"I Ask You to Be Amenable,"
Pages 267-272
Early that morning her husband had supervised the burial of
cannon wheels underneath a bed of sage. In the garret she and her children had
placed feathers in open barrels containing balls, flints, and cartridges. With
the redcoat soldiers almost within sight, a furrow had been plowed, cannon
barrels and muskets placed in the furrow, and a second furrow plowed to cover
them. When the soldiers entered the farm yard, Meliscent Barrett was
sufficiently composed to watch them search. Seated in her grandmother’s wooden
rocker, placed in the sparse shade of a red maple, she scowled at the soldiers’
use of her well.
“D’y’ave
spirits, ma’am?” a ruddy-faced sergeant asked, having separated himself from
scores of regulars crowding about the well bucket and windlass.
“I
do. It is kept for the pleasure of the gentlemen. It is not kept for the likes
of you.”
From
her servants, children, and most all people of common birth Meliscent Barrett,
the Colonel’s second wife, demanded absolute obedience.
The
sergeant’s cheeks reddened. “’Ere now. Y’ don’t belong t’be talkin’ t’me like
that! I be takin’ it whether or no I be ‘avin’ yer say so!”
“My
husband’s liquor is privileged property. I will speak plainly so that you may
understand. Not one poxy-faced, dirt-groveling, biscuit weevil knave of the
King’s hounds shall taste it!”
“God
rot yer eyes, y’ bloody old whore!” Poised to strike her, pulling his hand
back, he shouted a one-word expletive. Two seconds later he was striding toward
her back door.
“Mrs.
Barrett, I believe?” a stocky, square-headed officer asked, having halted the
sergeant with a proceed-if-you-dare scowl.
She
glowered.
“I am
Captain Lawrence Parsons, commanding officer of this detachment.” He gestured
broadly. “Be advised that our purpose here is not to plunder. This soldier’s
behavior notwithstanding, be certain that your private property is entirely
safe.”
“How
then, Captain, do you characterize that?!”
She jabbed her right forefinger at the soldiers entering and exiting her barn.
“Munitions
stored in defiance of the Crown, madam, are treasonous contraband, quite the
exception. As for what has just transpired, as for that, you, sergeant,” -- He pointed his riding crop at the stiff-backed
soldier -- “neither you nor any man
under my direction shall avail himself of spirits!”
“No
sir. Thank you, sir.”
“Be
mindful, sergeant, of your duty,
which you abrogated at Lexington .”
“Sir?”
“Your
men must obey orders, sergeant.
Orders you must obey absolutely! Is
that not so?!”
“Aye,
sir. I d’catch yer meanin’.”
“Very
well. Process beforehand what you are about to say. Process similarly your
employment. I shall be keeping my eye on you. Carry on!”
A
half minute passed. Hearing the sound of Parsons’ riding crop flicked against
his right calf, Meliscent watched what she could of the activity inside her
barn. A thin, dark haired young officer, his eyes taking note of her for the
briefest of moments, approached. Authoritatively, Parsons departed. Meeting a
short distance away, they conversed.
The
Captain nodded once, glanced at her, averted his face. She heard him say, “Have
them make a pile. Upon my command, burn it.”
They
had found the gun carriages, which her laborers had hastily buried under the
hay.
Captain
Parsons returned. Hands clasped behind his back, he gazed at her. “My soldiers
are hungry,” he said, blandly. “They will pay, with coin, what you will
provide. They will be kept here in the yard, well regulated. The provisions
will be conveyed to them by your servants.”
Meliscent
snorted. Parsons’ eyebrows arched.
Jabbing
her elbows against the backrest of her rocker, she scowled. “We are commanded to feed our enemies.” Her
hands worked combatively. “You cannot buy
good will. I will not accept your
coin!”
Parsons
stiffened. Anger colored his face. “A curious
decision,” he responded. “Imprudent. Obstinacy thrown in the face of courtesy.
Madam, you invite resentment!”
Her
eyes castigated him. From his coat pocket Parsons withdrew a shilling.
