Parham chuckled. 'Perhaps we should send him back to them, to let him try it on again?'
'As few of our Post-Captains are in French custody, it may be a
'Hear, hear!' Captain Stroud of
'Upon my word, Captain Lewrie,' Blanding went on, 'but I would not have suspected you to possess a shred of charity towards the French, given your, uhm… dealings with the devils, but… I must own that it would have cut a bit rough with me to be so heartless as to doom those refugees to a Jamaican holding pen. We don't make war on helpless civilians. It just ain't Christian!'
'Hear, hear, sir!' Lt. Gilbraith seconded between quick slurps.
'A most fitting end to our endeavour, indeed,' Chaplain Brundish stuck in. 'It is one thing to show implacable wrath to those most deserving of it, yet quite another to extend the sweet, kind hand of mercy to those who do not. So British, so English, that it makes me swell with pride to be Church of England.'
'Well said, sir!' Captain Blanding exclaimed. 'A
'Hear, hear!' Captain Stroud piped up, lifting his glass.
'Well… thankee for sayin' so, sir,' Lewrie said, striving for proper modesty. 'And for acceptin' my thoughts on what t'do with ' em all. Not
'I dare say,' Chaplain Brundish said after a sip of wine and a dab at his lips with his napkin, 'that news of our victory, as well as our merciful conclusion to it, will make
'That, and the casualty list,' Capt. Parham of
'Aye, Parham… not over a dozen of ours slain, not two dozen wounded,' Captain Stroud proudly said, 'The most
Blanding bowed in place, pleased as punch by the compliment.
'Aye, the Mob'll be mad for it,' Lewrie commented.
It was what the Publick at home had come to expect of the Royal Navv, the impossible victory by an out- numbered, out-gunned squadron or lighter single frigate 'gainst a bigger, with a pleasing 'butcher's bill' of enemy slain to report in the papers.
That they had accomplished; the leading French frigate had had over 350 men aboard-they always over- manned-and when she had struck and been boarded, nigh half of them were dead or wounded, with the rest staggering round in shock or slumped dead-drunk after breaking into the spirits stores of brandy, wine, rum,
The trailing frigate that had struck to
'As we lay up treasure of a temporal nature in a Prize-Court, I expect we also lay up
'And treasure in Heaven, sir,' Chaplain Brundish added with a deep, blessing-like nod of his head, 'for the Christian mercy bestowed upon the innocent at its conclusion.'
'Quite so, ha ha!' Stroud seconded.
'We may only hope that our
'Bedad, yes!' Blanding exclaimed. 'Why, between the four ships we took, all of them French
'Head-And-Gun Money on the two-decker transport, too,' Stroud reminded them. 'All those soldiers, to boot?'
'Be months before they're condemned and bought in to the Navy,' Blanding cautioned. 'Even so, some
'Enough for a proper wine cellar, I trust,' Captain Parham enthused, chuckling. 'Serving with Captain Lewrie in the past, I gained an appreciation for fine wines… and lashings of prize-money from our previous captures. Some of the ships we took back then, their masters or captains were possessed of discerning palates, were they not, sir?'
'A few of'em, aye, Parham,' Lewrie wistfully agreed, 'but some with the taste of Philistines. The piratical sorts, mostly.'
'And what might you do with your spoils, Captain Lewrie? Any special wishes?' Stroud asked,
'You know…,' Lewrie said, sitting back to ponder that query for a long moment. He took a sip of wine, then grinned. 'I think I will buy a penny-whistle.'
To the rest, it was a jape, an amazement.
But Lewrie really
EPILOGUE
…that if good men called werriours
Would take in hand for the commons succours,
To purge the Sea unto our great avayle,
And winne hem goods, and have up the sayle,
And on our enemies their lives to impart,
So that they might their prises well depart,
As reason wold, justice and equitie;
To make this land have Lordship of the Sea.
HAKLUYT'S VOYAGES
CHAPTER FORTY-NINE
Uhm… strictly speaking, sir,' Lt. Westcott said, 'the transport we took. The rest of the squadron wasn't 'In Sight' when we took her. Would she not he
'In the spirit of amity, I allowed Captain Blanding to present her as a squadron capture, Mister Westcott,' Lewrie told his First Officer. Lewrie looked over his shoulder through the opened sash-windows of