Dubious Allegiance
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Autumn 1837: the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada are on the eve of open revolt. Lieutenant Marc Edwards has been sent with a force of British soldiers to subdue the increasingly hostile French rebels. But as the smoke from the battle clears and political pressures build, Marc begins to question whether the sacrifices he has made in the name of Crown and country have been worth the cost.
On his return trip to Toronto, Marc is accompanied by a group of seemingly innocent civilians. But as tensions in the provinces escalate and personal grievances within the group arise, it becomes clear that not everyone Marc is traveling with is who he appears to be. Soon, mysterious death threats are issued and Marc finds himself the target of an unknown assassin. And when a member of the group is found murdered in the woods, Marc realizes that he may have more than one killer to worry about.
Don Gutteridge
Don Gutteridge is the author of forty books: fiction, poetry and scholarly works. He taught high school for seven years and then joined the Faculty of Education at Western University in the Department of English Methods. He is now professor emeritus and lives in London, Ontario.
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Dubious Allegiance - Don Gutteridge
Autumn 1837: the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada are on the eve of open revolt. Lieutenant Marc Edwards has been sent with a force of British soldiers to subdue the increasingly hostile French rebels. But as the smoke from the battle clears and political pressures build, Marc begins to question whether the sacrifices he has made in the name of Crown and country have been worth the cost.
On his return trip to Toronto, Marc is accompanied by a group of seemingly innocent civilians. But as tensions in the provinces escalate and personal grievances within the group arise, it becomes clear that not everyone Marc is traveling with is who he appears to be. Soon, mysterious death threats are issued and Marc finds himself the target of an unknown assassin. And when a member of the group is found murdered in the woods, Marc realizes that he may have more than one killer to worry about.
One of Gutteridge’s gifts—others include swift plotting and blessed wit—is to lure us into a world of smugness, treachery, crime, despair, and, of course, murder, through fresh, outsider eyes, so that as Edwards discovers the complexities, subtleties and brutalities of Upper Canada, so do we.
—Joan Barfoot on Turncoat in The London Free Press
DON GUTTERIDGE taught English at the Faculty of Education, University of Western Ontario, before starting the Marc Edwards mystery series.
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OTHER MARC EDWARDS MYSTERIES
BY DON GUTTERIDGE
Turncoat
Solemn Vows
Vital Secrets
title pageTouchstone
A Division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2012 by Don Gutteridge
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Touchstone Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.
First Touchstone trade paper edition July 2012
TOUCHSTONE and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
ISBN 978-1-4391-6372-6
ISBN 978-1-4391-7269-8 (ebook)
For Jean McKay, author and friend
Contents
Acknowledgements
Author’s Note
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Epilogue
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to thank Jan Walter, my editor for this edition, for her insights and tactful suggestions. Thanks also to my dedicated agent, Beverley Slopen, who has been a guiding force behind this series from the outset, and to Alison Clarke and Kevin Hanson of Simon & Schuster, for their continuing faith in the Marc Edwards mysteries.
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Dubious Allegiance is wholly a work of fiction, but the encounters between the rebels and loyalist forces during the rebellions in Upper and Lower Canada are based on the historical record, and the political and societal tensions that fomented the uprisings and fuelled their tragic aftermath—while fictionally represented here—are nonetheless true to the spirit of those difficult times. Particular actions and characterizations attributed to actual historical personages like Charles Gore, Allan MacNab, and Francis Bond Head are fictitious. All other characters are the invention of the author, and any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental. My rendition of the raids on St. Denis and the death of Captain Weir were materially aided by Joseph Schull’s Rebellion: The Rising in French Canada, 1837. The seriocomic clash between Mackenzie’s army
and Sheriff Jarvis’s pickets on Yonge Street is vividly recounted in Edwin C. Guillet’s The Lives and Times of the Patriots: An Account of the Rebellion in Upper Canada, 1837–38. Also, in its Appendix of Select Documents can be found a contemporary description of the hanging of Peter Matthews and Samuel Lount. I have taken some imaginative liberties with it, including moving the date up from April to January 1838. In general, though, I have endeavoured throughout to convey the tenor of the period as faithfully as possible.
