The Monmouth Summer
Page 18
Later, Adam spoke to Ann alone, to try to decide what she should do. All the time Nicolas had been speaking, Ann had felt her father's eyes on her, and had been wondering what he would say. He too had asked about the militia in Colyton, and the family, and though she had tried to minimise the troubles they had had, she thought he imagined more than she said.
"'Tis clearly no proper place for you to return to, on your own," he said thoughtfully, running his hand through his thin, grey hair. "'Twould be better if we could get you to your aunt in Lyme."
"But how, father? The militia may be on the roads behind you too, and I wouldn't like to go alone, on foot."
"Nor shall you, girl. There's no question of it." Adam looked at his daughter sharply, knowing how wayward her impulses were, and the dangers they could bring. "'Twas enough danger for you to bring these horses. I wonder what your mother was thinking of, to let you do it."
"But you need them in the army, don't you, father? And there was no-one else to come."
"So you say. And so it had to be you." Adam sighed, as he looked at those wide, appealing eyes, and despite himself a faint smile of affection played around his lips. He remembered how he had come home one day when Ann was eight or nine to hear from a farmer how she had dragged the largest of the man's farm dogs half a mile home from a dogfight, smacking it on the nose with a stick every time it tried to bite, while Tom took care of the other one. Mary had been furious, but Adam had hardly been able to bring himself to be cross with the girl for such a thing, even though he had wished she had not done it.
It was the same now; he was almost glad to have her with him, despite the danger. And then his heart faltered, as he thought how she might witness his cowardice, if he showed it. If only he were as brave as his daughter! If only he could be the father she deserved!
Again he rubbed his hand though his hair, and looked away, up the hill, that she might not see the shame in his eyes. "So what am I to do with you now, my dear? The army's hardly a safe place for a girl."
"But you're here, father, and Tom, to protect me. And perhaps I can help the surgeon, as I did today."
"Perhaps." Adam hesitated. He could think of no better idea, for the moment. "Will he have you?"
"He said I was a great help to him today, father. Though the man died."
Adam sighed again. "Maybe that's the best for now, then. I'd rather you did not see such things, but most men can do with a soft hand when they're wounded, no doubt of that. And you've always had a way with the sick. But mind you stay out of danger if there's any fighting, Ann. And don't go wandering away from the surgeon or me the rest of the time. For all this is a godly army, there's more than one sort of man in it."
"Yes, father. Or Tom. He can protect me too."
"Or Tom, yes." But as she left him, smiling happily, a knife of bitter jealousy twisted in Adam's stomach. He should be glad that she admired Tom, as she had seemed to do at the campfire an hour or so ago. After his fears of last week he should be pleased; it was what he and Mary - especially Mary - had always wanted. But as he saw her join Tom where he sat talking with some others. Adam felt not pleasure, as he had once done when he saw them together, but instead this absurd, despicable jealousy which sought for reasons even when he knew there were none.
The boy had always been sententious, he knew that. It was supposed to be one of his good points, that he was religious and clean-living, a steady balance to Ann's waywardness, definitely one of the Elect. If only he had not suddenly become so boastful with it, since he had joined the army; as though he were now not merely a man among other men, but a better man - stronger and more courageous - than those twice his age.
Adam bit his lip as he stood alone by one of the tents in the darkness, watching the little group by the fire. John Spragg's red face was smiling by the boy, laughing as he and Ann watched the skinny, wizened form of William Clegg telling one of his comic stories. John and Will were his friends; they did not seem to find anything strange in this new-found confidence of Tom's that so offended him. It had begun at Bridport, Adam thought, when Tom and the other pikemen had swaggered down the street last of all, in the disorderly retreat in which so many had so nearly panicked. Yet in the talk they had had about it afterwards, none of the others had admitted to terror - it had been as though they had won a great victory. And now again today; the way everyone laughed and joked around the fire, as though they had felt no fear at all, only made it worse for him.
