Read Pirate Code Online

Authors: Helen Hollick

Tags: #Hispaniola - History - 18th Century, #Romance, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Pirates, #Fiction, #Historical, #Fantasy, #Great Britain - History; Naval - 18th Century, #Historical Fiction, #Nassau (Bahamas) - History - 18th Century, #Sea Captains

Pirate Code (2 page)

“If one strand of cordage frays it will hold, perhaps with two or three unravelling it will still be usable, but would you trust such a line to brace a sail in a storm wind? I cannot always rely on my Craft, luvver. For some situations its strength is inappropriate. If I alter this thing I run the risk of drawing attention to what I am.” She paused; what more could she say that she had not already said? “The penalty for witchcraft is far greater than a few lashes with a whip for adultery.”

He grunted an answer. “So you will not save yourself?”

“I cannot. There is a difference.”

He did not wholly understand why, did not want to understand, just wanted her to be safe. Walking into the great cabin he grunted again. The window had been left open, rain was puddled on the floor, had soaked several of the cushions. As if watery fingers had poked and pried, there were rain drops scattered on the muddled books and papers on his desk, and small pools dotted among the debris of empty coffee cups and wine glasses on his mahogany dining table.

Hardly surprising that the window had been forgotten. After reading that summons his anger had changed into despair, and that had led to the only way he knew of showing Tiola how much he loved her. His lovemaking had been fierce, driving into her to prove she was his, her own response as demanding and urgent, taking him in deep, her arms and legs curled around him; their bodies and souls united as they reached the breathless crescendo of mutual pleasure.

As far as Jesamiah was concerned Tiola was his and no one, no one, would be touching or hurting her. Not even if he had to return to a life of piracy and kill van Overstratten to prevent it.

Two

Jesamiah had promised Tiola he would not do anything stupid, but he could not do nothing at all! By the intermittent flare of the lightning and the glow of the single lamp, he gathered the damp clothes that he had dropped to the floor in his eagerness to make love, and dressed quietly.

“Where are you going?” Tiola mumbled from the small alcove that was their bedroom.

“To check the anchors,” he lied. “Go back to sleep.”

He pulled on his boots, buckled on his cutlass. Ensuring it was loaded, he thrust a pistol through his belt and slid his arms into his coat. Finally, swinging a battered oilskin boat-cloak around his shoulders he crammed his three-corner hat on his head and half turned to go back and kiss Tiola goodbye. Thought better of it. If she guessed he was up to something she would stop him.

Automatically ducking beneath the door lintel Jesamiah walked the few yards along the narrow corridor and stepped out on to the deserted waist of the ship. Wind-driven rain hit him smart in the face like the slap of a duellist’s glove demanding satisfaction. He hunched his coat higher, glanced towards the scuttle forward of the main mast that led below to the crew’s quarters. Rue would not be in his own cabin but down there with the lads, and probably a few giggling lasses as well. Nassau had its attractions but the
Sea Witch
was home and Jesamiah’s quartermaster, his second in command, like himself, preferred the comforts of familiarity. When a once full pocket of coin was rapidly dwindling and the novelty of carousing ashore was waning, the call of the sea began to hush louder in your soul.

A crack of swaying light drifted from one corner of the not-quite covered hatch, a roar of laughter booming out in a lull of the wind. The African, Isiah Roberts. Jesamiah could recognise his first mate’s deep guffaw anywhere. He thought he heard the lighter tone of a woman’s voice, but a roll of thunder masked anything positive; another grumble obscured the creek of the oars as seating himself in the jollyboat warped alongside the entry port, Jesamiah pushed off and began to row. The wind was against him, he found it hard work to take the rowboat over the short distance of the harbour to the nearest jetty; was glad to toss her mooring-line ashore and make her fast. He was already soaked, the rain, dripping from his hat finding its way inside the neckband of his coat; his breeches were sodden.

