Carrying a gunnysack containing all his earthly possessions—an extra change of clothes, a knife, a few packages of herbs, and that universal symbol of a physician, the urine flask—Sterling Thorne dropped heavily into the barge that would row him to the docks. Witt Dekker, first mate aboard the Gloria Elizabeth, followed, nearly upsetting the skittish craft with his massive weight. His yappy terrier, a brown mongrel the Dutchman loved with an unseemly passion, sprang from the deck into his master’s arms.

Sterling moved silently toward the side of the boat, unwilling to risk an encounter with either the surly Dutchman or his dog. Dekker had been a hard taskmaster on the voyage, trying the patience of the predominantly English crew with his constant boasting about Dutch intelligence, foresight, and might. Well, now they were in Batavia, a Dutch colony, and Sterling intended to see for himself what the commercially minded Dutch had accomplished in this part of the globe.

Dekker settled on the bench with a self-satisfied sigh, drew the barking terrier into his lap, then nodded toward the oarsman. The barge set off, pulling through green water that sparkled in the afternoon sun. Around them, small barks and sculls paddled like curious ducks, skittering in and out among the larger ships at anchor in the harbor.

“So this is Batavia,” Sterling remarked, clasping his hands as his eyes roamed over the horizon. Beyond the docks, a line of brown rooftops stood like a wall; behind the rooftops, majestic green mountains rose like ancient warriors, determined to safeguard the heart of the island against the encroaching Europeans.

“Ja, it is,” Dekker answered, his broad hands holding the dog firmly in the boat. His deep voice rasped with excitement. “And what a time we shall have tonight, my friend. If you want to know where to find a drink, a bed, or a woman, you ask me, ja?”

“Thank you, Dekker.” Sterling narrowed his eyes as he studied the settlement that slowly came into view. “But I only want to find the home of my friend Dr. Lang Carstens. I hope to join him in his medical practice.”

“Why would you want to stay on land when you’ve had a sweet taste of the sea?” Dekker asked, slapping Sterling on the back with more friendliness than he had shown in their entire journey. “Why not remain a ship’s surgeon? The V.O.C. sends out a convoy or expedition nearly every month. And if you have a question about a particular captain’s reputation, you come find me.” One corner of his broad mouth twisted upward in a half-smile. “I know all the sea captains, and they all know me. And I can usually be found at the Broad Street Tavern, or thereabouts. That’s a friendly place, and they don’t mind if I bring Snuggerheid with me.” He scratched the animal under its scruffy chin and chuckled.

“I’ll keep that in mind,” Sterling answered absently. He glanced for a moment at the obnoxious dog. Dekker had told Sterling—and anyone else who would listen—that he’d named the animal with the Dutch word for intelligence because his father had always insisted Dekker was as dull as a clod. The Dutchman obviously hadn’t known his son very well, for Witt Dekker was cunning, able to manipulate men in a ruthless manner that often sent a shiver down Sterling’s spine.

Sterling leaned forward as the barge pulled up to the docks. A loader tossed down a rope and he caught it, tying the hawser with ease. Without lingering to say farewell to Dekker or the oarsmen, he leaped onto the dock and hurried to lose himself in the crowd.

He’d had enough of seamen. He yearned for the quiet atmosphere of a home, someplace where he could sit and converse with an intelligent man about something other than sailors’ superstitions and seamen’s complaints. He’d seen enough contusions, rope burns, and bleeding gums to last a lifetime. Though he didn’t expect to find better conditions in this Dutch outpost, at least he’d be able to attend his patients in a room that didn’t roll with every swell of the sea.

The long wharf curved nearly a half-mile around the edge of the harbor, with smaller docks protruding from it like stumpy teeth from an ill-tended mouth. Three-masted frigates and brigantines, schooners, and small sloops rode at anchor along the wharf, a full range of the ships that provisioned Batavia, a colony only twenty-three years old.

Sterling felt a shiver of anticipation ripple through him at the thought of working in a place not far removed from its frontier days. For this kind of experience he had left England and its traditional thinking. After spending seven years obtaining his Master of Arts at Oxford, he had acquired his M.D. degree at Montpellier, then had returned to London to be examined by the College of Physicians. Now, duly licensed and recommended by a letter from none other than King Charles’s personal physician, he was eager to practice in a place where he would treat more than ague and the sweating sickness so common in England.

