Read The Privateer's Revenge Online
Authors: Julian Stockwin
He waited for the hysterical babble to trail off, having discovered to his intense satisfaction that Prosser had not trusted Carthew and had stealthily retrieved the actual secret orders, which he still had in his possession.
Renzi pretended to ponder. “I seeâto be produced in court at the proper time.” He reflected further. “You will observe,” he said, as though to a lecture audience, “how trivial a task it has been for one in my position to arrange the abduction and death of any I choose. Should you fall in with my demands you may yet escape with your lifeâbut if you fail me I will give orders that will find you out wherever you are and extinguish your miserable existence. Do you understand?”
“Y-yes, Mr Renzi.”
“Then this is what you shall do. First bring the orders to me, with your written confession. Afterwards you shall stand up and testify against Carthewâand only then will you stand quite discharged of your obligations. This is now your choice, sir. How will you proceed?”
“IâI'll do it, Mr Renzi. Whoever you are . . .”
It had been a stiff walk out of town, up by Elizabeth College to Grange Road, and a little farther to the Kydd residence, a fine house with many rooms set back discreetly from the road. He passed the gardener, who touched his hat to him as he reached the ornate front door and found the bell pull.
A bewigged footman regarded him disdainfully. “Sir?” Fighting down a sense of unreality he said, “I'm Nicholas Renzi. I saw that Mr Kydd's ship is now in port. Is he at home at all?” He had seen the wicked black lines of the privateer schooner as she had returned to a joyous welcome on the quayside but, for some reason, had refrained from joining the crowds.
The footman seemed unimpressed and held out his hand.
“Oh, er, I have no visiting card on my person,” Renzi said uncomfortably, “but I assure you I am his good friend and sanguine he will offer me welcome.”
He was shown into a receiving room adjacent to the door by the disapproving flunkey. Renzi settled into a comfortable chair and picked up a
Gentleman's Magazine
to avoid gaping at the splendours of decoration to hand.
It was hard to believe that this was now the residence and home of the young, credulous quartermaster's mate who had sailed with him in
Artemis
frigate on her legendary voyage round the world; the master's mate who had stood with the seamen in the great Nore mutiny, then spurned an admiral's daughter for a country lass at ruinous social cost.
Kydd's sea sense had made him a natural predator and he was clearly reaping its rich rewards. Three voyages now. He was a figure of admiration in an island with a long history of privateering and could command the fawning attention of any he choseâand this was only the beginning.
Had it altered him? Was the open-hearted sailor now a hard-nosed businessman? When each cruise was adding massively to his private fortune, would he deign to go back to life in a humble sloop like
Teazer?
The more Renzi thought about it, the more unlikely it seemed.
Most of all, a gulf now separated them that could not have been greater: Kydd had found himself and would go on to great things, while he could only dream of achieving something in the philosophical line, not a path likely to lead to such riches.
With a sudden stab he realised as well that, as Kydd and his family rose in the world, Cecilia might be placed for ever beyond his reach. His despondency turned to fear.
The gritty rolling of wheels outside told him that soon he would know the worst. Sitting quite still, his pulse quickening, he heard the cries of an ostler and the jingling of harnessâthen a deeper voice of authority, probably the major-domo greeting his master: “A pleasant voyage, sir?”
Then the blessed sound of Kydd's hearty voice: “Not s' pleasant, but a mort profitable, I'd have t' say.”
“Oh, er, there's a gentleman in the receiving room,” the voice went on. “He gave no card but claims to be an acquaintance of yours. Will you see him or . . . ?”
“He gave a name?”
“Well, yes, sirâa Mr Rancy, sir.”
“Renzi!” The door burst openâand Kydd stood there, utter delight on his face. “Nicholas!” he cried. “Ye're here!”
Renzi stood slowly. “Yes, dear fellow, as you have rightly perceived, I am indeed here,” he said, eyes smarting.
Kydd advanced impulsively and hugged his friend. Then, frowning, he held him at arm's length. “That rogue the prince o' whateverâwhy, he's been working ye half t' death. Still, no need f'r that kind o' thing any more, Nicholas. We're rich!”
