The Rebels: The Kent Family Chronicles (49 page)

BOOK: The Rebels: The Kent Family Chronicles
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The army had not formally engaged the British since leaving Valley Forge on the twenty-third of June.

And now the British had a new commander.

Unfortunately so did all the Americans holding advanced outposts in the field this morning. To a man, they distrusted the general who was supposed to be giving the orders. As Wayne had said, Charles Lee had argued against this pursuit. Despite all von Steuben’s training, the Americans, Lee was convinced, were still no match for British regiments—

Very shortly they would resolve the issue. Resolve it in this patch of Jersey marshland where the tree trunks were surrounded by pools of water left from the huge storms that had alternated with intense heat and humidity for days on end. Philip watched the British closing in the ordered ranks he remembered so well from Breed’s Hill—

Then suddenly, from behind the marching redcoats, he picked up a terrifying new sound.

“Oh Jesus,” Breen exclaimed. “They’re throwin’ cavalry at us!”

Philip peered through the sweat blurring his eyes. The British infantrymen were flanking right and left. Into the openings burst the hard-riding vans of mounted units; men in green-faced blue coats and hussar busbies, their drawn sabers flashing—

“Queen’s Rangers!” someone cried in fright.

The American officers up and down the line called the count for cocking and poising firelocks. Philip heard Walter Webb yell:

“Hold for the signal—!”

Looking inhumanly tall in their saddles, the Tory Queen’s Rangers thundered between the trees, riding down on the Americans, sabers raised.

Philip watched one jouncing cavalryman’s busby tilt askew so that it touched his right eyebrow.

Sixty yards away now.

Fifty—

Coming at the gallop, dozens of them, hundreds, a surging wave of blue coats and steel—

A man to Philip’s left shrieked in panic, threw down his musket and began to run back toward the ravine. Webb shouted at him but let him go, whirling to concentrate on the cavalrymen. In the distance Philip thought he heard an American drum signal for a retreat.

Or was that thunder again?

Where was General Washington? Why had they been thrust forward like this under the over-all command of a man everyone considered a braggart, a fool, even a coward?

The Ranger horse came on.

Forty yards.

Thirty—

The great chargers rolled their eyes and bared their huge yellowed teeth against their bits. In patches of sunlight, the sabers glared like a spiked wall rolling forward—

Finally—much too late, Philip feared—he heard the command bawled from company to company:

“Fire!”

ii

A wild but all too brief elation had greeted the news of the French alliance.

The agreement between the American commissioners in Paris and the government of King Louis XVI had actually been reached in early January. A treaty stipulated that France would come to the aid of the new country with men and materiel if and when war broke out between Britain and her traditional enemy.

Very few doubted that such a war was inevitable. According to the rumors reaching Valley Forge in the late spring, France actually seemed to be encouraging incidents that would provoke open conflict. A French armada commanded by Admiral Count d’Estaing had already sailed from Toulon with four thousand soldiers aboard. The soldiers were prepared to land on American soil if, by chance, their country and England were at war by the time the ships made a landfall.

Alarmed, the king’s ministers in London had replaced the sluggish, luxury-loving Howe with a new commander in America, Sir Henry Clinton. Upon hearing the news of the French armada, Clinton promptly abandoned the prize of Philadelphia and began its evacuation in mid-June. Washington ordered the march from Valley Forge a few days later, moving the American army into New Jersey, an inferno of summer humidity and sandy roads and sudden storms.

Somewhere ahead of them Clinton zigzagged toward New York with his troops and his precious train of fifteen hundred wagons loaded with supplies and equipment. According to the scouts, Clinton was at present heading northeast, to reach the safety of New York via Sandy Hook. Only General Charles Lee and a few other senior officers were in favor of letting him go unmolested.

But thus far the pursuit had been a fiasco.

Washington pushed on without directly contacting the retreating enemy, listening meantime to the counsels of his various generals, and weighing each opinion. Everyone knew Anthony Wayne’s terse advice:

“Fight, sir.”

