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Authors: Laurie Halse Anderson

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She nodded.

“Did you play with your doll?”

She nodded again.

“And my seeds?”

She hesitated, then gave a little nod.

“What about the papers? In my sack?”

She shook her head. “Don't holler.”

“Did you use them to build up the fire, mayhaps? It's a cold night.”

She looked at the hearth, then shook her head again.

“Don't lie to me.”

“Mister Walter doesn't like lies. You're mean. You're mean and ugly.”

“This is more important than if I'm mean! Did you burn the papers?”

She yawned. “Mister burned the papers.”

“No, he didn't, he's not here! Why are you so foolish!” I yelled. “You did it, didn't you? You've ruined everything! Again!”

The brokenhearted look on her face stopped me like a pitcherful of cold water had been thrown at me.

“I'm sorry,” I said. “I'm tired. You didn't understand, it's just–”

Two tears traced a salty path down Ruth's cheeks. She lay back down on her pallet and pulled her blanket over her head.

CHAPTER XXV

Friday, September 28, 1781

V
IRGINIANS ARE QUITE CRUEL TO THEIR SLAVES.

–J
EAN
-F
RANÇOIS
-L
OUIS, COMTE DE
C
LERMONT
-C
REVECOEUR, FIRST LIEUTENANT IN THE
A
UXONNE REGIMENT OF THE
F
RENCH ARMY AT
Y
ORKTOWN

I
DID NOT SLEEP WELL
, chased by shadows until finally woken by a strange noise. Sweat-soaked and bewildered, I sat up. What was that sound? Something I'd not heard before, of that I was certain.

I rose and checked the door. The latch was undisturbed. I took a flatiron from a shelf and stood by the open window. A thunder-loud roll of drums beat in the distance. It startled me so much that I almost dropped the iron. The sound of shrilling fifes cut through the dark, and then I understood.

The army was on the move.

I unlatched the door and stepped outside. The hot air was thick with damp, like wet wool lifted from a boiling kettle. The entire town seemed awake in the darkness. Cattle bellowed, townspeople and soldiers hurried through the streets, horses pulled wagons, tossing their heads and whinnying.

I closed the door again.

How many more days would the Hallahans keep us on? Without the armies, they'd have no need of our help. Where would we go? How could we go anywhere in safety? I needed paper–costly paper–and a pen and ink to forge new free papers for us. I had neither money nor friends. Curzon had chosen his own path, and that pained my heart more than I thought possible. 'Twas unlikely we'd see Aberdeen again; the army he needed to spy upon was on the road.

I watched my sister sleep. As soon as she woke, her scowl would return, or maybe a look of hurt. On account of my temper the state of our sisterhood had again sunk into a dank bog of misery. I seemed incapable of doing anything right when it came to her. 'Twas no wonder she couldn't abide me. More and more, I could hardly abide myself.

I lay back down and stared at the darkness overhead. There'd be no more sleep for me. I rolled up my pallet and set to work.

By the time the steam was rising off the wash kettles, Widow Hallahan had not yet appeared. Neither had Kate nor Elspeth, which was curious. I peeked across the courtyard but saw no signs of life. Ruth woke, washed her face and hands in the basin, and tied a dark blue kerchief over her hair. She said nothing to me.

“Aberdeen stopped by whilst you slept,” I lied so as to spare her feelings. “He can't escort you to the hospital, on account of the army moving out. I shall take his place.”

She nodded, then went out to the courtyard. Thomas Boon nickered a greeting, and she spoke to him quiet enough that I could not hear her words. I swept the laundry, taking care to remove all the dried mud, carried in more firewood, and, finally, crossed the courtyard to the tavern, puzzled by the change in our routine.

The back door of the tavern stood open to the breeze. Widow Hallahan and Miss Marrow were sitting at the kitchen table, their breakfast of porridge, apples, and cheese in front of them. A newspaper was on the table too, folded in a most untidy manner.

I rapped lightly on the doorframe. Both women looked up, startled by my appearance.

“Didn't John come by to fetch you?” Widow Hallahan asked.

“No, ma'am,” I said, confused. “Am I to work at the tavern today?”

The women exchanged a glance.

“Nay,” the old lady said. “He, uh, he said you need to drive a wagon for him today.”

“Drive a wagon?”

“Not ascared of horses, are you?” she asked.

“Not at all, ma'am. Does the hospital have extra washing?”

Again they shared a look of mystery.

“Might could be he wants you to drive the hams out to the French regiment.” Widow Hallahan cut a slice of cheese. “They believe in a proper midday meal, even when marching. Indeed, he said something to that effect.”

That sounded like a falsehood. The French army had their own wagons. They would have sent it to fetch the hams in the night. But Mister Hallahan's need to lie to his mother was not my concern.

“Kate and Elspeth have not turned up,” I said. “The kettles are ready to boil.”

“Gave them girls the day off.” She began peeling the apple with the thin blade of the knife. “Figgered they'd be caterwauling and boohooing and the noise would grind my patience to dust.”

The fire in the hearth crackled. The tavern felt hollow without the raucous noise and bustle of guests.

“Should we fetch the laundry from the hospital while waiting for the mister to return?” I asked.

“No need,” Widow Hallahan said.

I blinked. “Pardon me, ma'am, but there's still plenty of puking and bleeding going on. They've more than three hundred sick fellas.”

