Mlavic had to follow or break into an unseemly lope to arrive ahead of them. He ended up tailing along behind. For that reason, he remained standing, to assert his questioned authority after they'd sat.
'Brandy?' Mlavic offered, still trying to play 'Merry Andrew.'
'Once we get this resolved, perhaps, sir,' Lewrie said coldly. 'Now, where are the French prisoners?'
'Frigate captain… dark hair? He come. Take them to Trieste.' Mlavic shrugged, speaking in a deep, guarded voice, and his eyes just too disinterested for Lewrie to believe that.
'When?' Lewrie shot back. 'Last I spoke to him, he was going back south, to the straits.'
'Yesterday!' Mlavic snapped, going to his stone crock for more plum brandy, miming an offer to share; which was refused. 'I come yesterday with prize, frigate man come same day. So many prisoner… I say be trouble, so he take. You go Trieste, ask him,' he slyly hinted.
Damme,
'How many shillings did he pay you, Captain Mlavic?' Lewrie asked. 'At a silver shilling per prisoner.'
'Three guinea!' Mlavic quickly bristled. 'Three pieces of gold, he give.'
'Sixty-three shillings… sixty-three prisoners?' Lewrie drawled. 'A neat, round number, ain't it? No small change to mess with. Sounds rather too little, though… for the fifty-odd who were here five days ago. Plus the twenty or so from the prize he'd already taken, plus the thirty-five or forty off your latest capture? Closer to five pounds, I'd reckon it, hmm?'
'By God, he cheat me!' Mlavic exclaimed, sounding outraged and all but slapping his poor dumb forehead. 'Here, good food. Serb food. You eat. We friends,
'Not in my brief, sorry,' Lewrie primly pointed out, 'killin' Turks. I'm not at war with Turks.'
Some younger Serb lads, barely old enough to be cabin-boys, offered heaping wooden trenchers of food, still steaming from the spits and pots.
'Eat! Drink!' Mlavic urged, digging in with one hand, without utensils, and slurping a pawful down with another draught of brandy. 'Is
Damn him! Alan groused, seeing Howse tentatively dig into his platter; not five minutes away from gettin' yer bowels ripped out and you'd go with a bellyful! Well… no need to be a
'Croat, Albanian… Greek,' Kolodzcy whispered in Lewrie's ear. 'Turkish!' He snickered. 'All de same cuisine.
Lewrie tried some food, poured himself a bumper of wine from that bottle he'd first opened. It was lamb, skewered on sticks with onion and garlic, some vegetables as well. Underneath was a gravied, fine-milled… tiny round rice-pellets? he wondered. A gnat-sized pasta? Rather infu-riatingly, it
'Cow come,' Mlavic hinted. 'Beef? Aha! 'Roast Beef of Old England.'
'Another question, sir…' Lewrie persevered. 'Your men kept my surgeon from examining the prisoners in the stockade. Even so, he says he heard women and children up there.
'Too many question,' Mlavic grumbled, shaking his head, masticating a chunk of bread. 'Why too many question? No work. Is time for eat… sing.
'Be on ship… prize,' Mlavic answered without looking up from his trencher, shoving a handful between bread and fingers. 'We bring here. Pay way on ship… pass-en-ger? Many, oh many.'
'So what have you got to hide, if they're passengers and such?' Lewrie wondered aloud. 'Why didn't your guards let Mr. Howse in, as they have before? Women, children… old men… not too many sailors, Mr. Howse tells me. What's different about this lot, that your men kept him from tending to them?'
'No diff'rent,' Mlavic insisted,
'Aye, sir,' Lewrie snapped. 'You afraid word'd get back to yer Ratko Petracic, and he'd be displeased with you?'
'Ratko?' Mlavic bawled, suddenly hugely, frighteningly amused. He let go a belly laugh, had to set his trencher aside, he was laughing so hard he might have spilled it. 'Petracic mad, Dragan? Oh, ahahah! Rakto,
'To heff carnal knowledche ohf yourself,' Kolodzcy translated, shaking his head at Mlavic s utter greed and stupidity. 'To go to de Devil… for you to heff carnal knowledche ohf your mother…' 'Oh,
Mlavic stood before him, a trifle hangdog, arms crossed over his chest, and glaring at Lewrie s shirtfront, like a defaulter come before 'Captain's Mast' for peeing on deck.
'We
Piss down his back a mite, Lewrie thought; maybe I can
'No more help, sir. No more alliance. You're on your own, and whatever it is that Petracic does… even if he begins the liberation of all of Serbia… my country's king and government will
'Serbs on own, ever!' Mlavic grunted, lifting his eyes at last. 'Enemies everywhere… help, none.
'Then how'd you get your damn' brig… sir?' Lewrie smugly reminded him.
'I would have take…
'Now you can keep that ship… and God help you,' Lewrie said, sensing he might have overplayed it, and not liking the truculence he saw returning to Mlavic's face. 'All her valuables, too. But those Venetian prisoners, those women and children, come with me, sir. I'll take them aboard