'Franco-Irish-American, perhaps.' Aske's second thoughts were more cautious. 'We've still got a lot of checking ahead of us ... but it does fit some of
Elizabeth nodded, yet found herself drawn to the expression on the old man's face: it was as though he was willing her to go on, to build more elaborately on their card-house of guesses.
'Amos Ratsey and James . . . Burns,' she began tentatively.
'If they were spies, they were never caught, were they?'
Wilder shook his head. 'No. They both flourished like the proverbial green bay-tree after the war. That is a fact—a dummy3
historical fact.'
'Huh! They cut their losses, and joined the winning side,'
said Aske. 'But after the retreat from Moscow they didn't have much choice—Moscow, and then the failure of the American invasion of Canada . . . and then Napoleon was beaten at Leipzig, and Wellington crossed the Pyrenees from Spain—what else could they do but keep their heads down and hope no one rumbled them?'
Amos Ratsey and James Burns had lived to keep their secret
—a secret which Tom Chard hadn't known when he told his part of the tale, years afterwards, to Parson Ward. But that wasn't a tragedy—it was more like the luck of the Irish. So what—
'What I'd like to know is how the devil Agnes—what was her name? Agnes
That was it: Humphrey Aske had been tracking her own thoughts, but somehow he'd overtaken her on the home straight.
She stared at Wilder. 'They gave it to James Burns, of course.
Is that what they did, Professor?'
'I don't know, Miss Loftus.' He stared back at her. 'Yet that would seem like another very fair guess . . . Or, let's say, I can think of no other way it could have become an O'Byrne dummy3
family heirloom.'
Aske frowned. 'Why on earth did they give it to him?' He shook his head. 'Timms and Chard weren't spies, for God's sake, were they?'
'That they were not, Mr Aske. I think they were good men and true—true to their salt, even the American. I believe that they must have come ashore with it, but they didn't know what to do with it. So they read the names on the lid—or Abraham Timms did—the names and the places . . . and they decided to deliver the box to one of those names. They may have looked for Ratsey first—or maybe O'Byrne was the first name they traced.' He shrugged. 'It's even possible they were aware they ought to give it to someone in authority, but they couldn't do that, could they?'
'You're darn right! Not if they were also busy deserting! Even going back to Portsmouth would have been like putting their heads in the lion's mouth—that would be one hell of a risk for them. But why should they want to do that?'
'Why indeed?' Wilder's voice was gentle. 'Why do men do brave deeds—if I knew that I would be wiser than I am! How did the O'Byrne family get the box? We don't know—but they
'But he
'Or it could be that Chard and Timms were simply keeping faith with men they admired—'
Keeping faith is another irrational act, more often than not.
But men will persist in doing it.'
Elizabeth shivered. 'How awful!'
'Awful?' Aske snuffled as though amused. 'If it's true, I'd like to have seen Burns's face when they turned up with it—it must have put the fear of God up him!' He chuckled. 'And then the relief when he twigged they were deserters! I'll bet he filled their pockets with guineas to enable them to make themselves scarce, too . . . If it's true it's a damn good story, I'll say that for it!'
Elizabeth was scandalised. 'But it's an awful story, Mr Aske!
The lieutenant and the midshipman—they went through all that, and then they died for nothing—
The enormity of the
'Chard and Timms got away, remember!' Aske moved to make amends.
'But they gave the box to Burns—of all men—'