chapter one

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Chapter 1: The Riverbank Promise (Summer 1862) The summer of 1862 pressed down on Virginia like a damp wool blanket. Heat shimmered above the fields, turning the air thick and hazy. Cicadas screamed from every tree, a constant drone that made conversation feel like shouting into a storm. Elijah Harper, seventeen and long-limbed, waded into the James River up to his knees, letting the sluggish current tug at his rolled-up trousers. He carried a fishing pole he had whittled himself, but the line stayed slack. Fish weren’t biting today, and truth be told, he hadn’t come for fish. Behind him, on the shaded bank beneath a stand of weeping willows, Amelia Rose Whitaker sat on their favorite flat rock. Her bare feet dangled just above the water, skirt tucked modestly around her ankles. A wide-brimmed straw hat shielded her freckled face from the sun, but stray curls of auburn hair escaped, glowing like embers whenever the light caught them. They had claimed this spot years ago, when they were still children running wild after church on Sundays. Back then it was a pirate cove or an Indian hideout, depending on the game. Now, at seventeen, the games had changed, though neither had said it aloud. “Pa says the harvest’ll be poor again,” Elijah spoke first, voice carrying easily over the insect hum. “Corn’s burning in the field. If the Yankees don’t take it, the drought will.” Amelia didn’t answer right away. She was skipping pebbles—four skips today, a new record. The stone plunked finally and vanished. “My father says the same,” she replied. “But he talks more about the war than the weather now. Says if Virginia goes, we all go with her.” Elijah turned to look at her. She kept her eyes on the river, but he saw the tightness around her mouth. The Whitakers owned a small farm two miles down the road from the Harpers. Their families had known each other forever—shared plows, traded seed corn, attended the same little Baptist church. Amelia’s mother had died of fever two winters past, leaving Amelia to run the house while her father wrestled with debts and drink. Elijah set the fishing pole against a root and climbed onto the rock beside her. Their shoulders nearly touched. “You believe him?” he asked quietly. “About the war coming here?” “I believe it’s already here,” she said. “Tommy Greer enlisted last week. Billy Mason too. They marched through town in new gray jackets like they were going to a wedding.” Elijah picked up a pebble of his own, turned it over in his rough hands. “Some boys at the store were talking about signing up. Said Lee needs every man who can hold a rifle.” Amelia’s head snapped toward him. “And what did you say?” “Nothing.” He skipped the pebble—only two bounces. “But Pa looked at me the whole way home like he was measuring me for a uniform.” Silence stretched. A kingfisher flashed blue across the water and vanished into the trees. “I won’t go,” Elijah said finally. It sounded like defiance, but it came out uncertain. Amelia studied him. Her eyes were the gray-green of river stones, serious and unflinching. “You might not have a choice. They’ll come for you if you don’t go willing.” “Then I’ll run,” he said, too loud. “North, maybe. Canada. Anywhere but bleeding in some muddy field for men who own slaves while we starve.” She flinched at the word slaves. Her family didn’t own any—couldn’t afford to—but half the county did, and the church preached it was God’s order. “Don’t talk like that out loud,” she whispered. “Someone’ll hear.” Elijah’s face burned. He reached for her hand without thinking. She let him take it. “I’m sorry,” he muttered. “I just… I don’t want to leave this.” He gestured at the river, the willows, the lazy afternoon. At her. Amelia’s fingers tightened around his. “Me neither.” They sat like that a long time, hands linked, listening to the water and the cicadas. Heat pressed down, but the shade and the river breeze made it bearable. Finally Amelia spoke again, softer. “If you do have to go… promise you’ll come back.” Elijah swallowed. “I promise.” “No.” She turned fully toward him, eyes fierce. “Promise proper. Like you mean it with your whole soul.” He met her gaze. Something shifted inside him, a certainty deeper than fear. “I swear it, Amelia Rose Whitaker,” he said, voice steady now. “I’ll come back to you. If it takes everything I have, I’ll find my way home.” She searched his face, then nodded once. Slowly, deliberately, she leaned forward and kissed him. It was their first real kiss—not the shy peck stolen behind the church last Christmas, but something surer, deeper. Her lips were warm and tasted faintly of the blackberries they’d shared earlier. Elijah’s heart hammered so hard he was sure she could feel it. When they parted, foreheads still touching, Amelia whispered, “And if you don’t come back in this life, Elijah Harper… you find me in the next one. I’ll be waiting.” He laughed once, shaky. “Deal.” Above them, the sun slipped lower, turning the river to molten gold. They stayed until dusk, talking of small things—how they’d fix the old cabin on Whitaker ridge someday, plant peach trees, raise children who would fish in this same spot. Neither mentioned the war again that day. But promises, once spoken aloud beside moving water, have a way of carrying farther than anyone expects.
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