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Into the Bright Unknown by Rae Carson (19)

I sleep for just a few hours before morning sunlight pours through the new window in my room and wakes me. The rest of the crew is eating a solemn breakfast in the galley, but I don’t have any appetite. I pour myself a cup of coffee, then head down to the stables to fetch the team of horses.

Peony and Sorry immediately start to complain. I feed them first and muck out their stalls, but it’s not enough to placate them. They’re even more restless than usual, as if watching the team head out on an adventure just made them hanker for more. During the long walk from Georgia to California, they got used to being out in the open, under big skies with lots of fresh air.

“Sorry, girl,” I tell Peony while I brush her. “But we need the carthorses again today. A couple more days and you’ll be on the road again.”

The brush does some kind of magic, because she seems more cheerful after, but no amount of grooming or coaxing cheers Sorry. The sorrel just stands there dejected, mane and tail hanging limp, which is more or less the creature’s usual state.

I’m probably imagining the way Peony and Sorry glare knives into my back as I fetch their neighbors and lead them up the ramp to the wagon and fresh air. They’ve made this trip a few times now, and they’re all business. Makes me miss the pair Daddy and I trained up back in Dahlonega.

The pair I sold to Jim Bosclair, who knew I had no right to sell them, but bought them anyway to help me out.

The rest of our group gathers outside—everyone but Mary, who insists that she shouldn’t be seen with us in the light of day in order for our plan to work. She’s right, of course, but I find myself wishing she was here anyway.

Jefferson wears his usual shirt and trousers, but everything is clean and pressed. Henry has donned yet another new suit—I think he must have traded the last one for it—this time in melancholy colors. The Major struggles with his tie, but Henry’s deft fingers soon fix it for him. Andy and Olive wear somber wool, their collars freshly pressed. Andy’s hair is combed, although nothing can keep a big cowlick from sticking up. Becky wears a deep blue that’s almost black, and has the baby wrapped in a navy blanket.

I’ve donned an ordinary gray dress and a warm sweater that’s a little too big. But I decide not to change them. This is how Jim always knew me.

Melancthon emerges from the ship with a wooden cross, which he holds up for us to examine. JAMES BOISCLAIR is carved into the crossbeam, along with yesterday’s date.

“It’s not much of an offering,” he says. “But he’s not being buried at sea, so the least he deserves is a decent grave marker.”

“Thank you,” I tell him. “It’s perfect.”

We form a sad procession through the streets. The residents of San Francisco are used to death and dying, so folks hardly glance at us twice. It saddens me, that a man’s life means so little to them, especially a man like Jim, someone given to helping out strangers.

A small group of four has already gathered in the cemetery. I recognize Jim’s friend Isaac, who I met the day Jim took me on his tour of the city. Beside him is the minister who has been raising money to help get Hampton out of jail. The cemetery caretakers, also Negros, stand by with shovels. They’ve dug a hole for us, and I pay them the amount we agreed on. It’s not six feet deep, but I reckon it’s deep enough for what we need.

“Is this everyone?” the minister asks.

“I guess so,” I say. “Jim didn’t have any family when he came west. . . .”

My words die away as several people crest the hill and approach—mostly Negroes, a couple Chinese, one white man with an eye patch.

Isaac moves to greet them all and exchange handshakes. It warms my heart to see folks turning out to pay their respects. Jim was only here a few months, but already he was putting down roots, acting as a leader in his community. Just like back home.

“Isaac tells me you knew Boisclair from Georgia,” the minister says to me.

“We both did,” I say, indicating Jefferson and myself. “He was good friends with my daddy, and always kind to me. Helped me out of trouble when I needed it most.”

“Amen,” Isaac says. “That’s the kind of man he was.”

“Amen,” the minister says. “Well, let’s get started. Who’s going to help lower the coffin?”

Jefferson and I both step forward. With help from Henry and Isaac and the two caretakers, we do a creditable job of lifting it off the wagon and lowering it with ropes into the hole.

“Whew!” says one of the attendants. “He was a heavy fellow.”

“He was solid gold,” I say, wiping sweat from my forehead. “The stone on which you set your foundation. Worked hard every day of his life.”

“Amen,” Isaac says.

“Amen,” echo the others.

The minister lifts a well-worn pocket Bible, its leather cover flaking at the edges, licks his finger, and opens to the right page without any help from a bookmark.

“Today’s word is from Matthew, chapter six, verses nineteen to twenty-one. ‘Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal.’”

I suffer a brief pang of conscience, and I share a glance with Jefferson, who also lowers his face in what I assume is a fleeting twinge of shame.

“‘But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.’”

