Aitken looked across at Hart, puzzled by what he now recognized as a strange sight. Hart stared back at him and said in a flat voice: 'We want to see your captain.'

'Explain your business,' Aitken said brusquely, 'then I'll see if he has time: he is very busy.'

'What's his name?'

'Ramage, Captain Ramage.'

'Christ,' Hart said in a low voice, 'of all the ones the Admiralty pick it has to be him!'

'You know him?'

'Know of him,' Hart said, 'who doesn't? Well -' he shrugged his shoulders and said something in rapid Spanish to Tomás, who swore, '- fetch him.'

'I don't fetch the captain,' Aitken said stiffly.

'Now you do,' Hart sneered. 'You see those ships?' he gestured at the anchored merchantmen.

When Aitken nodded. Hart said: 'They're all our prizes. Now fetch your precious Mr Lord Ramage.'

CHAPTER TWELVE

Ramage sat in his chair behind his desk, not because he needed the desk in front of him but because his cabin was crowded with the four privateersmen, Aitken and Southwick. Aitken had hurried in to give a quick explanation of why he was bringing the privateersmen down and a couple of minutes later had led them in, Southwick following presumably because he realized something strange was happening.

'Strange' was the appropriate word. For the moment the privateersmen were settling themselves down with the leader, the Englishman calling himself Hart, sitting in what was usually regarded as Southwick's armchair and his three companions taking up the settee. Southwick stood one side of the door and Aitken the other, both stooped because there was not enough room to stand upright under the deck beams.

This is the first time I have taken my ship to a foreign island in peacetime, Ramage reflected, and I meet a situation more perplexing than any I met in the war. Perplexing because more than a hundred and fifty innocent lives are at stake: people I have never seen; men and women passengers, officers, petty officers and seamen from five merchant ships: Dutch, French and British. What did this fellow Hart want or intend? Well, the privateersmen seemed to be waiting for him to start the proceedings.

'Well, Mr Hart, my first lieutenant tells me you command the Lynx privateer, and you claim that the merchant ships anchored here are your prizes.'

'Correct, except for the "claim". I'm not "claiming"; they are.'

Ramage nodded, as if accepting the point, but he said quietly, as though mentioning it apologetically: 'Britain and France have signed a treaty: Britain is now at peace with France, Spain and the Netherlands. Can you take prizes in time of peace?'

'We can,' Hart said bluntly. 'We have.'

Again Ramage nodded. 'The two British, two French and one Dutch ships I see at anchor here?'

'Those very ones. And probably another two or three within a week: our sister ship is still at sea.'

'Yes, it must be quite easy taking prizes now,' Ramage said. 'No one expecting trouble: guns not loaded - in fact I expect many merchant ships will have landed their guns.'

'They will, they will,' Hart said confidently.

'What do you propose doing with your prizes?'

At that moment the black spoke to Hart in rapid Spanish, demanding to know what was being discussed. Ramage was surprised at the words the man chose. He was careful to keep the tone of voice suitable for a seaman who was probably a bodyguard, but the actual words in Spanish were those an officer would use to a seaman. Clearly neither Hart nor the black had the slightest idea that Ramage spoke Spanish. The only trouble was that Ramage's Spanish and accent were Castilian, while the black spoke the crude and heavily-accented Spanish of the New World; almost as hard to understand as the Creole spoken by blacks in the French islands.

'What are you telling this man?' the black was asking.

'Just that the ships are our prizes, Tomás.'

'You be sure he makes no argument.'

'He is not. He is accepting everything.'

'Why?' The black was shrewd and probably the real captain of the Lynx: Ramage was becoming quite sure of that.

'I do not know,' Hart said vaguely. 'What else can he do?'

'Find out,' Tomás said.

Hart turned to Ramage with a friendly smile. 'Tomás speaks no English; I was explaining what we had been discussing.'

'Perhaps you'd like to translate for the benefit of your French mate as well?'

Hart nodded and quickly related to Belmont the gist of the conversation so far, and Ramage's suspicion was confirmed: Belmont was of no consequence. Once again the tone was right but the words used were those a master would use to a petty officer, not his second-in-command.

The hierarchy of the Lynx, Ramage guessed, was that the big Spanish Negro, Tomás, was the leader, with Hart the second-in-command, while Belmont and the silent blond were mates.

'Well, Captain,' Hart said smoothly, 'you do not seem very surprised to find five prizes anchored here at Trinidade!'

'Oh, I wouldn't say that,' Ramage said vaguely. Tomás would not understand the words, but he would be quick to notice if a foreigner was an ineffectual man. Clearly Hart knew of Captain Ramage - he had made that clear at the beginning - but Tomás would not believe him if he saw that this Captain Ramage had a vague and indecisive manner. Even Hart might begin to wonder. 'Well, yes, I suppose I was surprised to find ships here. After all, it isn't a very big island. It takes a lot of finding.'

'You had trouble?' Hart asked casually.

'Oh yes. Our chronometer is not very accurate.' He was careful not to look at Southwick as he added: 'Fortunately one can run the westing down.'

Hart said quickly in Spanish to Tomás: 'They had to run their westing down to find this place.'

Tomás said nothing and Ramage said innocently to Hart: 'You did not say what you were going to do with your prizes.'

'No, I didn't. It now depends on you, to some extent.'

Ramage thought quickly, and then yawned, delicately picking fluff from his coat. 'Oh, does it? It's not really my responsibility, you know. After all, you're the privateer. Well, the war's over now, so I suppose your letter of marque has expired, or whatever it does when a war ends. But your prizes are your affair - after all, even if the war was still on, they'd still be no concern of mine.'

'I'm glad to hear you say it,' Hart said.

'Oh indeed,' Ramage said, as though politely delighted that Hart agreed. 'I have my orders from the Admiralty and I really can't get involved in anything else - not without orders from their Lordships.'

'Might one ask if your orders will keep you here for long?' Hart asked cautiously.

Ramage shook his head and resumed the search for fluff on his coat. 'There's no secret about my orders: I've come here to survey the island and map it, and make a chart of the anchorages.'

'Why? Are the Admiralty going to start using it?'

'Use it?' Ramage said scornfully. 'I doubt it! Who the devil could find it! Anyway, it's a long way to anywhere else. No, Ascension is good enough for the Cape and John Company ships.'

'Why the sudden interest in Trinidade, then?'

'It's not a sudden interest in Trinidade,' Ramage said, with another yawn. 'The war is over, but the Admiralty have to keep a certain number of ships in commission, especially frigates. So they are sending several of them off to survey various unusual places. I expect one has gone to St Paul Rocks and another to Fernando de Noronha, for example. And probably Ascension; the charts for them are terrible, I know.'

'So how—' Hart was interrupted by Tomás asking what was being discussed. Hart told him that Ramage was not concerned about the privateer; that he wanted to avoid any responsibility, and that he was only concerned with carrying out his orders, to survey Trinidade.


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