“THE YANKEE PARSON WILL GET here tomorrow about noon?” John Nelson asked.
“If he comes,” Flora Kuyper said.
“He'll come. Beckford says he's been sniffing around Morristown like a bloody hound in search of a scent. You're the bait, my pretty girl. We're the trap.”
Beside Nelson stood his huge companion, Wiert Bogert, with his expressionless boy's face and blank blue eyes. “The bastard's close to his last sniff, by God, John,” he said.
Flora never saw these two without a shudder of revulsion. The burned flesh on Nelson's neck, curling up his throat to the jawline, made him look like a rotting corpse, restored to mad destructive life. Bogert was a murderous machine, empty of every feeling but hatred for the rebels.
The two had appeared out of the twilight that evening to inform her that they had four escaped British officers with them, badly in need of a good dinner. Flora had hosted similar dinners a half-dozen times in the previous six months. Her house was the last stop on the Liberty Turnpike, as the British called the escape route devised by Walter Beckford with the help of American loyalists. Traveling almost entirely by night, wearing their uniforms so they would not be shot as spies if recaptured, the escapees went from safe house to safe house in a month-long trek from prison camps in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and Charlottesville, Virginia. The journey across New Jersey was the hardest because many roads were patrolled by Washington's troops. Hence Beckford's use of Bogert and Nelson as escorts.
Flora Kuyper's role as mistress of a safe house enabled her to maintain her wine cellar and keep her barnyard stocked
with chickens, geese, and pigs. The British army had issued strict orders to loyalist marauders that the Kuyper farm was off limits to their thievery. There was nothing especially unusual about such directives. In the five years since the war had begun, hundreds of New Jerseyans had quietly made private truces with the enemy. The practice was called “taking a protection.”
Nelson's question about the chaplain, Chandler, had taken Flora by surprise. Beckford had ordered her to invite him to preside at Caesar's funeral. She had obeyed, vaguely expecting some additional instructions. Did he expect her to seduce him, too? she wondered. Now she realized Beckford planned to kill the man.
“Is he an agent?” she asked Nelson.
“How the hell do we know? We just obey the major's orders, like you, my pretty.”
“I hope you'll kill himâelsewhere.”
Nelson grinned. “Don't you worry. We'll wait for the bastard a mile down the road at least. Take his money, which will be nothin' but filthy Congress paper, alas, to make it look like it was ordinary murder for profit. We got our orders from the major. Under no circumstances must Mrs. Kuyper be involved. The way Beckford moistens his lips and rolls his tongue around the inside of his mouth when he says your name. It's enough to make a man envious, Mrs. Kuyper. No matter how hard we try, we'll never quite render the major the kind of services you supply. Is it true what we hear, that you're the doxy who persuaded him to give up boys?”
“Shut your filthy mouth,” Flora said. “Tell your officers that dinner will be served in an hour. I'll send something out to the barn for you and your friend.”
What did one more death matter? Flora asked herself, hurrying out to the kitchen. Beckford could be right. In his letter the chaplain seemed no more than a naive enthusiast. But that kind of man might be more dangerous than a cynic like Congressman Stapleton.
In the kitchen, Flora told Nancy about their unexpected dinner guests. Her solemn black face betrayed no emotion. She simply raked up the fire in the big cooking hearth and went to the door to call her daughters, Sallie and Ruth, from the slave quarters beyond the barns. Nothing disturbed Nancy's equilibrium. She was a woman of faith. Watching her move briskly about the kitchen, laying out eggs and spices, flour and milk for a custard pie, deciding a shoulder of beef would satisfy four hungry soldiers, Flora found herself yearning for Nancy's serenity. But such simplicity was beyond her reach forever now. For a moment she stared at a carving knife on the bare oak table. A quick pass of that shining steel across her wrist and she would no longer see Caesar in the cold barn while she pressed her lying mouth against the lips of men like Hugh Stapleton. She would no longer dream of Henry Kuyper's contorted face. She would no longer have to fear a future in which Walter Beckford or William ColemanâTwenty-sixâwould own her.
Perhaps she would do it tonight, in the bath. Let her treacherous blood mingle with the warm water. Let the bewildered chaplain bury her beside Caesar. Perhaps, as a farewell gesture of defiance to Beckford and Twenty-six, she would leave a note, warning the chaplain that his life was in danger.
“Mistress, why don't you lie down?” Nancy said. “Take one or two drops of your laudanum. I'll rouse you in plenty of time for dinner.”
“No,” Flora said. “I must dress.”
Nancy's shrewd eyes studied her. “You got to find forgiveness, mistress,” she said while Sallie and Ruth bustled at the other end of the kitchen, out of earshot. “You got to find forgiveness for yourself and Caesar now. The Lord's punishment has fallen on him, justly, we both know. But I believe you have a right to His forgiveness, I truly do. I think you could find it if you had someone to help you lift your heart to the Lord. Maybe this preacher that's comin' ⦔
Flora shook her head. Nancy and Cato saw her with their
slaves' eyes. They thought she was a kind mistress who had been seduced and corrupted by Caesar and his mad, murderous hunger for freedom. They only saw and pitied the Flora who paced the house in the night, silently weeping. They did not understand or question her obedience to Walter Beckford; that concerned politics, matters beyond their slave world. As Christians, they only grieved at its harm to her soul. They had no idea of the depth and breadth of Flora's mourning, how far it transcended Henry Kuyper's pathetic demise. They could not even imagine that she was about to become an accomplice in the murder of the man of God they hoped would comfort her.
