Catch a Shooting Star jd edit 03 12 2012 html Read online




  Catch

  A

  Shooting

  Star

  Brianna lee McKenzie

  Copyright© 2011 by Brianna lee McKenzie

  All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system without the prior written permission of the publisher.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or deceased, is entirely coincidental.

  Credits: Kindle Edition

  Structural Editor: J. Darroll Hall

  Contact us at: www.fantasyislandbookpublishing.com

  All rights reserved.

  PROLOGUE

  Robin’s Glen Plantation

  1864

  A wave of devastating flames blistered the earth behind him as General William Tecumseh Sherman marched on Atlanta on the fifteenth day of November. Then he swept eastward toward the Atlantic Ocean in his ambitious endeavor to cut the South to her knees and to make every Southerner suffer for the actions of the malevolent Rebel army. Railroads were destroyed, nay, uprooted and then bent to his will by source of fire and sheer force of his men until they encircled tree trunks as a symbol to the Rebels that their necks would soon be bound by the ropes of justice.

  Like the target of his conquest, communications were severed when telegraph lines were destroyed, cutting that region off from its core and impeding any warning to his next victim of annihilation. Industrial activity was halted when his minions reduced mills and cotton gins to ashes and then burned thousands of acres of crops, scorching the earth in their wake. From every farm and plantation, the inhabitants’ food stores were depleted when Sherman’s men killed any livestock that could not be confiscated or consumed by the invading soldiers. He ordered them to seize vegetables, corn-meal and potatoes to feed the troops on his march toward Savannah, where he met with the United States Navy for more supplies and artillery, which he used to overtake that city.

  Although he commanded his men not to enter the dwellings nor trespass any domicile that did not interfere with his campaign, no home, it seemed, was immune to his fury. No family went untouched by his dreadful descent upon this region which, according to many a Southerner, he had declared distasteful and therefore must be cleansed of its loathsome depravity.

  Not even the vast plantation known as Robin’s Glen was immune. Owned by Benjamin Star and diligently worked by many dedicated servants who had been freed many years ago by their master and who had refused to leave him even when their emancipation was proclaimed by the Union government. Instead, these former slaves endured retribution for their loyalty as they crouched in their homes and then were violently forced to leave the only life that they had known when Sherman and his men plunged upon the plantation. Distraught, they watched as Master Benjamin and his wife stood against the Union army with rifles raised while their beloved Robin’s Glen was pillaged and then set ablaze.

  Five-year-old Savannah Star clung to the collar of her beloved Bessie, a freed slave who had been purchased years ago when the first child was born and who cared for Richard as if he was her own baby and then Savannah when she was brought into the world. Tears of terror streamed down the little girl’s face as she pleaded with Bessie to make the horrible noise above them stop. Her frightened violet eyes watched the scant opening of the well that shielded them from the devastation that went on beyond their sanctuary.

  Bessie clutched the child to her breast in an effort to quiet the girl’s loud cries, hoping against hope that the men who passed by the well above them would not hear those anguished pleas. Her own tears fell upon the dirt where she shielded the child with her ample body, praying that no harm would come to the girl who was so precious to her, the child that she loved so dearly that she would give her life for Savannah.

  “They’re breaking down the door!” Richard screamed as he clamored down the rope ladder and knelt at Bessie’s side.

  “Come here, child!” Bessie enfolded the ten-year-old into her arms as she sobbed into his curly black hair. “There ain’t nothin’ we can do right now but pray.”

  “But, Mother, Father,” he blubbered into her breasts. “They won’t leave the house. They’re fighting the troops!”

  “I know, Richard, I know,” Bessie said to him as she pulled him away from her so that he could see the stern look in her dark brown eyes as she told him, “And they want you to stay down here where it’s safe. Don’t you go back up there and git yourself caught by them Yankees.”

  “Yessum,” Richard said, nodding and then he buried his head in her hefty shoulder and cried.

  “Damn Yankees,” she seethed between her teeth as she held onto the children with all her strength.

  Try as she might, though, she could not shield them from the screams that tormented them from above the ground that covered them in a coffin of solitude. The children shuddered each time a shot rang out and they shrieked when their father’s screams for mercy reached their ears.

  And when his mother’s scream was audible above the noise, Richard could stand no more. He tore from Bessie’s arms and ran toward the rope ladder and disappeared into the blackness above.

  Long hours of silence prevailed, save for the crackling of burning wood that echoed against the dirt walls of the cave where they crouched. Finally, Richard’s sullen feet breached the brim of the well and he climbed down to the dirt floor where he collapsed.

  Bessie, with Savannah close at her heels, scurried to the boy’s body and held him in her arms, pleading with him to wake up. When he opened his tear-swollen eyes and parted his cracked lips to reveal the message that was foremost on his mind, he coughed out the smoke that filled his lungs as he breathed dejectedly, “I couldn’t save her.”