Miss Marrow rose from the table, took the boiling pot of water from the fire, and poured it into the basin on the sideboard.

“Ruth and me can get to the hospital and back in a flash.”

I held my breath, praying first that she wouldn't complain about me walking with Ruth, and second that she wouldn't dismiss us on the spot, seeing as there was little need for us in the absence of the army.

“Nay, best you stay close by,” Widow Hallahan said. “All is amuddle, what with the soldiers heading into war. What a world!”

The cook darted her eyes at me strangely, then started scrubbing at a crusted pie plate with a rag.

“If I may, ma'am . . . ,” I swallowed hard. “How long do you figger that you'll need Ruth and me to work for you?”

“Well, that's the thing you need to talk to John about.” She cut the long, dangling apple peel and it dropped to the plate like a ribbon. “He'll be here in a flash. Went off before he finished reading the paper.”

I felt sure that meant our time at the laundry was finished. What should I do now? Ask at the hospital for work? But there was all sorts of sickness there. We needed work that would pay us enough for food and a roof to sleep under, but not if the place would be the death of us.

“What of my wages?” I asked boldly. “Mister Hallahan said I'd be paid cash for my time working in the tavern.”

“Another topic to discuss with himself.”

Something was amiss. Widow Hallahan had the head for figures in her family. I'd seen her counting out their earnings at the kitchen table at night. She dealt with the sellers at the marketplace and decided on the prices for food and drink in the tavern. I'd heard her complain about how her grown son had the head of a child when it came to numbers.

Unease fluttered in my belly like a butterfly trapped under a jar.

“Do we have any mutton pie left, Jane?” Widow Hallahan asked.

“A whole pie, big enough for two fellows,” Miss Marrow answered.

“Given the unusual circumstances of the day,” Widow Hallahan said, spearing an apple slice with the tip of her knife, “the army hullabaloo and all, what say you to a proper breakfast, Isabel, mutton pie and cider?”

“That would be fine, ma'am,” I said. “Much obliged.”

“You want I should fetch the cider?” Miss Marrow asked.

“First check the street,” Widow Hallahan said. “Look for the mister and his friend there who promised to bring the wagon. The way he runs hither and thither is just like his father, Lord bless the old goat's soul.”

The cook left the room, still clutching the scrubbing rag and dirty pie plate in her hands, which made no sense to me. None of this made sense. The two women were acting unnatural, as if they were reciting lines from a book, which was a foolish notion, for neither woman could read.

I glanced at the newspaper on the table, my eyes hungry as ever for words on paper. Mister Hallahan did spend long hours reading, seeking information that might help him turn a bargain. Though he never did any real labor in his tavern, his hands were forever stained with ink.

The cook came back in. “No wagon, ma'am.”

Widow Hallahan grunted and took another bite of apple. She chewed a moment, then pointed the knife at me. “Would your sister like some peach cobbler?”

“Indeed she would,” I answered, careful to keep my tone polite.

Standing behind the widow, the cook stared at me with wide eyes, blue as the summer sky. She held the crusted plate and rag so tight, her red fingers blanched to the color of bone. The intensity of her gaze and her strange manner gave me pause.

My remembery stirred to the night in '76 when Madam Lockton had tricked us with sweets, playacting with kindness to hide her evil intent. The night she stole Ruth.

I saw in my mind the muddy boot prints in the laundry, the disarray of our haversacks, our free papers torn up and burned by dirty hands. Not dirty; held with ink-stained fingers.

The heat in the room threatened to choke me. The truth of our peril rang so loud, I was sure the entire town could hear it. Widow Hallahan was not acting out of kindness; she was seeking to detain us. The man with the wagon was coming for us. To kidnap us. Steal us. Sell us.

I forced myself to draw a long, slow breath and resist the urge to run out the door. I could not let her know I understood her evil plan. To play a fool in front of a devil is often the wisest course of action.

I gave a shy smile and a false nod of gratitude. “Ruth does love peach cobbler, ma'am, and cider, too. That is most generous of you.”

Widow Hallahan smiled, preening, ever proud of herself.

“May I fetch her?” I asked, pretending that I would not move without her permission. “It'll only take a moment to clean her up. She's been shoveling donkey dung.” I stretched an alligator smile on my face. “I'll wash her hands and scrape the filth off her boots too. Wouldn't do to track that nastiness in here.”

“Fine notion, that,” Widow Hallahan said. “Jane will have a proper meal laid on the table here by the time you get back.”

I forced myself to curtsy, chin lowered, eyes down. In the distance the fifes shrilled again, louder than the birds and the drums.

We had been forced back into war for our liberty.

CHAPTER XXVI

Friday, September 28, 1781

A
NY PERSON MAY APPREHEND A SERVANT OR SLAVE, SUSPECTED TO BE A RUNAWAY, AND CARRY HIM BEFORE A
J
USTICE OF
P
EACE.

–A B
ILL FOR
A
PPREHENDING AND
S
ECURING
R
UNAWAYS, BY THE
C
OMMITTEE OF THE
V
IRGINIA
A
SSEMBLY
, J
UNE 18, 1779

I
STROLLED SLOW ACROSS THE
courtyard in case the widow was watching me out the window. The heat rose from the earth and made the air shimmer, yet I shook with cold fear. I tried to whistle, but my mouth was too dry. My legs wobbled like I was walking on the deck of a ship lost on a stormy sea.

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