Upstairs, Flora dressed with her usual care. She chose a gown of deep purple, its skirt and sleeves trimmed with gold braided silk. For a while she tried to read her favorite poet, François Villon, to compose her mind. But Villon was a world. What one found in him depended on the state of the reader's soul. His reckless mockery of all things sacred and respectable, which had once exhilarated her, was negated by his obsession with death. Suddenly she found herself reading again and again the
Ballade de la grosse Margot,
Villon's testament to a prostitute. She flung the book aside and paced the room, weeping.
A knock on the doorâSallie informing her mistress that dinner was served. Flora dried her eyes, took three drops of laudanum to steady her nerves, and descended to greet her guests. They had done their best to brush and clean their uniforms for the occasion, but their red coats and white breeches still showed the effects of a month of sleeping in barns and trudging through woods to escape American patrols. Three of them were young: a husky captain named Tracy with a hard, sensual mouth, and two lieutenants, an apple-cheeked baronet named Gore and a bulky, red-haired Scotsman named MacKenzie. The fourth man, Whittlesey, was a balding, gray-faced major with quizzical, kindly eyes. He reminded Flora of a priest she had known in New Orleans.
The younger officers were eager to talk about their adventures on the Liberty Turnpike, in particular the discovery that their American guide, a man named Grey, was a double agent. “Major Beckford's fellows, Nelson and Bogert, arrived just in time. The scoundrel would likely have turned us over to the first militiamen we met,” Lord Gore said.
“What did you do with him?” Flora asked.
“We did nothing,” Captain Tracy said. “Nelson and Bogert took him into the woods their first night with us and came back without him.”
“How terrible,” Flora said.
“Major Whittlesey rather agreed with you,” Lord Gore said. “Personally, I would have been happy to cut the beggar's throat myself.”
“And I,” said MacKenzie. “In Scotland we know how to deal with traitors.”
“I merely said I disliked killing a man so callously,” Major Whittlesey said. “Then bragging about it.”
“In war, Major, it's necessary to use crude instruments like Nelson,” Lord Gore said.
Captain Tracy began telling Flora how eager he was to meet the Americans in battle again. “One good push, that's all it will take, and their Congress and committeemen and militia will come tumbling down. In Pennsylvania everyone's sick of the war.”
Lord Gore and MacKenzie, who had escaped from Charlottesville, concurred. Gore had another idea to hasten the American collapse. “The Negroes are their Achilles' heel. We should arm them to fight their rebel masters.”
“And how do we get the guns back from them?” asked Major Whittlesey. “There's no point in winning the war by turning half this continent into Africa. In fact, there's no point in winning the war by burning as many houses as I've seen in ruins here in New Jersey. What have we won if we turn the country into a desert? No, my young sir, we must somehow break up Washington's army. That done, the war will be over
without another house burned, another innocent family ruined. I'd never have undertaken this long march from Lancaster without Major Beckford's assurance that I could give essential service to accomplish this.”
“Are you going to perfect your repeating rifle, Major?” Tracy said with a teasing grin. “So Beckford can march down to Morristown and scatter Washington's army with a corporal's guard?”
“Most of us dream of lasses,” Lieutenant MacKenzie said. “The major dreams of machines.”
Lord Gore, whose choirboy looks concealed a hunger for vengeance, pursued his argument with Whittlesey. “I dare say most of those burned houses didn't belong to innocent families. Taken in the mass, the Americans are the greatest villains on earth. Ten times worse than the Irish. I concede the wisdom of a swift stroke to behead the rebellion. But once that's accomplished, I think we should free the slaves and set up one or two colonies of loyal blacks here in their midst, as we planted the Scots Protestants in Ulster to make the Irish behave.”
“I'll drink a toast to that,” Flora said, raising her wineglass. “Tonight you'll be sharing the barn with the body of a black man who would have welcomed such a plan. He was a spy for His Majesty, inside Washington's army. They found him out and murdered him in the most cowardly way.”
“That makes me feel better about the way Beckford disposed of Mr. Grey,” Major Whittlesey murmured.
“I think it's you who deserve the toast, madam,” Captain Tracy said, raising his wineglass. “No doubt you set the fellow to the business and guided him in every step.”
“Hear hear,” said Lieutenant MacKenzie, seizing his glass. Flora had to sit there, smiling and modestly bowing her head before the salutes of His Majesty's officers.
Captain Tracy, a cavalry officer who had been captured in 1778, poured himself another glass of wine and began looking at Flora with eyes that suggested amorous ambitions. “I wish
there were more women in America with your courageâand beauty, madam.”
Flora ignored the compliment and turned to Major Whittlesey. “Do you think it possible that the King would create colonies of free blacks here in America?”
“Not likely,” Whittlesey said. “They're property. Those who belong to rebels will be confiscated and sold to help pay the cost of this damned war. But we may settle the German troops and some of our officers and soldiers here on confiscated lands. They and their children will be a sword at the Americans' throats until they forget their rebel ways.”
Captain Tracy, deciding Flora was beyond his charms, pursued this idea with gusto. “I can see myself now, sitting on my plantation house veranda, a black wench on either knee, as drunk as Sir Toby on his wedding day.”
“And what will your wife be doing meanwhile?” Lieutenant MacKenzie said. “Selecting some black stallion from the slave quarters, like as not.”