ones kept in his own scrawls, which he himself had trouble reading a month later. It was not a good year.
After Conch Bar, and the wholesale hangings which had followed, half the old lads had gone off for easier pickings; deeper in the Caribbean, or up to the American coast, where Congress was too cheap to keep a navy, or a coast guard worth the name. Walker's Cay had run more away to waters less well patrolled. Finney had had to increase the import of legitimate goods as stolen wares reduced in quantity, so his profit margin had fallen to only a little better than his Bay Street competitors'.
He'd lost huge sums, too, in all the goods that Rodgers, and that damned Lieutenant Lewrie, had burned at Walker's Cay, the pirated, and the hoarded true imports. Those staples, those delicacies, all gone up in flames, depriving him of his expected large markups. And there had been the import duties the cynical, greedy Searcher of Customs had imposed on goods he'd
There wasn't much better news from his grandiose plantings on Eleuthera. His overseer had written that both the coastal 'white' lands, and the 'red' lands farther inland, were failing. Bahamian soil was like a lying whore; rich and beguiling to start with, but too thin to turn under and hope it would revive after a fallow year, its nutrients sucked out by the first lush crops. And with so few animals in the Bahamas, and lack of grazing land for big herds, costly to manure and fertilize. Unless he shipped in tons of manure, his overseer wasn't confident. Cotton, sisal, hemp, sugar cane, even indigo and aloes-none of it prospered. And, the overseer had ended on a dismal note, the Georgia Tidewater and Sea Isle cotton nurslings
He'd be forced to sell, before the fine plantation house could be completed, as fine a mansion as any in the Bahamas, grander than the one Col. Andrew Deveaux had erected on Cat Island. The only value he'd get back from the sale would be the slaves, the ones he'd gotten for so little from Malone (the foolish, greedy bastard!) after he'd taken the
Finney took another sip of claret and made a face. Try as hard as he might, he'd never developed a palate for it. Petulantly, it went into the fireplace to shatter in a shower of wine across the imported Turkey carpet!
'Fireplace!' he gloomed at that extravagance, a gaudy, useless showpiece in a climate that never got close to freezing. He went over to his sideboard to pour himself a cut-crystal glass of Demerara rum.
'Excuse me, Captain Finney, sir,' his butler said, opening the wide double doors to the entry hall.
'Clean it up,' Finney snorted, putting his feet on his desk.
'I will, Captain, sir,' the butler agreed, secretly amused by his plebeian employer, and his demand to be addressed with a title he never really had-Captain. 'In the meantime, sir, this letter came for you. From Commodore Garvey, sir.'
'Fetch it here, then, damn yer eyes,' Finney sulked, finding no joy this evening in the obsequiousness of his hired help. Finney tore the wax seal off and unfolded the letter. 'Damn 'is blood!'
My dear sir;
Have you seen one of these? I was not aware your interest in interrupting
The enfolding, larger folio-sized sheet of paper had a hastily written note which quite took his mind from the curses he was about to hurl at the uppity cur, who'd sprinkle his notes with Latin, French or even Greek, just to (Finney swore) gall him over his lack of schooling.Lt. Coltrop' s
Aware of my stringent Requirements for
'Jesus an' Mary,' Finney shivered. 'It's all up, ain't it?' 'Sir?' his butler inquired distantly.
'Get out. I said, get out! Leave it!' Finney shouted as he got to his feet. He shoved the broadside sheet and the letter into one of his private ledgers, tucked them under his arm, and began to pace his palatial parlour and receiving rooms. He took inventory of his fineries as if seeing them for the first time, a visitor to his town house. The inventory took him through the dining room, into the large salon on the other side of the entrance hall, through still-rooms and butler's pantries, through wine cellar and library, up the stairs to peek into all four huge bedrooms, marveling again how well furnished they were. Sumptuous, some said. Bordello 'Flash,' others cruelly whispered behind his back-
'It's all up,' he told himself again, halfway between tears and rage. 'Don't
Not only would he lose the plantation, but he'd lose the slaves, his house and all its lovely 'pretties,' the best mat money could buy. His stores, his ships, his chandlery, his… 'Ah, shame of it, now!'
But, there was money in the house, and money in his stores. And in the bank. Enough to start over somewhere else. And he still had a fine little ship in the harbour, ready to take him anywhere in the wide world he wished. He ripped open the chifforobe in his own bedroom, took out a leather traveling case, and set the ledgers inside it, then began to pack bom it and an ornate sea-chest, his mind already calculating the best of the tide.
Chapter 10
'Damme, what a rotten business,' Lord Dunmore grunted after he had read the confessions. 'All this happenin' right under my predecessor Maxwell's nose, and him ignorant as sheep, ha ha! That'll make int'restin' readin' in London! But, it's over now. We've bagged the miscreants, and they'll hang in tar and chains 'til their bones fall apart, damme if they won't.'
'Finney did escape us, milord,' Solicitor-General William Wylly informed him. Wylly had not known Lord Dunmore but a few months, but he had already developed a blazing dislike for the new governor, and had been heard to call him 'obstinate and violent by nature,' with a 'capacity below mediocrity, little cultivated by education, ignorant of the constitution of-England… the lordly despot of a petty clan.'
'Best rid of him, then,' Lord Dunmore shrugged as he poured a round of brandy for them all; those he had to cultivate, at least Lewrie, Rodgers and some other minor officials were not included in that category, while Wylly, Garvey and Peyton Boudreau were. 'Once he's proved guilty in court, all his goods'll be liable to seizure. Bound to be a pretty penny in all that, hey? Might even help defray the cost of me new fortifications I'd planned for the western side of the town. Fort Charlotte, I think to name it, for our Queen.'
'There is the matter of the bank, milord,' Chief Justice Matson put in. 'Finney and several… ahum… of the finer and wealthier of the colony had formed a private merchant bank. There werehundreds of depositors, milord. It's been looted, I fear, and gone with Finney to God knows where. Many of your Privy Council had their accounts there, milord.
'Well, send a ship after him and get it back!' Lord Dunmore told them with an impatient arrogance. 'That'd be easy enough, hey? What we have the Royal Navy for, if you can't go seize a ship when you wish to, what? How