Avalon 9.7 Revolution, part 6 of 6

Twenty Mohawk in the war party parked their canoes on the riverbank, covering them with leaves and fallen branches.  They moved from the riverbank as soon as they heard the shooting.  The house where General George Washington was located was not far from the river.  When they got to the edge of the trees, they planned to charge the house.  They whooped and screamed and ran forward where they bounced off an invisible wall.  Several arrows reached the house from the trees before the arrows also broke against the wall.

Elder Stow came to the ground at the riverside of the house.  He still had his screen device set from the last encounter with the Mohawk.  And it was a Decker wall, which meant he could shoot through it while the Mohawk could not touch him.  He thought about the Masters.  That made him uncertain, but not that uncertain.  He opened his weapon to the widest angle and fired.  The natives, grass, and trees all burned for a considerable distance.  He checked his scanner.  He saw one living Mohawk crouched behind a burning tree near the river.

At the same time, Sukki raised her hands, and the tears came up into her eyes.  One blast of her power, and all but three of the British and Loyalist attackers turned to ash.  Isaac, Hannah, and Mister Lee all dropped their jaws to see it.

Dragoons came from the artificer’s camp, swords drawn, ready for action.  Nanette began to run to the remaining three men from the other direction, so Isaac and William Lee followed her.  Hannah went over to hug a weeping Sukki.

“Hush,” Hannah said.  “I had a grandmother who was a juju woman, but she had no power like that.”

“I’m sorry,” Sukki said through her tears.  “I hate the killing.”

“We all do,” Hannah agreed with her and kindly squeezed the girl.

Out front, Katie, Decker, Lockhart, Lincoln, Tony, Colonel Morgan, Lieutenant Brinkman and Colonel Meade all fired on the enemy from the prone position.  Major Gibbs and the unidentified general moved Washington back inside, backed up by the two guards who appeared to be willing to take a bullet in the back rather than let the general be hit again.  They made it inside without incident, Washington complaining that it was only a scratch.  Major Gibbs and his two men then fired from the widows of the house.

Decker and Katie cleared the road with some automatic rifle fire.  After that, they all fired on any man who was foolish enough to stick his head up.

“William Talbert,” Colonel Morgan identified the enemy.

“Not anymore,” Decker said, to suggest he took care of that problem.

Someone shouted from behind a tree.  “We need to keep them busy so the others can finish the job.”  The people out front could only guess who the others might be.  They all figured the job was to kill Washington.  Decker and Katie each took one side of the tree the yelling man stood behind, and they shredded the tree with automatic rifle fire.  The man bellowed like a buffalo.

In a short while, Washington’s guards came pouring out of their camp and had the men surrounded.  Five surrendered as the black-haired beauty and her friend walked up from the carriage.

“Michelle?” Lincoln had to ask.

“Michelle Marie,” Michelle Marie said.  “And may I present the Marquis de Lafayette.”

“A pleasure,” Lafayette said, shaking hands as the unidentified general came from the house.

“Nathanael?” Michelle Marie asked without spelling out the question.

“The general is fine,” Nathanael said.  “It is but a scratch as he said.  He is more upset that his jacket sleeve is torn.”

“Nathanael Greene?” Katie guessed.

“Oui,” Michelle Marie said with a smile and more introductions and handshaking.

“Katie,” a call came from the side of the house where the kitchen was located.  Nanette came beside a man held by two dismounted dragoons.  Nanette kept trying to talk to the man, but the man kept silent.  “It’s William,” Nanette shouted before they arrived.  “He won’t talk to me.”  Sukki and the household staff followed Nanette, and a half-dozen dismounted dragoons followed them.

“Lock him with the others,” Major Gibbs ordered, and the dragoons saluted in their fashion while Katie spoke.

“He is a British Sergeant out of uniform.  By the rules of war that make him a spy and assassin, as are the others.”

Colonel Morgan shook his head. “The others claimed to be Green Mountain Boys.  They will be tried as traitors and assassins.”

“What is burning?” Decker interrupted everyone.  People smelled the fire at the same time.  Men rushed to get buckets of water from the river.  It was a small group of trees by the riverside.  The fire would not spread far in the snow, but the men were worried to make sure the house did not catch fire.

