“I’m your enemy– why would you ever want to help me?”
“Death is my first enemy, Confederate – with injustice a close second, on account of my humanity; that puts you at a distant third, and figurin’ on what I heard in the street – before your Colonel tried to cut you in half, that is – you’re no more a friend to the Southern cause than I am.”
The negro poured two tumblers of a copper-clear drink as he spoke, stoppered the bottle and handed a glass to his patient.
“I’m no traitor,” Caleb urged, taking the smoky-sweet bourbon nonetheless, “and the Colonel’s cause ain’t the Southern cause; the Southern cause is freedom.”
“If four million in chains is freedom to you, then could be you’re my enemy after all.”
***
The Story So Far…Five Sentences at a Time
Chapter 1
The fog crept across the plain, wispy and wavering like a line of ghostly scavengers stooping low to inspect the dead. Caleb felt the dew it had deposited on his eyelids – cold, liquid coins — and awoke, sorely disappointed to find that he was still alive.




