The Kent Family Chronicles Volumes Four Through Six
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The Kent Family Chronicles Volumes Four Through Six

The Furies, The Titans, and The Warriors

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eBook - ePub

The Kent Family Chronicles Volumes Four Through Six

The Furies, The Titans, and The Warriors

About this book

A family builds its empire in books four through six of an American historical epic from the #1 New York Times–bestselling author of North and South.
Ā 
This multigenerational saga follows the Kent family in their pursuit of a better future in the expanding United States amid deceit, passion, and violence. From the brutal Battle of the Alamo to the bloody Civil War, their fate is intertwined with the course of American history in these three volumes of the series.
Ā 
The Furies: Spanning from 1836 to 1852, the fourth Kent Family novel opens with Amanda Kent just escaping the massacre at the Alamo. Brazen and focused, she works to make a new life for herself during the California Gold Rush, and she's willing to risk everything to restore her family's nameĀ .Ā .Ā .
Ā 
The Titans: In the hellish years of the Civil War, while the nation struggles with its identity, the Kent family fights greed and hatred. In New York, devious Louis Kent controls the family dynasty—now on the verge of collapse. Meanwhile, his cousin Jephtha Kent backs the abolitionist cause even though it may cost him his sonsĀ .Ā .Ā .
Ā 
The Warriors: With the advent of the transcontinental railroad, the Kents continue to fight for their place among America's wealthy. Temptation beckons young Jeremiah Kent as a Southern belle lures him into a trap of lust, lies, and murder. The nation may be facing a rebirth, but that doesn't mean all surviveĀ .Ā .Ā .

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Yes, you can access The Kent Family Chronicles Volumes Four Through Six by John Jakes in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Historical Fiction. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Book One
Black April

CHAPTER I
ā€œAn Oath Registered in Heavenā€

WHEN JEPHTHA KENT STARTED across the morass of Pennsylvania Avenue that Monday morning, he wondered if he was the only person in the whole town who was out of step. Washington City was behaving as if a holiday had been declared.
He didn’t feel at all like joining the Northerners or the Southerners who were celebrating. He was, in fact, upset. He believed it was likely that the interview young Mr. Nicolay had scheduled over three weeks ago would be canceled in view of the calamitous news from Sumter. If it was, he could look forward to trouble. Early that morning he’d received a terse telegraph message from New York. Theo Payne wanted copy on the situation in the nation’s capital. Exclusive copy. And, as always, he wanted it at once.
Halfway across the avenue, Jephtha waited until a horse-drawn omnibus bound for Georgetown passed. He dodged back as the hoofs of the horses shot out splatters of mud. The wheels of the omnibus bumped over half-buried cobbles that had long ago broken apart and sunk into the slime.
Aboard the car half a dozen passengers were bellowing a discordant version of ā€œHail, Columbia!ā€ Jephtha’s scowl deepened.
After the omnibus went by, he started on toward the iron fence bordering the south side of the street. His passage was again impeded, this time by a platoon of the Washington Rifles marching at quickstep. He darted around the rear of the column, avoided a couple of shabbily dressed blacks bound on some errand, then jumped out of the way of a barrow-pusher alternately blowing a battered horn and shrieking his offer of fresh oysters.
Jephtha hurried through the gate into President’s Park. Two run-down brick buildings stood on his right—the War and Navy Departments. They faced two more on his left—State and Treasury. The buildings flanked the northern end of the tree-covered lawn on which several of Washington’s unpenned hogs were wandering, ignored by the clerks and functionaries hurrying back and forth along the walks.
The walks all converged on the Executive Mansion further down in the park. Jephtha angled toward the bronze statue of Jefferson in front of the mansion’s north portico. The statue was occasionally criticized because some people believed the sculptor had given the former president a Negroid look.
Jephtha noted that the outbreak of hostilities hadn’t resulted in the presence of any additional guards. Just the usual two stood outside the doors, despite the fact that the man who lived inside had been violently hated—and threatened—ever since his election.
Prior to the inauguration, the President had been forced to sneak into Washington disguised in an army cloak and a cap of Scotch plaid, guarded by railroad detectives because of a rumored assassination plot. Jephtha had heard a description of the pathetic disguise from an elderly Negro porter who had seen it. In hopes of getting a story, he had been at the depot shortly after the special train arrived with its mysterious passenger.
And he’d stood in the raw March wind while Lincoln spoke to the crowd present for the inaugural. Spoke outdoors, as Army sharpshooters lined the rooftops of the city’s main thoroughfare in case of a murder attempt.
With that kind of atmosphere pervading the capital even before the news from Sumter, what the hell was there to celebrate now?
A familiar smell tainted the air of the park on this Monday in April, 1861. The warm spring weather always brought with it the stench of the garbage and human waste floating in the old city canal running by the far south end of the park. Jephtha paused a moment, glancing in that direction. On the other side of the canal he glimpsed the base of the obelisk dedicated to the memory of the country’s first President. But work on it had been abandoned when the subscriptions to pay for it had lagged.
The uncompleted monument, the smell of sewage pervading the Potomac flats, and the rude, graceless outlines of the mansion with its straggle of greenhouses and outbuildings all confirmed the opinion Jephtha had heard often from foreign visitors: As a national capital, Washington City was a disgrace. It lacked identity, it had a distinct feeling of impermanence, and it was filthy to boot.
Of course, it might not continue to be the capital for long.
Major Anderson, in command of the garrison at Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor, had heard General Beauregard’s guns open fire at four-thirty in the morning last Friday, April 12. Thirty-four hours later, Anderson and his men surrendered. The long-anticipated clash of arms had come, precipitated by the question of whether the newly formed Confederacy was entitled to take possession of Federal military installations within its boundaries.
Both Northern and Southern factions in Washington had exploded with a macabre enthusiasm when the first telegraphic reports of the surrender had been posted late Saturday evening on the bulletin board of the Evening Star, where Jephtha kept a desk. In his opinion, the Northerners particularly had no reason for joy. The city lay directly across the Potomac from one avowedly Southern state, and was hemmed in by another in which Southern sympathy ran high. How long could Washington survive if the rebels decided to attempt to seize it? In view of that question, the city’s euphoric mood struck him as insane.
Or am I the only lunatic in the whole town?
He felt no sense of relief because Sumter had been fired on. He was convinced the President’s proclamation, made public that morning, was foolishly optimistic; he had a copy of it in his pocket. The man Jephtha was going to attempt to see had declared an ā€œinsurrectionā€ existed. To suppress it he’d only called out seventy-five thousand state militiamen—and those only for a period of three months. Jephtha recalled the fervor of the people he had known, generally respected, and tried to serve in Virginia. He doubted ninety days would see the Southern rebellion to its end.
He walked up the steps of the mansion. Both sentries recognized him. One waved him on. Pushing through the glass doors, he tried not to think of the three sons he hadn’t seen in several years. He didn’t even know their whereabouts. That worried him most of all.

