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Authors: Peter Fitzsimons

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Conferring once again with the tried and true, Jeronimus is blunt about it: ‘Frans Jansz will not dance exactly to our pipes.
I have little confidence in him
.’ And, clearly, anyone who does not dance to their pipes is liable to soon be dancing to the pipes of Wiebbe Hayes.

‘Leave this one to me,’ assures Zevanck.

Once embarked on the return to Batavia’s Graveyard, it is Zevanck who now calls from the bow of the skiff he commands, in as friendly a voice as he can muster, that they intend taking a small side trip to hunt seals on the nearby higher of the two High Islands. As the skiff draws up on the beach on the southern side of the island, where what is left of the sea-lion colony is to be found, Zevanck admires the sheer beauty of his plan. What could be more normal than for them all to be carrying weaponry on a friendly seal hunt?

Zevanck gestures to the good surgeon to be his guest and lead the select hunting party comprising Lenart van Os, Mattys Beer, Hans Jacobsz and Lucas Jellisz. With little choice in the matter, Jansz leads off down the beach, making towards the colony of unsuspecting seals.

Suddenly, after several hundred yards, all the true Mutineers stop walking. The surgeon is a couple of paces ahead before he knows it. The assassination party remember too well what happened with assistant surgeon Aris Jansz, how he got away because the first strike did not go deep enough to mortally wound him. So it is the notably vicious Lenart van Os who strikes first. With a heavy grunt of effort, he takes his pike and, with that right hand only recently cared for by the surgeon, like Brutus thrusts it deep into the surgeon’s back. Feeling that not quite adequate,
Hans Jacobsz now strikes him a devastating blow
on the side of the head with his
morgensterre
.

It all happens so quickly that what might have been a scream is instantly stifled, as the blow of the whistling morning star practically shakes it out of him – an effect little diminished by Mattys Beer splitting the surgeon’s bonce wide open with his sword, like a butcher opening up a carcass with a cleaver. No matter that Jansz is clearly dead before he hits the ground. To show good faith, Lucas now gratuitously stabs him right through with his pike. The former good surgeon, who so singularly devoted himself to their health and held their lives in his capable hands, now lies dead by their hands. However, there is no chance now of the surgeon ever making his way across to Hayes’s Island.

Impressed with himself, sitting in the yawl on the way back to Batavia’s Graveyard, Zevanck leans across to Jeronimus and whispers, ‘Kapitein-Generaal, I have thought of another brilliant plan.’

‘What is that?’ Jeronimus asks.

‘If a yacht comes to rescue us, we should seize it and go pirating and sail to Spain.’

‘Ho, ho, ho!’ Jeronimus shouts. ‘
Do you have that only now in mind
, that I have long thought of and had in mind?’

CHAPTER NINE

Deliver Us from Evil

So we altogether expected to be murdered at any moment, and we besought God continuously for merciful relief. O cruelty! O atrocity of atrocities! They proved themselves to be nothing more than highwaymen. Murderers who are on the roads often take their belongings from people, but they sometimes leave them their lives; but these have taken both, goods and blood.

The
Predikant

6 August 1629, Batavia’s Graveyard

Still
, Jeronimus is not sated! Appalled at the ongoing failure to wipe out Hayes and his men, he needs release. Someone else must pay . . .

Stoffel Stoffelsz. While the carpenter had nothing to do with the failed attack, he has of late fallen lame and is of little further use to the Mutineers.

So, in part to assuage Jeronimus’s rage at the Mutineers’ inability to solve the problem of Wiebbe Hayes, and in part to lift their morale, Jeronimus hands his own dagger to Jan Hendricxsz and casually tells him, ‘Go and cut out the heart of Stoffel Stoffelsz, that lazy lout, who stands there working as if his back is broken.’

Hendricxsz does not need to be told twice.

Just a few minutes later, Stoffel, perched on the edge of one of the little yawls, is slowly and carefully crafting a new tiller.


