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They stood in silence as the driving rain weakened to a drizzle and Henry Lansdowne rowed evenly into the choppy channel to the steamer. Once there, he helped the passengers into the skiff and began rowing back again. Anson suddenly felt an overwhelming desire to flee. There was but a single passenger, a stranger. Dare had not returned.

As the skiff pulled closer, Anson’s nerves began to fray. The passenger’s appearance was disturbing. He was not young, so he would have knowledge and opinions of the war. But much worse than this was the one sleeve of the man’s coat: it was empty and pinned to his chest. A wounded veteran, and all that remained to complete the dismal picture was the man’s country. For Anson could not, even in his most patriotic moments, believe that the defeated Confederacy had gone away, at least not as a moral entity in the minds of its citizens.

He watched Henry Lansdowne moor the skiff and help the passenger out. Louisa ran forward but then turned to him, beaming. “Come along, Dr. Baird, come and meet our guest.”

And for the child’s sake, certainly not his own, Anson stood in the drizzle and awkwardly shook the passenger’s gracefully extended left hand.

“Ambrose Richardson. A pleasure to meet you, sir.”

The accent wasn’t strong, but it was there, a mild lilt, a subtle music. By the time Anson had come close enough to the man to see his narrow face and pale blue eyes, receding hairline, and full handlebar moustache of pure white, he had expected the worst. Now the man, tall and compactly built, his long legs bowed, suggesting he’d spent considerable time on horseback, was scanning Anson’s face, likely trying to estimate his allegiances and service record. It was wearying.

Falling back on his habitual courtesy, Anson asked the newcomer how long he planned to stay in Chilukthan.

“It depends,” Ambrose Richardson said, removing his hat from where he’d expertly tucked it under what remained of his amputated limb. He shook the rain from the hat before settling it back on his head. “If I like what I see of this salmon venture, I might want to stay a while and watch the proceedings. I understand the fishing is quite the spectacle.”

“Yes. I believe so.”

“And are you here as well, doctor, as an interested observer?”

Anson smiled thinly. He could hardly explain, even to himself, why he remained. To help an old friend, a comrade-in-arms? Yes. But also, perhaps, to confirm the rightness of the war and to honour its dead. Anson realized he couldn’t say so, and he wondered how much of the thought could be read in his face. Well, no doubt there would be other conversations. Dare was not on the boat; Anson would be staying on at Chilukthan, if not as an interested observer, then as a patient witness of whatever the resurrected past had in store for him.

“I’ve come to visit an old friend who lives nearby. But he’s gone away on business. I’m waiting for his return.” Anson looked at Henry Lansdowne, expecting some response in the form of a scowl or narrowing of the eyes, but the Englishman, surprisingly, was bent at the waist, speaking to his niece. Now the girl was indeed clapping; she could not contain her happiness, the words came rushing out.

“Oh, Uncle, really? Something for me? What is it? When can I see it?”

Henry Lansdowne hushed her gently, then rose.

“Mr. Richardson, if you’ll just come with me. We’ve arranged for you to stay at my brother’s home. Thomas will conduct you through the cannery when you’ve had a chance to get settled. Louisa here will accompany us.” He nodded to Anson. “Good day, doctor. We will see you this evening? Mr. Richardson and our relatives will be dining at the house.”

And with that, they were gone and Anson stood by himself once more, cold rain dripping down his neck, his body still shaking. He watched the two men and the girl enter the muddy field. Beyond them came the sound of wood chopping. The thick stand of trees just past Thomas Lansdowne’s house loomed on the horizon. The axe blows fell heavily, in a dull, steady rhythm.

Anson realized that he couldn’t stay much longer, but he had to wait for Dare’s return. The rain that fell seemed even colder now. If Dare didn’t come soon… But Anson didn’t complete the thought. There was no need. He would stay as long as necessary. Looking across the muddy field, he imagined he saw his old friend against the light, just as he’d once seen the shell-smashed tree in the Antietam battlefield. But as Anson took a step toward him, Dare retreated, an image only, a trick of memory. And there was only the woodlot and the sound of the falling axe and the chilling feel of an old enemy’s hand, the wrong hand, on his wet palm, so chilling it might have been the dead one, lopped off almost twenty years before.

• • •

Dinner that evening began politely, calmly, with experienced, time-hewn faces around a table in candlelight, gracious if tentative conversation, the aroma of roast beef pleasantly circulating, the light clink of cutlery, the illusion of a decorous and genteel world tucked neatly between a wild, powerful river and a billion cold stars with heathen Chinese going about their mysterious rituals in their own illusory imaginings, whatever they might be.

Yet as he cut into the blood-tinged meat on his plate, Anson shrank from the lightly probing questions of his countryman, the alternately distracted and raptly attentive features of Thomas Lansdowne, and, most of all, the ghostly urgency of Edney Lansdowne to belong in the material sphere. For the woman, it was painfully obvious after fifteen minutes had passed, was still grief-haunted and barely able to stifle either tears or screams—Anson had seen the malady in women before, and it always defeated him, medically and morally. Looking at her, he could not abide the artifice of gentility; she wore her dark but grey-streaked hair in two severe braids, leaving a part like a long, white scar on her skull. Her brow was creased, her cheeks sunken and the cheekbones prominent, and the black of her eyes dull. Anson was appalled. The woman should have been home, resting, especially since she was clearly with child. But he couldn’t bring himself to inquire after her health; to do so somehow seemed akin to attacking her. In any case, he kept expecting one of the family to relieve her of the burden of hospitality.

But Thomas Lansdowne, looking ill at ease and pulling periodically at the shirt collar around his thick, ruddy neck, was intently seeking Ambrose Richardson’s impressions of Victoria. Was it not a thriving capital city? And New Westminster, the visitor would find, was equally prosperous.

The Southerner responded amiably, neatly dabbing at the corners of his mouth with a napkin. Yes, Victoria appeared lively, there was certainly considerable evidence of commercial enterprise. And then the blood on Anson’s plate and knife appeared to shine.

“In a warehouse near the harbour,” Ambrose Richardson said, “I almost made the acquaintance of one of your fellow salmon canners, Mr. Lansdowne. At least, I had him pointed out to me by the proprietor, but he was gone before I had the opportunity to speak with him. The name was Dare. He is familiar to you, no doubt?”

The Lansdowne brothers exchanged glances. Then Thomas Lansdowne cleared his throat and took a drink of water, his other hand clenched around a fork that he held, motionless, at chest height. Into the silence came the keening of the wind.

“Perhaps I’m mistaken in the name?” Ambrose Richardson blinked benignly at each of the brothers in turn.

“William Dare,” Anson said, watching one of the candle flames flicker and go out, “is the man I’ve come to visit.”

The Southerner smiled. “Well, now, if that’s not a coincidence? I wish I had spoken with him. But, as I say, the moment he’d been pointed out to me, he was no longer there. An energetic and industrious man. And one of the more successful canners, I understand. The proprietor of the warehouse said as much.”