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Escape Into the Night
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FREEDOM 1 SEEKERS
ESCAPE into the NIGHT
LOIS WALFRID JOHNSON
MOODY PUBLISHERS
CHICAGO
© 2013, 1995
LOIS WALFRID JOHNSON
Previously published as The Riverboat Adventures Series
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Bible.
Interior Design: Ragont Design
Sidewheeler illustration by Toni Auble
Map of Upper Mississippi by Meridian Mapping
Cover Design: Brock, Sharp & Associates / Faceout Studio
Cover Image: Odessa Sawyer
978-0-80240716-0 - Printed by Bethany Press in Bloomington, MN - 02/13
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Johnson, Lois Walfrid. The Freedom Seekers
Escape into the night / Lois Walfrid Johnson.
p. cm. — (The freedom seekers; #1)
Summary: In 1857 thirteen-year-old Libby joins her father aboard the Christina and proves that she can be trusted to assist in the escape of a fugitive slave.
ISBN 978-0-80240716-0
[1. Fugitive slaves—Fiction. 2. Slavery—Fiction. 3. Afro-Americans—Fiction.]
I. Title. II. Series: Johnson, Lois Walfrid. The Freedom Seekers; #1
PZ7.J63255Es 1995
[Fic]—dc20 95–18990
ISBN 978-0-80240716-0 CIP
AC
We hope you enjoy this book from Moody Publishers. Our goal is to provide high-quality, thought-provoking books and products that connect truth to your real needs and challenges. For more information on other books and products written and produced from a biblical perspective, go to www.moodypublishers.com or write to:
Moody Publishers
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Printed in the United States of America
To each of you who have told me
how much you like
the Adventures of the Northwoods
and Viking Quest books
I dedicate this
Freedom Seekers series
to you.
Love always!
Elijah Lovejoy, Dr. and Mrs. William Salter, Henderson Lewelling, Amos and Ellen Kimberly and their son Samuel, Reverend Asa Turner, and Deacon and Mrs. Theron Trowbridge are all historic characters who lived in the 1850s. Emma is based on the story of a real mother helped by Deacon Trowbridge. All other characters are fictitious and spring with gratitude for life from the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is coincidental.
In the time in which this book is set,
African Americans were called Negro,
the Spanish word for black,
or colored people.
Contents
1. Nighttime Surprises
2. The Mysterious Boxes
3. Here Comes Samson!
4. The Bad Start
5. A Day with Caleb
6. Strange Message
7. The Judas Goat
8. The Underground Railroad
9. Caleb’s Secret
10. Libby’s Choice
11. Code of Honor
12. Let My People Go!
13. Riggs!
14. The Big Test
15. More Danger
16. The Hiding Place
17. Skunk River
18. Trapped!
19. Samson’s Disguise
20. The Never-Give-Up Family
Study Guide
A Few Words for Educators
List of Characters
Acknowledgments
Excerpt from Race for Freedom
CHAPTER 1
Nighttime Surprises
Aslender moon hung in the night sky as Libby Norstad gazed down from the hotel. In the river below, her father’s steamboat lay next to the landing. Dark now except for a lantern near the gangplank, the Christina seemed to be asleep.
Then as Libby’s eyes grew used to the darkness, a shadow separated from a building off to the right. A second shadow followed, and a third. Without making a sound, three men crept toward the river.
At a warehouse near the Christina they stopped. As silently as they came, the men crept around the building and disappeared.
A few minutes later the three men returned. This time they slipped into the deep shadows next to the warehouse. All during that March day in 1857 it had rained, and a large puddle lay between the tall building and the steamboat.
Trying to catch even one small movement, Libby peered into the night. Soon clouds blotted out what little moon there was, making it even more difficult to see.
Just then Libby heard voices from the sitting room next door. Her father was there, and her aunt. Libby strained to hear.
“She’s thirteen now. She needs a change in her life.” That was Pa, and Libby knew he was talking about her. But the rest of his words faded away.
Without making a sound, Libby slipped over to another window. There she was closer to the wall between her bedroom and the sitting room.
“Somehow that girl always manages to attract trouble!” That was Auntie Vi speaking.
Libby pressed her ear against the wall. At the same time she stared down at the warehouse. Not one movement gave away the three men.
Then from somewhere in the night a dog barked. In the next instant the men leaped from the shadows. Breaking into a run, they headed straight for the large puddle between them and the Christina. Long boards lay across the puddle, but the men sloshed through the water with bare feet.
In the same moment a boy raced across the Christina’s deck. When he reached the oil lantern, he blew out the flame. Sudden darkness hid the men.
Libby raised the window and leaned forward, straining to see. What had happened to the men? She felt sure they were trying to board her father’s boat.
As Libby wondered if she should warn him, the quiet night seemed to explode. Around the hotel the streets came alive. Instead of one dog barking, there were several.
Soon Libby heard dogs enter the street just below her window. Eight or ten men ran close behind with lanterns held high. In their light Libby saw leaping dogs. Yipping with excitement, they strained at their leashes. Bloodhounds!
