Kent Family Chronicles: The Furies - Kent Family Chronicles: The Furies Part 1
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Kent Family Chronicles: The Furies Part 1

The Furies.

The Kent Family Chronicles.

John Jakes.

For my son John Michael.

Introduction:.

Our Heroine.

SO FAR AS READERS are concerned, Amanda Kent, the leading character of this fourth novel in The Kent Family Chronicles, remains one of the two or three favorite members of my fictional family. Over the years I've heard from fans who have named daughters after her. And it still happens.

Amanda is one of my favorite heroines too-the second strong woman to appear in the series, the first being Philip Kent's wife Anne Ware. Reviewers have observed that I have a penchant for creating strong female characters. Only belatedly, after several Kent novels were written and published, did I realize it was so. There are women as strong as Amanda still to come in the series, and in my other novels. Possibly this is because of my study of the nineteenth-century women's movement, whose crusaders were often on the barricades for abolition as well as suffrage. I fell in love with the brave ladies who risked their reputations, their marriages, and sometimes their physical selves.

The Furies covers a fairly lengthy span of time and geography: Texas, 1836, and the siege of the Alamo, the California gold rush in the late 1840s, then the turbulent national schism over slavery as played out in the east. As always, research inspired certain elements of the story. One of the most interesting was the Native American myth of the great vine to heaven. I was so intrigued by it I had to find a way to incorporate it into Amanda's saga.

Another example: the novel's opening sequence, which finds Amanda trapped behind the walls of the Alamo in San Antonio de Bexar. She witnesses the Alamo's siege and fall and survives, as did Susannah Dickinson, wife of Almeron Dickinson of Tennessee, one of the many Americans killed during the fighting. Susannah and her little daughter, Angelina, whose charming girlishness took the fancy of General Santa Anna, later carried word of the Alamo atrocities to General Sam Houston, before the battle of San Jacinto, which won liberty for the Texas republic. Collaborating with the distinguished artist and book designer Paul Bacon, I did a book for young children about Susannah and Angelina.

I mention all this because Susannah is listed as the sole Anglo female to survive the massacre, but that is not to say other women weren't present: some of the Mexican defenders of the Alamo had wives or sweethearts with them. These Latina women, alas, were never described, or even noted, among the survivors. It's for this reason that Amanda's past includes a husband named Jaimie de la Gura. With that last name, Amanda too would have been ignored on the casualty rolls. All during the writing of the Kent series, this is how research aided me in justifying the presence of certain fictional characters at great historic events, without falsifying the record as we have it.

I hope you enjoy Amanda's adventures in a tumultuous time in American history, and I thank my friends at New American Library and Penguin Group (USA) for presenting them in this handsome new edition.

-John Jakes.

Hilton Head Island, South Carolina.

"Mr. President, I wish to speak today, not as a Massachusetts man, nor as a Northern man, but as an American...

"It is not to be denied that we live in the midst of strong agitations, and are surrounded by very considerable dangers to our institutions and government. The imprisoned winds are let loose. The East, the North, and the stormy South combine to throw the whole sea into commotion, to toss its billows to the sky, and disclose its profoundest depths. I speak today for the preservation of the Union...

"I hear with distress and anguish the word 'secession,' especially when it falls from the lips of those who are patriotic, and known to the country, and known all over the world, for their political services. Secession! Peaceable secession! Sir, your eyes and mine are never destined to see that miracle...

"I will not state what might produce the disruption of the Union; but, Sir, I see as plainly as I see the sun in heaven what that disruption itself must produce; I see that it must produce war."

March 7, 1850:.

Daniel Webster, to the United States Senate, in support of Henry Clay's.

compromise bills.

on slavery.

* Book One *

Turn Loose Your Wolf.

Chapter I.

The Chapel.

i.

SHE AWOKE LATE IN the night. At first she thought she was resting in her room, on the second floor of the adobe building local custom dignified with the name Gura's Hotel. It was a hotel, of sorts. But the small, well-kept establishment on Soledad Street served customers other than those who wanted a meal, a glass of aguardiente or a bed to be used for sleeping- For a few drowsy, delicious moments she believed she was back there. Safe. Secure- Her mind cleared. Reality shattered the comforting illusion. Gura's Hotel might only be a few hundred yards west of where she lay in the darkness, one torn blanket affording poor protection from the chill of the moonless night. But much more than distance cut her off from all that the hotel represented.

