Henry nodded. “Yes sir.”
As Henry stepped on dry land, the sergeant climbed in the boat. Within two minutes the men in the boat were at the bow of America, the auger chewing the first hole through wood.
Captain Dickinson watched the progress for a moment, eyes heavy, and then turned to Henry. “We removed all her cargo right after she arrived from England last week. She’s made a trip over there to bring back something.” He opened a haversack tied to his horse, lifting a strongbox from the sack. He also removed a leather satchel.
“What’s that?” asked Henry.
“No one, not the corporal, no one is to hear what I’m about to tell you. Understand?”
“Yes sir.”
“Inside this pouch is a letter of agreement — a contract. It’s extremely confidential. Understand?”
“Yes sir.”
“It could give the CSA the edge for the long haul. Your job is to get this fully executed contract and the strong box, to President Davis, and to do it traveling behind enemy lines. If you feel you are about to be captured, or worse, your last mission on earth is to make sure this agreement doesn’t fall into Union hands.”
“I understand, sir.”
“I’m told you were hand-picked by our Secret Service to carry out this job.”
“What’s in that box, sir?”
“Let’s call it a good faith payment. It’ll go into the Confederate treasury to help the CSA sustain the cause, and to give us added financial stability to fight this damn war.”
Henry nodded. “Understood, sir. I assumed the CSA is one party in the contract…may I ask who’s the second party?”
“No. That’s confidential. Are we clear, Corporal?”
“Yes sir.”
Dickinson glanced at his horse. “I also hear you’re one of the best riders we have.”
“I do all right.”
“You’ll be traveling great distances, mostly by night. The strongbox is fairly light. A diamond doesn’t have the weight of gold.”
“Diamond?”
“Yes. We’re under strict orders not to open the box. But I’m told one of the most valuable diamonds in the world is in there. It is here as a loan. A gamble to keep the South solvent. If this war drags on, and if the CSA treasury is drained, the diamond, if sold to the right people, might keep the cause alive. However, if the war begins to look like a losing proposition, regardless of a cash infusion, we’re supposed to return the diamond to England. All to be done with the utmost confidentially.”
A movement caught Dickinson’s eye. America was taking on water, slowly sinking. The men in the rowboat were now paddling back to shore. Dickinson said, “The irony tonight is that we are scuttling a ship that beat the British, and yet we might need their money to keep the Confederate states afloat. Are you prepared for what might be the most important, and most dangerous, one-man mission in this war?”
“I hope so, sir.”
“Henry Hopkins, son, I do, too. I sure as hell do. We will have a second small boat follow you across the river into Confederate territory. It’ll be carrying what’s left of the treasury.” Dickinson turned to watch America drop below the surface. Within minutes, the massive schooner vanished beneath the dark water. Only the three masts and their crossbeams protruded from the deep creek as if three crosses rose up in the moonlight to mark a watery grave.
An hour later, Henry Hopkins and William Kramer quietly began rowing back across the St. Johns River. Clouds passed slowly in front of the moon providing the cloak of darkness they needed. The breeze from the north brought the slight odor of burning coal.
Henry rowed, his eyes scanning the dark water, north to south. “Yanks are out there somewhere. I can smell them, smell the coal burning. It’s got to be a gunboat.”
William stopped rowing for a moment, listening, his eyes straining in the dark. “Yeah, I smell it. Can almost feel the steam on my skin. But I don’t see or hear anything.”
“Row. We’re only halfway across.” He looked toward the far western shore, the tree line a slight silhouette in the dim moonlight. “There’s the lantern! Angelina’s signaling.”
William nodded. “Yep, she’s right on time. You got a fine woman, Henry. How’d a fella like you manage that?” William chuckled.
“I ask myself that all the time.”
William glanced down at the strongbox in the center of the boat. “I guess you’re not gonna tell me what’s in the box, huh?”
“You guessed right. I swore an oath. I’m just the courier.”
“Can you tell me what’s in that haversack around your neck? I know it’s important, or we wouldn’t be meeting those men and sinking the most famous schooner in the world. Is it something that sailed across on America from England to Florida?”
“I can tell you that…yes, it is. Come on, we gotta get to the other side of this river.”
The moon climbed out of the clouds like shedding dark clothes, the St. Johns now bathed in moonlight, the ripples across the black water shimmering with brushstrokes of buttery light. Henry said, “Let’s move! We’re sitting ducks out here.”
William rowed harder, looking north for a second. A bullet hit him in his throat, the impact knocking him on his back, his dying eyes focused on Henry.
“William! Dear God! Hold on! I’ll get us to the other side.”
William tried to speak, his words gurgling, blood flowing out of his mouth.
Henry rowed with all his strength, looking over his shoulder to the spot on the distant shore where his wife waved the lantern, the moving pulse of light like the glow of a firefly in the black. He glanced back at his friend just as a dozen rounds burst from the gunboat skirting an oxbow bend in the river. The heavy bullets ripped through the wooden boat, blowing the sides and bottom out.
Within seconds, the boat began sinking, William Kruger’s body slipping beneath the black water, his wide eyes gazing up at the stars. Henry reached for the strongbox just as the boat split in half taking the strongbox and the body of William Kruger to the bottom of the river.
Henry clutched the haversack around his neck, trying to hold it above the surface of the cool water. A cloud slipped over the face of the moon and the river was black again. He could hear the steam engine on the patrol boat in the distance, somewhere in the inky darkness. Henry swam with all his strength toward the glow of the lantern. He swam toward the promise of a life with Angelina.
And he swam toward the hope of the South.
ONE
British Prime Minister Duncan Hannes decided he wouldn’t tell the Queen. At least he wouldn’t tell her immediately. The less she knew about a ghost from the past, the better. There was no sense worrying the Royal Family when these matters could be handled by others. But never in Hannes’ political career had he been faced with such a dilemma. He paced the hardwood floor behind his desk at 10 Downing Street in London and thought about the two emails he’d received.
Hannes, a fleshy man with a trimmed gray moustache and ruddy cheeks, looked through his bifocals and read the latest email again. He rubbed his temples, his face drooping from fatigue, and looked out the window at the Tower of London. He punched five buttons on his desk phone and his call was answered on the first ring. “Good morning, Prime Minister Hannes.”
“I wish it was a good morning. That anonymous email I received last week…”
“Yes, we’re still pursuing it, sir. Highly encrypted. Channeled through at least seven servers around the world. We’re still working on its point of origin. However, we may have isolated it.”
“Well, now you have more to work with, Justin.”