The papers left behind had remained untouched for years until recently.
Mabel began reading them out of curiosity.
What she discovered inside those letters had slowly convinced her that the danger her husband once feared was already returning to Willow Bend.
Isaiah asked quietly what exactly the letters revealed.
Maybel walked to the window and looked out across the moonlit fields before answering.
She said several powerful men in the county had begun forming secret groups after the war ended.
Their purpose was simple but terrifying.
They wanted to intimidate newly freed families so badly that many would leave the region entirely.
If those families disappeared, the land owners could quietly rebuild the system of forced labor through fear and debt.
Some farmers would be trapped in unfair sharecropping contracts.
Others threatened into leaving their land behind.
The letters even described secret patrols meant to frighten people during the night.
Isaiah felt a slow anger rising in his chest as he listened.
The war had promised freedom.
Yet it seemed some men were already planning ways to steal it back piece by piece.
Mayel turned back toward him and said she believed Clarence Whitmore was one of the leader behind these secret gatherings.
The following morning dawned warm and bright.
Yet the sense of danger remained quietly in the air.
Isaiah spent the early hours repairing an old barn near the edge of the property while Mabel walked through the fields examining the neglected rows of cotton.
She had begun thinking about planting crops again, though not in the same way her husband’s family once had.
Instead of building a large plantation with workers under strict control, she imagined something different. small plots of land where free families could grow crops and share the harvest fairly.
It was an idea that might bring life back to the empty fields surrounding the house, but it was also an idea that men like Witmore would likely hate.
Around midday, a thin cloud of dust appeared on the distant road leading toward the plantation.
Isaiah noticed it immediately and stood still, watching carefully.
Soon, a small wagon emerged from the dust, slowly approaching the property gate.
The wagon carried an older black man and a young boy who could not have been older than 10.
When they reached the edge of the property, the man climbed down carefully and removed his worn hat as a sign of respect.
Isaiah walked toward them cautiously while Maybel stepped down from the porch to greet the visitors.
The older man introduced himself as Samuel Turner.
He explained that he had once worked on a plantation several miles away before the war ended.
Now he was trying to build a small farm for his family on a patch of land near the river.
But during the previous night, a group of masked riders had visited his home.
They burned part of his fence and warned him to leave the county before the next full moon.
The young boy standing beside him was his grandson, and the fear in the child’s eyes made the story feel painfully real.
Samuel said he had heard rumors that the widow at the old plantation house was not afraid to stand against powerful men, so he had come, hoping she might offer advice or help.