DUBIOUS
ALLEGIANCE
It is the fall of 1837 and the colonial provinces of Upper Canada (later Ontario) and Lower Canada (Quebec) are on the eve of open revolt. The Reform Party of Upper Canada has tried for years to secure legislation that will alleviate the many grievances suffered under the stern and self-serving Family Compact. This small group of Tories holds control of the Executive Council and the Legislative Council and uses its power to block any such legislation forwarded by the democratically elected Legislative Assembly. Moreover, the new lieutenant-governor, Sir Francis Bond Head, secured a majority of Tories in the Assembly in the election of June 1836. The Reformers are left without hope for relief or justice from the governing institutions. A radical wing of the Reformers under the leadership of fiery William Lyon Mackenzie has begun to agitate in the hinterland, threatening insurrection.
In Lower Canada, the restless French population is suffering harsh oppression at the hands of the English minority and the land-owning French seigneurs. An economic depression brings many habitants in rural Quebec to the brink of starvation, while those in the cities see their numerical majority threatened by massive immigration from Britain. All that is needed is leadership, and the Reform-minded patriotes find two in former members of the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada, Montreal lawyer Louis-Joseph Papineau and Wolfred Nelson, an English-speaking doctor and politician.
Sensing trouble in Lower Canada, Bond Head decides to send all of his regular troops, garrisoned at Toronto, to Montreal to reinforce the regiment there, leaving Upper Canada relatively defenceless. Mackenzie immediately lays plans for a rebel march on the provincial capital.
In Lower Canada, hostilities have already begun. The French rebels under Nelson occupy the town of St. Denis, south of Sorel. The British response is quick and decisive. A large force of regulars, including the Toronto regiment, advances from Montreal to join battle. Life in the Canadian provinces will never be the same.
QUEBEC: NOVEMBER 1837
It may not be Waterloo, Marc, but by Christ, it’s going to be a bona fide battle!"
Ensign Rick Hilliard had to shout his enthusiasms in order to be heard above the roar of the night-wind, even though he was riding stride for stride beside his superior officer. Lieutenant Marc Edwards made no reply, but Rick’s excitement could not be dampened.
Don’t you think it was a bold move of the colonel to march the men down to St. Denis in the dark? The element of surprise, eh?
Marc gave him a non-committal grunt but kept his mind on the business of manoeuvring his mount, a hackney-horse commandeered at Sorel, through the muddy shoals of what passed for a road along the east bank of the Richelieu River. The cold rain had begun not a minute after the battle-group had cleared the outskirts of Sorel and aimed itself southwest towards its target, a fortified position of the rebels just above St. Denis. It comprised four companies of the 24th Regiment, one company of the 32nd, a motley collection of militia cavalry from Montreal, along with a twenty-four-pounder and its artillery crew.
Half an hour later, snow was added to the rain. It was late November in Quebec, and the weather showed no mercy. The wind-gusts were icy and keen as flails against the exposed flesh of face or finger. The chilling damp soon penetrated every crevice of clothing, every nook of body warmth. Uniforms stiffened. Boots grew slick. Footing became treacherous.
There’s something up there in the woods,
Marc said.
I can’t even see the woods,
Rick said, leaning across his saddle so that he was no more than a foot from Marc’s shoulder.
That shadow up there on your right, at two o’clock.
Shielding his eyes with his right hand, Rick could discern, between gusts of wet snow, the ragged profile of a line of evergreens that must border the nearby river itself. Yes, I see it now.
Something moved up there, animal or human. Do you want to have a look?
Rick grinned and dug his heels into his mount.
Take some men with you!
Marc called out after him. If you can find any!
