'Did you stand close inshore?' Lewrie asked, unable to hide his mounting excitement. 'Did you see a camp?'
'Didn't want to blow the gaff, sir,' Coltrop laughed, for once almost pleasant to be around. 'I stood north for a time, as if to go to seaward of North Caicos, then doubled back. But as far as I know, there should be no one there. A few farms so far on North Caicos, a fish camp or two… but none on Middle Caicos yet.'
'What do they call this area, Mister Gatacre?' Lewrie asked.
'Conch Bar, sir,' Gatacre replied. 'There's rumoured to be some caves there that Indians used in Columbus' time. 'Tis a barren place now, though.'
'Watered, though,' Fellows insisted. 'And where you find water, you'll find our pirates. Look, sir, it's perfect! Bluffs to spy from, just as we deduced. Deep water, about an hundred fathoms, close up to the reefs and shoals. An inlet between Highas Cay and Conch Bar Bluff where ships may moor. An escape run down this salt-creek between North and Middle islands to the Banks. And their main camp would most likely be about a mile in from the shoal- water line, out of range of random shot.'
'Depth, though, Mister Fellows,' Lewrie implored.
'Unsurveyed, sir,' Fellows had to admit, deflating. 'A fathom, maybe less, once inside Highas Cay.'
'And it may be a fish camp, after all,' Lewrie fretted out loud. 'But, then again… we must examine it If their main camp is inland, about a mile or better, that would put them… here… down by this last point, opposite the second islet past Highas Cay. They see us coming, they run through this passage for the Banks where we cannot follow. To prevent that, we must use all the ship's boats and our surveying luggers, and land a party between them and the escape route. Cross the shoals above Bottle Creek, wend our way under the shoreline into that channel, to… here. At dawn,
'Good God, sir, I'll rip her bottom out, sure!' Coltrop gasped.
'Close as you may, without holing yourself. Make a demonstration. Frighten them into running straight at me,' Lewrie decided.
'You, sir?' Fellows goggled. 'Sir, it's… well, it's been the traditional thing for the first officer to…'
'It's the riskiest part of our venture,' Lewrie countered. 'If they're not pirates, I wish to be the one nearest on the scene to call it off. And if they are, I've more experience with landfighting.'
'Should we not keep an eye on them for now, sir?' Coltrop asked. 'Send for troops from Fort George Cay? Surely, it's their…' 'If they are pirates, Mister Coltrop, they saw you, sure as I'mstanding here, and they're considering whether they should stay or run. We cannot take the time to send for troops and let them escape. I'll begrudge not a single wasted hour… not a single wasted minute!'
'Aye, aye, sir.'
'Sir, it's my place of honour!' Ballard protested as the boats were led around to the entry ports, as the armourer's files and stone rasped to put brutally sharp edges on steel blades and points. 'How else are lieutenants to rise, if they go in their captain's shadow?'
'With the shore party away,
'Once one makes captain, sir, it's time to let a younger man be one's goat,' Ballard rejoined, not backing down an inch. 'Let the junior officers make a name for themselves, or a muck of it. Is it that you see me making a muck of it, sir?'
'I have the utmost confidence in
'I see… I think, sir,' Ballard surrendered at last.
'Growl you may, but go you must,' Lewrie laughed, clapping him on the shoulder in parting. 'Old Navy proverb. Might be the Thirty-Seventh Article of War, hey, right after 'The Captain's Cloak'?'
There were only thirty-six Articles of War; the last gave a blanket power to a captain's lone decision for anything not covered by the specifics of the other thirty-five-the Captain's Cloak.
'The very best of fortune go with you, sir,' Ballard said.
'And enjoy your temporary command, sir.'
Chapter 6
It was slow going, rowing or poling in the darkness. First to run through the boisterous shoals two miles above Highas Cay, safely hidden by the night. Then to grope about close under the foreshore of the low islet that screened Bottle Creek from the sea. Inshore, the Caicos were rife with mosquitoes and biting flies, and once out of the Trades and into the marshy-smelling mangroves along the beach, they were almost eaten alive.
Then they completed their voyage, snaking out of Bottle Creek south along the shore of North Caicos, staying to the western side of the possible escape channel to avoid detection, and went a mile below the suspected position before turning to cross the narrow strait.
'I kin smell 'em, sir,' Cony said, his poacher's senses alert. 'Wood smoke. An' cookin'. Goat, more'n like. Mayhap fish stew on the boil, too, sir. Right savory, iff n ya don't mind my sayin'.'
'There, sir!' one of the hands poling up forrud whispered. 'I think I see fires. Like they wuz usin' one o' them caves t'cook in.'
Once on the eastern shore, they poled back north in water just a bit deeper than their shallow-draught keels, about four feet, until the coast bent back nor'west past the mouth of a tiny inlet.
Half a mile, little more to go, Lewrie decided. And hard sand all the way to the point. We're on foot the rest of the way.'Put into the inlet, men,' Lewrie ordered in a harsh mutter. 'Leave the boats. No one is to show a light, no one is to load his musket or pistol until I return and tell you to. Not a sound, now. Mister Parham, Mister Mayhew. You and the bosun's mate are in charge until Cony and I return.'
Taking only edged weapons, Lewrie and Cony set out up the hard sand of the beach for a ways, then moved into the deeper, softer sand above the tideline toward the sheltering sea grapes and stunted low bushes. A ledge of rock began to rise at their right hand as they progressed, and climbed higher and higher in irregular slabs as they neared the suspect camp. Soon, they were creeping along its base for concealment as it rose above their heads.
'This'll climb all the way to the sea bluffs,' Lewrie muttered. 'I don't think there's a way up it.'
'Too crumbly, sir,' Cony agreed in a whisper. 'Limestone an' ole coral. Cut ya t'ribbons iff n ya tried it in the dark, it would.'
'Listen!' Lewrie cautioned, kneeling down lower.
There were sounds of shouting, of laughter. And of music that came to them under the rush of the night winds and the continual sound of foliage stirring. And then there was a womanly scream.
'Wimmen!' Cony hissed close to Lewrie's ear. 'Might be a party they's 'avin'. Might they be fishermen after all, sir?'
Lewrie laid a finger to his lips and took a deep breath to make his limbs obey him. He half stood, and placed one tentative foot in front of the other, his grasp sweaty on the hilt of his hanger. With tremulous caution, they