While Renzi was digesting the “we,” Kydd turned on the major-domo. “Rouse up th' hands!” he roared. “We're t' have a right true welcome home t' two heroes o' the sea!”
They moved to the more august surroundings of the spacious drawing room, and Renzi noted how confidently Kydd moved about the sumptuous furnishings. Soon, fortified by a fine brandy, the two friends were slipping back into their old familiarity.
“Then do I take it that your recent voyage might be accounted successful, brother?”
“Aye,” Kydd said, with relish. “One who thought t' go a-tradin' with th' French coloniesâa right Tartar but no match f'r the
Witch,
o' course.”
“So now you have taken the character of a man of means, not to say wealth.”
“Oh, this pile, y' think so? It's on a very favourable lease fr'm a Mr Vauvert, rich cove who's done well out o' investin' in m' cruises.”
“Then this bounteous cornucopia might be said sufficient for your plans now to go afoot.”
“Ahâthe plans. Nicholas, I've had time t' think about it. It wasn't really much of a plan t' conceive they'll put 'emselves up against th' law just f'r a few guineas. Foolish t' believe so, don't y' think?”
“I'd be obliged to agree, dear fellow. But what if we could find some other way to right this grievous wrong done to you?”
“Y' mean, lay out the gold t' hire a flash London lawyer as will see me right? No, Nicholas, without we have th' evidence t' show him it just won't fadge.”
“Perhaps then we could find a denizen of the demi-world, an abandoned creature not noted for the delicacy of his morals who would follow the trail wheresoever it led. But who would know such a person?”
“Nicholas!” Kydd exclaimed, scandalised. “I'll not have dealings wi' such. It's not the place f'r a gentleman, as you y'self tells me!” he said with heat. Hesitating, he conceded reluctantly, “So it seems I'll have t' face it. There's no way forward. This is m' lot in life, an' if I'm t' be truthful then it's t' say that it's not so hard, an' I'm still fightin' the King's enemiesâin a private way, o' course.”
“Umm. Well, do tell me, for my interest, if it were in any wise made possible that at some future date the vile act is exposed and the malefactors brought to a reckoning, would you still desire to set yourself on
Teazer
's quarterdeck again? To give away the carefree life of a corsair for the stern duties of the Navy?”
Puzzled, Kydd blinked. “Why, o' course! Why else would I . . . ? Ah, I seeâye're flamming me! Well, Nicholas, let me say ye can be sure that if I c'n think of another plan as'll smoke 'em out, well, I'll do it with all m' heart.”
Renzi paused. A half-smile spread as he felt about inside his waistcoat. “Well, now, if you're ever to be a commander again we'll have to find a way to deal with these.” Slowly he withdrew a small sheaf of papers.
Unfolding the top one and holding it up, he asked innocently, “Oh, er, do you recognise this at all?”
“
My God!
Th' secret orders! Where did you . . . ?”
“From the knave who deliberately inserted them into your lawful orders.”
“Who?”
“As instructed by another, who most ardently wished for your ruin.”
“Who, damn it, Nicholas? Was it Lockwood?” Kydd blazed.
“Prosser.”
Kydd slumped in amazement. “Thatâthat gib-faced shicer? In God's name, why?”
“To achieve his step as an officer.”
“An' who was th' other?”
“The principal was Carthew. In a fit of jealous rage he paid a smuggler to land the chest and used Prosser to falsify your orders. Simple, really.”
Kydd shook his head in wonder. “That any should be s' low.” He turned to Renzi. “Nicholas, how did ye . . . ?”
“Oh, merely the application of common logic, and when I enquired it of him he most readily admitted the act. You will find his written confession here, the name of the smuggler, and as well he has agreed to testify against Carthew.”
Speechless, Kydd could only gaze at him in admiration. “Thenâ then this means . . .”
