Autumn 1697
"Admiral Drake."
Francis Drake struggled to sit upright. "Madame President."
"Oh, lie still." Pocahontas smiled at the injured sailor. "I didn't come all the way to Fort Oranje just to injure you further."
"Ah, yes, ma'am." Drake settled back with a sigh of relief. "How did you come here, ma'am? It's a long road from New Bath."
Pocahontas grinned. "I'm not so old yet that I've forgotten how to ride a horse."
Drake choked on the mental image. "I, ah, imagine the cabinet weren't overly pleased with that."
Pocahontas nodded. "Jefferson thinks it's an offense to the dignity of my office, Minuit feels it shows I'm regressing to my ancestral savage nature, and Vazquez de Coronado is convinced the REF are going to slip past Washington and take me captive." She smiled warmly at the Admiral. "For my part, I have never been one to leave a wounded friend alone."
Drake bowed his head as best he could. "I thank you, ma'am." He coughed, sipped water from the bottle by his bed. "The war… how goes it, ma'am?"
"Other than a certain Admiral failing to keep his ship in one piece?" Pocahontas shook her head. "About as expected. Your action gave a portion of the enemy fleet pause - one Man-of-War was put to flight - but the remainder seem set to maraud down the New Holland coast. Vice-Admiral Jones has taken the flag in the frigate Charity and is sailing to meet them."
Drake laughed. "I bet he was sore disappointed by that. He has been talking about his Man-of-War flagship since we laid the keel."
"He will have it in due time," the President assured him. "He can go back to waiting as soon as my Admiral is back on the deck."
"Ah. About that, ma'am…" Drake patted his immobilised leg. "The good doctors say I'll be laid up almost as long as Treasurer herself. They doubt I'll be shipshape again for the next campaigning season, let alone this one."
"Hmm." Pocahontas frowned. "That certainly is inconsiderate of you. Do you think Vice-Admiral Jones can handle it?"
"Absolutely." Drake gave a firm nod. "John Paul may be a bit skittish at times, but give the man an enemy to follow and he'll be on them like a foxhound."
"I shall assume that's a good thing." Pocahontas smiled, but then good humour soured somewhat. "As for the war on land… Fernambuco has fallen."
"Damn." Drake shook his head. "Sorry, ma'am. Did we hurt them for it?"
"De Soto says they paid double for each of our men they took," Pocahontas said. "Which is less of a consolation to me than I thought it would be."
Drake's lip twisted. "Yes, Madame President," he agreed. "Sending men to death or captivity is rarely easy."
"So I am discovering." Pocahontas shook her head slowly. "Washington - he's taken the cavalry up to the Thames Valley, I don't know if you've heard - before he left, he said that the siege had split the enemy force. That it should render them amenable to… 'divide and conquer'."
"Let us all pray it is so." Drake frowned. "That level of information… he must have a scout patrol right up in the woods around the city. I don't know that I like their chances."
"Yes." The President's smile was thin, humourless. "I have had that conversation with the General. That was my introduction to the term… 'acceptable losses'."
~
Alas, poor Fern. On the plus side, it's about the most useless city the English could capture (other than Oranjestad, stuck way out to Fern's west and with no road access). Their infantry and artillery are two turns away from anywhere, which means three turns to attack range. Their cavalry is more of a risk - when I hit End Turn, the ones in the city are going to be able to use their 4 moves to get a long way into our territory.
Which is why, before the declaration, I made sure we had at least one artillery in every city. We can't move them around effectively as a defensive force - not when the enemy has four times our range - but an artillery unit in a city should be able to take at least a few cavs with it when it goes. And then the mobile force can come into play.
As to Admiral Drake here - I'm giving him (and the rest of the navy) two lives. The first time their ships get sent to drydock, they will come out of it alive. The second time, they're gone for good. Characters to whom this applies are Drake, John Paul Jones, and Magellan (if he ever comes back). Jan de Witt and Benjamin Franklin are currently in Europe, so might ship in at some point, and will follow the same rules. Anybody else who gets on a boat, however, will sink like a rock.
The other military types - Washington, La Salle, Revere, Bolivar, Cortes - only get one life. If the army I claim they're with gets wiped out, they will be killed along with it. The same goes for Coronado and de Soto, if I ever identify them with specific scouts.
The rest of the government (there's another 13 of them) will be considered captured if the city they're in is taken (currently New Bath). If for some reason I use a unit to represent some or all of them, they will die if it does, and be captured is it is.
Is this the point where I start taking bets on how many of them will get through the war alive? (Answer: not really. It's not exactly a harrowing battle.)
Francis Drake
Real World: The first man to captain a ship through an entire circumnavigation, after Magellan foolishly died halfway several decades earlier. He claimed California for England, fought the Spanish Armada, and was a pirate. Wait, I mean privateer! 1540-1596.
FreeCol: Makes your Privateers 50% stronger. Joined the Congress in 1653.
West Wessex: Admiral of the Fleet. Having spent his early career harrying French shipping down south, he has now taken command of the entire navy. And then gotten himself nearly killed, because even a boosted Privateer is no match for a Man-of-War.
