The quiet and loneliness was driving John Sandles to distraction and he couldn't bear being in the house for any longer. Not that he was in an actual house. He'd been working on the room extension of his house on Sligo Creek nearly where the creek fed into the North River at the foot of the Appalachians to the west. The nearest town to him was Mount Solon, Virginia, a good five miles to the southeast. He didn't really need the extra room now, which was framed and sheathed in rock up to his chest, the rock being Susan's choice. The house itself was a two-room log cabin, the rooms being commodious enough—the bedroom with the loft overhead that he'd put stairs up to early in the winter, and the "everything else" room. The extension was to be his office. The loft was for the child and the children afterward until they could build on to the house. He didn't need the loft now, and it remained unfurnished.
Both Susan and the baby had died in a difficult childbirth late in the winter. John could have gone back East, over the Blue Ridge, back to some semblance of civilization then—back to Williamsburg. It had been Susan's dream to go West, for him to establish his law practice in the Shenandoah Valley. He supposed that it was because that had been Susan's dream that he couldn't leave now—and that he had to finish the room for his law practice. Susan and the baby were buried out there, in the copse of chestnut trees near the creek's edge. That was probably the real reason he couldn't leave. He was bound to their graves.
That and what he had left in Williamsburg where he had studied for the law at William and Mary. He had been indiscreet there. He had thought that what happened in the fears and frustrations of battle would be buried there, but that had not quite happened. Perhaps Mount Solon was far enough away for his indiscretions not to catch up with him. Susan had thought it would be. Susan had never given up on him.
He couldn't stay here longer today in the silence of the cabin, though, and he was tired of lifting rock into place in the frame for his office. It didn't help that Susan had declared this, the golden days of autumn, as her favorite time of the year in the valley. The trees were changing their color, there was a nip in the air, and the creek had lowered enough that he could hear the babbling of the water over the rocks. Further up the creek, at Thad's Mill, before the creek split, giving lesser flow to the Sligo, the water was still high enough to work the wheel.
Thinking on that gave John the excuse he was looking for to pull himself away from the cabin and from the graves he could see from the cabin in the stand of trees. There had been so much for Susan to forgive and she had loved it here, saying it was a new path for them. It was penance for him to stay.
But not for the rest of today. No, he had flour to pick up at Thad's Mill. He had an excuse to pull away from here, if only for a few hours. He went to the shed and saddled up the horse. It was a good three miles to the mill. And the mill was located on the main road out of Mount Solon north and south, along the Appalachians on the western edge of the valley. He had heard talk that there would be a national census taken for the first time in the next year—1790—and census takers were being hired. As a lawyer, one of only a few in the Mount Solon area, he should be able to land that job. He could use the money as he established his law practice. The mill was the social center of the area this side of Mount Solon. He should be able to learn more about the census plans there.
When he rode up to the mill, it too was quiet, which was unusual. In the stand of trees over by the road, there was more activity, as there often was. Two Conestoga wagons, their oxen out of the traces and watering in the creek, were pulled up beside the road, and five men, two women, a few children—who John couldn't count because they were running all around the wagons—were gathered around a fire, cooking a meal. Just more settlers headed up for the Northwest Territory through the Cumberland Gap, where new settlement was under way farther west than John and Susan had come to settle.
As John came off his horse, one of the men—a young, strapping tow-headed man a good eight years younger than John's own twenty-six, he reckoned on first glance—stood up from the fire and strode to the edge of the road, giving John a close inspection. John tried not to notice, but his demons stirred. The young man was fair of face, as yet with nothing on his chin to shave. His hair was curly and fit his head as a halo, and his body was well formed. Although John was dark-headed and taller and more solidly built than this young man, he couldn't help but think back to when he was that young and vulnerable—and about to enter battle and about to suddenly mature in so many ways. John turned and quickly moved into the dimness of the main mill room, calling out "Thadeus," as he entered the chamber.
A voice—one higher in pitch than Thadeus Wainwright's—answered him from the wheel room, telling him the owner of the voice would be there shortly—that he was grinding the last of a job.
Thad, John thought, Thadeus's young son, given the abbreviated name to distinguish the father from the son—as Thadeus's father, the originator of the mill, had been known as Thad, to maintain the same distinction with a name that had gone down the generations from one oldest son to the next oldest son.
John felt the clutch of being in a trap. He wouldn't have come if he had thought that Thadeus wouldn't be here. He wouldn't have come if he had known that the miller's son, of the same age and aspect as the golden young man over at the Conestoga wagons other than being a redheaded version, would be the only one here.
When Thad came out from the wheel room, he seemed a bit flustered, and it perhaps was just John's imagination that the young man was hitching up his belt. He smiled when he saw John, though, and blushed a bit, a redheaded young man not being able to control the flushing of his face as one of another aspect could.
"Hello, Mr. Sandles," he said in a low, soft voice. "Have you come for your sack of flour?"
"Yes, please, if you have ground what I brought in last week yet," John answered.
"We have it, yes. It's just over here." Young Thad backed away to a shelf area off to the side where several sacks of flour were being stored. He kept glancing back at John, though, and John felt he was flushing as well, although his darker coloring wouldn't show it.
"Is your father around?" he asked, hoping that the older Wainwright was just around the corner somewhere. "I thought to ask him what he knew about the organization of this census to be taken next year."
"No, sir," Thad answered, returning to John's side with a sack of flour. John wondered if it was his imagination that Thad maintained contact between their hands for longer than was required to pass the sack, but he didn't really want to think about that. He shouldn't have come, he now realized. He now realized that what had made him so jittery at the cabin wasn't being lonely for his departed wife—it was more the frustration of another sort of loneliness that he had been saddled with through a spring and a summer. He should have known that was the problem as soon as his eyes had met with the blond settler across the road when he'd ridden up to the mill. But at least the young man who had risen to come look at him would be gone the next day. Chances were good that Thad would be here whenever John came to the mill. Perhaps, he thought, he should take note where the other mills were in the area where he could take his business, such as it was. He was a lawyer, not a farmer, so he only raised the grain he personally needed.
"My father is in Mount Solon today. They are meeting to come up with a delegate to send to Richmond in the coming elections. I would have thought you would be there too."
"Was that today?" John asked. "I must have lost track of the days." There was no lie in that. Living alone as he did, John had considerable trouble keeping track of the days. He hadn't been in church on a Sunday since Susan and the baby had died. He hadn't forgiven God for that yet. But perhaps he should start going again if only to have some index of how the days fell.