Traitor to the Crown The Patriot Witch (37 page)

BOOK: Traitor to the Crown The Patriot Witch
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A crowd of men had gathered around him to listen. A few of them moved behind Proctor.

“A fisherman took me into the city,” he said, and then, because he didn't want to appear to be a spy, he added, “so I could check on my aunt. I was going to try to get her out, but with the attack coming, I thought I should get myself out first. I convinced the Redcoats I was one of their stable boys and they brought me over. Then I made a break for it, to get up here.”

As he spoke, he looked around at the faces. They were similar to the British faces below—some grim, some grinning, some angry. Most young, about his age. But they were wearing the same clothes they'd wear to work in a field, they stood about as they pleased taking their ease, and they argued with their officers when they didn't care for an order.

The vision he had, the scrying when the boy's blood was spilled, came back to him.

This hillside. Smoke. Relentless fire. The dead. The survivors fleeing.

Blood on his hands.

His failure.

“I need to find my commanding officer and report,” he finished.

“Soon enough,” the man said. “You say you're from Lincoln—we got any Lincoln men nearby?”

“Not that I know,” one man answered.

“Lincoln's 'tween Lexington and Concord,” another said.

“I was at Lexington,” Proctor replied. “Captain Parker, from Lexington, he'd remember me, if he's here. He loaned me shot at the bloody corner.”

Just saying the names evoked memories of that day, only two months past. Was it only two months? He felt like he lived in a different world now than he did then, like he'd become a different man. And this—looking at the fort, the lines of the colonial militia, the lines of the British below, protected by the guns on their warships—this promised to be a different kind of battle.

“I recognize 'im,” a voice said. It was a black man, the one who'd pulled him free of Pitcairn's guards when he'd tried to take the medallion.

“Who're you?” a surly man asked

“That's Peter Salem,” another answered. “I know him.”

“I know him too,” the leader said. “Hi, Peter.”

“Hi, Will. He was in the thick of it on the Concord Road,” Salem said with a nod at Proctor. “There was one last Redcoat riding a horse, and this fellow went down to the road and knocked him clean off.”

“So you know him?” Will asked.

“I don't know as I can say I know him, because we've never been introduced,” Salem said. “But that was something, taking that officer off his horse, and I'd recognize the man who did it anywhere, even I saw him dressed up like a Turk in Timbuktu.”

The men laughed at that.

Will held out his hand. “It's good to meet you, Brown. I hope you'll forgive the questions.”

“No problem. There's a war on, I understand.”

“Major Israel Putnam is in charge.”

“Only a major?” Proctor said.

“After the way we whipped them in Lexington, I guess we figured we don't need a general to beat 'em here.”

The men laughed again, and Proctor was struck by the similarity they shared with the men on the other side. He put his hand in his pocket and felt the lead balls. It seemed like a small shield against so much bloodshed.

“Old Put's the one you'll want to report to,” Will said. “You'll find him down at the center of the line.”

“Thank you,” Proctor said, and he took off at a quick pace. The British had aimed their cannons at the fort now, and a plume of dirt shot up in front of him as a ball struck just outside the wall. He waited until the dirt settled and then kept on going, asking for Putnam. There were so few men up here, maybe no more than a thousand, about a quarter of the number he saw among the British.

Putnam was older and more rotund than the other men in the redoubt, but no one looked more like an officer or moved with more purpose and energy. He was taking reports from half a dozen men, stopping every so often to mop his brow with a handkerchief. When it was his turn, Proctor repeated the story he told the other men.

“The British are moving cannons up to cover the road,” Proctor said. “They're planning to rake us, if we have to retreat.”

“That's excellent, Brown, excellent.” Turning toward one of his men, Putnam said, “Have them throw up some defenses along the Charlestown Neck to cover our retreat.”

The man, who looked exhausted the way that only a man who has been digging all night can, saluted briskly and ran off to see to it.

Putnam turned back to Brown. “Do you have a musket?”

“Not here—the Lobsters would have been suspicious if I carried it along their lines.”

“True.” Putnam chuckled, mopping the sweat from his forehead. “The fact is, we've got more men than guns.”

