Malcolm Stubbs’s natural hair was sandy and tightly curled as sheep’s wool; when left to its own devices, it exploded from its owner’s head like a ruptured mattress. Consequently, Malcolm usually kept his head polled and wore a wig. He’d evidently been wearing one earlier but had taken it off and set it aside, and the inch of mad growth thus displayed strongly resembled the texture of the two small curls of dark cinnamon-colored hair that Grey had so far received from Canada, each one bound carefully with black thread and accompanied by a brief note of thanks and blessing from Father LeCarré—the latest, just before his departure for Jamaica.
The urge to bounce Malcolm’s head off the desk and shove him facedown into the pulpo was strong, but Grey mastered it, chewing the bite of octopus—very flavorful, but in texture reminiscent of an artist’s rubber—thoroughly before saying anything. He swallowed.
“Tell me about this slave revolt of yours, then.”
MALCOLM DID LOOK at him now, considering. He nodded and reached, grunting, for the limp, bloodstained stocking hanging out of his artificial foot.
“We’ll go up to the battlements,” he said. “Not many of the servants speak any English—but that doesn’t mean none of them understand it. And they do listen at doors.”
Grey blinked as they emerged from the gloom of a stone stairwell into a pure and brilliant day, a blinding sky spinning with seagulls overhead. A stiff wind was coming off the water, and Grey removed his hat, tucking it under his arm lest it be carried away.
“I come up here several times a day,” Malcolm said, raising his voice above the wind and the shrieks of the gulls. He had wisely left his own hat and wig below in his office. “To watch the ships.” He nodded toward the expanse of the huge harbor, where several very large ships were anchored, these surrounded by coveys of smaller vessels, going to and from the shore.
“They’re beautiful,” Grey said, and they were. “But they’re not doing anything, are they?” All sails were furled, all port lids closed. The ships lay at anchor, rocking slowly in the wind, masts and spars swaying stark and black against the blue of sea and sky.
“Yes,” Malcolm said dryly. “Particularly beautiful when they’re not doing anything. That’s how I know the declaration of war hasn’t yet been received; if it had, the decks would be black with men, and the sails would be reefed, not furled. And that’s why I come up here morning, noon, and night,” he added.
“Yes,” Grey said slowly, “but…if in fact de Prado—that’s the commander of the forces here?—if he doesn’t know that war is declared,—why are these ships here already? I mean, plainly they’re men of war, not merchantmen. Even I know that much.”
Malcolm laughed, though without much humor.
“Yes, the cannons rather give it away, don’t they? The Spanish have been expecting war to be declared for the last six months. General Hevia brought these ships in last November, and they’ve been lying in wait here ever since.”
“Ah.”
Malcolm gave him a raised brow.
“Ah, indeed. De Prado’s expecting a declaration any day. That’s why I sent Olivia and the children to the country. De Prado’s staff all treat me with exquisite courtesy”—his mouth twitched a little—“but I can see them measuring me for leg-irons and a cell.”
“Surely not, Malcolm,” Grey said mildly. “You’re a diplomat, not an enemy combatant. Presumably they’d either deport or detain you, but I can’t see it coming to chains.”
“Yes,” Malcolm agreed, eyes fixed again on the ships, as though he feared they might have begun to move in the last few moments. “But if they find out about the revolt—and I really don’t see how that can be avoided—I rather think that might alter their views on my claim to diplomatic immunity.”
This was said with a sort of calm detachment that impressed Grey—reluctantly, but still. He glanced round to be sure they were not overheard.
There were a lot of soldiers up here but none close to them; the gray stone of the rooftop stretched away for a hundred yards in all directions. Grey could hear, faintly, shouts between an officer at the far end of the battlement and someone in the watchtower above. There was a small group of regulars—most of them black, Grey saw—stripped to the waist and sweating despite the wind, repairing a gap in the battlement with baskets of stones—and there were guards. Four guards at each corner of the battlements, stiffly upright, muskets shouldered. The fortress of La Punta was prepared.
A detachment of twelve men marched past, two by two, under the command of a young corporal shouting the Spanish equivalent of “Hup!” as they wheeled past the stubby watchtower. The corporal saluted smartly; Malcolm bowed and turned again to the vast expanse of the harbor. It was a clear day; John could just make out the great boom chain at the harbor mouth, a thin darkness in the water, like a snake.
“It was Inocencia who told me,” Malcolm said abruptly, as the soldiers disappeared down a stairway at the far side of the rooftop. He cut his eyes at Grey, who said nothing. Malcolm turned his face back to the harbor and began to talk.
The revolt was planned among slaves from two of the large sugar plantations near Havana. The original plan, according to Inocencia—whose cousin was a servant at Hacienda Mendez but was having an affair with one of the house slaves, whose brother was one of the ringleaders of the plot—had been to band together and kill the owners of the haciendas, loot the houses, which were very rich, and then escape through the countryside to the Golfo de Xaguas, on the other side of the island.
“Thinking that the soldiers wouldn’t pursue them, being distracted by the imminent arrival of the English on this side, you see.” Malcolm appeared quite unmoved by the putative murder of the plantation owners. “It wasn’t a bad plan, if they chose their moment and waited ’til the English did arrive. There are dozens of small islands in the golfo; they might have hidden there indefinitely.”
“But you discovered this plan, and rather than mentioning it to the comandante…”
Malcolm shrugged.
“Well, we are at war with the Spanish, are we not? Or if we weren’t, it was obvious that we would be at any moment. I met with the two leaders of the revolt and, er, convinced them that there was a better way to achieve their ends.”
“Alone? I mean—you went to meet these men by yourself?”
“Of course,” Malcolm said simply. “I wouldn’t have got near them had I come mob-handed. Didn’t have a mob to hand, anyway,” he added, turning to Grey with a self-conscious grin that suddenly took years off his careworn face.
“I met Inocencia’s cousin at the edge of the Saavedra plantation, and she took me to a big tobacco shed,” he went on, the grin fading. “It was almost nightfall, so darkish inside. Lots of shadows, and I couldn’t tell how many men were there; it felt as though the whole place was moving and whispering, but likely that was just the drying leaves—they’re quite big, did you know? A plant is almost the size of a man. They hang them up, up in the rafters, and they brush against each other with this dry sort of rustle, almost like they’re tittering to themselves…put the wind up me, a bit.”
Seven Stones to Stand or Fall (Outlander)
Diana Gabaldon's books
- Written in My Own Heart's Blood (Outlander)
- Voyager(Outlander #3)
- Outlander (Outlander, #1)
- Lord John and the Hand of Devils
- Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Blade
- Written in My Own Heart's Blood
- Dragonfly in Amber
- Drums of Autumn
- The Fiery Cross
- A Breath of Snow and Ashes
- Voyager
- The Space Between