Master Reeve’s bondsman gestured for Andrew and Molly to follow while he bundled their order. He wrapped cord around the linsey-woolsey so it could be packed more easily. The rest of the items went into a neat paper-wrapped bundle of a weight Molly could manage, talking to the all the while. “I am Jeffers and bound for six more years. Wharton seems a hard but fair man. I hope to see you in town sometimes, or on Sunday when our time is our own. I wish you Godspeed.” With that, he hoisted and settled the heavy bundle of yard goods on Andrew’s back and loaded Molly’s arms with her parcels.
The two labored under their burdens as they made their way along the rutted track. The morning sun was already hot, the air muggy. Andrew hadn’t gone far before the weight of the pack ate into his shoulders. He rested his weary back by leaning against a tree a time or two, knowing he’d never get the pack back on if he took it off. Molly shifted her bundles frequently as she fatigued. After a half a mile, they rounded a curve to see the Wharton farm in a stump-filled clearing. A hearty stand of tobacco took up most of the cleared ground, a patch of corn and a kitchen garden the rest. Clearly, tobacco was the major crop. Early on, the colony had nearly perished when farmers opted to plant all their ground in tobacco, the lucrative option, rather than food crops. A law was passed requiring each farm to provide a portion of corn to the community storehouse, enabling them to feed themselves, rather than rely on England to import food.
The cabin was strictly utilitarian, a modest one-story dwelling of rough timber, a well in the dooryard. The garden plots crowded up to the house, no cleared ground wasted. A rough outbuilding stood to the rear of the house. The stumps attested to farmland wrenched from the forest. Andrew got a glimpse of his future beholding the forest eager to reclaim the cleared ground. Master Wharton would be granted an additional fifty acres each for paying the transport his servant’s passage to the colony, a good deal indeed. The colony was desperate for cheap labor to work the farms, relying on the indentured and enslaved. Sadly, only about forty percent of the indentured lived to work out the terms of their service.
Master Wharton was waiting as they walked up. A gray-haired woman and an emaciated man in his fifties stood with him. “This is my bondsman, Bartle and his wife Aggie. They are about to work out their time. He will be teaching you smithing and your woman will work under Aggie.” If he knew their names, he didn’t bother using them. “They will show you to your quarters and get you started after supping.”
Great detail Linda. Can t wait to read more!
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Oh, working on 9 now
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loving this already!
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Thanks
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I hope Master Wharton truly is a good but hard man. Loving all the little details of bygone days and times. ❤ ❤ 😛
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This is the start of a pretty tough time I think!!
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Life was hard enough when you were working your own land but to do it an an indentured servant seems a cruelty.
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You are so right. Drudgery for nothing!
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Only 40 % survived ? Wow.
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It’s sad. Over 50,000 convicts were brought to colonies.
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” The stumps attested to farmland wrenched from the forest. ”
Loved the way you put it.
Though I am not commenting on the story so far, I think it is going good. Though at a slow pace.
Susie
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I am glad you told me it seems slow. Maybe putting in too much detail. Thanks.
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I love it because the more detail there is the more there is to read- so I loved it.
Do you mean it to be a story book or a novel ? Depends on the length you plan for it- if a novel, this pace is perfectly fine.
Susie
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Thanks. I expect to expand it into a novel at some point.
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So far they’re settling in well. I hope it continues. Great post, Linda. 🙂 — Suzanne
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Thanks.
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I think they’re in for some rude shocks
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Indeed.
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