come, too! Corn merchant in town who sellink us feed for beasts say many dangers in Africa, must always be ware. Rifled, see, Kapitan}' she declared, drawing her musket from its scabbard. 'I buyink musket and pistols in Ph… Philadelphia, in tour in America. Mnoga… much better even than Poppa's old ones. Lighter, too. See? Try, Kapitan,' she said, thrusting the rifled musket into his hands.

He swung it up and sighted down the barrel, hand well clear of the trigger or lock, for he was sure that she'd loaded it before leaving town; that would be mere caution for a young woman out riding all by herself in the wilds of Africa… which, like inland settlements in North America, began about fifty yards past the last truck garden.

It was light, and pointed well, though the comb of the stock was tailored to a slighter form, custom-made by a talented Yankee gunsmith. Glossy burled wood, lots of brass, with brass or silver inlay, about as fine as the Pennsylvania rifles that his ship had captured from an American smuggling brig in the Danish Virgins in the Caribbean, all of them top-grade presentation models sent as gifts or bribes to the rebel ex-slave leader Toussaint L'Ouverture and his senior generals.

'Magnificent!' Lewrie told her, handing it back. 'A match to a rifle I took in

the Caribbean. And, I've a breech-loading Ferguson as well, ever seen one? We should have a shoot, so you may try them… though I'm certain you'd out-shoot me without even trying.'

'I would like that, Kapitan Lewrie! You thinkink you are good shot?' she teased as she slid the rifle back into the scabbard.

'Uhm… passing fair, I s'pose,' Lewrie said with a grin, and some false modesty. 'Potted pirates in the China Seas at two hundred yards with my Ferguson.'

'Wing-shot?'

'Give me a decent fowling piece, and I can fetch home a decent bag,' Lewrie chuckled. 'Though, up the Mississippi, I did manage to knock down ducks and geese on the wing, with an air rifle!'

'Schto?' Eudoxia gaped, leaning away in her saddle. 'Wit' air rifle? I am seeink one, in gunshop in Portugal, but never am shoot!'

'I'd let you,' Lewrie teased back.

'Ooorah!' she whooped, startling both horses. 'Uhm, skolka vremene, pardon… how long it take you to be goink to this Simon's Bay?'

'Two days each way,' Lewrie said, unconsciously gritting teeth at the thought that horses would have been much faster. 'Perhaps two or three more to fetch what we're after, so… call it almost a week, together. Oh, but you'll be off hunting, by then, I'd expect.'

'Nyet, 'Eudoxia said with a silvery laugh. 'No, Kapitan. Men go hunt, but sailors and girls stay in Cape Town. We do circus, but soldiers have seen, Gallandya… Dutch peoples have seen, and plays in Engliski make no sense to them, so… we are finish performances. Mister Vigmore puttink hunt t'gether. Kapitan Veed lookink after us 'til they come back, ponyemayu} See? Poppa say huntink lion in wild Africa no place for girl, hah! Say I stay on ship wit' Kapitan Veed, but Moinya, big sweety,' she said, patting her gelding's neck in affection, 'mus' not go stale, mus' ride him, every day. Moinya is for to say in Engliski 'Lightning,' da}'

'And a cracking-fine horse I'm sure he is,' Lewrie praised her, 'one worthy of his name. So… when does the hunting party leave?'

'Oh, not for week, at least, Kapitan Lewrie,' Eudoxia told him, with a mischievious glint in her large amber eyes almost as playful as his own, and prettily lowering her lashes at him. 'Vigmore is talk to… Boers, what you call them… trekboers, who are knowink country, ev'ry stitch! Havink waggon trains like yours, wit' ox teams, wit' a band of Black drivers, like yours, too! Mister van der Merwe, one is called, he havink cutest little Black fellows who drive his oxes! I am thinkink they call them… Hottentots! Like doll peoples!'

'Well, we should be back, by then,' Lewrie off-handedly said. 'Perhaps we could… once my ship is repaired, o' course, ride out to the back-country and have ourselves a shooting contest.'

'Oh, would be bolshoi! Would be grand, Kapitan Lewrie! And… may-be…' Eudoxia posed girlishly, shyly, all but biting her lower lip and drawing out that tentative, suggestive word, 'you showink me grand Engliski frigate, da} Then, we have shootinks. Race horses or hunt little beasts, not lions! Take picnic basket…'

'Why, what a delightful idea, and thankee for suggestin' that!' Lewrie cried, his baser humours well-stirred, by then. And, with yer pesky poppa off gettin bit half t'death by flies, too! he thought in glee; And, damn my eyes, but, for playacting so doe-eyed innocent, /swear there's an eager vixen in her nature!

'We're to 'break our passage' at an inn that our guide, Mister Goosen, knows, up ahead, Mistress Eudoxia,' Lewrie further suggested. 'Care to ride with us and dine with us?'

'Oh, so sorry, Kapitan' Eudoxia said with sudden pout, 'but, I am promisink Poppa I not ride far, give hour I must return. Spasiba, for invitation, but I mus' go. I makink it up to you, in a few days?' she hinted with an enticing chuckle, in a throaty, promising way.

'Then I will be looking forward to that most eagerly, Mistress!'

'Pooh, Kapitan.' Eudoxia pouted some more. 'Mistress Eudoxia, always Mistress. So stuffy, da? Is Eudoxia, please? You are Alan, not Kapitan. Beink very good, maybe I sayink 'tiy,' not 'viy. 'How you say… un-formal? Unner-stan'?'

'Completely,' Lewrie told her with glad leer, stunned by that allowance, and half-strangled by the implication.

'Dosvidanya, Alan,' she cooed, leaning over from her saddle to plant a chaste kiss on his cheek and put a hand in the small of his back. Before he could respond in kind, though, she gave out a whoop and put spurs to her horse. She whipped away, to go cantering down the length of Lewrie's motley caravan to its very head, spin round before the ox team of the first waggon, and come galloping back along the far side of it towards town. ' Sh-chastleevavapooti! Paka! Have good trip, Alan! See you!'

God in Heaven! Lewrie thought; And just how long'1l it take for Wigmore and her poppa t'hunt down their lions, elephants, and such?

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

Well, h'it's a big bugger… h'ain't it?' one of the sailors commented with a scowl on his face as they contemplated the wreck of the Indiaman.

'Big as a bloody three-decker,' Bosun Pendarves agreed, looking up at her from a few yards away, hands on his hips and goggling at her ruined hull which towered over them. 'Bigger'n a Third Rate, anyways.'

The East Indiaman, once named the Lord Clive, lay rolled over on her starboard side, with her bows driven into the knee-deep shallows and her forefoot, cutwater, and bluff bows now half-sunken into the soft sand of the beach, while the rest of her extended out into the water of the bay, her stern underwater up to the counter under the stern walks that her best-paying passengers had enjoyed. Local scavengers had salvaged most of her forward hull planks already, those they could reach without a boat, so her ribs, frames, knees, and carline posts showed in the gaps they'd torn, clear from her larboard side to starboard, where crushed frames could be seen, after her grounding on the Whittle Rocks.

Even as Mr. Andries de Witt's caravan was unpacking and setting up camp on the low bluffs above the beach, die-hard local Boers sawed and pried on her forward half, even redoubling their efforts before the new-come

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