Pulling the round-turn and half-hitch tighter, he secured the boat and turned into the wind, thought he saw movement in the shadows beyond the corner of the fort wall. A woman? He was certain he had seen the swirl of grey skirts and the toss of silver hair. One of the town’s whores he assumed, hurrying to or from her night’s work.

He crammed his hat down firmer, dipped his head against the wind and made his way uphill to the Governor’s house, the great pink-walled building dominating George Street and the more affluent quarter of Nassau. Affluent in the sense it was not as full of scoundrels and degenerates as the rest of the town, and smelt less pungent of excrement, pig muck, spewed vomit and raw sewage.

If he followed his usual pattern, Woodes Rogers would be relaxing after dinner, boasting to his guests, yet again, of his daring sea adventures circumnavigating the globe. Personally, Jesamiah could think of nothing worse than listening to Rogers continuously clack on about it, nor could he see any sense in spending almost three years sailing around the world for virtually no financial gain. Rogers’ recompense had been the appointment as King’s Governor of this God-forsaken place; the fool seemed to regard it as an honour. In Jesamiah’s opinion the man was barking mad. Although he did concede Rogers had managed to get almost one thousand scurvy degenerates to sign their name or put their mark in his Book of Amnesty and, so far, hold to their pledge to forsake piracy in exchange for the King’s pardon. Himself among them.

As he approached the Governor’s house, Jesamiah remembered a time, a few years ago, when he had come knocking at this same door with innocence on his face and the intention of robbery on his mind.Absent-mindedly he fingered his blue ribbons. A different Governor then, a man as corrupt as fake gold. Woodes Rogers was a rarity, an upright and honest man. Jesamiah had sailed away several thousand pounds sterling the richer that night. He had also become a captain. Jealous of his ability, the man who had previously held command had tried to murder him, not reckoning on Jesamiah being the one who was quicker on his feet.

Murder was not so far from Jesamiah’s mind, either, this night. He shrugged, resigned. Murdering van Overstratten would solve a few problems but would create as many more. He hammered again on the door, his right hand going to the hilt of his cutlass, the palm itching to draw the blade. The cutlass, shorter and less cumbersome than a sword, was a killing weapon, heavy and solid, designed to slash and maim, to slice through flesh, muscle and bone. Jesamiah had used it, to full effect, often.

A white-wigged black man wearing spotless knee-length breeches, silk stockings, black shining shoes with silver buckles and a scarlet coat with gold braid and brass buttons answered the door. He looked the pirate up and down as if he were a rat crawled up from the stink of the bilge and reluctantly granted admittance. Taking Jesamiah’s hat, oilskin cloak and long coat with a fastidious grimace, he bade him wait while he ascertained whether the Governor was at home.

Of course he was. Jesamiah could hear Rogers’ flat, booming guffaw meandering all the way down the ornate staircase.

Totally unaware he had gone, Tiola drifted back to sleep, the sound of the wind-driven rain influencing her dreams. A prowling dream that wandered, intrusive, through her sleep. A dream of watching eyes and of light footsteps running like the patter of rain on the deck and skylight. A dream where puddles shimmered like the sheen on a silken gown, and where Jesamiah drowned in one that was as deep as the ocean.

Three

“Ah, Acorne! Come in, come in, won’t ye? Will ye take a glass o’ brandy with us? Ha, ha!” Rogers was on his feet, heartily beckoning Jesamiah forward, his cheeks red-spotted from an excess of good food, strong drink and the smoke-fugged heat of the first-floor dining room. Three men were seated at table, other places where the women had sat were vacated, the debris of a fine dinner scattered around.

“Sit, sit! Find y’self a chair. It’s a damn foul night eh, lad? Ha, ha!“ The Governor, with his irritating habit of adding a meaningless guffaw to his statements, poured Jesamiah a generous measure of best French brandy, his amiability attempting to mask an obvious unease. One of the men was Stefan van Overstratten. As Jesamiah had known it would be.