The dogs sniffed along the side of the warehouse, then followed the trail to the large puddle of water. At first the lead dog sniffed his way onto the boards. Seeming to find no scent, he went back to the edge of the puddle. This time he sniffed his way around it.
On the far side, the bloodhound barked again. As the other dogs joined him, their barking set up howls from dogs all over town.
Nose to the ground, the lead dog sniffed his way toward the Christina. At the edge of the riverbank he stopped. Looking up at the tall, heavy man who held his leash, the dog barked.
“Hey there!” the large man shouted. “You on the Christina!”
As the man held up his lantern, Libby saw that something had changed. The long plank from boat to shore was no longer in place.
When no one appeared, the man shouted again. “Hey there! I know you’re on board! C’mon out!”
Around him, the dogs set up an even greater racket. Then a lantern moved slowly across the forward deck. When the person with the lantern held it up, Libby recognized the boy she had seen only minutes before.
From near the railing he called down. “Can I help you?”
“Of course you can help me! Where are the men that boarded your boat?”
> “You saw men?” the boy asked.
“Where is your captain?” the large man roared.
“He’ll be back soon, sir. Would you like to wait?”
“Where’s your first mate?”
“I can’t tell you, sir.”
“Then let us board!”
“I can’t let you board, sir. Not without the captain’s permission.”
“Then run out your gangplank! We’ll tell you whether someone went aboard!”
The boy stepped backward and set down the lantern. As Libby watched, a long plank dropped down between the boat and the shore.
Once again the boy held up the lantern, but he stayed at the top of the gangplank. Strong and confident looking, he guarded the deck, as though unwilling to let anyone step past him.
With the lead dog running ahead, the pack of dogs pushed forward. Nose to the wood, he sniffed up and down the plank. Finally he returned to his owner and sat down on his haunches.
Holding up his fist, the large man shook it at the boy on board. “I don’t know what you did!”
The boy seemed undisturbed. “Maybe you should look somewhere else,” he called down.
The man’s sudden growl sounded like a dog’s. Just the same, he turned away. When the bloodhounds sniffed their way back to the warehouse, the men followed.
As they disappeared around the end of the building, Libby heard voices in the sitting room. Quickly she tiptoed across the floor and knelt down at the door between the two rooms.
“I just can’t seem to change Libby into what she should be.” That was Auntie Vi again.
Since the death of her mother four years before, Libby had lived with her aunt and uncle in a Chicago mansion. In that second week of March 1857, Libby and Auntie Vi had traveled to Burlington, Iowa, so that Libby could visit her father.
“How do you want to change her?” Captain Norstad asked.
“She can’t do anything right!” Auntie Vi answered. “She does like nice clothes, but—”
“She likes nice clothes, all right!” the captain agreed. “Libby told me that she didn’t like my uniform—that it’s too old-fashioned!”
“That sounds like Libby.” Her aunt sounded pleased. “She’s developed excellent taste. Whatever costs most, that’s what Libby chooses.”
“Does she now?” the captain asked. “Is that why she calls me Faw-thur, like some high society girl? The last time I saw Libby I was her pa.”
Trying to catch every word, Libby leaned closer. She’d have to remember to call her father Pa. In the darkness she bumped against the door. Scared by the light thud, she drew back. Had her aunt and father heard?
When they went on talking, Libby knew she was safe. Once more she put her ear to the keyhole.
“So what exactly is the problem?” Captain Norstad asked.
“Though she likes nice things, Libby acts like a tomboy. I was horrified when I caught her swimming! A proper young lady would never swim.”
“Unless her father showed her how.” Captain Norstad’s voice sounded dangerously low. “I taught Libby to swim, in case she fell off my boat.”
“But she embarrasses me in front of my friends!” Auntie Vi wailed. “I’m ready to give up on that girl!”
Give up on me? As though a knife pierced her heart, Libby felt the pain of those words. Auntie Vi wants to give up on me?
“Well, I’m not ready to give up,” the captain answered. “I’ll never give up on Libby!”
But Libby barely heard her father’s words. So upset that she forgot to be quiet, she again bumped against the door.
In the next instant Libby heard quick footsteps moving toward her. As she scrambled to get away, the door opened. Her father reached out and took her hand.
“We need to talk about something.” He drew her into the sitting room. “Sit down, Libby.”
“I want to stand, sir.” Whatever her punishment would be, Libby knew she couldn’t take it sitting down. “If you please, sir,” she added quickly.
Auntie Vi sat in a chair near the fireplace. In the lamplight Libby saw her aunt’s eyes. She was not happy with the way things were going.
As though walking the deck of a steamboat, Captain Norstad took a turn around the room. Libby remembered what that meant. Her father had something important to say.
When he reached a window on the front side of the hotel, the captain paused. Holding aside the curtain, he looked down.
Did he see the men and dogs? Libby wondered as the curtain fell back over the window.
Then her father turned to her. With his black hair and captain’s uniform, he looked tall and distinguished. “Libby, I’ve made up my mind. I want you to live on the Christina with me.”
