Buccaneer

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Authors: Tim Severin
,’ said Captain Gutteridge cheerfully, ‘is the best season to take up logwood.’ He was leaning over the rail as his vessel edged slowly along a low swampy coast. Beyond the swamp a cloudless sky came down to the horizon in a pale harshness that made Hector’s eyes ache. The land was so flat that all he could see was the endless dark green barrier of mangroves on their tangled mud-coloured roots and the feathery top of an occasional palm tree. It had taken less than ten days to sail from Port Royal to the Campeachey coast, and Gutteridge was in good humour. ‘You’ll be back in Jamaica before you know it,’ he was saying. With Hector’s stolen chart in hand, he was carefully tracking their progress. ‘Logwood fetches a hundred pounds a ton on the London market, and with your share of the profit you can begin to make your fortune.’
    Everyone in the Caribees, Hector thought to himself, was ready with advice on how to make vast great riches. Earlier it had been Robert Lynch, now it was the threadbare captain of a worn-out trading sloop. He no longer resented Gutteridge for his dishonesty over the mythical trip to Petit Guave. It was three weeks since Hector had last seen Dan, Jacques and the two Laptots, and he had accepted that whatever had happened to them in the French colony it was too late for him to make a difference. As for his yearning to see Susanna again, perhaps the captain was right. The niece of Sir Thomas Lynch would be more impressed with a rich suitor than a penniless admirer. Maybe a lucrative trip to the Campeachy coast would be his first step on the road to making a fortune.
    He turned his attention back to the shoreline. ‘The logwood cutters call themselves Bay Men and they live scattered all along the coast,’ Gutteridge told him. ‘Maybe five or six of them live together in a shared camp. They could be anywhere, so we cruise quietly along the shore until they spot us and make a signal. Then we drop anchor and they’ll come out to trade. They’ll exchange their stock of logwood for the goods we bring. Our profit is rarely less than five hundred per cent.’
    ‘How do we know what they want?’
    The captain smiled. ‘They always want the same thing.’
    ‘But wouldn’t they get a better price if they brought their logwood to Jamaica themselves?’
    ‘They can’t. Too many of them are wanted by the authorities. They’d be arrested the moment they set foot ashore. Many of them are ex-buccaneers who failed to come in and surrender when there was an amnesty. The rest are knaves and ruffians. They like the independent life, though I can’t say I envy them.’
    Now Gutteridge was staring fixedly at a stretch of mangrove. ‘Is that smoke?’ he asked. ‘Or are my eyes playing tricks?’
    Hector looked carefully. A light grey haze was rising from the greenery. It might be smoke or a patch of late-morning mist that had not yet cleared. ‘They hide themselves like fugitives. Surely the authorities would not send ships here to arrest them,’ he said.
    ‘It’s the Spanish they are afraid of,’ Gutteridge explained. ‘The Spaniards claim all of Campeachy as their territory and regard the Bay Men as trespassers who steal the timber. If the Spanish patrols catch the loggers, they are carried off to the cities where they are thrown into prison or auctioned off as slaves.’
    He was shading his eyes with his hands and staring long and hard. He gave a grunt of satisfaction. ‘Yes, that’s smoke all right. We stop here.’
    He despatched Hector with a sailor into the ship’s hold with orders to bring up a barrel of rum. Stooping under the deck beams, Hector noted that the cargo space was three-quarters empty. In one corner were stacked a few rolls of cloth. Elsewhere were several cases of hammers, axes, cutlasses, wedges, crowbars. Against a bulkhead several more chests contained blocks of refined sugar. But the bulk of the sloop’s cargo was three dozen barrels and casks of varying sizes,

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