Deliberately selecting a chair opposite the Dutchman, Jesamiah nodded a greeting to his friend Captain Henry Jennings, and the respected Benjamin Hornigold, two older men and one-time pirates. Both, as did Rogers himself, insisted they had been privateers, although the difference between privateer and pirate was a fine line; one acted against enemy ships during the time of declared war with the knowledge and consent of a Government, the other not giving a torn sail for who he plundered or when.

Jennings had made his fortune along with Jesamiah salvaging Spanish gold from a fleet of storm-wrecked treasure ships. Not exactly salvaging. Eleven galleons had gone down in a hurricane off the Florida coast and pirates had flocked like sharks to blood for the spoils; only Jesamiah had come up with the idea to go one better. Teaming up with Jennings the pair of them had cockily raided the warehouse where the Spanish had been storing the re-claimed treasure. Had come away as wealthy men. Jennings had retired, buying himself a modest estate here near Nassau, Jesamiah had sailed on to Africa, to Cape Town. Where he had met Tiola Oldstagh and fallen belly-deep in love with her.

The brandy was good quality – probably smuggled contraband. Jesamiah sipped at it, declined a cheroot offered by Jennings and a fill of pipe tobacco from Hornigold.

“My thanks gentlemen, I do not smoke. I had enough of tobacco as a child. When you’ve grown up in misery on a tobacco plantation you tend to want nothing more to do with the foul weed.”

“Unless it is to steal it and line your pockets with another man’s hard-earned profit.” Van Overstratten lifted the brandy decanter, poured himself a large refill. Pointedly, neither he nor Jesamiah had greeted each other.

“There are those who steal more of the profits than a pirate could ever accomplish,” Jesamiah commented. “Governments, of all nations, have powder burns on their fingers when it comes to reckoning taxation levies and trade tithes.”

Hornigold, a man nearing his sixties, and like Governor Rogers wearing a shoulder length, heavily curled grey wig, took his pipe from his mouth and guffawed. “Aye, you have it right there lad! I’d wager there are more dishonest men in Parliament than in London’s Newgate Gaol!

“And wiser men in Bedlam, eh?” Rogers added.

“Except,” van Overstratten countered ignoring the joviality, “men in prison do not have the opportunity to unbutton their breeches and make free use of other men’s wives.”

“Nothin’s free in gaol,” Jesamiah retorted taking excessive care to set his glass down, not slam it as he was itching to do. “Wardens charge a high price for a five minute poke at a woman.” His eyes lifted, stared direct at van Overstratten. A lean man in his late twenties, with high cheekbones, aristocratic brow and slender hands. His dress and appearance were immaculate; a man who flaunted his wealth and everything he had. Tiola, he had wanted for her beauty and for the begetting of a son. And for getting the better of Jesamiah Acorne.

“Of course,” the Dutchman countered disdainfully, “you would be knowing of the debauchery that occurs inside a prison, having extensive personal experience of such places.”

Prudently Jesamiah held his tongue, accepted the offer of several cheeses Governor Rogers hurriedly pushed in his direction.

“Try the goat’s cheese, lad, it has just the right blend of herbs. M’cook makes it himself, fine man. As black as tar o’ course, indentured into m’service. Not a slave. I don’t hold with keeping slaves as cooks, couldn’t trust the buggers not to put something nasty in the soup, eh? Ha, ha!” Rogers had not changed in the few years since Jesamiah had first met him. A paunch-bellied, opinionated man who relished the sound of his own voice. But he was well meaning, and there were those – especially back in England – who muttered that he proffered too much of a soft touch where the taste of the lash would serve better purpose.

He was right about the cheese.

Before Jesamiah’s arrival Hornigold had been recounting some sea adventure of his youth and the conversation returned to his rambling anecdote. Jesamiah sat quiet, apparently politely listening, his mind dwelling on how easy it would be to draw a pistol, cock the hammer and shoot van Overstratten right between the eyes. Except, out of courtesy he had handed the weapon to the servant at the front door, along with his cutlass. It did not do to sit at the Governor of Nassau’s table with a primed pistol tucked through your waist belt or a cutlass nestled at your left hip. Pity.