  “Who?” Savannah asked as she shook his smoldering shoulders.

  “Mother,” he coughed. “She was upstairs. I couldn’t get to her. Father…”

  His head lolled against Bessie’s arm as he fell into unconsciousness. His limp body lay motionless at her knees as she leaned over him and cried into his clothes. Savannah grabbed her brother’s shirt and begged him to wake up and when he failed to heed her pleas, she left him in a terror-stricken tirade and climbed up the ladder before Bessie could stop her.

  Feeling the scorched earth beneath her bare feet, little Savannah scurried toward the prone body of her father and fell onto him as she beat against his back and beseeched him to come to life. And as Bessie knelt beside her and tried to pull her from the girl’s father, Savannah fought with all her might against the strength of her nursemaid’s hands.

  “No!” Savannah cried angrily. “He can’t be dead! He just can’t be dead!” And when Bessie bent to turn over her master’s body, Savannah fell upon her father’s chest and begged him, “Please come back, Papa, please!”

  Then, as if summoned by the Angel of Life, Benjamin’s eyes fluttered and he groaned against the pain of the bullet in his side. He looked at his daughter and then at Bessie, whose own face showed her gratitude for her master’s revival.

  “Madeline,” he whispered his wife’s name as he tried to roll to his side to see the mansion engulfed in flames.

  “She’s gone, Master Ben,” Bessie whimpered as she held him to the ground to keep him from running into the smoldering house and told him, “Ain’t nothin’ you can do for her now.”

  Great sobs of sorrow racked his bo
dy as he pulled his little daughter into his arms and held her as if no other being on earth could fill the void of losing his wife. Together, father and child melted into each other as grief took over and overwhelmed them with its merciless onslaught.

  Later, when he was bandaged in the servant’s cottage, he lay next to his son on a cot only large enough for one. But he refused to let Bessie take the boy from his side as they huddled on the mattress and healed.

  Little Savannah helped Bessie as much as she could and, it seemed to her nursemaid, the child grew up that day, right before Bessie’s eyes. The girl did not cry anymore, not even when they laid her mother to rest. She did not weep, but turned her sorrow into anger, into sudden outbursts of fury that she wielded at any who caused her pain.

  When Father was well again and Richard’s body had recuperated, although he was prone to pneumonia for the rest of his short life, and when the mansion was rebuilt, Savannah vowed in her little girl voice and a stamp of her tiny foot that no one would ever cause her to cry again without being punished.

  The War ended and the Union was mended, but sore feelings still transcended upon the states that had seceded and then had been welcomed back as if nothing had come between them. And as time drifted by, bitterness continued to loom in the air like a brewing storm, both in the southern states and within Savannah’s heart.

  For her, every day that succumbed to the night’s dreadful dominion was thankfully transformed to its former glory, bringing with it a promise of favorable days to come. And the pledge that the recurring rising sun assured her each morning when it winked its golden glow upon her upturned face was her guarantee that even in the darkness of distress, a bright new day would soon reappear.

  Chapter One

  A howling wind battered the unrestricted shutters as if they were leaves still clinging to an autumn tree against the torrent of twisting currents that relentlessly inundated them. Their hinges strained against the force of the gale that threatened to rip them from the adobe walls that clasped them. But, still the grinding metal clenched against the whirling wind and held fast to the flailing window covers as if their survival was of the utmost importance.

  Somewhere in the distance, a faint cry echoed, barely audible above the whistling wind and the crashing wooden shutters. The baby’s wailing became louder and louder, drowning out the frightening noise of the storm’s persistent onslaught. The cries become louder still, until no other sound was perceivable. Their insistent wails deafened any who could not resist their unceasing screech.

  Suddenly, there was silence. The darkness gave in to the bright glare of sunshine outside the hotel room where Savannah Star lay. Her sadness was a glistening reprieve against the fear that had gripped her dreams.

  She buried her face into the pillow and wept, her wracking body rocking the four-poster bed in which she had slept for the past twenty-odd months. Her cries became louder and more pitiful until she finally uttered the name that had haunted her all these nights.

  “Benito,” she yelled into the feathered pillow. “Benito!”

  She uttered the name over and over until her voice could no longer strain against the confines of the pillow.

  She took in a deep, sullen breath, and then raised her head and whispered to the Heavens, “Benito. My sweet Benito.”

  Then for what seemed like an eternity, her eyes fixed themselves on the feet that had carried her across the desert, through the muddy waters of the Rio Grande and into the hotel that was now her home. Slowly, her mind drifted through the events and the tragedies that had brought her here, so far away from her home in Georgia, and so close to the man who had held her as his imprisoned bride.

  “Diego,” she seethed as she wrung her feet together in anger.

  The man she had married three years ago was fifty miles across the Mexican desert, but to her, his presence surrounded her, filling her with fear and loathing so deep that she dared not cross the border to face him.

