roleplayguy2013
Really Experienced
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2012
- Posts
- 191
Port Ambrosia, at last, was his...
"Governor Stanton...?" a voice spoke from nearby, breaking his reverie. "A delegation from the town is here to speak with you, m'lord."
He nodded to his Aide, asking, "Each of them?"
"The French, the Dutch, and the Germans," the Aide answered. "The Portuguese are still conferring over who will represent them, and the Spanish refuse to acknowledge our sovereignty over the islands while--"
The man stopped ceased talking as Henry waved off his listing of the small port's nationalist factions. Over the two hundred years since its initial settling, Port Ambrosia has traded hands -- sometimes by treaty, sometimes by force -- more than a dozen times. Each time, a portion of the previous nationality's populace remained; today, there were a dozen and a half nations -- mostly European -- represented on the Port Ambrosia Governing Council ... the supervising body that he was about to disband.
He didn't blame the Spanish for not wanting to attend the little get-together at which he would end the last little bit of hope they had for ever controlling what had begun as their island. In fact, he was surprised that any of the island's representatives were coming; they all had to know that he was cutting them out of governance of the little Caribbean port.
But, as he stared out from behind the crenelations of Fortress Ambrosia at the small sailing vessel only now making its way into the harbor, he had a more important issue at hand. He looked to the Aide and asked, "What about the ... independents?"
The Aide's lips spread a bit as he asked, "The pirates, m'lord?"
Henry smiled as well, then looked out to the bay again. Pirates! It all seemed so unreal to him. His family had come from the inland areas of England; they had had no direct interaction with the people of the sea, let alone pirates. He hadn't even believed they existed as a younger man -- tall tales, he'd called them -- and he still had a hard time believing it now, despite the fact that his Aide had identified the boat entering the harbor as belonging to one of them.
And to make it even harder to fathom ... a woman pirate...? That just seemed ... so unlikely. He gestured toward the boat just beginning to drop some of its sails. "Is this her?"
The Aide stepped up to the crenelations and followed Henry's gesture. "Yes, m'lord."
"Name...?"
"I ... I'm sorry, Governor," the man said hesitantly, "The name ... that of the boat and her captain ... they escape me, m'lord. So sorry."
"I want you to meet her at the dock," Henry said, turning and heading for the long stone stairway that would take him down to where his guests were assembled, waiting to learn of their futures, or lack thereof. "Take a couple of squads with you--"
"Twenty men?" the Aide asked surprised. "You want me to take twenty men to--"
"Too many?" Henry asked, oblivious.
"Not enough!" the Aide answered with a concerned tone. "These are blood thirsty pirates, m'lord."
"Don't be silly," Henry said, waving a hand in dismissal. "They're just people trying to earn a living--"
"By raping and pillaging and murdering innocent civil--"
Henry laughed aloud, cutting short the man's panic. "Don't be silly. They're just businessmen ... business women ... trying to make a living and, when necessary, defending themselves against--"
"Please m'lord..."
Henry came to a stop at an open door. Beyond it, sitting up and down a long oak table, he could see the representatives of Port Ambrosia, waiting for their new Governor's entrance and introduction. He looked to his Aide; the panic in the man's eyes was more than evident. Henry was sending this quite, mild-mannered man to meet with pirates -- blood thirsty or not -- on his behalf; the most he could do was send him well protected.
"Fine, Lawrence. Take four squads ... and the sharp shooters." He held an extended finger up before the man's face, shaking it. "But ... be subtle. I want her to understand this is a diplomatic mission to her personally, not an armed seizure of her boat. She hasn't done anything illegal in the eyes of the British Government."
He turned and entered the room, abandoning one sticky situation for another.
Lawrence could feel his left foot twitching as he stood at the end of the dock watching the boat slowly entering the harbor, all but one of its sails tied away from the wind. This wasn't how his new life in paradise had been described to him. Pirates?
Behind him, in a neat, tight formation, was a squad of ten riflemen. Another squad was assembled at the far end of the dock, at the cobblestone road; and yet two more were out of sight behind a boat repair building. Lawrence turned and looked to the roof of the ship builder; the heads of six men, armed with the latest rifled long guns, were barely visible.
