Back at the plantation, the meeting was reaching at its most important moment.
Isaiah stood beside Maybel as she asked the gathered families a final question.
She asked whether they were willing to stand together if trouble came, not just today, but in the months and years ahead.
For several seconds, no one spoke.
Then Samuel Turner slowly stepped forward from the crowd.
The older farmer removed his hat and looked around at the faces of his neighbors.
He said he had spent most of his life being told where he could live and what he could do.
But he had promised his grandson that the next generation would grow up in a different world.
If standing together with others could help build that future, then he would not run away again.
One by one, other voices joined him.
Some spoke with quiet determination.
Others spoke with strong emotion.
Yet the message was the same.
They were ready to stand together.
At that exact moment, Isaiah heard something that made him turn his head sharply toward the distant road.
The faint but unmistakable sound of approaching horses.
He stepped forward quickly, his eyes scanning the edge of the fields.
Within seconds, the riders appeared, moving fast across the open land toward the plantation gate.
Gasps spread through the gathering as people recognized the masked figures approaching with torches already lit in their hands.
Whitmore and his men had not expected to find dozens of witnesses waiting for them.
They had planned to strike quickly and leave before anyone could respond.
Instead, they now faced an entire community standing together in the open yard.
The riders slowed their horses uncertainly as they reached the entrance to the property.
Whitmore stared at the unexpected crowd beneath the oak tree.
Families, farmers, and children stood side by side watching them.
No one ran.
No one hid.
Isaiah stepped forward until he stood directly in front of the gate again, just as he had during the first confrontation.
But this time, he was not alone.
Samuel Turner stood beside him.
Then Thomas Green joined them.
Then Joseph Carter.
Soon, nearly every man in the gathering had stepped forward to form a quiet line between the writers and the house.
For a long tense moment, the entire scene remained frozen in silence.
Whitmore’s men shifted uneasily in their saddles, realizing their torches and threats suddenly looked very different when facing an entire community instead of two isolated people.
Maybel walked forward calmly and stood beside Isaiah.