When Elder Stow turned his screens off, the smoke pushed toward the river, but it would not be long before the others smelled it and saw the fire.  Elder Stow flew to the Mohawk by the tree.  The man had been burned, but not badly, even if the tree was a total loss.

The man screamed when Elder Stow landed.  He went at Elder Stow with a knife, but Elder Stow anticipated this and caught the man’s knife hand around the wrist.  Elder Stow was not the short old man he appeared.  He was a Gott-Druk, which is to say a Neanderthal.  He was nearly as strong as a gorilla.  He twisted the man’s wrist and the knife fell.  Then he grabbed the man by the throat, lifted him easily off the ground, and flew him to the other side of the river.

“You are on the wrong side,” Elder Stow said.  “But be that as it may, you must tell your people American officers are off limits.  You should let the British and Americans settle their own differences and keep your people home and safe.  Soon enough, things will be decided, and you will want to make peace with the victors.  Go.  Tell your people and do not come here again.”

Elder Stow backed up from the man, and at first, the man wept for his hand that hung limp, though he may have also wept for being able to breathe again.  Soon enough, the man left the river behind and headed north, and Elder Stow let him go.

Elder Stow turned to look at the devastation he caused.  Men were coming to the river with buckets for water to at least contain the fire.  He thought it best to turn invisible before he flew back to rejoin the others.  He found them gathered around Ghost the mule who lay on the ground, an arrow in his thigh.  Major Gibbs directed the water bucket traffic.  Colonel Meade gagged at the sight of lumps of charcoal that used to be men.  He went back inside with Lafayette to check on General Washington.  Nathanael Greene turned away and joined the travelers with Colonel Morgan and Lieutenant Brinkman.  The travelers were mostly in tears as a dragoon came to the group.

“What are we going to do without Ghost to carry our things?” Sukki asked as the dragoon spoke loudly to two of his men.

“Fetch the animal doctor,” he ordered, and the two dragoons ran back to their horses.  “It does not look life threatening,” the dragoon added for the travelers.  “The mule should survive.”

“But he will be no good for our journey,” Tony said, and sniffed, and many faces turned to look at Michelle Marie.  She turned instead to speak to the dragoon.

“Captain Lewis.  I need six volunteers from your cavalry troop, men from Maryland and Virginia who know the roads.  These travelers need an escort to the next time gate, and I don’t want to argue about it.”

Captain Lewis looked at General Greene, but the general just nodded.  “Besides being the camp mascot, she gives orders like a general on the battlefield.” General Greene grinned and Michelle Marie returned a snooty look.

“I’m sure we can spare a mule,” Colonel Morgan offered.

“No good,” Katie said.  “If it went through the time gate, it would age maybe sixty years instantly and we would have nothing but a pile of bones in the next time zone.”

Lockhart sighed and spoke to Decker.  “Looks like we are back to where we started when we first got the horses.  We will each have to carry our own supplies.  I think the satchels are still mostly good.”  Decker nodded.

Michelle Marie added.  “I will take Ghost to the Lancaster home in Norristown.  He will live out his days in peace.  Meanwhile, you will have to go.  The chances of you saying something par hasard, is too great.”

“But we just got here,” Sukki said as Elder Stow stepped up and put one arm around her shoulder to comfort the girl.

“But what about the Masters?” Elder Stow asked.

“We don’t know if any of these men were servants of the Masters, or just British spies and paid assassins.  The British have plenty of reason to want to see General Washington dead without help from the Masters.”

Sergeant William and William Talbert both said things that might indicate a future connection,” Decker said as he hugged Nanette.  “But nothing for sure.”

“Circumstantial,” Lockhart added.  “But that kind of makes it hard to know in the future.”

“You just do the right thing,” Michelle Marie said.  “Stop the paid assassins and let the Masters sort things out, which reminds me.  Poor Michael Henry will not get his money back on the mule.”

“Michael Henry?” Nanette asked.

“Marshal Casidy,” Michelle Marie said with a great big smile.  “Where you are going next.”

************************

MONDAY

Episode 9.8 The Wild West. the travelers have a time trying to catch up with Marshal Casidy. While they move through the Black Hills, Dakota territory, they run into plenty of natives and gunmen around Deadwood. Until Monday, Happy Reading.

