âI'll show you out, Fan. Don't worry, Matthew, you can trust Fan not to tell, eh Fan?''
âI ain't seen nobody. Swear to God. Au'voir, Miss Dale,' she says, nods at Matthew and is taken downstairs.
âMiss Dale?'
âWe are not married, Matthew,' Lucy's lips tremble. âBut you are surely hungry. Eat something, as much as you want. Tell me how you escaped. Oh Matthew, I'm so happy to see you. I'm so happy.'
*
âYou're quite certain about the lady?' Matthew asks Joseph when he returns.
âYes. I know her well. Besides, I've given her a little something to make sure.'
âIf the constables come is there somewhere I can hide myself quickly? Or a window I can climb out of?'
âThere's a cupboard behind my bench, Matthew, with two sets of doors, upper and lower. See? I keep paints and tools and well, all manner of things in the top part. You'll have to go under the bench to get into the lower half. But there's room enough for a man. I'll make two small holes in the doors for air. I'll clear it out immediately.'
Barely able to squeeze himself into the space, Joseph crawls under his bench, bangs his head, curses, pulls out armfuls of papers, objects, clothing. Lucy and Matthew smile to each other at the sight of long legs protruding, at the shuffling, scuffling, papers, ever more papers.
âIf I may say it, Joseph, you look like a huge terrier digging for a bone,' says Matthew.
âI am!' Joseph backs out, his patched breeches showing need of further mending. âA terrier worrying at authority.'
âI want to do more than worry authority, damn them to hell.'
âLucy has told me what you did.'
âOh. Oh, that was nothing. A schoolboy's trick. To impress someone.'
They are silent. Lucy's pride shakes.
Of course he is no longer a boy. Two years have passed, in which she herself has changed greatly. Matthew's voice no longer squeaks, his limbs, even his features have hardened with a fierce assurance that hadn't fully formed before. He'd embraced her as a man, not a little brother.
âJoseph, I must get a message to someone. Could you deliver it for me? Better you than Lucy, who would be noticed. At the George in St John Street. Tonight.'
âOf course. It's near here. Whatever I can do.'
âThat'll be a start. Are you willing to do more?'
âJoseph has so much work, dear Matthew, I doubt he has the time.' Lucy feels events swirl away from her. Imagines both of them in hiding, both in danger. Her life dissolving into terror. âMany people buy his prints now. And there's the new project, isn't that so, Joseph?'
âYes, yes. But I have always supported the cause.'
âWhat cause do you mean?' Matthew asks, sceptical.
âWhy, liberty and equality of course. I am a friend of Democracy. I used to be a good member of the Corresponding Society. Did you ever attend the great meeting in St George's Fields? Not that Iâ¦'
âOh the Corresponding Society. All talk. Debate.'
âDebate is good. Ideas are disseminated. Those get to hear who might not otherwise have done.' Joseph springs up. He is much bigger than Matthew, expects to dominate. âWe used to send letters and pamphlets all over the country, encouraged men north, south, east and west.'
âAnd what good has that done? You can no longer meet in big numbers, can you. No more than twelve! So many are in prison. Spies are everywhere.'
âMatthew.' Lucy has watched him without cease. âHow do you know this if you have been confined to school all this time?'
He blushes. âOh. I can't tell you. I have been reading.' He dismisses her. âBut I must act. It is useless to read, to meet, to talk. Read, meet, talk. Nothing changes.'
Joseph has been searching through portfolios. âThis is how I used to act, Matthew.'
The boy glances at the sheets. Neither laughs nor smiles, replaces them.
âI admire your talent. But these are old things. Who doesn't laugh at the Prince of Wales? Or Farmer George or Pitt. Who ever heard of a king
laughed
off his throne? It's not enough. The monarchy must be overthrown. A republic established.'
âAn impossible quest without bloodshed,' says Joseph crossly.
âIndeed! The Irish know what to do and how to do it. And French ships are waiting for the word.'