She was cut off by the four-foot-thick walls of the roofless chapel of the mission of San Antonio de Valero. She was cut off by the trenches among the cotton-woods-los alamos-that lined the water ditches outside. She was cut off by the heavily guarded plank bridges over the San Antonio River. She was cut off by an enemy force estimated to number between four and five thousand men.

Yet something other than the physical presence of an army was fundamentally responsible for her separation from the hotel. No one had forced her to come to the mission some said was nicknamed for the cottonwoods, and others for a garrison of soldiers from Coahuila that had been stationed here early in the century. Her own choice had isolated her.

In those lonely seconds just after full consciousness returned, the woman whose name was Amanda Kent de la Gura almost regretted her decision. She lay on the hard-packed ground, her head against a stone-the only kind of pillow available-and admitted to herself that she was afraid.

She had been in difficult, even dangerous circumstances before. She had been afraid before. But always, there had been at least a faint hope of survival. Only the most foolishly optimistic of the hundred and eighty-odd men walled up in the mission believed there was a chance of escape.

Turned on her side, her best dress of black silk tucked between her legs for warmth, Amanda stared into the darkness. In memory she saw the flag that had been raised from the tower of San Fernando Church on Bexar's main plaza. The flag was red, with no decoration or device to signify its origin. To the men and the handful of women who took refuge in the mission when the enemy arrived, however, the meaning of the flag was clear. It meant the enemy general would give no quarter in battle.

Amanda's mood of gloom persisted. Only with a deliberate effort of will did she turn her thoughts elsewhere. Pessimism accomplished nothing. Since she couldn't sleep, she ought to get up and look in on her friend the colonel- But she didn't move immediately. She listened. She was disturbed by the silence. What had become of the night noises to which she and the others had grown accustomed during the past twelve-no, thirteen days?

She yawned. That was it, thirteen. It must be Sunday morning by now. Sunday, the sixth of March 1836. The first companies of enemy troops had clattered into San Antonio de Bexar on the twenty-third. Counting the extra day for a leap year, today would mark the thirteenth day of the siege- She couldn't remember when the night had been so still.

There was no crump-crump of Mexican artillery pieces hammering away at the walls. No wild, intimidating yells from the troops slowly closing an armed ring around the mission. No sudden, terrifying eruptions of music as the enemy general's massed regimental bands struck up a brassy serenade in the middle of the night, to keep the defenders awake, strain their nerves. The general knew that tired men were more susceptible to fear-and less accurate with their firearms-than rested ones- None of those tactics had worked, though. If anything, the resolve of the garrison had stiffened as the days passed; stiffened even when it became apparent that Buck Travis' appeals for help, sent by mounted messengers who dashed out through the enemy lines after dark, would not be answered.

Colonel Fannin supposedly had three hundred men at Goliad, a little over ninety miles away. Three hundred men might make the difference. But now everyone understood that Fannin wasn't coming. He hesitated to risk his troops against such a huge Mexican force. That message had been brought back by one of Travis' couriers, the courtly southerner Jim Bonham. He had risked his life to return alone when he could have stayed safely at Goliad after delivering Travis' plea to Fannin.

Oh, Buck Travis still talked of relief columns from Brazoria. Perhaps from San Felipe. But there really was no Texas army-nor any organization to this rebellion as yet. All Travis could honestly hope for-all any of them could hope for-was to hold the mission as long as possible, make it an example of the will of the Anglo-Americans to resist the Mexican tyrant. No one could get out any longer, not even under cover of darkness. The Mexican trenches and artillery emplacements had been advanced too close to the walls.

But why was this night, of all nights, so silent-?

She pushed the soiled blanket away from her legs. The quiet unnerved her. She wished Crockett would take up his fiddle as he'd done on several evenings when Mexican grape and canister whistled and crashed against the walls. Crockett's lively fiddling, counterpointed by the wild wail of John McGregor's bagpipes, would have been welcome. It would have lifted her spirits as it had before- But I'd settle for just a cup off coffee, she thought, standing, stretching, brushing the dust from the black silk skirt spotted with beige patches of dried mud. She was weary of corn and beef and peppered beans served up without coffee. She and the dozen other women-Mexicans, mostly-cooked for the garrison. Although the women did their best, the men complained about the lack of a hot drink to wash down the meals. Amanda didn't blame them.