They were the chosen army of the Lord, they could not be afraid. But Adam knew that he was, and wondered how long he could continue to hide his fear. Laughter reached him from the group by the fire as he watched. He took a deep shuddering breath and let it out slowly. At least Ann should not see him run, nor Tom neither. Tom Goodchild should not see him run!
He walked quietly back to the camp fire, a slight, upright figure in his sober clothes and greying hair, his face grim and unsmiling amid the laughter of his friends.
18
"IT IS as though we had marched into Heaven!"
Tom stood for a moment and gazed down the main street of Taunton, a smile of wonder on his face. Beside him, Ann shook her head, disbelieving, seeking some point of contact between what she saw and the humdrum, workaday town she remembered from her two previous visits.
Tom craned his neck to puzzle out the lettering that had been hurriedly sewn onto the sheet stretching across the street above their heads:
'Ye Armie of Ye Lord Cometh; let Ye Hethene Tremble!'
There were several such hastily improvised banners, and dozens more streamers and ribbons and bolts of coloured cloth, hanging from windows and doors and fluttering between garrets all down the street.
"There are some more newcomers, look! Carrying those old matchlock muskets you spoke of!" Proud of what she had learnt, Ann pointed to a group of men marching past, looking about themselves curiously as though they had just arrived, and being cheered by some girls leaning out of a window. "Will they be deserted militia too?"
"It do look like that!" Tom agreed. "Though there were that many ran away to join us at Chard, I'd never have thought there could be more."
"Will they be given a new musket, like you were, father?"
"I suppose so, my dear, if 'tis possible." Adam watched the deserted militia march past, thinking how similar they themselves must have looked when they first arrived in Lyme. "Though I doubt the Duke can have a lot left, with this number come in to join us now. How many do you think there be, Tom? I heard a man say 'twas near four thousand."
"Five, I heard." But the numbers were too great - none of them had seen a tenth as many men before. Ann had perhaps had the clearest picture of what the numbers meant that afternoon, when, riding a cart with Nicolas Thompson at the rear of the army, she had suddenly come to the top of a rise and seen the whole line of the army before her as it marched towards Taunton. The entire valley had been black with people, as though a huge ants' nest had been kicked and had erupted. The sight had touched her with awe and dread; awe, that so many people could come together in so short a time, to march so determinedly for the same cause; dread, because they no longer seemed like a group of men, but rather like a swarm, a plague of dark, hundred-legged caterpillars, bristling with pikes and scythes and banners, hunching themselves and then stretching or twisting sideways as the road bent or widened or narrowed, while small knots of cavalry hurried along the flanks like colourful, long-legged spiders. As she had watched the blue and gold banner at the head of the foremost spider hurry through the green fields and orchards to the walls of Taunton, she had shivered, despite the heat, and felt the hairs rise on the back of her neck, for it had seemed more like a plague of Hell than an army of God.
But the people of Taunton had thought different, clearly, for they had poured out of the gates of their city and lined their streets in hundreds to welcome the Duke. All the bells in all the spires and towers had vied with each other to ring out the peals of triumph, as some still did now, five hours later.
Above the great tower of St Mary's that same blue and gold striped banner now floated serenely, its confident motto, 'Fear Nothing But God', rippling in the wind to remind friend and foe alike that in this war victory would be the wages of virtue, defeat and death the wages of sin.
Ann turned to her father and John Spragg, who was with them in the throng of the main street. She had begun to sense her father's irritation with Tom, without fully understanding its cause. She wanted to heal it, if she could.
"Where do you think we can see the Duke, father? I've been with the army two days without a sight of him yet."
Adam looked at her and sighed, wondering again what he was to do with a daughter in the army. "The Duke's got more to do than parade around for maids to gawp at, Annie. Apart from which, 'tis hardly proper for you to be out on these streets with the town so full of soldiers. 'Tis no place for a girl."
There were very few women on the street, it was true, in comparison to the large number of men; and some of these turned their heads to look at her as they went past, in a way she was not used to at home. But she did not feel afraid.
