Luc looked at her. “Are you serious? We can’t be. Look how crowded it is.”
Sophie tried to imagine what other trial would draw so many spectators, then stubbornly shook her head. “I don’t know,” she finally said. “But, Luc, look at the front.”
In front of them a scarlet-draped table dominated the room. It was massive — maybe as long as forty feet — and at least three feet higher than anything else. There were fifteen chairs set at regular intervals behind it, two desks at each side, and a long enclosure with a roughly built bench on the right, between it and the spectators. Several furled Union Jacks stood in their standards behind the table, adding vivid splashes of red, white, and blue to the sombre room and giving authority to the table.
As Sophie and Luc watched, the clerk self-importantly tidied the fifteen stacks of paper and the inkwells that stood in front of each chair. “What’s the matter, Sophie,” Luc whispered, studying the table again. “What’s worrying you?”
“Well, I can’t see where the judges are going to sit,” she whispered back. “Can you?”
The government had gone to a lot of trouble to make the room look as majestic as possible, presumably to symbolize its authority. Surely, the powerful judges should have had the place of honour. But, try as she might, Sophie couldn’t see where they’d sit, unless it was in the roped-off section right in front of them. That couldn’t be right, she knew, because then they’d be among the spectators.
Mr. Christie cleared his throat and tapped her on the arm. “I really do beg your pardon, Miss Mallory, but I couldn’t help overhearing. I can answer your question, if you’d allow me to.”
Sophie smiled her agreement, then exchanged wary looks with Luc. She certainly wasn’t comfortable with the way Mr. Christie seemed to know everything, and she could see that Luc was still on edge, as though wondering why the lawyer had chosen to sit with them. Maybe he thought Mr. Christie planned to point him out to the police constables in the doorways. As Lady Theo kept reminding them, these were desperate times and desperate people were doing anything they could think of to gain the government’s favour.
Mr. Christie seemed not to notice their cautious reactions. “The reason you’re not seeing a place for judges, Miss Mallory, is because this isn’t an ordinary trial. It’s a court martial. Do you know what that means?”
“A court martial’s a trial for soldiers in the army,” Luc answered.
“Right …”
“But my brother isn’t in the army. So, how can they try him here?” Luc blurted out, and then went deathly white as Sophie gasped. If Mr. Christie was a government spy, Luc had just about handed himself over for arrest. Desperate people, desperate times, she thought as she looked at Mr. Christie in panic.
He seemed to be mulling something over in his mind. The list of defendants, it turned out. He held his hand out to Luc. “Mr. Moriset, I presume.”
Luc looked stricken, torn between good manners and petrified about the consequences of being identified. For the first time, Sophie understood exactly why Lady Theo had warned them time and time again to be careful. By letting his guard down for that tiny moment, Luc had given his identity away to a total stranger. She wondered how much Mr. Christie knew about the rebellion and if he realized that Luc was still wanted in the area south of the St. Lawrence.
Mr. Christie withdrew his hand without making an issue of it. “Maybe you would be well-advised to wear women’s clothes again tomorrow, Mr. Moriset. Like you did when you helped Miss Mallory in her, er, snowball fight,” he said quietly. “There are many spies in the room and once the novelty wears off, they’ll be studying everyone even more carefully. Today, though, you can be part of my family.”
Luc looked like he wanted to cry, and Sophie knew how annoyed he was with himself. In an attempt to distract him, she turned to Mr. Christie. “I don’t know anything about court martials,” she admitted. “Could you explain it to us, sir?”
“Courts martial, Miss Mallory. One trial is a court martial; two or more, courts martial. I suspect there will be at least ten trials before we’re done,” he stated, and Sophie decided that he really must be a lawyer. Or a grammar teacher. No one else would care whether it was court martials or courts martial. But when he went on, she could tell he was really talking to Luc, not her.
“A lot of lawyers do not understand it either. Personally, I don’t think it’s even legal for the government to try civilians here. But, with the army everywhere, who can say it’s wrong? Not me, that’s for sure. I’m not that brave. In any case, that’s why twelve very ordinary men will be tried for treason this morning with the soldiers they fought against as their judges. There’ll be General Clitherow….” He broke off and looked directly at Luc. “Do you know who he is?”
Luc nodded. “He’s smart. He commanded the troops at Napierville, and he’s Governor Colborne’s right-hand man.”
“That’s right. He’ll sit in the middle in the big chair, as he’s in charge. He’ll have four colonels, three majors, and seven captains as his fellow judges. The desks on the left side are for the deputy judge advocates. They’re lawyers — barristers like me, really. As deputy judge advocates, though, they tell the officers what the law is and act as the prosecutors.”
Sophie felt outraged by the thought of officers who had fought in the rebellion judging its participants. “That’s not fair. I saw what the Glengarries did in Beauharnois when they rescued us. They didn’t care about the law or if people had rebelled or not. They just burnt their houses down anyway.”
“It really doesn’t seem right, sir,” Luc added so quietly and nervously that Sophie could see he still didn’t trust Mr. Christie at all. “Some of the men’s farms are threatened by English settlers. How can British officers understand that?”
“They can’t,” Mr. Christie retorted. “They know how to fight, how to advance against the enemy in straight lines, when to charge, when to retreat. Most importantly, they know how to follow orders. They understand discipline, young man, not the law. They won’t care if someone is a soldier or a farmer. All they know is that these men rebelled against the British Crown. According to the law, that is treason. Everyone seems to have decided already that they’re guilty, and the government has said they must be punished. You’d better prepare yourself, young Luc. There’ll be no compassion here today, I’m sorry to say.”
Sophie knew that Mr. Christie was being kind and, as he said, preparing Luc for the inevitable. Still, the worry she’d managed to keep at the back of her mind suddenly leaped to the front. Was this the kind of justice her papa would have to face?
No one seemed to know why he had been arrested. Benjamin Mallory had crossed into Canada to attend a Welcome to Winter party at the Beauharnois country house of Lady Theo’s friends from London: Edward and Jane Ellice. When Benjamin hadn’t arrived in Beauharnois, Sophie and Lady Theo assumed he had waited for the rebellion to end before travelling north to Canada. They hadn’t known Benjamin had left Vermont until Luc found out that he was in a jail somewhere south of the river. Lady Theo vowed to get him out of prison, but Sophie wondered if she really could. Would Papa end up having to face trial in this room, in front of those fifteen officers — the general, the four colonels, the three majors, and the seven captains? Beside her Luc was obviously fighting his own demons of fear. “I’ve heard my brother has a great defence,” he whispered to Mr. Christie, blinking hard. “That has to count for something.”
“I….” Mr. Christie stopped when he heard a slight commotion behind them.
“Oh, no,” Luc said, elbowing Sophie in the ribs. “Don’t look up. She’s here.”
His suggestion was too late. Sophie had already turned to see what was happening. A small group of fashionably dressed people was walking down the steps to the front of the room. Among them was a tall woman dressed entirely in black, from her