*

Avalon 9.7 Revolution, part 5 of 6

As it turned out, the travelers and the rifle company arrived just ahead of the barges.  Several hundred hungry men stood on the banks of the river ready to unload the supplies when they docked.  The supply wagons stopped to unload at the artificers.  The wagons would be taken by the teamsters to the blacksmith shops for repairs before being sent back to Reading for another load.  The artificers included everything from candlemakers to gunsmiths.

“The actual engineers for the army,” Tony called them, though most of the eyes and ears of the travelers were on a squad of well-turned-out dragoons who spoke with Colonel Morgan.

“This way,” Colonel Morgan gathered the travelers.  “Lieutenant Brinkman will accompany you while I report to the general. He will keep the guards and others from asking too many questions.  Meanwhile, I am sending my officers with the men to set a temporary camp between the guard and Sullivan’s Brigade, across the road from a rifle pit where they can practice if they can’t stand still.”  They did not go far, crossing only a shallow, ice-covered stream before they got down near a house.  They saw two guards on the porch and more dragoons who watched them carefully, so they appreciated Lieutenant Brinkman’s presence.

Colonel Morgan spoke again to Katie and Lockhart.  “Lieutenant Colonel Hamilton and the rest of the men fetched from the northern department should arrive in two or three days.  With the artillery, we should be up to full strength, but it looks to me there are too many ragged and naked men to give a good account. I would not be surprised if half of the men deserted in the next two months of winter.  Please excuse me.  I have to report.”  He walked up to the house and the guards let him inside.

“The patriots will stay,” Lincoln said, hopefully.  Then he turned with the others to look more closely at their surroundings.  From that place, they could see much of the camp, and Katie and Tony talked.

“The housing is being built by the soldiers themselves,” Katie said.  “You can see, most of it is unfinished, but it gives the men something to do to keep their minds off the cold and their empty bellies.”

“It is a much bigger camp than I imagined,” Lockhart admitted.

“As I recall, there are eleven to fourteen thousand men in the camp, or more,” Katie said.  “A few claim the actual number is around twenty thousand.”

Tony pointed out several things to Decker and Lincoln as well.  “They are building forts, like redoubts against being overrun by the enemy.”

“I see most of their artillery is on that small hill,” Decker said.

“Mount Joy,” Lincoln named the hill and got out the database to be sure.

“They are also digging entrenchments in case the British try something,” Tony finished his thought and pointed to several places where the men were working.

“They should not put all of their artillery in one spot,” Decker said, seemingly stuck on that idea.  “Hills are great to screen the camp against enemy spies and all, but they should have men up all along that ridge.  The hills are only good if you keep the enemy off the high ground.  Once you surrender the high ground, the valley risks becoming a death valley.”

“I’ll make a note,” Lieutenant Brinkman said.  “But I am sure the general has piquets in the hills.”  He pointed to the ridge behind the small hill.

While they waited, Sukki and Nanette wandered over to the cooking fires which were outside the main house beside the road.  Elder Stow went with them to watch them.  They found a black couple there cooking enough for a regiment.

“Hannah.  Get your bread out of the oven.  The roast has to go in.” The woman nodded and went to do that very thing while the man stepped up to the visitors.  He looked at Nanette, Sukki, Elder Stow, and once more at Nanette before he spoke to Elder Stow.  “How may I help you?”  He looked surprised when Nanette answered.

“I am Nanette, Missus Lieutenant Colonel Milton Decker.  This is my sister Sukki and her adopted father, Elder Stow.”

“Isaac Till and my wife Hannah.”  The man smiled and pointed at the woman.  The woman, Hannah, acknowledged everyone with a nod while she carried the steaming hot bread inside the house.

“Are you cooking for the whole command staff?” Sukki asked as she saw Hannah come back out carrying a large cut of beef in a roasting pan.

“General Washington and his staff.”  Isaac nodded while a second black man stepped up.  This man looked exceptionally clean and well dressed.

“Isaac.  The general would like some tea.”

“Of course, Mister Lee,” Isaac said, and turned to the visitors.  “I always keep the kettle near hot for tea.”  He moved the kettle to a hotter spot on the fire and got a pot and some tea leaves from a small tent.