ii

At the foot of the main staircase, a family that included four children gawked at the elaborate chandeliers. Farm people, to judge from their look. Jephtha caught bits of excited conversation in German as he climbed the stairs two at a time. Sightseers came and went at will in the President’s home.
On the second floor he proceeded to the office of John Nicolay, one of the Chief Executive’s two personal secretaries. The red-haired, freckled young man was engaged in conversation with a frock-coated gentleman Jephtha recognized as a low-ranking official who worked for Secretary of State Seward. Nicolay, at least, wasn’t smiling or capering like some of the imbeciles in the streets:
ā€œā€”General Scott will be here at eleven for the meeting. Please send messengers to inform the cabinet members.ā€
The visitor nodded and brushed past Jephtha, who stood waiting in the doorway, unnoticed by Nicolay.
Jephtha Kent was a tall, stern-looking man of forty-one. His gray-blue eyes contrasted sharply with the dark, straight hair he tended to forget about combing. His cheap suit of black broadcloth was equally unkempt. His shirt had a distinctly gray cast.
Jephtha’s nose was prominent; blade-like. Like his dark hair, it was a trait he’d gotten from his Indian mother, a Shoshoni squaw named Grass Singing. His father had married her during his days as a mountain man in the far western part of the continent. Jephtha’s pale, intense eyes were his only physical inheritance from his Virginia forebears. His grandmother on his father’s side had come from the Tidewater country. Jephtha often drew stares; at first glance, he looked more Indian than white.
Nicolay was busy sorting papers on his desk. Jephtha cleared his throat.
ā€œGood morning, John.ā€
ā€œOh—!ā€ Starting, Nicolay glanced up. ā€œJephtha. Good morning. One minute—I’m trying to find a note the President gave me right after breakfast.ā€
The secretary located it, then uttered a long sigh. ā€œI’m sorry. I completely forgot you were on the calendar.ā€
ā€œI’m not surprised. It’s been a hectic weekend, I imagine.ā€
ā€œIt’s been hell.ā€
ā€œAny further word from Sumter?ā€
ā€œNothing beyond what we heard last night.ā€
ā€œAnderson and all his men got aboard the relief vessels?ā€
ā€œThat’s right.ā€
ā€œNo more casualties reported?ā€
ā€œOnly the one—Anderson’s man who got killed when a cannon blew up. General Beauregard was damned civil about the whole business. Allowed Anderson to salute his flag before he and his troops left the fort.ā€
ā€œYou’ll find that typical of Southern people, I think,ā€ Jephtha said. ā€œI hope it doesn’t mislead anyone into believing Southerners won’t fight. They’re hard fighters.ā€
ā€œI realize. We’ve a lot of ’em in the army, you know. West Point men. Senior officers. I don’t doubt a good many will hand in their resignations.ā€
Jephtha nodded. ā€œEmulating Beauregard’s example.ā€ The commander at Charleston had withdrawn from the superintendency at West Point to return to his native South. ā€œWhat about news from Richmond?ā€
ā€œNone. But I expect we’ll hear by midweek.ā€
ā€œAnd they’ll follow the first seven states out of the Union.ā€
ā€œThat’s what the President anticipates,ā€ Nicolay agreed with a glum expression.
ā€œHow many more does he expect to go?ā€
ā€œNorth Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas look almost certain. Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri could fall either way.ā€
ā€œI suppose all this turmoil means Mr. Lincoln won’t see me this morning.ā€
ā€œOh, I think he’ll see you. He knows the New York Union stumped hard for him while Seward’s men were still whining about their licking at the Wigwam.ā€