Scowling, he tossed it onto the lap of her frock. A second officer,
freckle-faced, exhibiting a swagger, added his own. Two nearby soldiers,
observers, now approached. Parsons’ angry eyes taunted her.
“This,”
she exclaimed, “is the price of blood!”
Pivoting,
Captain Parsons strode toward the three carriages now parked outside the barn.
“Burn them!” he shouted. “Burn the whole bloody batch!”
“No!”
She rose. “God be my witness, no!”
Refusing
to turn about, he said, “I shall no longer accommodate you!”
“Burn the carriages if you must.” Raising
the hemline of her dress, she hurried to him. “Do not burn the barn!”
Parsons
turned.
They
glared.
Advancing
his chin, Parsons said, “The flames won’t ignite your barn.”
“If
you’re mistaken?!”
“I’m
not mistaken!”
“Realize,
if my barn burns, you’re not destroying contraband! You are destroying what you
declared to me you would protect! Move the carriages farther away, Captain
Parsons! Use a scintilla of common sense!”
Mounds
of hay were being heaped underneath the carriages. Parsons signaled the
sergeant in charge to strike a spark.
The
soldiers in the yard had watched the confrontation. At least half of them
witnessed the pell-mell dash of a farm laborer through the barn’s opened
doorway. Hurling his upper body against the ribs of the sergeant, the laborer
sent the man sprawling. The laborer bounded to his feet. Four soldiers immediately
wrestled him down. The ruddy-faced sergeant who had demanded spirits, suddenly
amongst them, raised his musket stock.
“Bring him to me!” Parsons shouted.
Grunting,
cursing, the soldiers yanked the laborer, a husky lad, across the yard.
Having
closed half the separating distance, Parsons pressed the end of his crop
against the boy’s chest. “You, pile
of midden! You have assaulted a
soldier of the King!”
“T’hell
with that.”
Parsons
rose upon the balls of his feet. “You! Scab! You shall not say that! I wilI
have you transported to London
in chains! Your name!”
His
arms pinned by two burly soldiers, the boy spat at Parsons’ boots.
Face
raging, Parsons whipped his right calf. “You! Whore son! Bleeding sodomite! You
will pay for your insolence! Your name!”
Meliscent
thrusted her body between them. Her left shoulder struck Parsons’ chest.
Flailing her arms, she widened the narrow space. “Enough!” she demanded.
“No,
Madam!” he stammered. “It is, … not
enough!” His suffused face contorted. “Step aside! This man has committed
treason!”
“He
is not a man!” she answered. “Look, for God’s sake! Look! He is a boy!” She inhaled deeply. Tightening
herself, she exclaimed, “He is my boy!
My son! What would you expect?!”
Gray
particles obstructed her vision. Her shoulders quivered. Lord, strengthen me! she mouthed. She met Parsons’ fierce
scowl.
“Whether
he is your son or not,” Parsons said, enunciating each word, “he has attacked
soldiers of the Crown, in the performance of their duty. He shall be punished!”
“For
defending his parents’ barn, Captain
Parsons! Private property!”
“A
matter of contention, Mrs. Barrett. A mother’s desperate defense!”
His
entire being threatened her.
She
saw what her intransigence had wrought.
“For
everybody’s sake, Captain,” she said, exhibiting sudden dignity, “you should
remove the carriages to a safer place, then ignite them. We will not resist
you.”
Prepared
to speak, he blinked. “Be assured of that!”
She
persisted. “Had your soldiers already done so, this would not have happened.
Nor would my son have acted as such had my words to you been dispassionate.”
Parsons’
mouth closed. Eyes cloaked, he lowered his left hand. The tip of his riding
crop touched his right boot. Sensing that her refined, gentler voice had
tempered him, she looked at her hands. Her anger had incited his wrath more, she judged, than had her son’s foolish
battery.
“We
disagree about my son’s intention,” she said, risking what she had gained to
attain all. “We will not argue about that. But, Captain Parsons, he is but a
lad, thirteen. Alas, influenced by his mother’s rash temper. He is not the
master of the house. Please do not punish him as if he were. I ask you to be
amenable, sir, charitable.”
Her
son, James Jr., wisely submissive, stared at his shoes.
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