Shalla
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About this ebook
Set in Colonial Rhode Island in the mid-seventeenth century, Shalla is the fictionalized story of a real person, one of the children of Rhode Island founder Samuel Gorton, who was known as "the New England firebrand." Because of his religious and political beliefs, Gorton was kicked out of Plimoth Plantations, Providence, and Pawtuxet before founding his own colony. He called it Shawomet, although it is now Warwick, Rhode Island. In 1643, soldiers from the Massachusetts Bay Colony attacked Shawomet and captured Samuel Gorton and some of his followers, taking them to Boston to stand trial for heresy. No one knows exactly where his wife and children were during the time he was in prison. This is the story of what might have happened to them, told through the eyes of one of his daughters, a girl with the remarkable given name of Mahershallahashbaz.
Kathy Lynn Emerson
Kathy Lynn Emerson has written both contemporary and historical novels, and has been published in several different genres. She is the author of sixty-four traditionally published works of fiction and nonfiction under several names. She won an Agatha Award for nonfiction for How to Write Killer Historical Mysteries and received the 2023 Lea Wait Award for "excellence and achievement." She lives in Maine.
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Book preview
Shalla - Kathy Lynn Emerson
SHALLA
CHAPTER ONE
THE THINKING PLACE
Shalla sat hugging her knees in the warm midday sun, content and sleepy. Words washed over her in waves of sound as she watched a crab scurry sideways across the coarse sand. She heard her father's fervor as he read aloud, but did not take in his meaning. It is but another letter from the Massachusetts Bay, she thought . . . until Isabel Potter gasped in horror.
Shalla still had no idea what the letter said, but its effect was stunning. Goodwife Weston wept quietly against her husband's shoulder. Randall Holden fondled his musket.
We will look upon you as men prepared for slaughter,
Samuel Gorton repeated. Eyes Shalla had inherited—bright and blue as sapphires—blazed. With one abrupt motion he held the letter aloft and crumpled it in his strong, work-roughened fist.
The very air seemed to quiver, tense and fearful as the small band of settlers gathered in its salty embrace. Shalla looked about her in growing confusion. Something was wrong, terribly wrong, and she had not the slightest idea what it was.
This letter is dated four days past, the third day of October in this year of our Lord sixteen hundred and forty-three.
Her father's resonant voice soothed but the words were frightening. "Doubtless troops were dispatched soon after. We have little time left and much to do, for we are not prepared to be slaughtered. Neither are we prepared to go meekly to Boston at the will of those who would take away our liberty. Flee, my friends. Save what you can. We few shall remain here in Shawomet to defend our homes."
When Samuel Gorton gave an order, he was obeyed. As their neighbors streamed past them, faces grim but determined, Shalla's sister Molly poked her hard in the ribs. Hurry, Shalla.
Why?
Shalla asked.
Have you porridge for brains?
The older girl's voice was sharp as a wasp's sting. Did you not hear what Father said? Soldiers are coming!
Why?
Shalla repeated, but no one answered her. She followed Molly into their one room house.
Within the rough hewn walls, Shalla's mother was in command. With her fair complexion and her slender, long-fingered hands, she appeared fragile at first glance. In fact she was as tireless as her husband. She set Shalla to work at once. Bundle all the good pewter into this blanket.
The tankards and dishes clanked together as Shalla piled them onto the thick wool surface. Almost before she'd let go of the last piece, her older brother, known as Young Sam to distinguish him from their father, tied up the corners and hauled it away. He carried off a basket full of pots and pans as well.
If anything happens to me,
he said, these will be hidden at our thinking place.
His tanned face wore as serious an expression as Shalla had ever seen on it. His pale blue eyes were narrowed with worry and a lock of light brown hair, the exact same shade as Shalla's, rose from his forehead as if he'd been pulling at it with fretful fingers.
What do you—?
He was gone before she could complete the question. Mother,
she wailed, what did he mean? What could happen to Young Sam?
Mary Gorton ignored her. She and Molly were too busy pulling a heavy blanket box to the center of the room. From the back they looked like twins, for at fifteen Molly was the same height as their mother and shared her coloring and delicate bone structure. Shalla was almost as tall, but it was because she took after her father.
Put our extra shoes into a basket, Shalla,
Mother said, turning. Then help Ellen.
She rounded up seven-year-old Sarah and five-year-old Johnny and hurried the younger children outside, leaving her middle daughter's question unanswered.
