Althuda.

'Then if you escaped, how is it that you are back here in the Skellurn's Den?' one of the English seamen wanted to know. They were all listening now. Althuda's story had moved even the most hardened of them.

'I came back to rescue somebody, another slave who was left behind,' Althuda told them. 'When I entered the colony again I was recognized and betrayed.'

They were all silent for a space.

'A woman?' a voice asked. 'You came back for a woman?' 'Yes,' said Althuda. 'A woman.'

'There is always an Eve in the midst of Eden to tempt us into folly, 'one sang out and they all laughed.

Then somebody else asked, 'Was she your sweetheart?' 'No,' Althuda answered. 'I came back for my little sister.'

Thirty guests sat down to the banquet that Governor Kleinhans gave to welcome his successor. All the most important men in the administration of the colony, together with their wives, were seated around the long board.

From the place of honour Petrus van de Velde gazed with delighted anticipation down the length of the rosewood table above which hung massive chandeliers, each burning fifty perfumed- candles. They lit the great hall as if it was day, and sparkled on the silverware and crystal glasses.

For months now, ever since sailing from the coast of Trincomalee, van de Velde had been forced to subsist on the swill and offal cooked on the galleon and then on the coarse fare that the English pirates had provided for him. Now his eyes shone and saliva flooded his mouth as he contemplated the culinary extravaganza spread before him. He reached for the tall glass in front of him, and took a mouthful of the rare wine from Champagne. The tiny seething bubbles tickled his palate and spurred his already unbridled appetite.

Van de Velde considered this a most fortunate posting, for which his wife's connection in the Council of Seventeen was to be thanked. Positioned here, at the tip of Africa, A constant procession of ships passed in both directions bringing the luxuries of Europe and the Orient into Table Bay. They would want for nothing.

Silently he cursed Kleinhans for his long-winded speech of welcome, of which he heard barely a word. All his attention was on the array of silver dishes and chargers that were laid before him, one after another.

There were little sucking pigs in crisp suits of golden crackling, barons of beef running with their own rich juices set around with steaming ramparts of roasted potatoes, heaps of tender young pullets and pigeons and ducks and fat geese, five different types of fresh fish from the Atlantic, cooked five different ways, fragrant with the curries and spices of Java and Kandy and Further India, tall pyramids of the huge claw less crimson lobsters that abounded in this southern ocean, a vast array of fruits and succulent vegetables from the Company gardens, and sherbets and custards and sugar dumplings and cakes and trifles and confitures and every sweet delight that the slave chefs in the kitchens could conceive. All this was backed by stalwart ranks of cheese brought by Company ships from Holland, and jars of pickled North-Sea herring, and smoked sides of wild boar and salmon.

In contrast to this superabundance, the service was all of delicate blue and white pattern. Behind each chair stood a house slave in the green uniform of the Company, ready to recharge glass and plate with nimble white-gloved hands. Would the man never stop talking and let them at the food, van de Velde wondered, and smiled and nodded at Kleinhans' inanities.

At last, with a bow to the new Governor and a much deeper one to his wife, Kleinhans sank back into his chair, and everyone looked expectantly at van de Velde. He gazed around at their asinine faces, and then with a sigh rose to his feet to reply. Two minutes will do it, he told himself, and gave them what they expected to hear, ending jovially, 'In conclusion, I want only to wish Governor Kleinhans a safe return to the old country, and a long and happy retirement.'

He sat down with alacrity and reached for his spoon. This was the first time the burghers had been privileged to witness the new Governor at table, and an amazed and respectful silence fell upon the company as they watched the level in his soup bowl fall like the outgoing tide across the mud-flats of the Zuider Zee. Then, suddenly realizing that when the guest of honour finished one course, the plates would be changed and the next course served, they fell to in a frenzied effort to catch up. There were many stout trenchermen among them, but none to match the Governor, especially when he had had a head start.

As his soup bowl emptied, every bowl was whisked away and replaced with a plate piled high with thick cuts of sucking pig. The first two courses were completed in virtual silence, broken only by slurping and gulping.