Von Steuben had theoretically brought the army to a new, higher pitch of readiness. Yet Washington had finally decided on a compromise. They would engage Clinton’s rear guard only. If that action proved successful, the entire American force could sweep forward.

Regrettably, the general who demanded personal command of the exploratory action was thin, ugly, egotistical Charles Lee, nominally the highest-ranking officer after Washington.

Lee had seen service in Europe. He considered himself much more of a military expert than his superior. There was even talk that he had penned not-so-secret notes to the Congress denouncing Washington as “damnably deficient.” Lee stubbornly maintained that the army to which he’d pledged his service could never win a major engagement against crack British and Hessian units.

Conscious of his rank and its perquisites, he still demanded command of the probing action aimed at Clinton’s retreating troops. Washington reluctantly agreed—

And Lee began not a vigorous chase but a slow, aimless dallying. The men in the field this steaming twenty-eighth of June, 1778, were already aware that while Lee vacillated, Clinton had started his precious baggage train moving again. During the darkest hours of the preceding night, the quarry had begun to widen its margin of distance from the Americans.

Now, along an irregular front near tiny Monmouth Court House, the forward American units braced for what appeared to be a protective counter-stroke from Clinton’s rear. And, as General Wayne had disgustedly noted, no clear-cut instructions had yet been issued by General Lee.

“Order, counter-order, disorder.”
Every man, it seemed to Philip, was left to fight as circumstances dictated.

Or flee.

Or die.

iii

The first of the Tory Queen’s Rangers had nearly reached the American line. Philip’s musket bucked against his shoulder, cracking out flame and smoke.

His ball struck an officer’s huge roan in the neck. The animal bellowed as it went down. A fountain of horse blood sopped the officer’s breeches.

Three and four deep, the cavalry charged the line of erupting muskets. Some blue-coated men dropped. Others broke through to hack and chop with their sabers. The area immediately in front of Philip quickly became a melee of downed horses and mountless men, with other Rangers from the rear charging through as best they could.

And now came the frantic business of re-loading—

The officer Philip had unseated dashed to his right, grabbing at the reins of a horse whose rider had been shot. Philip saw this while he fumbled with powder and ball and tried to remember von Steuben’s ten-count. All around him he heard screams, shots, curses, the sickening
chunk
of sabers striking exposed flesh.

The bloodstained officer gained the saddle, spurred the new mount forward. Sections of the American line began to break, the men scrambling toward the ravine. Philip and Royal Rothman held their places in a clump of shrubbery that afforded them only minimal cover. The smoke, the steam, the uproar of hoofbeats and shrieks and explosions constricted Philip’s world to little more than a few yards of ground—

Just as Philip finished loading, the officer with the blood-reddened trousers tensed in the saddle, ready to leap his new horse straight over their heads in pursuit of the men fleeing to the ravine.

Royal Rothman jumped to his feet, took two short steps to the side, rammed his bayonet into the horse’s belly as it went over. A hoof struck Philip’s ear, drawing blood—

The big cavalry horse wrenched in midair. The Ranger cried out, his blade arcing crazily as horse and man tumbled. Breen was back-stepping and re-loading at the same time. He slipped in a muddy place. The falling officer’s saber, coming down at a chance angle, cut Breen’s neck from the right side.

Breen’s head seemed to loll toward his left shoulder. Blood cascaded over his chest. The officer’s bayoneted horse was down, thrashing, loosing its stinking bowels in its death-agony.

The officer pulled himself from under the fallen horse, staggered to his feet. Philip aimed his musket at the blue-coated back, decided instantly not to waste a shot, leaped over the dying animal with bayonet thrust out ahead.

The officer heard him coming, spun. A bar of steaming June sun lit young, frightened blue eyes. The saber flashed up defensively. Philip dodged under, stabbed his bayonet home and yanked it out.

The Queen’s Ranger spilled forward into the mud. American muskets were crackling and flaming again.

“Have at ’em with bayonets!”

Off to his right Philip recognized Wayne’s voice, very nearly a maniacal shriek. A riderless British horse went by, almost knocking Royal over. The horse tried to check at the edge of the ravine. Philip watched it tumble over—just as he heard other hoofbeats behind him—

More of the Rangers on the attack. He shot shoulder to shoulder with Royal. Their two balls killed one cavalryman, wounded a second. They jumped apart to let the horses race past. The dead Ranger hung head down, his boot caught in his stirrup.

