Chapter Twenty-Seven

Wherein, Jake launches a new plan, and Claus van Clynne offers his own revised theories of divination.

Jake was met halfway t o the infirmary hideout by a loose group of boys and young men sent by Culper as reinforcements. He was not surprised that they had not met van Clynne or Alison; both were independent sorts and undoubtedly were proceeding by their own lights and circuitous routes back. At the hospital, however, he did worry, and had hunted up Daltoons in preparation of mounting a rescue mission when the landless Dutch squire and the disguised girl appeared at the door, arguing about who had saved whom.

"Where have you been?" demanded Jake.

"We have been salvaging your operation," declared van Clynne. "As usual. I tarried long enough to make the entire episode seem a simple robbery, appropriating some cutlery along the way. Your friend Dr. Keen tried to upend me. Which raises another matter: I thought you had disposed of him."

"He has more lives than a cat."

"Indeed. Perhaps we should recruit several dogs to attack him. Now, on to more important matters: is there any ale in the house?"

Jake shook his head and turned his attention to Alison, telling her with great severity that she had disobeyed his direct orders by not heading straight back to the infirmary. The ledger book was more important than all of their lives together, he told her, as its accounts might well tell General Washington where the British were heading. That, in turn, might save the entire Revolution.

"It gives no more clue to Howe's intentions than the wind," said van Clynne as he pulled it from his belt. "I took the liberty of examining it on the way. It will show you quite clearly that the British have spies spread throughout the continent and pay them equally. But beyond that, nothing. Now, where is the ale stored? Must I attend to every phase of the operation myself?"

The Dutchman disappeared down the steps. His opinions on other things might be severely prejudiced, but he was an unbiased expert when it came to account books. The places were clear, but Boston was as well-represented as Philadelphia, which appeared as many times as Newark, which sprung up as often as Jamestown, itself mentioned nearly as much as Albany. The agents were listed by number only, as might be expected; the Americans employed a similar system.

The maps Jake had stolen were of even less value, being copies not of places in America but the lost continent of Atlantis.

After a brief and uncharacteristic burst of temper, Jake admitted to himself his plan had failed miserably. And while Culper had already gone to the coffeehouse to work on the problem from there, there was scant hope of quick results. The British were sure to increase their security because of the prison break, and might even guess what the Americans were aiming at. Any information gleaned could easily be part of a plan to throw off the patriots.

Not only had Jake failed to discover the British design, but he had announced to Keen that he was still alive — a development that would complicate his progress and have dire consequences for all who helped him.

Never in all his operations could he remember failing so dismally. And the stakes were incredibly high; Washington himself was counting on him.

The spy heard the general's voice in his head, setting notions into order:

Use your imagination,

the general ordered.

Create a solution. Untie this knot. Create, Jake!

"Alison, I want you to go with Lieutenant Daltoons to the coffeehouse," said Jake abruptly. "Then go where Culper assigns you."

"He wishes to put me into retirement," protested Alison.

"He merely wants you to be safe," said Jake.

"I can do much more good in the city," said Alison. "You see what help I've already been. The fat Dutchman would not have escaped without me."

"I hope you are not referring to me," harrumphed van Clynne as he climbed the stairs back to the loft. "As you are wrong on several counts: I am neither fat, nor was I in need of your assistance." The mug of porter he carried with him was not the highest quality, but acceptable under the circumstances. "I merely delayed my departure long enough to retrieve a map of the area where my land is situated, to assist the good General Washington in recommending my claim to Congress."

"You must go," Jake told her. "For your own good. No arguing."

"If I may be so bold as to make a suggestion," offered van Clynne, "I know a fine housewife on Long Island who would undoubtedly be glad to have her help. She is not Dutch herself, but married into the race. Granted, it is nominally behind the enemy lines, but the farm is safe enough."

"I do not like the Dutch, even by marriage," said Alison. "They are cowards."

"Cowards! After all of my efforts on your behalf!"

The pope would stomach insults to the cross with less emotion than van Clynne showed now, his nose twitching with such fervor that Jake feared he would issue a catastrophic sneeze.

"I will concede that you may be brave," said Alison, retreating half an inch, "though it was I who saved you."

"You have much to learn, young woman," said the squire. "Who plucked whom from the city slop at the side of the street?"

"Please, Claus, you're not helping the situation," said Jake.

"There was a time when proper respect was shown for one's elders," he groused, walking toward a large chair in the corner where he could recover his dignity without further interference. "But mark my words, sir, your plan for gathering information is all wrong."

"Which plan is that?" said Jake.

"Whatever plan you are concocting. Undoubtedly it will entail much slinking about and additional fisticuffs. Brute force is unreliable in these situations. Finesse, sir — that is the Dutch way, tried and true. All you need do is discover the proper person, approach in the light of day, and ask."

"Like your tailor."

