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Authors: RITA GERLACH

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“Drop your weapon, rebel.” A redcoat stood a stone's throw away, his long rifle poised against his shoulder.

Seth opened his hand and let his musket fall into the leaves. Soldiers hurried forward and confiscated his knife and musket, shot and powder horn. Saber moaned, and from the corner of Seth's eye, he saw his faithful mount struggle to rise.

The redcoat that held him at gunpoint glanced at the suffering horse, and a cruel light spread across his face. Helpless, Seth watched the redcoat take the musket from a soldier and aim. The forest grew silent, and Seth's quickened heartbeat pulsed in his jugular. He clenched his teeth and shut his eyes. Then his musket ended his horse's misery.

At the blast, Seth jerked. He stepped back from the putrid smell of rum and sweat, from the pocked face that glistened with grime, and from the eyes that blazed with sordid pleasure. A firm voice gave orders to make way as an officer on horseback cantered toward him. The Englishman dismounted, took Seth's musket from the rum-smelling buffoon, and turned it within his hands.

“Iron. Smoothbore barrel. Maker's mark.” The officer examined the craftsmanship of the wood and forged brass. “Walnut full stock. Board of Ordnance Crown acceptance mark on the tang. Regulation Longland, I’d say. A quality piece by American standards.”

Seth bit his lower lip and clenched his fists. “I cannot kill any of your men. It's not loaded. You have my shot and powder. Return them to me.”

The officer handed the musket over to an Iroquois scout. “A gift. Show it to your people. Tell them the king of England wished you to have it.”

“We captured a rebel.” The redcoat who shot Seth's horse threw his shoulders back.

Colonel Robert Hawkings stood nose-to-nose with the soldier. “You think yourself worthy of some reward? One prisoner is something to boast about?”

Corporal John Perkins nodded. “Better than none at all, sir.”

“Out of my sight, you foul-smelling oaf.”

Perkins shrank back, red-faced. Hawkings planted himself in front of Seth and met his eyes. “Your colonials killed several of my men, including our major. Not only are you a rebel, but a murderer as well. You’ll hang for it.”

Seth stared straight into his enemy's eyes. “It would be better to suffer the noose than be under the bootheels of tyrants.”

Blue veins on Hawkings's neck swelled and he struck Seth across the face. Seth's head jerked from the force of the blow. Slowly, he turned back and spat out the blood that flooded his mouth.

Nearby a younger officer watched. His expression burned with arrogant pride. Seth noticed the tear in the man's jacket and saw a stream of blood had stained the white linen beneath it.

To the rear, another man stepped forward.

“Colonel Hawkings, trade this prisoner for one of our own.” He spoke in a quiet, controlled tone.

Hawkings's brows arched, and he spun halfway on his heels. “Captain Bray, you have no satisfaction in seeing a traitor hang?”

“Hanging is for those who have been tried and sentenced. This man has not had that afforded him.”

“He deserves nothing in that regard.”

“Our government has given prisoners of war the rights of belligerents, sir. They’re not to be executed.”

“You doubt my authority in this matter?” Hawkings said.

Bray's frown deepened. “No, sir, only your better judg-ment.”

“Stand back. I’ll shoot this rebel myself.”

Hawkings drew his pistol, pointed it at Seth's head and cocked the hammer. Stunned, Seth's breath caught in his throat. His body stiffened in a cold sweat. .

Bray lunged and cuffed Hawkings's wrist. “He's unarmed.”

Hawkings shoved Bray back. “Take your hands off me. You dare defy me?”

“We are Englishmen and Christians. Let us abide by the rules of just conduct.”

Hawkings grabbed Bray's coat and yanked his face close. “I am the officer in charge. I can do anything I wish.”

“Shooting an unarmed man is murder,” Bray said.

Hawkings paused. His expression grew grave as though he considered the word
murder
with great care. A moment later, he lowered his pistol. “Murder, you say? Well, I’ve had enough blood this day. I know my officers shall agree this man is guilty and that hanging is a more just and merciful punishment. Perkins, secure this rebel under that tree, the one I mean for him to swing from at dawn. Let him listen to its branches creak all night. Perhaps that will humble his rebellious heart.”

