head under the pump and came up roaring to draw attention to himself. Overmire was a sawed-off runt with a broad pug nose, tiny ears and a short neck. He had a head full of close-cropped dark hair that coiled like watchsprings and refused to stop growing at his neckline. Instead, it merely made the concession of thinning before continuing downward, giving him the hirsute appearance of an ape when he went shirtless. And Overmire loved to go shirtless. As if his excessive girth and body hair made up for his diminutive height, he exposed them whenever the opportunity arose.

Drying himself with his shirt, Overmire sauntered across the yard to join the men. He opened his lunch pail, folded back the top of his sandwich and muttered, 'Sonofabitch, she forgot the mustard again.' He slapped the sandwich together in disgust. 'How many times I got to tell that woman it’s pork plain and mustard on beef!'

'You got to train ’er, Harley,' Blaylock teased. 'Slap ’er upside the head one time.'

'Train her, hell. We been married seventeen years. You’d think she’d know by now I want mustard on my beef.' With his heel he ground the sandwich into the dry needles and cursed again.

'Here, have one o’ mine,' Blaylock obliged. 'Bologna and cheese today.'

Will Parker bit into the bitter apple, felt the saliva spurt so sharply it stung his jaws. He kept his eyes off

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