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"When I came to, she was gone," the Virginian reported in an anxious voice.

"Mokie is safe for now, back with Brindle," Conawago said.

Hadley gave a sigh of relief then reached inside his shirt and handed Duncan a tattered piece of paper. "You wanted to know about the owners of the Susquehanna Company. Being a Burke has its advantages. I spoke to the man who is the tobacco merchant who acts as agent for the Virginia land company, then the family banker here. They made some inquiries. Before leaving for the pier, I took their reports."

The paper contained a list of eight names, with numbers beside each indicating a number of shares. "Eight of the original owners have sold their shares. Each of them had a tale of reversals. A ship lost at sea. A sugar mill burned in a southern colony. An unexpectedly adverse judgment from a Philadelphia judge. Orders for timber or turpentine cancelled. Contracts with the army suddenly terminated. They all suddenly needed cash."

"And Ramsey bought them out," Duncan suggested.

Hadley nodded. "He promised to do it quietly, so as not to cause public humiliation. It seems he now has a controlling interest in the company opposing Virginia for the western lands." He pushed Duncan's hand back when he tried to return the paper.

"No," Duncan said. "Get this to Brindle. Tell him everything you've just told me. Tell him if he looks he will find Ramsey's hand in at least some of the calamities that forced the sales of shares."

Hadley nodded and secreted the paper back inside his shirt.

"And ask the magistrate's help in finding the merchant Waller. We must know who replenishes his accounts, who instructed him in dealing with the slaves."

The Virginian nodded again. "I will ask if I might stay in his stable, to help watch over Becca and Mokie and the little one." He hesitated, looking up at Duncan. "What did you mean, the girl's safe for now?"

"In the race to protect Mokie," Duncan replied, "has no one asked why they want her dead? She is still somehow a threat to the killers."

"But she is only-" Hadley began, then paused.

Voices were being raised in the house. In the light cast through the open window Duncan saw something fly across the kitchen, heard the shattering of china dishes and the frightened cry of a woman.

"What kind of bull have they released in there?" Conawago wondered out loud as a pot flew out the window.

It was, Duncan saw a moment later, the most vicious bull of all.

"Go!" he yelled at Hadley. "Find McGregor!"

"Run, Duncan!" Conawago gasped.

But Duncan did not move. "No. I am too weary," he said, then a glance at his friend showed him Conawago understood the real reason. Most of those approaching from the kitchen door carried muskets. If they spotted Duncan fleeing they would fire into the Iroquois camp.

From the light of the torches his escort carried, Duncan could see that Lord Ramsey had thinned in the past months, his plump face now much harder, though his fleshy jowls had not entirely receded, giving him an unflattering, half-made appearance. But his burning eyes, lit by arrogance and hate, had not changed.

Not even his escort, four militia soldiers and two rough men with the look of stevedores, seemed prepared for Ramsey's wrath. The lord, shoving the man in front of him out of the way, stepped to Duncan and began beating him. "You worthless pig!" he cried in a cracking, high-pitched voice. "You Scottish scum! You damnable worm!" He slapped Duncan, then slapped him again, before pummeling him with his fists. Another curse came with each stroke. Duncan did not react, did not move. The great lord could put little power behind the blows, and any resistance would only invite his escorts to join in. Duncan staggered, taking the blows, returning Ramsey's malevolent stare until Conawago finally seized Ramsey's collar and pulled him away like a misbehaving child.

Ramsey turned on the old Nipmuc now, striking him with an open hand on the jaw, shoving him so hard that Conawago tripped and fell to the ground. Duncan watched as two, then four of the Iroquois braves leapt from their blankets, reaching for their war clubs. The militia soldiers uneasily closed in front of Ramsey, who gestured one of the street bullies toward Duncan. The man pulled a set of manacles from his belt.

"'Tis an ungodly clamor for the time of night," boomed a voice from behind them. "Ye'll have the poor inhabitants of the city thinking the Hurons have attacked." Sergeant McGregor was stepping out of the kitchen, six of his kilted men at his heels.

"We are finished here," Ramsey spat. "I am taking my property and leaving."

"Ye are leaving, aye," McGregor declared as he reached the circle of men. "I am charged with maintaining order and protecting the treaty delegation," he added.

"You have no authority over me!" Ramsey spat. "McCallum belongs to me! Do not interfere!"

"I have authority, y'er lordship, over anything that disturbs the delegations." Mockery was thick in the Scot's voice.

Ramsey turned on the burly sergeant. "You Highland scum! We should have finished you off in the last uprising!"

"Ye should have tried," McGregor shot back in a hot whisper.

"I don't know what fool decided to put you kilted apes in uniform!"

"That particular fool, y'er honor, would be the king."

Even in the dim light of the torches Duncan could see Ramsey's face flush. "This mongrel is mine!" he insisted. "I have warrants."

"I be not bound by warrants, y'er worship," McGregor replied in a level voice. "Only the orders of my general."

Ramsey's eyes flared. Grabbing the manacles, he viciously slapped them across Duncan's cheek, then opened one of the wrist restraints to place on Duncan. The sword that suddenly pressed down on the chains seemed to materialize from thin air. "If ye wish to test a Scottish blade against y'er Philadelphia bulls," McGregor growled, "I'm y'er man." The militia soldiers nervously tightened the grips on their muskets. The rest of McGregor's squad pressed close, making sure the muskets would be of little use.

Ramsey dropped the chains and retreated a step. "You are already my prisoner, McCallum," he reminded Duncan. "Take a step out of your savages' refuge and you are mine!" He grabbed one of the militiamen, shoved him toward the kitchen door, and followed him down the path.

Duncan watched Ramsey disappear into the house, then touched his cheek. Blood was dripping down his jaw, onto the chains below.

"You must flee, Duncan!" Conawago warned. "Now. He will have his men surrounding this place soon."

"To where?"

Conawago did not answer, just quickly walked to the little door in the brick wall, pushed back the bolt, and opened it. Marston stepped inside with a muffled lantern and nervously gestured for Duncan. "Our electrical friend says he has found us another sanctuary," Conawago announced.

Ramsey's men could be seen organizing themselves on the corner near the front gate as Marston, Duncan, and Conawago darted through the shadows. Duncan lost track of where they were, was only vaguely aware that they moved away in a wide curve from the lamps of Market Street for several minutes then back toward them. At last Marston led them to the back door of a house, fumbled with a key, then opened the door.

The first-floor windows of the house were cleverly rigged with dark canvas mounted on pins and pulleys, which Marston now lowered like sails to block out the glass before opening the screen on his lantern. "The owner is away," he announced. "He would not object to you borrowing the house. In fact he is certain to be delighted when I tell him the circumstances."

It was a simple, comfortable dwelling, its only trappings of luxury the scores of books in the front room. Not just a library, Duncan saw, as Marston lit more candles. Large Leyden jars stood in ranks along a table by one wall. Another table was cluttered with an odd assortment that included strange cast-iron shapes, stuffed birds, a globe, disassembled spectacles, two clocks, lenses, a dead dragonfly, and a wooden tray of lead type.