problem with that, too.'
'The Borneo pirates,' Lewrie interjected. 'There's little love lost between them and the Lanun Rovers, is there, sir?'
'Exactly so, Mister Lewrie. He may have some relations with 'em as a hole-card, so to speak, and he may be forced to play it to allow him one last chance to go home a winner, but… well, damme!'
'What?' Twigg rapped out.
'Well, here's this lad Choundas, born a commoner, normally denied his chance to shine in the French Navy, but thinking himself kin to ancient sea-kings. I see why you would think he would have to do something grand against us before going home, Mister Twigg, but think on this for a moment…' Ayscough beamed cleverly. 'The Borneo boys are river-based, and they don't go out of sight of shore too often. Who would Choundas feel the most in common with?'
'The Lanun Rovers, still!' Twigg exclaimed.
'Right, then!' Ayscough said once more, rubbing his horny palms in satisfaction. 'Were I looking for prizes, I'd be far south, opposite the Johore Straits. Around Anambas or Pulau Natuna, where we met that pirate fleet last year. Here at Spratly, maybe up farther north and still to windward of the Canton run on the Tizard Bank. No shelter there, though, if the winds pipe up.'
'Too close to Dutch or English patrols down south, sir,' Lewrie commented. 'That's why he chose Spratly in the first place.'
'Yes, so we must assume that he's somewhere up to windward, but not
'Is this not a Spanish naval base, here on Palawan?' Sir Hugo asked, leaning over the chart. 'This Puerto Princesa? Seems they'd have this area covered. Why let some outsider upset what arrangement they have with their own native pirates? They'd kick him out soon as those Yankees let them know of it.'
'Ah, but he doesn't even know that
'So this Balabac Strait is pretty much the King's Highway to these pirates, sir?' Lewrie asked, peering at the chart.
'Yes, just so. And I'd expect Choundas to be somewhere near the western entrance, around the island of Banggi on the north tip of Borneo, or on the island of Balabac itself,' Ayscough concluded, tossing down his dividers.
'We have little time, then, before the first ships sail from Calcutta and Madras for this year's trading season,' Twigg fretted. 'We'll not see him playing innocent in Canton again. One raiding season, then back he goes to the Indian Ocean, leaving other ships to be his bearers for the last loads of loot, whilst he's off like a hare to France. We might be able to stymie his designs by our presence, and defeat him that way. But there's the matter of all those ships we've lost the last two years. All those murdered men. Damme if I care much for him escaping with even the slightest hint of success, sirs! I wish him destroyed, utterly!'
'Like Cato's demand,' Sir Hugo mused. 'Carthage must be destroyed.'
'Exactly, Sir Hugo,' Twigg said firmly. 'For everyone's peace of mind, Choundas must be destroyed.'
'Mister Lewrie,' Captain Ayscough asked. 'Whatever did happen to those Veneti?'
'Caesar sank the lot of them in 56 B.C., sir,' Lewrie replied.
Chapter 10
To ease the overcrowding aboard
The
Leaving
'And a half, four!' the leadsman in the chains said, getting bored and sunburned at his thankless task. They were skirting round the foetid, marshy tip of Borneo, near enough to a native settlement marked on the chart as Kudat (which was about all that the chart had gotten right in the past few days) to have seen several single
'Time to change the leadsmen, sounds like,' Lewrie said. He drew out his watch and looked at the time. 'Almost the end of the day watch. Five minutes to eight bells, Mister Hogue.'
'Stand off-shore once the watch changes, sir?' Hogue asked.
'I think we'll continue as we are for the first hour of the first dog-watch. After that, the light will be too far westerly for us to spot shoal-water,' Lewrie replied.
'We'll alter course after four bells.'
'Aye, sir,' Hogue said, yawning.
'And a quarter less five!' the leadsman sounded out.
Borneo reeked, as did its shoals. Rotting vegetation, rotting weed washed up on her shores, stagnant mud-flats and dead-fish odors, and the heights inland blocked a proper sea-breeze to waft it all off. Now and then a hint of cooking, now and then some gorgeous aromas from riotously thriving flowers- but mostly it stank horribly like some gigantic slaughter-house. They'd all be glad to get out to sea.
'Something in the water!' the lookout on the tall main-mast shouted. 'Three points off the starboard bows!'
'Shoal?' Lewrie wondered, raising his telescope for the umpteenth time that day. 'It looks low enough. No, a rock, perhaps.'
'Native boat, sir,' Hogue said with the advantage of his almost uncanny eyesight. 'Turned turtle, looks like. God, no! It's a ship's boat!'
'Fetch-to, Mister Murray!' Lewrie shouted to his bosun. 'Lead the cutter 'round from astern and call away a boat crew.'
'Shall I go, sir?' Hogue asked anxiously.