“I’m sorry,” said Jason, and saying that, he realized that he was willing to lie to protect Ruth Harper. He was willing to because he had—same as he’d shot that fellow without thinking.
“I did it,” Ruth blurted. Jason looked at her in amazement.
She confessed to everything—even going so far as having the certificate brought downstairs from her room. She explained that she had brought the weapon out because she wanted to see how Jack Thistledown’s son could shoot.
“And as it turned out, he is a remarkable shot,” she said.
“Jack Thistledown.” Mr. Harper shook his head.
Then Ruth went at her father on another tack. “That man was deranged, father. He was a Klansman! If Jason—Mr. Thistledown had not fired upon him, Heaven knows what he might have done to us both!”
Mr. Harper went quiet and thoughtful at that, and although Jason did not know him well he could see the arguments turning in his head. He wondered when it would come to the point where he asked to know what the two of them had been doing back in the orchards.
Jason regarded Aunt Germaine. She was seated away from them on a high-backed stuffed chair, hands folded in her lap. Light from the tall windows reflected in her glasses, making it difficult to tell where she was looking.
“Jason,” said Mr. Harper finally, “look at me.”
Jason looked at him.
“Dr. Bergstrom thinks that Piotr Nowak will live. So you have not killed a man today, although you might well have. For that, you can be grateful.”
“I am grateful for that.”
“And I must tell you that I am grateful you had the presence of mind to use my daughter’s ill-gotten
Jason nodded.
“Now I am going to send you home. You and Mrs. Frost both.”
“Father,” said Ruth, standing up, “Mr. Thistledown should not go back to the same hospital as that brute!”
“I am not speaking of the hospital,” said Mr. Harper. “I mean to say, it is time that both you and your aunt left Eliada. The steamboat is downriver just now. It returns late tomorrow. On Tuesday, you shall both be on it.”
Aunt Germaine leaned forward. “I beg your pardon,” she said in a tone that suggested anything but begging.
“I’m sorry, Mrs. Frost. You may convey my apologies to New York, if indeed that is your next stop.”
“You are suggesting that we leave,” she said. “Now.”
“I am insisting.”
Aunt Germaine stood, and walked over to Jason. She put a hand on his arm.
“He rescued your daughter, sir. From, if I may say, a difficulty that is of your making—not his.”
“Is that so?”
“The Klan. They were here before us, sir. They injured your Negro days before we arrived.”
“My
Mr. Harper drew a breath and paused, as if collecting himself.
“Madame,” he finally continued, “I will not be swayed. Do you not see what danger you are in now? Both of you? Are you not afraid that this fellow’s friends will try to take vengeance?”
Aunt Germaine took Jason’s arm. “We shall see,” she said. “Come Jason—we are returning to the hospital.”
Jason stood up, but Mr. Harper shook his head. “I would not recommend that. Ruth is right—the hospital is not safe.”
“Then what would you recommend?”
Mr. Harper sighed. “Mrs. Frost, I don’t bear you ill will. You or young Mr. Thistledown. I’d ask that the two of you remain here as our guests for the next two nights. We have spare rooms aplenty, and I think you will find that Harper hospitality exceeds that at the hospital. I do not think that anyone would dare strike
“We shall send for your things,” said Mrs. Harper in a kindly tone.
Aunt Germaine was having none of it. “Do not think this makes things right!” she said, so fiercely that Mrs. Harper gasped, Mr. Harper looked away, and Jason felt the blood in his face as he briefly met eyes with Ruth. He recalled as they arrived that Aunt Germaine had not wished to be embarrassed. He wondered now, somewhat nastily, if she even had the wit to be.
The picnic carried on long into the evening but Jason stayed clear of it. He had a good view from the bedroom the servants had put him up in. It was an attic room, but pretty fine for that: the bed was wider than the hospital bed that Jason slept in, and softer too. And there was a little window that cut out from the eaves, and a place where a fellow could sit and look out. It was also advantageous, in that the room was a floor up and a wing away from the quarters where they’d placed Aunt Germaine.
He had only two visitors during the day.
Sam Green stopped in about four in the afternoon. Outside, some fellows had gotten with their instruments—one with a guitar, another with a fiddle, and another fellow with a harmonica—and started to play a tune together. Sam Green knocked twice on the door before letting himself in. Jason nodded welcome.
“You ever learn to dance, Mr. Thistledown?” said Sam, bending his head to look out the window over Jason’s shoulder.
“Not much call for it,” said Jason.
“Are you sure about that? Nothing a young lady likes better’n a fellow who’s quick on a two-step.”
“Mayhap I should learn that then.”