Refugees poured into the city on foot and in every conceivable kind of conveyance. They slept in Capitol Square or broke into the homes of those who had already left by train, carriage, or shank's mare. Orry heard that Ashton was one of those refusing to leave. It leavened his dislike of her, but not much.
Soldiers swelled the population, too. Wounded sent back from the Chickahominy lines; deserters who had shot or stabbed themselves — who could say which were which? Specters in torn gray, they walked or limped everywhere, thin from hunger, hot-eyed from fever, befouled by dirt, and covered with bandages stained by blood and pus. Some women of the town aided them, some turned away. All night and all day, the wagons and buggies and carts rumbled in and rumbled out, and the windowpanes hummed and cracked, and sleep became impossible.
Orry had another bad experience in the pine building housing Winder and his men. This time he called at the request of Secretary Randolph, who operated a large family farm near Richmond. Randolph had a friend, also a farmer, who had refused to sell his produce at the lower prices fixed by the provost marshal. In a polemical letter to the Richmond Whig, the farmer called Winder a worse threat to the populace than McClellan. Having expressed that opinion, he was snatched right out of the Exchange Bar one night. Away he went to the foul factory on Cary Street where Winder was now locking up those whose utterances he deemed' seditious.
Orry went to the pine building to request an order freeing the prisoner. He sent his name in, but the general wouldn't see him. Instead he had to speak with one of the civilian operatives, a tall, lanky man dressed completely in black save for his linen.
The man's name was Israel Quincy. Looking more like a Massachusetts parson than a Maryland railroad detective, he clearly enjoyed having someone of Orry's rank in his shabby little cubicle as a supplicant. He was quick to answer the request.
"There'll be no release order from this office. That man made General Winder angry."
"The general has made Secretary Randolph angry, Mr. Quincy, as well as most of Richmond, because of his absurd tariffs. The city desperately needs food from outlying farms, but no one will sell at the prices set by this office." Orry drew a breath. "Your answer is no?"
His dark eyes benign, Quincy smiled at the visitor. Then the smile seemed to crack and reveal the venom beneath. "Unequivocally no, Colonel. The secretary's friend will stay in Castle Thunder."
Orry rose. "No, he won't. The secretary has the authority to go over the general's head and will do so. He preferred to follow protocol, but you've made it impossible. I'll have the prisoner out of that pesthole within an hour."
Leaving the cubicle, he was stopped by Quincy's sharp, hard, "Colonel. Think twice before you do that."
Disbelieving, Orry turned and saw arrogance. He boiled over. "Who do you people think you are, terrorizing free citizens and stifling any opinion that differs from yours? By God, we'll have no damned Pinkertons operating in the Confederacy."
Low-voiced, Quincy said, "I caution you again, Colonel. Don't defy the authority of this office. You might need a favor from us one of these days."
"Threaten me, Mr. Quincy, and with this one hand I'll beat you into the ground."
Forty-five minutes later, Castle Thunder lost one inmate. But there were many more for whom he could do nothing. As for the warnings of the power-drunk guttersnipe in the black suit, he never gave them another thought.
At the War Department, Orry supervised the packing of box after box of ledgers, files, records, as May twisted down to its fearsome end, which brought the battle of Fair Oaks, virtually on the doorstep of the city. McClellan clumsily repulsed the Confederate attack, which saw Joe Johnston seriously wounded and replaced in twenty-four hours by the President's former military adviser, back from exile.
Granny Lee took charge of the Army of Northern Virginia for the first time. Confidence in him was not high. Boxes were packed with even greater haste, and a special train kept steam up around the clock to haul off Treasury gold if the final assault broke through Lee's lines. Orry sweated and packed more boxes and picked up a rumor of a plan afloat in Winder's department. He heard no details, only that he was the target. Quincy's forgotten threats came to mind again, increasing the tension he felt. He thanked the Almighty that Madeline wasn't here to face the danger and feel the madness.
"Please," the woman said.
Scarcely thirty, she looked much older. She smelled of the mud bespattering her clothes. Three children, starved gray mice, hunched against her skirt, and over her shoulder peered an adolescent black girl with decayed teeth and a red bandanna on her head.
The heavily planted garden rustled and dripped. The shower had stopped an hour ago, about half past six. The garden was twenty feet square, wild and green — almost too lush. Ten steps led down to it from the house. At the top, Ashton stood behind Powell, one of her palms pressing the back of his fine linen shirt.
In reply to the woman, he cocked his revolver. The potent sound aroused Ashton unexpectedly.
"Please," the woman repeated, freighting the word with her tiredness, her desperation. "We came in from Mechanicsville. The Yanks were too close. My man's with Old Jack in the valley, and we have nowhere to go. The gate was open —"
"Some niggers forced it last night, hunting a place to squat. I wouldn't have them, and I won't have you. Go out the way you came."
One of the youngsters tugged the woman's skirt. "Ma, where can we stay?"
"Ask President Davis," Powell said. "He hustled his wife out of town in a hurry — maybe he has a spare bed." Powell flourished the gun at them. "Get out, you goddamn vermin."
The woman managed a look of loathing as she herded her brood into the lowering June twilight. The faraway sky reverberated with a sound like tympani. Powell thrust the gun into his pants, walked down the stairs, and kicked the gate shut. "Find me some rope," he said without turning around.
Ashton darted inside and was back within a minute. He lashed the gate shut and secured it with several knots. Leaves dripped in the silence. Then the sky drummed again.
Upstairs, with all the windows open on the steamy evening, he reclined on his elbows and let her work him to a huge erection, in the fashion he enjoyed. Then he bored into her like a bull. They tore the bedclothes loose and pushed them all over the place with their rolling and straining. He was splendid, inducing, as he always did, a joy she could only express and relieve by screaming.
Overcome by a satiated exhaustion, she fell asleep. She woke presently to find Powell reading a book he kept at the bedside: Poe's Tales. He had told her that the fantastical stories and the character Dupin were favorites of his. It was fitting to reread them in Richmond, where Poe had edited the Literary Messenger for a period.
In perspiring lassitude, they lay together, Powell speaking in a reflective way, as he liked to do after making love.
"I was discussing the Conscription Act with some other gentlemen yesterday. There was unanimity that it's an outrage. Are we apes, to be prodded into a cage anytime Jeff says jump? At least there are ways around the law."