unhealthy. Got into sugar cane, cotton and such, in a small way. Ran up a rather nice house, ran about twenty slaves, my own cane-mill, press and pans. Down southwest of Spanish Town, on Portland Bight. Milled for neighbours who didn't get the wind to run their own mills proper… done main-well raisin' horses and cattle as well. Takes less labour and fewer slaves. Oh, I played ship's husband for a while, backin' cargoes on the Triangle Trade, but after a time or two, I got out of that. A drib here, a drab there, and it all added up, somehow.'
'But your regiment,' Lewrie pressed as their soup arrived, a hot and spicy pepperpot. 'Sounds as if you had a fine retirement or second career. But then, you…?'
'Boredom, Lewrie!' Christopher told him with an outburst of too-bright laughter. 'I was bored silly! Like most things, one claws and schemes t'get Life's treasures, but once in hand, they lose lustre, and you find it was the
'I think I see your point,' Lewrie replied, thinking of his own tenant farm in Anglesgreen, the mark of a landed gentleman that
'And… there's the slaves,' Cashman admitted, turning sombre. 'Recall, do ya, we once had a schemin' session on a riverbank in Spanish Florida, when we got sent up the Apalachicola t'deal with the Muskogee Indians? How it'd be a great land for crops like cotton, did I fetch in some Bengalis, 'stead o' the Indians? Grow it, pick it, and card it, wash it, bale it, and ship. Or spin it and loom it on the spot, usin' the river for power. Even build a manufactory, and sell made clothin' all over this part'of the world?'
'Aye, I do recall. How close did you come?' Lewrie smiled.
'You
'But it didn't work that way,' Lewrie said for him, though yet mystified. It was a
'May've been the worst mistake I ever made, Lewrie, to settle out here,' Cashman confessed in a mutter. 'I considered America, but even with over-mountain land goin' for ten pence an acre, it requires slaves t'work it, too, 'less you settle far north, among those stiff-necked, hymn-singin' Yankees, with all their 'shalt nots.' And it's a
Lewrie knew about that; sugar and molasses, coffee and cotton, dye-woods and indigo to American ports. Sell cargoes and invest some of the profit into rum, tobacco, hemp ropes, tar, pitch and turpentine, resin and naval stores; ship that to England and make another profit, which was partly invested in cheap trade goods, trinkets and gew-gaws, cast-off muskets and cutlasses, bolts of gaudy cloth and such to sell or trade in West Africa, where the Black chieftains and Arab traders would fetch you thousands of their own people, or those captured from other tribes, then ship 'Black Ivory' on the Middle Passage to a Caribbean port to be auctioned off. Three legs of trade, three profits in one, and five hundred pounds could end up fetching four thousand!
'Saw the wretches landed, sold off at the Vendue House,' Cashman said so softly that Lewrie had to lean over his soup to hear him. 'I felt… sick. Smelt the stink of a 'blackbirder,' have you? Once is enough for a lifetime. Fed me own slaves a touch better after that, I did. Shoes and new slop-clothing more'n once a year. Let 'em have an hour or two more on their vegetable plots, bought more salt meats and such? Felt I was doin' right, no matter what the neighbours thought. Salved my conscience a little, but that was all I was doin'. What my overseers did in my name, though… What's the difference?'
'So you got more into livestock?' Alan asked.
'Yes. Less cane, where the real misery lies, the killin' work.'
Lewrie studied Christopher Cashman-the 'Kit' of his early derring-do-as he returned to spooning up his pepperpot soup before it got cold. He
But, Lewrie wondered, where was that 'fly,' sardonic rogue from those days, the one with the wry, sarcastic, or flippant comment in the face of danger or disaster?
'You know about the Second Maroon War, I take it?' Cashman asked of a sudden, as if all that had passed between them moments before had never occurred.
'Yes. Started in '91, didn't it?'
'Prompted by the slave revolt in Saint Domingue,' Cashman said. 'Got beaten back, but broke out again in '95. I retook colours then, as a major once more. Nothing near so big or widespread as our Frogs suffer, but bad enough. 'Twas a great slaughter, e'en so. Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth, and not a jot o' mercy. Ambush for ambush, massacre for massacre. Shut 'em down by '96, but there's still many skulkin' about. Then along comes General Maitland, who asks me to be on his staff at Port-Au-Prince. Spent a year at that, then the people here suggested raisin' another local regiment. Maitland put in a word for me, and I had the support of my neighbours, who put up the money.'
'But Kit… whyever agree t'fight rebellious French slaves, if you didn't care for fightin' your own?' Lewrie puzzled aloud.
'In any society, Alan my old,' Cashman said, leaning closer to mutter even softer, with a sardonic gleam in his eyes, 'you're either on the side of the angels or you're a
Lewrie's jaw dropped open in surprise.
'Servile, obsequious cringers, liars, and frauds, all of 'em,' Cashman rather calmly went on, between sips of his soup and a dabbing at his mouth with a fine linen napkin. 'I've an overseer runnin' things for me, for now. Once this war on Saint Domingue's done, I'll sell up, lock, stock, and barrel, and get free of this pestilential place. Sham a lingerin' fever, invent a troublin' wound… grief? Any, excuse to placate my neighbours and peers. I'll have done my bit by then, and there'll be no shame in it.
Lewrie shook his head in the negative.
'I'll sell off my slaves with the greatest of glee,' he said, with a nasty smirk, 'to the harshest masters I know, and I know most of 'em, believe you me. Those