She folded the blanket, laid it on the ground and turned toward the east wall of the chapel. There, on a platform reached by a long ramp of earth and timber, she glimpsed the dim shapes of the twelve-pounders-three of the mission's fourteen cannons. She thought she saw a couple of men slumped over the guns, sleeping. Worn out. If only there'd been a little coffee to help everyone stay awake-!

Suddenly she wondered whether the enemy general knew they had none. Perhaps he did, and was gambling that a night of quiet would cause the defenders to fall into exhausted slumber. Did that mean a surprise attack was imminent-?

As she pondered the worrisome possibility, her right hand strayed to her left wrist. Unconsciously, she touched the fraying bracelet of ship's rope, its once-bright lacquering of tar dulled by time. The bracelet was a link to a past that now seemed wholly unreal.

But it had been real, hadn't it? There was a great house in a splendid eastern city. And ample meals. And clean bedding. And a tawny-haired cousin with whom she'd fled when her mother was killed and the family printing house burned- Her fingers closed on the bracelet. God, she wished she were out of this place. She felt guilty admitting that, but it was true. The probability of death had become an inescapable reality. Too much to bear- With an annoyed shake of her head, she overcame her gloom a second time. Such feelings were not only unworthy; they were wasteful of precious energy. She could still see to her good friend's welfare, even if she could do nothing about the fact that, very soon now, she might die- Along with every other Anglo-American walled up within the mission that those in Bexar, Anglo and Mexican alike referred to as the Alamo.

ii

A huge mound of stones blocked the center of the chapel's dirt floor. The rubble was left from last year, when the Alamo had been occupied by soldiers under the command of General Martin Perfecto de Cos, the elegant brother-in-law of the president of the Republic of Mexico. Cos and his men had been driven out by Texans-and the president himself had mustered a new army, marching north from Saltillo to punish those who had dared to fight his troops and resist his repressive laws.

A short twelve years earlier, a newly independent Mexico had welcomed American immigrants to its Texas territory. Under special legislation of 1824 and '25, empresarios such as the Austins, father and son, were encouraged to purchase land at favorable prices, to recruit settlers and bring them to the new Mexican state. The Americans all promised to become Catholics, but the government seldom bothered to enforce the vow once it was made. One of the most popular men in all Texas was a genial padre named Muldoon, who frankly didn't care whether the immigrants ever set foot in his church. To be a "Muldoon Catholic" was perfectly satisfactory to the Mexican government- Indeed, the government's generosity to foreigners had very little to do with winning souls to the Mother Church. It had a great deal to do with the general feistiness for which Americans-particularly those on the western frontiers of the nation-were famous. The Anglos were intended to serve as a buffer between the marauding Texas Indian tribes and the more heavily settled Mexican states below the Rio Grande.

The Americans who came with the empresarios were hardy people. They defended their land, cultivated it, and thrived under the easy benevolence of the republican government. More and more Anglos arrived every year- Until a series of political upheavals brought Mexico's current president to power.

Fearful of Andrew Jackson's well-known hunger for territory, and aware that the number of Americans in Texas was growing daily, the new President had instituted a series of harsh laws, including one in 1830 that prohibited further immigration. Another struck at the heart of the state's agricultural system, abolishing the sale and use of black slaves.

Friction resulted, then outright hostility. When Stephen Austin visited Mexico City in 1834, intending to press Texan claims about infringement of liberties, the President jailed him. From that time on, relations between the capital and its northern province worsened- Erupting at last into open warfare.

The preceding June, a little army of Texans had swooped down on the port of Anahuac and driven out the officer responsible for enforcing newly imposed customs duties that made exporting of crops and importing of essential commodities all but impossible for the settlers. Anahuac marked the start of the armed struggle led by the Texas War Party, of which Buck Travis was a leading member. Now most of the Americans in Texas-about thirty thousand in all-were openly talking about, or waging, a rebellion-just as their forebears had done sixty years earlier, to protest the taxes and repressive policies of the English king who had ruled the continent's eastern seaboard.

