The Gun Ketch (52 page)

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Authors: Dewey Lambdin

BOOK: The Gun Ketch
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Lewrie's eyes lit up with pleasure as he saw that part of the cargo that had shifted and crushed Finney as
Caroline
ran aground were the chests of gold and silver coin looted from the bank, part of Jack Finney's personal hoard. Mixed among spilled coins were certificates of exchange and ledgers.

"Lookee here, Lewrie," Finney cajoled, once the worst of pain had subsided. "There's a bottle o' brandy yonder in my wine cabinet I see as hasn't been smashed. Been studyin' it somethin' fierce the last few minutes. Have a heart an' fetch it, willya, Lewrie? Let a sailin' man go to his Maker with a reason t'smile, hey? Lemme have one taste 'fore I pass over? Won't be long, fer either of us."

"Cony, fetch the devil his brandy," Lewrie frowned, pacing up the steep slant of the deck to larboard. He could feel the
Caroline
dying, could feel her shift and shamble as the morning tide and the current played with her, as waves made her pound on the Charleston Bar. Timbers groaned deep within, planks sprung with sharp cries, and now and again, something in her hold thumped and drummed, or gave way with a sharp crack.

Won't be long before she breaks up, Lewrie thought; we'll have to get all this stolen loot aboard
Alacrity
before then.

"John Canoe," he said. "Fetch Mister Woods, the gunner's mate, and a working party to pack up this loot and get it aboard our ship."

"Aye, aye, sah."

"Now tell me about Commodore Garvey, Finney," Lewrie demanded once Canoe was gone.

"Right tasty, this," Finney replied, leering back at him between deep gulps from the neck of the bottle. "One o' me... one of my finest imports, I do declare, sir."

"We don't have much time, Finney," Lewrie pressed, coming down to starboard again.

"You do, don't ye, now!" Finney snapped, then cried out with the vehemence of his accusation that had caused fresh waves of agony. "Ah, Jaysis, 'tis a hard life I've had. But a few good years, in the Bahamas, an' now ye've ruined that! Doesn't seem fair, it don't, you to go.on livin', with a wife handsome as yer Caroline,. a boy-baby an' all, an' I t'be dyin', mint an' broke."

"My God, you...!" Lewrie spluttered in amazement, thinking of all of Jack Finney's victims. "Seems
damned
fair, to me, after causing all that misery and murder. Now what about Commodore Garvey? I want to know for certain. Tell me how he helped you. And how much he cost you."

"Ye don't get it, do ye, Lewrie?" Finney laughed softly. "God, how much I hate ye, Lewrie! Iver since thet night in the inn, when ye turned yer nose up at me invitation ... looked me over like a muddy pig an'... spite me, willya? Sneer at me, willya? Well, 'tis only fair I get a last chance t'spite ye back. Garvey's an English bastard, same as ye. Much as he deserves it... I'll give ye nothin' to make any more fortune on. Thet way, I goes t'me death with somethin' ye want, so in a way, I beat ye, after all, Lewrie. Now, why don't ye shit in yer fine hat there, clap it on yer head, an' call it a brown tie-wig?"

Woods' men arrived and began to fetch out the crates and chests, scooping up loose coins to cram back into the boxes, and, Lewrie knew, their own pockets if someone didn't look sharp after them. There would be no prize money, no head bounty, and all that they recovered would be Droits of The Crown instead of Droits of The Admiralty, so his men would have nothing to show for death or wounds. Lewrie decided to ignore the litte they could get away with this time; they'd earned it.

"Take all o' this, sir?" Woods inquired, waving about the cabin. "Aye, all of it. There may be some evidence hidden away in the odd chest or bag," Lewrie nodded. "Leave the bastard nothing."

"We be leavin' him, sir?" Woods asked. "Beg pardon for me to be suggestin', Captain, but the seas're gettin' up. We'd best be quick about it, sir. Mister Ballard's sent our other boats over."

"Aye, we will be," Lewrie nodded, scuffing about the cabins in frustration over Finney's hateful, mocking silence about Garvey.

"Uhm, you'll be wantin' us to take this, too, sir?" Woods said, gesturing to the shadowed forward bulkhead where the dining space had been. "This pitcher, sir?"

"Christ!" Alan rasped in shock. On the bulkhead hung a portrait, now askew and gnawed in a lower corner by grape-shot in canvas and the frame. It was a copy of his own portrait of Caroline! Not an oval, as was his, but rectangular; copied closer about her face to eliminate the gardens and East Bay. Augustus Hed-ley had done it himself, for in the lower right corner was his florid signature.