The conversation faltered. Taking a breath to steady the anger churning with the sickness in his stomach, Jesamiah wiped his fingers on a napkin. It would not serve any purpose to lose his temper. Not here.

“I have come to plead clemency, Governor,” he said. “To offer payment for any wrong I have committed against this Dutchman, Master Stefan van Overstratten.”

“You could not afford the bill, Acorne,” van Overstratten snapped as reply. “You are personally responsible for the loss of at least three of my ships and several thousand pounds in value of cargo. Not to mention the innocent men you killed in the process of your plundering.”

“For all of which I have received the King’s pardon of amnesty.”

“Your king’s pardon. I am Dutch. George is not my king. Nor have I granted you pardon.”

Swallowing bile and his temper, Jesamiah again stared direct at the man opposite him. He could afford a large payment in compensation. Were he to bother tallying the gold he had stored in various banks he would probably find himself richer than this Dutchman. In the recent-formed Bank of England alone he had a hoard of more than £15,000. With the comparison of a naval captain’s wage of £1 per day on a first rate vessel, Jesamiah was a rich man. He had almost two-thirds as much again stowed in Dutch and Portuguese bank vaults – and that without the value of gems and mercantile goods, barrels of expensive indigo and nutmeg; the fine wines, silks, china, and spices stashed in warehouses in various scattered ports. That all his wealth had been made from stealing other people’s property, some of it, aye, from van Overstratten’s merchant fleet, was immaterial to Jesamiah.

Quietly he offered; “I will return the
Sea Witch
to you in exchange for Tiola’s freedom.”

It was not an easy offer.

Jennings, Hornigold, and even Rogers, all three of them captains and seamen, sat staring at him, dumbfounded. A captain to give up his ship voluntarily for a woman? Had such a thing been heard of before?

Van Overstratten was no sailor, he did not see the significance of the proposal, nor the effort it had taken to make it. He threw back his head and laughed outright.

“Of what use is a worm-riddled, rotten-keeled hulk to me? Before you stole her she was a pristine, new-launched ship. You have ravished her, turned her into a stinking, rat-infested pirate menace.” He swiped his hand sideways, dismissive. “She is naught but a violated whore. Utterly valueless to me. Worthless.”

Feeling his hand inching towards where his cutlass would have been, Jesamiah swallowed a curt retort. The
Sea Witch
was as much a part of him as an arm or a leg – more, she was his life and livelihood. He could survive without a limb but not without a ship. As a counterbalance, though, he could not survive without Tiola. The pain would be unbearable were he to lose the
Sea Witch
but he could, somehow, replace her. He could never replace Tiola.

Van Overstratten failed to mark Jesamiah’s bitter silence. With sneered contempt added, “As, of course, you have also prostituted and poxed my wife.”

The insult went one fathom too far. Jesamiah half rose, his face a curled mask of fury. “Then you are no judge of ships, you bastard, nor women!”

Alarmed, Rogers patted the air with his palms calling with authority for the younger man to stay seated. “Gentlemen, gentlemen! I will not have insults traded at my table. Calm yourselves.” As a diversion he sent the brandy around again. “If you cannot control your emotions Captain Acorne, I will be obliged to ask ye to leave m’hospitality.”

Ignoring him, his hands flat on the table Jesamiah tossed another challenge at the Dutchman. “If Tiola is of no worth to you why will you not accept my offer? I have made it in good faith before eminent men as witnesses; you will lose no honour by accepting.”

Van Overstratten poured himself a refill of brandy, leant back in his chair, his arm draped over the curve of the mahogany back, his leg crossed over the other at the knee. He inhaled his cheroot, sent a waft of aromatic smoke billowing from his lips; said, tapping ash from its tip: “Because, pirate, it is you offering it. I do not make a habit of dealing with poxed cockroaches. I prefer to step on them and crush them beneath my boot, without a second glance.”

