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  ‘I thought you had all but left them?’ Hobert remarked.

  ‘I should not have done so,’ John said, his voice very low. ‘I should not have left them in the middle of such a war. I was angry with her and I insisted she came with me and when she defied me I thought I was free to go. But a man with a child and a garden planted is never really free to go, is he, Bertram?’

  Hobert shrugged. ‘I can’t advise,’ he said. ‘It’s an odd life you’re making, that’s for sure.’

  ‘It’s two lives,’ John said. ‘One here, where I live so close to the earth that I can hear its heartbeat, and one there, where I live like an Englishman with duties and obligations but with great riches and great joys.’

  ‘Can a man do both?’ Hobert asked.

  John thought for a moment. ‘Not with honour.’

  The moment that Suckahanna saw him come from the shadow of the forest and walk past the sweat lodge, the fields and up the village street she knew that something had happened. He walked like a white man with weight in his heels. He did not stride out as the men of the Powhatan. He walked as if something was pulling his shoulders downwards, pulling his head down to his feet, pulling his feet so that he looked as if he was wading through a mire of difficulties instead of dancing on smooth grass.

  She went out slowly to meet him. ‘What’s wrong?’

  He shook his head but he would not meet her eyes. ‘Nothing. I have done what I promised to do and now I am come home. I need not go again until harvest time.’

  ‘Are they sick?’ she asked, thinking that his slouch might be shielding some illness or pain.

  ‘They are well,’ he said.

  ‘And you?’

  He straightened up. ‘I am weary,’ he said. ‘I shall go to the sweat lodge and then wash in the river.’ He gave her a brief unhappy smile. ‘And then everything will be as it was.’

  In the warm days when the woods seemed to grow and turn green before his very eyes, John returned to his trade of plant collecting and rarity hunting. Already he had sent home a large parcel of Indian goods: clothing, tools, a case of bands and caps made from bark; now he recruited Suckahanna’s son as his porter and every day the two of them left the village for a long stroll in the woods and came back laden with sprouting roots. John worked in companionable silence with the boy, and found that his thoughts often wandered to Lambeth. He felt great affection for Hester and a powerful sense that he should be there with her, to face whatever dangers might come from a country in the grip of an insane war. But at the same time he knew he could not leave Suckahanna and the Powhatan. He knew that his happiness, and his life, lay with the People.

  John thought himself a fool: to abandon a wife and then to try to support her, to take a wife and then to think daily of her rival. He wanted so much to be a man like Attone, or even a man like Hobert, who saw life in simple terms, who saw one road and steadily walked it. John did not think of himself as complex and challenged; he lacked all such vanity. He saw himself as indecisive and weak and he blamed himself.

  Suckahanna watched him create a nursery bed, heel in the roots, and linger over his cuttings; but she said nothing for many weeks. Then she spoke.

  ‘What are they for?’

  ‘I shall send them to England,’ John said. ‘They can be grown and sold there to gardeners.’

  ‘By your wife?’

  He tried to meet her direct black gaze as frankly and openly as he could. ‘My English wife,’ he corrected her.

  ‘And what will she think? When a dead man sends her plants?’

  ‘She will think that I am doing my duty by her,’ John said. ‘I cannot abandon her.’

  ‘She will know that you are alive, and that you have abandoned her,’ Suckahanna observed. ‘Whereas now she may have given you up for dead.’

  ‘I have to support her in the way that I can.’

  She nodded and did not reply. John could not accept the stoical dignity of the Powhatan silence. ‘I feel that I owe her anything that I can do,’ he said awkwardly. ‘She sent me a letter which I got at Hobert’s house. She is in difficulties and alone. I left her to bring up my children and to manage my house and garden in England, and there is a war in my country …’

  Suckahanna looked at him but said nothing.

  ‘I am torn,’ John said with a sudden burst of honesty.

  ‘You chose your path,’ she reminded him. ‘Freely chose it.’

  ‘I know,’ he said humbly. ‘But I keep thinking …’

  He broke off and looked at her. She had turned her head away from him, hiding her face with a sweep of black hair. Her shoulders, showing brown and smooth through the veil of black hair, were shaking. He gave an exclamation and stepped forward to comfort her, thinking that she was weeping. But then he saw the gleam of her white teeth against her brown skin, and she flicked around and was running down the village lane, away from him, and was gone. She had been laughing. Not even her immense courtesy could restrain her amusement any longer. The spectacle of her husband struggling interminably forwards-backwards, duty-desire, English-Powhatan, was in the end too helplessly funny for her to take seriously. He heard the wild ripple of her laugh as she ran down the path to the garden where the sweetcorn was already growing high.

  ‘Aye, you can laugh,’ John said to himself, feeling himself wholly English, as leaden-footed as if he were wearing boots and breeches and weighed down by a hat. ‘And God knows I love you for it. And God knows I wish I could laugh at myself too.’

  When the snows were melted from even the highest hills, when there were no sharp frosts in the morning, when the ground was dry beneath the light summer moccasins of the braves, there was a meeting called by the ancient lord, Opechancanough. John the Eagle went with Attone and with one of the senior advisors of the community to represent their village, travelling along the narrow trails, northwards up the river to the great capital town of Powhatan. It nestled in the dry woodlands, at the foot of the mountains on the edge of the river which John had once known as the James River, but which he now called the Powhatan, and the waterfall at the side of Powhatan town was Paqwachowng.

  They sighted the town of about forty braves at dusk, and paused outside the city boundaries.

  ‘You’re to keep quiet until spoken to,’ Attone said briefly to John. ‘The elder will do the talking.’

  John looked without resentment at the older man who had led the way at a hard pace for the journey of many days. ‘I didn’t even want to come,’ he protested. ‘I’m hardly likely to interrupt.’

  ‘Didn’t want to come, when you can see new plants and trees and flowers? And take them back to Suckahanna when we sail downriver by canoe?’ Attone mocked.

  ‘All right,’ John allowed. ‘But I’m saying I didn’t ask to come. I didn’t want a place here.’

  The older man’s sharp beaky face turned to him. ‘But your place is here,’ he said.

  ‘I know it, older one,’ he said respectfully.

  ‘You will answer questions but not give opinions,’ the man ruled.

  John nodded obediently and fell into file at the rear.

  No-one knew the age of the great warlord Opechancanough. He had inherited his power from his brother the great Powhatan, father of Princess Pocahontas, the Indian heroine whom John had visited when he had been only a little boy and she had been a celebrity visiting London. There was no trace of her beauty in the ravaged face of her uncle. He sat on a great bench at the end of his luxurious long house, his cape of office shining in the gloom with the round discs of abalone shells. He barely glanced at John and his companions as they shuffled up, bowed, deposited their tribute on the growing pile before him, and stepped back.

  When everyone had come and bowed to the lord he made a brief gesture with his hand and the priest stepped forward, cast some dust into the fire and watched the scented smoke spiralling upwards. John, weary from many days’ walking, watched the smoke too and thought that it made strange and tempting shapes, almost as if one c