Read The Messenger Online

Authors: Siri Mitchell

The Messenger (11 page)

12

Jeremiah

 

I shook my head as I walked away. She’d tried to hand the note right back to me—in plain sight where any could see it! How could one teach the art of deception when the student denied its very utility? It was like trying to teach an angel to be a devil. But I had to hope for her success. Otherwise it would be both our necks together. At the gallows.

John Lindley came in for supper that night. He was wearing a look so long he might have tripped over it as he came through the door. “You need a drink?”

He nodded.

“Rum?”

“Brandy.”

I pulled the cork from a bottle with my teeth and then poured him a bowl.

“Might need two. Howe’s gone and asked to be recalled.”

Recalled? That was news. “To where?”

“England.”

A recall was long overdue in my opinion. He’d been given time enough to quench the rebellion and hadn’t done it. “You think they will?”

John shrugged and took a drink. Planting his forearm on the bar, he turned to look around. Then he leaned in close. “Word is, the prime minister is none too happy with him.”

I could see why. General Washington was only a few scant miles down the road with half his troops laid low by illness. Yet Howe hadn’t managed to roust himself from his mistress’s bed for the two days it would take him to defeat the ragtag army. If I were the prime minister, I would have called for his head long before now. “Who’s to replace him?”

John picked up his bowl and eyed the bottom of it and held it out toward me. I pulled the cork once more and filled it. “Does it matter? General Howe’s a true gentleman.”

“When is it to happen?”

“Before the spring campaign, I suppose.” He was tapping his fingers against the counter now, looking as if he’d rather be talking to someone else. “I just wish something could be done.”

“You can’t very well recall the request.”

“No. But . . . blast it all! There ought to be something that can be done to fete the finest officer in the army. Something memorable.”

I recorked the bottle and stowed it on the shelf behind me. “Write him a play.” The army might have been a den of playactors for all the masterpieces that were being practiced and planned for production down at the theater.

“A play.”

“Or some sort of ode in his honor.” An idea was growing in my mind. General Washington was looking for a way for his prisoners to escape. John was looking for a way to fete his general. What if the same diversion could be used to meet both ends?

“Everyone has written some sort of play. Or other.”

I’d forgotten: The officer corps seemed to attract nothing but frustrated playwrights. “How about a ball?”

“We’ve been dancing all winter.”

All winter. It needed to be something different, then. Something novel. Something . . . that could be looked forward to all spring. “What about—”

“There he is!” John muttered the words under his breath as he turned from the counter and held out a hand to a major, who was swiftly approaching.

“Jonesy? Major John André. John, this is Jeremiah Jones. He was invalided out after Devil’s Hole.”

“Oh? Tough luck, then.”

I saved my smile.

“Jonesy and I were talking about General Howe’s departure. How we ought to fete him.”

The major flashed me a look. “I’ll have a brandy as well.”

I took another bowl down from the shelf as he leaned on the counter next to John. “It’s got to be something extraordinary. Something more than another play or a ball.” The major accepted the bowl from me and took a drink. “Something different.”

General Howe’s brother, Admiral Howe, was due to return to the city soon. “What about the boats?” I asked.

André looked up at me. “What about them?”

“Couldn’t you do something on the river?”

“A regatta?” He flashed a smile that was stunning in its brilliance. “A regatta on the river! Splendid idea. And we could do everything else as well. It could be a regatta-theater-ball. A regatta-
pageant
-ball—even better! A whole day filled with celebrations. It would be a medley of events. A veritable
Meschianza
!”

I shrugged as if it didn’t matter much to me, one way or the other. But a day filled with festivities would provide multiple opportunities for a diversion. I only hoped it would fall late in the season. The tunnel might take a while to dig. “Let me know how I can help.” I’d do whatever I had to in order to keep abreast of the event. On the night of the festivities I wanted every officer within ten miles of the city to be completely and utterly drunk. Unfit to respond to the prisoners’ escape.

“We will.” With a clap on the back and a wink, John left with André. But they would be back. If I played them right, they would plan the whole event right here at my counter. And I would be informed of every detail.

Once they were well gone I gave over control of the drink to my barkeeper and went upstairs to my room. Locking the door, I drew the curtain and took
Common Sense
down from its shelf. Then I worked for the next two hours to find just the right words.

By the time the watchman called out eleven o’clock, I had completed my message.

Howe expected to be recalled in spring. Officers to have a gala upon his departure. Suggest that night for escape.

I uncoded it once just to make sure it said what was meant. Satisfied, I hid it in a finger of a glove. Now I just had to find a way to get it to General Washington.

