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<h2> CHAPTER XXVII. CARTAGENA </h2>
<p>Having crossed the Caribbean in the teeth of contrary winds, it was not
until the early days of April that the French fleet hove in sight of
Cartagena, and M. de Rivarol summoned a council aboard his flagship to
determine the method of assault.</p>
<p>"It is of importance, messieurs," he told them, "that we take the city by
surprise, not only before it can put itself into a state of defence; but
before it can remove its treasures inland. I propose to land a force
sufficient to achieve this to the north of the city to-night after dark."
And he explained in detail the scheme upon which his wits had laboured.</p>
<p>He was heard respectfully and approvingly by his officers, scornfully by
Captain Blood, and indifferently by the other buccaneer captains present.
For it must be understood that Blood's refusal to attend councils had
related only to those concerned with determining the nature of the
enterprise to be undertaken.</p>
<p>Captain Blood was the only one amongst them who knew exactly what lay
ahead. Two years ago he had himself considered a raid upon the place, and
he had actually made a survey of it in circumstances which he was
presently to disclose.</p>
<p>The Baron's proposal was one to be expected from a commander whose
knowledge of Cartagena was only such as might be derived from maps.</p>
<p>Geographically and strategically considered, it is a curious place. It
stands almost four-square, screened east and north by hills, and it may be
said to face south upon the inner of two harbours by which it is normally
approached. The entrance to the outer harbour, which is in reality a
lagoon some three miles across, lies through a neck known as the Boca
Chica—or Little Mouth—and defended by a fort. A long strip of
densely wooded land to westward acts here as a natural breakwater, and as
the inner harbour is approached, another strip of land thrusts across at
right angles from the first, towards the mainland on the east. Just short
of this it ceases, leaving a deep but very narrow channel, a veritable
gateway, into the secure and sheltered inner harbour. Another fort defends
this second passage. East and north of Cartagena lies the mainland, which
may be left out of account. But to the west and northwest this city, so
well guarded on every other side, lies directly open to the sea. It stands
back beyond a half-mile of beach, and besides this and the stout Walls
which fortify it, would appear to have no other defences. But those
appearances are deceptive, and they had utterly deceived M. de Rivarol,
when he devised his plan.</p>
<p>It remained for Captain Blood to explain the difficulties when M. de
Rivarol informed him that the honour of opening the assault in the manner
which he prescribed was to be accorded to the buccaneers.</p>
<p>Captain Blood smiled sardonic appreciation of the honour reserved for his
men. It was precisely what he would have expected. For the buccaneers the
dangers; for M. de Rivarol the honour, glory and profit of the enterprise.</p>
<p>"It is an honour which I must decline," said he quite coldly.</p>
<p>Wolverstone grunted approval and Hagthorpe nodded. Yberville, who as much
as any of them resented the superciliousness of his noble compatriot,
never wavered in loyalty to Captain Blood. The French officers—there
were six of them present—stared their haughty surprise at the
buccaneer leader, whilst the Baron challengingly fired a question at him.</p>
<p>"How? You decline it, 'sir? You decline to obey orders, do you say?"</p>
<p>"I understood, M. le Baron, that you summoned us to deliberate upon the
means to be adopted."</p>
<p>"Then you understood amiss, M. le Capitaine. You are here to receive my
commands. I have already deliberated, and I have decided. I hope you
understand."</p>
<p>"Oh, I understand," laughed Blood. "But, I ask myself, do you?" And
without giving the Baron time to set the angry question that was bubbling
to his lips, he swept on: "You have deliberated, you say, and you have
decided. But unless your decision rests upon a wish to destroy my
buccaneers, you will alter it when I tell you something of which I have
knowledge. This city of Cartagena looks very vulnerable on the northern
side, all open to the sea as it apparently stands. Ask yourself, M. le
Baron, how came the Spaniards who built it where it is to have been at
such trouble to fortify it to the south, if from the north it is so easily
assailable."</p>
<p>That gave M. de Rivarol pause.</p>
<p>"The Spaniards," Blood pursued, "are not quite the fools you are supposing
them. Let me tell you, messieurs, that two years ago I made a survey of
Cartagena as a preliminary to raiding it. I came hither with some friendly
trading Indians, myself disguised as an Indian, and in that guise I spent
a week in the city and studied carefully all its approaches. On the side
of the sea where it looks so temptingly open to assault, there is shoal
water for over half a mile out—far enough out, I assure you, to
ensure that no ship shall come within bombarding range of it. It is not
safe to venture nearer land than three quarters of a mile."</p>
<p>"But our landing will be effected in canoes and piraguas and open boats,"
cried an officer impatiently.</p>
<p>"In the calmest season of the year, the surf will hinder any such
operation. And you will also bear in mind that if landing were possible as
you are suggesting, that landing could not be covered by the ships' guns.
