Kings and Emperors

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Kings and Emperors Page 5

by Dewey Lambdin


  “Ah, but a sprain, sor!” Furfy enthused. “Light duties for a week, that!”

  “Take a tumble on purpose, and it’ll be bread and water with no rum for those ‘light duties,’” Lewrie warned. “Let’s be on our way. Clear the pans of your weapons before we do.”

  He blew the priming powder from his own pistols, eased them off cock, and stowed them in his coat pockets.

  * * *

  Some of the landing party did slide and stumble on the way down, but there were no injuries beyond some scrapes and bruises. They boarded the boats and shoved off, after a break for water, and rowed back to the ship.

  “No dancing girls, sir?” Lt. Westcott asked, looking disappointed when Lewrie got to the quarterdeck.

  “Only dancing gulls, sorry,” Lewrie quipped. “Morrocan fisherman, or Barbary Corsairs, might put in here, but it’s un-inhabited.”

  “Ah, well,” Westcott said with a large sigh.

  “Mister Fywell?” Lewrie called down to the ship’s waist, where the Midshipman was sorting through his sketches.

  “Aye, sir?”

  “Once we have got the ship back under way, I’d admire that you bring all your drawings of the island to my cabins,” Lewrie said.

  “Very good, sir!”

  “Back to Gibraltar, and our damned gunboats, I suppose, sir?” Westcott asked. “So much for freedom, however short.”

  “Aye,” Lewrie told him, with a grunt of displeasure at the prospect. “Hmm … you can’t see Ceuta from the quarterdeck, can you?”

  “No, sir, there’s a young mountain in the way,” Westcott said.

  “Masthead!” Lewrie bawled up to a lookout in the main mast cross-trees. “Can you see the fort from up there?”

  “Nossir! It’s b’hind a lotta bluffs!” the lookout reported.

  “Excellent!” Lewrie exclaimed. “Hands to the capstan, Mister Westcott, and let’s get under way!”

  CHAPTER SIX

  “These are quite good,” General Sir Hew Dalrymple said as he looked over Midshipman Fywell’s sketches in his offices at the Convent the next morning. “That many guns, though, Captain Lewrie? Damn.”

  “Those mounted atop the walls, the lighter twelve-pounders and eighteen-pounders, didn’t have the range to engage us, sir, and the lightest cannon that protect the West face, where any land attack would come, couldn’t fire on us, but we think the count’s right,” Lewrie said.

  “That confirms that the rumours of re-enforcement are true,” Sir Hew said with a sigh. “We must assume that the troop re-enforcements are equally true, and that Ceuta now has two more full regiments to defend it. It’s much too formidable to be attempted. It would have been a tough nut before. Now … ah well.”

  “It has to be supplied, sir,” Lewrie pointed out, “and, did my ship stand off-and-on so no supplies could reach it, and the Isle of Perejil would be occupied, with some artillery emplaced, the Spanish would be cut off and starved.”

  “Perejil?” Sir Hew said with a scowl, glancing over to his large map.

  “This little dot here, sir,” Lewrie said, crossing to the map and tapping at it. “There’s nobody there. The Spanish named it, so they may claim it, though it’s close to the border with Morocco, so they may claim it, too, but the Dons’ve never done a thing with the place. Look at the chart we made, sir. There’s two roomy bays either side of this headland, only one steep path up this notch to the top, and plenty of rock and sand for emplacements. Fifty men could guard the landing place against hundreds. No timber or water, though.”

  “Fywell?” Sir Hew said. “Peter Fywell? From Hampshire, is he?”

  “Ehm, I don’t know, sir,” Lewrie replied, perplexed.

  “Knew a fellow at Eton named Fywell, and this one could be his kin,” Sir Hew said, maundering. “Oh, well. Didn’t stay long, it was the Army for me, don’t you know, and I was with my regiment when I was thirteen. My dear old regiment, ah!”

  “One battery, six twenty-four-pounders, could keep the Dons from fetching supplies to Ceuta from Cádiz, sir,” Lewrie strongly hinted, before the Dowager could launch into humming his favourite regimental march. “The Dons can’t see Perejil from Ceuta, so they wouldn’t know what we’re up to ’til it’s too late.”

  “Hmm, what if it’s really Moroccan territory, and only named and claimed by the Spanish, unlawfully?” Sir Hew quibbled. “I have established good relations with the Sultan at Tangier, and I’d not wish to endanger them. They’re touchy enough about Spanish Ceuta.”