Hawkings strode off. Perkins grabbed hold of Seth and tied his wrists together. Seth lowered his eyes, stared at the ground,
and refused to give Bray any sign he was grateful he had stood up for him.

“If I were you, I’d mind my place, Bray.”

Seth lifted his eyes to see Bray turn to the man who taunted him.

“Have you no honor, Captain Darden?” Bray said. “A man must speak up for justice.”

Darden pulled away from the tree he leaned against. “If you do not take care to show respect to Colonel Hawkings, you’ll regret your interference. You should know what meddling could do, after what happened at Ten Width.”

Seth let out a breath and frowned. What did these men know of Ten Width, his grandfather's estate in England? Yanked forward, he caught Darden's stare. Within the depths of his pale-gray eyes burned hatred. A corner of Darden's mouth curled and twitched. To stay silent, Seth bit down hard on the tip of his tongue.

They led him to the oak, where he struggled with the understanding he’d die young at twenty-six. Under the shadow of the tree's colossal branches, he cried inwardly,
Let the sighing of the prisoner come before thee; according to the greatness of thy power preserve thou those that are appointed to die.

Seth's burdened heart hoped heaven heard him, but his weakened flesh doubted.

The sky hung inky-black, burdened with stars. The moon, umber and maize, cast its light over twisting leaves. With a heavy heart, Seth gazed at the vaulted heavens and made out the constellation Lyra. “Where is God my maker, who giveth songs in the night?” he murmured, his eyes gathering together
the stars that made its shape. What lay beyond those heavenly places? Was he prepared to meet his end?

He had lived in the Virginia wilderness, fighting alongside a handful of patriots from the Potomac Militia after a gut-wrenching farewell to his father, Colonel Nathan Braxton, and his younger sister, Caroline. Caroline was but a child then, and the war-torn colonies were no place for a motherless girl. He thought of her, with brotherly longing, far away in England, glad she was at least safe, fed, and clothed, living in their grandfather's house.

A frown quivered at the corners of his mouth. She had no idea her brother was a prisoner of the British army, assigned a traitor's death.

When the soldiers settled down before the fire and stretched out on the ground to sleep, Seth laid his head against the rough bark of the oak. A thread of blood that had seeped from the wound on his temple felt cold against his skin. Though his death was promised on the morrow, something stronger rallied his courage. He refused to accept such a fate and opened his eyes to study his surroundings. The campfire was low and gave little light. Behind him, the forest brooded in darkness.

He thought of ways he might escape and, with much tenacity, he loosened the ropes that dug at his wrists. That's all there was to it—break the bindings and with care and caution vanish into the dark.

He twisted and turned his hands and strained hard against the cords. A slight change happened, but not enough to free him. He repeated the process again with added determination. Through the gloom, he saw Bray walk toward him. He relaxed his struggle, so as not to give away his plan.

“I’m sorry you are to die tomorrow.” Bray crouched in front of him. “I did what I could to prevent it.”

Seth pressed his mouth hard, and turned his head the other way. “What is one rebel more or less to you?”

“A human life is precious.”

“Not in war.”

“Are you thirsty?” Bray yanked the stopper free on his canteen.

Seth nodded. Bray put the opening to Seth's mouth. The water tasted cold and sweet, and he was grateful for it.

“I’d give you something to eat, but we have nothing. Well, nothing you would want. Our men were starving, and your horse … I’m sorry.”

Seth pushed down his rage and swallowed hard.

Bray pinched his brows together. “Tell me your name.”

Seth hesitated, then replied in a short breath. “Braxton.”

“Braxton? An English name.”

“It was once.”

“Have you family in England?”

“My grandfather and sister live in Devonshire in some ruin of a place, where he eats his beef and subjects her to his politics.”

Bray made no sign of offense at Seth's bitter remarks. “Is Caroline Braxton your sister?”

