The Privateersman
Page 1
The Privateersman
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Part One
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Part Two
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Part Three
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
The William Kite Naval Adventures
Copyright
Part One
Death
The Rice-Water Fever
The wind thrust him forward with palpable force, raising the capes of his heavy coat and pattering them across his shoulders with a strange fluttering insistence, so that he thought of black crows assaulting him, the frenzied beating of their wings just beyond his vision. The power of this dark image raised his heartbeat and made him fearful of the dark and stormy night. It was, he knew, populated with more than mere visions, for he could hear the whispers of the obeah women of the Guinea coast and the moans from the slave decks of a Guineaman sailing as swift as an arrow through the stunning beauty of a tropical night, a night whose perfection was marred by the sickly sweet stench rising from the gratings over her slave-rooms below.
Spiritually oppressed and instinctively wary, he hefted his heavy cane and gripped it like a club, half expecting to be attacked by footpads as he approached the corner, but the night was too foul for even those most opportunist of thieves.
He turned the corner and felt the thrust of the wind change to a buffeting irregularity as it coursed up the rising street of tall and elegant houses. As the ground rose the wind came more directly off the River Mersey behind him and he felt its full force. A coach stood outside one house, a bright patch of light spilling from its open door, but the flaring torches of two patiently waiting link boys dissipated the domesticity of the scene, giving it instead, a hellish aspect only added to by the figure of the coachman unmoving upon his box. The gale snatched away any noise of voices that might be expected to accompany this scene of departure, giving it a detached, other-worldly appearance that was in accord with his mood. This was a night for death and dark deeds, not frivolous rioting.
He crossed the street, rather than pass through that puddle of light and feel an irresistible compulsion to glance into the hallway. The lives of others had no part in his desperate fear and misery. Half way across the cobbled carriageway the rain began. It came with a gust of wind which threatened to unseat his tricorne and he hurriedly put his left hand up to its fore-cock to avoid losing it. The skirts of his heavy coat clung to his legs like the jungle undergrowth. He quickened his pace but the first sheeting squall struck him and drove at the nape of his neck with a chill sensation as if all the corvine birds in hell were flying behind him, intent on harrying him. His heavy boots tripped on the uneven cobbles as he struggled uphill and he swore as he caught his balance, turning to glance behind him as if real crows terrorised him.
‘You damned fool!’ he hissed to himself, forcing himself to stop and turn, to confront his primitive irrational fear with the cool logic of his solitude. Then the coach was coming up the hill behind him, its two lamps glowing like eyes and the black gleam of the straining horses’ wet bodies presided over by the untidy black hump of the coachman atop the neat regularity of the coach’s swaying body. He watched it go past, its blinds up and its passengers oblivious to the drenching rain that, in a matter of moments, had turned the street into a hissing torrent of water. A footman was on the box and gave him a glance of commiseration and then the equipage was gone.
The rain drove him uphill, the little light escaping from the interstices between shutters showed it almost horizontal, while the occasional sconced lamp only added to the desolation. Was it possible, he thought for one moment, to be so alone when surrounded by such habitations? But he already knew the answer: the presence of death isolated even those huddled now round their fires of sea-coal in a lamp-lit atmosphere of familial conviviality. For cholera, like the tall and lonely figure, stalked the sea-port of Liverpool.
By the time he turned the final corner, into a street that ran parallel to the distant river and whose houses thus afforded him a timely lee, his stock was sodden and the rain poured from the tricorne’s cocks as if from three gutters. He clumped up the three steps to the door and pulled the bell, turning to stare up and down the street as he waited, unconsciously pounding the step with his cane.
The door opened and he turned as the maid drew aside and bobbed a curtsy.
‘Good evening, Captain.’
‘Evening Bridget.’ He nodded at the Irish girl and stood in the hallway, the water pouring off him. ‘I’m sorry, m’dear…’
‘’Tis no matter, sir.’ She took his hat, cane and gloves and waited as he removed his great coat.