Nicolay slipped into the hall. ā€œCome along and let’s find out. I wouldn’t expect more than five or ten minutes, though. Or any specific information. Matters are just too uncertain.ā€
Jephtha followed the secretary to the other end of the building. There, a carpeted corridor led from the Lincoln family’s living quarters in the southwest corner to the President’s office on the southeast. A crowd of job-seekers, contractors and ordinary citizens wanting favors packed the chairs and benches along the corridor. Such crowds always jammed the mansion’s upper halls on business days, waiting to pluck the President’s arm and dog his steps whenever he appeared.
Cigar fumes and the smell of sweat fouled the air. Jephtha heard some of the petitioners discussing Major Anderson’s safe removal from the Charleston fort. He listened to a couple of obscene comments about the character of Jefferson Davis, the former military officer, legislator, and Secretary of War who was now president of the seven-state Confederacy down in Montgomery. Jephtha had been in the Senate gallery in January when Jefferson Davis had submitted his resignation during a sad, moving speech prompted by Mississippi’s following South Carolina out of the Union. The Senator had long held out against secession and its inherent promise of violence. But circumstances and principle had finally forced him to a reluctant decision. While he bid his Senatorial colleagues farewell, many of them wept.
Nicolay left Jephtha beside another blue-clad sentry, Lincoln’s sole protector. The secretary knocked and disappeared behind the rosewood door. In less than a minute, he returned.
ā€œYou may go in for a few minutes. He’s almost finished with his other visitor.ā€
ā€œWho is it?ā€
Nicolay smiled. ā€œThe only person in Washington who can come into the office whenever he wants.ā€
ā€œAh,ā€ Jephtha said, understanding.
The secretary started to push the door open, apologetic:
ā€œAs I suspected, the President won’t give you any specific answers about government policy or our response to the developments at Sumter.ā€
Understandable, Jephtha thought as he thanked Nicolay and stepped inside, struck again by a feeling of pessimism. Who except perhaps the abolitionists and the Southern fire-eaters had ever expected it would come to this? A country less than a hundred years old at war with itself—?
He doubted Mr. Lincoln—or anyone else in the nation—really knew how to find answers for the problems posed by the unprecedented calamity.

iii

A great deal of sport had been made of Abraham Lincoln’s peculiar physique: his great height—six feet four inches—coupled with his lankiness; his stooping posture; his huge hands and feet and ears. This morning the President looked even more like a great skinny ogre—though a genial one—hunched as he was in a fragile chair in front of the small desk by the windows. Southeast through those windows the iron base of the uncompleted dome of the Capitol caught the leaden glare of sun trying to break through clouds. A train whistle shrieked twi...

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Contents
  4. The Furies
  5. The Kent Family
  6. Book One: Turn Loose Your Wolf
  7. The Journal of Jephtha Kent, 1844: Bishop Andrew's Sin
  8. Book Two: Gold
  9. The Journal of Jephtha Kent, 1850: A Higher Law
  10. Book Three: Perish with the Sword
  11. The Titans
  12. Book One BLACK APRIL
  13. Interlude THE GIRL I LEFT BEHIND ME
  14. Book Two RED JULY
  15. Epilogue
  16. A KENT FAMILY TREE
  17. The Warriors
  18. Book One: In Destruction's Path
  19. Book Two: War like a Thunderbolt
  20. Book Three: The Fire Road
  21. Book Four: Hell-on-Wheels
  22. Book Five: The Scarlet Woman
  23. Epilogue at Kentland The Lifted Sword
  24. Preview: The Lawless
  25. A Biography of John Jakes
  26. Copyright Page