#DailyLines #MOBY #WRITTENInMYOwnHEARTSBlood #Book8 #OutMARCH2014 #ChapterSix #UnderMyProtection


The bell of the Presbyterian church two blocks away rang for half-ten, and my stomach echoed it, reminding me that—what with one thing and another—I hadn’t had any breakfast yet.

Jenny had had a bite with Marsali and the children, but declared herself equal to dealing with an egg, if there might be one, so I sent Mrs. Figg to see whether there might, and within twenty minutes, we were wallowing—in a genteel fashion—in soft-boiled eggs, fried turkey hash, and flapjacks with butter and honey, which Jenny had never seen before but took to with the greatest alacrity.

“Look how it soaks up the sweetness!” she exclaimed, pressing the spongy little cake with a fork, then releasing it. “Nay like a bannock at all!” She glanced over her shoulder, then leaned toward me, lowering her voice. “D’ye think her in the kitchen might show me the way of it, if I asked?”

A diffident rapping on the damaged front door interrupted her, and as I turned to look, the cracked door was shoved open and a long shadow fell across the painted canvas rug, narrowly preceding its owner. A young British subaltern peered into the parlor, looking disconcerted by the wreckage in the foyer.

“Lieutentant-Colonel Grey?” he asked hopefully, glancing back and forth between me and Jenny.

“His lordship isn’t in just now,” I said, attempting to sound self-possessed. I wondered just how many more times I might have to say that—and to whom.

“Oh,” the young man looked further disconcerted. “Can you tell me where he is, Mum? Colonel Graves sent a message this morning, asking Lieutenant-Colonel Grey to attend General Clinton at once, and the General was, er…rather wondering why the Lieutenant-Colonel hadn’t arrived yet.”

“Ah,” I said, with a sidewise glance at Jenny. “Well. I’m afraid his lordship was rather urgently called away before he received the General’s message.” That must have been the paper John had received moments before Jamie’s dramatic reappearance from a watery grave. He’d glanced at it, but then shoved it unread into his breeches pocket.

The soldier heaved a small sigh at this, but was undaunted.

“Yes, Mum. If you’ll just tell me where his lordship is, I’ll go fetch him there. I really can’t go back without him, you know.” He gave me a woeful look, though with a touch of a charming smile. I smiled back, with a small touch of panic in my midsection.

“I’m so sorry, but I really don’t _know_ where he is just now,” I said, standing up in hopes of driving him back toward the door.

“Well, Mum, if you’ll just tell me where he was heading, I shall go there and seek direction,” he said, doggedly standing his ground.

“He didn’t tell me.” I took a step toward him, but he didn’t retreat. This was escalating beyond absurdity into something more serious. I’d met General Clinton briefly at the Mischianza ball a few weeks—God, had it only been weeks? It seemed whole lifetimes ago—and while he’d been quite cordial to me, I didn’t think he’d receive a _nolle prosequi_ from me with any sort of complaisance. Generals tended to think highly of their own consequence.

“You know, his lordship doesn’t hold an active commission,” I said, in the faint hope of putting the young man off. He looked surprised.

“Yes, he does, Mum. The General sent notice of it with the message this morning.”

“What? He can’t do that—er, can he?” I asked, a sudden dread creeping up my backbone.

“Do what, Mum?”

“Just—just tell his lordship that his commission is active?”

“Oh, no, Mum,” he assured me. “The Colonel of Lieutenant-Colonel Grey’s regiment recalled him. The Duke of Pardloe.”

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