In fact, it is the landing parties would be in danger from their own
artillery."</p>
<p>"If the attack is made by night, as I propose, covering will be
unnecessary. You should be ashore in force before the Spaniards are aware
of the intent."</p>
<p>"You are assuming that Cartagena is a city of the blind, that at this very
moment they are not conning our sails and asking themselves who we are and
what we intend."</p>
<p>"But if they feel themselves secure from the north, as you suggest," cried
the Baron impatiently, "that very security will lull them."</p>
<p>"Perhaps. But, then, they are secure. Any attempt to land on this side is
doomed to failure at the hands of Nature."</p>
<p>"Nevertheless, we make the attempt," said the obstinate Baron, whose
haughtiness would not allow him to yield before his officers.</p>
<p>"If you still choose to do so after what I have said, you are, of course,
the person to decide. But I do not lead my men into fruitless danger."</p>
<p>"If I command you..." the Baron was beginning. But Blood unceremoniously
interrupted him.</p>
<p>"M. le Baron, when M. de Cussy engaged us on your behalf, it was as much
on account of our knowledge and experience of this class of warfare as on
account of our strength. I have placed my own knowledge and experience in
this particular matter at your disposal. I will add that I abandoned my
own project of raiding Cartagena, not being in sufficient strength at the
time to force the entrance of the harbour, which is the only way into the
city. The strength which you now command is ample for that purpose."</p>
<p>"But whilst we are doing that, the Spaniards will have time to remove
great part of the wealth this city holds. We must take them by surprise."</p>
<p>Captain Blood shrugged. "If this is a mere pirating raid, that, of course,
is a prime consideration. It was with me. But if you are concerned to
abate the pride of Spain and plant the Lilies of France on the forts of
this settlement, the loss of some treasure should not really weigh for
much."</p>
<p>M. de Rivarol bit his lip in chagrin. His gloomy eye smouldered as it
considered the self-contained buccaneer.</p>
<p>"But if I command you to go—to make the attempt?" he asked. "Answer
me, monsieur, let us know once for all where we stand, and who commands
this expedition."</p>
<p>"Positively, I find you tiresome," said Captain Blood, and he swung to M.
de Cussy, who sat there gnawing his lip, intensely uncomfortable. "I
appeal to you, monsieur, to justify me to the General."</p>
<p>M. de Cussy started out of his gloomy abstraction. He cleared his throat.
He was extremely nervous.</p>
<p>"In view of what Captain Blood has submitted...."</p>
<p>"Oh, to the devil with that!" snapped Rivarol. "It seems that I am
followed by poltroons. Look you, M. le Capitaine, since you are afraid to
undertake this thing, I will myself undertake it. The weather is calm, and
I count upon making good my landing. If I do so, I shall have proved you
wrong, and I shall have a word to say to you to-morrow which you may not
like. I am being very generous with you, sir." He waved his hand regally.
