The Ship
The Founding of the Bile Duchess
In the autumn of 1707, in a yard near Port Royal where the hemp-rot ran thick and the air itself seemed to fester, the French shipwright Marin Gaschet laid down the keel of what would become the Bile Duchess — then nothing but a sloop-frame, sharp-built and slender, intended for the sugar trade between Hispaniola and Marseille. The frame was elegant even unfinished: fifty-eight feet on the deck, beam narrow enough that a man could almost throw a line across her width, the entry sharp as a knife-blade and the transom raked back in the Caribbean fashion. She was meant for speed and profit, nothing more sinister. But wood remembers.
When yellow fever burned through Port Royal that same winter — the harbourmaster’s corpse bloating in the pest-house, the air above the docks humming with flies — Gaschet’s yard was condemned and abandoned wholesale. The Duchess sat in her stocks for three years, her frame drinking in the miasma, her timber warping and swelling in the tropical rot, as if the disease had become part of her very grain. The shipwright never returned to finish her. They say he died in Cartagena, his skin the colour of old bilge-water.
In 1710, a privateer captain named Vane — no relation to the Charles Vane who would hang at Execution Dock, but hungry with the same appetite — seized her during a raid on the harbour. He finished her with salvaged oak and a single raked mast, rigged her for close-hauled speed with a gaff mainsail that could draw a full gale. Within six months, men began to die. A bosun’s mate first, his body blackening in the hold before they threw him overboard. Then a rigger. Then two ordinary seamen with boils that would not heal, their skin turning the colour of old bruises. Vane abandoned her in Tortuga and took passage home on a merchantman that sank three weeks after taking him aboard.
The sloop lay beached and shunned until 1715, when a woman named Eliza Blacklung — then captain of nothing, working a smuggler’s brig out of Barbados — walked her length alone at dawn and understood what the island knew: that the Duchess was not cursed, but loaded. She recruited men without fear or family, sailors already marked by pox, already half-dead from previous ventures. With Quartermaster Elena Morales and Bosun Neville Ives, she refitted the sloop’s waist for cannon work — not conventional iron, but something darker. The first fumigation tube was cast in a fever-haze, packed with the organs of plague dead, sealed with pitch and prayer. When Blacklung fired her battery at a Spanish quarantine galley off Montego Bay in the spring of ‘16, the crew of that galley abandoned their posts screaming before a single round of iron reached their hull. The Duchess took their cargo without blood. They say the crew still whispers her name at nightfall, and that no man who walks her deck ever truly recovers his fear.
Armament
The Bile Duchess: Her Battery and Firing Doctrine
The Bile Duchess carries eighteen guns arranged in a configuration that marks her purpose as plainly as her black-stained hull. The twelve-pounders — six per side — mount on wooden carriages bevelled low along her rails, their barrels a dull iron-grey that never sees full polish. These are her teeth for conventional work: merchant defence, revenue cutters, and the occasional frigate foolish enough to give chase. They sit inboard enough that the sloop’s slight freeboard does not drown them in a seaway; Bosun Neville Ives has seen to it that every gun can run out and fire even when the Duchess heels to a beam reach, which she does as naturally as breathing.
But the fumigation cannons are her true signature. Mounted in the waist and on the fo’c’sle — four amidships, two forward — these truncated, thick-walled pieces throw no shot. Instead they discharge canister packed with pitch-sealed casks of diseased matter: smallpox cultures, carrion rendered to powder, the sealed organs of plague victims. The gun crews pack them with linseed oil and tallow to preserve their potency across long passages, and the air around the amidships battery carries a permanent reek of corruption that no amount of vinegar-swab can fully mask. Men who tend those pieces develop a peculiar grimness about the mouth, as though they are always breathing through cloth.
When a fumigation cannon fires, the sound is not the snap of a twelve-pounder but a wet thump — the sound of pestilent cargo leaving the bore — followed by the whistle and scatter of fragments across an enemy deck. During the bombardment of a rival quarantine station off the Windward Passage in ‘23, the Duchess loosed her full battery in sequence, walked twelve-pounder shot through gun ports while the fumigation cannons burst overhead, raining infected cargo on the garrison below. Men have reported entire crews abandoning their vessels after a single volley, choking and screaming before they even understand what touched them. The psychological effect is worth more than tonnage of iron shot.
The broadside weight runs to seventy pounds of iron alone; add the fumigation discharge and a single pass delivers something nearer to terror translated into physics. Gun crews are drawn from the Cabal’s own trained men — hard cases who understand their business. They drill at the carriage twice weekly, and the captains of gun are marked by scarred hands and a certain deafness in their starboard ears from years of the concussion.
Captain Blacklung’s standing order before any run-in is spoken plain: Load the fumigation tubes first. Iron shot follows. We do not sink our prizes — we make them unwantable.