A Place Called Freedom - Ken Follett [139]
With Lizzie’s urging Mack made good speed and they reached Fredericksburg around suppertime. There were people on the streets and lights in the houses. He drew up the buggy outside Dr. Finch’s home. Lizzie went to the door while Mack wrapped Bess in the blankets and carefully lifted her up. She was unconscious but alive.
The door was opened by Mrs. Finch, a mousy woman in her forties. She showed Lizzie into the parlor and Mack followed with Bess. The doctor, a thickset man with a bullying manner, looked distinctly guilty when he realized he had forced a pregnant woman to drive through the night to bring him a patient. He covered his embarrassment by bustling about and giving his wife abrupt orders.
When he had looked at the wound he asked Lizzie to make herself comfortable in the other room. Mack went with her and Mrs. Finch stayed to help her husband.
The remains of a supper were on the table. Lizzie eased herself gingerly into a chair. “What’s the matter?” Mack said.
“That ride has given me the most awful backache. Do you think Bess will be all right?”
“I don’t know. She’s not very robust.”
A maid came in and offered Lizzie tea and cake, and Lizzie accepted. The maid looked Mack up and down, identified him as a servant, and said: “If you want some tea you can come in the kitchen.”
“I need to see to the horse first,” he said.
He went outside and led the pony around to Dr. Finch’s stable, where he gave it water and some grain; then he waited in the kitchen. The house was small, and he could hear the doctor and his wife talking as they worked. The maid, a middle-aged black woman, cleared the dining room and brought out Lizzie’s teacup. Mack decided it was stupid for him to sit in the kitchen and Lizzie in the dining room, so he went and sat with her, despite the frowns of the maid. Lizzie looked pale, and he resolved to get her home as soon as possible.
At last Dr. Finch came in, drying his hands. “It’s a nasty wound but I believe I have done everything possible,” he said. “I’ve stopped the bleeding, sewn up the gash and given her a drink. She’s young and she will heal.”
“Thank goodness,” Lizzie said.
The doctor nodded. “I’m sure she’s a valuable slave. She shouldn’t travel far tonight. She can stay here and sleep in my maid’s quarters, and you can send for her tomorrow or the day after. When the wound closes I’ll take out the stitches—she should do no heavy work until then.”
“Of course.”
“Have you had supper, Mrs. Jamisson? May I offer you something?”
“No, thank you, I’d just like to get home and go to bed.”
Mack said: “I’ll bring the buggy around to the front.”
A few minutes later they were on their way. Lizzie rode up front while they were in the town, but as soon as they passed the last house she lay down on the mattress.
Mack drove slowly, and this time there were no impatient sounds from behind him. When they had been traveling for about half an hour he said: “Are you asleep?”
There was no reply, and he assumed she was.
He glanced behind him from time to time. She was restless, shifting her position and muttering in her sleep.
They were driving along a deserted stretch two or three miles from the plantation when the stillness of the night was shattered by a scream.
It was Lizzie.
“What? What?” Mack called frantically as he hauled on the reins. Before the pony had stopped he was clambering into the back.
“Oh, Mack, it hurts!” she cried.
He put his arm around her shoulders and raised her a little. “What is it? Where does it hurt?”
“Oh, God, I think the baby is coming.”
“But it’s not due.…”
“Another two months.”
Mack knew little about such things but he guessed that the birth had been brought on by the stress of the medical emergency or the bumpy ride to Fredericksburg—or both.
“How long have we got?”
She groaned long and loud, then answered him. “Not long.”
“I thought it took hours.”
“I don’t know. I think the backache I had was labor pain. Maybe the baby has been