Marcus took his time before he answered.
“Because I had nothing left to lose that mattered,” Marcus replied. “And I thought you might be the father that I had been searching for.”
Words of Two Syllables THE NEW ENGLAND PRIMER, 1762
Absent
abhor
apron
author
Babel
became
beguile
boldly
Capon
cellar
constant
cupboard
Daily
depend
divers
duty
Eagle
eager
enclose
even
Father
famous
female
future
Gather
garden
glory
gravy
Heinous
hateful
humane
husband
Infant
indeed
incense
island
Jacob
jealous
justice
julep
Labour
laden
lady
lazy
Many
mary
motive
musick
21
Father
OCTOBER 1781
The hospital outside Yorktown echoed with the quiet sounds of death. Agitated limbs fought with worn sheets and blankets, making a soft rustle. And every few minutes, sighs floated through the air as the soldiers’ ghosts flew free.
Marcus lay on the cot in the corner, his eyes locked shut against the ghosts, unable to respond to calls for help that once would have had him rising to tend and comfort the sick. Tonight, he was just another soldier far from home, dying among his brothers-in-arms.
Marcus swallowed against the dryness in his throat. It was parched and raw from fever, and it had been hours since someone came through with the bucket and dipper. So many men in Washington’s army were ill with camp fevers—too many to care for now that the war was nearly over and the able-bodied were on their way home to their former lives.
He heard low voices at the entrance to the ward. Marcus clawed weakly at the sheets, hoping to get the orderly’s attention.
“What does this French soldier look like, Matthew?”
Lantern light flickered against Marcus’s closed eyelids.
“Dieu, John. How do I know?” The voice was familiar, tugging on Marcus’s memory. “I barely knew him. It’s Gil who wants him found.”
Marcus’s sticky eyes cracked open. His throat worked to make a sound, but nothing came out but a whisper that was far too low for anyone to hear.
“Chevalier de Clermont.”
Booted heels stopped on the dirt floor.
“Someone called my name,” the chevalier de Clermont said. “Speak up, Le Brun. We’ve come to take you from here.”
The lantern swung closer, closer. Its brightness pierced the thin skin of Marcus’s eyelids, sending rivers of pain through his fevered body. Marcus moaned.
“Doc?” Cool hands touched his forehead, his neck, pulled the sheets from his clawed hands. “Christ alive, he’s on fire.”
“I can smell death on the fellow’s breath,” the other man said. His voice was familiar, too.
There was a jostle of water against wood. De Clermont pressed the chipped edge of a dipper, slick from men’s spittle, against his lips. Marcus was too weak to swallow, and most of the water ran from the corners of his mouth.
“Take his head—gently, Russell—and hold him, just so, there.”
Marcus felt himself raised up. Liquid tipped into his mouth, cool and sweet.
“Tilt his head back. Just slightly,” de Clermont instructed. “Come, Doc. Swallow.”
But the water dribbled out again. Marcus coughed, racking his body and wasting more of his pitiful strength.
“Why won’t he drink?” the other man asked.
“His body is shutting down,” de Clermont said. “It’s refusing its own salvation.”
“Don’t be so bloody Catholic, Matthew. Not here, surrounded by all these proper Puritans.” Whoever was speaking—when had Marcus heard that voice before?—was trying to lighten the atmosphere with soldiers’ humor.
Marcus opened his eyes and saw the dead rifleman from Bunker Hill named Cole—the same man he’d seen at the hospital in Trenton wearing the clothing of a Virginian.
“You’re not Russell.” Against all odds, Marcus’s throat moved to swallow, and a drop of moisture slid down the parched tissues. “You’re Cole. And you’re dead.”
“So, sir, are you—or near enough, by the smell of you,” he replied.
“You know Doc?” De Clermont’s voice registered his surprise.
“Doc? No. I knew a boy named Marcus MacNeil once, a brave lad from the frontier with a marksman’s eye and a reckless disregard for orders,” the man from Bunker Hill replied.