their own heads be it' if an enemy merchantman escaped their clutches only to stagger into even greater harm among the savages of the coasts.
'Look at it this way, Alan,' he said, chortling, as they put their heads together just shy of Corfu. 'Its a bit less prize-money for us, but do th' damn pirates get her, she's a dead loss for th' Frogs just th' same. One less bloody cargo t'help 'em build their navy 'gainst us!'
'Just so long as they only take outward-bound ships, sir,' Lewrie reluctantly agreed with him, leaning forward to snag the neck of the claret bottle on the table between them as they celebrated aboard
'Cargoes already bought and paid for, mind, so 'tis double their loss,' Rodgers interrupted, as had ever been his energetic wont. 'May e'en be
'But I'll fight tooth and nail for an inbound ship, sir,' Lewrie persevered with a much-put-upon sigh well hidden from Rodgers. Falling back into old, forgotten habits, he consoled himself with a wry chuckle; it was difficult to get a word in edgewise when Benjamin Rodgers was full of himself and 'chirping wordy'!
'Aye, poor wine 'board an outbound ship,' Rodgers hooted, full of mirth, retrieving that bottle for his own enjoyment. 'After they've drunk up all their 'bubbly'
'Amen and amen t'that, Alan old son!' Rodgers guffawed, banging the bottle on the table in his exuberance. 'Aye, short as they are for solid coin, why… an' how many other nations' bankers'll honour any o' their Letters of Exchange, 'cause they're paper promises… not worth th' paper they're written on!'
'Bills of credit, but based on
'An' ev'ry inbound vessel we take, then, is another nail in th' coffin for 'em,' Rodgers exulted, getting to his feet to pace. 'They have t'buy grain or starve, from th' Barbary States or their old chums th' Americans. Must be in bad debt with them already! Most o' their merchant fleet already swept clean off th' seas, blockaded.'
'A huge drain, sir… on an already thin-stretched economy. Or treasury. Worst drain may be right here in the Adriatic. Can't win a war without a navy… can't build or maintain their navy without stores from the Adriatic. And can't purchase-'
'That'll be something t'tell Captain Charlton, next time we cross his hawse, wouldn't it, Alan?' Rodgers speculated. 'That we're doin' a power more t'hurt th' Frogs than anyone else at th' moment. Makin' 'em bleed through th' nose for want o' timber. Might bankrupt 'em. By God, we could! Bankrupt 'em… d'ye think?'
'Very possibly, sir.' Lewrie grinned. 'And make a tidy profit in prize-money, in captured silver and gold for ourselves, with every inbound ship we take. As for the outbound, we might as well let the pirates have 'em. Or burn 'em, since-'
'Hellish waste, though.' Rodgers sobered for a moment. 'So far, we've seen some damn' handsome ships, for th' most part. Worth a lot to the Austrian Prize-Court. Not a third th' value of th' inbound, but…'
'Word might get round, sir,' Lewrie suggested. 'Might give pause to Frog shipmasters… those neutrals, too, who'd profit by smuggling for 'em. Word of Dalmatian pirates takin' their ships'd put the fear of God in 'em, too, sir. Wonder if there's a way to start a rumour…'
'We'll find that out tomorrow, Alan,' Rodgers stated levelly, with a cunning leer on his phyz. 'When we put into Corfu. Or rather, when
'Once burned, twice shy, sir?' Alan snickered. 'Still holding Charleston 'gainst me?'
'A bit, I must own.' Rodgers chuckled. Years before, Rodgers had come aboard
'Just after dawn, Alan…' Rodgers decided. 'We'll transfer all the foreign crews and prisoners to
'And should there be any smuggling vessels or French ships…'
'Aye, old son.' Rodgers twinkled. 'There's yer couriers f'r a damn' fine rumour o' piracy an' pillage. An' news o' Royal Navy ships sweepin' th' Adriatic clean as a tabletop. Make a sham o' waterin'… firewood an' water, th' usual sort o' port visit. No longer'n twenty-four hours, mind. Whilst I stay seaward t'guard th' prizes we have so far. Should there be a French warship in th' offin', my 5th Rate'd be more dauntin' than yer
'Sure you don't relish a run ashore, sir?' Lewrie offered. 'You didn't get your shot at Venice, and Trieste's a dead bore, so-'
'I'll get my quill dipped sooner'r later, no fear, Alan. Venice is still there for me,' Rodgers countered, coming to pour them both up to brimming 'bumpers.' 'From what you an' Charlton told me of it, it's not all it's reputed to be, though. Though th' sportin' ladies do sound fetchin'. Griggs?' He called to his manservant. 'Trot out another o' this claret 'fore supper. You'll dine aboard, o' course, Alan?'
'Only if you swear you won't get me thunderin' drunk, Benjamin,' Lewrie scoffed. 'How could I start our rumour and do all you expect with a thick head tomorrow?'
'Seen you in action afore, sir. Thick head or no, you'll be up for it. Griggs, damn yer eyes? Smartly, now!'
CHAPTER 4
Corfu was another mountaintop risen from the sea, so close to the Albanian, Ottoman-ruled mainland that the eastern pass by the old fortress of Kassiopi, which guarded Corfu's northern strait, was within heavy gun-range of the Balkan shore. They went south, skirting along the western coast instead, all the way to Cape Asprokavos before sailing north again for Corfu Town..
The island was shaped like an irregular hammer; the northern end and Mount Pandokrator formed the peen. It then tapered, trending southeast in an undulating series of wiggles, before the final eastward hump round Cape Asprokavos. In the middle of the island's eastern side was a cockspur, and upon that easterly-jutting cockspur's tip was Corfu Town, well sheltered from the fierce Boras of the Adriatic and those shrieking Levanters out of Turkey.
The harbour proper was on the north side of the cockspur peninsula, further protected by a massive breakwater and fortified seawall, under the towering battlements and gun-apertures of the New Fort, which lay on the harbours west. At the very tip of the peninsula was another fortress-the Citadel. The town lay between those two forts, crammed between the hills and the fortress walls. It was walled, itself, along the sea sides, and probably walled on the west and sou'west, too-quite sensibly-due to the island's importance to Venice for hundreds of years, and its proximity to their ancient foes just across the narrow straits.