Finally came a more refined drawing of a man looking up at a crescent moon over the words
Learn well the Motions of the Mind
Why you are made, for what designed.
It was signed Ishmael Ojiwa Nipmuc.
The verses, Duncan suspected, were from the popular book of children’s verse by John Newbery, a fixture in many British schools. But Ishmael had scribed another verse in much smaller writing at the bottom of his paper. The world’s a bubble, it said, and the life of a man less than a span. Francis Bacon. He extracted the oval medallion that had laid by Hickory John’s body. It was an exquisite carving of a deer and a bear standing like sentinels on either side of a kneeling man.
He stared at the medallion, knowing it must have held important meaning for the murdered Nipmuc, then set the papers in the grass around him, trying to understand what about them nagged him. He recounted the names on the crosses at Bethel Church. The captured children did not share the names of the dead. The children who shared the names of the adults had been killed. The Nipmuc wheelwright who lived apart from the war had a secret the raiders desperately wanted. He had kept an ancient flint knife hidden in his room that had sent Conawago rushing north. Bethel Church was built upon layers of tribal mystery.
As he stuffed the papers back into his shirt, he heard a new hammering, a staccato beat in the distance. This was no woodpecker. He lifted his rifle and found one of the ledges that broke through the cover of the trees, quickly stepping to the edge and just as quickly stepping back. He dropped to the ground and inched forward on his belly.
Fort William Henry, at the end of Lake George, was much larger than he had anticipated. He recalled reading how it had been reinforced and strengthened after the British had reclaimed it following the terrible massacre by French Indians there three years before. The parade ground inside the palisade held ranks of soldiers being drilled. Two heavily laden bateaux were rowing away as another was being loaded. On a broad flat outside the palisade more soldiers were being trained, marching, stopping, pivoting, fixing bayonets, and charging at straw figures tied to posts. They were moving through stations, sprinting up an earthen mound at one position, leaping over a trench at another, then spreading out with mechanical precision into the treacherous double line of muskets that had wreaked havoc on so many European battlefields. With grim recognition he saw the final station, a hundred feet from the gate. Troops completing the circuit were drawn into tight formation and ordered to halt to gaze upon a scaffold where the body of a man swayed at the end of a rope.
Duncan tossed several coins on the table as the innkeeper reached to remove his breakfast dishes. He had paused on his desperate ride from Fort William Henry for a few hours’ sleep, rising before dawn to cover the last few miles to Albany before releasing his horse and stopping at the first tavern on the outskirts of the town. “I’m looking for a place called Forsey’s,” he ventured.
The old Dutchman eyed him in surprise. “Enlisting, are ye?”
“My brother’s an officer,” he replied warily. His brother Jamie had indeed been a captain before being court-martialed as a deserter.
The innkeeper didn’t seem particularly convinced, but he shrugged and pointed out the window. “Down Water Street then turn at the old elm and head toward the river. Sign’s out front.”
By New World standards, Albany reeked of age and culture. For a few minutes as he walked down the cobbled street he felt he was back in Holland, where he had been a boarding school student. Stout brick houses with stepped roofs and smaller, brightly colored, tidy abodes with tall chimneys lined his passage. He reminded himself that the town had its start as the Dutch community of Fort Orange more than a century earlier. A woman tended asters in a cemetery beside a yellow building marked as the Dutch Reformed Church. A team of matched horses was being hitched to an elegant carriage before a stately house. A beefy, unshaven man led a procession of several weary-looking Indians bearing enormous bundles of furs on their shoulders. Heavy wagons loaded with barrels rumbled over the cobbles. An Indian woman sold baskets under a huge tree. He looked up, recognizing its fan-shaped branches, then turned down the cross street and descended toward the Hudson. Halfway down the street was a substantial brick building. With a sinking feeling he saw the soldiers, nearly all officers, idling near its entrance. He ventured close enough to read the sign over the front door before ducking into an alley. Forsey Bros, it said. Clothiers to the Military.
He waited in the shadow of a stable behind the building, watching women in plain work dresses carrying red and blue fabric out of a cellar door to hang on a rope stretched between two trees. When one of them inadvertently kicked over a basket of their split-stick clothespins, scattering them across the ground, Duncan emerged into the sunlight to help her collect the pins.
She looked at him suspiciously but offered a stiff nod of gratitude when he dropped the last pin in the basket. “I was looking for Mrs. Eldridge,” he ventured.
The woman looked as if she had bitten something sour. “The old widow witch? Like as not cajoled some fool into trading a pint of rum for a fortune-telling and is passed out in her hut.”
“Fie!” the second woman snapped. “That’s no Christian way!”
“Christian don’t exactly describe her,” the first woman sneered.
“And thank God you have been spared the torment she has known,” the older woman chided. Her companion gave an exaggerated grimace and retreated toward the cellar.
“Hetty’s life has been harder than most,” the woman explained to Duncan.
“She works here?” he asked.
“Most days. Sewing lace to officers’ tunics, though I daresay she’s never worn lace in her life. If she’s in her way she’ll not say a word to you.”
“In her way?”
The woman winced. “Her hut lies beyond the yard where they build the bateaux. Not hers exactly, but no one had the spine to put her out when she squatted in it.”
The shipyard at the bottom of the hill was a hive of activity. Wagons stacked with timber were lined up waiting to unload. Three separate boats were under construction, each braced within heavy pilings above the muddy bank down which they would slide upon completion. Mallets and hammers beat an unsteady rhythm. Rough-looking men working with planes and chisels glanced up at Duncan and seemed to dismiss him as one of the trappers or scouts who frequented Albany. Curses rose from a long deep trench in the ground where a man on the wrong end of a heavy sawblade spat out the wood dust constantly falling on him.
Duncan paused at the far edge of the yard near a massive dog with shaggy brown hair sitting on its haunches. It possessed a wild, noble air about it, and Duncan, who had befriended several such creatures in his youth, instinctively took a step closer.
“Wouldn’t,” came a terse voice behind him. The speaker was a burly bearded man covered in sawdust who had just climbed out of the sawpit.
“Just admiring your animal,” Duncan offered. “I’ve seen many mastiffs and hunting hounds but few as magnificent as this beast.”
“Not my animal, nor any man’s here. It just appeared two days ago. Will have naught to do with us. Won’t take meat, won’t take a bone. I’ve got Iroquois here who say that warriors killed in battle sometimes come back as such creatures for unfinished business.”
Duncan inched closer. The dog did not move its broad, heavy head, but a low rumble of warning rose in its throat. His expression was suddenly that of a fierce predator.
The man produced a rag from his pocket and began wiping his face. “It just stares like that. All day, all night as far as we know.” The man, Duncan realized, was frightened of the animal. “A boy threw a stone at it. The dog just gave him its eye and the boy fell back into the pit, broke his damned ankle. My men are calling it the hell dog.”