‘Is there any news?’ he asked, nodding at the stairs.
Bridget shook her head, ‘no, sir, nothing new…’
‘Who is it, Bridget?’
‘’Tis the Captain, Miss Katherine.’
He looked up as Bridget sank under the weight of his sodden coat to see Katherine Makepeace half-way down the stairs. The younger woman managed a wan smile. ‘Uncle William…’
‘Kate… There’s no change, I understand.’
Katherine shook her head, ‘No, no change.’
‘I am sorry…’
‘May I speak to you… Please…’ She indicated a door off the hallway, descended the stairs and, as he stood back, led him into the with-drawing room. A single candelabra burnt on a side table and the low light threw the young woman’s face into stark relief. Growing fast beyond the age then considered as being marriageable, she was plain and almost severe in her looks, though her face lit up when she smiled, for she had perfect teeth. But she had nothing to smile about on this filthy night which rattled the sashes as the rain fell like a lash upon the window panes.
‘What is it, m’dear?’
She drew herself up and faced him. ‘Uncle William, I fear the worst…’
He nodded, ‘Yes, I understand, I know of no-one who recovers once the disease has taken such a hold. You are taking those precautions that I advised?’
‘Yes, insofar as we can…’
‘They must be most stringently enforced,’ he said, ‘with absolute authority, particularly so below stairs. It is imperative, Kate, or you, your mother and your brothers, when they arrive, will succumb.’
‘I have given instructions that all water is to be boiled and that they are to wash their hands when handling anything from the sick-room.’
‘Let us hope that is sufficient.’ Seeing the agonised look on the young woman’s face, he added, ‘as I am sure it will prove.’ He touched her arm and smiled. ‘bear up Katherine, your mother will need all your help in the coming days.’
‘But,’ she looked at him, ‘how did father catch this disease?’
‘It is everywhere, my dear, even up here,’ he suppressed any hint of irony, ‘and your father spent much time down in the docks and the lower part of town.’
She was not listening and interrupted him, her eyes wide with concern. ‘Oh, forgive me, I forgot to ask after William.’
‘He died this afternoon.’
‘Oh.’ The long expected news seemed to stun Katherine. ‘Oh dear…’ She hesitated, not knowing what
to say. ‘I… I am so very sorry.’ The tears ran down her cheeks. ‘And it was the same?’
He nodded. ‘Yes, the rice-water sickness…’
‘And Puella?’
He shook his head and she heard the tremble in his voice. ‘I do not think she will last a month.’
‘She has the cholera too?’
He shook his head again. ‘No, but she has lost the will to live. I have seen her this way before; she withdraws inside herself and,’ he sighed, ‘I am the author of her misfortune, hence my presence here, for I cannot remain at home this evening though I suppose I must return later.’
‘You may stay here…’
‘No that would be desertion and I cannot have that charge laid against me.’ He looked her in the eye, ‘I did have another reason for calling.’
‘About the ship?’
‘Yes, I thought it best that your father did not know.’
Katherine shook her head. ‘It is too late. My mother told him this morning. She was unable to prevent herself… I do not think my father took the news to heart, he was already in a high fever and seems unaware of anything happening around him.’
‘Well, there is nothing to be done. She is only our second loss in all these years, but it comes at a hard time…’
‘Uncle William, if, I mean when father dies, what will become of us?’
He looked at her and smiled. ‘Your mother will have a small fortune, my dear, a sufficient competence to sustain you and your two brothers. That is something upon which you may rest easy.’ He paused. ‘By-the-by, have your brothers been summoned?’
She nodded. ‘They are expected tomorrow, or the following day…’ She seemed preoccupied and Kite asked if there was some other matter that troubled her.
She shrugged. ‘I have heard father talking about money, fretting over some private matter and mother I know was anxious, so anxious in fact that she confronted him with the loss of the African Princess as though it was the summit of our calamities.’