During the third course Kleinhans rallied and, as host, made a valiant attempt to revive the conversation. He leaned forward to distract van de Velde's attention from his plate. 'I expect that you will wish to deal with the matter of the English pirates before any other business,' he asked, and van de Velde nodded vigorously, although his mouth was too full of succulent lobster to permit a verbal reply.

'Have you decided yet how you will go about their trial and sentencing?' Kleinhans enquired lugubriously. Van de Velde swallowed noisily, before he replied, 'They will be executed, of course, but not before their captain, this notorious corsair Francis Courtney, reveals the hiding place of the missing Company cargo. I would like to convene a tribunal immediately for this purpose.'

Colonel Schreuder coughed politely, and van de Velde glanced at him impatiently. 'Yes? You wanted to say something? Out with it, then!'

'Today I had opportunity to inspect the work proceeding on the kasteel fortifications, sir. The good Lord alone knows when we will be at war with England again, but it may be soon. The English are thieves by nature, and pirates by vocation. It is for these reasons, sir, that the Seventeen in Amsterdam have placed the highest priority on the completion of our fortifications. That fact is spelt out very clearly in my orders and my letter of appointment to the command of the kasteel.'

Every man at the table looked grave and attentive at the mention of the sacred Seventeen, as though the name of a deity had been invoked. Schreuder let the silence run on for a while to make good his point, then said, 'The work is very much behind what their excellencies have decreed.'

Major Loten, the outgoing garrison commander, interjected, 'It is true that the work is somewhat behindhand, but there are good reasons for this.' The construction was his prime responsibility, and Governor van de Velde's eyes switched to his face. He placed another forkful of lobster in his mouth. The sauce was truly delicious, and he sighed with pleasure as he contemplated another five years of meals of this order. He must certainly buy the chef from Kleinhans before he sailed.

He formed his features into a more solemn pattern as he listened to Loren making his excuses. 'I have been hampered by a shortage of labour. This most regrettable revolt among the slaves has left us severely under manned he said lamely, and van de Velde frowned.

'Precisely the point I was about to make,' Schreuder picked up smoothly. 'If we are so short of men to meet the expectations of the Seventeen, would we be wise to execute twenty-four strong and able-bodied English pirates, instead of employing them in the workings?'

Every eye at the table turned to van de Velde to judge his reaction, waiting for him to give them a lead. The new Governor swallowed, then used his forefinger to free a shred of lobster leg caught in his back teeth before he spoke. 'Courtney cannot be spared, he said at last. 'Not even to work on the fortifications. According to Lord Cumbrae, whose opinion I respect,' he gave the Buzzard a seated bow, 'the Englishman knows where the missing cargo is hidden, besides which my wife and I,' he nodded towards Katinka, who sat between Kleinhans and Schreuder, 'have been forced to suffer many indignities at his hands.'

'I quite agree,' said Schreuder. 'He must be made to tell all he knows of the missing bullion. But the others? Such a waste to execute them when they are needed on the walls, don't you think, sir. They are, after all, dull-witted cattle, with little understanding of the gravity of their offence but with strong backs to pay for it.'

Van de Velde grunted noncommittally. 'I would like to hear the opinion of Governor Kleinhans on this matter,' he said, and filled his mouth again, his head lowered on his shoulders and his small eyes focused on his predecessor. Sagely, he passed on the responsibility of making the decision. Later, if there were repercussions, he could always unload a share of the blame.

'Of course,' said Governor Kleinhans, with an airy wave of the hand, 'prime slaves are selling for almost a thousand guilders a head at the moment. Such a large addition to the Company purse would commend itself highly to their excellencies. The Seventeen are determined that the colony must pay for itself and not become a drain on the Company exchequer.'

All present gave this their solemn consideration. In the silence Katinka said, in ringing crystal tones, 'I, for one, will need slaves for my household. I would welcome the opportunity to acquire good workers even at those exorbitant prices.'

'By international accord and protocol it is forbidden to sell Christians into slavery,' Schreuder pointed out, as he saw the prospects of procuring labour for his fortifications beginning to recede. 'Even Englishmen.'

'Not all the captured pirates are Christians,' Kleinhans persisted. 'I saw a number of black faces among them. Negro slaves are much in demand in the colony. They are good workers and breeders. Would it not be a most desirable compromise to sell them for

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