The Sapphire Brooch by Katherine Logan (best novels to read to improve english .txt) π

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- Author: Katherine Logan
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A steady stream of officers moved in and out of the room during Ramseurβs final hours. Some offered prayers. Some sat silently. All came to honor a friend. General Custer kept a vigil throughout the night.
As dawn broke over the valley and the death rattle continued, Ramseurβs attempts to keep moving air into his chest weakened. Charlotte rose to stretch her legs, setting aside the cold compress she had used to wipe Ramseurβs forehead. Custer picked it up and dabbed at his friendβs face.
The general opened his eyes and spoke in a weak voice. βI have a new baby and I donβt even know whether I have a son or a daughter.β
A moment of truth arrived for Charlotte. She had failed to save him, but she would not fail to give him the one piece of information she alone had the power to give.
She leaned in close and said in a low voice, βYou have a daughter. Her name is Mary.β
The generalβs mouth lifted slightly on the right side in an effort to smile. βSend a lock of my hair to my wife, Ellen, and bear this message: βI die a Christian and hope to meet her in Heaven.ββ
And with those words, the general closed his eyes and quietly slipped away.
Charlotte met Custerβs steel blue eyes, now battle-weary and red-rimmed from a night of sleepless grief. βThank you, Doctor Mallory. I will mention the excellent care the general received in my letter to Ellen.β
Charlotteβs chest hitched as panic swept through it. Her ancestorβs name could not appear in the historical record because of something she did. βPlease donβt single me out, sir.β She struggled to think clearly. βThe general received excellent care from your surgeon as well.β
He stood with his hat in his hands, nodded, and quit the room.
Charlotte went over to the window for a gulp of fresh air, but was almost suffocated by the smell of decaying flesh. The dead and dying of the two armies were commingled. Many of the wounded had crawled to the stream for a drink of cool water. Horses dragged damaged wagons behind them. Abandoned ambulances were still full of wounded soldiers. Cries of agony could be heard from every direction. Over eight thousand men had been killed, wounded, or captured, and many of the dead were in the plantationβs front yard, stacked in gruesome piles awaiting burial. They would all be buried in shallow graves until they could be moved to their final resting places.
She turned away from the window. All these years she had been so naΓ―ve. Sheβd studied history and reenacted battles and believed she understood the war. But she hadnβt, not really. War was gut-wrenching, heartrending, and, above all, deadly. And she had come close to being a casualty. Was this the point of this trip back in time? To see the war as it really was? If so, sheβd seen enough, and she was ready to go home. Her fingers grazed the bump of the brooch again. As soon as she had privacy, she would use the tweezers she had pilfered from the medical supplies and find out if the brooch would take her back to her century.
Boots clomped on the floor behind her. She turned to see one of the junior officers who had been in and out of the room during the night.
βGeneral Sheridan wants to see you. If youβll come with me.β
She patted her beard and wig, hoping she continued to look the part of Major Carlton Mallory. As tired as she was, appearances still meant everything. Even more important, in this case her appearance might mean the difference between survival and death.
She was escorted to the front room Sheridan was using as his office. βCome in, Major. Take a seat.β
She sat across the desk from a dark-eyed man with closely cropped hair. A man she knew to be a ruthless and highly decorated warrior. He picked up a quill pen and dipped it into an inkwell. βName and regiment?β
His steely tone triggered the bad kind of shivers along her spine. She twitched and straightened her back. She would not let him intimidate her. Who was she kidding? She was stuck in the Civil War, for Peteβs sake, and not at all sure how, or if, she could return home. Was she intimidated? Yes, by God, she was.
βMajorββshe stopped to clear her throat and lower her voiceββMajor Carlton Jackson Mallory, Second Corps Army of Northern Virginia.β
The pen squeaked across the paper. βWhereβd you receive your medical training?β
βNew York Medical College.β
βDo you own any slaves?β
βOf course not.β She gulped, knowing she needed to temper her responses. βOur slaves have been granted their freedom.β
βYet you fight for the rebel cause.β
βIβm a doctor, not a soldier.β
βThe Federals need good doctors, too.β
Her mouth had gone dry as paper. She gnawed the inside of her cheek and tried to summon a little saliva. βVirginia is my family home and has been for over two hundred years.β
βWhere in Virginia?β
Fortunately, she knew her ancestor served the Second Corps until the end of the war, which meant he had not been captured in Strasburg. She would be safe giving him the answer to his question.
βMallory Plantation is about ten miles north of Richmond.β
βWhat would you do to save your home from being burned to ground?β Sheridan glared intently.
For one shocking moment, the steady hand of time stilled. Had her presence in the past suddenly put her ancestors at risk? She took a long, steadying breath, then another, suppressing a roar of fear.
βWhatever I had to do.β
She knew in her gut she had committed herself to a task she wasnβt going to like. Thereβd be no return trip home in the near future.
He put down his pen, leaned back in his chair, and pursed his lips thoughtfully. Charlotte squirmed under the
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