‘I think not, Kate; that would be a gross exaggeration.’ He smiled at her again. ‘When the time comes I shall explain matters to your mother and to you if you so wish.’
‘Thank you.’
But to Kite it seemed that this was no real reassurance. ‘Where is your mother now?’ he asked.
‘She is asleep beside father, that is why I was anxious to know who it was calling at this hour.’
‘I am sorry, I really had no idea of the time.’
‘Oh no, I did not mind it being you. I was only anxious that it was not Frith. He will fuss so and pleads all sorts of excuses to disturb father.’
‘Frith? You mean Samuel Frith?’ He frowned.
‘Yes.’
‘What business has Samuel Frith with your father at this time?’ Kite frowned. He tried to clear the fog of his own preoccupations away from his mind. Frith had called several times at the counting-house to see Makepeace of late and the latter had dismissed his visits as being personal and not of much significance. ‘D’you know, Kate?’
She shook her head, a look of uncertainty crossing her face so that he was driven to dissemble. ‘Ah I recollect,’ he said hurriedly, ‘I had forgot, your father offered him an interest in a Guinea voyage; nothing was concluded and I suppose Frith has grown anxious lest your father’s illness interposed and stopped him participating…’
‘I do not much care for him, Uncle William.’
‘No my dear, neither do I and I should advise against either you or your mother entertaining him.’ This he said with perfect truth, adding, ‘I do not know why your father wished to solicit his interest.’
Katherine looked at the floor. ‘Mister Frith had made Father a proposition regarding myself, Uncle.’
‘You?’ Was this the personal nature of Frith’s business with Makepeace? And was the opportunity to speculate on a voyage part of some proposed marriage settlement? Frith and Katherine were not likely bed-partners, though there were some advantages to be gained from the union commercially, and perhaps Frith might benefit from Katherine’s embraces. He looked at her unhappy face as she confronted him.
‘Yes.’ She shook her head. ‘I did not wish to accept, but…’
‘Your father would not listen to you, I suppose. I did not know of this; but what was your mother’s part?’
Katherine dropped her voice to a whisper, as though fearful of the very walls retaining her confidence. ‘She it was who proposed the union.’
‘I see.’ The ever practical Martha’s hand was not hard to discern.
‘So,’ Katherine said, her voice hardening, ‘the death of Father will do nothing to loosen our bond with Mr Frith, rather it will be enhanced and Mother may feel compelled to unite our families in the interests of Charlie’s and Henry’s futures.’
‘For which you will be the guarantor.’
‘Yes.’
‘I see.’
‘Will you…? Can you…?’
‘I will do what I can, Katherine,’ he said, wondering what on earth lay within the bounds of possibility. Katherine was entirely dependant upon her Father and, if he died, Kite supposed her mother would have a greater influence upon the fortunes of her children. In the years he had known her, Kite had never entirely warmed to Martha Makepeace. Kate, however, was a sweet creature and not a marketable commodity. He tried to reassure her. ‘Thank you for your confidences; pray remember that you may rely upon me.’
‘Thank you, dear Uncle William.’ She leaned forward and kissed his cheek.
‘I am not truly your Uncle William, Katherine m’dear, but I hope you may count me a true friend. Now, if you will ring for little Bridget, I had better return to Puella.’
‘Poor Puella. You will give her my kindest regards.’ Katherine crossed the room to the bell pull.
‘I shall. And please do you keep me informed of your father’s condition. It were best, when the end comes, that you let me know first. Send Bridget; she is to be trusted, I think.’
‘I will…’ Their conversation ended as Bridget entered. ‘The Captain’s leaving, Bridget.’
As he left he turned in the doorway, a flurry of rain drove past him into the hall. ‘It is late,’ he said, ‘you should get some sleep.’
Chapter One
Captain ‘Topsy-Turvy’
It was almost midnight when Captain William Kite reached his own house, buffeted by the gale against which it had been necessary to struggle. He went immediately to the bedroom where the candle had almost burnt out. It seemed the only thing that had changed, for Puella sat in the darkness as she had when he had left, hours earlier. He stared at her, but she seemed unaware of his presence, staring straight ahead of her into the gloom, seeing at once the past and the future.