  Why, you just have so many friends, everywhere! Lewrie thought, wondering when the Dowager would see his point, if ever.

  “Captain Middleton’s yard has scads of timber, and we could establish a regular supply of rations, ammunition, and water for the garrison you put on Perejil, or Parsley, Island, sir,” Lewrie pressed on.

  “Is there any parsley?” Sir Hew asked, as if it was vital.

  “Very little, so late in the year, sir, and bitterer than the usual,” Lewrie replied. “I didn’t care for it as garnish.”

  Hands t’yourself, and don’t pound his desk! he chid himself.

  “I’d like to go back and sound the two bays, sir, determine the depth—,” Lewrie tried again.

  “And so you should, Captain Lewrie, at once!” Sir Hew woke up and urged him. “I will send along an officer of the Royal Engineers to determine the suitability of the island for artillery, and siting any guns. There’s a Naval Captain available, too, a Captain Ussher, at hand with nothing to do so far. He’ll go along with you, too.”

  Someone who could take charge of the damned gunboats, maybe? Lewrie thought in sudden hope; Can I cozen the man into the job?

  If Perejil was garrisoned, it would be under the command of an Army officer, surely, with Royal Artillery supported by as much as a half-battalion of infantry, and no place for a sailor.

  “Once I drop them off with sufficient supplies, and chart the bays, sir, ’til the island’s garrisoned, I can blockade Ceuta from re-supply from Cartagena, Algeciras, or Cádiz,” he suggested, crossing the fingers of his right hand for luck.

  “Yayss,” Sir Hew slowly drawled, “that would be best.”

  “Well, I shall take my leave, sir, if there’s nothing else, and await the officers of your choice to come aboard to begin their survey of the island,” Lewrie said, “if they will notify me as to how many in their party they think necessary to accompany them. I must make arrangements for their berthing.”

  “I will speak to them and have them do so, Captain Lewrie,” Sir Hew promised. “By the by, sir … you deliberately trailed your colours well within Ceuta’s gun range to count their guns?”

  “Aye, sir,” Lewrie told him.

  “And the Spanish obliged? Good God!” Sir Hew exclaimed.

  “I expect they were bored with garrison duty in such a dull place, sir,” Lewrie told him, tongue-in-cheek. “An exciting time was had by all parties, with no damage done. They’re bad shots.”

  “I cannot determine whether you are intrepid, or mad, sir,” Sir Hew declared, goggling at him and shaking his head with a bit of bemusement.

  “Well, the jury may still be out on that head, sir,” Lewrie replied with a laugh.

  * * *

  Sapphire thankfully spent much of the remaining year of 1807 at sea, after the survey of Parsley Island was completed, loitering off the fortress of Ceuta as an ever-present threat, and only departing for deeper waters as stormy Winter weather came on, always returning to just beyond maximum gun range. Thankfully, Sir Hew Dalrymple wrote to Admiralty in London, explaining what Lewrie and Sapphire were doing, and requesting a draught of officers and sailors to man the burgeoning squadron of gunboats, so someone else was stuck with that onerous chore.

  There was some excitement when the renowned General Sir John Moore and an army of eight thousand men entered Gibraltar Bay on the first of December, bound from Sicily, with orders to land somewhere in Portugal and fight the French. That army spent two days in port, then sa
iled for Lisbon; they were back at Gibraltar by the tenth. Lisbon and Portugal were firmly in French hands, and there was a small squadron of French ships in the Tagus, and a suspect squadron of Russian warships, too. The Russians were nominally allies of France, but so far had not taken any hostile action against Great Britain; more interested observers than active participants, so far, but no one could know on which side they might fall if challenged.

  Lewrie had been in port to re-provision when Moore first arrived, and had had a brief chat with the man at a supper party hosted by Sir Hew Dalrymple, and had found Sir John Moore a paragon of active soldiering. Maddalena thought him handsome, too.

  Barely was Moore back, though, when orders came from Lord Castlereagh in London to leave two regiments at Gibraltar and bring all the rest home to England. There was nothing to be done for Portugal in the middle of a rough Winter, and plans would have to be re-thought for the Spring.

  Bad weather also delayed the arrival of General Sir Brent Spencer and his 7,000 men who had been counted on to take Ceuta; they were still in England. Parsley Island remained un-occupied.

