“She’ll be well-treated, won’t she?” Alan pressed.
“Do you really care, Lewrie?” McGilliveray asked, almost mocking him.
“Damme, yes I do care,” he shot back, putting an arm around her, which she understood more than words, and she came up from her pad of blanket between the thwarts to sit at his side.
“Yes, she shall be well-treated,” McGilliveray finally softened, after taking a long moment to consider Alan’s fierceness on the subject. “She will have an honored place in my mother’s huti, and in the clan. I suppose, technically speaking, she could never re-marry as long as you are alive and could come back to claim her. But since we both know that you shall never see her again, it would best if she used your absence at the next Green Corn Ceremony as proof that the marriage didn’t take. Love-matches can be repented then, if they aren’t working out, even if children have already resulted. Being with child will make her more desirable as a wife, since it proves she is fecund and able to bear children. She could do right well.”
“I’d like to leave something for her, something to help her in future. What do you suggest?” Alan asked in a soft voice, and some of his concern and sadness must have communicated to Rabbit, for she tucked her head onto his shoulder and hugged him back, eyes downcast.
“As a sop to your conscience?” McGilliveray snapped.
“Damn you to Hell, McGilliveray, I’ve had it with your bitterness at being born only half-white or half-Muskogee. What passes between us is no matter, though, as long as the girl prospers. And my child.”
There, I’ve said it, he thought with sudden wonder. I’ve claimed the brat as mine, and her as my responsibility.
“And what do you want for your child?”
“I’d like him to grow up English, frankly, with proper schooling and all. There’s no bloody future in growing up Indian.”
“Hardly possible unless our mission is successful. And that after he’s been raised Muskogee for his first few years. Best let him be what he’ll be and let it go at that, Lewrie. I’ll be staying on with the tribe, though, and I’ll see that he knows who his father was, and what his legacy is. I am truly sorry for you about this.”
“Then give me a little help here,” Alan demanded.
“Blankets and such for the present. Make her a rich little girl when she goes back to the White Town. Her own skillets and pots and all the needles and thread you can, that sort of thing. Any spare shirts you have. Maybe some sailcloth you can spare. For the future, I can tell her the value of money, and you could leave her some. Small coins would be best, pence and shillings, so she can buy from the traders who will come. Could you come up with about twenty pounds in change?”
“Yes, I could.”
“At five pence here and a shilling there, it will keep her and her babe in style for years,” McGilliveray promised him.
“Good, then,” Alan said, giving her another assuring hug.
The next noon found them at the mouth of the Ochlockonee River, in the long narrow inlet between the two arms of swamp and marsh that formed the hiding place for the Guarda Costa sloop San Ildefonso. It was too soon to expect the sloop to be there, but they were close enough to deep water to have a good view of the ocean beyond and could spot her arrival when she appeared.
They made camp on the east bank, though it was not much to look at, given a choice. Their new Muskogee and Seminolee allies would be coming down the east bank, so they had to suffer in silence. The ground was half-marshy, half-sand-spit, strewn with sea-oats and dune grasses, saw grass and palmettos, and cypress and pine inland to their rear. It teemed with biting flies, mosquitoes and gnats, and but for the sea breeze would have been uninhabitable for very long. They pitched lean-tos of cane and palmetto fronds for shelter and settled down to wait. Cashman sent some of his fusiliers out on picket, and the young Creek warriors went off to hunt silently with bows and arrows, and to scout the ground.
While Soft Rabbit and the other unmarried travel girls set up their pots and gathered firewood, Alan and Cashman went to the shore and found a place to spy out the sea.
“By my reckonin’, this is the day you wanted the boat to come back for us,” Cashman said. “If she makes it.”
“Should have been safe as houses out there, out of sight of land,” Alan said, extending his telescope and patiently scanning the horizon.
“Well, Red Coat … Tom … was tellin’ me that when they took Fort St. George at Pensacola, Galvez fetched a fleet of sixty-four ships from Havana for the job.”
“Sixty-four?” Alan scoffed. “They’ve not ten decent sail of the line in the entire West Indies. Damn few useful frigates, either. Most were merchantmen, I’ll wager. You can depend on my captain to come back for us, you’ll see.”