"You have leave to go."</p>
<p>It was sheer obstinacy and empty pride that drove him, and he received the
lesson he deserved. The fleet stood in during the afternoon to within a
mile of the coast, and under cover of darkness three hundred men, of whom
two hundred were negroes—the whole of the negro contingent having
been pressed into the undertaking—were pulled away for the shore in
the canoes, piraguas, and ships' boats. Rivarol's pride compelled him,
however much he may have disliked the venture, to lead them in person.</p>
<p>The first six boats were caught in the surf, and pounded into fragments
before their occupants could extricate themselves. The thunder of the
breakers and the cries of the shipwrecked warned those who followed, and
thereby saved them from sharing the same fate. By the Baron's urgent
orders they pulled away again out of danger, and stood about to pick up
such survivors as contrived to battle towards them. Close upon fifty lives
were lost in the adventure, together with half-a-dozen boats stored with
ammunition and light guns.</p>
<p>The Baron went back to his flagship an infuriated, but by no means a wiser
man. Wisdom—not even the pungent wisdom experience thrusts upon us—is
not for such as M. de Rivarol. His anger embraced all things, but focussed
chiefly upon Captain Blood. In some warped process of reasoning he held
the buccaneer chiefly responsible for this misadventure. He went to bed
considering furiously what he should say to Captain Blood upon the morrow.</p>
<p>He was awakened at dawn by the rolling thunder of guns. Emerging upon the
poop in nightcap and slippers, he beheld a sight that increased his
unreasonable and unreasoning fury. The four buccaneer ships under canvas
were going through extraordinary manoeuvre half a mile off the Boca Chica
and little more than half a mile away from the remainder of the fleet, and
from their flanks flame and smoke were belching each time they swung
broadside to the great round fort that guarded that narrow entrance. The
fort was returning the fire vigorously and viciously. But the buccaneers
timed their broadsides with extraordinary judgment to catch the defending
ordnance reloading; then as they drew the Spaniards' fire, they swung away
again not only taking care to be ever moving targets, but, further, to
present no more than bow or stern to the fort, their masts in line, when
the heaviest cannonades were to be expected.</p>
<p>Gibbering and cursing, M. de Rivarol stood there and watched this action,
so presumptuously undertaken by Blood on his own responsibility. The
officers of the Victorieuse crowded round him, but it was not until M. de
Cussy came to join the group that he opened the sluices of his rage. And
M. de Cussy himself invited the deluge that now caught him. He had come up
rubbing his hands and taking a proper satisfaction in the energy of the
men whom he had enlisted.</p>
<p>"Aha, M. de Rivarol!" he laughed. "He understands his business, eh, this
Captain Blood. He'll plant the Lilies of France on that fort before
breakfast."</p>
<p>The Baron swung upon him snarling. "He understands his business, eh? His
business, let me tell you, M. de Cussy, is to obey my orders, and I have
not ordered this. Par la Mordieu! When this is over I'll deal with him for
his damned insubordination."</p>
<p>"Surely, M. le Baron, he will have justified it if he succeeds."</p>
<p>"Justified it! Ah, parbleu! Can a soldier ever justify acting without
orders?" He raved on furiously, his officers supporting him out of their
detestation of Captain Blood.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the fight went merrily on. The fort was suffering badly. Yet for
all their manoeuvring the buccaneers were not escaping punishment. The
starboard gunwale of the Atropos had been hammered into splinters, and a
shot had caught her astern in the coach. The Elizabeth was badly battered
about the forecastle, and the Arabella's maintop had been shot away,
whilst' towards the end of that engagement the Lachesis came reeling out
of the fight with a shattered rudder, steering herself by sweeps.</p>
<p>The absurd Baron's fierce eyes positively gleamed with satisfaction.</p>
<p>"I pray Heaven they may sink all his infernal ships!" he cried in his
frenzy.</p>
<p>But Heaven didn't hear him. Scarcely had he spoken than there was a
terrific explosion, and half the fort went up in fragments. A lucky shot
from the buccaneers had found the powder magazine.</p>
<p>It may have been a couple of hours later, when Captain Blood, as spruce
and cool as if he had just come from a levee, stepped upon the
quarter-deck of the Victoriense, to confront M. de Rivarol, still in
bedgown and nightcap.</p>
<p>"I have to report, M. le Baron, that we are in possession of the fort on
Boca Chica. The standard of France is flying from what remains of its
tower, and the way into the outer harbour is open to your fleet."</p>
<p>M. de Rivarol was compelled to swallow his fury, though it choked him. The
jubilation among his officers had been such that he could not continue as
he had begun. Yet his eyes were malevolent, his face pale with anger.</p>
<p>"You are fortunate, M. Blood, that you succeeded," he said. "It would have
gone very ill with you had you failed. Another time be so good as to await
my orders, lest you should afterwards lack the justification which your
good fortune has procured you this morning."</p>