When the Texans had driven General Cos from the Alamo in December, he had retreated back across the Rio Grande. Not a Mexican soldier was left in the entire state-until the president himself, stripped of his last pretense of friendliness, had led his new army and its horde of camp followers north to Bexar.

The president's arrival split families, as their members took sides. His presence sent a good portion of Bexar's population into frantic flight, their belongings piled in carts. The president secured the half-deserted town that had formerly held about four thousand people. He raised the red flag on the church. Those Texans determined to resist had already retreated to the Alamo. So began the siege, the president steadily advancing his fortifications at night, his goal to ultimately storm the mission on the east side of the winding San Antonio River- All of the resulting turmoil and uncertainty seemed summed up for Amanda in the rubble pile she now circled with quick, precise steps. Moving briskly required effort. She was tired. She felt unclean. She wished she had a brush for her lusterless hair.

And coffee.

But somehow, as she walked on, a hardness that had been forged within her by years of risk-filled living reasserted itself. She wanted to survive this siege. But failing that, she could at least end her life in a way she could be proud of- I don't want to die here, she said to herself. I've come so close to death so many times, I thought I'd earned a reprieve for a few years. But if this is the end, I ought to face it the way my own grandfather did when he fought against the British king- Her grandfather had survived the American rebellion and died of natural causes in 1801, two years before her own birth. Yet because her father, Gilbert, had told her so much about Grandfather Philip-whose rather stern portrait she remembered from the library of the house in the east-he remained a very real presence. So real that she often thought of him as if he still lived and breathed.

I wouldn't want him to be ashamed of how I die. I would never want him to be ashamed that I belong to the Kent family.

That she was probably the family's last surviving member was perhaps the saddest part.

iii

The Alamo chapel dated from the 1750s. Franciscan friars from Spain had built it, as part of a doomed effort to win Christian converts among the predatory Indian tribes. Unfortunately, the tribe the fathers chose as their chief target was notorious for a lack of belief in higher powers. Of all the Indians Amanda was familiar with, the Comanches came the closest to uniform atheism.

The chapel was located on the southeast corner of the sprawling complex of stone and adobe buildings that had grown to cover almost three acres. Invisible beyond the chapel's stout doors was the two-story long barracks, which ran roughly northeast to southwest. The barracks formed one wall of the great open rectangle known as the Alamo main plaza.

On the plaza's ramparts and in the rooms below, the defenders were awaiting the inevitable final assault by several thousand Mexican foot soldiers and cavalry. Some said there were a hundred and eighty-two men in the mission. Others put the number at one more than that. It included thirty-two who had ridden in from Gonzales knowing there was almost no chance of escape.

On Friday, Lieutenant Colonel William Barret Travis had called them all together in the main plaza and given permission for any man who wished to leave to do so. Only one had accepted the offer.

Strangely, hardly anyone called the man a coward. Perhaps it was because gnarled little Louis Rose was a friend of Colonel Bowie's. Or perhaps it was because he had long ago proved himself in combat. Rose had fought with Napoleon in Russia before taking ship to the Americas. He was no longer young, he explained, and he'd faced death too often. Once more would be pushing his luck too far.

Clearly the little soldier had no innate loyalty to the cause that held the rest of them together. Travis told him to collect his belongings and go over the wall while there was still time. By first light, Rose had vanished.

Amanda paused to glance into the sacristy, one of the few rooms adjoining the chapel that still had a roof. The sacristy, where most of the women and children slept, was dark and still.

She moved on, her expression pensive. How would the president treat the wives and youngsters after the battle? That the rebels would lose the battle hardly seemed in doubt any longer. Almost miraculously, not a man had been seriously injured during the thirteen-day siege. But things would be entirely different when the enemy launched a direct attack on the walls. The Mexicans had rifles with bayonets and, presumably, ample ammunition. The personal armament of the Americans consisted of squirrel guns, pistols, tomahawks and knives. And powder and shot were running low inside the mission. Some of the Alamo cannons had fired rocks and hacked-up horseshoes in the past couple of days- Given all that, the Americans remained in reasonably good spirits. They managed to act contemptuous of Santa Anna's nightly artillery bombardment, and made bawdy jests about the midnight band music. It struck her that, with Louis Rose gone, there wasn't one man who could truly be called a professional soldier.

