Eagle's Cry: A Novel of the Louisiana Purchase (21 page)

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Authors: David Nevin

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Lewis stood transfixed, thrilled by the depth of ideas. Once again Mr. Jefferson had led him into deeper waters than he’d ever experienced. He felt humbled.
Mr. Jefferson smiled. “Given all that, such change and the
changes we are making is noble work. Bigger than any of us. Never forget that. Now, we count on Mr. Randolph to move matters through Congress. We need him. We can’t do it all by ourselves. We’ve already offended him on the Wagner matter, but I think Mr. Madison is right on that. We can’t be blatantly throwing out men whose only sin was being part of the old. Same with your work in helping trim the army; we must be fair. Now, Mr. Randolph can be extreme—”
“Yes, sir. I noticed.”
The president chuckled. “But we do need him. We may lose him someday—we’re on a middle course and he rides out to the far edges—but let’s not do so casually. In short, let’s mind our manners on the Hill.”
“Yes, sir.” Lewis thought he’d never felt quite so profoundly a horse’s ass.
WASHINGTON, FALL 1801
Two nations were supremely important to the young United States—Britain and France. They were the world powers before whom all other nations trembled. They were locked in war and each struggled to bring other nations to its side. Those that neither side could coerce, both sides abused. It was the duty of the new secretary of state to try to retain shreds of national dignity in the midst of war.
Britain and France. Madison decided to take them in order and invited each envoy to call. First came Edward Thornton, handsome young chap of thirty or so, the British charge. He entered the modest State Department offices with riding crop and gloves in hand, bowed, seated himself, and crossed his legs, polished boots reflecting a shimmer of
light. He was gracious, relaxed, his blue eyes direct but mild, his mustache not quite military. Yet beneath a genial, even gentle surface there was a hardness. He would be a bad man in combat, Madison thought, surprising himself a little, and probably in the diplomatic wars as well.
“Now,” the secretary said, “please understand that the attacks on Britain in the Democratic press do not express our policy.” He smiled. “The bark far exceeds our bite.”
“Welcome news, Mr. Secretary,” Thornton said politely.
“Next, I know you have been romanced by Federalist society.” No flicker of response in Thornton; the man was cool. “But you should understand that to place weight on what they tell you will sever you from reality.”
Thornton bowed in his chair. “I stand admonished, sir.”
“Now to the real issue. High as we place our relations with Great Britain, even higher do we place our own national honor. And that honor is sorely tested by the Royal Navy’s continued abuse of our trade and our ships.” He watched Thornton settle deeper in the chair. It was an old issue, and he had a hunch it would bring the United States to war with Britain someday, but he wanted that date as far off as possible.
Claiming an arbitrary wartime right, Britain had fixed unilateral rules under which it already had seized American goods worth millions and doubtless would seize millions more. The United States built the best ships in the world—it was forest country; the choicest of timber was always available—and its seamen ranked with the best. It was a powerful trading nation—indeed, it already was the largest neutral shipper. Britain tried to bend that trade to its own use, and what it couldn’t bend it often seized.
But even more arbitrary and outrageous, it stopped our ships on the high seas to board press gangs that simply kidnapped likely sailors to serve on its warships—pressing them into maritime slavery in a navy famous for its brutality.
“They stop your ships to search for their own deserters. Surely that is their right, sir,” Thornton said.
“But for every deserter recovered, they steal ten of our men. It’s clear they seize anyone they think they can use.”
“And return them when an accidental seizure is reported.”
Madison laughed. “Please. You have taken more than two thousand of our young seamen—scarcely a third have been returned—and that after they’ve given your navy years of the most brutal service.”
“But surely, Mr. Madison, you understand, Great Britain is engaged in a war of great consequence with a mad tyrant—”
Madison held up a hand. “Mr. Thornton! Kindly remember that it’s your war, not ours.”
“Sir, with all respect, it should be the war of every man who loves democracy. Napoleon is a dictator.”
“Be that as it may; studied neutrality is our policy. Certainly the president admired France in the past, but he has no illusions about its government today. But seizing our goods and kidnapping our men is not acceptable.”
Thornton shifted uncomfortably on the hard chair. “But, sir,” he said, “you must know that I am without authority to negotiate on such matters.”
Of course that was true, nor had Madison expected more. They parted courteously but not cordially. Madison stood by the window watching the young man mount a fine mare. The horse heard a noise in the street and snapped her head around, moving away from the man as she did so. With one foot in a stirrup he was forced to hop along on the other foot. He glanced over his shoulder, and Madison stepped back from the window so that the envoy might feel that this loss of dignity had gone unobserved.
