There was a red light toward Frenchman's Creek, too, but where Fonda's Bush should lie a vast sea of fire rose and ebbed and waxed and faded above the forest.
"Were any people left there?" I asked.
"None, sir."
"Thank God," I said. But my heart was desolate, for now my house of logs that I had builded and loved was gone; my glebe destroyed; all my toil come to naught in the distant mockery of those shaking flames. All I had in the world was gone save for my slender funds in Albany.
"Where are my friends?" said I to a soldier.
"At the Block House, sir, and very anxious concerning you. They have not long been in, but Nick Stoner is all for going back to Summer House to discover your whereabouts, and has been beating up recruits for a flying scout."
Even as he spoke, I saw Nick come up the road with a torch, and called out to him.
"Where have you been, John Drogue?" said he, coming to me and laying a hand on my shoulder.
"Is Penelope safe?" I asked.
"She is as safe as are any here in Mayfield. Is it Summer House that burns in the north, or only the marsh hay?"