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The Guineaman
The Guineaman Read online
The Guineaman
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Disclaimer
Part One
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Part Two
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Part Three
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Part Four
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
The William Kite Naval Adventures
Copyright
Disclaimer
This book contains views and language on nationality, ethnicity, and society which are a product of the time in which the book is set. The publishers do not endorse or support these views. They have been retained in order to preserve the integrity of the text.
Part One
Blood
The Fugitive Spring, 1758
His breath was rasping painfully in his throat now. The effort to run, to raise one foot after another, seemed too much for his failing strength, and still the ground continued to rise, a sharper incline it seemed to his numbed mind, for the sparse grass had given way to a treacherous scree and he sent stones tumbling down behind him. Instinct and a long familiarity with the wild countryside surrounding the lakes had brought him up onto the Black Fell. He began to slacken his pace, feeling his leg muscles trembling with the effort of escape, the thunderous pain of his beating heart and the fogging of his brain. Sweat poured into his eyes and soaked his clothes. He was close to fainting now, as he almost fell headlong, for he had no idea how long he had been running, only that his whole world had suddenly contracted in this effort of escaping his pursuers.
He slowed to a stumbling lope, gradually reclaiming the use of his faculties. He became aware, dimly at first, that night was coming on, and of a sharp chill in the air that presaged rain. He raised his eyes and saw, at last, the summit of the fell. Now that it seemed attainable, it failed to bring him the security he hoped for. Breathing ponderously he stopped, trying to think. He bent over, gasping, hands on knees, his throat raw, his leg muscles cramped, the moisture on his exposed skin suddenly chilled.
Then he heard a shout and the baying of the dogs, and fear leapt again in his guts. Lifting his head with a strangled cry he began to run once more.
He knew his pursuers could see him against the sky as he crossed the ridge, but it was only as he felt the scree begin to fall away, treacherously inducing his exhausted legs to falter, that he realised how foolish he had been to expose himself. Had the effort of escape not dominated him, his normal ready intelligence would have prevented so foolish a mistake, but it was too late now. For perhaps another five minutes he blundered on, increasingly uncertain of his footing, his arms flailing, his will ebbing with his stamina. Then he slipped, the moment of lost control coinciding with a sharp declivity in the ground, and his shoulder glanced against a rocky outcrop. The impact spun him half round so that his left leg tripped over his right and he tumbled at the foot of the rock.
He fell full length, splashing into a cold pool of water lying under the outcrop. Face down, he swallowed the brackish stuff, then, in a last reflex he raised his head, gasped at the air and crawled, like a terrified child, along some ten yards of what felt like a magically soft landscape of green. Then he slowly subsided, laying down in the bed of the stream, his head to one side as he lapsed into complete unconsciousness. The water trickled into and out of his open mouth but the lush landscape of his imagination, which was in fact nothing more than tall, flanking grasses and some patches of moss, concealed him in the twilight.
Some moments later, when his pursuers reached the rock, they had lost the trail. In the gathering darkness they stared down into the valley beyond and one of them pointed to something bounding down a slope half a mile away. The two men bent, like their victim a little earlier, their hands on their knees gasping for breath as they tried to make out their distant quarry. The hounds slumped on the ground, flanks heaving and tongues lolling from their slobbering chops as they panted like their masters. One lapped water from the pool the other shook foam from its muzzle. Neither were good coursers, and both men and dogs were badly winded.
‘Th’ bugger always could run on the fells,’ one of the men said to the other between gulps of air, nodding at the dark shape still just visible below.
‘He’ll be back,’ responded the other. ‘Then we’ve got ’un.’
At that moment the rain began. A few tentative drops at first, followed by a sudden, sleeting downpour that hissed at them, bouncing off the scree as a squall drove it up the valley and over the brow of the open moorland. Twilight turned suddenly to the onset of night.
‘Come on Phil, time we got back home. We’ll get the justices’ men after ‘im and have ‘im in a noose by Carlisle next quarter-day!’
The man called Phil did not follow his brother at once but continued to stare down into the valley. Rain streamed down his face. ‘Billie Kite!’ he roared into the wind, ‘I haven’t finished with you, you bastard!’
Then he turned, and was gone, following his brother back the way they had come, swallowed by the darkness and the torrential rain. Far down the side of the abandoned valley, the frightened goat galloped in its sure-footed way.
* * *
The fugitive recovered consciousness a few minutes later. The cooling sweat of his exertion and the chill of the downpour woke him to a shivering cold. Slowly, he raised his head and, for several long minutes he remained thus, listening with the keen attention of a hunted animal. All he could hear was the hiss of the rain on the stones and the low moan of the rising wind. The loom of the rock outcrop startled him for a moment, but then he realised not only what it was, but where he was. He had run near-enough to five miles from the lake, up the steep incline of the Black Fell, far up beyond the trees and beyond even the high pasture where the flocks of sheep grazed. He had given the Hebblewhite brothers a good run for their money, to be sure! For a moment he thought it was time return home and then the ghastly events of the early evening flooded back to him, along with the dark realisation that he was a damned soul.