She knew of four lawyers among the hundred and eighty. There was a physician-Dr. Pollard, who attended Bowie. Bill Garnett, only twenty-four, was an ordained Baptist minister. Micajah Autry, one of the Tennesseans whom Crockett had brought in, wrote passable poetry. There were several men from England and Ireland, even another Rose-first name James-who claimed he was ex-President Madison's nephew. Most had been lured to the southwest by the promise of new land, a second chance. In the border states, it was said, many a man simply shut his cabin door, carved or chalked G.T.T.-Gone to Texas-on it, and walked away.

Some of the more recent arrivals, though, had come in direct response to appeals by the Texans for help in resisting the Mexican dictator. Crockett was one of those. He'd marched into Bexar in February, with a dozen sharpshooters tramping along behind him. There was not only the promise of a fight here, he said, but maybe a new start afterward-and that he needed. His anti-Jacksonian politics had caused his defeat in his most recent run for Congress. In a fury, Crockett had told his constituents, "You can go to hell-I'm going to Texas." In the Alamo, he joked about getting the worst end of the bargain.

She saw him now as she approached the entrance to the baptistry at the chapel's southwest corner. A lean man, Crockett was seated on a stool beside the cot where Bowie lay, his pneumonia-wasted face lit by a lantern on the floor. The tail of Crockett's coon cap hung down over the back of his sweat-blackened hide shirt. His shoulders moved, but Amanda couldn't see what he was doing.

Bowie didn't hear her approach. His bleary eyes were fixed on Crockett's hands, which finally became visible to Amanda from the doorway. The Tennessean was ramming a charge into one of the relatively new percussion-cap pistols. Another, matching pistol lay in Bowie's lap, alongside the nine-inch hilted knife that had given the big, sandy-haired Colonel of Volunteers the reputation as a dangerous man, a killer. Jim Bowie hardly fitted that description now, she thought sadly.

Crockett turned. So did Bowie's black slave, Sam, who squatted in a corner, his young face showing strain. In a moment Crockett stood up. Like Bowie, he was exceptionally tall. Not bad-looking, in a raw-boned way. He pretended to be a rustic, but Amanda had talked to him often enough to know that he was widely read, and had constantly worked at educating himself during most of his fifty years. The tales about his prowess as a frontiersman-spread throughout the United States in campaign biographies-had been craftily designed, often by Crockett himself, to help him win his races for Congress.

Now Crockett touched the muzzle of the pistol to his cap. "Miz de la Gura. You're up early."

She stepped into the light, the once-elegant black silk dress rustling. "I seem to have gotten used to going to sleep to band music, Colonel." She smiled.

"Know what you mean." Crockett smiled too, but uneasily.

The lantern light revealed Amanda as a fairly tall woman, five feet seven, with a full, well-proportioned figure. She'd lost about ten pounds in the preceding two weeks, and it showed in hollows in her cheeks, and half-circles beneath her large, dark eyes. Her nose was a trifle too prominent for perfect beauty. But men still found her immensely attractive. She knew it, and in the past she'd occasionally capitalized on the fact.

Outside, in the chapel, a child began to fret, as though caught in a nightmare. Amanda identified the voice as belonging to Angelina Dickinson, eighteen months. The child's mother, Susannah, was married to Captain Almeron Dickinson, in charge of the garrison's artillery. Almeron was undoubtedly up with the chapel cannon. His eighteen-year-old wife was the only other Anglo woman in the mission. The rest were wives or sweethearts of the Mexicans such as gunner Gregorio Esparza who had sided with the Americans against Santa Anna.

Bowie's big fingers shook as he tried to pick up the pistol Crockett had laid beside its mate and the knife.

He acknowledged Amanda's presence with a blink of his eyes, then a labored question: "How are you, Mandy?"

"Well enough, Jim. You?"

"Passable."

"Has Dr. Pollard looked at him tonight?" Amanda asked Crockett.