"You Englishmen fight wars for economic reasons, don't you?" asked Smith. "After all, the Opium War is all about keeping lucrative markets open."
"Precisely," replied Stewart. "You remember our discussion about your rebellion back in 1776?"
"I prefer to think of it as a revolution. Rebellion sounds . . . ignoble."
"The point is, my country decided there was no profit in keeping the colonies under its thumb. They were awfully expensive to maintain."
"Which is why you levied such onerous taxes on our forefathers," suggested McAllen. "The yoke grew too heavy for them to bear."
"But let us return to the subject at hand. Lamar is a dangerous man. One of my reasons for being here is to determine precisely how serious he is about launching an invasion of Mexico's northern provinces."
"He must deal with the Comanches first," said McAllen. "Besides, with any luck, Sam Houston will again be president by this time next year."
"That, I am sure," replied Stewart smoothly, "is something devoutly to be wished."
He spoke no more on the object of his visit to Texas. The conversation veered to a comparison of McAllen's experiences in war with the Seminoles and Comanches, and Stewart's adventures with the Maori of New Zealand—the Maoris had just begrudgingly recognized British sovereignty in the Treaty of Waitanga—and the Tamils of Malaysia, who had in the past frowned upon a British presence in Malacca and Singapore. Finally, after his second glass of brandy, Stewart excused himself and retired to his room.
The next morning, Ashbel Smith came downstairs to find McAllen on the veranda, discussing plantation affairs with Jeb, the black overseer. Old Roman had just carried out a tray with a carafe of coffee, and Smith poured himself a cup and breathed deeply of the fresh morning air. It promised to be a warm, sunny spring day. Mockingbirds performed their amazing repertoire from the branches of the trees which lined the lane connecting the house to the river road at the base of the bluff, while finches darted through the hedge of Cherokee rose. A crew was working in the sugarcane field, removing the weeds which threatened the young sprouts.
Finished with Jeb, McAllen joined Smith on the veranda. "Is our Englishman sleeping in this morning?" asked the physician.
"Oh, no," replied McAllen dryly. "He's gone riding—with Leah."
Smith almost choked on his coffee. He peered warily at McAllen, trying to judge the man's mood. But it was useless—McAllen gave nothing away. Sam Houston's words rang loud in Smith's ears: "He is, by all accounts, a dashing beau sabreur, and will no doubt be quite popular with the ladies." I am an idiot, Smith decided.
"Well, what do you make of Major Stewart?" he asked, as lightheartedly as he could manage.
"He isn't telling the whole truth regarding his reasons for coming to Texas."
"What do you think he's hiding?"
"I think he's here to persuade the general that remaining independent of the United States is the best course of action for Texas. The British want a buffer between the United States and Mexico. Preferably one free of slavery."
Smith mulled this over as he took a sip from his coffee cup. "While it's true that the Old Chief has Tom Blue and Esau, he is not much for slavery as an institution. But he's no abolitionist, either. I just don't understand why the British are so set against slavery. Oh, I know they've abolished it in their empire, but without slaves the South could not produced the cotton which feeds British textiles. It is my impression that the cotton industry, in the production of both yarn and finished cloth, is the life's blood of the British factory system. I would think it employs at least a half million workers—who would be out of work without raw Southern cotton."
McAllen nodded. He was vaguely familiar with the course of abolitionism in Great Britain. Slavery had been outlawed throughout the British domains in 1833, the triumphant culmination of a long campaign by religious and philanthropic groups. The British government had been in a reformist mood; in that same period, factory reform and a new "poor law" had been passed, designed to make working conditions less horrific in the first case, and to provide more generous care for the aged and unfit in the last. And though Parliament had authorized a special fund of twenty million British pounds to compensate slave owners whose slaves would be emancipated by government mandate, implementation of emancipation had been blocked by the Jamaican planters and had resulted in the mass migration of disgruntled Boer farmers from the Cape Colony. The "Great Trek" of the hardy Boers had taken them into Natal, where they had formed a republic, and where they were having no little trouble persuading the proud Zulus to labor in Boer fields.
"It may be," he told Smith, "that in this case the British government must choose between high principles and protecting the fifty million pounds sterling which their money men have invested in Mexico."
Smith sighed. "I just don't believe Houston will seriously entertain an allegiance with the British. He has his heart set on annexation, I am sure of it. For one thing, he would never be able to look old Andy Jackson in the eye if he tied an independent Texas to Great Britain. You know how Old Hickory feels about the redcoats!" Smith shook his head. "No, John Henry, I think the Old Chief is going to pretend to court the British, just to grab the attention of those pettifoggers in Congress. I would very much like to sit back and watch him spar with Major Stewart. Perhaps I will be able to join him when he comes here."
"You know my door is always open to you, Ashbel."
From the vantage point of the veranda, high on the bluff overlooking the Brazos, Ashbel Smith could see a good portion of the river road where it skirted McAllen's cultivated fields, and now he spotted two riders whom he surmised were Stewart and Leah McAllen. An alarming thought came to him.
"John Henry, please remember that the Old Chief would not want any harm to come to our English guest."
McAllen gave him a funny look and then burst out laughing. Smith was startled. He had seldom known his friend to laugh like this. In fact, of late McAllen had scarcely cracked a smile.
"Really, now, Ashbel, what kind of host do you take me for?"
"It's only that—"
McAllen grew serious. He put a hand on the doctor's shoulder. "Don't concern yourself on that score. Major Stewart will come to no harm by my hand. Now follow me. Let's get out of here before they return. I know you want to be on your way back to Galveston, and I have it in mind to visit a friend in Grand Cane."
Ashbel Smith was perplexed as he accompanied McAllen to the stables behind the house, followed as always by the ubiquitous Joshua. Where Stewart was concerned, Leah's behavior had not yet overstepped acceptable bounds, but Smith was certain it was merely a matter of time. She would be incapable of resisting the British officer if he proved so bold as to give her the slightest encouragement—and Smith doubted that the major would abide by any rules of proper conduct in that regard. Stewart struck him as a man who played by his own rules and liked nothing better than to thumb his nose at society. As for McAllen, the man knew his wife far too well to expect her to behave like a faithful wife should. Smith had the impression that McAllen was hiding something up his sleeve. It seemed to the physician as though his friend almost wanted an indiscretion to occur. But how could that be? McAllen was too proud to court the role of cuckold.