“I see you have met some of our visitors,” Mister Lee said and turned to the three travelers with a smile.

“Nanette Decker, my sister Sukki and her adopted father Elder Stow,” Nanette spoke up and stuck out her hand.

“William Lee, a pleasure,” the man said and shook that hand.  “General Washington’s left-hand man.”

“Not the right-hand man?” Nanette asked.

Mister Lee shook his head.  “That would be Colonel Meade, his aid-de-camp.”

“Of course,” Elder Stow said, and at that moment, Colonel Meade was introducing himself and Major Gibbs, commander of General Washington’s guards, to Katie and Lockhart.  Katie even offered a small salute.

“My wife is a major in the Marine Corps,” Lockhart said.

“And you?” Major Gibbs asked, not liking the idea of being the same rank as a woman.

“Assistant Director of the Men in Black,” Lockhart admitted.  The men stared at him with eyes that seemed to understand something.  Lockhart decided to take the next step.  “We are from the year 2010.  We have a quicker way to get home than living through the next two hundred and thirty years, though it will likely be the end of 2015, or early 2016 by the time we get there.  That is all I can say about that.”

Colonel Meade looked at the sky and mumbled.  “That is one complication we do not need right now.”  He looked again at Lockhart.  “We have enough trouble right now getting the men properly sheltered, dressed, and fed.”

Katie kicked the snow at her feet.  It was honestly half snow and half mud.  “It is not as cold here as history remembers,” she said.

“Cold enough,” Major Gibbs said.  “But we were helped greatly a couple of days ago when Missus Lancaster and the women of Philadelphia rode in with ten wagons of shirts and other clothing.  The wagons all had a false bottom, and she got the shirts out right under the nose of the British.”

Colonel Meade added a note. “The general has written to Henry Laurens and the Continental Congress for help.  I hope they do something soon.”

“Missus Lancaster,” Lockhart said.  “Michelle Marie?”  He wanted to be sure who they were talking about.

Major Gibbs nodded and Colonel Meade spoke.  “She calls herself the camp mascot.  She travels around to the various brigade camps with her violin and her voice.  She is a great help with morale.”

Lockhart and Katie nodded as they got interrupted.  A carriage came up the road that ran beside the creek.  A black-haired, green-eyed beauty stuck her head out of the carriage window and waved.  “Lockhart,” she shouted.  When she pulled her head back inside, the man she rode with asked.

« Amis à vous ? »

« Oui.  J’ai beaucoup d’amis, » she answered.

Before the carriage could arrive, Colonel Morgan and General Washington came out the door with another general officer not readily recognizable.  A rifle fired from down the road toward the guard camp.  The bullet creased General Washington’s arm and he fell to the ground.

Colonel Morgan and Lieutenant Brinkman ran to their horses to arm themselves.  Katie and Decker grabbed their rifles, their horses not yet being in a panic.  Lockhart and Tony pulled their revolvers, and Lockhart grabbed his shotgun before the two of them shooed the horses toward the side of the house by the river to get them out of the way.

“Stay down,” Katie ordered Colonel Meade who knelt by his general with the other unidentified general.

“Stay down,” Decker echoed, as the two guards on the door ran up to the general, their eyes down the road, trying to identify who fired that shot.  They all heard yelling as some men not far away got behind the trees and the bushes left along the road or laid prone on the road itself to make themselves as small a target as possible.

Out by the kitchen, Isaac grabbed the rifle he had leaning against the tree there.  He had to load it, which took time.  A dozen men dressed like workers came from the artificer camp carrying rifles sporting bayonets.  Nanette recognized one of the men.

“William,” she yelled, even as she reached into her purse.  She had taken to carrying the medical bag the way Alexis had, but unlike Alexis, she was not against using the Beretta Boston gave her.

Elder Stow immediately pulled up his scanner to look at the house and grounds.

The workmen, who were either British soldiers or loyalists opened fire from the road.  Nanette fired twice.  William Lee and Hannah both came out of the kitchen preparation room and had weapons that they fired.  Isaac fired last.  None of the people in the kitchen area got hit, but one British man went down, and another caught a bullet in his arm.