Shalla tried to obey, all the while struggling to convince herself that Young Sam was in no danger, but memories had her fingers curling into fists. Soldiers. Men with guns. They kept coming because her father stood for what he believed. They called him a firebrand, attracting trouble, when all he really wanted was to be left alone.
Her hands trembled as she packed her mother's clogs. One eluded her grip to sail across the room. Its thick wooden sole struck a cluster of leeks hanging from the roof beam.
Clumsy!
Molly's pale face looked as sour and disapproving as any Bay Colony Puritan's.
Heat rushed into Shalla's cheeks. Molly was forever pointing out her shortcomings, as if she were Mistress Perfect. Clumsy? A fine word from one who cannot walk two steps outside the door without sounding like a herd of frightened deer!
Would you have me wear moccasins as you do and sneak up behind people?
Scorn dripping from every word, Molly drew herself up to her full height and fixed Shalla with a wilting gaze.
This must be how a netted fish feels, Shalla thought, and pictured herself flopping awkwardly and gasping for air. Then she rallied. Although her voice trembled and her eyes threatened to imitate the banks of a stream at spring melt-off, she snapped back at Molly. Even barefoot you would step on every twig and like as not trip over a root and crash to the ground!
With a haughty sniff, Molly turned her back. Using deft, economical movements, she rolled their clothing into tight balls and bundled them into blankets for carrying. Anything made of cloth, since it had to be imported from England, was too valuable to leave behind.
Frustrated, Shalla stuck out her tongue. It was wasted effort. Molly did not notice. Without looking up she added, You have mud on the back of your skirt.
Shalla brushed furiously at several dark spots on the muted red cloth. Her linen cuffs were dirty, too, and the matching apron was ripped in at least two places. She had no idea where her cap was. Her hair, pushed behind her ears to get it out of her face, hung to the middle of her back in tangled clumps.
Molly's clothes rarely needed repair, and when they did her stitches were so careful that no one could tell there had been a tear. Such things had never seemed important to Shalla, but as she glared at her sister, she could not help but remember the hushed conversation she had overheard between her parents only two days earlier.
Let her enjoy her childhood, Father had said.
That is nearing an end, Mother had reminded him. She is almost at the age when a girl becomes a woman, and I would she could be more like her sister.
I'd rather be more like my brother,
Shalla muttered under her breath.
Across the room the Gorton maidservant, Ellen Aldridge, reared up behind the trestle table with a snort. She'd been on her knees on the hard packed dirt floor, going through the contents of the oak chest. Strands of gray hair stuck out at odd angles underneath her white linen cap, and her apron was twisted sideways. She left a dirty streak across her nose and cheek as she wiped away beads of perspiration with a dusty hand.
Come here, Shalla,
she called. Take these down to the canoe and tell young Peter Greene to ferry them out to the shallop as quick as he can.
She began to fill Shalla's outstretched arms with warm cloaks.
Why can we not stay, too? Stay and fight?
The pile was heavy, all wool and fur, and spilled over onto the floor. Why do we have to run away again?
It will be too dangerous here for women and children. Only the men will remain behind. Go on now—down to the shore. The shallop will take us across the bay to your Uncle Thomas on Aquidneck Island. We will be safe there.
Does 'men' mean Young Sam too?
He was scarce thirteen, but well grown and nearly as tall as their father.
Not if I have my way!
Ellen would have said more, but just as she opened her mouth a shadow fell on the two of them. The sunlight streaming in through the cabin door was blocked out by the figure of a man in armor.
Shalla spun around, dropping everything Ellen had piled into her arms. She breathed a sigh of relief when she saw it was only her father silhouetted in the doorway. The light behind him turned his golden hair into a halo around his head.
Time to leave,
he said.
Shalla flung herself toward him. Effortlessly, he lifted her off her feet and hugged her; but there was less comfort in his arms than she'd hoped for. As she pressed against him, Shalla felt the cold hard surface of the corselet of his pikeman's armor, and the lumps of the bandolier that held ammunition for his musket. The scent of the gunpowder made her nose twitch. She liked it better when he only smelled of leather and tobacco.
Peter has taken Johnny and Sarah out to the shallop,
Father said as he set Shalla back on her feet. It is time for the rest of you to board.
You cannot mean to leave all this,
Ellen protested.
Shalla's gaze followed the sweep of Ellen's hand. Ladles and skimmers and forks still hung suspended from the lug pole at the mouth of the wide stone hearth. Stools, the trestle table, and the bedsteads remained as well.
"Those soldiers from Massachusetts Bay will steal or destroy everything they get