several hours until I had to be at the craft fair, and the battle didn't start till three.

Well, if I couldn't sleep, I could make good use of the time. I rummaged through die clutter until I found my cell phone. Then I curled up in the sleeping bag and spent the next hour calling relatives and neighbors to ask if they could lend me any ironwork they'd bought from me. Most agreed, and promised to drop the stuff off at my booth. Since I hardly had enough stock left to sell, I planned to put tags on the borrowed stuff saying 'FOR DISPLAY ONLY; ORDER NOW FOR DELIVERY BEFORE CHRISTMAS' and see how many more commissions I could score.

It worked fairly well; I took dozens of orders, and whenever I dashed over to check on how Tad was doing, Faulk's booth was full of customers and increasingly lower on ironwork. The bail fund grew steadily until Mrs. Fenniman came by and offered to put up the balance in return for Faulk making her a gazebo that looked like his booth.

'Of course, if they convict him, he might not be able to make your gazebo for quite a while,' Tad reminded her.

'If he's convicted, he won't need the booth for quite a while, so you can give me that,' she replied. Practical as usual.

The Anachronism Police had the bit in their teeth and were writing citations right and left. Luckily, my fellow crafters took my word that I'd do something to erase the rapidly mounting fines, so morale was high. Even mine. A night of tossing, turning, and fretting hadn't produced any brainstorms about the murder, but I had come up with a way to handle the fines, and enlisted Tad and my nephew Eric to help me carry it out.

We didn't see much of the reenactors. Except for Wesley, who strutted by, resplendent in a scarlet British officer's uniform, all the reenactors were busy making last-minute preparations for the battle.

'And sleeping off the beer, some of them,' one soldier's wife told me, shaking her head. 'Seems some of the boys must have gotten a little soused and went around playing pranks.'

'Pranks?' I said. 'What kind of pranks?' Call me paranoid, but I couldn't help jumping to the conclusion that anything out of the ordinary had to be connected with Benson's murder.

'Oh, stupid stuff,' she said. 'Someone going around pilfering stuff – just for the hell of it, as far as we can tell, because most of what was missing wasn't valuable. And this morning all the pilfered stuff has started turning up in places some drunk would think was funny. Like we found one woman's missing stays run up a flagpole and a stolen bayonet stuck in the wall of the privy for a toilet-paper holder. Juvenile stuff like that. So everyone's on edge, expecting to find the missing musket balls in the stew, or maybe someone's stolen long Johns.'

'Must be a Y-chromosome thing,' I said, and we both laughed as she wrote a check for the iron pot rack she was ordering.

'Whoever did it better steer clear of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers,' she said, as she turned to go. 'Their regimental standard still hasn't turned up, and those boys are hopping mad.'

Maybe that was why Michael hadn't dropped by all morning, I thought. Maybe he was helping soothe frayed tempers and recover purloined items. Or, more likely, maybe he was simply having too much fun marching around in the white-and-gold uniform.

Two o'clock came, and the crafters who didn't want to see the battle began their loadout, while the rest of us headed out to the battlefields. I lagged behind. If Michael and half the men in my family hadn't been participants, I think I would have gone back to the tent and curled up for a ten-hour nap. I'd-been questioning people all morning, whenever I could steal a moment away from my booth, and I hadn't turned up a single useful bit of information, or thought of a single plan for helping Faulk. To top my mood off, the first person I ran into when I got to the battlefield was Mrs. Waterston.

'Oh, there you are, Meg,' she said, in a voice that implied she'd been searching frantically for me all day.

'What's up?' I asked, warily.

'I don't suppose you know where that brother of yours has gone,' Mrs. Waterston said.

'Off to join whatever unit he's fighting in, I should think.'

'Oh – he's fighting?' she said, sounding surprised.

'Well, he's a man; they're all allowed to fight, no matter how useless they are at it,' I grumbled.

'Bother,' she said, without appearing to hear me. 'Well, here, you watch him for a while.'

With that, she handed me Spike's leash and sailed off. He looked up and wagged his tail as if glad to see me. I sighed, and decided to find a portapotty before the battle got going. Preferably one that didn't already have fifty people in line, which was how I ended up going back through the rapidly emptying camp to use the relatively out- of-the-way portapotties there.

When I got out, I looked over at the tree where I'd tied Spike and saw only his leash and his empty collar lying on the ground. He'd escaped again.

'As soon as this bloody festival is over, I am buying that dog a proper harness,' I fumed, turning around to scan the surroundings. 'Maybe a straitjacket.'

I strode down the lanes of the camp, calling Spike's name, which was probably a mistake. He might not even want to be found.

I passed Cousin Horace, who was struggling with a pair of dark blue overalls.

'Have you seen Spike?' I asked.

'No. Could you help me with these?' he said.

'Stand still then.'

He didn't exactly stand still, but at least he stopped wiggling his legs, and I was able to undo the misbuttoned overalls and do them up again properly. Meanwhile, above my head, he was struggling into a coat.

'There,' I said, standing up. 'That's a nice uniform, Horace.'

'I'm fighting with the Third Virginia State Legion,' Horace said, proudly, turning so I could admire his hunter- green coat.

'Won't catch me in one of those dandified uniforms,' drawled a voice nearby.

Tony Grimes. Who seemed to have regained some of his courage since fingering Faulk for murder, the rat. Although when I got a little closer, I suspected it was Dutch courage. Hair of the dog.

He was sitting outside his tent, wearing a filthy set of buckskins, trying to tie the laces of a pair of buckskin shoes, and making a poor job of it.

'Nice outfit, Tony,' I said. 'I guess you usually just keep them around for gardening and changing the oil in your truck.'

'Don't forget your hat, soldier,' Tony said to Horace. 'Madame Von Steuben's on a tear; she's court- martialing anyone who's missing part of his uniform.'

'Oh, dear, where did I leave it?' Horace moaned.

'If you don't know, go see Mrs. Tranh, quick,' I said. 'She brought spares of everything, if she hasn't run out.'

'Better hurry,' Tony said, as he reached back into his tent for something. 'All the redcoats were supposed to be on the field half an hour ago.'

Horace hurried off. I stopped.

'All the redcoats?' I repeated, under my breath.

Horace's uniform was green. Bright, hunter green.

I turned and walked back to Tony. He was struggling to tie a knot in a broken buckskin lace.

'What did you say?'

'I just told your wimp of a cousin to hurry,' Tony said. 'Mrs. Waterston wanted all the redcoats in the redoubt half an hour ago.'

'Only Horace's not a redcoat, you slimy little weasel!' I exclaimed, leaning over, pulling Tony up by die front of his buckskin shirt, and shaking him. 'You're colorblind, aren't you?'

'What difference does that make?' Tony said, trying to pull away.

'You told Monty the killer was wearing red plaid socks,' I said. 'How the hell did you know they were red plaid? They could have been green or blue or even purple plaid for all you knew.'

'I'm only red-green colorblind,' he said. 'I can see most other colors, and I've gotten very good at telling what kind of brown means red and what kind of brown means green.'

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