"Wot a bastard," Woods grunted. "Namin' this lugger o' his after your good lady, sir, an' now this! Take it to the boat, sir?"

"Aye, Mister Woods. I'll not have her go down with him, or give him any comfort to look upon. Thankee, Mister Woods."

"Aye, aye, sir."

"Finney, you miserable shit!" Lewrie shouted, wheeling about to walk back to the man, flexing his hand on his sword's hilt, pondering hard on whether to kill him that instant, or let him groan in agony and drown as the best, and most painful, death for him.

"Many's the nights I wuz inspired t'gaze upon her, Lewrie," Finney boasted. "Rattlin' a whore, an' lookin' at her, an' wishin'. Almost had her, damme'f I didn't, though."

"Don't, sir!" Cony said, stepping between to block Lewrie from drawing his sword." 'E's agoadin' ya, sir, so 'e kin die quick. God o' mercy, sir, let 'im drown! 'E's aspittin' up blood arready. Drown in gore'r sea-water, sir. Ev'ry rock o' this wreck's apainin' 'im good as the fires o' Hell, sir. 'Tis best 'e suffers so, Mister Lewrie!"

Lewrie panted hard, affronted to be held in check.

"And lookee this, sir," Cony whispered, pointing with his chin to a cylindrical traveling bag on the deck. From beneath a pile of hastily crammed in silk shirts and neck-stocks, peeked a stack of old ledgers. "Lookee this 'un, sir. In 'is own 'and, sir."

Lewrie fought down his rage and opened the ledger Cony offered him. It was in Finney's near-illegible scrawl; not so much an account of debits and credits, but a log such as a mate would keep, more like a diary. There were entries of ships taken, by whom, how many shares the crew got, who had died and would require settlements for wives or girls, expenditures of powder and shot, values of goods taken, of how much pirated ships sold for in Havana or Cartagena. Along with such dry accountings of mayhem and murder, Finney made his comments about his illegal business, wrote his screeds about the high cost of bribing government officials, listed...!"Oh, my God!" Lewrie smiled suddenly. "Bless you, Will Cony!"

"Thankee, sir," Cony grinned shyly.

"Ah, 'twas a lovely brandy," Finney groaned blissfully, tossing the empty bottle aside. "Given enough warnin', 'tis right a man gets a chance t'die dead drunk."

Lewrie took the ledger with him as he walked down the deck to Finney for the last time.

"Me curses 'pon ye, Lewrie," Finney beamed, coughing on blood in his mouth, trying to spit some at Lewrie, who stood just a little too far away to hit. "Bad cess t'ye, yer handsome bitch, yer brat, an' all yer kin! Bad cess fer the rest o' yer lives!"

Lewrie held up the book. Opened it so Finney could see; and recognize his own hand, and know it for what it was.

"Ah, no!" Finney groaned, screwing up his ruggedly handsome face like a petulant child.
Caroline
was swept by a breaking wave, making her thump and pound on the Bar harder than before, and shift with the sound of sliding sands. Wood croaked and screamed.

"I'd tell you to go to the devil, 'Calico Jack,' but then, we both know that's where you're bound, don't we?" Lewrie chuckled as he put the ledger under his arm. "How did it go? 'Calico, calico, who will buy my calico? Tis Jack, Jack, the Calico Man'?"

"Oh, ye brute! Oh, ya bastard!" Finney raved, as water began to seep into the cabins, to froth in through loosened plankings.

"Know how to swim, 'Calico Jack'?" Lewrie taunted. "That might keep you alive a minute longer. It'll hurt like Hell, of course."

"Youuu!"
Finney screamed.

"Let's go, Cony. We have what we came for."

Epilogue

"Any nation that wont support a navy to protect its interests can't have much objection to make, now, can they?" Captain Childs said with a guffaw as he dined Rodgers and Lewrie in, in the great-cabins of his frigate
Guardian.

"The point was made, sir," Rodgers snickered back. "Diplomatic, though. Not quite so pointed as you couch it. An' after they learned Finney was a British master, in a British-flagged ship, that shut them up."

"Well, 'tis all settled now," Childs went on happily. "Finney's dead, his enterprises foundered, and his pirates all scattered Hell to Huttersfield. Bank funds recovered, all of Finney's ill-gotten gains property of the Crown. A neat bit o' business, in the end."