Would Thornton be wise enough to pay less attention to Federalists who revered his nation despite the abuse it meted out to its erstwhile colonies, Alexander Hamilton calling its system the best in the world and urging the United States to emulate it? Erstwhile colonies … that was it. The British had never forgiven us, less for turning on them, than for whipping them when they tried to do something about it. For years they had refused to honor the treaties ending the war, holding onto those forts up around the Great Lakes and arming and supplying Indians for attacks on settlers. In this and
other ways they’d abused us with a peculiar air of contempt, as if it were somehow personal.
But stealing goods from our ships on slender pretext of legality and kidnapping sailors into brutal bondage, these were the actions of the powerful against the weak. What made it even more difficult and irksome was the simple reality that what was so important to us was but a pinprick to the great nations locked in war. They paid us almost no attention except when moved to use us. Our envoys waited months for audiences that rarely produced the courtesy of a direct response. Of course, Madison must protest, bluster, threaten—but he knew British hostility was not likely to ease.
He watched Thornton’s mare—God, that was a good-looking horse—turn onto Pennsylvania Avenue and break into a canter at a touch of the spurs. Sooner or later, he thought, we’ll have to fight them … .
France, in Madison’s estimation, should be easier. We were friends, sealed in writing by the new treaty that had solved the problems of the last few years, problems that Madison felt were largely caused by Federalist desires to take Britain’s side in the brutal war. French arrogance and the greed of the strange little foreign secretary—imagine Monsieur Talleyrand demanding a bribe before he would even receive our envoys. Britain might abuse us, but it didn’t demand bribes.
But when Talleyrand saw he couldn’t get away with such effrontery and the United States was ready to join Britain he switched to an improved tune and the friendship with France that never should have been in question was quickly restored, John Adams having the courage to fly in his party’s face.
Louis Pichon, the recently arrived envoy from Paris, was in some indefinable way a more modest man than Mr. Thornton. He appeared at the appointed time, suit impeccable, linen fresh, buckles on his shoes gleaming, hair in a neat queue, all quite beyond fault. But his features were nondescript,
his eyes pale neutral in color, his manner very quiet. Yet it was Pichon whom the French government had sent to Berlin to let young Mr. Adams know that tomfoolery was over and the French wanted peace. A note from John Quincy Adams had so informed Madison, startling him profoundly. It explained so much about President Adams’s turnabout. He’d been willing to defy his party because he knew he could trust the latest overture: It came from his son.
Pichon clearly had to be taken seriously, but that made it the more important to get things straight. Madison said firmly, “You must understand, my dear sir, that while Democrats have been friends of France, our policy remains one of total neutrality. In short, we will take no sides in your conflict with Britain, and we will permit no trespasses—specifically, French privateers will not be permitted to operate from our ports.”
Pichon looked chastened. “We have always thought of Mr. Jefferson as our friend,” he said tentatively.
“We are the best of friends—but within that framework.”
In fact, Tom had clung longer than most to the rapt faith that the revolution in France represented a new glory of human freedom and possibility, but the Terror, the clattering guillotine, the slide into military dictatorship long since had quenched his enthusiasm for France as it stood today.
Pichon cleared his throat. “Sir,” he said, “it is on that profound base of friendship that Monsieur Talleyrand counts on the United States to assist it in dealing with that evil rebel, Toussaint L’Ouverture.”
“Ah, yes,” Madison said. “Santo Domingo.” He was surprised. Things on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola had seemed quiet. Toussaint was a political and military genius who had risen to lead his fellow black slaves in a wild revolution that had proved unstoppable. He had seized Haiti, the east end of the island, then swept across the Spanish end, Santo Domingo, ejecting all European troops and establishing an apparently benign rule over a half-million blacks, fifty thousand whites, and a like number of mulattos, the nativeborn long since having been killed or absorbed. The world
expected quick retaliation, but Napoleon had had his hands full smashing the Second Coalition and dismembering the Holy Roman Empire; meanwhile Toussaint declared himself a loyal Frenchman and the island still a French colony. So Napoleon had named him captain general of the French army to command Santo Domingo.
Well, well—Pichon seemed to be saying that Toussaint’s affection for France was not reciprocated after all. He had said he considered himself Napoleon’s brother since they both had come to power in the same way. Perhaps that had not been well received in Paris.
“What do you have in mind, Mr. Pichon?”
“We intend to starve him out. We want the United States to cease all trade with him. He can’t survive without food supplies and manufactured goods. Soon his people would turn on this black tyrant and welcome the return of honest French governance.”