Hallo
, Stoffel,’ Hendricxsz says rather pleasantly. ‘I have a message for you from the
Kapitein-Generaal
.’

‘A message . . . for me?’ Stoffel replies, nervously. For the carpenter, any contact at all with Jeronimus is a worry. All he wants to do is stay clear of the whole red-velvet band, get on with his work and wait until, hopefully, a rescue yacht comes to save them all.

‘Yes, a message, my friend,’ Hendricxsz continues. ‘And here it is!’

With which, Hendricxsz matter-of-factly drives his dagger deep, right up to the hilt, into the very heart of the unsuspecting carpenter. So clean is the incision, so devastating the result, that there is little spurting blood. Stoffel is dead before he hits the ground, with barely a whimper. For his part, Hendricxsz simply wipes his blade on the dead carpenter’s trousers until it gleams clean once more and then nods to Mattys Beer and Jan Pelgrom, standing a short way off, to dispose of the body in the usual fashion – carry it to a nearby tent and bury it in a shallow grave. In the old days, just a month ago, such a murder would have been done under a legal pretext and under the cover of darkness, with the burying of the body done discreetly.
Now, they needn’t bother
.

10 August 1629, Batavia

Gazing out from the top floor of the Batavia citadel, Governor-General Jan Pieterszoon Coen can now see with his own eyes, in the far distance, what his spies in the countryside have been keeping him informed of for months. The Sultan of Mataram is massing his forces for another attack, this time with far more men than he had the last time. Some in the settlement are saying there will be over 100,000 soldiers coming at them – and it is known that these men are so committed that they are paying their own way, so as not to drain the royal coffers. They began gathering as long ago as May, and though Coen organised for several of the VOC’s men-of-war to destroy their stockpiles of rice and boats at Tegal and Cerebon, still it did not stop them. Still, they kept growing, and now here they are, their mass getting larger and blacker even as he watches them.

Such are their numbers, and their confidence – these troops are now brazenly sitting around on the edge of the Javanese jungle, looking at him just as he is looking at them – that Coen suddenly feels very, very tired. This second attack, whenever it comes, will clearly be prolonged and the foe more formidable for the lessons it learned the last time. With that many soldiers, whatever small supplies they have will soon be consumed, so the Sultan will have to unleash them on a death-or-glory charge sooner rather than later.

Does he still have the energy for the fight? Of late, his health, like that of all who spend a great deal of time in the Indies, has begun to wane. He sleeps poorly, wakes in a cold sweat and is exhausted by nine o’clock in the morning. Can he lead his own men to victory again this time? He can only hope so. He has no choice but to try.

16 August 1629, Batavia’s Graveyard

An uneasy, undeclared truce now lies over the Abrolhos. Jeronimus and the Mutineers have learned that until such time as they come up with a new method of attack, there is little they can do to destroy Hayes and his men. Meanwhile, much as they would like to, the Defenders do not have the capacity to attack the Mutineers. They are capable of defending themselves on their own island, but if they ever set foot on Batavia’s Graveyard they will surely be shot to pieces. For the moment, thus, both sides are at an impasse.

But it is hard. And perhaps hardest hit by this appalling lack of action is Jan Pelgrom, who has been waiting too long for the opportunity to kill another by his own hand in full view of the men he so reveres. It has been ten days since the last murder on the island and again Pelgrom’s role in it was merely to clean up after the event.

As it happens, however, on this very day it is made known to him that the
nettebraijer
, net-maker, Cornelis Aldersz Schagen, is to have his head cut off, primarily because Jeronimus feels a little bored and secondly because there has been some discussion among the Mutineers as to whether it is possible to take off a man’s head with a single slash of a sword, as it is said the samurai warriors can do. Jeronimus is happy to indulge them by offering up a victim upon whom they can test out their theories.