"What about his commercial interests, sir?" Lewrie was forced to ask. "His legitimate interests, that is? And surely, sir, I found many names in his ledgers of civilians who turned a blind eye, or did his bidding, for a price. Government officials..."

"Ahem," Childs sobered. "The, uhm... our Royal Governor is now in possession of those ledgers, Lieutenant Lewrie. I would imagine that some investigation is proceeding. And that someday, they will be brought to book. Civilian doings. No matter to the Fleet."

"Finney's stores're already taken over by the other Bay Street merchants, lock, stock, and barrel," Commander Rodgers added, reaching for the wine bottle on the sideboard. "Stock bought up at pence to a pound at auction. Though devil a hope we have o' lower prices in our lifetimes."

"Amen to that, sir," Childs chimed in, eyeing Rodgers' liberality with his wine. "Might pass that down, once you're done, sir."

"And the Commodore, sir?" Lewrie presumed to question.

"Ah, well," Childs scowled. "Hmm. Pity 'bout that tropical ague that took him of a sudden. Didn't look that sick for so long, as they say he was. No, 'tis best he's off home, to recover in milder climes."

"With nothing but his Navy pay, in the end," Rodgers laughed as he passed the bottle down. "And that in arrears for all his high living."

"The Admiralty'd probably send someone else out next spring to command the Bahamas Squadron," Childs sighed. "Can't have a mere frigate captain such as myself in charge for long, with so many senior men with impeccable connections sitting around on half-pay."

"But copies of the allegations did go to the Admiralty, sir?" Lewrie pressed harder. "After all, I would assume Commodore Garvey had impeccable connections that could... well, preserve his career."

"Aye, I sent 'em, Lewrie, if that's what you're wondering, sir," Childs glowered at him. "All we may do is but hope that Our Lords Commissioners will take them into account for next time."

"Hope he makes bloody Admiral," Rodgers snorted, well into his cups at their very private supper. "Sir, gentlemen, allow me to propose a toast. To Commodore Horace Garvey... may he attain the rank of rear admiral in His Majesty King George the Third's Royal Navy..."

"Bloody hell," Lewrie muttered, but forced to raise his glass.

"... of the permanently retired 'Yellow' Squadron!" Commander Rodgers concluded with a bark of a laugh, and tipped his glass up to drain it right down to "heel-taps."

* * * *

"There's the fine little fellow," Lewrie cooed to his son, who had at last warmed to his presence, and didn't bawl when he saw him any longer. Lewrie sat rocking on the dog-run terrace, young Sewallis a tightly swaddled bundle in the crook of one arm, entertaining him as he would William Pitt the cat, with a length of small-stuff tied in a bowline dangled for tiny fingers to grasp. Every time he succeeded in getting hold of the loop in the line, he gurgled his pleasure and lit up his features with a radiant, cockeyed smile. Lewrie rewarded him with a dandle on his knee, which made Seawallis even more ecstatic.

"Lucky fellow you are, Seawallis," Alan assured him. "First son, bound for the law. Oxford or Cambridge. You'll never have to go to sea like your daddy does. 'Tis a miserable bloody life."

"Don't teach him bad words, Alan," Caroline said, coming out to sit by him, and deliver two glasses of wine. "He'll learn them soon enough. Yes 'e
will,
pretty baby! Ooh, li'l man Seawallis, yes! Your
daddy I
Like to have Daddy play with oo, yes oo
do,
Mommy
knows
oo do!"

"Mommy
can
speak the King's Engh'sh, Seawallis," Alan snickered. "Daddy
knows
she can. And someday, oo will, too! Ain't that a bloo... won't that be a wonder?"

He turned to look at Caroline, she looked at him, and they both laughed at themselves for a fond moment. Until Alan wriggled his nose and looked down at his lap. Young Seawallis had become so delighted he had fouled himself, and quickly soaked through his swaddlings to turn Lewrie's breeches both wet and pale brown. "Oh, bugger!"

"I'll take him, sah," Wyonnie offered, coming out to the dog-run. "Time fo' his nap 'fo suppah, anyhow, sah."

"Thankee, Wyonnie," Lewrie said. "Thank God it's my worst and oldest breeches."

"I fetch ya a towel, sah."

Fatherhood, Lewrie thought; hmmm! It
must
get better as they become continent! Surely!

"How long will
Alacrity
be in dock?" Caroline asked, sipping her wine, putting her feet up on her hassock and enjoying the sunset.

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