Pass a L'Outre was a shortcut to the Head of the Passes, where all the forking channels came together; bloody grand for someone. Up halfway at a Northwest bend was a better bastion, Fort Saint Phillip; ho-hum. Halfway to New Orleans was Pointe a La Hache, but no fort, so who cared? Ninety miles up past the Head of the Passes was the great Nor'east bend called the English Turn, and Fort Saint Leon, a substantial obstacle, though.
'Know why they call it the English Turn, sirs?' Pollock japed.
'When the French still owned Louisiana, we actually put a fleet this far upriver,' Pollock said with a lopsided smile, 'but the old governor, Bienville I think it was, made such a belligerent display,
'What's the current?' Nicely enquired, frowning.
'Five to six knots, sir,' Pollock supplied. 'It takes nearly a week to ascend the river. Boresomely slow passage. In small vessels, and with the help of hired locals, one
Lewrie abandoned the idea of borrowing the novel and returned his interest to the chart at the mention of 'pirates' and the coastal lairs they might be using.
'Do you envisage an overland expedition?' Pollock grimaced in distaste for such an endeavour.
'Through the swamps?' Nicely said, shying from the idea, too.
'Wouldn't have a corporal's guard left by the time you got to New Orleans,' Lewrie said, chuckling, half his mind on
'Captain Lewrie, when a Lieutenant in the last war, sir, did a stint ashore in the Spanish Floridas,' Capt. Nicely explained. 'With the Creek Indians up the Apalachicola, was it not, Lewrie?'
'Aye, sir. Once was enough for me,' Lewrie said, mock-shivering. 'Does Sir Hyde intend a descent upon Spanish Louisiana, I could think of no
'Um, then,' Nicely grunted, sounding hellish disappointed. 'If it must be a
'How large a vessel was it?' Pollock asked.
'A
'Well, one
'And getting to New Orleans itself from there?' Nicely added.
'From the West shore of Lake Borgne it's fifteen or so miles to the city,
'If we
'Well, sir…' Lewrie stated, then took time to read the depth notations and slowly shook his head. 'Mister Pollock is right. The ships of the line and the troop transports would have to lay off this Cat Island, outside the Sounds, and you'd need hundreds of cutters and barges to pull it off, lots of gunboats and bomb ketches to reduce this Fort Coquilles, too, I s'pose. I could sail
'Yes, hmm,' Nicely grumbled, sounding guarded.
'If our presence, scouting and sounding their water approaches didn't give the game away, of course, sir,' Lewrie added. 'For later.'
'Perhaps a covert approach,' Nicely posed, 'in a civilian ship flying, oh… an American flag might suit. Sound and scout this way to the city… perhaps even sail up the Mississippi right up to the town! Take a look at their garrisons, their river forts, ah… just in case we are forced to use blunt force, and risk the English Turn once more, hmm?'
'Whilst I'm looking for pirates, sir?' Lewrie asked, grinning widely at how eager (yet cagy) Capt. Nicely looked to have an active part in whatever it was that Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, the general in charge of their Canadian possessions, and far-off London might have in mind. 'Of course. My frigate could back you up should you get into trouble. Just so long as you're near the coast, not actually upriver beyond that… what did you call it?… the Head of the Passes?'
'Do you personally wish to scout the city, though, sir, posing as an American,' Lewrie japed the so pleasant and good-humoured Captain Nicely, 'I'd strongly advise you to learn how to chew a quid of tobacco and how to spit. 'Tis hardly a skill one quickly learns. And, I'm told that neatness counts, sir, hah hah!'
'Ah ha!' Nicely rejoined, though not looking quite so amused by his joshing as Lewrie would have imagined. 'Lewrie's first command was a captured French
'Excuse me, sir,' Nicely's longtime Cox'n, now the
And whatever it was that Capt. Nicely was so sphinx-faced about Lewrie feared that it would not be a duty
CHAPTER SEVEN
A pleasure to see you once again, Captain Lewrie,' Peel said, once the introductions were done.
'I just wish I could say the same, Jemmy,' Lewrie rejoined with a tart grimace. 'Not when you wear your 'official' spy phyz, though.'
'Who says that I wear it
'You're here, damn my eyes,' Lewrie spat back. 'That's proof enough for me.'
'Oh, ye of little faith,' Mr. Peel-James Peel-mocked with a mournful 'tsk-tsk' and a shake of his head.
'Oh, I of scars aplenty,' Lewrie said right back, scowling.