"My, you have been busy this morning," Alan snickered.
"Them that had a little English," Burgess allowed with a shrug as they idled against a stack of crates to watch the coolies and the French crew unload a junk that had lightered their cargo up from Whampoa Reach. "Rest of it was way over my head. Never thought I'd have to learn anything more than a little Cherokee back home. I'm lucky I can savvy just enough Hindee so Nandu and my subadar don't cock their heads and look at me queer. I say… good pelts, those. That Yankee captain didn't have better."
"What do they sell for?" Alan asked idly, finding the spying business a dead bore as the hot afternoon wore on.
"He told me he'd get almost one hundred of their dollars for a pelt," Burgess informed him.
"Hmm, wonder what that is in real money?" Alan mused aloud.
"I think it's somewhere between five and six pounds sterling. But here's the profitable part, Alan. The Nootka Sound Indians'll swap you a prime pelt for one four-a-penny board nail!"
"S'truth!"
"Can you credit it? 'Course, you were among the Creeks and the Seminolee."
"Well, we weren't doing much trading. 'Cept for my wife."
"Your what?.
And on their way back to the Chun Qua Factory, Alan regaled Chiswick with the tale of impregnating the Cherokee slave-girl Rabbit and being forced to purchase her from her owner for a dragoon pistol, a cartouche pouch, a shirt and a pair of deer hides.
"And there you are, paying court to my sister Caroline, and you a married man," Burgess japed. "I should write and warn her how fickle your enthusiasms are!"
Chapter 4
Their supper that evening at the factory was another of those marvels to a palate ruined by ship's rations. Or by the bland-ness of English cooking, Alan thought, except in the rarest instances. Oh, there was lots of rice, but, like the supper at Sir Hugo's bungalow in Calcutta, it seemed that hundreds of dishes made their appearances as removes. Some fiery hot, some crunchy and only mildly spiced, some almost recognizable and some that could only be identified by comparing them to puppy-spew, or one of William Pitt's hairballs. The lone Chinese table-servant announced the name of each dish, with Wythy translating-pork, chicken, beef, lobster bits, shrimp, oil-fried omelets and such. Lewrie decided they could call 'em devil's turds, 'long as they kept them coming.
Wythy alone of their company ate with chopsticks in the native manner, and put away as much as two of them together with a frantic neatness. Not a wasted motion when he was at table.
"Ah!" Wythy said at last when the final dish, and the gigantic bowl of rice, had been removed. "Perfection from the soup to the nuts!"
"Speaking of soup, Mister Wythy," Alan asked, attention fixed on the port decanter that the servant placed by Twigg's elbow. "Do these Chinese really eat soups made out of bird's nests and shark fins?"
"Oh, aye they do. Daft on 'em, they are," Wythy rumbled with a laugh. "Bird's nests… well, that's the mandarin's style. Eat such exotic shite such's their Emperor's court can obtain. Like the old Romans. Lark's tongues, mouse cheeks an' such."
"To show off how wealthy they are," Twigg commented.
"The rarer the victuals, the better show they put on for their guests, to flaunt their wealth."
"An' ye'll have noted, no doubt, how most o' the really nabob-rich Chinese traders'r fatter'n Falstaff," Wythy added.
Alan hadn't noted any such thing, but he gave the comment a sage nod of agreement. Wythy had fed himself into such a good mood, and Alan wanted nothing to upset him. Wythy hadn't told him where the safer brothels were yet.
"Peasants in the countryside are one crop away from famine," Twigg said. "And it's short commons for most of 'em. Just take a look at the people who live on all those sampans we passed on the way up-river for comparison. Poor as Irish crofters, and about as starved, most of the time. It's a virtue to the Chinese to get rich, and set a table such as a duke could afford back home."
"Er… about the shark fins, though," Burgess pressed. "Does this soup really restore an old man's vigor?"
"Well, I'm nowhere near needin' restoration yet, sir," Wythy boomed with amusement like a thumped barrel, "but there's more wonders in this world'n ye could shake a stick at. I've heard tell it works. Mind ye, that was from Chun Qua himself. Who knows? Where'd ye hear o' shark fin soup?"
"Oh, there was a French mate on the customs dock this afternoon," Alan replied, finally getting his hands on the port and pouring himself a full bumper. "They were unloading bales of the damned things. Strung together like fish on twine. Must have had thousands, and getting three or four livres apiece for 'em, too, he told us."
"A French ship," Twigg commented, raising his eyebrows to Alan to start the decanter leftward down the table to his empty glass.
"Aye, sir."
"And what else did they land on the docks?" Twigg inquired.
"Furs, sir," Burgess supplied. " Nootka Sound pelts. Quite a lot of 'em. Uhm… bird's nests. All sorts of stuff. Right, Alan?"
"Well, most of it was crated or bundled. I did see the furs, and the shark fins, though," Alan allowed. "I'd have to take your word on the bird's nests, Burge. That, and the ginseng."
"Ginseng!" Twigg barked, and set the decanter down on the table with a loud thump. "Ginseng, d'you say, sir?"
"Oh, yes." Burgess bubbled on. "Their mate… what was his name, Mon-something… no matter. Said they had ginseng aboard. I believe he said it's about as good as shark fins to aid old men in passion. Our old slaves back home in North Carolina said…"
"Mister Wythy," Twigg interrupted, almost shushing Chiswick to silence, "correct me if I err, but ginseng is primarily a Chinese herb, is it not, sir?"
"Aye, 'tis," Wythy agreed.
"But is there not another source in this world for ginseng?" Twigg pressed. "I speak of another member of the Araliaceae family, the Panax quinquefolius, which produces the same five leaves, scarlet berries and succulent root. And is not North America, the Colonies… former colonies, now… the only other known source of ginseng?"
"Ah ha," Wythy grinned slowly in confirmation.
'Tell me more about this ship, sirs," Twigg demanded.
"Well, she's the La Malouine, sir," Alan stated.
"Ah ha," Wythy said once more, maddeningly obtuse to them.
"Do you think she might be the Frog privateer we seek, sir?" Chiswick asked.
"She very well might be," Twigg replied, nodding grimly.
"Well, she stands out, compared to those ships we've snooped around so far," Wythy informed them. "Most of 'em seem fairly innocent, see. Sailin' outa Pondichery'r Chander-nargore. Isle of France, or all the way from L'Orient or Nantes on the French Biscay coast. May not signify, but…"
"Yes, but for several intriguing 'buts,' Tom," Twigg rasped.
"Such as, sir?" Alan inquired, by then totally mystified.
'To have furs, a ship must sail to the Bering Sea to trade in Nootka Sound," Twigg said, beginning to tick points off on his long, knobbly fingers. 'Then trade among the Sandwich Islands, Cook Isles, Otaheiti and all to get the bird's nest, sandal-wood and shark fins. But for even the smallest crew to sail that far and live among the Polynesians for the duration of that voyage, they would have to forego much cargo on the way outward for supplies to keep the hands fit. Now tell me, young sirs, were they landing anything else? Indian goods, perhaps?"
"Aye, sir. Cotton bales, brassware, spices. Crates of silver."
"Well, now, that's an extremely odd mix of cargo. Far out of the ordinary for most French Indiamen, or country ships," Twigg mused, tenting his fingers under his cadaverous chin and gazing at the ceiling. "And I need hardly tell a seafarer such as yourself the near impossibility of that, do I, Mister Lewrie?"