“How're you on shovels?”

Another shell whistled in and hit the wall nearby, throwing up dirt and shards of wood. A man fell down, pierced.

“We're short on shovels right now too,” Putnam said. “Truth is, most of the digging's done and it's time to fight. If you stay back and help any wounded men away from the wall, we'd appreciate it. You'll be able to pick up a musket and fill in a hole on the line at some point.”

“Yes, sir,” Proctor said. As Putnam turned away to his next task, Proctor said, “Sir?”

“What is it, Brown?”

Proctor pulled one of the musket balls from his pocket. “If you would take this for luck, sir, it would honor me.”

Putnam saw it was a musket ball and dropped it in his bag. “You don't have any powder to go with that ball, do you?”

“No, sir,” Proctor said. “That's why it seemed like I ought to give it to someone who might use it.”

“Powder would have been luckier for us all. But thank you.”

Proctor moved along the line, asking after officers and finding few senior men there. He gave the charmed musket balls to a few captains. They looked at him oddly, but if he handed it over with some excuse, and moved on quickly, no one looked too closely. Suddenly, he found himself wishing for the widow's sickness on him again. If he could see the skulls behind the flesh, he'd know for certain which men to give them to. Instead, he watched for anyone else who acted like a leader and passed a lead ball on to them. It was the best he could do.

The sun was high overhead: it was past noon. All of Charlestown was aflame, the wind pushing the smoke over the hilltop so that their eyes constantly stung. British mortars fell along the fort so often that the sound of explosions no more startled him than the sound of his own heart. But when he looked over the wall and saw the lines of the British regulars, thousands of them, ready to attack, his pulse skipped a beat.

The attack would begin anytime now.

A cheer went down the line as a single man, followed by
a dozen others, approached Putnam. He was tall, fair-haired, and handsome.

“Who is that?” Proctor asked a man nearby.

“That's Doctor Warren. He was just appointed major-general of the whole army yesterday.”

“Ah,” Proctor said, recognizing the name. Dr. Joseph Warren was considered about the finest man in all of Massachusetts—intelligent, brave, and the best physician in the colonies. He pushed closer to hear his conversation with Putnam.

“—I wouldn't think of it,” Warren was saying.

“By rights you should be the commanding officer here,” Putnam said.

“Nonsense,” Warren replied. “My commission hasn't taken effect yet. It's dated for tomorrow.”

“A mere formality.”

“Not at all,” Warren said. “You were here first, you threw up the defenses, you've taken all the reports, and you understand the situation. I'm here as a volunteer, and I'll serve like any other.”

“Are you certain?” Putnam asked, though he was clearly flattered by the younger man. “There is no ego involved. I would be honored to pass the command to you.”

“As I am honored to serve under you,” Warren said. The way he said it, Proctor felt that he wasn't merely being polite or affecting enthusiasm. He really meant it. “Now, I have my own musket and enough shot and powder to share,” he added. “Where should I go?”

Several company commanders spoke up at once, and not just for the chance at an extra round or two of powder. Warren was one of the great leaders of the colony. Proctor thought he had never seen a more gracious man. He needed one of the charms, if any man did.

As Warren moved away from Putnam, Proctor shoved his hand in his pocket and pushed forward. “Doctor Warren, if I may trouble you. Doctor Warren?”

And then his footsteps faltered. His pocket was empty. He had no charms left.

“Yes?” Warren said, puzzled.

Proctor pulled out his empty hand and offered it to Warren. “I just wanted to shake the hand of one of the finest men in Massachusetts.”

The men around them laughed at that, but Warren took his hand and shook it heartily.

Another shell whistled over the wall, and a few men ducked as it exploded. But Warren held his head up, and the others were quick to mimic his example.

“They're coming!”

The line of Redcoats had started marching up the hill. The drummers beat out the call to arms and men ran to defend the wall, taking any spot that was empty, regardless of where they might be assigned. Proctor grabbed a tall, thin fellow as he ran by. “Can you spare one lead?”

The man opened his mouth to say something, but his fellows were calling for him to join them.

“Please,” Proctor said.