  * * *

  A little after the New Year of 1808, Sapphire was back at Gibaltar to replace some sprung top-masts and other storm damage, when Thomas Mountjoy sent him a note, inviting him to come ashore and dine. Lewrie sprang at the chance, and had a note sent ashore at once, and was at the landing stage an hour later, in a rare, driving rain.

  “You look miserable, like a drowned rat,” Lewrie said as he shook hands. “What’s that, a parasol?”

  “They’re calling them ‘umbrellas,’ and every gentleman at home with any sense of style, and wishes to stay somewhat dry, has one,” Mountjoy told him, not rising to teasing in his usual manner. He looked drawn, and tired. “Be a sailor, be a stoic, and we’ll see who is the drowned rat. Let’s go to the Ten Tuns Tavern, they’ve a good menu of late.”

  Lewrie had to shake water from his hat, and briefly, from his uniform coat by the time they arrived and went inside, where it was much warmer, and the wind-whipped rain did not spray into the outdoor covered patio.

  “Too bad that Spencer and Moore could not combine their armies, and do something in Portugal,” Mountjoy began, after ordering them a bottle of claret.

  “We’ll see in the Spring,” Lewrie said with a shrug. “Better weather, better plans?”

  “I’ve heard from Romney Marsh in Madrid,” Mountjoy imparted in a mutter, hinting that there were some new developments, but this time he did so without his usual twinkle of knowing something that Lewrie did not. He sounded tired. “Crown Prince Ferdinand is plotting to usurp King Carlos and arrest Godoy, for real. It ain’t a rumour anymore. That painter, Goya? He’s doing portraits of the royal court, heard whispers, and passed it on to Marsh. The Spanish people would be all for it … anyone’s better on the throne than Carlos, and they think that Ferdinand will tear up any treaties with France if he does win out, and get them out of this miserable war.”

  “Napoleon’d never abide that,” Lewrie said with a sneer. “He’d be over the Spanish border in force, like he did with Portugal, to put a puppet in charge.”

  “Perhaps he’s planned to do that all along,” Mountjoy said with a hint of his former slyness. “He’s gobbled up enough of Europe for an empire, already, and if he holds the Spanish throne, perhaps he thinks that gives him all of Spain’s overseas possessions, too?”

  “Hah!” Lewrie scoffed. “No one in any Spanish colony pays the slightest bit of attention to Madrid, anymore. If France gobbles up Spain, most of ’em would declare independence and say to Hell with European doings. Bonaparte would take an empty purse with not one penny in it, even if the Spanish roll over and beg, which they would not. Sure t’be riots and revolution. Then you get your fondest wish … Spain comes over to our side. Are you sure you’re getting true accounts from Marsh, not just idle rumours? Don’t see how he does it.”

  Romney Marsh could be considered insane, but a perfect spy; he could assume a myriad of identities and carry them off with panache. The only question was how he could juggle all his multiple personas and keep straight which one he played at any given time.

  “I gather he plays an artistic priest, he draws extremely well, and can play the guitar so he can pose as an itinerant musician in taverns,” Mountjoy related. “What else he is in his spare time, I’d not hazard a guess. Napoleon is plotting to take all of Spain and her possessions. London’s sent me a letter condensing what they’ve heard from Paris.”

  “That bitch!” Lewrie snarled, meaning Charité Angelette de Guilleri, the worst-named murderess ever, once a Louisiana Creole who had gone pirate to raise money for a French rebellion to take the colony and her beloved New Orleans back from Spain, then a salon celebrity in Paris, and part of the force that had hunted Lewrie and his wife to the Channel coast during the Peace of Amiens, where his Caroline was shot in the back and killed. The woman had turned British spy when Napoleon Bonaparte sold New Orleans, and Louisiana, to the United States.

  “One of ‘Boney’s’ Marshals, Joachim Murat, is gathering another army cross the Pyrenees, over one hundred thousand men, with orders to pretend sweetness and light, and lie like the Devil so the Spanish don’t suspect anything ’til it’s too late. He’ll march on Cádiz, to free up the French ships blockaded there since Trafalgar, and he’ll come to Gibraltar. The treaty that Godoy signed with France proposes an alliance to take Gibraltar.”

  “Any mention of Ceuta?” Lewrie asked, suddenly concerned.

