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The Fort: A Novel of the Revolutionary War - xaviantvision

The Fort: A Novel of the Revolutionary War - xaviantvision

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"So you will take <strong>the</strong> oath?" McLean asked, and saw how solemnly Beth gazed at her bro<strong>the</strong>r."Don't have much choice, sir, do I? Not if I want to fish and scratch a living."Brigadier McLean had issued a proclamation to <strong>the</strong> country about Majabigwaduce, assuring <strong>the</strong> inhabitants that if <strong>the</strong>y were loyal to his majesty andtook <strong>the</strong> oath swearing to that loyalty, <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong>y would have nothing to fear from his forces, but if any man refused <strong>the</strong> oath, <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong> proclamation promisedhard times to him and his family. "You do indeed have a choice," McLean said."We were raised to love <strong>the</strong> king, sir," James said."I'm glad to hear it." McLean said. He gazed at <strong>the</strong> dark woods. "I understood," <strong>the</strong> brigadier went on, "that <strong>the</strong> authorities in Boston have beenconscripting men?""That <strong>the</strong>y have," James agreed."Yet you have not been conscripted?""Oh, <strong>the</strong>y tried," james said dismissively, "but <strong>the</strong>y're leery <strong>of</strong> this part <strong>of</strong> Massachusetts.""Leery?""Not much sympathy for <strong>the</strong> rebellion here, General.""But some folk here are disaffected?" McLean asked."A few," James said, "but some folk are never happy.""A lot <strong>of</strong> folks here fled from Boston," Bethany said, "and <strong>the</strong>y're all loyalists.""When <strong>the</strong> British left, Miss Fletcher? Is that what you mean?""Yes, sir. Like Doctor Calef. He had no wish to stay in a city ruled by rebellion, sir.""Was that your fate?" John Moore asked."Oh no," James said, "our family's been here since God made <strong>the</strong> world.""Your parents live in Majabigwaduce?" <strong>the</strong> brigadier asked."Fa<strong>the</strong>r's in <strong>the</strong> burying ground, God rest him," James said."I'm sorry," McLean said."And Mo<strong>the</strong>r's good as dead," James went on."James!" Bethany said reprovingly."Crippled, bedridden, and speechless," James said. Six years before, he explained, when Bethany was twelve and James fourteen, <strong>the</strong>ir widowedmo<strong>the</strong>r had been gored by a bull she had been leading to pasture. <strong>The</strong>n, two years later, she had suffered a stroke that had left her stammering andconfused."Life is hard on us," McLean said. He stared at a log house built close to <strong>the</strong> river's bank and noted <strong>the</strong> huge heap <strong>of</strong> firewood stacked against oneouter wall. "And it must be hard," he went on, "to make a new life in a wilderness if you are accustomed to a city like Boston.""Wilderness, General?" James asked, amused."It is hard for <strong>the</strong> Boston folk who came here, sir," Bethany said more usefully."<strong>The</strong>y have to learn to fish, General," James said, "or grow crops, or cut wood.""You grow many crops?" McLean asked."Rye, oats, and potatoes," Bethany answered, "and corn, sir.""<strong>The</strong>y can trap, General," James put in. "Our dad made a fine living from trapping! Beaver, marten, weasels.""He caught an ermine once," Bethany said proudly."And doubtless that scrap <strong>of</strong> fur is round some fine lady's neck in London, General," James said. "<strong>The</strong>n <strong>the</strong>re's mast timber," he went on. "Not so muchin Majabigwaduce, but plenty upriver, and any man can learn to cut and trim a tree. And <strong>the</strong>re are sawmills aplenty! Why <strong>the</strong>re must be thirty sawmillsbetween here and <strong>the</strong> river's head. A man can make scantlings or staves, boards or posts, anything he pleases!""You trade in timber?" McLean asked."I fish, General, and it's a poor man who can't keep his family alive by fishing.""What do you catch?""Cod, General, and cunners, haddock, hake, eel, flounder, pollock, skate, mackerel, salmon, alewives. We have more fish than we know what to dowith! And all good eating! It's what gives our Beth her pretty complexion, all that fish!"Bethany gave her bro<strong>the</strong>r a fond glance. "You're silly, James," she said."You are not married, Miss Fletcher?" <strong>the</strong> general asked."No, sir.""Our Beth was betro<strong>the</strong>d, General," James explained, "to a rare good man. Captain <strong>of</strong> a schooner. She was to be married this spring."McLean looked gently at <strong>the</strong> girl. "Was to be?""He was lost at sea, sir," Bethany said."Fishing on <strong>the</strong> banks," James explained. "He got caught by a nor'easter, General, and <strong>the</strong> nor'easters have blown many a good man out <strong>of</strong> this worldto <strong>the</strong> next.""I'm sorry.""She'll find ano<strong>the</strong>r," James said carelessly. "She's not <strong>the</strong> ugliest girl in <strong>the</strong> world," he grinned, "are you?"