After years of believing his family would have to survive alone, the idea of cooperation sounded almost unbelievable.
He promised to attend and said he would bring two neighboring farmers who had also received threats during recent weeks.
While Isaiah rode back toward the plantation under the soft glow of the evening sky, another meeting was taking place in the dimback room of the same tavern where Witmore and his allies had gathered before.
The [snorts] mood inside the room was far more tense than it had been the previous night.
Several land owners were angry about how the confrontation at the plantation had ended without any real result.
They believed Whitmore should have acted more forcefully while he had the chance.
Whitmore listened to their complaints in silence before finally raising his hand for quiet.
His voice remained calm but carried a cold certainty that silenced the entire table.
He explained that fear worked best when it spread slowly through many examples.
Burning one fence might frighten a single farmer, but destroying something larger could send a message across the entire county.
One of the men asked what kind of example he had in mind.
Whitmore leaned forward slightly and tapped his finger against the wooden table as he answered.
He said the widow’s plantation itself had become the center of this growing defiance.
If that place suddenly suffered a disaster, the people gathering around it might lose their courage very quickly.
Several men exchanged uneasy glances as they understood what he was suggesting.
Destroying an entire plantation house would not simply be a warning.
It would be an act that could attract attention far beyond Willow Bend.
Whitmore noticed their hesitation and reminded them that maintaining control sometimes required bold action.
If the widow’s influence continued to spread, the region could soon become impossible to manage.
Back at the plantation, Isaiah and Mabel were standing near the barn, watching the last light of the sun disappear behind the distant trees.
Isaiah had just returned from Samuel’s farm and shared the good news about several families willing to attend the meeting.
Mayel smiled slightly as she listened, though her eyes remained thoughtful.
She understood that each new ally also increased the risk of retaliation from Whitmore’s group.
Still, she believed the meeting had to happen.
People needed to see one another face to face if they were going to trust each other enough to stand together.
As darkness slowly covered the land again, the plantation seemed calm and quiet.
The house glowed warmly with lamplight, and the soft sounds of the countryside returned with the night air.
Yet beyond the peaceful fields, plans were already forming that could soon threaten everything Mabel hoped to build.
Whitmore and his allies had begun preparing an act that would shock the entire county if it succeeded.
Inside the house, Isaiah placed several lanterns near the windows and checked the doors carefully before sitting down at the kitchen table.
Maybel joined him with a stack of paper where she had begun writing invitations for the coming meeting.
The quiet determination in the room felt strong, almost inspiring.
Yet both of them understood the truth that hung quietly over the plantation that night.
Courage had begun to gather around their cause, but so had danger.
And somewhere in the darkness beyond Willowbend, men with power and pride were already preparing a move that could either destroy their efforts completely or ignite a fight that would change the future of the entire county.
The day of the meeting arrived beneath a wide blue Mississippi sky, warm and bright, as if the land itself had no knowledge of the tensions growing beneath its calm surface.
From early morning, Isaiah could see wagons moving slowly along the distant roads that led toward the plantation.
Some carried entire families sitting quietly on wooden benches.
Others brought single farmers riding on horseback.
By midday, the once silent yard around Mabel’s house looked very different from the lonely place it had been just days earlier.
Nearly 30 people had gathered beneath the large oak tree beside the barn.
Some were men who worked small farms.
Others were women who had traveled miles with their children just to hear what the virgin widow had to say.
Many of them had heard rumors about the night riders.