All he could do was wait and see what happened next...
"Governor Stanton...?" a voice spoke from nearby, breaking his reverie. "A delegation from the town is here to speak with you, m'lord."
He nodded to his Aide, asking, "Each of them?"
"The French, the Dutch, and the Germans," the Aide answered. "The Portuguese are still conferring over who will represent them, and the Spanish refuse to acknowledge our sovereignty over the islands while--"
The man stopped ceased talking as Henry waved off his listing of the small port's nationalist factions. Over the two hundred years since its initial settling, Port Ambrosia has traded hands -- sometimes by treaty, sometimes by force -- more than a dozen times. Each time, a portion of the previous nationality's populace remained; today, there were a dozen and a half nations -- mostly European -- represented on the Port Ambrosia Governing Council ... the supervising body that he was about to disband.
He didn't blame the Spanish for not wanting to attend the little get-together at which he would end the last little bit of hope they had for ever controlling what had begun as their island. In fact, he was surprised that any of the island's representatives were coming; they all had to know that he was cutting them out of governance of the little Caribbean port.
But, as he stared out from behind the crenelations of Fortress Ambrosia at the small sailing vessel only now making its way into the harbor, he had a more important issue at hand. He looked to the Aide and asked, "What about the ... independents?"
The Aide's lips spread a bit as he asked, "The pirates, m'lord?"
Henry smiled as well, then looked out to the bay again. Pirates! It all seemed so unreal to him. His family had come from the inland areas of England; they had had no direct interaction with the people of the sea, let alone pirates. He hadn't even believed they existed as a younger man -- tall tales, he'd called them -- and he still had a hard time believing it now, despite the fact that his Aide had identified the boat entering the harbor as belonging to one of them.
And to make it even harder to fathom ... a woman pirate...? That just seemed ... so unlikely. He gestured toward the boat just beginning to drop some of its sails. "Is this her?"
The Aide stepped up to the crenelations and followed Henry's gesture. "Yes, m'lord."
"Name...?"
"I ... I'm sorry, Governor," the man said hesitantly, "The name ... that of the boat and her captain ... they escape me, m'lord. So sorry."
"I want you to meet her at the dock," Henry said, turning and heading for the long stone stairway that would take him down to where his guests were assembled, waiting to learn of their futures, or lack thereof. "Take a couple of squads with you--"
"Twenty men?" the Aide asked surprised. "You want me to take twenty men to--"
"Too many?" Henry asked, oblivious.
"Not enough!" the Aide answered with a concerned tone. "These are blood thirsty pirates, m'lord."
"Don't be silly," Henry said, waving a hand in dismissal. "They're just people trying to earn a living--"
"By raping and pillaging and murdering innocent civil--"
Henry laughed aloud, cutting short the man's panic. "Don't be silly. They're just businessmen ... business women ... trying to make a living and, when necessary, defending themselves against--"
"Please m'lord..."
Henry came to a stop at an open door. Beyond it, sitting up and down a long oak table, he could see the representatives of Port Ambrosia, waiting for their new Governor's entrance and introduction. He looked to his Aide; the panic in the man's eyes was more than evident. Henry was sending this quite, mild-mannered man to meet with pirates -- blood thirsty or not -- on his behalf; the most he could do was send him well protected.
"Fine, Lawrence. Take four squads ... and the sharp shooters." He held an extended finger up before the man's face, shaking it. "But ... be subtle. I want her to understand this is a diplomatic mission to her personally, not an armed seizure of her boat. She hasn't done anything illegal in the eyes of the British Government."
He turned and entered the room, abandoning one sticky situation for another.
Lawrence could feel his left foot twitching as he stood at the end of the dock watching the boat slowly entering the harbor, all but one of its sails tied away from the wind. This wasn't how his new life in paradise had been described to him. Pirates?
Behind him, in a neat, tight formation, was a squad of ten riflemen. Another squad was assembled at the far end of the dock, at the cobblestone road; and yet two more were out of sight behind a boat repair building. Lawrence turned and looked to the roof of the ship builder; the heads of six men, armed with the latest rifled long guns, were barely visible.
All he could do was wait and see what happened next...