Kings Ransom (eBook)
97 Seiten
Pieter Haasbroek (Verlag)
978-1-7764915-5-1 (ISBN)
A treasure map to paradise.
An island of nightmares.
And a ghost from the past who will stop at nothing to steal it all.
Off the treacherous coast of Thailand and Bangkok (1720). Pirate hunter Simon Verbeeck chases a legendary treasure that could secure peace for his loyal crew. But the island is no paradise, it is a prison ruled by Ben Powers, a sadistic rival from Simon's past who craves vengeance and Simon's beloved ship, the Red Ruby.
Ambushed and betrayed, Simon loses everything, his freedom, his ship, and the very prize he sought. Left for dead, his only hope is a desperate ocean crossing that will push his endurance and courage to the breaking point.
But survival brings no safety. Framed for kidnapping the King's daughter, Simon is thrown into a Bangkok dungeon to await execution. To reclaim his ship and clear his name, he must unravel a deadly conspiracy, before a hidden enemy plunges an entire kingdom into darkness.
Packed with betrayal, vengeance, and relentless high-seas adventure, The Kings Ransom is perfect for fans of classic pirate romance and epic historical thrillers.
Set sail on the sixth book of Meiring Fouche's unforgettable pirate saga today.
A treasure map to paradise.An island of nightmares.And a ghost from the past who will stop at nothing to steal it all.Off the treacherous coast of Thailand and Bangkok (1720). Pirate hunter Simon Verbeeck chases a legendary treasure that could secure peace for his loyal crew. But the island is no paradise, it is a prison ruled by Ben Powers, a sadistic rival from Simon s past who craves vengeance and Simon s beloved ship, the Red Ruby.Ambushed and betrayed, Simon loses everything, his freedom, his ship, and the very prize he sought. Left for dead, his only hope is a desperate ocean crossing that will push his endurance and courage to the breaking point.But survival brings no safety. Framed for kidnapping the King s daughter, Simon is thrown into a Bangkok dungeon to await execution. To reclaim his ship and clear his name, he must unravel a deadly conspiracy, before a hidden enemy plunges an entire kingdom into darkness.Packed with betrayal, vengeance, and relentless high-seas adventure, The Kings Ransom is perfect for fans of classic pirate romance and epic historical thrillers.Set sail on the sixth book of Meiring Fouche s unforgettable pirate saga today.
6. THE KINGS RANSOM
Chapter 1
For days now, the sailing vessel, the Red Ruby, has been ploughing calmly and swiftly through the Indian Ocean. But now, the beautiful craft has almost reached its destination. It is a remote and peculiar destination, without any inherent danger, yet nonetheless extraordinary.
There is a man in the crow’s nest, and on the deck, everyone is busy with their respective duties. Some are scrubbing, others are working on the sails, and still others are just pitching in here and there. It is during lulls like these that the seaman takes advantage to get his vessel in order. The gun ports of the Red Ruby are closed. The men on deck are not armed. No danger is anticipated.
The only two on the vessel who are particularly alert at the moment are the man in the crow’s nest and the helmsman. Especially the man in the crow’s nest, as he has a very explicit order to keep his eyes open and carefully observe the surrounding sea. One never knows when one might encounter a pirate or two. They are very fond of appearing on the horizon here on the eastern sea routes and making your life miserable.
In the captain’s cabin, three men are sitting at a chart table. One is large and dark, and his name is Simon Verbeeck. The second is tall and blonde. His name is Wilhelm Rieckert.
The third is short and insignificant. His name is John Tobey.
Simon Verbeeck and Wilhelm Rieckert, Simon’s right-hand man here on the Red Ruby, are spectators. The man who is working is John Tobey. Every time, Tobey indicates something with his hands or with his eyes. He cannot speak, because his tongue has been cut out.
John Tobey is busy drawing a map. He does it thoroughly and neatly. The piece of parchment on which he is drawing the map is held down on the chart table by four weights. Tobey’s fingers are firmly clasped around the quill as it scratches across the parchment. First, he draws the outline of an island. Then, he indicates the palm plantations that reach almost to the sea. Then, he continues into the interior and finally makes a dot on the map with a circle around it.
John Tobey looks very pleased when he is finished. “I think this is where the treasure is located,” Tobey indicates. “I’m doing all this from memory, but that’s about where the treasure should be.”