<p>Blood smiled with a flash of white teeth, and bowed. "I shall be glad of
your orders now, General, for pursuing our advantage. You realize that
speed in striking is the first essential."</p>
<p>Rivarol was left gaping a moment. Absorbed in his ridiculous anger, he had
considered nothing. But he made a quick recovery. "To my cabin, if you
please," he commanded peremptorily, and was turning to lead the way, when
Blood arrested him.</p>
<p>"With submission, my General, we shall be better here. You behold there
the scene of our coming action. It is spread before you like a map." He
waved his hand towards the lagoon, the country flanking it and the
considerable city standing back from the beach. "If it is not a
presumption in me to offer a suggestion...." He paused. M. de Rivarol
looked at him sharply, suspecting irony. But the swarthy face was bland,
the keen eyes steady.</p>
<p>"Let us hear your suggestion," he consented.</p>
<p>Blood pointed out the fort at the mouth of the inner harbour, which was
just barely visible above the waving palms on the intervening tongue of
land. He announced that its armament was less formidable than that of the
outer fort, which they had reduced; but on the other hand, the passage was
very much narrower than the Boca Chica, and before they could attempt to
make it in any case, they must dispose of those defences. He proposed that
the French ships should enter the outer harbour, and proceed at once to
bombardment. Meanwhile, he would land three hundred buccaneers and some
artillery on the eastern side of the lagoon, beyond the fragrant garden
islands dense with richly bearing fruit-trees, and proceed simultaneously
to storm the fort in the rear. Thus beset on both sides at once, and
demoralized by the fate of the much stronger outer fort, he did not think
the Spaniards would offer a very long resistance. Then it would be for M.
de Rivarol to garrison the fort, whilst Captain Blood would sweep on with
his men, and seize the Church of Nuestra Senora de la Poupa, plainly
visible on its hill immediately eastward of the town. Not only did that
eminence afford them a valuable and obvious strategic advantage, but it
commanded the only road that led from Cartagena to the interior, and once
it were held there would be no further question of the Spaniards
attempting to remove the wealth of the city.</p>
<p>That to M. de Rivarol was—as Captain Blood had judged that it would
be—the crowning argument. Supercilious until that moment, and
disposed for his own pride's sake to treat the buccaneer's suggestions
with cavalier criticism, M. de Rivarol's manner suddenly changed. He
became alert and brisk, went so far as tolerantly to commend Captain
Blood's plan, and issued orders that action might be taken upon it at
once.</p>
<p>It is not necessary to follow that action step by step. Blunders on the
part of the French marred its smooth execution, and the indifferent
handling of their ships led to the sinking of two of them in the course of
the afternoon by the fort's gunfire. But by evening, owing largely to the
irresistible fury with which the buccaneers stormed the place from the
landward side, the fort had surrendered, and before dusk Blood and his men
with some ordnance hauled thither by mules dominated the city from the
heights of Nuestra Senora de la Poupa.</p>
<p>At noon on the morrow, shorn of defences and threatened with bombardment,
Cartagena sent offers of surrender to M. de Rivarol.</p>
<p>Swollen with pride by a victory for which he took the entire credit to
himself, the Baron dictated his terms. He demanded that all public effects
and office accounts be delivered up; that the merchants surrender all
moneys and goods held by them for their correspondents; the inhabitants
could choose whether they would remain in the city or depart; but those
who went must first deliver up all their property, and those who elected
to remain must surrender half, and become the subjects of France;
religious houses and churches should be spared, but they must render
accounts of all moneys and valuables in their possession.</p>
<p>Cartagena agreed, having no choice in the matter, and on the next day,
which was the 5th of April, M. de Rivarol entered the city and proclaimed
it now a French colony, appointing M. de Cussy its Governor. Thereafter he
proceeded to the Cathedral, where very properly a Te Deum was sung in
honour of the conquest. This by way of grace, whereafter M. de Rivarol
proceeded to devour the city. The only detail in which the French conquest
of Cartagena differed from an ordinary buccaneering raid was that under
the severest penalties no soldier was to enter the house of any
inhabitant. But this apparent respect for the persons and property of the
conquered was based in reality upon M. de Rivarol's anxiety lest a
doubloon should be abstracted from all the wealth that was pouring into
the treasury opened by the Baron in the name of the King of France. Once
the golden stream had ceased, he removed all restrictions and left the
city in prey to his men, who proceeded further to pillage it of that part
of their property which the inhabitants who became French subjects had
been assured should remain inviolate. The plunder was enormous. In the
course of four days over a hundred mules laden with gold went out of the
city and down to the boats waiting at the beach to convey the treasure
aboard the ships.</p>
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