Read The Mountain of Gold Online
Authors: J. D. Davies
Shish said, 'Ah. I think we may need to raise the deck a little, Captain. Six inches should suffice, I think? I'll order Bagwell and a party of men off the
Nonpareil
to attend to it. But you're not due to sail until, what, the end of the year? Ample time.' I felt the beginnings of that throbbing in the forehead which is familiar to all tall men who have to inhabit low structures. Shish continued, 'So, Captain Quinton. What would you fancy for decoration, sir?'
I had no opportunity to reply, for at that moment there was a commotion on the deck. The yard porter, whom I had encountered earlier—a low, squinting creature of no breeding—admitted himself, bowed perfunctorily to me and spoke to Shish in a hushed whisper. The Master Shipwright seemed immediately discomposed by his tidings. 'Sir, it seems we have an invasion.'
An invasion? Great God, had King Louis or the Dutch chosen this moment to exploit England's craven weakness?
I felt for the hilt of my sword—'A host of ungodly foreigners is warring in the town, says the porter, here,' said Shish. 'Warring with my shipwrights, Captain Quinton! The women say they are Turks, or some other breed of uncivilised heathen—Russians, perhaps, or worse. They have attempted to seduce honest goodwives, and my shipwrights won't have it! No, they won't have it! But there is a strange thing, sir. A very strange thing, indeed. They seem to be calling your name, Captain Quinton.'
A cold chill gripped my heart like a vice. Quite equably, Musk said, 'Well, Mister Shish, you're right in one thing, at any rate. Much worse than Turks or Russians.'
We ran out of the dockyard and up the High Street of Deptford. Ahead of us, only a few hundred yards from the dockyard gate, lay the venerable Gun Tavern, where my grandfather had got horribly drunk with old Howard of Effingham, the Lord High Admiral of England, before they both ventured out against the Spanish Armada. Now it was the scene of another great battle. A bloodied shipwright lay in the door, moaning; another came through a window as we approached. I halted and sighed. With as much authority as I could muster, I shouted, 'Cornishmen! In the names of your King and of Captain Matthew Quinton, I order you to desist! Lanherne, where the hell are you, man?'
The sometime coxswain of the King's ships
Jupiter
and
Wessex
appeared in the doorway, holding a shipwright in a tight arm lock. Reluctantly he released the man and saluted. 'Cap'n.'
John Tremar, a behemoth of strength and unutterable violence crammed into a miniscule frame, came up beside him and smiled contentedly. 'Cap'n,' he echoed.
'What is the meaning of this riot, Mister Lanherne, in the name of all that's holy?'
Lanherne, who had served notably as a soldier in the land's dreadful civil wars, looked sheepish and said, 'They were rude, sir. We merely asked them to toast with us.'
'Quite exceeding rude,' said Tremar. A piercing scream came from within the Gun Tavern: it was accompanied by a plea for mercy, cried in a pitiful Kentish voice. There were unmistakeable sounds of large men falling against tables or walls.
And what toast did you ask them to drink?'
Lanherne brightened. 'Why, sir, this place, Deptford—well, it's sacred to all Cornishmen, you see. It's where our forefathers fought and died, in the year ninety-seven.'
Now, I knew my history of Queen Elizabeth's reign; naturally, for my grandfather had done so much to shape that history. But—'I don't recall any Cornish action here in 1597, Lanherne. And with respect, we are quite some way from Cornwall.' With that, another of my old coterie, the man-ape John Treninnick, fell through the door, rubbed away a punch to his chin, saluted, screamed with rage and threw himself back into the fray.
Lanherne ignored the intervention entirely. 'Oh, not
Fifteen
Ninety-Seven, sir.
Fourteen
Ninety-Seven. When our proud Cornish boys led by An Gof the blacksmith and Flamank the lawyer marched all the way across England, to London itself. Twenty thousand of them, sir. Got all the way to Deptford Bridge, then took on the king's army. A close run thing, Captain, but the Tudor's men fought an unfair battle—well, at any rate, they had cannon and cavalry, and our great-grandsires had only pitchforks or their bare hands.'
I sensed the impatience of Shish, at my side, for we should have been about our task of quelling this riot, but this was a history unknown to me, and curiosity won out. 'So this was some great cause the Cornishmen were about? To overthrow Harry the Seventh and restore the line of York, perchance?'
