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Authors: Tim Severin

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He nodded towards the north-east horizon. ‘Over there in Chile the colonists are paying exorbitant charges for goods brought out from Spain and trans-shipped across Panama. Aboard the
Cygnet
we have a cargo of iron goods and fine woollen cloth, which we should be able to sell to great advantage, having much less cost of freight.’

Cook was almost lost for words.

‘But surely you are aware that the Peruvian Viceroy forbids all trade with foreigners?’

‘That is why I did not hoist any colours on your approach,’ answered Swan amiably. ‘I am aware of the antipathy between the two nations. I thought the English flag might attract an unprovoked attack. Equally, if I had hoisted a Spanish flag, I might later be accused of sailing under false pretences. No nation likes to see their emblem borrowed without a by-your-leave.’

Cook shook his head in amazement. ‘I wish you and the Duke luck with your venture. But don’t be surprised if you meet with disappointment.’

‘What about you? What brings you here?’ asked Swan, though it must have been clear from the number of armed ruffians on deck that the
Delight
was not a peaceable merchantman.

‘We proceed to Juan Fernandez,’ said Cook. ‘We had a difficult passage around the Cape.’

‘I preferred Magellan’s Strait. The transit took more than

two weeks and was challenging – frequent gales, no depth for anchoring, fog and mist – but we got through,’ answered Swan. He sounded a little smug.

‘And now where are you headed?’ asked Cook as he deliberately changed the subject.

‘I thought to try Valdivia first. It is the closest town on the coast. I wish to begin my trading there.’

Hector, who had been listening to the conversation, saw his chance.

‘Excuse me, Captain Swan,’ he interrupted. ‘Would you need an interpreter for your commercial negotiations?’

Swan’s eyes lit up as he recognized the young man. ‘You are the person who called out to us in Spanish. Indeed, I took you to be a Spaniard. I fear my own efforts at the language were all too clumsy. Unfortunately my factor – a most excellent speaker of Castilian – died at sea some weeks ago. So yes, I do require a trustworthy interpreter.’

‘Then I am willing to act for you.’

Swan’s watery blue eyes looked enquiringly at Cook. ‘Are you able to let this young man go?’

‘He has not signed articles, so he can do what he wants,’ Cook answered curtly.

Hector decided to press home his advantage. ‘I am travelling with three friends. Perhaps they also could join me on your ship? One of them is a fine cook.’

Swan beamed with pleasure. ‘It sounds as if I am getting a real bargain.’

‘Not entirely,’ Cook responded sourly. ‘You’ll be taking on a blind man.’ He nodded towards Dan, still standing nearby with a bandage across his eyes.

Swan was about to speak when Hector intervened. ‘My friend’s eyesight may soon return. He was partly blinded during a lightning storm last night, but he can still see a little.’

Swan held up a hand and stopped him. ‘He too may join the
Cygnet.’
Then, unexpectedly he added, ‘I too have been similarly afflicted.’

And without further explanation he began to take his leave of Cook.

 

T
HE RIDDLE OF
Captain Charles Swan’s last remark was solved on the way back to his ship with Hector and his friends in the
Cygnet’s
launch. The captain groped in his pocket and pulled out a pair of spectacles. Each lens was the colour of freshly cut slate. Swan placed them on his face, carefully hooked the wire loops around his ears, then tied a leather thong behind his head to hold them securely. For a moment Hector was reminded of a blind beggar, his sightless eyes hidden behind black glass. But on looking more closely, he realized that he could still discern the captain’s eyes, though dimly.

Swan anticipated his reaction. ‘Vanity precludes me from wearing them on meeting strangers. All too often they think they are dealing with an unfortunate.’

‘Maybe there are times when it is useful to conceal your eyes,’ Hector ventured.

‘A shrewd observation. It’s said that in China the judges wear such spectacles in court so that their thoughts are hidden until they deliver judgement.’

‘But that’s not why you wear them?’

‘Bright light, especially when reflected off the sea, hurts my eyes. Like your friend here, it sometimes damages my vision, leaving me half-blind for hours at a time.’

‘You were never struck by a fireball, nor stared at the corposant?’

‘Indeed not. The doctors tell me that my condition is often found among those whose hair has little colour. Wearing these spectacles reduces the risk and discomfort.’

Hector twisted in his seat and took a last look at the
Bachelor’s Delight
. He would miss a few of her crew, in particular the navigator William Dampier, who was a thoughtful and intelligent man. But John Cook was not to be trusted. He was an outright bandit of the sea, and his men were no better. Hector was not sorry to be leaving them.

 
FIVE

 

A
FTER THREE WEEKS
in Swan’s company Hector had grown accustomed to seeing two smoky dark lenses fastened to his captain’s face whenever the sunshine was bright. Now Swan was squinting through them into the early-morning glare as he looked forward over the
Cygnet’s
bow. It was a clear, bright day and they had arrived on the coast of Chile with the first hint of an onshore breeze filling the ship’s sails as she glided gently into the entrance of a deep gulf. The low headlands on either side were shrouded with a dark mantle of scrub and native forest, and the hills behind them appeared wild and desolate. If the chart had not shown that the town and port of Valdivia lay within the gulf, Hector would have thought the land was uninhabited.