He thrust his hand in his bag and pulled out one round, slapping it into Proctor's palm. Proctor retreated from the front line, back among the drummers and fifers and the other unarmed volunteers.

He sat down and looked at the lead ball. It seemed like such a small thing, that could snuff a man's life. It seemed smaller still, that it could act as a protection. He cupped his hands around the lead ball, holding his lips to the gap between his thumbs.

“Dear Father in heaven,” he prayed. “May Thy light shine on this simple ball of lead. If it be Thy will, let it become a shield of life rather than a taker of life. Let no man who bears it fall before his appointed time.”

He opened his hand. Nothing had happened.

Clasping his hands again, he prayed more fervently, repeating it three times under his breath. But he didn't feel
anything flow through him—no tingle of energy, no warmth, no difference at all.

The lead ball sat in his palm. It was still no more than a lead ball.

Maybe he couldn't do it without Deborah. Maybe she had drained all his magic too. All his power had flowed into the widow, and all the widow's power flowed into Deborah. Maybe he had nothing left.

The British fired as they advanced, the front line shooting, the second line marching up and doing the same while the first line reloaded. One man fell nearby, struck by a musket ball, and lay still.

“Hold your fire!” Putnam shouted. “We have to make every shot count—don't fire until you see the whites of their eyes.”

“If they get that close, we can stab them and save the powder,” a man called back, and they all laughed.

“Be firm, men,” Putnam shouted.

Another series of mortars fell, smashing parts of the wall and throwing back the defenders. A round of musket fire followed. A man fell nearby, clutching his shoulder and moaning as he tried to crawl back up to his position.

“Can we have a hand?” a captain called.

Proctor dropped the lead ball and ran forward to help, hunched over to duck the musket fire buzzing overhead. The wounded man's shoulder was smashed, his right arm hanging bloody and dead. With one hand under his left arm and the other on the man's belt, Proctor hauled him back from the line and loaded him on one of the horse carts that were waiting to remove the wounded.

“Hold,” Putnam shouted, and the call went down the line.

Proctor ran to drag another injured man away from the wall. Halfway to the carts, he realized the man was dead. At that moment a shell crashed over the wall, and Proctor instinctively covered the body with his own.

The British soldiers were less than a hundred yards away. They had the range with their cannons. They had numbers on their side.

The colonials had the high ground and they had courage. At least that part of the widow's curse had failed.

The British came within fifty yards now, and still the colonials held their fire. Another round of musket fire came over the ramparts and more men fell, but none ran.

And none, Proctor saw, were officers, even though they stood exposed to harm as they marked the progress of the British line.

Maybe it was just luck. There were so few officers among them.

Maybe it was Deborah's charm.

He glanced over the wall. The British regulars were less than fifty yards away. Putnam cried, “Fire!”

Fire flashed in firing pans down the row of the wall's defenders, flame jetted from their musket bores, and a cloud of smoke rolled off their weapons.

When the wind tore away the smoke, the British were still advancing. Their next round of fire knocked down more of the defenders, who, spread out over a line only one man deep, were now frantically reloading.

Proctor looked down at the dead man in his arms, at the blood on his hands, and suddenly he knew what his scrying meant. He knew that the little boy's life blood had told him what he needed to know as it flowed out of his body into the widow's bowl.

Taking the blood on his hand, Proctor cast it in a circle.

“Let this man's sacrifice not be in vain,” he said in a rush, hurrying to finish before the Redcoats came over the wall. He groped for words, trying to remember it the way that Deborah had taught it to Alexandra. “Let his blood, shed to defend this ground, defend all men who stand their ground. Reverse the widow's spell.”

The New Englanders had reloaded their muskets.

Putnam, standing at the wall, yelled, “Fire!”

The colonists' weapons jetted flame and smoke again, firing for only the second time since the British had begun the battle.

Chapter 25

Proctor ran to the wall. When the wind sheared away the smoke, the British were in disarray, many of the men fallen, others dragging them back from the American position.

Tobias, the little drummer, appeared on the battlements beside Proctor. “We beat them! We beat them—huzzah!”

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