“Sukki, help out,” Elder Stow ordered as he took to the air.  They were being attacked from all sides, but the ones out front or by the kitchen did not know about the ones coming up from the river.

Avalon 9.7 Revolution, part 1 of 6

After 1755 A.D. Valley Forge

Kairos lifetime 117: Michelle Marie Lancaster

Recording …

People walked through the streets despite the cold weather.  The town square appeared full of revelers.  They had plenty of guns in the street as well.  Men shot at targets or just up into the air making a loud bang every so often.  Booths held all sorts of food and beer.  And music sounded like an undercurrent to the revelry.  A dozen-piece orchestra played, and a choir sang on the steps of the church.

Katie grabbed one woman’s attention to ask what it was all about, but before she could frame her question the woman shouted, “Happy New Year.”

“What year?” Katie asked instead.

“Seventeen seventy-eight, of course,” the woman said and hurried off on her errand.  The sky looked overcast, like it might snow in the frigid weather, but for the present, the people were out in the square celebrating the turn of the year.

Lincoln, having read up on the subject, carefully asked two men what colony they were in.  He mentioned they had been traveling through the wilderness for some time.

“The great state of Massachusetts,” the man said.  “We are smack in the corner with the wilderness of New York in that direction and Connecticut below us.”  He pointed to the west and south to show what he meant.

“Connecticut is always beneath us,” another man interjected, slapped his friend hard on the shoulder, and laughed, like he made a great joke.  The first man rubbed his shoulder as they walked off.

“Where are you headed?”  A different man walked up and asked as he eyed them suspiciously.  The man wore deerskin clothes and a bearskin coat.  It made him appear Native American, though he was clearly European.

“Pennsylvania,” Lincoln answered.  Katie and Lockhart began to pay attention.  Tony spoke up to get between Lincoln and the questioner.

“We heard General Howe and the British took Philadelphia.  General Washington is going to need all the help he can get.”

“I don’t imagine your black boy and his woman will be much help,” the man said, pointing at Decker and Nanette.  Nanette had to put her hand out to keep Decker from responding, though she could not prevent Decker’s growl.

“None of your concern, William Talbert,” yet another man said as he entered the conversation.  He shooed off the suspicious one and turned to the travelers.  “Colonel Daniel Morgan,” the man, dressed in something like a uniform, introduced himself.  ‘My regiment of four hundred riflemen, are camped east of town.  We are always looking for new recruits.  I see you have some unfamiliar weapons.  Are they any good?   Are you any good with them?”

Lockhart looked at Katie and she nodded in a kind of permission, like she knew this colonel by name and knew he was one of the good guys.  “Decker,” Lockhart said, knowing Decker had some steam to vent.

“My pleasure,” Decker responded.  He lifted his rifle and aimed at the clay pots men had set up on a fence rail with a barn wall twenty paces behind it.  Decker sat on his horse so he could see and aim over the heads of the men.  He sat about a hundred yards further away than the line the men used for their rifle practice.  He considered getting out his scope, but it was not that far.  One shot, and a clay pot busted to pieces.  He shot three more times without reloading, and the three other pots on the rail broke.  Two got knocked off the rail.  The third cracked in half.

“Huzzah,” Colonel Morgan said in his surprise.  He turned to Decker and said, “That is a remarkable rifle.  May I see it?”

Decker shook his head.  “Not allowed,” he said, and looked at Lockhart to explain, or not.

“That rifle comes from about three hundred and thirty years in the future,” Lockhart said honestly enough.  “It is not our intention to change history.”

Katie spoke up.  “But we are headed to Valley Forge in support of General Washington if you are going that way.  There is safety in numbers and maybe we could share some thoughts with you privately on the road.”

“The future you say.” Colonel Morgan looked at Lockhart and took a minute to look at the others as a new uniformed man jogged up to join the group.  The new man looked carefully at the travelers before he spoke.

“Your rifle demonstration was most impressive.  May I see the instrument?”

“Not allowed,” Colonel Morgan said as he introduced his subordinate.  “Captain Price.  General Washington sent him and his men to fetch us from the Northern Department after Burgoyne surrendered.  George, I need you to move a few of your tents to make room beside the headquarters tent.  These people have valuable information, and I don’t intend to let them far from my sight.”