“Are you absolutely sure?” asks Simon.
“Well,” replies Tobey, “it’s just an approximation. Once we’re on the island, I’ll be able to say exactly.”
“What I mean,” says Simon, “is are you absolutely certain that there is buried treasure, John Tobey?”
Tobey smiles. He speaks again with his fingers. “I’m as certain as I am alive,” he indicates. “The treasure is there, unless someone has removed it. I helped bury it myself. That’s why my tongue was cut out. That’s why I spent months alone on that island. I’ve already told you the whole story, Simon Verbeeck.”
This is true. Tobey has told Simon Verbeeck the story so often. At Simon’s request, he once wrote it out in full on parchment. The dark mariner then read it all. It is a fantastic tale of wealth and cruelty. The pirate in whose company Tobey was had taken him along when he went to bury the treasure. And because he wanted to make absolutely sure that no one would ever know where it was, he had Tobey’s tongue cut out and left him on the island. In the meantime, the pirate had died. The treasure must, in all likelihood, still lie where it was buried.
Simon Verbeeck had found John Tobey on the island at the time, but due to circumstances, he could not search for the treasure. He had taken pity on Tobey, and John Tobey had become one of his most loyal and valued crew members. Also one of the bravest. One of the most daring.
The island that John Tobey has drawn lies off the east coast of Siam. It is a relatively small island when you look at it on a map, but when you are on it, it is not so terribly small. There are lush forests on it and there is even a small mountain. There are springs, dense undergrowth, and the most beautiful beaches one can imagine. It is one of the jewels of the East, and it is completely uninhabited.
“Now what do we do with you, John Tobey, if we arrive there and the treasure isn’t there?” asks Wilhelm Rieckert teasingly. “Can we just cut off your ears then?”
Tobey indicates again quickly with his fingers. “If the treasure isn’t there,” he says, “then it’s not my fault.”
For Simon Verbeeck, the feared and hated hunter of pirates, this is indeed a peculiar mission. It rarely happens that he searches for treasure, but this time he is searching for treasure. He has a good purpose for it. For many years, it has been his desire to replace the older members of his crew, who are no longer really capable of doing their jobs properly, with younger men, and then to settle those old-timers somewhere on land. To that end, he would like to get hold of a piece of land at the Cape of Good Hope. But to do that, he needs the money, and he doesn’t have it. He has been thinking about coming to unearth this treasure, selling it, and using the money to buy a settlement for elderly crew members, not only from his vessel but also from other vessels.
“You say the island is completely uninhabited?”
John Tobey nods vehemently. In sign language, he indicates that there was not a living soul on the island as long as he was there. He had walked it from end to end. He had had plenty of time to do so because he had been alone on the island for a very, very long time.
He thinks back almost wistfully to the time he spent on that paradise. It was the loneliest time of his life, and he had believed that he would never be rescued. He had firmly believed that he would have to spend the rest of his life there. Only he and the pirate captain knew about the treasure that was buried there, but he knows that the lives of pirate captains are short-lived. When the months went by and the pirate did not return to claim his treasure, Tobey deduced that he had perished.
Tobey had lived by catching fish, eating coconuts and drinking the milk, from sand crabs, from crayfish that he caught in the shallow water, from sea turtles that he got hold of just beyond the coral reef. He never lacked for food, but he did lack for company.
The map is now finished. It is carefully examined by Simon Verbeeck and Wilhelm Rieckert. They have just finished with it when a seaman comes running into the cabin.
“An island right ahead,” the seaman reports.
Simon Verbeeck, Wilhelm Rieckert, and John Tobey leap up and run out of the cabin.
“What do you see?” Simon shouts to the man in the crow’s nest.
“I see land,” the man calls back, and in his voice there is the enthusiasm that always characterizes a seaman’s voice when he sights land.
“Where?” asks Simon.
“Right ahead,” the crow’s nest man shouts back.
Simon smiles at Wilhelm Rieckert. “We can calculate our direction quite well, can’t we, Wilhelm?”
“Yes, I must say,” Rieckert replies, “that’s something we can do.”