Marc’s squad was at the head of the column to reconnoitre and skirmish with any scouts or advance units of the rebel contingent, should that be necessary. At least that was Colonel Gore’s plan. But the quagmire of the road and the late-November storm, not to mention the pitch dark, reduced the infantryman to a staggering, lurching parody of the proud and fearless redcoat. Should the moon have been perverse enough to burst out and illuminate the scene below it, not a wink of military scarlet would have been visible. At the end of a single hour’s march, three hundred of Queen Victoria’s finest were caked with mud, boot to cap. Many sank up to their knees in the frigid gumbo, and in a desperate effort to free a boot from permanent lodgment tipped backwards into the mire and had to be helped erect by the nearest upright comrade. And since nothing could be seen in the darkness, the only means of communication was the disembodied shout. The curses and cries of the foot-soldiers could be heard but faintly. Only the roadway guided them, defined by its ribbon of mud between grassy verges, irregular hedgerows, or the ragged vestiges of the autumn’s failed crops.
The mounted militia unit from Montreal fared no better than the men on foot. Assigned to protect the flanks of the straggling column, the cavalry floundered about, with more gusto than guile, on the periphery of the slogging riflemen, bumping into each other in the impenetrable murk and periodically stepping on a soldier unable to leap aside. Three of their horses broke a limb in such collisions and had to be shot, the report of the Brown Bess shuddering through the column and momentarily silencing all complaint—a sharp reminder that the mission they had embarked upon was much more than the minor inconvenience of a forced march over inhospitable ground.
But if man and horse had difficulty with the mud, the rain, and the absence of light, then the wagons carrying the supplies, the twenty-four-pounder and its sixty-eight round shot were bound to suffer an even worse journey. A mile above St. Ours, a village halfway between Sorel and their destination, the road had simply vanished into a swampy morass, and the wagons sank to their axles. The men in charge lashed the stalled horses—more in spite than hope—and then had to be themselves rescued by their mates: bootless, chilled to the bone, and too weary to curse God or their officers. Marc had ridden back to one such mêlée, barked orders at a squad of the Montreal cavalry who were milling about ineffectually on the grassy verge of the woods nearby, and soon the wagons and gun carriage had been hauled laterally onto firmer ground, where they proceeded cautiously forward until some semblance of the road reappeared.
You were right, sir,
Hilliard shouted as he rode up beside Marc. I spotted three fellows, civilians, in that clump of bush over there, but they scampered off into the dark towards the river. I ordered the men to hold their fire and went after them. But they had a little dory of some kind waiting and were out into the river before I could draw my pistol.
So much for the strategy of surprise,
Marc said.
Well, it was a decent idea in theory,
Hilliard said, defending Colonel Gore’s unpopular decision to attack St. Denis and the rebels by stealth in the pre-dawn mists. Nor was the mood of men and officers much cheered by the fact that Colonel Gore was deputy quartermaster-general of British forces in the Canadas, a man whose only battle experience to this point had been skirmishing for the high ground of magazine and commissary.
We’d better keep this news from the rank and file,
Marc said. We can’t be sure that those habitants weren’t spies or scouts for the rebels.
Quite right, sir. Although three hundred soldiers marching on a farm road at ten in the evening in a snowstorm is bound to occasion some notice,
Rick responded.
As Marc’s outriders entered the main street of St. Ours, a sudden peal of church bells rang out from the cathedral tower just ahead in the town square. It was no summons to the faithful, but a clanging cacophony of warning—or threat. When it paused for a minute, in the far distance to the south and east, several more such tocsins echoed ominously across the sombre countryside.
Jesus,
Hilliard said, the whole damn province knows we’re coming.
Let’s hope Colonel Gore has a backup plan,
Marc said. I’d better go and tell him what we’ve seen and what these bells mean. Have Sergeant Ogletree form up the troop here to wait for the main body of the column to move up.
When Hilliard looked skeptical, Marc said quickly, Remember, Rick, we are in enemy territory.
Thirty minutes later, near midnight, the full brigade was ready to enter the village. The colonel had allowed the men to pause long enough to scrape the worst of the gumbo off their boots and weapons, and to reassemble into their double column. One of the draught horses died in its frozen harness and had to be extricated and dumped on the roadside. A drummer and two fifers were commanded to strike up their most flamboyant martial air, and the entire column then marched in glorious, daunting formation down the main thoroughfare of St. Ours. The mounted officers and cavalry pranced warily along both flanks. Colonel Gore, a small moustachioed gentleman more adept at whist than war, rode impassively before the gun carriage and its awesome intimidation.