"Oh, father! 'Tis a celebration!"
"I know, but ... "
"You can leave her to stay with me for a while, if you like, Mr Carter. I'll look after her. And all these soldiers be godly family men enough, like ourselves. They won't do her no harm."
Adam glared at Tom, hating him. You are not her husband yet, he thought. Remember that, young man, and take care! His hands shook with the sudden violence of his emotion, and he clenched his fists to control them, wondering at the strength of his feeling. But being betrothed to a girl hardly gave Tom the right to give her father advice about his own daughter, as though he were a child or an old man. Tom, however, was looking away, across the street, and did not notice his anger. Adam felt John Spragg's hand on his shoulder, and unclenched his fists slowly.
"Come along with me, Adam. 'Tis just a step across the street to the White Hart, and I should like to see the Duke again too."
So Adam relented, and went with them, though he still seethed inwardly. He wondered that no-one seemed to notice when he felt so strongly; was it like this, too, when he was afraid?
There was a crowd of men outside the White Hart, for Monmouth had made it his headquarters; but the Duke himself did not seem to be there. Instead Lord Grey came out, laughing, with several well-dressed, perfumed cavaliers of similar fashion. Tom cursed, and deliberately told Ann the story of Grey's flight at Bridport, in a voice quite strong enough for most of those around to hear.
"And yet we'm still to have the sodomite for our leader of horse, for all that, because he's a Lord and do look pretty," he ended, so loud and scornful that Ann felt sure Grey must have heard it; and indeed he glanced at them coldly as he strode into the crowd. But he passed without speaking. Grey was a foppish, weak-looking man with big eyes and delicate hands that played for a moment with the ringlets of his wig. Ann noticed how the strong perfume that he and his friends wore drifted after him, contrasting strongly with the stale sweaty smell of most of the men around her.
"He doesn't look much like a champion of the good old cause," she said mischievously. "I wonder when he was last inside a conventicle?"
"Never!" said Tom vehemently. "Such men'll betray us, if the Duke don't rid himself of 'em. They see him as a King, and theirselves as his courtiers, keeping his godly followers away from him. 'Tis like Israel says, the Duke should listen to us and the preachers, not fancy cavaliers like that one."
"Remember the Duke's a fancy cavalier himself, boy," said John Spragg quietly. "He's been in no more conventicles than Lord Grey."
"But the man's a soldier of God for all that," said Tom. "With the Lord's blessing he'll learn to lose his vanity and bring back that godliness to the nation that Israel says we had under the Protector."
"Won't Monmouth want to be King, first? Surely he doesn't talk of a Commonwealth, a religious republic, now?"
Before it had happened, Ann had had her opinions, but never believed the rebellion would really come at all; and now that it had come, it was too overwhelming to be sure where it would lead. But Tom was certain.
"It doesn't matter what he wants, now. 'Tis like Israel says - we're an army of common, godly people. 'Tis us that fights - the leaders must do what we say."
Adam frowned. "That's not what matters, Tom. 'Tis the leaders that matter. Monmouth don't want to be Protector. He'll be King." He smiled at Tom's innocence as he thought of the contrast between the Cromwell his father had spoken of, the heavy, blunt-featured farmer he had once seen a woodcut of in a book, and the Duke of Monmouth. Monmouth was a prince, King Charles's illegitimate son, an aristocrat like Lord Grey; not a man who could share power and work with others, nor yet one who could bully and dominate others by the sheer force of his personality.
He was a man who would be King because people loved him, and would follow him for love - he was that, or nothing. "If he can lead us to win a few battles, and get rid of his Papist uncle, that's all you can expect from him. We’ll have to put up with a few Lord Greys, just the same."
"'Tis a pity, though, Adam, bain't it?" said John Spragg thoughtfully. "When there's dozens could lead us better. Noll Cromwell was no fop like Grey, nor was Lord Fairfax neither, from what they say. And the country thrived just as well without a king, as I recall."