“Two weeks, three weeks, is a long time to lay out there and kill time, though. Seriously, if he doesn’t come, what could we do?” Cashman pressed.
“Sail off in the boats, I expect. I did it once before up in the Chesapeake, and that was with river barges never meant for the open sea I could do it again, a lot better than before, with the launch and the gig.”
“It’s a devilish long way to Jamaica, though, ain’t it,” Cashman grunted, pulling off his moccasins and spreading his toes in the dry white sand. “What, two days’ sail to Tampa Bay, another two to the Keys?”
“Let’s not go borrowing sorrow so quickly,” Alan replied. “If things go that badly, it might make more sense to borrow horses from the Creeks and go overland to Charleston. If traders can do it, then there’s a chance we could, with some help from our new allies. Tonight’s the night Svensen was due back with the sloop. If he doesn’t make it, then we might have to change our plans, but I’d give him at least two days’ grace before I started worrying for real.”
“’Nother thing that bothers me …” Cashman began.
“God, but you’re a fountain of joy today, Kit.”
“Notice we didn’t come across any Apalachee on the way back?” Cashman droned on full of caution. “We gave ’em some muskets and truck, they got the drift of what we’re doin’ here with White Turtle and the Seminolee with us. I know they’re a shattered lot, compared to the Muskogee, but you’d think they’d come out of the woodwork and give us a cheer or two, maybe try to cadge a free sip of rum’r somethin’.”
“Hmm, have you asked McGilliveray about that?” Alan asked, now sharing a worry with the infantryman.
“Not yet, but I’m goin’ to, right now,” Cashman replied. “Never thought I’d be the one to say this, but I’ll be tickled pink to see the sight of our Creeks and Seminolee show up with ’nough weapons and men.”
“I’d like it, too,” Alan agreed, putting down his telescope after deciding that not even an errant whitecap could be mistaken for a topsail on the horizon. “If the sloop comes inshore tonight and anchors here in the inlet, and our Indian friends are not here to take delivery of the guns, we’ll be forced to wait for them with a target no patrol could miss.”
“De sloop’s heah, Mista Lewrie, sah!” Andrews hissed at the front of Alan’s lean-to, where he had been sleeping with Soft Rabbit, after staying awake most of the night awaiting the arrival of San Ildefonso. He had barely lain his head down, it seemed, to sleep the morning away.
“I’ll be right out,” Alan said, groping for his shirt. It was the first night he had slept with her that they had not made love, or even removed their clothing. Soft Rabbit had gone to sleep without him hours before, after sensing that his duty took precedence over her.
“Ah-lan,” she coaxed as he started to leave what little scrap of privacy they had in the lean-to with a blanket hung over the front.
“Got to go, Soft Rabbit, like it or not,” Alan said. He gave her a quick hug and a kiss, then darted out into the dawn. It was not foggy on their sand-spit, though fog hung thick as the Spanish moss on the trees to their rear and inland. By the light of a few smoldering coals in the cook-fire from the night before, he could see that his watch read a
bout half past four in the morning. It was false dawn, and the soft breezes coming off the sea were chilly. Waves rolled in and broke on the beach with a soft, continual hissing.
There was barely enough light to see where he was walking as he made his way down to the shore by the river.
“Where away?” he asked in a soft voice.
“Deyah, sah,” Andrews said, pointing out to sea to the southwest. “Mustah missed de river in dah dahk un’ come ’long de coast.”
San Ildefonso ghosted out of the river fog, hardly a ripple of bow wave under her forefoot, and her sails hanging almost slack with the last gasp of the pre-dawn sea breeze. For a moment, Alan was worried she might have been a real Spanish Guarda Costa sloop, but he recognized several patches on her outer jib, and caught a lick of color aft on her mains’l gaff—the blue, white and red of a Royal Navy ensign.
“That’s her, alright,” Alan breathed with relief in his voice.
“If she’s in the right hands,” Cashman said at his elbow, which made Alan’s full bladder jolt with alarm. “I’m keepin’ my troops hidden ’til we know for sure.”