No sniper opened fire from rooftop or belfry. No curtain shifted surreptitiously at its casement. The shrill bells had stopped abruptly. The only sounds were the tramp of boots in unison, the jangling of harness and scabbard, the padded thump of weary horses, and the strident disharmonies of the fife and drum. And while the silence of the town itself was welcomed, it was also eerie, unreadable, and just a little unnerving. So it was with some relief that the column moved out of the village and into the countryside again, to the relative safety of the quagmire.
I don’t suppose it matters all that much whether we surprise Nelson and Papineau at St. Denis,
Hilliard said a few minutes later when wet snow and frozen fingers had put an end to the musical escort and the column had begun to unravel once more in the dark. After all, General Colborne’s orders are to move on St. Denis from the north while Lieutenant-Colonel Wetherall attacks from the south.
In a pincer movement, you mean,
Marc said dryly, behind a smile that his good friend could not see.
Don’t you find it exciting that in our first campaign we are going to execute one of the classic battle strategies, going all the way back to Caesar, Alexander, Hannibal—
Maybe we should have commandeered a few elephants.
Immune to Marc’s ripostes, Hilliard carried on boldly. And if it’s true that Papineau, Nelson, O’Callaghan, and the other rebel leaders are all in St. Denis, then this tin-pot revolt will be put down by this time tomorrow night. If we don’t get them, Wetherall will nab them from the south. Their only hope is the American border, and the Yankees are welcome to them!
I trust you’re not putting Gore and Wetherall, fine gentlemen though they be, on the same rostrum as Caesar and Wellington.
Well, no. But as unregimented as this rabble up ahead may be, they nonetheless threaten the stability and very future of British North America. The outcome of tomorrow’s battle will surely be as significant as Wolfe’s vanquishing of Montcalm.
The cry of a beleaguered cavalryman immured in the mud to their left recalled Hilliard to his duty, and he vanished into the swirling snow. That the coming clash of forces was not Waterloo was evident to everyone who had resided in Quebec for more than a month. Despite the rumours and frenetic news reports, no arms or cash had poured in from the republic to the south. Marc knew that Louis-Joseph Papineau, like William Lyon Mackenzie in Upper Canada, was principally a politician, a talker, a negotiator, and a high-stakes gambler. While his followers armed themselves with ageing muskets and pistols, and drilled in pastures in the dead of night, they were, though numerous, not a cohesive army. No man of military stature and experience had stepped forward to take command. So even if the hundreds or thousands who had gathered around the Liberty Pole at Nelson’s distillery chose to fight, there would be no classic battle between uniformed, disciplined armies serving under their national flag. What, then, would there be? Shooting, mutual determination, and death. And with Colonel Gore’s superior force already exhausted, hungry, and dispirited, who but God knew the outcome. Perhaps Lieutenant-Colonel Wetherall had arrived from Chambly in the south and settled the issue. Certainly, their own colonel’s judgement was already suspect.
Everything had begun smartly and according to protocol. The three hundred men and their support units had been mustered with enthusiasm and precision on the wharf at Montreal. The band had stirred the modest crowd of well-wishers to cheers as Colonel Gore led his troops up the gangplank and aboard the Hochelaga, bound for Sorel at the mouth of the Richelieu River. Major Owen Jenkin, who had become Marc’s friend and surrogate father in the past year, shook Marc’s hand and wished him luck before returning to Montreal. Neither of them had been willing to speak of the indefinite postponement of the wedding of Marc and Beth Smallman that had been made necessary by the transfer of Marc’s regiment to Quebec. But it was never far from their thoughts.