Cornelis Aldersz Schagen has been selected as the target because he has been so ailing of late that his work around the island will not be missed. Pelgrom is beside himself with enthusiasm for the task at hand and implores Jeronimus that he be granted the honour of striking the blow. ‘Please,
Kapitein-Generaal
,’ he entreats, emphasising the title that Jeronimus so adores, ‘
I beg this privilege be mine
and mine alone, so that I may prove my value to you. I should sooner do this than eat or drink.’

Feeling a rare burst of magnanimity, and admiring the sheer heartlessness and ruthlessness of Pelgrom’s plea – was it really only three months ago that he was a mere subservient cabin boy? – Jeronimus acquiesces with a casual nod of his head. This is followed up with the
Kapitein-Generaal
even handing over his own sword for the task, its gleam reflected in Pelgrom’s bloodthirsty eyes.

The young man’s ecstasy, however, will not last long, for when one of the most bloodthirsty brigands of them all, David Zevanck, hears of it, he is insistent. ‘That
boy
,’ he sneeringly advises a bemused Jeronimus, right in front of Pelgrom, ‘is simply not strong enough for such a task. He can hardly heft your sword, let alone swing a true blow. Far better to afford young Mattys Beer this pleasure.’

And so it is that Pelgrom is trumped, with Jeronimus reneging on his promise – which is, of course, the
Kapitein-Generaal’s
privilege – as with another nod of his head he grants Beer the honour of finishing the life of Cornelis Aldersz Schagen.

With this, the ever-eager Mattys Beer asks Pelgrom to hand over the coveted sword. To the great amusement of the gathered Mutineers, however, the latter shakes his head resolutely and, fighting back tears, tries to hold on to the weapon. Ah, how they laugh.

But enough.

Mattys Beer steps forward and, with one vicious cuff to the side of Pelgrom’s head, plucks the sword from the kid’s hand before heading off to see Gillis Phillipsz, the blacksmith, to have it sharpened. Half an hour later, all is ready.

An exceedingly nervous Cornelis Aldersz Schagen is summoned to Jeronimus’s tent, where he is sat down in a chair and immediately blindfolded by the relegated Pelgrom.


Be happy, sit nicely
, it is just a joke,’ Jeronimus reassures the young cooper. With such soothing words, Schagen does settle a little, as the sense of delicious expectation in the room heightens. Mattys Beer steps forward and, from beneath his red cloak, displays the freshly sharpened, exquisitely honed sword. With a smile, he plays it up for the crowd, imitating the samurai, measuring up the weapon against Schagen’s goosebumped neck, without touching it.

So silent has everything now become, so tight the air of expectation, with only the stifled giggles of Jeronimus to distract from it, that Schagen senses something is amiss. The cooper is just starting to stir, to try to remove his blindfold, when Beer takes a little skip forward and, with one almighty, perfectly aimed horizontal blow, does indeed sever Schagen’s head from his body. Blood immediately gushes from the stump of his neck in a triumphant fountain, before just as quickly subsiding. Schagen’s still terrified head bounces to the floor like a dropped coconut. A roar goes up from the Mutineers as Beer completes the arc of his sword with a final flourish. They crowd around him in congratulation, slapping him on the back and offering him a celebratory wine.

Not all are quite so elated. Tears of jealousy run down Jan Pelgrom’s face. That was meant to be his kill! But no one in the tent cares about Pelgrom’s tears, and it is perhaps the two Germans, Jan Hendricxsz and Mattys Beer himself, who care least of all. Both are looking closely at the torso of the unfortunate Schagen.

As Germans who have spent time at sea, they are all too aware of one of the most famous stories of their nation, concerning the fourteenth-century German pirate Klaus Störtebeker, who, in 1401, was captured and sentenced to death by beheading, together with his 73 crew members. The legend has it that Störtebeker managed to negotiate with the mayor of Hamburg that as many of his compadres as he could walk past once he was beheaded would be released. And he did so, famously rising and walking past 11 of his fellow pirates before the executioner put out his foot to trip him up. Annoyed at being so humiliated, the mayor saw to it that those 11 men were executed too,
their heads installed on spikes
along the banks of the River Elbe.

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