  Not yet anyway. Not until she was certain that she had conquered the terror that he had instilled into her very soul. Not until she had the skills to confront him, to shoot him down and his arrogant laugh with him.

  A shiver swirled through her body as she recalled that spine-tingling laugh, a laugh that, as the days crept into years, had become grating and dreadful.

  Looking intently at her tiny feet, she let her mind drift back to the days when her life was happy, before her marriage to the Mexican Baron, Don Diego Fernandez. She thwarted a contented sigh as she wrapped a dainty foot around the other ankle and closed her eyes against the sight of the man who had troubled her mind and heart all this time.

  It had been early Spring when Don Diego had first come to her home near Atlanta, his charm and exuberance had been a welcome and delightful contribution to the staunch atmosphere that had hung over the estate of Robin’s Glen. His charisma had welled in the halls of the manor, giving it a semblance of liveliness, which it had craved for so long. Ever since that terrible day when Sherman had changed their lives forever, the plantation had lost something essential to its vitality.

  Father had met Don Diego through a mutual friend and had learned that the baron was rich and could offer him assistance in paying the back taxes and the overdue mortgage on his vast plantation, a mortgage that had been reluctantly entered into by Benjamin Star in order to restore the charred mansion to its previous glory. Don Diego was all too happy to come to Robin’s Glen, a sprawling cotton farm that lay just outside of Atlanta, Georgia, and to talk with Father about such a transaction.

  Seventeen-year-old Savannah watched with pride and anticipation as Father took Don Diego on a tour of the plantation, for the Mexican baron beamed with satisfaction at the rolling green hills, the blooming peach trees and the beautifully manicured gardens that adorned the grounds. She could see the gleam in the foreigner’s dark eyes as she watched from her prancing coal-black Tennessee-Walker horse only a few feet away from him. She saw, too, the spark of adoration when his eyes moved from the surroundings to fall upon her lovely face.

  A shy Savannah ducked her head. She had not yet realized that she was as beautiful as Father had declared to her every day of her life and this strange man’s obvious scrutiny of her made her even more self-conscious.

  Deep in those dark illuminated orbs, she saw something that made her shiver with what she thought was excitement at first, for with his smooth, thick alluring speech, he enticed her into breathlessness. But, there, beneath the sparkle of self-assured astuteness and magnetic charm was a tinge of unmistakable malice that caused apprehension to creep into her very soul.

  She quickly averted her eyes when she saw that he had felt her uneasiness toward him and had smiled arrogantly in triumph. Clamping her mouth into an exasperated line, she whipped her horse around and trotted away, her head held high as if to warn him of her obstinate temperament. Awkwardly aware that his eyes bored into her back as she rode away, she heard him laugh a low, victorious laugh.

  Angrily, she kicked her mount’s ribs and lowered her body as the horse lurched into a gallop and carried her away from his ostentatious stare. But, when she was hidden behind a magnolia tree and safely out of his eyesight, she leaned back on the reins and whirled the horse back to face the man who had caused her to harbor such agitation.

  Don Diego looked tall and handsome at the distance from which she felt comfortable watching him. His lean body sat prominent and proud on that prancing imported Spanish stud. His attractive brown face seemed truly interested in what Father was saying and his unmistakably genuine smile made him seem warm and compassionate.

  Yet, even from the space that separated him from her scrutinizing glare, she still felt that unnerving apprehension which had gnawed at her very core from the moment he first looked upon her with his shrewd appraisal. And that trepidation was enough to give her cause to avoid him until he would mercifully leave their home.

  That day finally came when the handsome Mexican don bade Father Good-bye with a deep bow an
d a genuine smile. For Savannah, there was a warm and passionate kiss upon her quivering hand, which he held firmly, yet gently within his palm. And, when he winked a dark brown eye at her and smiled as if they had just shared a secret and intimate dialogue, she blushed deeper than the maroon gown that she wore.

  Instinctively, she waved to him when he tipped his black suede hat while he sat pretentiously atop the stallion that pranced anxiously beneath his proud form. She quickly pulled her hand down to join its mirror image at her waist where she rung them together in what she thought was fear. And, once his retreating figure disappeared beyond the bend, she finally let out a breath of relief.

  But, for some odd and compelling reason, she found herself missing his attentive stare, his alluring words and his soft, feather-light kisses upon her skin. True, they were only meant for her hand, but somehow, she knew that those lips wanted to find their way to hers, and that silent promise, by God, made her miss him even more.

  She pulled in a breath of growing indignation at her body for craving his attention. Then she lifted her skirt for a quick and decisive departure from the veranda on which she stood with her father. Narrowing her eyes at Father’s proud smile, she let out a harrumph and whirled away, leaving him to his glorious triumph. She closed the glass-clad door behind her, but turned to look beyond her gloating parent toward the road onto which the man who had provoked different results in both of them.