"Cromwell was no more'n a king without a crown," said Adam. "This Protestant Duke'll do us well enough, if he's soberly advised, as he will be, if he lets us crown him."
"We don't need no more kings, Mr Carter!" burst out Tom vehemently. "Look around you! Do these people look like courtiers, who want to change one king for another? Or follow fops like that fool Grey, or Robert Pole? These are the people who held Taunton against King Charles in my grandfather's time - people who want to go to the meeting house and pray like us in our own way, without any vicars or bishops or kings to come between us and God! Look at them - Ann, don't you see?"
Ann looked across the square, where all the doors and windows were decorated with bolts of cloth or flowers or branches of green trees, like a festival. Nearly all the men, even the preachers, had some flower or sprig of green in their hats, for this was the badge of the army. The atmosphere was serious, yet joyful at the same time, as though everyone felt they had been set free; yet from what she had heard of the time of Cromwell's republic, before she had been born, it had not been a time of great joy or freedom except in religion. Tom's words about Robert made her think of London, the tempting, thrilling London Robert had described to her, and she wondered if the army would go there, and if it would be as exciting as Robert had painted it. Certainly there must be evils there; but for all Tom's boastful enthusiasm she did not want a country ruled by men as narrow and dogmatic as him and Israel Fuller. Was that what these men wanted; these men around her, with the keen, purposeful joy in their faces, and the cheerful sprigs of green in their hats?
"I'm for a Protestant King," she said, and smiled at her father, ignoring the jealous, bitter disapproval on Tom's stern handsome face.
19
THERE WERE no orders for the army to move next day, and Adam was determined to use part of the time to ensure that Ann went home, or at the very least, did not follow the army out of Taunton. But in the morning he could do nothing, for it was spent in continued practice drill in the army camp outside the town.
The Colyton men had now cut down the basic musket drill to two minutes between each volley, at which Sergeant Evans seemed almost pleased, though he would not admit it; and they watched with tolerant scorn the fumbling efforts of the newly-formed regiment of Taunton men, Colonel Bassett's Blues, who took a good ninety seconds longer. Even when they did fire, most of the Taunton men's shots skimmed the bark and leaves off saplings in the hedge two or three feet above the haycock targets.
"Reckon they be trying to knock the old blackbirds out of their nests," chuckled William Clegg good-humouredly.
"They'll learn, in time," answered
Adam. "We were as bad as that a week ago."
"So long as they listen to their sergeant, instead of falling asleep on the job," snapped the sharp, sing-song voice of their beloved tormentor. Sergeant Evans looked pointedly at Adam and winked at the others. The sergeant had a long memory, and Adam had not yet been allowed to forget that first day when he had been too tired and deafened by the endless noise to know when to stop. But although the Welshman was stern he was not vindictive, and as the Colyton men saw how they had improved, they were coming to trust his judgement as much as they feared his tongue.
"What's this? Are you musket men taking your ease again?" broke in Roger Satchell, striding over from where he had been exercising the pikemen. He glanced at the haycocks and laughed. "I see you even bring your sheets to work!" For that morning Sergeant Evans had somehow procured two bedsheets from some unsuspecting housewife, and had strung them up on a line just above and behind the haycock targets, so that they could easily see if bullets had missed and gone too high.
"I did have hopes of taking them back as good as they came," the sergeant replied. "But we've still got a few hayseeds here who think we're out to shoot pigeons!"
"Not too many though." Roger Satchell looked approvingly at the twenty-odd holes produced by a dozen volleys. "I think if you'd tried that a week ago, the poor housewife would have had nothing left but rags. But we need to learn to work together. Sergeant, fall your men in over there, if you please!"
For the rest of the morning they practised the complex drill of manouvering with the pikemen, forming squares and lines and columns, each designed to enable the infantrymen to use their two main weapons to the maximum advantage to protect each other, destroy the enemy on foot and remain impregnable to their horse.