“Not without Conawago’s nephew.”
“You can’t know he is here.”
“He was with her, only hours ago.”
“You don’t understand, Duncan. There’s dark things afoot. I’ve never seen the general so worked up. The provosts are like mad dogs. They’d as likely skewer you on their bayonets as arrest you.”
Duncan studied Woolford’s worried countenance. “You mean there’s more than murders hanging over the army. What else happened?”
Woolford stared at him in silence. There was a reason the general trusted him for clandestine missions. “Most think the war is almost won,” he said in a lower voice. “But our successes have been built on sand.” Suddenly the captain’s eyes went round with surprise as he looked over Duncan’s shoulder and cursed. Duncan heard the running footsteps behind him and was about to turn when Woolford spoke.
“I’m sorry,” the ranger captain said, and he slammed a fist into Duncan’s jaw. Duncan staggered and dropped onto his knees. “Stay down, damnit,” Woolford pleaded.
As Duncan tried to shake the pain from his head, a second blow came, a glancing strike of Woolford’s rifle butt onto the side of his head. Duncan sank into darkness.
His sense of smell woke first. Wood smoke. Tea. Candle tallow. The talcum used on wigs. His eyes fluttered open to see burning logs in a huge hearth at the far side of a spacious chamber and candles on a long table near the fire. He lifted his head and shook the fog from his eyes.
Woolford sat at the table with three other men, conferring urgently over a large map. More maps were pinned to the walls of the room. The bronze glow of dusk filtered through two windows along one wall. Between the windows stood a heavy desk on which papers and quills were strewn. The door opening into a corridor was blocked by a stern guard in a scarlet coat holding one of the army’s deadly Brown Bess muskets. Outside the windows the sound of heavy boots marching in unison echoed off stone walls.
Duncan stirred, trying to rise, and discovered that his feet were bound with chains, his arms tied to the chair with sashes. The rattle of his manacles caused the men at the table to turn toward him.
With relief Duncan recognized the man who stood and approached him. He had met General Calder on his first day in the New World, and he knew him to be a fair man of moderate temper. He had been tied to a chair on that day as well, and Calder had called off the officer who had been assaulting him with a horse crop.
Duncan forced a respectful nod as Calder approached. “Good evening, General,” he offered.
The general slammed the back of his hand across Duncan’s jaw. “I should have kept you in chains that first hour I met you, McCallum!” Calder snarled. “I will not have you destroy my army!”
Duncan looked in desperation at Woolford, who hesitantly rose from the table. “I have always found McCallum to be a man of integrity, sir,” the ranger captain ventured. “He states that all the killings occurred before he arrived at Bethel Church.”
“The word of a murderer and traitor means nothing!” Calder snapped.
“It will be for a magistrate’s court to decide if he is a murderer,” Woolford said in a level voice.
Calder’s face flared with anger. He stepped to the desk and lifted a bronze disc dangling from a leather strap. “Did you not issue this to McCallum, Captain Woolford?” the general demanded.
Woolford glanced at Duncan apologetically. This was treacherous ground. If he lied, Duncan would be guilty of falsely claiming to be a ranger, the act of a spy and traitor. But they both knew what it meant for him to admit the truth.
“For safe passage through the frontier. He assisted us, as a scout. He never received a farthing of the king’s pay.”
One of the other officers, an elegant middle-aged man with eyes like two black pebbles, rose from the table. “Answer the general, Captain,” he growled. “Did you issue a ranger’s badge?”
“Yes, Colonel Cameron, I did.”
“Which means he will not be subject to a civilian court proceeding.” Cameron approached Duncan as he spoke, walking around his chair. “He will be prosecuted by the army, in a closed chamber. We can spare an hour tomorrow morning. The witness statement will suffice for the court-martial. We can have him strung up before lunch. A least we can bring one of the McCallums to the king’s justice.”
“Witness?” Duncan asked.
The colonel’s eyes flared at being interrupted. “Sergeant Hawley signed an affidavit attesting that he saw you stabbing the poor man.” He leaned over Duncan as if about to strike him. “The soldier you killed was well-liked in the 42nd. We should turn you over to them. They would pull off your limbs before they strung you up.”
“Hawley lies!” Duncan spat. “I had no connection to Bethel Church. They were all dead before we arrived.”
Colonel Cameron raised an eyebrow. “We?” He turned to Woolford. “Who else was with him? Where is his accomplice?”
When neither Woolford nor Duncan replied, Cameron raised a crumpled piece of paper. “You would have us believe you were a stranger to those at Bethel Church! Yet you walk around with a letter addressed to Bethel Church!”
Duncan swallowed hard. “It was raiders! The enemy!”
“Raiders who didn’t steal anything. Raiders who left without burning a single building or destroying any stores.”
“They took horses and a wagon,” Duncan explained. “They took children. They killed nine settlers.”
Cameron sneered. “If there had been-”
The general looked up from the desk. “Children?” he interrupted.
“There were eight children in the settlement. Two were killed with the others in the smithy. One escaped. The others were taken.”
“French raiders don’t risk such a deep penetration into our lands to take children,” Cameron declared icily.
“I didn’t say they were all French. There were natives too. The Hurons and Abenaki who run with the French take children. They sell them as slaves in the North.”
General Calder studied Duncan in silence then lifted two more objects from the desk. Duncan shuddered as he recognized the little dirk and the pay chit that Hawley had claimed to take from his kit. He extended the dirk to make sure Duncan saw it, then dropped it on the desk and approached Duncan with the chit raised before him. “Why take this?” Calder demanded.
“I did not steal it. Hawley planted it in my pack. He found me bent over MacLeod trying to render aid. I had medical training.”
“You said they had been dead for hours,” Cameron snapped.
Duncan looked at the floor. “The residents of the town, yes. But he was not a resident. I was hoping it might be different for him, that he may have just been left wounded by the raiders. There was yet warmth in his body.”
The general did not seem to hear. He paced across the room, staring forlornly at the little piece of pasteboard. As he approached the hearth he spat a bitter curse and flung it into the fire.
“There was another dead soldier. That was his dirk. A dispatch rider,” Duncan said to his back. “In the lake. Tied to a wheel. Hickory John made wheels for the army.” He realized the others were all staring at him as if he were mad. Duncan himself did not know why he had spoken the words. Even to him they sounded like the ravings of a desperate man.
The fourth man at the table, a wan junior officer wearing lace cuffs and a stiff collar, had kept busy with his quill but now looked up. Cameron hastened to his side and looked over his shoulder. He gasped and hung his head.
“Marston?” Calder called.
The young officer looked up. “Uncle, I don’t think that-” he began, gazing pointedly at Duncan.
“Just tell me!” Calder snapped.
“Seven five three two, sir,” Marston stated morosely. The pronouncement had the sound of more raving.
But the general seemed to make sense of it. The words struck him like a physical blow. He sagged and sank into a chair at the end of the table. “We can deal with mere murder tomorrow,” he declared in a voice that was suddenly weary.