Lanherne and Tremar looked at each other. Aye, sir, the greatest cause of all,' said Tremar, gravely. 'They didn't fancy paying their taxes that year.'
'So we asked the shipwrights to toast their memory with us, sir, all politely, of course. To toast An Gof in his own words,
a name perpetual and a fame permanent and immortal.
Uttered just before they hanged, drew and quartered him. A request modest enough, Captain.'
'But they were quite exceeding rude.'
It was Musk who asked the obvious question: the one that I should have asked at the very beginning, but to which I already knew the answer. 'And what, exactly, is your business in Deptford, Mister Lanherne?'
The coxswain looked nonplussed. 'Why, Mister Musk, word got down to Cornwall that the captain had a new ship. We beat drums from Penrhyn up to Bude, and there's sixty or more of us here, good and true, ready to list with Captain Quinton once again.'
Another of my old Jupiters, a dark lusty fellow called Summercourt, came through the door at that moment, falling into the gutter in what appeared to be a wrestling match to the death with a hirsute shipwright. I nodded to Shish and drew my sword, for it was time to restore the king's peace to the good people of Deptford. But at least I had the answer to the question that had vexed me during my journey to the yard.
Who but madmen would volunteer for a voyage to Guinea?
Of course.
Cornishmen.
Seven
I still had several weeks of grace before the
Seraph
finally got under way in its pursuit of the mountain of gold. Weeks during which I could attempt to avoid meeting my dreaded passenger-to-be, a feat that I had managed with success thus far. Weeks during which I certainly could not avoid attending the apotheosis of the Lady De Vaux: her marriage to my brother in St Paul's Cathedral. Weeks in which I could reflect fully upon the warning given by my good-brother Sir Venner, and think upon those others who might seek to prevent the voyage of the
Seraph
—or at least, to prevent the continued living of her captain. The scarred man, for one, though there had been no further sightings of him, and increasingly I questioned what I might or might not have heard on the road from Newmarket. The other I had almost forgotten, until a letter came to me one day at the beginning of November. The winds were howling around the ancient abbey—indeed, such was the nature of our home that many of them were howling straight through it—and I was in the library, writing what I calculated to be my fifteenth letter of the day to some functionary or other who had a part to play in getting my
Seraph
ready for sea.
Cornelia brought the letter to me; she always reached the mail first, for invariably most of it was for her. (Letter-writing seems to be one of the national religions of the Dutch, presumably because in their country there is little else to do, and every post brought endless epistles from her parents and her obscure cousins in Gelderland, Friesland and every other 'land' in that muddy nation.) She was in ill temper. Even by our standards, we had been making particularly vigorous efforts to pre-empt the forthcoming debacle at St Paul's by getting Cornelia pregnant. Regrettably, a position recommended by the wise woman of Baldock Forest succeeded only in spraining her back, and she was bent almost double as she handed me the letter. She was still seething at a comment overheard in Bedford, where she and my equally bent mother had gone to purchase some horses—only for a somewhat short-sighted alderman of the town to enquire whether they were sisters.
She said, 'It's from Roger, by the looks of it. He's close to King Louis these days, isn't he? Can't he persuade him to invade before the wedding? That would well and truly thwart My Lady De Vaux—a few hundred French guards and a cardinal or two parading up the nave of St Paul's!
God in hemel,
I'd like to see your mother's face, too, if King Louis' musketeers turn up and cancelled the wedding in favour of a full papist
Te Deum!
'
I sighed and took the letter. Cornelia sat down opposite me (very, very slowly) and picked up an old anatomy book by Galen that had belonged to the alchemically-inclined seventh earl.
I broke open the hugely impressive wax seal of the Comtes d'Andelys, its crest unchanged since the times of Charlemagne, and began to read.
'Mon cher ami—'
To render it in the original French is the height of folly, of course, for in these days when the German tongue pervades our court and country, who but the near-dead like myself could comprehend it? In English, then—
'My dearest brother-in-arms! Oh, my esteemed and noble friend, Matthew Quinton! My fellow warrior in the time of greatest adversity—'
There was much more in the same vein, for although RogerLouis de Gaillard-Herblay, seventeenth Comte d'Andelys, was a good man and a true friend, he was, at bottom, French, and alas, brevity is not a characteristic of that mighty race. When the endless expressions of undying affection toward my person finally ceased, there was much on his search for a wife (as yet unfruitful, although a prodigiously plump daughter of the prodigiously rich Duc de Montreuil was said to be a promising candidate), a long discourse on the doings of King Louis and his court (the queen and at least one mistress reportedly pregnant), much on the splendid harvest brought in by cheerful peasants from the fertile soils of his endless fields ... and so on. Finally, though, not even a Frenchman could further postpone the matters of substance.