Libby’s heart leaped. I’ll be with my father—my pa—again! Never in her wildest imagination had she thought he would allow that.
But her aunt broke in. “A girl Libby’s age without her mother on a riverboat? That’s unthinkable!”
“Is it?” Captain Norstad asked. “Libby and I barely know each other anymore. I want to be part of her life, to help her grow up. I get lonesome for her.”
Pa is lonesome for me? Libby felt glad. More than once since the death of her mother, she had cried herself to sleep. She had felt lonely for both parents.
“It’s not safe for Libby to live on your boat!” Auntie Vi exclaimed.
“It wasn’t safe when she was eight or nine, but Libby is thirteen now. I’ll get her a dog.”
“A dog?” Libby asked, startled. She wasn’t sure about that. She’d seen a lot of dogs running around the streets of Chicago. Dogs that were dirty and mean and got into fights. “Are you sure I need a dog?”
“He’ll protect you.”
Suddenly Libby remembered something else. “I don’t have enough clothes along. How can I possibly live with only one trunkful?”
“You’ll manage!” Pa’s voice was gruff now, and Libby knew that no one would change his mind. For good or bad, she would live on the Christina.
Like a giant wave, the idea washed over her. Libby felt excited, but also scared. Often she’d heard people talk about the dangerous things that happened to steamboats. They exploded or caught fire. They struck the hidden roots of old trees and sank within minutes. Gamblers traveled on the boats—and thieves.
Whenever she heard those stories, Libby had worried about her father. Now, living on the Christina, she would share that danger.
Then she remembered her aunt’s words—words that hurt all the way through. Standing tall, Libby faced her father. “If I live on the Christina, I want a never-give-up family.”
“What do you mean, Libby?” he asked.
Libby looked straight into his eyes. “I want a family that believes in me, even when I’m not perfect.”
A sob rose in her throat, but Libby kept on. “A family that sticks together, even though it’s hard.”
Tears welled up in her eyes. Unwilling to have her aunt see her cry, Libby tried to blink back her tears. Instead they spilled over.
“That’s the kind of family I want too,” Pa said softly. “We can be that family for each other.”
“With just two people?”
Pa nodded. “If we don’t give up on each other.”
Libby found it hard to believe. “You might not like how I act.”
“You might not like what I ask you to do,” Pa answered.
“But we can practice,” Libby said.
“We’ll practice hard.” Her father had a twinkle in his eye. “Caleb and the other people who work on the Christina will be our larger family.”
Captain Norstad glanced toward Auntie Vi. “I need to leave Burlington tomorrow.”
“Tomorrow?” Libby asked. This time her scared feelings went right down to her toes. What will my new life be like?
CHAPTER 2
The Mysterious Boxes
The next morning, standing outside the hotel where she and Auntie Vi had spent the night, Libby felt a tingle of excitement. I’m
beginning my new life! I wonder what adventures I’ll have!
Of all the steamboats at the landing, her father’s paddle-boat seemed the most beautiful. Even now, smoke billowed from the tall stacks. In the sunlight the railings and pilothouse shone.
Then Auntie Vi joined Libby, and they started down the street to the river. Libby studied the name on the wooden housing of the great side paddlewheel.
“Christina for my ma,” she said. The four-deck-high steamboat was a proud reminder of the mother Libby still loved with all her heart.
“Christina was a red-haired beauty,” Auntie Vi answered. She and Libby’s mother had been sisters. “Deep red hair with gold highlights—the same color as yours. Same brown eyes too. Men for miles around wanted to marry her—”
“I know, I know,” Libby broke in. She had heard the story at least a hundred times.
“Your mother could have married any wealthy man she chose,” Auntie went on. “Why she picked your father I’ll never know!”
Libby searched the sky behind the Christina. She felt as if a cloud had passed over the sun. To her surprise it still shone.
“Ma married Pa because she loved him.” Libby’s voice sounded sharp, even to her own ears. “And I love him too!”
“Love never pays the bills,” her aunt answered, as she always did. “If you find living on the boat too hard, your Uncle Alex and I will welcome you home.”
Libby didn’t want to think about returning to her aunt’s. Not now, anyway, when she looked forward to her new life. Instead, Libby remembered her aunt’s hurtful words. She thinks I’m not worth anything. Maybe she’s right.
Trying to push aside her nervousness, Libby slipped her hand between the folds of her full skirt. The white cloth of her new dress felt soft to her touch. With a toss of her head Libby set her face toward the Christina.
This is the first day of my new life! I won’t let anyone spoil it!
Picking up her pace, Libby walked as fast as she dared. In one more hour her aunt would go back to Chicago. I only need to get through the next hour.
Just then Libby hiccuped.
“Child!” her aunt exclaimed. “How can you get hiccups at a time like this?”
“I don’t know.” Libby wished she could push aside her nervousness. Not since she was nine years old had she been on a steamboat. In the midst of her next hiccup Libby swallowed hard.