Again Wayne ordered the bayonet charge. This time sections of the American line began to move.

Philip and Royal bent low, stumbling toward the trees. Philip gulped air. God, he was dizzy. The heat was enough to make anyone pass out—

Quickly he glanced up and down the line. What he saw restored his spirits and re-sharpened his senses. The American musket-fire had blunted, then broken the Ranger charge. A few last horsemen were wheeling to head back the way they’d come, retreating wraiths in the forest steam.

A ball whizzed past Philip’s head. He ducked automatically, realized that the infantrymen who had stopped to permit the Ranger companies to charge through had now started a defensive fire.

But the Rangers—superb soldiers—had been
beaten!

Philip and Royal converged on a kneeling infantryman who desperately tried to decide which of them to shoot. His face plastered with sweat and sand, Royal took advantage of the hesitation and dispatched the luckless redcoat with one stroke of the bayonet.

When the man fell, Philip glanced at his friend. There was something strange and terrible and old in Royal’s eyes. As he smiled, the sand cracked from his cheeks and dribbled onto his filthy shirt. His teeth had the white look of a skull’s.

Ahead, they heard Wayne’s bellow. Out in front of all the rest, he was leading the bayonet attack. Philip and Royal staggered toward the voice, hunting for redcoats.

But in the steamy, uncertain light they were hard to spot. And now they too were pulling back.

Philip stumbled and sprawled in a pool of water. By the time Royal had helped him to his feet, they both heard a new, readily identifiable sound in the woods:

American drummers beating a familiar cadence.

Anthony Wayne came storming back toward them, shaking a bloodied spontoon:

“Form up in column of fours!
Column of fours!”

“General, why are they beating retreat?” Philip shouted. “We’ve got ’em running—”

Wayne stopped long enough to mop his forehead with his sleeve. He was shaking:

“You go tell that to General Lee—you can probably find him having breakfast behind the lines! It appears we nipped Clinton’s tail a little too smartly. A scout came through before we started the charge. He said Clinton’s turning the main body of the army back against us. He’s afraid of losing his wagons. We’re
that close
—”

Wayne’s index finger and thumb illustrated. His face was still white with fury.

“—consequently, Charlie Lee’s called a retreat!”

He stalked on toward the ravine, screaming:

“Column of fours, goddamn you!
Retreat formation!”

Wearily, Philip and Royal began to trot after the retreating general.

Philip’s temples hurt. So did his chest. Sand and tiny insects tormented his exposed skin. He cursed long and loud, finally exclaimed:

“That damn yellow Lee still thinks we can’t hold against the British!”

Astonished, he heard Royal echo his anger with one foul word after another. The boy, it seemed, was no longer a boy—

They loped back past the horse Royal had killed, to rally around two drummers signaling from the other side of McGellaird’s Brook.

iv

They marched while the sun blistered them. They marched on a road half mud, half sand, in a direction Philip presumed to be westward. Back toward English-town; back toward the main body of the army.

They marched along in a column of fours, cursing but keeping step. Every man in the ranks knew how close they’d come to blunting the British counter-thrust and breaking through.

It seemed to Philip that the horror of Breed’s Hill had been repeated with an eerie, subtle variation. This time the American bayonets could have won the day. At least in his limited sector—

Then, once again, the retreat signal. Not to keep them from defeat, but to prevent a victory.
Damn!

They tramped along the sandy, hell-hot road, complaining bitterly.

The pullback had been orderly, and without casualties. Von Steuben had taught them that. He had also taught them a great deal they were unable to use, Philip thought in disgust.

Next to him, Royal said, “Do you suppose anyone will go back for Breen’s body?”

Philip grimaced. “How can they? Looks like we’re going to be driven back miles from where we started.”

“Will Captain Webb write Breen’s family?”

Philip shrugged. “Breen never told us his real name. It would take a visit to Andover to find out who he really was.”

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