Chapter Three: Withdrawn
:
September-October, 1776
11-15 September 1776
On the morning of September 11th, Timothy Grady stood off to the side of the front entrance of the Billop Manor, the Staten Island estate mansion of Colonel Christopher Billop, at attention with the other servants there to support their various masters, as the delegations of the two sides of a peace conference that could stop the budding rebellion against Britain in the New World in its tracks arrived. The British delegation, led by British Admiral Lord Richard Howe had arrived first. That's why Timothy already was here, as HMS
Yarmouth
Captain Owen Sheffeld's personal man servant—his personal man servant in more ways than just dressing the captain and polishing his boots. Also part of the British delegation was HMS
Asia
Captain George Vandeput. Those two sixty-gun warships still provided the backbone of the British threat in the New York area.
Timothy's attention increased as the American contingent arrived—in two waves. First came the politicians, the Continental Congress members John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and Edward Rutledge. These were followed some twenty minutes later by the colonial militia representative, Major Brady Lathrop. The American force's commander, General George Washington, had been deemed too indispensable to risk sending to a meeting on the British-occupied soil. The rebels didn't have the depth of military leaders that the British did. Washington also had taken seriously Timothy's report that the British didn't expect anything to come of the conference and weren't prepared to accept anything but the colonies' unconditional surrender. The Continental Congress remained hopeful, however, so here their delegates were.
The young man's heart began to beat harder when he saw that Douglas Bester was seconded to Lathrop. The two—the soldier and the spy—immediately were aware of each other, but both were as careful as they could be not to draw attention to the electricity that was arcing between them. The short time it took for Bester to dismount and follow Lathrop up the front steps of Billop Manor and into the mansion was the last contact the two of them had that day.
The conference proved to be short and just shy of explosive content. The Continental Congress delegates insisted on delivering the recently pinned Declaration of Independence and that the British recognize its existence. In response, General Howe declared, as Timothy had told General Washington was the case, that he had no brief from London or King George III to accept anything from the colonists but a surrender and a pledge of obedience to the king. The preliminary ceremonies took three hours; the central nonmeeting of minds and departure of the American delegates took less than fifteen minutes.
That night, in one of the several bedrooms in Billop Manor, Captain Sheffeld's foreplay while atop Timothy took less than fifteen minutes. The resulting fuck lasted nearly three hours. The foreplay, involving a whip, was more painful to Timothy than the fuck was.
In the greater world, the possibility of peace between Britain and her rebelling colonies was brushed aside and on September 15th, 1776, George Washington having already pulled his troops out of lower Manhattan, the
Asia
and
Yarmouth
landed 12,000 soldiers near the stripped battery at the tip of the island and occupied the lower city. The colonial militia held a line across the island at the Harlem River.
The captains of the two British warships came ashore with the occupation troops, and Thomas Hadley was at the front entrance of his Stone Street town mansion to welcome both the captain and his manservant, Timothy Grady, as guests in his house.
As soon as Hadley and Timothy could manage to be alone, Hadley slipped a folded map to Timothy.
"As you are able and as it will be naturally found in a way to be believed, you are to convey this map to someone in high authority among the British," Hadley whispered. "Yes, you may look at it and see what it is," he said, as Timothy made to unfold the map.
"It appears to be a military map of Manhattan. Are you sure I should give this to the British?"
"Yes, Lathrop is sure he wants you to. The British cannot be considered content to remain here in lower Manhattan. As they wished to do in Boston and were unable to do, they'll want to move from here into the mainland and spread out as soon as possible."
"But this appears to show where colonialist defenses are weak," Timothy said.
"That it does," answered Hadley. "Lathrop wants this place of apparent weakness to be where the British try to maneuver around our lines in Harlem and land. What you are being asked to do is to somehow insert it into their hands in such a way that they believe in its authenticity."
"I will do my best," Timothy answered, understanding now the purpose and importance of the map. "The captain says that we withdraw to Howe's headquarters on Long Island tomorrow. That is where I will have to find a way."
"And as quick as you can," Hadley said, pushing Timothy through a door into the servants' wing and pasting a smile on his face, having heard the approaching footsteps of his esteemed British guest, Owen Sheffeld.
* * * *
21-22 September 1776
As unobtrusively as he could, Samuel Fraunces motioned Thomas Hadley to continue on to one of the back rooms of the tavern on Manhattan's Broad Street when Hadley entered the bar area. The atmosphere inside the tavern was downright poisonous. The occupying British Redcoats had taken over all of the central tables, but the colonists had not completely given up the room and sullenly sat around in muttering groups, their heads together and their faces taking a range of venomous aspects, at the fringes of the room and in the shadows.
To a man, they'd turned baleful eyes on Hadley when he entered the tavern. The prominent Tory merchant hadn't dared leave his Stone Street mansion since the British had taken over lower Manhattan a week earlier. Tensions were high. The colonialist citizens who had abandoned the lower city were seething and building up to something. The British had put guards on Hadley's mansion and on those of other prominent Tories in the city, of which there were many—New York wasn't anything close to being supportive of the rebels, but the Tories tended to remain indoors for their own protection. Who knew how long the mere semblance of protection would hold, however?