“It is over, dear friend. With this evidence your reinstatement will be a matter of formality only, and remembering the particular kindness Sir James Saumarez had for you, I would not be in the least surprised to find him especially anxious to make up in some handsome way for what you have suffered.” Stretching out lazily, he continued, “And from henceforth your new fortune will set you in the first rank of society, never more to concern yourself with trifles as we mortals must. Not forgetting that your means now will bring you influence and power, perhaps a seat in parliament? It were folly for the Admiralty to ignore such a one.”
Kydd listened quietly, then grinned. “O' course, Nicholas, if life in a pawky brig-sloop doesn't please ye any more, I shall have t' find a new clerk . . .”
It took another brandy before conversation could resume.
With a triumphant flourish Kydd waved the evidence in the air. “Who'd have thought it? I hold in m' hands just a few squiddy papers, but they're enough t' see me back in command o' dear
Teazer!
” His eyes shone.
“And a nemesis for the wrongdoer!” Renzi added.
“Aye,” Kydd said, his voice hardening. “Carthew doesn't know it yet but he's found out, an' I'm about t' choke his luff with this'n! I'll now have my revenge on him, th' dog!”
Renzi gave a saintly smile. “A court-martial and dismissal with disgrace from His Majesty's Navy, scorn and contempt at all levels and no hope whatsoever of being received by polite society ever again. And, of course, little prospect of employment by any who value probity in character.”
The smile grew wider. “If, of course, you wish to cast him into damages then you must add penury to his suffering.”
“Enough!” Kydd rose to his feet. “I'm goin' t' Saumarezâ
now
!”
Renzi gave a little laugh, which he tried to smother.
“What?” Kydd grated.
“Oh, nothing. Just the irony of a privateer's revenge setting a right true sea officer back into His Majesty's Service.”
A
UTHOR'S
N
OTE
T
HE ANCIENT CASTLE OF
M
ONT
O
RGUEIL
still lies at the head of Gorey Bay in Jersey. The curious may wish to visit and pace the stone floors of the rooms from which Commodore (later Admiral) Philippe d'Auvergne ran
La Correspondance
in those desperate days two hundred years ago. They might then desire to mount the old battlements for the thrilling view of the coast of France, as countless sentries and others have done over the centuries since Good Queen Bess. I would recommend the trip; there have been few of my research locations that have proved so little changed and so genuinely atmospheric.
In fact the Channel Islands are fascinating indeed. St Peter Port is rightly said to be as prime a Georgian city as Bath or Weymouth, and a brisk walk up Grange Road will allow the interested to view the splendours of the residences built by successful privateers and grand merchants. The original harbour remains, but within the embrace of a much larger modern edifice; however the fearful sea hazards of dizzying tidal currents and the maze of submerged rocks still have the power to chill.
For the inhabitants of the Norman Isles, as fiercely in
Â
dependent as ever, the loyal toast will always be to the Duke of Normandy. They revere those who have loomed large in their thousand-year history, perhaps none more than Admiral Sir James Saumarez, a grave figure whose integrity and sensitivity ensured that he would always stand in the shadow of other, more colourful commanders. I was gratified to learn recently that there are plans for his memorial, dynamited by the German army, to be restored.
Philippe d'Auvergne's story is a less happy one: at the end of the war, exhausted and in debt, he crossed Europe to enter into his princely inheritanceâonly to have it bartered away by the Great Powers in the readjustment of borders after Waterloo. He died days later.
As usual, I owe a debt of gratitude to three women without whom there would be no books: my creative partner and wife, Kathy; my literary agent, Carole Blake; and my editor, Alex Bonham. I've consulted many in the Islands, and I apologise for not naming them all. However I would be remiss in not mentioning Dr Gregory Stevens Cox, whose peerless work on the period started me on my quest and whose personal tours stripped away the layers of years; the Lt Governor of Guernsey, Sir Fabian Malbon, who as an admiral and commander-in-chief himself shares my respect for Sir James; and Captain Eric Gill, the Queen's harbour master, whose insightful observations on navigation in those waters informed my writing. My thanks are due, too, to Captain A. J. Holland, Nicholas Gold, Peter de Sausmarez and the staff of the Priaulx Library.
I do hope you enjoyed this story: in the next book Kydd will be sailing into shoal waters of quite another kind . . .