Corsair

Corsair by Tim Severin Page A

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Authors: Tim Severin
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hiding in the bushes nearby. I had seen her several times before, and knew she used to meet up with one of the other gardeners from time to time. He’s a Spanish slave and sells stolen vegetables cheaply to her as she’s a poor woman and has little money to spare. But the guard thought she was having a love affair with one of the gardeners, and began to beat her. I intervened as the Spaniard wasn’t nearby. This made the guard think that I was the lover, and he began beating me too. The commotion brought other guards, and I was taken back down to the bagnio. They clamped my ankles in a wooden yoke which the two guards held up so my shoulders were on the ground and my feet in the air. Then the aga di baston laid on. I was lucky he was beating only the soles of my feet with his staff, for if he had hit me in the ribs I think he would have smashed them. Still, I’m probably luckier than the wretched woman. She’ll be severely punished for consorting with a slave.’
    ‘Lie still while I get some salve for your feet from that French prisoner who was an apothecary. He’ll sell me some ointment,’ said Hector. Dan winced as he reached inside his shirt and produced a purse dangling around his neck. ‘Here take the money from this,’ he offered. ‘Don’t let him cheat you.’
    ‘What about tomorrow?’ Hector was worried. ‘It will be days before you can walk again, and you need rest.’
    ‘Fix it with our friendly kaporal. Give him the remainder of the money. Make it a big enough gileffo so that I am excused work for the next week or so.’
    ‘Leave it to me,’ said Hector. ‘At least I’ve some news to cheer you up. Someone’s coming from London with money to purchase the release of all English slaves. Maybe when he hears that you were captured by the corsairs when you were on your way to London with a message for the King of England from the Miskito people, he will pay for your release as well so you can complete your mission.’
    Dan grinned weakly. ‘Your news, my friend, helps dull the pain more than any ointment. If I had to stay here, I don’t think that I could face another dose of the bastinado.’

    C ONSUL M ARTIN was a humane and sensitive man so normally he disliked visiting the bagnios. Quite apart from their stench and squalor, the slave barracks depressed him because they made him feel a fraud. His standing instructions from London were to be polite and friendly when meeting with his fellow countrymen held prisoner. But he was also told that he was to avoid being drawn into any discussions about possible release. If pressed, he was to discourage any speculation on the subject.
    In the consul’s opinion that turned him into a hypocrite.
    So he was in an altogether more optimistic mood on the morning he accompanied Mr Abercrombie, the newly arrived English envoy, to interview the prisoners. At last there was a chance to redeem these unfortunate wretches, some of whom had been waiting five or six years for release back to their own country. Nor did the cheerless demeanour of the envoy – the ‘commissioner’ as he preferred to style himself– dampen the consul’s good spirits.
    Abercrombie was exactly the sort of person that Martin had expected. He had the manner of a long-serving bookkeeper, and the lugubrious expression on his narrow face was enhanced by a long upper lip and a voice that was lifeless and flat. The commissioner had arrived three days earlier aboard a 40-gun English warship now anchored in the harbour, and his present task was to visit the various bagnios where English prisoners were being held. There the envoy would audit the true value of each slave, for it had been agreed with the Dey that whoever owned the slave was to receive a ransom equal to the sum the slave had originally fetched at auction. Naturally the commissioner made it plain that he mistrusted the accuracy of the sums that the Dey’s secretary had written down for him.
    Abercrombie had also told the consul

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