'We
'Good God, you…!' Peel went quite pale. 'I can't swim that…'
'Mister Peel, I can't swim at all!' Lewrie hooted, grinning at him maliciously, happy to be getting some of his own back. 'Just lie back, grit your teeth… and think of England, hey?'
'You're daft, you're…!' Peel gasped.
Lewrie put the tiller hard-over for the shore. He looked about for the rowboat; it was already ashore, abandoned, bows grinding upon the strand. A flash of white shirt on a rocky path above the beach was the tail end of the escapees, scrambling around the point to the village where they could blend in with their fellow Genoese, perhaps prop their feet up in an
'Dear Lord, sir!' Mountjoy screeched as he learned what Lewrie had in mind, as the
'Hang on!' Alan warned. They were back up to at least five knots. Rocks were visible underwater to windward as she went in at a sixty-degree angle. There was a shudder as she scraped over something, a slither of sand, then a thunderous roaring and groaning as her bow and forefoot planking tore away, as her keel shattered forrud, and stout ribs of her hull timbers almost exploded into kindling! Her bow pitched high, then came crashing down again, she canted to starboard amid the shrieking of her masts and yards, stays, taut halliards and sheets twanging and snapping loud as gunshots, as everything came down in ruin!
Her motion came to a stop in an eye-blink, throwing everyone off their feet. Lewrie fetched up at the forward edge of the quarterdeck, rolling over to get back upright, and regretting his precipitate action just a tad; after all, she'd been a pretty little thing, worth a pretty penny at the Prize Court. For all the good that would have done him if his previous experiences with those thieves was anything to go by.
The
'Well, let's go ashore!' Lewrie urged, trotting forward to find some loose bights of line to ease their scramble down the starboard end of the sprit platform to shin-deep water.
There were no troops in the village. Peel's and Mountjoy's fluent Italian gathered that much from the locals; they'd ridden off a day before. No, no smugglers had come ashore,
'Bloody rejects,' Peel said, as he pawed a chocolate gelding's chest for defects. 'Austrian, Genoese, maybe French… sound-enough, once, I s'pose. Girth galls and saddle sores, almost healed? Cavalry remounts. Stolen, I shouldn't wonder. Maybe this bastard's fattening 'em up to sell back, later.'
'No matter,' Lewrie snapped, impatient for a gotch-eyed, gangly ostler lad to put saddle and pad on the likely dun mare he'd picked. 'He admits he sold a horse to Choundas? He recognizes our description?'
'Yessir, best of his lot,' Peel replied, doing his own saddling. 'Our boy, 'Brutto Faccia' was here, right enough. Paid in gold, didn't quibble. Didn't wait for change, either. Now, price he asked for ours you'd think we'd just bought blooded Arabians, 'stead o' these. In the Household Cavalry, we'd deem these Welsh coal-pit ponies.'
'I had a pony once.' Mountjoy crooned to his choice to calm her as he sat her back, already mounted. 'Bit me, rather often, he did.'
'Paid for information, too, this brute tells me,' Peel went on, kneeing his horse to tighten the girth. 'Don't hold yer breath, damnye. So we had to, as well. There's the coast road… east to Vado, or west to Finale, pick it up 'bout a mile inland. Another road at the junction… goes inland, northwest.' Peel swung up into his saddle and leaned down to adjust his off-side stirrup.
'Which did he take, does this fellow know?' Lewrie pressed, as he swung a leg over, his Ferguson rifle muzzle-down across his back.
'Asked about Austrians,' Peel said, sitting upright. 'I doubt this man really ever knew, but he told him there
They set off at a brisk trot, posting in their saddles, finding Latin saddles' high pommels and backs awkward. The horses were awkward, too, too long unexercised and fractious; taken too soon from their period of recuperation to be strong. The road junction was uphill all the way, less than a mile, but their mounts were already breathing hard.
A quick halt for Peel to study clues in the wheel ruts and hoofprints that went in every direction, those partly obliterated by boot marks of the soldiers who'd left the village.
'Sir!' Mountjoy yelped, having ambled down the Finale road for about two musket shots' distance. He came cantering back, waving something aloft. 'Tricolor cockade, sir. Just lying in the middle of the road. Off a Frenchman's hat, do you think, Mister Peel?'
'Yessir, I do.' Peel squinted down the road. 'You stayed in the middle, or on the verge, sir?'
'Middle, sir.' Mountjoy groaned. 'Did I err?'
'Well see. You wait here for a bit.'
Peel walked his gelding down the left side of the road, peering at the ground. He stopped where he saw fresh shoe prints that Mister Mountjoy had made when he dismounted, then crossed over to the right-hand side, kneed his mount through the brushy undergrowth, and disappeared! Minutes later, though, he emerged; on the northwest road!
'Clever, this Choundas!' Peel laughed, waving them to join him. 'For a sailor, I'd not expect it. Tossed his cockade to lure any pursuit down the Finale road, then doubled back through these woods to hide his prints. With that uniform he wears, under a cloak, he could almost pass as an Austrian artillery officer. Or Genoese, Piedmontese… as little as most have seen of 'em. Yet, here's his prints, leading right up this inland road. There's still a chance! Must we kill our horses, so be it, but we can still catch him! Follow me!'
Capitaine de Vaisseau Guillaume Choundas was not a horseman. He had never owned one. His father couldn't afford one when he was growing up; even if their principal diet came from their catches at sea, grain for a horse's nourishment was better put in the bellies of the Choundas family, than such an extravagance.
Yet a man who'd aspire to the level of the aristocracy or those untitled rich, as his father had schemed for him to do, the brightest of his sons,