"Admiral Drake."
Francis Drake struggled to sit upright. "Madame President."
"Oh, lie still." Pocahontas smiled at the injured sailor. "I didn't come all the way to Fort Oranje just to injure you further."
"Ah, yes, ma'am." Drake settled back with a sigh of relief. "How did you come here, ma'am? It's a long road from New Bath."
Pocahontas grinned. "I'm not so old yet that I've forgotten how to ride a horse."
Drake choked on the mental image. "I, ah, imagine the cabinet weren't overly pleased with that."
Pocahontas nodded. "Jefferson thinks it's an offense to the dignity of my office, Minuit feels it shows I'm regressing to my ancestral savage nature, and Vazquez de Coronado is convinced the REF are going to slip past Washington and take me captive." She smiled warmly at the Admiral. "For my part, I have never been one to leave a wounded friend alone."
Drake bowed his head as best he could. "I thank you, ma'am." He coughed, sipped water from the bottle by his bed. "The war… how goes it, ma'am?"
"Other than a certain Admiral failing to keep his ship in one piece?" Pocahontas shook her head. "About as expected. Your action gave a portion of the enemy fleet pause - one Man-of-War was put to flight - but the remainder seem set to maraud down the New Holland coast. Vice-Admiral Jones has taken the flag in the frigate Charity and is sailing to meet them."
Drake laughed. "I bet he was sore disappointed by that. He has been talking about his Man-of-War flagship since we laid the keel."
"He will have it in due time," the President assured him. "He can go back to waiting as soon as my Admiral is back on the deck."
"Ah. About that, ma'am…" Drake patted his immobilised leg. "The good doctors say I'll be laid up almost as long as Treasurer herself. They doubt I'll be shipshape again for the next campaigning season, let alone this one."
"Hmm." Pocahontas frowned. "That certainly is inconsiderate of you. Do you think Vice-Admiral Jones can handle it?"
"Absolutely." Drake gave a firm nod. "John Paul may be a bit skittish at times, but give the man an enemy to follow and he'll be on them like a foxhound."
"I shall assume that's a good thing." Pocahontas smiled, but then good humour soured somewhat. "As for the war on land… Fernambuco has fallen."
"Damn." Drake shook his head. "Sorry, ma'am. Did we hurt them for it?"
"De Soto says they paid double for each of our men they took," Pocahontas said. "Which is less of a consolation to me than I thought it would be."
Drake's lip twisted. "Yes, Madame President," he agreed. "Sending men to death or captivity is rarely easy."
"So I am discovering." Pocahontas shook her head slowly. "Washington - he's taken the cavalry up to the Thames Valley, I don't know if you've heard - before he left, he said that the siege had split the enemy force. That it should render them amenable to… 'divide and conquer'."
"Let us all pray it is so." Drake frowned. "That level of information… he must have a scout patrol right up in the woods around the city. I don't know that I like their chances."
"Yes." The President's smile was thin, humourless. "I have had that conversation with the General. That was my introduction to the term… 'acceptable losses'."
~
Alas, poor Fern. On the plus side, it's about the most useless city the English could capture (other than Oranjestad, stuck way out to Fern's west and with no road access). Their infantry and artillery are two turns away from anywhere, which means three turns to attack range. Their cavalry is more of a risk - when I hit End Turn, the ones in the city are going to be able to use their 4 moves to get a long way into our territory.
Which is why, before the declaration, I made sure we had at least one artillery in every city. We can't move them around effectively as a defensive force - not when the enemy has four times our range - but an artillery unit in a city should be able to take at least a few cavs with it when it goes. And then the mobile force can come into play.
As to Admiral Drake here - I'm giving him (and the rest of the navy) two lives. The first time their ships get sent to drydock, they will come out of it alive. The second time, they're gone for good. Characters to whom this applies are Drake, John Paul Jones, and Magellan (if he ever comes back). Jan de Witt and Benjamin Franklin are currently in Europe, so might ship in at some point, and will follow the same rules. Anybody else who gets on a boat, however, will sink like a rock.
The other military types - Washington, La Salle, Revere, Bolivar, Cortes - only get one life. If the army I claim they're with gets wiped out, they will be killed along with it. The same goes for Coronado and de Soto, if I ever identify them with specific scouts.
The rest of the government (there's another 13 of them) will be considered captured if the city they're in is taken (currently New Bath). If for some reason I use a unit to represent some or all of them, they will die if it does, and be captured is it is.
Is this the point where I start taking bets on how many of them will get through the war alive? (Answer: not really. It's not exactly a harrowing battle.)
Francis Drake
Real World: The first man to captain a ship through an entire circumnavigation, after Magellan foolishly died halfway several decades earlier. He claimed California for England, fought the Spanish Armada, and was a pirate. Wait, I mean privateer! 1540-1596.
FreeCol: Makes your Privateers 50% stronger. Joined the Congress in 1653.
West Wessex: Admiral of the Fleet. Having spent his early career harrying French shipping down south, he has now taken command of the entire navy. And then gotten himself nearly killed, because even a boosted Privateer is no match for a Man-of-War.