said youâd a serious problem, Toby. I hope I can help.â
Stirk cleared his throat. The others crowded forward, silent and watchful. âItâs like thisân, Tom.â He swallowed and avoided his gaze. âWhen I asks ye for a steer wiâ the coin, I didnât tell it all, anâ itâs gettinâ to me as I wasnât square with ye.â
âOh?â Kydd said carefully, drawing up a chair.
âWell, yeâre right anâ all, weâve found treasure.â
âAh! And you want to know where to hand it in.â
âNot as we should say, Mr Kâ, that is, Mr Paine. See, weâve found it but canât get at it anâ was hopinâ yeâd see yâr way free to givinâ us some advice.â
Kydd frowned. âLetâs be clear on this, Toby. You sayââ
âTom, mate. We found a wreck right ânough, SpanishArmada anâ all. Nobody knows of it. Ye canât get at it from the shore-side, so everythingâs still there. So we gets together a little venture anâ goes out to dig it up. Trouble is â¦â
He tailed off at Kyddâs look. âToby. Youâre asking me to compound a felony by assisting you toââ
âNo, no, mate! Whatever we does, thatâs our own business. All weâre askinâ is a course tâ steer. Nothinâ to clap tâ your tally a-tall!â
âOh?â
âWell, could be thereâs not one piddlinâ syebuck there, but we has a notion tâ try, is all.â
âGo on.â The liberal measures of highland whisky heâd enjoyed at the hall were doing nothing for his concentration but he heard Stirk out. The least he could do was to give his opinion to an old shipmate.
Chapter 12
M
aid
bobbed to her anchor off the cave, and Kydd strained to see what he could of the wreck. It was on a small pebble beach within a terrifying twist of rock and had the sombre dignity of centuries about it.
He surveyed the area carefully, squinting as the pain behind his eyes became intrusive â generosity in the matter of libation at his offer of counsel had not been stinted. The incline was certainly enough over time to account for the wreck washed clean, but had the contents been scattered on the seabed below?
The first thing was to make soundings.
They had brought a coracle with them and Stirk set out in it. Under Kyddâs direction he paddled it on a straight course and lowered a lead-line at regular intervals.
Kydd soon had a picture: the beach incline led into the sea and quickly levelled to a flattish firm silt undersea plain, at this state of tide, of the order of three fathoms deep over a respectable area. There must have been high-water springs when the ship struck for it would never have cleared itotherwise. There was every possibility that whatever had been brought down had settled and gone no further.
On its own, however, this was not enough. The area was within two buttresses of rock, which would have protected it from the worst of the seas, but the most insidious foe would have been tide scour, currents regularly swirling back and forth about the craggy points as the water ebbed and flowed. It would not have been long before loose objects had tumbled into deeper water.
Kydd took in the situation carefully. Tides were always local and could take any number of courses, even down to individual outcrops of rock. Here, with the tide on the make, he could see from the pattern of ripples that, while it passed offshore, the little bay itself was not disturbed.
Almost certainly the relics were strewn within twenty or thirty yards of the end of the wreck â in but three fathoms of water.
Chapter 13
A s the Dunlochry Treasure Company reconvened, the chair recognised Mr Paine as counsellor.
âWeâs awaiting yâr report, Mr Paine,â Stirk stated respectfully.
âWell, Toby, itâs notââ
âItâs