‘Puella…’ He called her name softly, but she did not stir, her handsome black features immobile, as though carved out of the ebony she so much resembled in the candle-light. He had removed his boots below and crept across the rich carpet to fish a new candle from the box she kept them in, for Puella hated the dark winter nights of these unfamiliar, hostile northern latitudes. Lighting it from the first, he replaced the old with the new candle and then lit another. Having reassured himself that Puella was beyond his contact, he left the room.
Holding the other candle he ascended to the upper floor, his heart beating heavily in his breast. He hesitated before entering his son’s bedroom then with a sigh, he turned the door handle and went inside. The candle-light fell on the body of the boy. The curly hair and the broad and flaring nostrils had all the beauty of his mother’s, though the shape of his head was inherited from his father, as was the tall build and the line of his chin. ‘You would have been handsome, my darling buckaroo,’ he murmured, ‘like your beautiful mother and the brother that you never knew.’ He touched the boy’s brow and the chill of the flesh still had the power to shock him, though he was no stranger to death. The finality of it had an absolute quality that was so at variance with the petty aspirations of his busy life;
it mocked him with a quiet, eternal jeering that was inescapable. Contemptuous of the solicitous interventions of priests, he felt again that solitary acquaintanceship with the ineffable and numinous power that bestrode the universe, familiar to seamen, hermits and the obeah women whose blood had so recently flowed in his dead son’s veins. The sensation brought him no comfort, but with it came an unresentful acceptance. He, like his wife, bowed to the inevitable but in contrast to Puella he gathered himself again and in going on attracted her contempt and enmity.
Sighing, he rose and bid his son farewell. The dead boy would be buried tomorrow.
Kite softly walked down the stairs to his study where he picked up a blanket kept there for the purpose and made himself as comfortable as he could on the couch. When the spirits took a hold of his black wife, William Kite found it impossible to spend the night in the same room.
But he could not sleep alone either. The rain beat upon his window and the gale howled relentlessly, booming in the cold chimney and lifting the heavy curtains so that he lay awake, tense and uneasy, as he had once lain in the cabin of the Spitfire as a hurricane attempted to dismember the schooner. With a monstrous effort he turned his mind from the cold body lying in the room above him and the immobile figure of his beautiful wife sitting with the past and the future gathered about her in the next room.
Grief over young William’s death and a cold despair over his estrangement from Puella slowly ebbed. Instead his active mind reverted to the distraction of the evening, the situation in the household of his business partner, Captain Makepeace. Both had served in the slaver Enterprize, Makepeace as commander, and they had become joint ship-owners in Liverpool towards the end of the Seven Years War, men whose family lives were almost as inter-woven as their business relationship. But what was he to make of Katherine’s revelations about Frith?
Makepeace had never mentioned the matter of a liaison between Katherine and Frith. Could his wife have been behind the match? That was a distinct possibility, Kite thought sitting up. Martha Makepeace was a competent woman who, in the years since her husband retired from the sea, had lost some of her autonomy. By way of compensation, she had taken to manipulating other people. Kite himself had been relieved when she had, with every appearance of cordiality, arranged matters between his own sister Helen and Lieutenant Henry Hope of the Royal Navy. But even supposing his conjecture was accurate, surely Makepeace would have made some allusion to it? Kite knew too much of the captain’s past, of his flagrant philandering on the Guinea coast, and this shady history linked them so that they might have considered themselves confidants. In the years of association in Liverpool, their combined ventures had drawn them closer, so that vexed asides about the occasional extravagances of Martha, the exasperations of fatherhood and the intermittent discord endemic in any household, led Makepeace to the odd revelation. Surely, only a desire to conceal something from his partner could explain Makepeace’s silence on the subject of Frith.