<strong>The</strong> brigadier turned his gaze back to <strong>the</strong> shore. He some-times allowed himself <strong>the</strong> small luxury <strong>of</strong> imagining that no enemy would come to attack him,but he knew that was unlikely. McLean's small force was now <strong>the</strong> only British presence between <strong>the</strong> Canadian border and Rhode Island and <strong>the</strong> rebelswould surely want that presence destroyed. <strong>The</strong>y would come. He pointed south. "We might return now?" he suggested, and Bethany obliged by turning<strong>the</strong> Felicity into <strong>the</strong> wind. Her bro<strong>the</strong>r hardened <strong>the</strong> jib, staysail, and main so that <strong>the</strong> small boat tipped as she beat into <strong>the</strong> brisk breeze and sharpdashes <strong>of</strong> spray slapped against <strong>the</strong> three <strong>of</strong>ficers' red coats. McLean looked again at Majabigwaduce's high western bluff that faced onto <strong>the</strong> wide river."If you were in command here," he asked his two lieutenants, "how would you defend <strong>the</strong> place?" Lieutenant Campbell, a lank youth with a prominent noseand an equally prominent adam's apple, swallowed nervously and said nothing, while young Moore just leaned back on <strong>the</strong> heaped nets as thoughcontemplating an afternoon's sleep. "Come, come," <strong>the</strong> brigadier chided <strong>the</strong> pair, "tell me what you would do.""Does that not depend on what <strong>the</strong> enemy does, sir?" Moore asked idly."<strong>The</strong>n assume with me that <strong>the</strong>y arrive with a dozen or more ships and, say, fifteen hundred men?"Moore closed his eyes, while Lieutenant Campbell tried to look enthusiastic. "We put our guns on <strong>the</strong> bluff, sir," he <strong>of</strong>fered, gesturing towards <strong>the</strong> highground that dominated <strong>the</strong> river and harbor entrance."But <strong>the</strong> bay is wide," McLean pointed out, "so <strong>the</strong> enemy can pass us on <strong>the</strong> far<strong>the</strong>r bank and land upstream <strong>of</strong> us. <strong>The</strong>n <strong>the</strong>y cross <strong>the</strong> neck," hepointed to <strong>the</strong> narrow isthmus <strong>of</strong> low ground that connected Majabigwaduce to <strong>the</strong> mainland, "and attack us from <strong>the</strong> landward side."Campbell frowned and bit his lip as he pondered that suggestion. "So we put guns <strong>the</strong>re too, sir," he <strong>of</strong>fered, "maybe a smaller fort?"McLean nodded encouragingly, <strong>the</strong>n glanced at Moore. "Asleep, Mister Moore?"Moore smiled, but did not open his eyes. "Wer alles verteidigt, verteidigt nichts," he said."I believe der alte Fritz thought <strong>of</strong> that long before you did, Mister Moore," McLean responded, <strong>the</strong>n smiled at Bethany. "Our paymaster is showing <strong>of</strong>f,Miss Fletcher, by quoting Frederick <strong>the</strong> Great. He's also quite right, he who defends everything defends nothing. So," <strong>the</strong> brigadier looked back to Moore,"what would you defend here at Majabigwaduce?""I would defend, sir, that which <strong>the</strong> enemy wishes to possess.""And that is?""<strong>The</strong> harbor, sir.""So you would allow <strong>the</strong> enemy to land <strong>the</strong>ir troops on <strong>the</strong> neck?" McLean asked. <strong>The</strong> brigadier's reconnaissance had convinced him that <strong>the</strong> rebelswould probably land north <strong>of</strong> Majabigwaduce. <strong>The</strong>y might try to enter <strong>the</strong> harbor, fighting <strong>the</strong>ir way through Mowat's sloops to land troops on <strong>the</strong> beachbelow <strong>the</strong> fort, but if McLean was in command <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> rebels he reckoned he would choose to land on <strong>the</strong> wide, shelving beach <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> isthmus. By doingthat, <strong>the</strong> enemy would cut him <strong>of</strong>f from <strong>the</strong> mainland and could assault his ramparts safe from any cannon-fire from <strong>the</strong> Royal Navy vessels. <strong>The</strong>re was asmall chance that <strong>the</strong>y might be daring and assault <strong>the</strong> bluff to gain <strong>the</strong> peninsula's high ground, but <strong>the</strong> bluff's slope was dauntingly steep. He sighedinwardly. He could not defend everything because, as <strong>the</strong> great Frederick had said, by defending everything a man defended nothing."<strong>The</strong>y'll land somewhere, sir," Moore answered <strong>the</strong> brigadier's question, "and <strong>the</strong>re's little we can do can stop <strong>the</strong>m landing, not if <strong>the</strong>y come in sufficientforce. But why do <strong>the</strong>y land, sir?""You tell me."

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