âThe French, Matthew? The French are up to their necks in blood. They kill their own. Jacobins guillotine Jacobins. We had our civil war a hundred and fifty years ago; we don't want another. Look how people constantly cry out for peace!'
âWould you execute the King and Queen?' Lucy asks, barely audible.
Matthew turns to her, flat certainty on his face. âWhat difference between the King's turds and mine?'
He pauses, waiting for her reaction. Hoots with boy's coarse laughter. She has lost him.
2
Shouts of âland' echo from the crow's-nest to the lowest deck and all who can run up, pushing for a glimpse. At first there's nothing to see, except great numbers of porpoises leaping and blowing close to the bow of the ship, without ever touching it. Sarah and Tom watch the energy and apparent joy; dare to think it an emblem.
The banks of the Delaware appear, passengers jostle, straining for something familiar: trees, horses, a man with a cow. Two miles of broad river to Philadelphia, temporary capital of America, city of brotherly love.
Charming Molly
moves slowly, so slowly, as though allowing each passenger to absorb similarity, difference. Almost all are sailing to a new life. The voyage, a kind of purgatory, has tested, purged them; now they must ready themselves to step out into paradise.
Many are taken ill during the eight-week journey, numbers die. Somehow, Sarah and Tom avoid the worst disease, though they're sick for a while. At least their thinner, paler selves are safe from pursuit, they think, but their future is unknown. They have no home. No one awaits them. Yet better that than met by the master to whom one's youth, one's life is indentured.
The crowds lining the sides of the ship become silent in the search for familiarity, like myopic scholars constructing a language from fragments: black smoke buffeting up from boiling tar, barrels rolling, men with axes, a whole hedge of fishing nets. They near the main dock and river traffic thickens as it does on the Thames. Gulls circle. Now they understand the pilot's slow approach, for small skiffs and dinghies shoot here and there among the schooners and merchantmen, avoiding strings of barges, plunging carelessly into pathways and wakes, across fixed routes of solid scows.
Sparse houses, small white churches, snow-covered jetties, piles of lumber. Grey plates of ice. Wharves, stores, boat-builders, warehouses, houses crowding the river's edge, taverns: Ship-A-Ground, Boatswain and Call. Finally cranes, crates, shipyards, lines of docked vessels, tangles of masts and ladders, sailors everywhere, porters, lightermen, sacks round their shoulders for warmth. Faces through steam and smoke, black, white, brown, square-boned Indian. Recognisable and utterly strange.
They turn to each other at the same moment, feeling that strangeness. It's like waking from a long and troubled sleep, changed. They look at one another as if they're marvellous beings. Astonished at what they've done. What they will yet do. Laugh aloud. Hold each other close.
They have little to carry, wave away carters. Agree they should find the centre of the city, said to be the most beautiful in America. The air is cold; it's hard to ignore blasts of heat through tavern doors. Travellers and sailors fill the roads, ponies, traps, horses, carts churning up a sludge of snow.
They trudge on boards past river-licked wooden houses. Freezing mud becomes icy cobbles, roads widen, broad pavements appear, buildings grow in stature. Red-brick villas, rows of four-storey dwellings, steeples, municipally confident steps, tall windows, columns.
Sarah stumbles. Tom takes her bag.
âYou're faint, Sarah. We must eat.' They smell coffee from a squat building on the corner of the street.
âOld London Coffee House! Would you believe it?'
âI didn't think they had coffee houses in America, Tom.'
âEverything will surprise us here.'
Sarah drinks coffee, Tom hot toddy, quite unlike the punch she prepared daily at Battle's, for its main ingredient is rum. They order two plates of stew. Men stare at them, assessing their provenance, their wealth, their relationship.
The stew is warming, the meat unidentifiable.
âRaccoon, sir,' the waiter tells them. âWhere're you from?'
âLondon.'
âNo raccoons in London?'
