were lost. There are swamps. Even hunters have been lost. And the last one was almost a year ago.â
âHow many others?â I insisted.
âThree,â Macklin replied.
âAll were maids?â
âTrue,â Penney said, âalthough I had not thought of it so. I thought of them as childrenââ
âTomorrow,â I said, âI would like to be taken to where they were last seen.â
âThey were gathering herbs,â Macklin said. âDiana knew much of herbs and their worth as food, medicine, or dyes. She was teaching the young missââ
âIt was a mistake,â Pittingel said sharply, âfor which you have yourself to blame. You were warned. The Macklin girl was not fit company.â
Robert Macklin turned sharply around. âJoseph,â he said quietly, âyou speak of my daughter.â
Pittingel flushed angrily. âAye! Your daughter, Macklin, yours by birth, but whose in reality? The devilâs own, I say, spawned in your wifeâs womb, but the devilâs own!â
Macklinâs features had stiffened. âPittingel, you have no rightââ
âHere, here!â Penney interrupted. âLetâs not become heated over this. Argument will not get our girls back, and Joseph Pittingel turned out his whole lot, every motherâs son of them to search! We owe him that, Macklin.â
âYou are right, of course,â Macklin said quietly. âIf you will excuse meââ
âNo, it is I who must leave,â Pittingel interrupted. âI have business elsewhere.
âSackett, if thereâs aught I can do, call on me. I have many men here and a ship due in any day now with her full crew. Anything I can do for my good friend Penney will be done.â
He went out, and the door closed behind him. For a moment there was silence.
âYou should not incur his anger, Robert,â Penney warned. âHe is a man of much influence with both the church and the council. It was only he who prevented them from having Diana up before the assizes. And with the evidence they have against her, it would mean burning.â
âEvidence!â Macklin scoffed. âThey have not a paltry bit of evidence. Diana is a good girl, and a God-fearing one.â
âShe was seen gathering mandrake,â Penney reminded, âand she walks alone by night. How much do they need? Did not Brother Gardnerâs cow go dry after he spoke angrily to Diana? Did notâ?â
âNonsense!â Macklin said. âPurely nonsense!â
âNevertheless,â Penney said sharply, âthat is why they will not look, Macklin, and you know it! They do not wish to find Diana, and my Carrie must suffer because of it! I was a fool toâ!â
âTalk will not bring her back,â Anna Penney interrupted.
Pushing back my empty bowl, I got to my feet and drank off the last of the cider.
âIf they can be found, Mistress Penney,â I said, âI shall bring them back, with Yanceâs help.â I put down the mug. âOne more thing. Do the Pequots have muskets?â
Penney looked around. âMuskets? I think not, although there was talk of some selling of arms to them. Why do you ask?â
âTenaco,â I said, âthe messenger Mistress Penney sent for us, was shot. He was shot only just after he left here, shot by someone who both had a musket and who did not want him bringing help.â
I lifted the latch. âNow who do you suppose would do that?â
I stepped out into the night and pulled the door shut quickly behind me. Instantly I rounded the edge of the house and stood quiet to let my eyes grow accustomed to the darkness.
A moment I listened. Someone, some
thing
was out there. Out there in the darkness, waiting.
Chapter III
W aiting or watching. The night was a secret place, but the keys to the secrets were the senses. Edging a little along the cabin wall, feeling