
She Was Deemed Unmarriageable—So Her Father Gave Her to the Strongest Slave. Virginia 1856 They said Elellanar Whitmore would never marry. In four years, twelve men had looked at her wheelchair, bowed politely, and walked away as though her disability were contagious. At twenty-two, she was a Southern belle deemed “damaged goods” in a society where a woman’s worth depended entirely on physical perfection. Her mahogany wheelchair — crafted after the riding accident that shattered her spine at age eight — became her identity in the eyes of Virginia’s elite. Not Elellanar Whitmore, daughter of Colonel Richard Whitmore. Not the brilliant young woman who learned Greek at fifteen or devoured philosophy in secret. No. She was simply the crippled one. And in 1856 Virginia, a crippled woman was a burden, a liability, a womb assumed useless by rumor and ignorance. A doctor she had never met speculated aloud — falsely and recklessly — that she was infertile. The rumor swept through plantation society like wildfire. Too weak. Too broken. Unmarriageable. Even William Foster — fat, drunk, fifty, and known for accepting nearly any bride with a dowry — rejected her despite her father offering him a third of the estate’s annual profits. That was the day Elellanar accepted her fate: she would die alone. But her father had other plans — plans so radical, so shocking, so utterly outside the bounds of Southern society that when he spoke them, she thought she had misheard. “I’m giving you to Josiah,” he said. “The blacksmith. He’ll be your husband.” Elellanar stared at him, certain he had taken leave of his senses. “Father… Josiah is enslaved.” “Yes,” he replied, calm and deliberate. “I know exactly what I’m doing.” What she didn’t know — what no one could have predicted — was that this desperate decision would become the beginning of the greatest love story she would ever live…..
“Whitmore’s got himself a monster in the smithy.”
But they didn’t know him.
Nobody knew him.
Not yet.
THE FIRST MEETING
My father arranged our meeting the next morning.
I heard his footsteps first. Heavy. Deliberate. The kind of steps that made floors creak and men swallow their breath.
When Josiah ducked through the parlor doorway, he seemed carved from the very beams of the house — enormous, intimidating, otherworldly. But his posture was humble, head bowed, hands clasped, the classic stance of an enslaved man standing before a white family.
“Josiah,” my father said, “this is my daughter, Elellanar.”
He lifted his eyes for only a moment — dark brown, unexpectedly gentle — before lowering them again.
“Yes, sir,” he said softly. His voice, shockingly, did not match his body. It was quiet. Calm. Almost tender.
I asked him if he understood my father’s proposal.
His answer broke my heart.
“I don’t know what I want, miss. I’m a slave. What I want doesn’t usually matter.”
When my father left us alone, I invited him to sit. He glanced at the delicate parlor chair as though it might collapse beneath him.
“The sofa, then,” I suggested.
He sat on the very edge, careful not to lean back.
“Are you afraid of me, miss?” he asked.
“Should I be?”
“No, miss. I would never hurt you.”
Then he flinched when I mentioned his nickname — the brute.
He wasn’t a brute.
And within an hour, he proved it.
Because when I asked if he could read — a dangerous question for an enslaved man — he admitted the truth.
“Yes, miss. I taught myself.”
And then he began to speak of Shakespeare with a depth and intelligence that stunned me.
Caliban. Prospero. Freedom. Power. Humanity.
For the first time in years, I found myself smiling. Engaged. Fascinated.
He wasn’t a monster.
He was brilliant.