He delivers a short sermon about people coming to California in search of gold, when what they really need to find is a congregation of souls, a community of like-minded spirits. He says that when the gold fails and the money runs out, as it surely will, God will still be there to help us, and the way he helps us is by surrounding us with the right people.

Brother Jim, he points out, was one of the right people. Even though he’d only been in San Francisco a few months, he’d made it his business to look out for others, like Isaac here, who needed a hand finding a home, or Brother Hampton, who needed the community to lead him out of Babylon and rescue him from unjust imprisonment.

For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.

I glance around at my own small community—Becky and the children, Henry, the Major, and most of all Jefferson. I have treasure richer than gold, if I have friends like these. And it’s true; they have my heart.

The minister would say I’m laying up treasure in heaven, where thieves do not break through nor steal, but he’d be wrong. My treasure is still worldly, still vulnerable, and I’ve already lost too much of it. Theresa and Martin, my parents, and now Jim—all stolen from me.

Maybe I’m just as greedy as any ne’er-do-well taken by gold fever. It’s just that I’m greedy for friends. Greedy for a home.

The minister ends by leading us all in a hymn. It’s not one that I’ve ever heard, but I appreciate the sentiment.

“Steer well! The harbor just ahead

Aglow with glory’s ray,

Will on thee golden luster shed,

From out the gates of day,

And waiting there are longing hands

That thrill to clasp thine own,

And lead thee through the heav’nly land

Into the bright unknown.”

It’s fitting we sing this song as we view California’s Golden Gate to the bay, still strewn with morning fog, lit on fire by the sunrise. Jim would have loved it.

The minister bows his head and prays. Then we take turns tossing handfuls of dirt onto the casket. Andy enthusiastically throws fistful after fistful, until Becky guides him clear. The two cemetery attendants finish the job with their shovels; I imagine filling a grave goes a lot faster than digging one. When they’re done packing down dirt, a little mound remains. I lift Melancthon’s cross from the wagon and jab the long, pointed end into the ground, leaning hard until it’s firmly set.

I reach into my pocket for gold coins to hand out, two to the minister, and one each to the attendants and to Isaac.

“You don’t need to do this,” the minister says, but it seems like more of a formal protest than a genuine one. The other coins disappear quickly into their owners’ pockets.

“I do, for Jim’s sake,” I say. “Thank you for coming out today.”

“Thank you, and God bless all of you,” the minister says.

“When will you know about the fate of Hampton?”

“As soon as the sheriff has time to see me and sign the papers. Seems he’s busy at the moment, with the auction just yesterday.”

“And evicting people from their houses all week long,” Isaac adds.

“We mean to see Hampton free,” I say.

“We’re handling it,” the minister assures us firmly.

“We look out for our own,” Isaac adds.

There’s a lot of hand-shaking and farewelling, and after all of Jim’s friends have trickled away, our group finds itself standing in the cemetery at the foot of Jim’s grave. Jefferson just stares at it, shaking his head, as if he can’t believe what’s just happened.

“So what’s next?” Becky asks me.

“We go into the lion’s den,” I say.

“Might be tricky,” Mary says. “The hardest part yet.”

Jefferson kicks a clod of dirt at the foot of the grave. “Let’s ruin him.”

The Major clasps Jefferson on the shoulder. “Even I’m willing to put on some frippery and attend a party, so long as there’s a chance to set Frank Dilley to rights. That son of a—”

Becky clears her throat abruptly, and the Major jumps.

“Beeswax. That son of a beeswax.”

“Ma, what do bees whack?” Andy whispers.

“Hush, darling,” Becky says.

Henry is the only one who seems delighted at the prospect. “This is going to be the biggest, most exclusive party in the history of San Francisco. Maybe in the history of California. You couldn’t drag me away with horses. And that’s before we get to any of the other business.”

I can’t help grinning at his enthusiasm. “And you, Becky? This all depends on you. I would never do anything to put your children in harm’s way, on purpose or by accident. If you have any doubts or reservations, just say the word and we’re done.”

Becky bites her lower lip, which is never a good sign. She pulls Olive close and gives her a tight hug, puzzling the girl. Then she reaches out for Andy, to tousle his imperfectly combed hair, but he dodges her and starts darting around everyone’s legs.

“Bees whack this,” he sings. “Bees whack that, bees whack the bear with the bowler hat!”

Becky gazes at her unruly son, her face full of warmth. Full of love. My mama used to look at me like that.

“Oh, of course I’m in,” she says at last. “That man’s so low he has to reach up to rub the belly of a snake. He should be stepped on like the vermin he is.”

“That’s what I hoped you’d say.” I grab Andy as he runs by and make as if to toss him into the back of the wagon. He squeals in delight. “Let’s get ready.”

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