Hector was looking at a coat of arms cast into the metal of the barrel. A large letter V impaled the letters O and C. ‘The crest of the Dutch East India Company,’ he said. ‘I wonder how Vlucht got his hands on it.’
‘Probably looted it from some luckless Company ship. I reckon he was as much a pirate as he was an interloper.’
The Miskito circled the gun muzzle with his hands, gauging the size. ‘Five-pounder, or thereabouts,’ he commented. He rubbed away the dirt from the touch-hole. ‘Nothing here that some careful attention cannot fix. We’ll need the right tools, and some round shot. Let’s see if we can find a wormer.’
They searched what remained of the vessel above water. In the forecastle Hector located the gunner’s stores. There was a wormer with a threaded head, which Dan would need in order to clean out the barrel after firing, a powder ladle, three heavy spikes to use as levers for moving the gun, and a rammer.
‘No sign of a sponge?’ asked Dan as Hector brought out these tools and set them down beside the cannon.
‘No, but there’s a box of wads that should fit.’
‘We will need those. We can always wrap some wet cloth around the butt end of the rammer to make a sponge.’
‘There was another tool – a rod with a set of springy claws at one end. But I left it behind.’
‘That will be a searcher for checking for cracks inside the barrel. No use to us, as we could not mend any flaws even if we found them. We’ll have to take a chance that the guns are sound. Did you manage to locate any round shot?’
‘No.’
Dan looked serious. ‘That’s odd. We can load the two little lantaka with musket balls and pebbles, but if we want to use the big cannon against a stockade, we need to have the right-sized shot.’
‘Maybe these guns were just for show,’ said Hector.
Dan thrust an arm down the barrel. ‘I can feel the wad, though it’s soggy and damp. Behind it there’s the ball. I’d say he was a captain who preferred to leave the guns charged and shotted in case they were needed in a hurry.’
He withdrew his arm and together they crossed the sloping deck and investigated the second cannon. It, too, was ready-loaded. ‘Are you sure you’ve looked everywhere for a shot locker?’ Dan asked.
‘There’s nothing. I guess Vlucht was too mean to keep proper artillery stores,’ said Hector.
‘No point in salvaging two cannon when we have only two rounds of shot to fire from them. One cannon will have to do,’ said Dan.
Hector looked across at the kora kora, still hove-to fifty paces away on the fringe of the reef, unable to come closer. ‘How do you propose to do that?’ he enquired doubtfully.
‘Ask the Omoro to build a raft on-shore, and then come out at high tide and take this gun off.’
They waded their way back to the war canoe where Prince Jainalabidin’s face lit up with excitement when Hector explained how Dan wanted to proceed. The boy spoke rapidly to the chamberlain.
‘The prince says that we Omoro know all about building rafts,’ translated Mansur. ‘We use them for fishing in the river. His Highness says that he can order his men to have a raft ready in less than three hours, and they will remove the cannon from the wreck by nightfall.’
Hector hid his doubts that the work could be done so quickly. ‘Then, with His Highness’ permission, I suggest that Jezreel and Dan go back to the Westflinge and get the cannon ready. Jacques and I will stay in case we can be of assistance.’
The kora kora shifted to the same creek where the Westflinge ’s castaways had earlier set up their camp, and soon Hector had to admit that he’d underestimated the Omoro. Her crew divided into teams and disappeared into the jungle. Within half an hour one squad returned carrying stalks of giant bamboo, six inches in diameter and thirty feet long. They stripped off the leaves, and then used their heavy knives to shave away the hard, shiny outer skin. This, according to Mansur, meant that the lashings of the raft would grip. Meanwhile another team had reappeared with lengths of rattan and split the vines lengthwise. When all the materials were ready, the entire workforce set about fastening the bamboos side by side with the rattan strips, then attaching cross-braces to give the raft its shape. By mid-afternoon they had pushed the raft into the water and, with Hector and Mansur aboard, were propelling it towards the wreck of the Westflinge.
They found that Dan and Jezreel had used the hand-spikes to manoeuvre the brass gun to the edge of the deck and had unbolted the trunnion caps that held the weapon to its carriage. Jainalabidin’s men looped a length of rattan around the gun while their colleagues on the raft rigged spare bamboos to make a simple crane. Taking advantage of a slight uprise on the swell, the cannon was lifted from its carriage, swung across the gap and lowered safely on to the raft. Minutes later, the gun’s wooden carriage followed.
‘Neatly done,’ said Jezreel approvingly. With a round shot in each hand, he stepped across to the raft. Dan and Hector gathered up the rammer and hand-spikes and the box of wads and followed him.

THREE DAYS LATER Hector found himself gazing up at Haar, the chief town of the Sugala and the residence of their Rajah. He could see why the Omoro had failed to subdue their rivals. Haar was perched on a headland jutting from the coast. Cliffs, 200 feet high, protected it on three sides, and the only approach from the sea was by a footpath cut into the steep bluff, which faced over the stony landing beach. The fishermen there had taken to their heels and scampered up the path to the town the moment they’d seen the war canoe approaching.
Hector flinched as a musket bullet splashed into the water close by. The Sugala were firing off occasional warning shots at the kora kora as it cruised slowly past the deserted landing place. But the range was too far for any accuracy.
‘Boom, boom!’ Prince Jainalabidin made enthusiastic artillery noises and pointed excitedly, first at the lantaka and then at the brass cannon, still on its raft being towed behind the kora kora.
Hector shook his head. With just two rounds of shot in their armoury, it would achieve nothing to lob a cannonball at the town on the crest of the headland. ‘We must get closer for our guns to be effective. We have to attack the town from the land,’ he explained to the chamberlain.
‘That will be dangerous,’ Mansur cautioned. ‘On the landward side Haar is protected by a stout palisade of tree trunks, and the Rajah’s people keep the jungle cut back so that their musketeers have a clear shot at any attackers. The ground there is flat and level, with nowhere to hide. Last time we had two men wounded when they got too close.’
‘We don’t have any choice, if we want to use our cannon,’ Hector answered.
The older man looked unconvinced. ‘There’s no way to get the large gun up there. The hillsides are very steep and covered with thick forest, and the only track to the summit follows the bed of a stream. In many places you are obliged to scramble knee-deep in the water.’
Hector forced himself to sound cheerful. ‘Then we must turn that into an advantage. The Sugala will never expect us to bring cannon up that route. So they won’t try to intercept us. They’ll stay behind their palisade and wait for us to go away. We’ll give them an unpleasant surprise.’ He turned to Prince Jainalabidin and said in slow, careful Spanish, ‘Your Highness, can your men bring the big gun through the jungle and up behind the town?’
The boy bit his lip, and cast an anxious look towards the chamberlain. It was clear that, for the first time, he was being asked to overrule his father’s minister in a major decision. Mansur translated Hector’s words so that there should be no misunderstanding. After a brief silence the prince said proudly, ‘Of course. My men will do what I ask them.’
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