“Good thinking,” Alan replied, realizing that it was never good to see what you expected to see without making some preparations to be surprised by a clever foe. “Unfortunately, they’ll expect to see some of our party. And me, or they’ll turn about and sail out of here with the land breeze when it comes up. It’s too late to be fooling about on a hostile shore with dawn in an hour.”
“I’ll leave you to it, then, Alan. Good luck.”
Alan opened his breeches and stepped into the sea oats to drain his bladder while he had the chance. Then, gathering his nerves, he stepped out onto the river shore in plain sight and waved his arms at the sloop, hoping that Cashman’s fear was not real.
There was no answering wave that he could see, so he lifted his telescope and eyed her as she came on without a sound on the still river, becoming more solid, with a bank of fog behind her on the western shore. It looked like Svensen at the tiller, but that did not guarantee that a Don officer might not be hidden, directing Svensen’s movements.
“Damn you, Kit, now you’ve got me starting at shadows, too,” he grumbled. He had to step out and call, softly “Ahoy the sloop!”
He hung the glass over his shoulder and waved both arms over his head. Someone at the bows waved back and the sloop altered her head slightly more bows-on to him in response.
“Ahoy derr!” Svensen boomed back at last, making every bird on the riverbank squawk in alarm and take wing. “Mister Lewrie, ja?”
“Svensen!” he rasped back in a harsh whisper. “Yes, it’s me.”
“Dat you, zir?” Svensen howled as though it was blowing a full gale. A bull gator began to roar somewhere off in the fog in response.
“Lieutenant Lewrie, yes!” he replied. “Svensen, not so loud!”
“Aye, zir, dis be Svensen! Und who be mit you, zir?”
“Oh, for Christ’s sake,” Alan muttered. “Captain Cashman of the 104th, Mister Cowell, Mister McGilliveray … Svensen, this is supposed to be secret, you know! Not so loud?”
“Vat, zir?” Svensen bellowed loud as the Last Trumpet. “Vat ship I from, zir?”
“Shrike, brig o’ war, you noisy bastard!” Alan finally yelled back at full volume. “Now for God’s sake, will you shut the hell up, and get your miserable arse ashore this instant!” The sloop swung about, let go her halyards and dropped anchor once she coasted to a stop.
“I’ll have the damn fool’s guts for garters,” Alan promised himself as he motioned for the gig to be launched into the river. Within a minute, he was standing on a ship’s deck once more, among his own kind, all of them beaming with relief that a hard and dangerous job was almost over.
“Zorry, L’tent,” Svensen said. “But, by damn, ve been not a mile offshore all night, down t’ coast here.”
“Missed your land-fall in the dark, did you?”
“Aye, zir, ’bout five mile, I t’ink. Vas dark as a cow’s arse, it vas, zir,” Svensen said with evident relief. “Been vorkin’ our vay off shoals und bars, und den der vind, ’bout vun hour ago, on us she die.”
“You’re here now, that’s the important thing,” Alan said, clapping him on the arm and forgetting his own promise to nail the ignorant bastard’s hide to the main-mast. “Well done, altogether.”
“T’ankee, zir!” Svensen expanded with pride. “Gott der cargo ready to hoist out, zir. Dem red-skins, dey gon’ take it, zir?”
“Yes, they’ve agreed to aid us in getting Florida back. They haven’t shown yet, but they’re on their way, with pack-horses and mules,” Alan explained. “I’ll get the launch over here and we may begin stacking everything on the shore yonder. On the way down here they also may have picked up some canoes or dugouts from their friends the Seminolee.”
“Vundered vat for we gif dem muskets, zir. Ja, ve start!”
The launch butted up alongside a few minutes later, and Alan was surprised that Soft Rabbit was in the boat. She scrambled up over the rail and came to his side, clad only in skirt and blanket. The sight of her beauty, with so much of it on view, made the hands stop their labors dead until Svensen gave the nearest man a kick and yelled at them to hop to it.
She gazed up at the mast, looking around the deck, and he realized that she had never seen such a powerful collection of civilized technology in her life, so far beyond her experience that it might as well be some shaman’s magic.
