Sea Robber

Sea Robber by Tim Severin

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Authors: Tim Severin
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Spain.’
    Hector was too stunned to say anything. The Governor was still speaking, his voice sorrowful.
    ‘Fully a year ago Don Fernando left Peru to take up his post in the Ladrones. His wife accompanied him. Doubtless your friend Maria went also. I’m sorry.’
    As the Governor’s words sank in, Hector felt numb. Despite his present status as a prisoner in Chile, he had still cherished a faint hope that there would be a happy outcome to his quest for Maria. He had even allowed himself to speculate that she might hear of him in gaol, if he was sent to Lima for trial. She might come to find him, and though he did not expect her to save him a second time, she might persuade the judges to spare him from the garrotte and give him a prison sentence instead. The news that Maria was on the far side of the world shattered that fantasy. She would never be aware he’d come to Chile to find her, nor would she ever know what happened to him. For a black moment he despaired as he pictured the vast distance that lay between them.
    Then, from somewhere within him, came an obstinate and defiant response: he would not be deterred. He would not waste the long, harsh weeks at sea, or the cruel passage around the Horn. They had brought him a good part of the way to her and if, by some miracle, he was ever free to do so, he would continue his journey to reach her. Unbidden, an image of Maria appeared as he had last seen her at his trial. He remembered how self-assured and beautiful she had been, answering the prosecution’s questions with outright lies. He could hear her low, firm voice and picture the set of her jaw and the way she looked straight at him as if he was a stranger and swore that she’d never seen him before. Now he would show similar courage and determination, whatever the consequences. He would not abandon hope of reaching her, though his detention in Valdivia would be harder to bear now that he knew Maria was still so far away.

 
SIX

     
    I T WAS THE TIME OF THE YEAR when Valdivia braced itself for the winter rains. The weeks that followed Jezreel’s capture and Hector’s detention saw life in the town become increasingly dank and comfortless. Heavy showers merged into prolonged downpours and, as the season advanced and winter settled over the town, flurries of hail or sleet swept down from the cordillera. Lingering fogs and a fear of marauding pirates deterred shipping and trade, which in summer linked Valdivia with the outside world. Isolated and waterlogged, its people settled into dreary resignation, matching Hector’s gloom.
    While Jezreel passed the time playing cards with their gaolers and teaching them how to use backsword and singlestick weapons, at which he had excelled since his fairground days, Hector took long, solitary walks. Often he found himself at the waterfront and stood on the dockside. There he would watch the raindrops speckle the dirty brown surface of the river, and think of Maria and of what had happened to Jacques and whether Dan had recovered his eyesight. Then, with Maria’s letter still tucked away safe and dry inside his shirt, he would retrace his steps to the Governor’s residence, where he and Jezreel remained as Don Alonso’s guests.
    One afternoon towards the middle of September, when the rains were at last showing signs of abating and there was a promise of spring in the air, Hector returned to find Don Alonso in his office with a map of the Spanish colonial possessions spread out on a table.
    ‘While the coastal traffic has been at a standstill,’ the Governor said, ‘there has been no word from the Audiencia about what I should do with you and Jezreel. But the Niebla fortress has just sent word that an aviso, an advice boat, has been sighted off the entrance to the gulf. I expect tomorrow the captain of the vessel will arrive here, bringing my instructions.’
    He gestured towards the map.
    ‘Forgive me if I am intruding on your private concerns, Hector, but doubtless

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