Isaiah listened without interrupting, though every word she spoke made his thoughts spin faster.
He had expected orders, maybe hard labor or some strange demand.
Instead, this young widow was speaking about dignity and freedom.
It felt almost unreal.
After a moment, he asked the first question he had allowed himself since leaving the trading yard.
He asked her what she expected from him now.
Mabel did not answer immediately.
She stood and walked toward the tall window overlooking the fields.
The late afternoon sun had begun to soften, turning the distant cotton rose golden.
When she finally spoke, her voice carried a quiet determination that made Isaiah sit straighter in his chair.
She said the world was changing slowly, but the men who had once owned plantations still believed they owned the future as well.
They were already gathering in secret groups, planning ways to control the town again through violence and fear.
Abel had overheard some of these plans through conversations that took place in the homes of wealthy neighbors.
She explained that her late husband’s family had once been connected to many powerful landowners in the region, which meant she still heard things others did not.
What she had heard frightened her deeply, but fear had slowly turned into resolve.
She turned back toward Isaiah and told him the truth she had not dared speak in town.
She needed someone she could trust, someone strong enough to help protect people who were still being threatened quietly across the county.
Families who had once been enslaved were trying to build homes and farms.
Yet, groups of angry men were already planning to drive them away.
Mabel believed Isaiah understood that danger better than anyone else.
She said she did not buy him for labor or for profit.
She bought him because it was the only way to remove him from a man who clearly saw him as nothing more than property.
Isaiah felt a strange mix of emotions rising inside him.
Suspicion still lingered.
Yet there was something sincere in her voice that was difficult to ignore.
For years he had survived by trusting no one.
Yet the calm honesty in Mabel’s eyes made him wonder if perhaps this moment was different from the countless others that had shaped his difficult life.
Evening slowly settled over the plantation house.
As the sky turned deep shades of orange and purple outside, crickets began their nightly songs in the tall grass.
Mel lit a small oil lamp and placed it on the table between them.
The warm glow softened the shadows in the room, making the quiet space feel almost peaceful.
Isaiah realized that for the first time in many years, he was sitting inside a house without fear of being shouted at or ordered to leave.
Yet, questions still filled his mind.
Why had this young widow risked her reputation to help a stranger?
Why had she chosen him out of everyone in that trading yard?
And what exactly did she expect to happen next?
Mayel seemed to sense his thoughts even though he had not spoken them aloud.
She explained that the town of Willow Bend was standing on the edge of something dangerous.
The war had ended, but the anger created had not disappeared.