Caribbee

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Authors: Julian Stockwin

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Table of Contents

Also by Julian Stockwin

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Maps

Dramatis Personae

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Author’s Note

Glossary

Timeline

Also by Julian Stockwin

Kydd

Artemis

Seaflower

Mutiny

Quarterdeck

Tenacious

Command

The Admiral’s Daughter

Treachery (
US Title
: The Privateer’s Revenge)

Invasion

Victory

Conquest

Betrayal

CARIBBEE
Julian Stockwin

 

 

 

 

 

www.hodder.co.uk

First published in Great Britain in 2013 by

Hodder & Stoughton

An Hachette UK company

Copyright © Julian Stockwin 2013

The right of Julian Stockwin to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.

ISBN 978 1 4447 1207 0

Hodder & Stoughton Ltd

338 Euston Road

London NW1 3BH

www.hodder.co.uk

To all my shipmates, old and new

Dramatis Personae
(* indicates fictitious character)

* Thomas Kydd, captain of
L’Aurore

* Nicholas Renzi, his friend and confidential secretary

L’Aurore
, ship’s company

*Gilbey, first lieutenant

*Curzon, second lieutenant

*Bowden, third lieutenant

*Clinton, lieutenant of marines

*Dodd, marine sergeant

*Oakley, boatswain

*Poulden, captain’s coxswain

*Redmond, gunner

*Stirk, gunner’s mate

*Kendall, sailing master

*Saxton, master’s mate

*Calloway, master’s mate

*Searle, midshipman

*Doud, seaman

*Wong, seaman

*Tysoe, Kydd’s valet

Officers, other ships

Admiral Cochrane, Leeward Islands Squadron

Admiral Dacres, Jamaica Squadron

Captain Brisbane,
Arethusa

Captain Pym,
Atlas

Captain Dunn,
Acasta

Captain Lydiard,
Anson

Captain Bolton,
Fisgard

*Captain Tyrell,
Hannibal

*Lieutenant Beale,
Hannibal

*Lieutenant Buckle,
Hannibal

*Lieutenant Briggs,
Hannibal

*Lieutenant Griffith,
Hannibal

*Lieutenant Hubbard,
Hannibal

*Lieutenant Mason,
Hannibal

*Midshipman Jowett,
Hannibal

*Midshipman Joyce,
Hannibal

*Maitland, master,
Hannibal

Army

*Captain Hinckley

*Major Wyvill

Others

*Hayward, seaman

*Richard Laughton, Renzi’s brother

Francis Mackenzie, governor of Barbados

*Jonathan Miller, American businessman

*Daniel Thistlewood, plantation owner

*Louise Vernou, French royalist

*Wilikins, confidential secretary to Dacres

*Miss Amelia Wrexham, society belle

*Charles Wrexham, chairman of planters’ association

Chapter 1

‘S
-sir! Mr Curzon’s compliments, an’ we’ve raised Barbados!’ came the wide-eyed report.

The frigate
L’Aurore
had been at sea for long weeks, beating up the coast of South America in frantic haste on a mission that might well see the catastrophic situation of the British in Buenos Aires reversed. It had been a voyage of daring speed and increasing privation as provisions and water ran low under the pressing need for hurry. Reduced to short allowance, the griping of hunger was constantly with them.

Captain Thomas Kydd looked up from his desk. ‘Thank you, Mr Searle.’

The ship’s youngest midshipman hesitated, unsure whether to wait for a response for the second lieutenant.

Kydd laid down his pen. ‘Tell Mr Curzon I’ll be on deck presently.’

Apprehension stole over Kydd as he contemplated his task: to persuade a senior commander-in-chief to detach part of his fleet to go south in rescue of an unauthorised expedition that had sought to liberate South America from the Spanish.

It had all started brilliantly. Their tiny force had quickly captured the seat of the viceroyalty of the River Plate, Buenos Aires, but then the population had turned on their liberators and forced the surrender of their land forces. Commodore Popham, still at anchor off the port there, was desperately seeking support to retake the city.

From the quarterdeck Kydd gazed across an exuberant expanse of white-flecked blue sea to a distant light grey smudge, Barbados – where was to be found the Leeward Islands Squadron. There were just hours left to ensure that his arguments to its admiral for weakening the defences of the vital sugar islands by parting with his valuable assets were sound and convincing.

‘A noble achievement, our voyage, sir, I’m persuaded,’ Curzon offered, as they neared.

‘A damned challenging one,’ agreed Kydd, absently. There was murmuring that he didn’t catch from the group around the wheel behind him but it wasn’t hard to guess its drift. These were men who had left shipmates as prisoners to the Spaniards and they were expecting to see them freed soon by bold naval action.

Barbados was at its shimmering tropical best. After the intense blue of the deep sea, with its gaily tumbling white combers, and shoals of bonito and flying fish pursued by dolphins, there was now calm and beguiling transparent jade water above the corals. Along the shore coconut palms fringed dazzling white beaches. Neat houses on stilts with distinctive green jalousies perched above the tideline.

It was an impossibly lovely prospect for those who had voyaged so long and endured so much but, mission accomplished, they must leave and return to that grey southern madness.

By the time they had made the bluffs of South Point and left the brown and regular green of sugar fields safely to starboard, anxiety returned to steal in on Kydd. There was the possibility that the Leeward Islands Squadron was at sea, in which case it could be anywhere and would have to be found. However, his real concern was that, as a junior frigate captain, he was going to debate high strategy with a senior admiral. But there was no alternative: too many brave men depended on what he was about to say.

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