“Colonel?”

“An order.  Run.”  Colonel Morgan turned to the travelers who dismounted to walk their horses.  He waited until Captain Price was out of earshot.  “The future you say,” he repeated.

“You seem easily convinced after one simple rifle demonstration,” Lockhart said, some old police suspicion creeping into his voice.

Colonel Morgan nodded and confessed.  “Before I took the rifle company north to join Gates, I had a long talk with Missus Lancaster, General Washington himself sitting right there, listening to it all, not blinking an eye at a word she said.  She said she had friends from the future that might show up in time for what she called the Battle of Saratoga.  She did not explain what she meant by that, but she said lately you have been showing up at critical points in history.  I understand basically what she meant by Saratoga now, and how important to the war effort the British surrender is.  But now I wonder why you are here… now.”

“Michelle Marie Lancaster,” Lincoln interrupted.  “The Kairos in this day.  Her husband is gone.  A Shawnee raid in the western territories out by Fort Duquesne, that’s Pittsburg.  Just before the start of the Revolution.  Sorry.”  Lincoln honestly tried not to say too much.

“She is a beauty, and French besides,” Colonel Morgan said with a smile spreading across his face.  “I imagine she can have any man she wants.”  He coughed and looked serious again.  “She did say to look for you, and described you a bit, just in case.  And you are from the future?  She said the dark man was a colonel?”

“Lieutenant colonel, sir,” Decker said.  “And it is African American.”

“So she said,” Colonel Morgan answered.  “She did not explain that either, though it was a designation I never heard of.”

Katie butted in. “Like Polish American or German American.  Like Asian American or Native American.”

“So you say.  I would guess as many as one out of twenty, maybe one out of ten men in Washington’s command are African American.  Some are free men.  Some are slaves fighting for their freedom.” Colonel Morgan shrugged. “I understand the darkies, being men, wanting to fight, especially if they are fighting for their freedom.  What I don’t understand is how a woman becomes a major, and marine besides.”

“We work with the navy,” Katie said.

“I know what a marine is,” Colonel Morgan said.  “I know some ship captains who believe it is bad luck just having a woman on board.”  He paused before he said, “This way.”  He began to walk, and the travelers followed.

“We learned a few things in the future,” Katie said.  “Times change.”

“They must,” Colonel Morgan agreed.  “Don’t get me wrong.  Though I only spoke with her a couple of times, I don’t imagine there is anything Missus Lancaster could not do if she set her mind to it.”

“You would be surprised at some of the things she has done,” Lockhart said.

“I am sure I would,” Colonel Morgan agreed, and slowed as they came to the place where the road left the town.  “I don’t suppose you might tell me how this war turns out.  Missus Lancaster appears to be working hard for the patriot cause, so maybe that says we get something out of it.”

“Can’t tell,” Katie said.

“Dare not tell,” Lockhart echoed.

Colonel Morgan nodded again.  “She said I was not supposed to ask, but I thought it was worth a try.”  They came to a stop at the edge of a camp where three men were taking down a tent to move it.  Some tents were in among the trees.  Most of the tents were spread across a field, no doubt a farm field in winter.

“This is more than enough room,” Tony said as he brought Ghost to the front and people got their tents to set up the camp.

Colonel Morgan had to think a minute before he spoke.  “We travel roughly twenty-five miles a day.  We might make thirty on our own, but sometimes we hardly do twenty because of the wagons and the women.  I suppose your women can travel with the wagons…”

“We need to stick together,” Elder Stow interrupted.

“We carry our own tents and necessities,” Tony added.

“But we can maybe share a cooking fire in the wilderness.”  Katie suggested., “Along with the stories and things that we are allowed to tell you, if you want.”

  Colonel Morgan agreed, and on his own he decided it would be best to limit contact between these people and his riflemen.  He watched Sukki put her hand over the fire that had been allowed to dwindle while the men moved their tents. The fire sprang up almost too much and too fast, but Sukki managed a couple of logs before the whole fire became ash. He watched Nanette toss a cloth ball at the ground and say the word “tent.”  The cloth ball expanded and shaped itself into a tent for two, and Colonel Morgan went into his own tent thinking, Yes.  Limit contact.