By running away he had compromised his innocence. No one would now believe he had nothing to do with the girl’s death!
Oh, God, that it should be his poor Susie…
The impact of this terrible realisation caused him to void his stomach in an eructation of pure fear: he could never go home again. Never. He could only run on, away down the far valley after the goat.
Chapter One
The Whore
William Kite walked south by night, hiding up during daylight. He sheltered in a succession of barns, in a churchyard where the sexton had made a small bower to keep his pick, shovel, sickle and scythe, and, as he neared Liverpool, under the wreckage of an old boat he found on a beach on the southern shore of the River Ribble. At first he had been terrified, but once south of Lancaster, with no hue and cry obvious behind him, he began to feel more confident of escape. He was innocent of the charge the two brothers had screamed at him when they had seen the body of their sister, but there was sufficient confusion and guilt attached to his relationship with the dead girl to prick his own conscience. That and the long-standing enmity of Susie’s brothers goaded him with the very spurs of the devil himself.
All his fear and irresolution translated into the desire to put as many miles between himself and the Hebblewhite farm and the bloody scene upon which he had stu
mbled that dreadful afternoon. Exhaustion induced sleep, but when he woke cramped and cold, he sprang instantly to his feet and pressed on southwards. He drank from streams and scavenged what food he could. He caught and cooked a rabbit as he had often done in his carefree boyhood, a youth which now seemed an age away, golden in its fading insubstantiality. Yet, out of the conflicting conviction of innocence and guilt by association, he found the will to press on, to escape, to survive. And as time passed, and no-one challenged him and there was no sound of bloodhounds born on the wind, the eviscerating panic gradually faded. He found that he could think again.
As he walked, only hiding from another night traveller who rode north on steaming horse with the fugitive air of a highwayman, Kite learned that the ability to think brought with it a train of terrors. The shadow of the gallows fell constantly across his path; the horror of execution, of the disgrace he knew capture, trial and execution would bring upon his father and sister; the impossibility of establishing innocence in an England lusty for death in this year of Grace 1756, spurred him ever southwards. His fear combined with a natural solitary disposition and the cunning born of a boyhood and youth amid the lakes and fells of Cumbria, to enable him to avoid other humans, and in due course he formulated a strategy, just as he had seen his father formulate a specific in the little workshop filled with the mysteries of the pharmacoepia. It chilled him to think that he would never see his father again, nor his own sister, but the circumstantial evidence condemned him forever. Only the dry logic of his father’s profession of apothecary, sustained him. Perhaps he could go for a soldier and lose himself in the ranks of a regular battalion sent on duty overseas… perhaps… But there were few opportunities that he could think of, although a thousand mad schemes came and went as he walked, burning his mind with the one searing certainty, that somehow he must live to let his father know he was innocent.
And it was then that he thought of his cousin Francis, and the Liverpool merchant to whom he was apprenticed. Kite recalled the address on the letter his father had last written to Francis, for Kite’s widower father had brought up Francis as well as his own two children. Mr Kite had stretched his influence to the utmost to secure the young man employment which would remove the necessity of feeding him from the slender profits from the apothecary’s trade.
During the fourth day, as Kite settled beneath the old boat on the bank of the Ribble, he spread out his coat and, having rinsed his shirt and hose in the sea, laid them too, to dry. If anyone saw them while he slept exhausted beneath the split tarred planking, nothing came of it and he felt better when he pulled them on again that night, for all the clamminess of the salt in his shirt. At the end of his fifth night’s march Kite approached Liverpool. Intending to rest for only an hour or two, he fell deeply asleep, awaking towards evening in a state close to panic. He wandered utterly confused amid the crowded and noisy streets of the waterfront. Worn out with anxiety and exertion, he failed to locate his cousin’s lodging. But on finding he had sufficient money to do so, he secured a night’s sleep in a cheap lodging house near the river.
The landlord looked him up and down, shifted the quid of tobacco and remarked, ‘You’ll likely have to share before the night’s out, but a young man of your quality’ll have to get used to that if you lodge here.’
Kite was too tired to grasp to what the landlord alluded, aware only of the warmth of the alehouse and the smell of some sort of gruel or stew cooking within the tavern. An hour later, having removed his coat and shoes, he was stretched on a flea-ridden mattress, half covered by a stained blanket.
Some two hours later he woke suddenly, sitting up in bed with a start. The door to the room was open and in it loomed a man bearing a candle in one hand. His other was about the waist of a young woman. Her stays were loose and she and the man were obviously drunk.
‘There’s a young fella in the bed already, Jimmy. I didn’t know youse was after having one of them nights…’ and she broke off into a giggle, staring at Kite as he hurriedly reached for his coat and shoes, recalling the landlord’s warning. He was confused. It was dark, he should have been marching; the young whore reminded him of Susie. The same wet and open mouth, the same disorganisation of dress, the same damp stink of sexual intent.
He thought only of escape again, thrusting his feet into his shoes, grabbing his coat and making for the door, to shove past the swaying seaman and his hussy. The seaman reeled back with an oath as Kite pushed past. Kite stumbled on the stairs, recovered and then descended into the taproom. Behind him the seaman, having made an attempt to grab Kite, was drawn back into the bed-room by his whore and the door slammed.