'My thoughts turn increasingly toward the sea, Matthew, and to the times we had in the old
Jupiter.
As you will already know, my King seeks to make France a greater power at sea, and is ordering a new fleet of ships from our own yards and those of Holland. This is no threat to England and your great navy, of course, but it is shaming that a country the size of France should have no more than a few ancient tubs carrying her proud fleur-de-lis ensign to sea. The King is commissioning great nobles to command his new ships—men with far less experience at sea than my own, though I will confess that my experiences were, shall we say, unconventional.'
(Escaping the wrath of King Louis' minister Fouquet, whose wife he had seduced, the Comte d'Andelys had enlisted aboard the
Jupiter
as a sailmaker's mate named Le Blanc, and I inherited him with the ship.)
'Thus I am tempted to solicit a command. Who knows, my dear brother-in-arms, one day we might sail alongside each other, side by side against a common foe!'
Ever the optimist, Roger evidently had not contemplated the possibility of us fighting
against
each other.
'Now, Matthew, I turn to this matter of the Seigneur de Montnoir. I have never met this man, but some of my friends at court know him. He is a strange and secret creature, it seems—part warrior, past mystic. Some say he is a descendant of the old prophet de Nostredame, but our court is ever home to a feverish terror of the occult, and I would place little weight
on such tales. He has great lands in the Auvergne that have allowed him to indulge his passions. These do not seem to include wine and women, as is the way with most of us in the Second Estate. Instead, my friends inform me that Montnoir is a fanatic. He seems to have convinced himself that he committed a mortal sin by fighting against Spain during our late wars with that kingdom, believing that all of Catholic Europe should be united in crusade against the Turks and the Moors, as well as those notorious and unrepentant heretics, the English and the Dutch. As we know, my friend, there is only one thing more dangerous than a fanatic, and that is a wealthy and well-connected fanatic. Thus Montnoir serves the Order of Malta because it gives him a licence to kill heathens indiscriminately, and in the hope that one day he will become Grand Master, a sovereign prince of Europe and keeper of much of the supposed secret knowledge of the ancients. But he also has the ear of King Louis, who detests mystics unless they tell him what he wants to hear—'
'Well?' asked Cornelia, looking up from the gruesome illustrations in Galen just as a particularly vicious gust of wind carried a dead bird and some branches hard against the window.
'Roger's thinking of taking a command at sea,' I said, summarising the letter to rather less than its bare bones.
'Oh sweet God, not another one,' my wife said. 'Another sea-captain. Thirty years from now, there you will be, husband. You and Roger and my brother, the admirals of England, France and
Nederland.
She chuckled, and took up another book from the table: Foxe's
Book of Martyrs,
a fine source of potentially grisly fates for the Lady De Vaux, most of them involving searingly painful immolations. Within moments, she was engrossed.
I returned to Roger's letter.
'He is convinced that he has two certain routes to the Grand Master's throne. One is to be the discoverer of an unlimited source of wealth, either the philosopher's stone of the alchemists or a great golden hill that is said to exist somewhere in Africa, or better, both.'
I felt a sudden chill as I read that sentence.
'The other is to bring about the restoration of the Order's English and Scottish lands, lost during what you call your Reformation. Thus he takes a close interest in the affairs of your country, Matthew; almost as close an interest as he takes in promoting his dark ambitions. Indeed, it is said that he has an agent or agents in England even now. So beware of this man and those who serve him. From what I have gleaned of him, it would not surprise me if he sought to burn the entire population of England as heretics, whether or not they stand between him and his goals. But while England has such gallant swordsmen as Matthew Quinton to defend her, she need never fear...
(There were several more paragraphs in this vein before Roger eventually reached his valediction.)...
May both the Catholic and Protestant Gods watch over you, old friend, and my undying love to your dear Cornelia.