“My ship,” Alan said, tapping his chest and waving a hand about the deck possessively. “All mine.”
She understood “mine,” and looked at him as if he had suddenly stood revealed as a god from her perfect Upper World come down to earth.
“Cony?”
“’Ere I be, sir.”
“Thank you for bringing … ah, her, out to the ship.”
“My pleasure, sir. Thought she’d like ta see her, sir.”
“Please gather up some things for her in a pack. Needles and thread, twine and some scrap sailcloth. What blankets you can find, some cooking implements, too. She’ll have to go back to her people.”
“Aye, sir, I’ll take care of it, sir.”
He led her below and aft into the captain’s quarters, which were now his again, even if only for a short time. As she gazed amazed and laughing at so much wealth in so small a space, he loaded her up with an embroidered and painted canvas coverlet from the bed-box, the sheets and the blankets, the small round mirror from above the wash-hand stand and the hand-basin, too, some towels, half a dozen pewter plates, cups and bowls, and all the silverware. They tied it up into small bundles that could be strapped across a horse’s back for her return journey to the Muskogee White Town. There was his sea chest in the same place he had left it, and he opened it to lay out more treasure for her, including a suede purse containing his small change.
“Money,” he told her, sorting out and counting the coins for her. “White Turtle will tell you what it’s for. Traders, come. You give to traders. Oh, devil take it, you don’t understand a word I’m saying.”
“Ah-lan,” she whispered, setting aside her new wealth. She took his hand and placed it on her stomach. “Mine bebby, you bebby …” She waved a hand at her bundles and gave him a smile that made him feel light-headed, indicating that she understood how much he was giving her and the child to come. She raised his hand to cup one of her breasts, shrugged off her blanket, and smiled impishly at him.
“There’s not time for that now,” he said, but to no avail, for she turned her head to see if the door was shut, lifted her skirt and stretched out on the bare straw-packed ticken mattress.
“Well, just this last once,” he gave in as he looked down at how beautiful she was. “Never let it be said I refused a lady.”
He came back on deck about half an hour later, just as true dawn was making itself apparent. Nearly a third of the cargo had been shifted, and was stacked ashore, covered with sailcloth to keep the damp out of the muskets
and powder. And still no sign of the Creeks to take delivery of it. Soft Rabbit was still flushed with the last rogering he had given her, now dressed in a loose shirt that came down almost to her knees, cinched in with a kerchief for a sash over her deerskin skirt. Alan had changed back into uniform and had returned his precious hanger to his left hip. Even plain as a lieutenant’s uniform was, to her it was cloth of gold, even though she thought that his cocked hat was sort of silly, and laughed at him every time he adjusted it.
“’Bout anudder hour vor de cargo, zir,” Svensen told him and knuckled his forehead in salute. “By damn, dat’s vun pretty girl, she be, zir! Dey all vas like dat up de river?”
“Most of ’em, Svensen.”
“Den by damn I’m zorry I not go mit you, zir. Been to der Cook Islands und to China vunst before de var. Sveetest little girls in der vorld, native girls ist,” Svensen said in appreciation. “How long you t’ink ve have to vait on dese fellas?”
“No idea, Svensen. Once the cargo’s been off-loaded, get a kedge anchor out, with springs on the kedge and bower,” Alan said. “Load the cannon in both batteries.”
“Loaded now, zir. Tompions in, vent’s covered. Powder be dry, I reckon.”
“Round-shot?”
“Round-shot und grape, zir. Didn’t know vat to expect in de dark, zir.”
“Very good. Light a coil of slow-match now, just in case, and tell off some hands for gunners. Andrews?”
“Yas, suh?”
“Send two men ashore and start dismantling our camp. Bring back everything the Admiralty’d miss. Oh, and see to helping Rabbit … Mrs. Lewrie … gather up my gifts to her and then put them ashore.”
“Aye aye, sah.”
They took the gig ashore with her gifts, and piled them all in one place for later packing out by horseback. Cashman wandered in from his picket line out at the edge of the trees and tipped his hat to them, which made Rabbit giggle and point to his cocked hat.
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