  “Not to do with Murat, no,” Mountjoy told him. “When Sir Hew Dalrymple wrote to the Sultan at Tangier about your proposal to take Perejil, or Parsley, or whatever it’s named, the French legation at Tangier learned of it at once, and wrote to Paris. Bonaparte was furious, I’m told. He doesn’t have the navy or the transports to use Ceuta as a base, not with our Mediterranean Fleet in the way, and fears that we’d use Perejil for a landing to take Ceuta, first. Now we occupy the little speck—”

  “We haven’t yet,” Lewrie had to tell him. “We surveyed it but Sir Hew’s still making ‘nicey-nice’ with Tangier, so nothing’s been done.”

  “Good Christ!” Mountjoy gasped, shaking his head in disgust. “Fine intelligence gatherer I am. Right cross the Strait, and I hadn’t a clue!”

  “You wish, sirs?” a waiter asked, interrupting their covert mutterings.

  “Ah … yes,” Mountjoy replied, as if coming up for air, “Oh, look! They have macaroni and cheese. And roast beef. Must be the weather, or the gloominess lately, but I’m craving something exotic for a change.”

  Lewrie went for spiced kid medallions au jus atop a bed of couscous, and a vegetable medley, whatever that amounted to in Winter with all trade cross the Lines shut down by orders from Madrid.

  “A basket of rolls to begin with, with herbed oil and butter, and lots of roast beef for me,” Mountjoy insisted.

  “‘When mighty Roast Beef was the Englishman’s food … It ennobled our hearts and enrich-ed our blood,’” Lewrie attempted to sing.

  “You sing, sir, on par with how you tootle on the penny-whistle,” Mountjoy said with a wince, and a laugh. Once the waiter was gone to place their orders, though, he leaned closer and lowered his voice to a mutter again. “London also believes that Murat will march on Madrid and oust the Bourbon dynasty, then place one of ‘Boney’s’ brothers on the Spanish throne. Bonaparte’s leaning towards Joseph, even though he’s already the King of Naples. From our source, whom you despise, we also strongly suspect that Murat dearly wants it for himself. He’s seen so many of his old comrades awarded duchies and minor kingdoms, and we gather that he feels he’s more than earned one, and it’s his due.”

  “You say the Spanish people want Ferdinand, and no more truck with France,” Lewrie replied. “You ought to cheer up, Mountjoy, for if Napoleon does that, Spain has to revolt and change sides. That’s what they sent you here to accomplish, isn’t it?”

  “The Spanish are proud enough to rise up,” M
ountjoy said, looking glum. “But, will they, and will it amount to anything? There’s the rub.”

  “Then, let’s all keep our fingers crossed,” Lewrie suggested. “And like my First Officer says they do at the Artillery School at Woolwich, it depends on holding your mouth just right, too. Christ, Mountjoy, cheer up! The prospects are good … and, the menu shows they’ve a berry duff for dessert!”

  BOOK ONE

  Nothing should be left to an invaded people but their eyes for weeping.

  —ATTRIBUTED TO OTTO VON BISMARCK, PRUSSIAN CHANCELLOR (1815–1898)

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  “Aren’t they pretty, sir?” Lt. Westcott said in glee as they stood atop the poop deck to watch the gunboat squadron, now a dozen in number, exercise in the bay.

  “So long as it’s someone else’s bloody gunboat squadron, I’ll allow that they look … smart,” Lewrie said, lowering his telescope. “Speaking of smart, has the dockyard sent us the paint we requested?”

  “The Commissioner’s clerk says that there’s very little paint on hand, at present, unless we prefer green,” Westcott told him.

  “Well, I don’t,” Lewrie said with a growl. “Green? Mine arse on a band-box. What’s that here for, the walls of the hospital?”

  HMS Sapphire had spent the better part of the tumultuous Winter at sea off Ceuta, and what she needed was black paint to renew the upper-works of the hull, and whitish-cream buff paint to touch up the gunwale stripes along her gun-ports, which colour scheme was becoming the standard for the Royal Navy, à la Nelson.

  “It may be some months before an adequate supply arrives, sir,” Westcott said. “I suppose the old girl will have to look … dowdy for a while more. Any more word from shore, sir?”

  “It seems that Spanish spies are as good as ours,” Lewrie told him with a bark of mirth. “The Madrid papers printed accurate details of our planned attack on Geuta on the fourteenth of February. By the time General Spencer’s main body came in to harbour here, it was given up as hopeless.”

 

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