 

The next morning I braved the rain and returned to the tailor’s. Two visits within a week’s time. More times than I’d visited in the previous two years. He eyed me with no little suspicion. “I didn’t expect to see you back so soon.” He shot a glance toward his apprentice. “Did you want something altered?”

I cursed my lack of thought. I should have brought my other coat. “I thought . . . perhaps . . . it could be I’ll need another.”

“Another?”

“Coat?”

He sighed and tossed a look at his apprentice. “Go and take those new shirts over to Howe’s headquarters for Colonel Hillman.” He nodded toward the corner where a package sat tied up with string.

When the boy had sauntered off, the tailor sent me a look over the rims of his spectacles. “Another coat?”

“Not really.”

“Then what is it? I already told you everything I know.”

“I have to pass a message to the general.”

He shook his head. “To headquarters. That’s what we say. To
headquarters
.”

“Fine. I have to get a message to headquarters.”

“Then you’re going to have to do like I told you and find the egg-girl.”

“Which one? And how will she know to trust me?”

“She’s the one with the blue cart. And you’ll have to wear a purple-colored feather in your hat.”

“A feather in my hat.”

“To signal you’ve something to pass. And she’ll have a scarlet-colored ribbon on her cap if she’s something to give you. Here. Let me lend you mine.” He pulled out a drawer behind the counter. Bent down and reached an arm into it. “Just stick it right into the brim where it’s been cocked.”

A feather in my hat. That could be a problem.

 

I wasn’t one to walk around with things sticking out of my hat, though the tailor did it all the time. But he was a dandy. And he cared so much about the smallest of details that he could be expected to wander about the market looking for delicacies like quails’ eggs.

I, on the other hand, was not.

It was difficult enough to tie my cravat in a respectable knot, let alone match the clocks on my hose to my waistcoat and the embroidery on my coat to my gloves. Glove. What did it matter? Whose eye was I hoping to catch? I didn’t even bother with waistcoats anymore. Nor did I button my coat.

I couldn’t.

And now here I was, parading down High Street with a purple feather stuck into my hat in the middle of a rainy afternoon. If I didn’t hate the British so much, I would have never willingly suffered such indignities. As I approached Fifth Street, I saw John come around the corner. I sped my walk, but he caught up to me with a jog.

“My! Aren’t you looking dapper. One might think you’ve set your eye on some fair girl.”

I didn’t return his grin.

“Is it the Quaker one?”

“Is what the Quaker one?”

“The girl. Is she the reason for that handsome feather?”

I wanted to wrench the wretched thing from my hat and stomp it into the mud. “The reason for this silly feather is that . . .” Is that what? What reason could I give him? That wasn’t the truth?

“No need to explain.”

“It’s not—I mean—”

“Love makes fools of us all.”

“Why should you be so interested in my thoughts of Hannah?”

“Hannah?” He shook some raindrops from his cloak. “So things are progressing quickly, then?”

“Miss Sunderland.” And curse her for insisting that I use her Christian name. She wasn’t a Christian. She was a devil in disguise. “And she’s not . . . I’m not . . .”

He punched me in my arm. The missing one. “Forgive me. I take such interest in others’ affairs because I have so little interest in my own. All that awaits me in England is a pile of lovely money. And very little charm. She’s quite delightful really. And very frank.”

“Who? Your heiress?”

“No. Miss Sunderland. Your beloved Hannah.”

“She is not my Hannah.”

As we came abreast of the market, he took himself off with a wink.

She was not my beloved anything. A nuisance was what she was. But if she explained the presence of this ridiculous feather, then I suppose she’d made herself useful. For a change.

I began to scan the brick-buttressed market booths at Fifth Street. If market it could be called. Last spring there had been vendors here by the dozens. Now, at this time of day, the market was nearly deserted. I could hear the echoes of my own shoes striking the cobbles. I counted only seven booths occupied. And it felt as if each one of those vendors was watching me.

I made a point of looking over all of the wares. In truth, there was no way around it. I had to go to each booth in order to find the blue cart. One of the vendors had three meager-looking parsnips for sale. Another had a slim wedge of cheese. A third had brought a small sack of flour. And finally there was the egg-girl with her blue cart.

She wasn’t a girl really, more of a haggard, careworn woman. But the tailor had always been rather over-romantic in his sentiments. There were four baskets of eggs sitting in her cart. Apparently those were all she had to offer, but they were quite a bit more than most Philadelphians were used to seeing these days.

Her cap was trimmed with a scarlet ribbon. She seemed to be . . . waiting. For something. For me. “How much?”

“Ten shillings the egg. Coin. Not paper.”

Then it was a good thing I kept my own clutch of hens. They were down in the cellar so no one could steal them from me.

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