“I will not leave Mr. Lister to hang,” Duncan declared.
“A fleeing bond servant is sometimes easy to forget,” Crispin said. “If Mr. Lister flees, however, they will say it proves his guilt-and an escaped murderer, they are sure to hound.”
“He speaks true, Clan McCallum,” the old Scot said through the shadows.
“Do you think Mr. Lister guilty?” Duncan asked Sarah, forgetting until the words left his mouth how she reacted to questioning.
Sarah stopped applying the liniment but did not bolt. “No,” she said at last. “But if you stay, my father will use him against you.”
“This lass is wise,” Lister said. “Wait a few days, then disappear.”
“I will report you ill,” Crispin added, “so you will not be missed for a day or two. There is no war in the south. Scots go there, far from the law. Far from the army,” he said in a pointed voice. “They will know about your brother. If Captain McCallum of the Forty-second has half the sense of his brother, he will already be there, with answers for your mysteries.”
“I cannot leave,” Duncan insisted.
“Then ye be a damned fool,” Lister shot back.
“That,” Duncan said in a falling voice, “we can take as proven.” If he did find the truth in the Carolinas, he would return, even it guaranteed an iron collar for seven years.
Crispin began covering the last of Duncan’s wounds. Sarah had melted back into the darkness without a word.
When he returned to the schoolhouse, his room had been ransacked. His pallet was thrown against the wall, and his few articles of clothing were strewn about the room and stepped on by muddy boots. The drawers of the chest all hung open. Duncan pulled the pallet onto the ropes of the bed frame and dropped onto it, belly first, and was instantly lost in slumber.
There was a half day of lessons slated for the morning, and Duncan was up at dawn, silently taking breakfast in the kitchen with the house staff, returning to stand on a wooden box to write the alphabet at the top of the large slate behind his table, pausing every few moments to fight the pain that shot across his back each time he stretched out his arm.
As he rang the bell at eight o’clock, the young Ramsey children bolted out of the great house, Sarah walking a few steps behind, wearing a plain grey dress, its lace collar buttoned tightly around her neck, her hair tied in a ribbon at the back. She offered Duncan a nervous smile and joined her siblings inside, sitting at the small table behind Jonathan and Virginia. They recited the alphabet together, then Duncan invited them to write a word that began with the letter A, to gauge how far the younger children had been instructed.
Jonathan and Virginia worked quickly but Sarah stared at the alphabet, pain in her eyes, before laboring over her own slate. After a moment Jonathan held up his board, showing the word Albany in careful letters. Ax, Virginia had written in a practiced hand. When Duncan stepped to Sarah, her hand trembled, and she pushed the slate away as if it scared her. She had written Akrn in crude, misshapen letters, but expertly sketched a tree beside them.
“Excellent,” Duncan said, pushing the slate back so her siblings could not see.
He read aloud the remainder of the morning, relieving Sarah of the need to write again. When he dismissed school for the day, she lingered behind.
“My tongue can find the words, but not my fingers,” she said, gazing awkwardly at the floor. “My mother taught me before. But it is difficult to bring those things back from so many seasons ago.” Her gaze lifted toward the window. A little gray bird perched on the windowsill, looking inside. “I am ashamed.”
“There is no shame in the lamb who stumbles at first step.”
The hint of a smile flickered on Sarah’s face, and she dared to meet Duncan’s own gaze for a moment. “Could I learn the songs your mother would sing to us orphan lambs?”
“They were in Gorse, the old Gaelic,” Duncan said, not daring to ask why she referred to herself as an orphan. “You have to have an ear for it, like the pipes.”
“Ceol Gaidhlig,” she said. Gaelic music, in the old tongue.
He stared at her. A question is as good as a bludgeon to her, he reminded himself. She had, after all, spent months with Adam, himself a Gaidheal, a Highlander. “You are a never-ending source of mystery, Miss Ramsey. It reminds me of another word. Haudenosaunee.”
Sarah noticeably relaxed. “It means people of the longhouse. The Iroquois. The Six, the sergeant calls them.”
“Longhouse?”
She picked up the chalk and drew a long structure with a curved roof, explaining how saplings were tied together for the ridge poles and covered with elm bark to make a house, with several hearths inside, one for each family.
“It would be a rare bargain,” Duncan proposed, “if for each English word I taught you, you would give me one in Iroquois.”
She offered a nervous nod, and he wrote the word maple. “The Haudenosaunee do not draw their words,” she said, “but I can give you the saying of them.” She drew a turtle. “Anonwara,” she pronounced, a hint of excitement in her voice.
They worked for another two hours, without lunch, and Sarah’s table became covered with papers filled with the words she asked Duncan to spell. Oak, hemlock, cedar, and a dozen other trees. Deer, beaver, eagle, owl, wolf, beside drawings with his own makeshift spellings of the Indian words she gave him. Erhar, dog. Anokie, muskrat. Kenreks, lion. Ohskenonton, deer. As a learner, she was as fleet as a creature of the forest, and for the first time Duncan saw on her countenance something that, if not contentment, was at least satisfaction.
“And bear?” Duncan asked.
Sarah hesitated only a moment. “Ohkwari.”
It was what she had cried out that first night, in the cells, then again in the barn. Haudenosaunee, she had said, then ohkwari.
“Your father will have missed you at lunch, Miss Ramsey,” he reminded her.
Sarah gave a sour smile. “He takes his lunch privately, at his desk.” She looked up. “I am not practiced in the ways of etiquette. But we are not so many years apart. When we are together like this, are we allowed to use our Christian names? Duncan.”
“I remember telling you stories of my childhood, Sarah,” he ventured.
She stood, and he was sure he had frightened her away, but she stepped to the window. The view of the river and the deep woods seemed to quiet her. “When I left the spar that day, it seemed I was falling forever. I don’t remember being in the water. I just awoke in the cell and thought I was in one of the places spirits go to. It was only later in New York that Captain Woolford told me you were the one who saved me.” She searched his face as if for an explanation. “You cleaned my grave,” she added in hollow whisper, as if it had been another way of saving her life. She leaned into the glow of the window and touched the glass with her fingertips. “I remember so little of my time on the ship. I was always sleeping, or felt as asleep even when awake.”
“They dosed you with strong medicine.”
“They gave me tea, always bitter teas. My stomach would turn over from it, but they would just give me more. Reverend Arnold explained I was going through a spiritual crisis, and I knew he was right from all the terrible visions I had. He said that it was the hand of Providence at work in me, that going across the ocean in my strange hibernation allowed me to be made anew. They said after you fished me from the water, that the captain insisted I be put in the cell. The vicar was very apologetic. Lord Ramsey said it was the right thing to do, to keep me safe.” She stepped back to the desk and began sounding out each of Duncan’s written words. “Beaver. . deer. . wolf.”