That was preposterous enough to endanger Madison’s composure, but he managed a quiet response. “Well, Mr. Pichon, we have developed regular trade relations with Santo Domingo. You can see we can’t abrogate them without cause.”
“But, Mr. Secretary, they’re blacks. Niggers. Slaves! In revolt against their masters. Surely, sir, that gives pause for reflection in your own southern states, in Virginia itself.”
“That doesn’t concern us,” Madison said. He knew his voice had gone harsh, and he knew Pichon didn’t believe him. Of course a successful slave revolt just offshore had shaken the slave-holding states to the core. Shaken Madison too. Slaveholders lived in ever-present terror of slave revolts—we always fear those whom we abuse and why not? None are slaves by choice, and many would be willing to kill us. You couldn’t say that black men and women in America weren’t abused; someday the ugly institution would die but meanwhile …
Well, that’s why slaveholders resisted slaves who read, though Madison allowed reading on his plantation and was angrily criticized by other plantation men. Slaves who could read, absorb ideas, get the news, talk to their fellows—that
was where organization started and organization led to revolt. That was Toussaint’s story. He had a genius capacity to organize, and once he could mobilize numbers he couldn’t be stopped.
“I mentioned this over tea to the president,” Pichon said cautiously, “and he seemed amenable … .”
Well, Tom did feel even more strongly the perils of a slave revolt, and there wasn’t much question that a successful black revolt off our shores would fill our own blacks with hope. And then a great many people who met with Tom when he was in his genial mood came away sure that he agreed with them. Madison feared a slave revolt, but he didn’t intend to let that fear drive American foreign policy.
“We don’t plan to recognize Santo Domingo nor have we been asked to do so,” he said. “But we have reciprocal trade agreements, and we will maintain those.”
“Ah, sir, my government will be gravely disappointed.”
Madison stiffened. Did that suggest a threat? Perhaps. He stared at Pichon and found no trace of give. The Frenchman was tougher than he’d thought.
“Well,” he said, his voice casual, “I’m sure our friendship in many other areas will quickly overcome disappointment.”
WASHINGTON, FALL 1801
Matt Davis was whining again. You couldn’t blame him, either; he’d been treated abominably. They were in Burr’s parlor-and-room at Pensee’s boardinghouse. It was the establishment’s only suite and more than Burr really needed, but he always had the best even if he had to juggle accounts from time to time. He was a gentleman, after all. He had arrived
on a late stage and Matt had come lurching out of the shadows and started to complain before Burr could open his grip.
Poor Matt. Big, a bit rough in speech and manner, he was a jewel too little recognized, his ability beyond question. Burr had asked very little of the new administration, a mere five federal appointments in New York City to take care of Matt and David Gelston, and three key workers. How the devil did Brother Jefferson suppose he’d won in New York City, which gave him the state that gave him the whole kit and caboodle and put him in office, but that some folks in the city had extended themselves? And they should be rewarded, surely, could anyone disagree with that? Certainly the Federalists now occupying the posts should be tossed out on their ears, matter of principle.
Burr had submitted his list months ago, five names only, mind you, reserving a plum for Matt, naval officer at the Custom’s House, one of those sinecures that paid well and demanded little. Not a word of response. He’d written to inquire. A cool note from an underling answered; nothing had been decided. Poor Matt had been beside himself; he’d come to Washington and gone on to Monticello to beard the winner in his den.
“He was cold as ice,” Matt said. “Looked down on me as so much scum. Kept talking about New York and what a quaint place it was. ‘Quaint,’ that was the word he used. I told him it was a place that had worked its ass off to get him elected.”
“Yes, yes, but did you tell him why you were there?”
“Of course. He looked at me like I was dirt. Said I would hear about it when others did. Threw me out, he did.”
Burr was shocked. “Ejected you?”
“Naw, not literally. Killed me with kindness, you know, but wasn’t nothing left for me but to go.” His mouth worked. “I thought sure if I went down and explained how bad I need an answer, he’d about have to say all right. I told him it wasn’t like I’d come in from the moon or some place; the
vice president
had recommended me. Didn’t cut no ice.”
He gazed at Burr, something strange in his expression. “I mean,” he said slowly, “you
are
the vice president, ain’t you?”
Burr froze him with a glance. “That’ll do, Matt,” he said, and stood in dismissal. “See me when I return to New York.”
“Aw, I didn’t mean nothing, Aaron, please.”
“Good evening, Matt.”
The next day, walking two blocks to the Capitol, Burr reflected on Davis. That remark hadn’t been accidental. He’d had the oaf figuratively on his knees begging forgiveness before he’d finally told him to go, but the point had gone right to the heart of things. If he couldn’t deliver on a rotten five appointments, what did it mean to be vice president? Was he part of a new administration, or was he a political eunuch? This world operated on power; strip a man and the political wolves would take him overnight.