Simon hurries to the forecastle and brings the small telescope to his eye. Far on the horizon, like a dark spot, he sees the island emerge from the endless ocean. His heart leaps within him. It had been a safe voyage from the Cape of Good Hope. No mishap and no incident. He just hopes that they will find on the island what they have come to seek. If he succeeds in unearthing the treasure, he plans to sail back past the coast of Siam, through the Strait of Malacca to the West Coast of Malaya. There, he wants to load a cargo of timber and ivory to go and trade it in at the Cape of Good Hope.
They reach the island in the late afternoon, and from a distance, it looks like a blue jewel. It lies there, surrounded by its snow-white beaches, and there is a bluish haze over the lush vegetation of the small island. Simon now stands by the helmsman himself, because he knows how treacherous it is to sail around these islands in the East. Almost without exception, they are surrounded by coral reefs, and Simon Verbeeck does not want his proud vessel to run aground on one of the reefs. He has two depth gauges. One on the port side and one on the starboard side, here at the forecastle. Every time, he admonishes them to measure accurately, but the men themselves know what it means if they measure incorrectly.
When Simon has approached the island to a safe distance, he orders that anchor be dropped. It is too late to go ashore now. Simon Verbeeck has learned that the sea, and especially islands, sometimes present nasty surprises. He has a feeling that he should not enter this strange island now. He must wait until it is light again. Until he is fully prepared.
The anchor is dropped, and the Red Ruby comes to a standstill outside the coral reef of the island. The skipper gives the order that two longboats be made ready to take a number of men ashore early the next morning. He orders the men to get their weapons in order. He orders them to place shovels in the longboats. Everything is done as he orders, and he decides to go to rest early that evening.
“How many men are you taking ashore tomorrow, Simon?” asks Wilhelm Rieckert.
“Three-quarters of the crew,” Simon replies. “I think we will have to take three longboats.”
“Isn’t that a little risky?” asks Rieckert.
“I don’t think so,” Simon replies. “I don’t see any vessel here by the island.”
“We couldn’t see the other side of the island, you know that, Simon.”
“That’s true again,” the skipper replies. “We were a little foolish, weren’t...
| Erscheint lt. Verlag | 3.9.2025 |
|---|---|
| Reihe/Serie | Red Ruby |
| Illustrationen | Meiring Fouche |
| Mitarbeit |
Zusammenstellung: Meiring Fouche |
| Übersetzer | Meiring Fouche |
| Sprache | englisch |
| Themenwelt | Literatur ► Fantasy / Science Fiction ► Fantasy |
| Literatur ► Romane / Erzählungen | |
| Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Freizeit / Hobby ► Sammeln / Sammlerkataloge | |
| Kinder- / Jugendbuch | |
| Schlagworte | ebook pirates • english action and adventure books • historical romance and action • meiring fouche • pirates • pirate stories • red ruby • red ruby ebook series • red ruby series • sea adventure • sea pirate ebook • sea pirate stories • sea pirate story • Treasure Hunt |
| ISBN-10 | 1-7764915-5-6 / 1776491556 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1-7764915-5-1 / 9781776491551 |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
| Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
Digital Rights Management: ohne DRM
Dieses eBook enthält kein DRM oder Kopierschutz. Eine Weitergabe an Dritte ist jedoch rechtlich nicht zulässig, weil Sie beim Kauf nur die Rechte an der persönlichen Nutzung erwerben.
Dateiformat: EPUB (Electronic Publication)
EPUB ist ein offener Standard für eBooks und eignet sich besonders zur Darstellung von Belletristik und Sachbüchern. Der Fließtext wird dynamisch an die Display- und Schriftgröße angepasst. Auch für mobile Lesegeräte ist EPUB daher gut geeignet.
Systemvoraussetzungen:
PC/Mac: Mit einem PC oder Mac können Sie dieses eBook lesen. Sie benötigen dafür die kostenlose Software Adobe Digital Editions.
eReader: Dieses eBook kann mit (fast) allen eBook-Readern gelesen werden. Mit dem amazon-Kindle ist es aber nicht kompatibel.
Smartphone/Tablet: Egal ob Apple oder Android, dieses eBook können Sie lesen. Sie benötigen dafür eine kostenlose App.
Geräteliste und zusätzliche Hinweise
Buying eBooks from abroad
For tax law reasons we can sell eBooks just within Germany and Switzerland. Regrettably we cannot fulfill eBook-orders from other countries.
aus dem Bereich