The taproom was crowded now, the air thick with tobacco smoke and raucous conversation. The variety of men, men of colour, men with red-hair, men of sallow complexion and jet-black hair, even a Chinaman with narrow eyes that Kite had only ever heard of in a story, were interspersed with the shabbily gay dresses of the common drabs who sought to service them. Pots of ale and flip were borne hither and thither by the pot-boys and a lass or two and the whole, thick atmosphere seemed instantly recognisable to a young man catechised from childhood.
‘I am in hell,’ he muttered, seeking the door to the street.
It was an ill chosen and in the event a fateful moment for, as he made for the entrance and the cool night air beyond, two men rose in front of him. Already in heated argument over a smirking trollop who lolled back on the adjacent bench, one shoved at the other and he in turn, recovering, lunged back at his assailant. In an instant, they were fighting.
Kite recoiled from this further manifestation of devilment as the yelps of encouragement and amusement went up all around him. The crowd egged on the contestants until, after only a few moments, one fetched the other a heavy belt on the jaw and the luckless victim subsided with a crash against the bench.
The victor turned to the woman who was eyeing him with an excited gleam in her eye and held out his hand. ‘C’m on, you!’ he said, breathing heavily.
‘You sure youse can manage her after all that fistifcuffs, Tommy-boy?’ someone called out and the excited company roared once more.
Tommy-boy ignored the ribaldry, tugged the girl to her feet and pulled her roughly to him, embracing her and planting a kiss upon her wet and ready mouth. The company lost interest and Kite made to pass the couple when suddenly the defeated man rose to his feet. Kite saw the flash of steel and shouted a warning, but he was too late. The knife, thrust upwards, was driven to the hilt into the woman’s buttocks so that she screamed and arched her back, her would-be lover, staggering under the impact. In the next second a bottle descended upon the head of the seaman with the knife and he fell a second time to the floor.
Kite’s exit was now blocked as the other women screamed and gathered round. He caught a glimpse of stocking and a pink thigh pouring with blood and then, amid the wails and the screams and the shouts of the men now crowding about the wretched trollop, he reacted in a way that he could never quite explain. Perhaps it was the earnest desire to prove he was not capable of the murder of which, in distant Cumbria, he stood accused. Perhaps some unconscious urge drove him to prove his innate goodness, that he might, at some desperate future moment, call these low-born seafaring folk and their dockside whores to stand as witness to his character.
‘Clear a table,’ he said, his voice loud and commanding. He swept an arm and sent pots and bottles to the sawdusted floor, adding, ‘stretch her out here, and quick, for she loses blood.’
Amid the hubbub, a face or two turned towards him. It was clear from his coat and neck-cloth that, modest though they were without any pretensions to fashion, he was not a man of the seafaring stock that filled the alehouse. His pallid complexion alone set him apart from them, but the impression of his being a gentleman was lent credibility by his assumption of authority.
‘Lay her out upon the table,’ he said again, eager to staunch the haemorrhage that reminded him so painfully of the bleeding Susie. Perhaps he sought to
make amends, perhaps he accepted that this scene, with its terrible echoes of a late afternoon only a few days earlier, was a fatal repetition from which there was no escape. All he was aware of in that unpleasant moment, was that from an unnerved young man intent on escape from a dockside alehouse, he had become again the youth who could set bones and stem the flow of blood. He had done it for Susie’s pet rabbit after a fox had savaged it; he had done it for his sister’s puppy after Philip Hebblewhite’s hound had mauled it, and he had set the wings of birds caught in nets, including a beautiful peregrine falcon. He had been trying to help Susie herself when her brothers found him and raised the cry of ‘murderer!’
‘I can help her,’ he said now, staring about him and dismissing the suspicion in the faces round him.
‘Do as he says,’ said the man Tommy suddenly, his face pale under his sunburn, the stink of liquor overlaying that of stale sweat. ‘Get her up on the table!’
Kite turned, caught the eye of one of the serving girls and said, ‘get me some clean water and a clout… And a needle and thread…’
The wounded woman had fainted as Tommy lugged her unceremoniously onto the table. She lay face down, a large, buxom woman of some twenty three or four years of age, unlovely in her unconscious state. Kite carefully raised her filthy skirt and her soiled petticoats as the sailor’s knife fell from her. Kite bent and retrieved it, regarding the wound as the crowd round about fell silent with an intent curiosity. The thrust had been upwards, and the blade had begun its incision in the upper portion of the thigh, reaching its greatest penetration in the subcutaneous fat covering her left buttock. If the cheated and would-be lover who stabbed her had been intending to wound her private parts, he had mercifully missed. The woman’s ample figure had saved her from certain death. A momentary yet bitter reflection about the capricious nature of fate crossed Kite’s mind: the drunken seaman had escaped a certain charge of murder while he himself, caught in a moment of extreme compromise, yet innocent of any harm to Susie, was sought as a murderer.