"A temporary setback," admitted van Clynne, feeling expansive. "It was the right forest but the wrong pew, the proper church but the wrong tree. The plan remains sound." He settled into the well-cushioned seat and pulled a small stool up for his feet. In truth, properly comfortable chairs had gone out of style thirty years before. This one with its wide wings and broad but firm seat would have to do.

"You have a plan?" Daltoons asked Jake.

"Not yet."

"Culper will be able to solve it, if anyone can."

"I doubt in time. General Washington has a difficult schedule to meet. Perhaps I should row out and ask Howe himself."

"The man has no taste," said van Clynne. "He believes wine better than beer."

"If I were Howe," said Alison, "I would attack Philadelphia. It's full of pompous puffs who will gladly bow to the king."

"So now you are a politician as well as a soldier," said Daltoons. "Shall we call you General Alison, or Congressman?"

"I do not think that I will allow you to call me anything," said Alison. "And why do you wear that red cloth around your neck? Is it your sweetheart's sign?"

The lieutenant turned red. "My mother gave it to me before I joined the army," he said. "I do not have a sweetheart."

"I could have predicted that," said Alison.

While the pair were engaged in their light fencing, Jake made a mental list of the men who must know Howe's true plan. General Clinton surely would know where his commander was going, even if Culper's efforts to infiltrate his staff had so far revealed nothing.

Kidnap him? If easier than swimming out to Howe, it was still difficult in the extreme. Nor was Jake likely to find any knowledgeable member of his circle an easy target. Keen would probably have alerted the entire British force by now.

He began thinking of prominent Tories who might have been let in on the secret, and once more came to Bauer. Surely his network of Loyalists would have been of use to Howe in his planning. Bauer had also helped organize Tory cabals in the city of New York before the invasion, and it would be logical to have him help or at least advise in setting the stage in Boston.

Or Philadelphia. Or Georgia. Or the Carolinas.

He had a company of guards, but that obstacle might not prove insurmountable. If he were kidnapped, he might be rowed from his own dock without an inordinate amount of trouble.

But how to get him to say what he knew? And how to know it was true?

Bauer's fierce reputation was not unwarranted. Fight off his guards, kidnap the man, torture the answer from him — and then be victimized by a simple if well-told lie?

Worse, kidnapping might alert the British, and possibly cause them to change their plans.

Brute force would be unreliable, Jake realized. Claus — dare he concede it? — was right about that.

Bauer must be the solution; Fate had not thrown them together so often today without some purpose. Too bad he couldn't just kill him, then dissect his brain for the answer.

Jake's mind lit with an idea.

"Do you think Bauer will show up for the duel?" he asked Daltoons.

"Of course." The lieutenant had laughed at the story earlier with a touch of envy; he wished he might develop his older friend's flair, as well as find his luck.

"Even if he knows I'm an American?"

"How will he know?"

"Keen will tell him." Jake reconsidered. "Well, perhaps he has reason not to. Bauer still thought I was a spy for Bacon just now. Lady Patricia seemed to think Keen and I were friends, which is an idea that could only come from Keen. He must have some reason for keeping my identity secret."

"In any event, I would think Bauer's reputation guarantees his presence at the duel," said Daltoons. "But why would you attend?"

"To kill him and then raise him from the dead."

"What?"

Jake jumped from his chair. "We are going to kidnap him and steal the answer, without anyone else realizing it. We will need some contingency to distract his dragoon guard, in case they feel obliged to attend the duel. Can you arrange an order to take them away from his house?"

"I'm sure we can find a diversion," said Daltoons, unsure what Jake was up to. "But don't you think you should consult with Culper?"

It was as useless to try and stop Jake when he was launched on a plan as it was to argue with van Clynne about Dutch superiority. The patriot spy waved him off as he ran to grab his coat. "The first trick is to kill him, the second to cure him. That way we'll keep others' suspicions down and only worry about his. Have everything ready for me. I must see a friend. In the meantime, organize some sort of order or delay for the guard. I want to make sure Bauer arrives on the Jersey shore without it."

Alison sprung after him.

"You can't come with me," Jake said.

"The British are looking for you," Daltoons told Jake. "And Culper specifically said for you to stay in hiding."

"The beauty of being on a mission for General Washington," said the spy, "is that I take orders directly and only from him. A mission has but one chief."

"I knew we would hear the theory at some juncture," muttered van Clynne as he slipped toward sleep. "Though usually it is to give me some base assignment."

"Deliver Alison to Culper, and tell him to continue his efforts. With luck, my stage tricks won't be needed."

"I want to help you." Alison caught hold of Jake's arm as he started down the stairs.

Jake reached back and took her arms firmly, gripping not quite hard enough to hurt her, but surely pressing his will into her rebellious flesh. "If you truly care about our Revolution, you will go with Daltoons and not utter another word."

"But — "

"And hand me back my Segallas."

Even in the dim light, there was no obscuring the look in Jake's eyes. Alison nodded meekly.

"I shall pursue my own plan in the morning," vowed van Clynne between his snores.

"Do that," said Jake, tapping his shoe as he left.

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