gunners. I'll want a pistol, musket, and cutlass for every man, as well. Mister Peel, with me for a moment, if you please, sir. Let us compare… notes.'
They stepped aft to the taffrails for privacy. Peel had already perused his, and crumpled it up to toss overboard, astern.
'My employer has contacted the Austrian headquarters. They're to keep a close watch on all roads, looking for a scarred man with a limp. They're to particularly inspect any wagon or cart going to one of our Senator di Silvano's estates. Mister Silberberg has also placed a watch upon the senator's mansion, should Choundas be spirited there. But we don't have the willing agents to follow every coach coming or going to his house. The rest of the conspirators' houses aren't covered. Even with things coming to a head, Mister Silberberg doubts di Silvano will tip his hand that directly, I'm sorry to say, Captain Lewrie. I doubt we'd be able to watch close enough should this be happening in London.'
'Mister Drake says there've been so many bumboats alongside the privateer, coming and going, that it's impossible to say if Choundas was in one of them, disguised, either.' Lewrie groaned. 'She's her sails har-bor- gasketed, and her crew ranti-poling with the local whores, as drunk as lords. She's not coming out tonight, at any rate. Or in the morning, either, the way he says they're celebrating their new fortune.'
He crumpled up his own note and tossed it over.
'Their heads'll be too thick.' Lewrie chuckled without amusement. 'The senator does have a yacht. But then, so do almost all of the other conspirators. It's a local sport, yachting.'
'Those we know about, sir,' Peel cautioned in a covert mutter. 'And them we still can't link to the plot, direct. A fishing boat, or a yacht. By dawn, there could be hundreds of 'em out here.'
'Does Choundas come out tonight, Mister Peel,' Lewrie schemed, trying to put himself in the wily Frenchman's head, 'it'll most like be around nine or so, after full dark. Combined with us being close off the approaches, I should think. We'll be turning away, to stand west on our leg. He could idle just off the mole… no lights showing, and
'East of the inland road that comes down to Finale, sir.' Peel shrugged. 'How far East, I… of late, I have no way of knowing.' He gave Lewrie a quick grimace before turning bland again. Hating to say 'I don't know' as bad as any secret agent. 'Along the coast road, we must assume they've advanced closer to Vado.'
'Other side of the headland?' Lewrie grumbled in surprise when Peel told him that. 'That'd be only ten miles west of our anchorage!' 'It's possible, sir. Sorry I can't enlighten you further.' 'Forty miles, at most then,' Lewrie puzzled. 'Genoa to Finale or thereabouts. Seven hours to safety, at six or seven knots.
But not knowing how he was going to accomplish that, yet. That barge could never catch up a larger, faster vessel, once she got to sea, with a bone in her teeth. He'd have to place
'Mister Buchanon, 'vast your packing, sir,' Lewrie called out. 'I apologize, but I'll need you aboard, after all. Mister Hyde, you're still in charge of the barge.'
'Aye, sir!' Hyde grinned, proud to have a temporary 'command.' 'Pass the word for Mister Crewe to come to…' ' 'Ere, sir!' Crewe replied from the gangway above the tethered barge, which was still being loaded and armed.
'Mister Crewe, you're familiar with fire-arrows?
'Forget the spring-arms, Mister Crewe,' Lewrie countered, with a leer on his face. 'Just make me up a half dozen that can be shot up high in the air, that we can see for, oh… six miles, at night? Shot at extreme elevation from a swivel gun. Like a signal-fuzee that Mister Hyde can light off like a fireworks.'
'Oh, like a Roman candle, sir!' Crewe beamed. 'I can do that, sir. Half dozen, no work a'tall, Cap'um.'
'Pass the word for Mister Giles. My compliments, and he is to supply the barge with two days' dry rations and water, biscuit, cheese, and small-beer. And enough wine for two days' 'Clear Decks and Up Spirits.' You'll not be splicing the main brace, Mister Hyde, till I tell you. You're to loaf about just off the entrance, showing no lights of any sort. Stay furtive as mice, till any vessel leaves larger than a rowboat. You're to fire off one of Mister Crewe's fuzees from a swivel, soon as one does. Almost straight up, but in the general direction of her course. Anything heading west is what we're interested in.'
'Aye aye, sir,' Hyde agreed, though not sure what it was he was agreeing to.
'The captain of that corvette we fought, Mister Hyde, that's the bastard we want. He captured a commissary ship full of British gold… and he now thinks he'll slip away and go back home to crow about it,' Lewrie told his senior midshipman first, before he explained things to the rest of his crew before dark. 'I want him, Mister Hyde. And with your help, I mean to have him, this time.'
CHAPTER
6
A hot supper, for which he had little appetite, almost uncivil a host to Mister Peel and Lieutenant Knolles who dined with him, talking 'shop' for once. And so eager for news that most of what he heard wasn't an awkward conversation, but the loud ticking of his chronometer in the chart-space on the starboard side of the great- cabins.
Then back on deck, wondering if Choundas had made a total fool of him, of them all, no matter how cleverly they'd schemed. Alan had always come a cropper, whenever he'd thought himself especially sly-didn't matter at what, he'd always tripped over his own wits-hoping against hope that just this once, events would prove an exception. A gelatinous crawling of time, an
By God, we'd better, Lewrie thought! But not a very good night for it. Perversely, the winds had risen a trifle, the sea was surging and creaming now and then in tiny whitecaps-cat's paws and horses. What there was of the moon was occluded by scudding clouds coming down from inland, some storm rushing downslope off the Alps. Their view of the coast was only a black smear against a cold-ashes evening, merely a matter of degree.
'Fetch-to, Mister Knolles,' Lewrie commanded. 'We go galloping off east, he's sure to slip past us.'
'Aye, sir! Duty watch, hands to the braces and sheets!'
A quarter-hour later, riding cocked up into the wind, bows almost due north, the ship making no headway. Still nothing to be seen.
'Signal!'