'Lock them all up, separate cabins. No personal belongings, I think would be best. These trunks and chests, ready for debarking at San Remo… could you go through them all?'
'These two, particularly, sir. This dead fellow seemed anxious to purge just these two open ones.' Mountjoy dared to grin. Excited, again, to be useful. 'Why just these two? His… and the snuff-brown man's, I'd wager? Rather plain, good leather, but unremarkable, hmm. Nothing as gaudy as those. I'd strongly suspect the fancy ones belong to the elegant gentleman. Might be the ship's owner, do you not think, sir? Might have
'I leave it to you, sir,' Lewrie interrupted. 'I have to get way on her, sort out her crew, disarm and inspect em. Shuffle hands about-again!- to man all our prizes, and such. We'll speak later, once we're safe and snug in Vado Bay.' And knowing, too, that once his clerk got enthused about something, he'd talk six ways 'round whatever had heated his blood, and waste the rest of the Day Watch doing it, too!
'Manifests,' Lewrie said, snapping his fingers, delaying his departure for the upper decks. 'Bills of lading, ship's papers, crew and passenger lists. I'll send you Mister Giles and his jack-in-the-bread-room to take inventory of the cargo, so you may see if it conforms.'
'Very good, sir. I mean, aye aye, sir.'
Lawyers, Lewrie thought, pounding up the companionway ladders: Minds like snake's nests, God save us!
CHAPTER
6
'A most gallant action, Commander Lewrie,' Horatio Nelson told him, waving a hand toward a cut-glass decanter of newly arrived claret. 'Perhaps a
'Thankee, sir,' Lewrie replied, making free with that welcome claret, and feeling like God's Own Damme-Boy to win praise from a man so aggressive himself.
'And most circumspect of you, as well, sir,' Nelson went on, 'to confine your findings concerning the merchant brig, and your suspicions, to a separate report.'
'Mine and my clerk's, sir, Mister Thomas Mountjoy's,' Alan added. He'd won almost gushing praise-there was enough and more to go around. And Mountjoy, surprisingly, had done almost as much as Knolles, Bootheby, Cony, or any of the others he'd cited for significant contributions to their overall success.
Too far from the entry door to be able to respond to the musket butt rapped on the deck, Nelson's next comment was cut off by the knock at the louvred partition door to the day-cabin.
'Excuse me, sir, but Captain Cockburn is come aboard, as you bid him,' Lieutenant Andrews informed him, 'and is just without.'
'Ah, show him in, sir!' Nelson brightened. 'Devil of a fellow, Cockburn. Took a Genoese just off Finale, 'bout the same time as your
'Captain Nelson, sir, good morning to you. Lewrie.' Cockburn nodded, almost affably. Especially since Lewrie was sporting his newer full-dress coat, with the suggested epaulet and slash cuffs.
Small talk was made for a few minutes, a review of Cockburn's doings off Finale, which Lewrie felt politic to beam over; Lewrie's doings far to the west, over which Cockburn raised a brow and simpered, almost politely.
'And both of you have taken merchantmen violating our unofficial embargo,' Nelson summed up. 'Ships that present to us a most striking and mystifying similarity of circumstances. One might initially think that their coinciding similarities were simply that; coincidence. But I now am coming to suspect that any similarity between them is a first inkling of something planned, do you see. First off, Captain Cockburn brings in
Damme, but Cockburn's a lucky bugger, Lewrie groaned to himself!
'Odd, though, that so far, Mister Francis Drake, ashore, cannot seem to find anyone who knows her as
'And mine, sirs…' Lewrie exclaimed, sitting up straighter.
'As if it were the drill, sir?' Lewrie puzzled. 'No, it hardly sounds like coincidence at all!'
'Take him, sir?' Cockburn asked.
'Shot dead, in an exchange of fire with my Marines, sir,' Alan had to admit. 'There's a second, though, whom my clerk thinks might be another Frenchman, traveling under a false identity. Gave us a name… Enzio Brughera… but his companion, who called himself Inconnu' in his dying breath, didn't
'I have him below, in irons,' Nelson said. 'I intend to hold him here, until Mister Francis Drake may contact some, uhm… associates, more used to this sort of chicanery.'
'And out of the hands of the civil authorities, sir,' Lewrie added. 'Who might feel pressed, politically or militarily, to set him free. Or look the wrong way for a minute or two.'
'Quite.' Nelson nodded grimly. 'While your French midshipman may go ashore, once he's given his parole, and may be exchanged, along with the civilian sailors and those passengers we
'Another mystifying thing, sirs,' Lewrie commented, 'is Captain Menzi of
'That, too, is intriguing, I'll grant you,' Nelson agreed with him, waving a hand toward the decanter, so Lewrie could play 'Mother,' and top them all up.
'Well, sir.' Cockburn sniffed. 'It is not as if British ships have been completely absent from these waters. They were engaged in a smuggling endeavor, after all.'
'Genoese ships might know it is now considered smuggling, sir,' Lewrie countered. 'But how did a vessel ostensibly Tuscan come to know of it, and so quickly? That, too, smacks of chicanery, of an organized and well-