Part 9 (1/2)
”T'would take a year to tell it all. Somehow we eventually got to the Great Moghul's court. I think he was named Akman. An' we start livin'
like I never thought I'd see. Should've seen his city, lad, made London look like a Shrops.h.i.+re village. He had a big red marble palace called Fatehpur Sekri, with jewels common as rocks, an' gold e'erywhere, an'
gardens filled with fountains, an' mystical music like I'd ne'er heard, an' dancin' women that look'd like angels . . .”
His voice trailed off. ”Ah, lad, the women there.”
Symmes suddenly remembered himself and turned to examine Hawksworth with his gla.s.sy eyes. ”But I fancy you're a bit young to appreciate that part o' it, lad.” Then his gaze returned to the fire and he rambled on, warming to his own voice. ”An' there was poets readin'
Persian, and painters drawin' pictures that took days to do one the size of a book page. An' the banquets, feasts you're ne'er like to see this side o' Judgment Day.”
Symmes paused to draw on his pipe for a moment, his hand still shaking, and then he plunged ahead. ”But it was the Drugs that did it, lad, what they call'd affion and bhang, made out o' poppy flowers and some kind of hemp. Take enough of them and the world around you starts to get lost. After a while you ne'er want to come back. It kill'd the others, lad. G.o.d only knows how I escap'd.”
Then Symmes took up his well-rehea.r.s.ed monologue about the wealth he'd witnessed, stories of potential trade that had earned him a place at many a merchant's table. His tale expanded, becoming ever more fantastic, until it was impossible to tell where fact ended and wishful fabrication began.
Although Symmes had never actually met any Indian officials, and though the letter from Queen Elizabeth had been lost en route, his astonis.h.i.+ng story of India's riches inspired the greed of all England's merchants.
Excitement swelled throughout London's Cheapside, as traders began to clamor for England to challenge Portugal's monopoly of the sea pa.s.sage around the Cape. Symmes, by his inflated, half-imaginary account, had unwittingly sown the first seeds of the East India Company.
Only young Brian Hawksworth, who nourished no mercantile fantasies, seemed to realize that Roger Symmes had returned from India quite completely mad.
CHAPTER FOUR
”Pinnace is afloat, Cap'n. I'm thinkin' we should stow the goods and be underway. If we're goin'.” Mackintosh's silhouette was framed in the doorway of the Great Cabin, his eyes gaunt in the lantern light. Dark had dropped suddenly over the _Discovery_, bringing with it a cooling respite from the inferno of day.
”We'll cast off before the watch is out. Start loading the cloth and iron-work”--Hawksworth turned and pointed toward his own locked sea chest--”and send for the purser.”
Mackintosh backed through the doorway and turned automatically to leave. But then he paused, his body suspended in uncertainty for a long moment. Finally he revolved again to Hawksworth.
”Have to tell you, I've a feelin' we'll na be sailin' out o' this p.i.s.s- hole alive.” He squinted across the semi-dark of the cabin. ”It's my nose tellin' me, sir, and she's always right.”
”The Company's sailed to the Indies twice before, Mackintosh.”
”Aye, but na to India. The bleedin' Company ne'er dropped anchor in this nest o' Portugals. 'Twas down to Java before. With nothin' but a few Dutchmen to trouble o'er. India's na the Indies, Cap'n. The Indies is down in the Spice Islands, where seas are open. The ports o' India belong to the Portugals, sure as England owns the Straits o' Dover. So beggin' your pardon, Cap'n, this is na the Indies. This might well be Lisbon harbor.”
”We'll have a secure anchorage. And once we're inland the Portugals can't touch us.” Hawksworth tried to hold a tone of confidence in his voice. ”The pilot says he can take us upriver tonight. Under cover of dark.”
”No Christian can trust a bleedin' Moor, Cap'n. An' this one's got a curious look. Somethin' in his eyes. Can't tell if he's lookin' at you or na.”
Hawksworth wanted to agree, but he stopped himself.
”Moors just have their own ways, Mackintosh. Their mind works differently. But I can already tell this one's not like the Turks.”
Hawksworth still had not decided what he thought about the pilot. It scarcely matters now, he told himself, we've no choice but to trust him. ”Whatever he's thinking, he'll have no room to play us false.”
”Maybe na, but he keeps lookin' toward the sh.o.r.e. Like
he's expectin' somethin'. The b.a.s.t.a.r.d's na tellin' us what he knows. I smell it. The nose, Cap'n.”
”We'll have muskets, Mackintosh. And the cover of dark. Now load the pinnace and let's be on with it.”