The room, a simpler version of Battle's, tables, chairs, smoke and coffee fumes, handwritten advertisements on the wall, begins to fill with takers for a sale, jaws chawing, spitting on the black tobacco-juice floor.
âMy wife and I have just arrived from London,' Tom tells the owner, a wary Irishman with long sideburns.
My wife.
âWe need rooms for a few nights. Where do you recommend?'
âYour occupation?'
âPrinter and bookseller. My wife's father owns a coffee house in London. We need good, clean rooms.'
Another man might have taken up the connection. âNo tippling houses for you, then. Keep clear of Helltown!' he laughs, unfriendly. âThe Bell, North of Arch Street. Eighth and Sansom. Tell Dobson I sent you.'
It's begun to snow. A group of some fifteen black youths and girls stand in the freezing slush.
âThe sale!' says Tom.
âAre they slaves? Some of them are children, Tom.'
âBonded labourers, Ma'am,' says a man. âYou British?' He spits.
Tom takes Sarah's hand, hastens her away.
Matthew Dobson, the Bell's keeper, is jovial, his tavern a small new building pressed between taller dwelling houses with a yard and stabling at the back. He checks their credentials, shows them a room under the roof, overlooking the street. Flakes shutter the panes.
Two candles illuminate them.
She removes her bonnet, shakes free her hair. âI keep expecting to be knocked off my feet as the ship rolls.'
âWe should rest. I'll seek out Robert Wilson soon and hope he'll have work for me. We'll need an income in a matter of days.'
âI too must find work.'
âThink what you could do with that coffee house, the Old London. Write to Sam and ask him to buy the man out. Don't look shocked! I'm not serious!'
âI think I'd rather forget the past.'
âIn its entirety?'
âOf course not! But I want to remember only what was good. Working in Battle's was like living under water. Now I realise it. I couldn't breathe. I knew nothing about life on land.'
He takes her hands. âMy dearest,' he says, âit's our honeymoon now, our honey-month. We've had our wedding night, have we not, squeezed into our corner of the ship?'
âIt was like going to bed in a drawer!'
They laugh at the memory of the awkwardness, the promise that it drew from them nevertheless.
There isn't much in the room under the Bell's low roof: a chair, wash-stand, jug and basin, a small grate in which Dobson lights a fire. The mattress is lumpy with straw and corn husks: after the voyage it's luxury. They don't leave it till late the following day. A new world.
*
They find Robert Wilson's shop on Second and Chestnut, the street unpaved. In its double-fronted windows are books, bottles of ink, inkwells, pens and writing paper.
âInk!' Tom says. âAltogether a bigger place than Cranch's in Berwick Street. But no matter. I'm certain he won't be too grand for me; Baldwyn spoke well of him. I'm optimistic.'
He links his fingers in hers. Their reflections, side by side, smile back at them from the glass.
Robert Wilson's eyes are an extraordinary blue, unblinking. It's what you notice first about him and for a while notice nothing else. He reads Baldwyn's letter while they wait and glance round the shop, both sides of which are filled with books.
âTom Cranch! Excellent!' They shake hands. âAnd Mrs Cranch!'
They've decided to pass for man and wife until they make true friends who will understand. Many in Philadelphia are Presbyterians or Quakers who might be offended, they think.
Wilson is a Scot.
âHow is my old friend Baldwyn? We grew up together, wee lads. I tried to persuade him to move here, but he went to London and stayed.'
âHe is well but sore-pressed as all are in England and, of course, Scotland too.'
âIs it a social visit you're making, Tom? Or have you and Mrs Cranch chosen to live in this boom land in stead of the old country?'
âWe hope to live here, Robert. But we made no arrangements except for Baldwyn's letter, for we left in a hurry. You may know how the government is closing in on those of radical mind. The Anti-Sedition laws were about to be enacted. We brought little with us, either belongings or money. I have abandoned my business, not doing well, it's true, though I'll surely sell it. Sarah was working in her father's coffee house, Battle's near the Exchange.'