‘Unless I’m mistaken, there’s some sort of building by that white mark where the trees have been cut back,’ said Swan.

The identity of the building became obvious some minutes later when a cloud of grey smoke burst from it, quickly followed by the sound of a cannon shot.

‘Surely they can see our flag?’ exclaimed Swan, disappointment in his voice. Hoisted at the
Cygnet’s
main topmast was an enormous white sheet, which the captain had hoped would be accepted as a token that his ship came in peace.

Without waiting for an order, the steersman put the helm hard over and the vessel sheered away from the gunfire. Even as he did so, there was another cannon shot, this time from a concealed battery on the opposite shore. The splashes from the cannonball were clearly seen as it skipped across the surface of the sea a hundred paces ahead of the ship.

‘We must make our intentions even plainer,’ said Swan. ‘Let fly the fore-topsail as a signal that we wish to parley. Then brail up the courses.’

The
Cygnet
crept along, barely a ripple under her forefoot, while her crew watched and waited. After a while a guard boat could be seen putting out from the beach in front of the nearest fort and heading towards the waiting ship.

‘Lynch, this is when your knowledge of Spanish can be put to good use,’ said Swan. ‘I will write a letter for you to carry to the Governor of Valdivia explaining that we come to trade, and providing a list of our merchandise. If he lacks a competent translator, you can make our intentions plain.’

‘Should I mention that you have a licence from the Duke of Grafton?’

Swan shook his head. ‘No. The Governor may never have heard of the Duke. Say instead that we intended to make for the East Indies by way of the Cape of Good Hope, but met with such heavy weather that we were obliged to turn around and go westabout. Our stopover here is a chance matter.’

Hector thought such a far-fetched tale was unlikely to be believed, but he made no comment. All that mattered to him was to get ashore and begin in earnest his search for Maria. The smuggled note she’d written to him on the day she’d saved his life told him of her expected return to Peru and her employment with Doña Juana, whose husband Don Fernando de Costana had been promoted to the Audiencia, the ruling council. The Governor of Valdivia should surely know the whereabouts of such a prominent colonial official.

Within moments of Swan disappearing into his cabin to write his letter, word of his plan had spread throughout the ship, and a worried-looking Jacques emerged from his galley and came to speak with Hector. ‘Mon ami, you should not go on your own,’ said the Frenchman.

‘I’ll be all right. You stay behind with Dan and Jezreel,’ Hector assured him. Day by day Dan’s damaged eyesight had improved, though the Miskito still found it difficult to see clearly objects at a distance.

‘Jezreel can look after Dan,’ said Jacques stubbornly. He wiped his hands on a rag to get rid of a smear of soot.

‘Lynch will manage very well on his own,’ insisted Swan, overhearing their conversation. He had reappeared with a folded and sealed paper in his hand.

By now the guard boat was within hailing distance. Hector climbed up on the rail and waved the note in the air. ‘A letter for the Governor,’ he called in Spanish. The guard boat was a small piragua rowed by what looked like half a dozen fishermen. In the stern sat two uniformed soldiers and a young man of about Hector’s own age, wearing an officer’s red and white sash, who appeared to be in charge.

‘I wish to speak with the Governor of Valdivia. I have a letter to him from our captain,’ repeated Hector, shouting at the top of his lungs.

After a short hesitation the boat crew bent to their oars, and Hector was climbing down into the piragua, which shoved off as quickly as if the
Cygnet
’s hull was hot to the touch.

‘My captain wishes to open commerce. We were on our way to the East Indies by way of the Cape of Good Hope, but bad weather forced us to turn back and take the westward route,’ said Hector after he’d introduced himself. The explanation sounded even lamer than before.

‘I am Ensign Luis Carvalho,’ said the young man. His mournful dark eyes set in a long, narrow face regarded Hector with open disbelief. ‘My uncle—’ He corrected himself, ‘the Governor wishes to know by what authority you bring your vessel to Valdivia.’

‘If you will take me to the Governor, this letter will explain everything,’ Hector answered.

The ensign glanced back over his shoulder. ‘Your ship may anchor where she is. There is good holding ground. Valdivia is some distance from here and it will be at least two hours before we get there, even with the flood tide under us.’

For the first part of the journey Carvalho sat stiff and silent, leaving Hector to watch the passing scenery. His initial impression of a land barely touched by humans was confirmed. Beyond a shoreline of granite rocks began virgin forest, and after so many weeks at sea he could smell the resin of pine trees. The nearer hillsides were the first in a series of dark, sombre ridges, which extended to a far cordillera, its crest marked by a thin band of snow. Everything was on a vast scale, empty and brooding.

Closer to hand, the waters of the gulf teemed with wildlife. A flock of squabbling seabirds chased a shoal of anchovies directly into the path of the piragua. The gulls dived repeatedly as fish rose to the surface, and once or twice Hector had a quick sighting of a sleek, black fin when a dolphin came up from below, feeding on the same shoal, driving them back towards the birds’ greedy beaks.

BOOK: Sea Robber
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