Then, as the afternoon of November 22 waned, the steamer moved steadily downstream to the occasional shout of encouragement (or otherwise) from the shoreline. By six o’clock, with the sun setting behind foreboding clouds, Sorel was reached. By seven, in a darkness unrelieved by streetlamps—the town could no longer afford such a luxury—fife and drum conducted the colourful brigade to the barracks. Here it was expected they would have their evening meal and rest until daybreak. Horses would be conscripted, extra wagons appropriated, scouts sent out to reconnoiter the riverside terrain, and couriers whisked ahead to Chambly to help co-ordinate the pincer movement
envisioned by General Colborne, the supreme commander in British North America and an officer who had fought at Waterloo.
But eager to make his mark on something other than a requisition form, Colonel Gore had decided on his own merit to choose the age-old tactic of surprise over the more reliable deployment of scouts and dispatch riders. Thus, instead of filing into a warm barracks and a cold supper, the five companies and cavalry troop were commanded, without ado or explanation, to wheel back onto the main street and make for the road to St. Denis. The fog had already begun to turn traitorously into rain and, as the night-cold pressed down upon them, to intermittent snow. Any initial excitement on the part of the soldiers was quickly dampened by the hostile weather. Half a mile out of town, the sprightly music of fife and drum unraveled and died altogether when lips froze to mouthpiece. Then the standard-bearer had tripped on a rut, pitched cap-first into the muck, and watched in helpless horror as the Union Jack sank out of sight in a puddle.
How are the men faring?
Marc asked his sergeant.
Ogletree, with a face as gnarled and craggy as a habitant woodcarving, peered up at his superior officer. I spent two years on the Peninsula with the Iron Duke, sir, and I don’t recall anythin’ as bad as this. The lads are toughin’ it out an’ keepin’ their mutinous thoughts to themselves, but damn it to hell, Lieutenant, if it’s much farther to St. Denis, they won’t be fit to fight a banty rooster with rickets.
It’s a good ten miles from here, Sergeant.
An’ we’re makin’ about two miles an hour, luggin’ that blasted cannon over this peat-bog of a road. We can’t possibly spend another five hours out in this stuff an’ then be expected to make a surprise attack on an enemy, who’re warm, an’ well fed, an’ just waitin’ fer us to show our mugs.
I agree, but that seems to be the master plan at the moment.
Marc swung down from his mount and dropped beside Ogletree. I’m going to walk with you and the men. Hilliard can look out for himself. If anyone gets a sniper’s bullet, it’s likely to be one of those fool militiamen hopping about like hares on a griddle.
Marc immediately felt his right boot being sucked into the mud. The continuous wet snow and rain had begun to turn the stiffened ruts into oozing slime, more liquid than solid. Walking was reduced to slithering, with repeated pulling at one boot or another to prevent it from being sucked away in the stubborn undertow.
Welcome to our world, sir!
Private Higgins called out behind his superior officer. But there was no malice in the remark. The men increased their pace a little. Twenty minutes later Hilliard and several others of the mounted vanguard drew to a halt.
What’s the problem, Ensign?
Marc said. Rebels ahead?
No, sir. There seems to be two roads instead of one.
He looked perplexed, as if a fork in the road were an alien thing, inscrutable as the habitant’s lingo he did not comprehend beyond a curse word or two.
I don’t recall our map showing the river road dividing anywhere near here, sir,
Marc said to Captain Riddell, the company commander, when he rode up to see what had caused the stoppage.
"Neither do I, Lieutenant. But then we have not been provided with proper military maps. My instinct is to stick to the river. The frogs usually do."
Marc was about to agree when Colonel Gore arrived, looking like a waterlogged peacock. The issue at hand was explained to him. No advice was sought. The deputy quartermaster-general simply waved them towards the narrower road to their left—away from the river and through a dense bush. Officers and men obeyed, as they must.
As he wheeled to ride back to his rear position, the colonel snapped at Marc: Lieutenant, please get on your horse at once. Your uniform is a disgrace, and you are in danger of demoralizing your men!
Marc obeyed, as he must.
* * *
Along the road to the right that the colonel had disdained to take, an incident was to occur less than half an hour later, one that would be significant in determining the course and nature of the rebellion. Neither the deputy quartermaster-general nor any of his officers or men would be witness to it, but it was recounted to them, again and again and in such horrific detail by those claiming to have been present, that they felt