He’d been consulted on nothing. Not a word. Cabinet chosen, ambassadors appointed, his opinions not sought. Robert Livingston named to France; patriarch of the up-Hudson family, good man and good Democrat, but Burr would have been glad for some say. Point was, Burr ruled the Democrats in New York City but not in the state. The Clintons were rulers in the state, old George and his son, DeWitt. They were allied with the Livingstons and hated the Schuylers, who had been Burr patrons before their power faded. So Livingston meant trouble for Burr. He should have had some say. Should have heard of it before others did instead of learning in public what he obviously didn’t know, a slap in the face much remarked upon in New York.
He climbed the long steps and passed into the rotunda with its hubbub of voices, odor of meat braising on charcoal, sour smell of beer. A dozen men stood about, voices echoing. He spied Chairman Randolph at a stand buying sausages for three sleek hounds on leashes and advanced with hand extended.
Before he could speak, Randolph leveled a finger at him and cried in a piercing voice, “Ah, the grand master of theft honors us with a visit. The betrayer, the Judas of our world, here among us! Porter, porter! Where is the damned porter?
Bring swabs, won’t you, to mop the floor after the honorable vice president of the United States! Wherever he walks he leaves a trail of slime.”
Burr stopped, appalled. The rotunda went silent, men staring. “Sir,” he said, but Randolph rode him down.
“Or is it not slime at all but tears? Tears of regret, tears of loss, laments of the failure of the grandest theft since Sinbad went after the jewels of the Kublai Khan’—his voice rising to a near scream—“tears mixed with slime, sir!” The dogs, excited by the tone, were lunging and snapping.
Burr tried to get his breath. The man must be mad! “How, how dare you, sir?”
“Why, Mr. Vice President, Mr. Genius of New York, I have it on the best of authority. My old friend Samuel Osgood tells me he can prove you tried to steal the election from Mr. J.”
Osgood! He was one of the great names, former postmaster general of the United States, Burr had persuaded him to stand for the New York legislature in the coup that swung the election—could he now be saying—.
Burr reeled out into the sunshine, walking, walking. But it wasn’t true! He’d done nothing! How could Osgood say—What proof? There was none, Osgood must be crazy. Yes, they’d pressured that miserable little Madison a bit, thought a tie would be an interesting situation, more an experiment than anything, but once it happened, he had been impeccable, he’d done nothing whatsoever to influence outcome, let them choose honestly, Burr or Jefferson, and they’d chosen and it all had been honest, honest, he hadn’t made a move—
Cold anger settled over him and he walked steadily, swinging the stick like a boulevardier on the banks of the Seine … but with his heart racing. At the boardinghouse, hours later, an invitation from the president. Would he dine on the morrow at half after three?
So! They would sit down after all, doubtless tête-à-tête or perhaps with little Madison and the Treasury secretary, Albert Gallatin, and they would go over plans, appointments, legislation needed, Federalists to weed out …
But six congressmen were there, three from each party, James Bayard among them, and no cabinet officers. The conversation was general and, to Burr’s ears, banal. No real talk of politics beyond a bit of joshing, Jefferson entertaining them with flights of rhetorical fancy that Burr felt didn’t make much sense, the dinner soon over, the president turning them into the hall, bidding them a collective good day, disappearing …
One of the Democrats drew Burr aside, an upstate New York congressman whose name he’d forgotten. “Haw! this worthy cried. “Looks like you ain’t the biggest wig in New York after all. You hear about our host’s letter to DeWitt Clinton?” He laughed. “I see from your eyes you haven’t. Well, seems the president wants old DeWitt’s ideas on appointments, plans, what matters to New York State.” Burr saw raw malice in his grin. “Says no one’s opinion would he value more on New York matters.”
“Oh, I doubt he said that.” The remark was torn from Burr’s throat; instantly he regretted it.
“I seen the letter,” the other crowed. “I seen the letter.”
They paused at the door, Burr scarcely aware that heavy rain was falling. The president going to DeWitt Clinton? Livingston named without a word, and now the president was telling Clinton—who really was Burr’s enemy at home—that he would value no opinion more? His throat was tight. He felt circled by enemies. Could the Virginian’s jealous rage be so out of control that he aimed to destroy his own vice president? It made no sense. Or did it? No, not really, but … . There was a quiver deep in his chest. He locked his hands together. Calm, calm.
Bayard took his elbow and invited him to share his carriage. Burr accepted without thinking but was immediately sorry, for the moment they started, Bayard said, “Why didn’t you come when I called? You were in Baltimore.”