A jolt gripped Seth at his sister's name. “You know her?”

“I do. She told me she had family in Virginia.”

“Is she well?”

“The last I knew, she was well.”

“At least I’ve been afforded some comfort before I die.”

“You’ll not hang,” Bray whispered. “I owe it to Caroline to help you.”

Bray drew his knife and slipped the blade between the cords and Seth's flesh. Seth strained to pull the ropes open to give
Bray room to slice. Soon the bindings broke and he rubbed his bruised skin.

“They’ll hang you instead of me,” he said.

“Trust me, I’m safe.” Bray glanced back at the sentry and set the knife back in its sheath. “There is more to tell, but we have no time. Perhaps we’ll meet again someday.”

With the cloak of darkness to cover him, Seth slipped away. Moonlight marked his path. He went heel-to-toe and stepped through the tangled maze of leaf and root. He traveled several miles before the faint rim of the land leveled off into green fields. To the east, toward the bay and river, seams of fog wove through the bottomlands. Through the trampled battlefield, Seth trudged and paused to glance at the outworks the British had abandoned—the empty trenches and redoubts.

When he reached the heart of the encampment, he moved on toward a farmhouse. He entered through the front door into a sparsely lit room, where lay row upon row of injured patriots. He made inquiries among the men and learned from a wounded solider that his father had fallen in the early hours before Cornwallis surrendered.

With bleary eyes, and his head wrapped in a bloody bandage, the lieutenant smiled up at Seth. “I know Major Braxton. I saw him fall not five yards from where I stood. He fought bravely. I cannot say, lad, whether he is living or dead.”

At these words, Seth's hopes sank and he leaned down. “Do you know where I might find him?”

“Could be among us wounded.”

Seth thanked him and went on to look for his father. After a desperate search, he found Nathan's body, battered and bloody from battle. He lifted the blanket that covered him. Blood stained the linen shirt, waistcoat, and navy-blue jacket. In his father's hand, he saw the glimmer of a gold locket. He
knew it kept safe his mother's portrait. He took it and shoved it into his pocket.

He curled his hands into fists and dug his fingers into his palms to steel himself against the pain. Grief broke through, clawed at his heart, and pummeled him. He silently wept and lifted his father's body into his arms.

“Grandfather will never understand the man you were,” he whispered against his father's cold cheek.

He laid him back. His hand trembled, along with his heart, when he touched his father's eyes and closed them.

1
Devonshir, England
Winter, 1783

J
uleah Fallowes stepped out of the carriage and gazed up at the full moon above a dark, spear-like chimney that belonged to Ten Width. Her deep brown eyes, flecked with russet, drifted over to a candle set against the blackness of the ivy-covered walls that glowed from inside Benjamin Braxton's bedchamber window. A chill swept through her—from the wind and from a sense of what she might find beyond the frosted glass.

The lantern outside the door sputtered against the winter night. She gathered the sides of her hood closer to her cheeks and entered the dark foyer where a servant met her. Benjamin's physician, Doctor Yates, donned his hat and nodded to her. She pushed back her hood, and her hair fell in auburn twists about her face and shoulders. The long ride from Henry Chase had left her chilled, and she hesitated to remove her cloak. When she caught the way Yates's eyes roved over her blushed face, it gave her more reason to keep her womanly figure concealed.

“There is nothing I can do, Miss Juleah.” He grazed her arm with a sinewy hand and withdrew it slowly. “He shall not last the night.” Grave, he looked into her eyes one more time and strode out the door to his horse.

When the door finally closed, Juleah shed her dove-gray cloak, mounted the stairs, and entered the room. Benjamin lay in his bed. Propped up against high pillows, he made slight efforts to breathe. Caroline, his granddaughter, Juleah's closest friend since childhood, sat by his bedside and looked up at Juleah's approach. Her jade eyes were teary, and her face pale as the lace cuffs on the faded dress she wore. At first, her expression was one of grateful relief, but then changed to fatigued sorrow.

BOOK: Surrender the Wind
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