Twice now the Dutchman had called him poxed. Jesamiah stared at the white linen of the tablecloth beneath his palms, a stain of wine to the left had spread into the shape of a sea turtle. His head tilting downward he raised his eyes, menace flaring within the darkness of his dilated pupils, spoke very softly as his right hand went almost imperceptibly to one of the ribbons tied into his hair.

“But I am fully prepared to deal with a snivelling coward, van Overstratten. A coward who would strip a defenceless woman naked to the waist for the degenerate men of this island to ogle, rather than fight the man he really wants to punish.”

The ribbon was between his fingers, a knot tied, fast, efficient, at its centre. An innocent-looking strand of blue, silk ribbon. In the right hands – Jesamiah’s – a weapon that was strong enough to choke and strangle; to crush a windpipe.

“Jesamiah!” Henry Jennings shouted coming to his feet also and laying his hand on the younger man’s arm. “This will serve no purpose. You have signed the pardon and like it or no you must now obey the law. Do not be a fool. Sit down, boy.”

Jesamiah shook him off, leant further over the table. “Come outside you worm, settle this in the way a man would. Or are you too shit-scared to face a better man? A pirate?”

Rogers slammed the table with his fist. “Acorne! I will not have you insulting my guests. Apologise or get you gone!”

Coiling the length of ribbon around one hand, Jesamiah turned to Rogers, his stare unblinking and formidable. “I apologise to you, Sir,” he stated, giving a small, polite bow, “but not to this bastard who would see a woman flogged.”

“I have no necessity to soil my hands on scum such as you, Acorne,” van Overstratten interjected with a bark of scorn. He had not moved, although his face had drained ash pale. “I believe in justice and law, not in the seditious, empty threats of a thief and a murderer. My wife has broken the marriage vows she made to me in the sight of God and has publicly insulted my honour, for that I will see her punished.”

A hideous smile spread over the Dutchman’s mouth. “Be thankful I have not also invoked my right to insist it be you, Acorne, who delivers her punishment.” The smile broadened into the gloat of a leer at the responding look of sickened disgust coming over Jesamiah’s face. “Provoke me and I may well change my mind.”

Losing the final restraint of control over his barely held temper, Jesamiah leapt across the table scattering chairs, china, silverware and glass. The candelabra toppled over; the crystal brandy decanter fell with a shattering crash to the floor, releasing the pungent smell of its contents. The ribbon was between his fingers, pulled taut around van Overstratten’s neck, Jesamiah, standing behind him, legs braced, arms crossing, locked at the crook of his elbows, pulling backwards, the previously innocuous ribbon as effective as a wire garrotte.

“You can’t even pronounce her name correctly, you bastard,” he hissed into the Dutchman’s ear. “Its Teo-la short, quick, not your lah-di-dah Ti-oh-la.” He pulled the ribbon tighter. “Yield to me you bastard or I’ll strangle you here and now. One way or another I’ll bloody see her free of you!”

The Dutchman was clawing at the rigid length of blue silk crushing against his carotid artery, stifling his air supply and the pulse of blood to his brain.

Henry Jennings and Benjamin Hornigold rushed to grasp at Jesamiah’s arms, Rogers hurrying to the door to fling it wide and bellow for his militia guard.

Faced with a volley of primed muskets, Jesamiah swore and released the choking van Overstratten. The Dutchman’s lips were blue, face suffused red, he fell forwards hands clasping his throat, wheezing and coughing, gasping to suck in lungfuls of air.

Dropping the knotted ribbon to the floor Jesamiah held his hands in surrender. Getting himself shot would not help Tiola.

Nor would it help to spend the rest of the night in gaol, but that was where, at Governor Rogers’ explicit orders, he found himself.

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