That again! With an effort, Burr focused his attention. “First, I swore I would do nothing to influence the outcome. I’m not a thief, sir, of elections anymore than of gold. Second, it was ridiculous. The point was not to persuade
Federalists; they already were persuaded. Point was to show Democrats that I was the one of their own who could win.”
Bayard threw back his head. “Had the Federalists, did you? Ho, ho. Maybe you could have a career on the boards with such pitter-patter. No, my friend, after what Hamilton had to say, they were deserting you in droves. He was mounting a major campaign against you, and I do mean major.”
Alex? My God, was the whole damned world against him? Why would Alex attack him? They’d been adversaries, of course, political adversaries, but that was like appearing against another lawyer in the courtroom; it was part of the game. Yes, he’d stolen New York City from under Alex’s nose, that was politics, maneuver and counter. His breath went short. Alex abusing him, the president, that impudent wretch Randolph, Matt Davis whining and complaining; by God, he’d had about enough!
He heard his own voice go soft and deadly. “What was Alex saying?”
“Suffice it to say that he considered you not qualified for the presidency.”
Burr caught Bayard’s arm. “What did he say, damn you; to so alarm your brethren? Did he call me despicable, dishonest, a cheat, a liar?”
Bayard jerked away. “Oh, no you don’t. You shan’t use me as a vehicle for a duel. You want to challenge Alex, challenge him, but don’t try to use my words.”
Burr beat his stick against the carriage roof. “Stop! I’ll get down here.”
He walked on, scarcely aware of chill rain soaking his coat. Everything, everyone, standing against him like some great malign conspiracy to destroy him when he had done nothing but work his heart out, he had won the damned election single-handedly and put that rotten Virginia blueblood in position to—
“Aaron! For Christ’s sake, get in here before you drown!” It was good old Jim Wilkinson in a big carriage, two
mounted soldiers looking miserable to the rear, two to the fore, coachman holding the reins and staring straight ahead. Wilkinson did know how to handle a general’s pomp; he had an air about him that was fit for a ruler.
“You look as if you’ve lost your last friend and are coming down with consumption to boot. Let’s go have a half-dozen boiling hot toddies and talk of dreams and empires.”
Dreams and empires! By God, Burr thought, he could use a little such talk. His heart soared at Wilkinson’s warm welcome.
“Let’s,” he said. “Yes, let’s.”
“Roughing you up, are they, Aaron?”
They’d had four hot toddies and were working on oysters wrapped in bacon rashers and broiled. The general speared another oyster and held it high. “Well, my friend, they’re scum. You’re one of the great men of our time, Aaron, and throwing you away indicates their pygmy scale.”
He held thumb and forefinger a half inch apart. “Miniscule men, Aaron. But you wait and see—the future will belong to men of power. You stand high in that rank and so do I.” He popped the oyster into his mouth and chewed noisily.
God, what a hell of a good fellow old Jim was!
Madison took the chair before the president’s desk that gave him the long view down the Potomac to Alexandria. He liked this big sunny room on the southwest corner so that morning as well as afternoon sun poured in through near floor-to-ceiling windows. One was open and errant breezes fluttered voile curtains. The room was big enough for separate work stations, each heaped with the materials of a particular interest. Madison thought it was a form of genius that allowed Tom to master so much—science, astronomy, medicine, agriculture, exploration, statecraft, more expert than most experts. His own mind was nothing like that. His was deeply penetrating and drove fiercely to
conclusions. Jefferson insisted that together they were a perfect team.
Albert Gallatin hurried in, quite out of breath. He was slender and saturnine, bald as an egg, a smallish man from Switzerland whose years in Pennsylvania hadn’t touched his heavy accent. His mathematical brilliance far surpassed that of anyone Madison knew except Alexander Hamilton. Albert understood Alex’s mysterious financial measures perfectly, and though Federalists hated him and used his accent to insist on dark foreign intrigue, anyone else as secretary of the treasury would have been unthinkable. Indeed, Bayard had warned them not to tear up Hamilton’s pea patch and he should be pleased, for Albert was holding the Hamiltonian financial structure on a steady course while softening its impact on the common man and lessening the advantages Alex had lavished on the wealthy.
“Now,” Albert said, after twenty minutes of parsing numbers that made Madison’s head swim, “we really should turn to Mr. Burr.” Albert liked Burr. They had been allies when both were congressmen. But he never left any doubt as to his loyalty.
“This person Matt Davis,” Albert said. “I admit he’s rude and crude, but he’s close to Aaron and valuable in New York.”

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