Christian Cameron

Washington and Caesar


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off the African name. “Caesar, Colonel.”

      “Ah, Caesar. He has a bit of the Roman look to him, does he not?” Washington was disconcerted for a moment—a rare feeling, quickly dismissed. Then he smiled—a quick flash, without teeth, but one that lit his face—and he turned back on Bailey.

      “Am I understanding? Caesar beat Pompey?”

      Bailey looked at him without understanding, and Washington shook his head and moaned inwardly; his moments of learned wit were few enough, to fall on such barren ground.

      “Perhaps we’ll call him Julius Caesar?”

      Bailey was still trying to make out why Washington was so concerned that the new slave had beaten Pompey.

      “It were a fair fight, Colonel.”

      Washington smiled again, nodded.

      “I’m sure it was, Bailey. But I like the name. Julius Caesar. Tell Queeny—he’s with Queeny?”

      “Yes, Colonel.”

      “Julius Caesar. I like the look of him, Mr. Bailey. Tell him I will want him and the hounds out tomorrow morning. See to it.”

      “Yes, Colonel.”

      “He has a jacket?”

      “Yes.”

      “I have the caps in my baggage. See that he has one. All the neighborhood will be riding tomorrow, and he must be smart.” Washington leaned over the stile and looked him in the eye.

      “I like to be there when the dogs are fed, Caesar. When you have their food made up, you send to the house for me, if I am by. Do you understand?”

      “Yes, suh. Then dogs know you.”

      Washington nodded. “Exactly. Boy, what will you feed ’em tonight?”

      Caesar took a moment to think over his reply.

      “They gun dogs, they rest tomorro’. They get meat. They hounds, they run tomorrow. They get bread soaked in broth, roll’ in balls.”

      Washington smiled, a thin-lipped movement that hid his teeth.

      “And they’re all well, Caesar?”

      “Blue heah…Blue here, she’s coat be dull, be’nt it, suh?”

      “You tell me.”

      “An’ she won’ take huh food. Her food.”

      Amused at the boy’s eagerness and air of confidence, Washington leaned out farther over the stile.

      “What do you do for a dog like that?”

      “I wash her in broth and see dat…that she licks herse’f and get her some food.”

      “I take a little turbith mineral, I make it into a ball with corn syrup, and I give it her to eat.”

      “Neva heard that one, suh. What’s turbit?”

      “Mr. Bailey, would you be so good as to reach down the second tin. The very one. Look here, boy. I take as much as will cover a nail. See? I’ll mix it with a dash of syrup. Damn it, there used to be corn syrup here.”

      “Right here, Colonel.”

      “Thank you, Mr. Bailey. I mix them together and then roll it in a pill, like this. Now you give it her, Caesar.”

      Caesar took the sticky pill and stroked the dog for a moment before running his fingers along the bottom of her jaw, where he pressed. The dog opened her mouth wide and Caesar laid the sticky pill on her tongue. It was gone in a single lick, the dog looking back and forth between the people with the weary air of one who has been practiced upon.

      “Four times a day until she takes food. I do rather like the notion of bathing a dog in broth, though. Do you find that it answers?”

      “They can’t he’p but lick, suh.”

      “I learned about the turbith mineral from Lord Fairfax, and there is no man in America knows more about dogs. I long to tell him about bathing a dog in broth. Do both: I wish to see it in action.”

      “Yes, suh.”

      Washington left the boy to Bailey, and headed for his house.

      

      He read in his library for a while, then looked at his latest drawing for an improved stable, made a change where he thought he could run water straight from the spring with pipes, and thought better of it. He was restless, and he walked through the house as he sometimes did when he couldn’t concentrate his mind. The servants and slaves in the kitchen were surprised by his passage, but pleased at his satisfaction. Other house slaves looked worried when he passed, or were long in bed themselves, according to their tasks.

      Washington stopped on the central stairs and found Martha sitting in the blue parlor. “Are you ready for bed, ma’am?”

      She lifted her book to him with a smile and went back to reading, a habit he had once found rude and was now used to. The smile, at least, meant she was in good humor. He nodded, almost a bow, and went up. The stair had never satisfied him. It was too narrow, and lacked something in sweep compared to other houses. It dated from a time when Mount Vernon had been considerably smaller. He began to plan a new staircase, trying to picture where he would have the space for a broader sweep.

      “Are you going to bed now, sir?” asked his personal slave, Billy.

      Washington realized he was standing at the top of the stair, unmoving, and that his hands were cold. He had been there some time.

      “I am, Billy. I am.”

      “Will you want anything while you undress?”

      “I think I’ll have a small brandy, Billy.”

      “Very well, sir. I’ll be with you in an instant.”

      Before Washington had done more than enter his bedroom and take his watch out of his breeches, Billy was back with a trumpet-shaped glass on a silver tray. His presentation was elegant, indeed, everything about Billy was elegant, and he did it so quietly that Washington seldom heard him coming.

      Washington swallowed a third of the contents in a gulp, surprising himself. He smiled. “My thanks on that, Billy. Will you see to my watch case? It’s dull.”

      “Yes, sir.” Billy took his coat and handed it to a young boy, who took it away with something like reverence.

      “I can get my own boots, Billy.”

      “I’m sure you can, sir. But you won’t while I’m here.”

      Billy had the softest touch of the slave accent, never enough to make sir into suh, but enough to make his tone husky. He was always softly spoken. Washington sat and allowed Billy to pull off his riding boots, which were handed to the same boy for polishing. Billy left his slippers by the fire. Washington would never submit to anyone putting his slippers on. Washington turned, his aquiline profile strong against the dark outside. He sipped his brandy.

      “Anything else, sir?”

      “Have you met the new boy, Billy?”

      “Which one, sir?”

      “The African, Billy. The dogs boy.”

      “Cese, sir?”

      “That’s him, Billy. Caesar, if you please. What do you think of him?”

      “He’s a good boy. Queeny likes him, and that’s somethin’.”

      Billy didn’t exactly approve of Queeny, as he was a Christian man and she was easy in her affections. But at another level, they were allies.

      “We’ll know what he’s made of when we see him on the hunting field, eh?”

      Billy attended Washington even on horseback.