Sterling absently patted the parchment tucked between his shirt and his skin. The letter was from Dr. Beaton Norwell, Lang Carstens’s English cousin and Sterling’s friend. Beaton had never met his renowned Dutch cousin, but he was a good enough sport to give Sterling an excuse to leave the country. The renowned Dr. Carstens was bound to be advancing in age, Beaton told Sterling, and might be eager to acquire a younger partner to assist in his medical practice. “In any case, he is a gentleman,” Beaton had assured him as he handed over the letter of recommendation. “Good manners, at least, will prevent him from tossing you out on the street without at least a meal and the offer of a night’s hospitality.”

The two men shook hands before Sterling departed, and even then his blood had run thick with guilt. He had told his weeping mother that he wanted to leave England to investigate prospects of opportunity for his brothers in Batavia, but everyone in the village knew better. The real catalyst for Sterling’s abrupt departure was Ernestina Martin, a simpering country beauty who’d rather faint than fight. She had set her cap for Sterling long before he became a doctor, long before the crops failed and Sterling’s father had to sell off most of the family acreage. Not even the threat of poverty could dissuade her from pursuing Sterling. Since his return from London she’d taken to sitting in his mother’s kitchen, her eyes and ears attuned to anything that had to do with the Thorne’s eldest son.

His mother wanted Sterling to marry her; his father had approved the match even before he died. But though Sterling could find no fault in Ernestina’s beauty or her background, he did not think he would be able to abide her whining little sighs, her affected expressions, or her distracted feminine helplessness. How could a man lay down his burdens to sleep at night, knowing he would be driven batty all over again with the next sunrise?

As the eldest son, it should have been Sterling’s place to inherit and maintain what little remained of the estate, but he had never felt called to be a farmer. And so, to escape Ernestina’s earnest promise of a position in her father’s house, he’d gathered a few belongings, cozened a letter of recommendation from Beaton, and signed as a surgeon on the first ship sailing from London to the Spice Islands. In the new colony he hoped to make a place for himself and one of his brothers—whoever did not end up marrying the simple-minded Ernestina. Neither Mayfield nor Newland would mind marrying the pretty girl, and Sterling would be happy to let them have the family estate as a wedding gift. But the other brother would have to find his own way in the world. Feeling responsible, Sterling wanted to do all he could to help.

Now he repressed a smile at the sound of his boots clumping loudly over the docks. He walked stumpily, like a man unused to the solid feel of land beneath his feet. It had taken him three days to acquire “sea legs,” and now it seemed as though it would take some time to acquire “land legs” as well.

The dock ended at a broad street jammed with carriages, horses, donkeys, and carts. He crinkled his nose at the sudden onslaught of scents, far different from those of the sea. The smell of grease and cooking meat drifted from an open window; the sharp stench of sweat and horse dung hovered above the street. He had heard the Dutch were famous for fastidious cleanliness, but there was no evidence of that quality here at the wharf.

Slinging his bag across his shoulder, Sterling stepped off the dock and into the sweaty, shoving mob, eager to find his place in the thriving colony of Batavia.

“Sterling Thorne?” Lang Carstens crinkled his nose as if he had caught a whiff of rotten potatoes. He was a plump little man with a curly gray beard that surrounded his face like a storm cloud, and from the bleariness of the old man’s eyes, Sterling deduced that his visit had interrupted the doctor’s afternoon nap. The housekeeper had led Sterling to the doctor’s study, and after the space of several minutes, the elderly doctor had finally appeared in the doorway and tottered to his desk, his eyes intent upon the letter Sterling had delivered to the housekeeper.

“At your service, sir.” Sterling bowed respectfully, then pointed to the crinkled parchment in the doctor’s hands. “I believe the letter will explain all. Dr. Beaton Norwell, one of King Charles’s personal physicians, is your cousin and my friend. Since I am rather in need of a position to practice the medical arts, Dr. Norwell thought you might be willing to take on an associate.”

“An associate?” The doctor’s frown deepened as he looked up.

“An assistant then.” Sterling spread his hands and tried to smile. “At the risk of seeming immodest, I can assure you, sir, that I am quite capable. I served as ship’s surgeon on the voyage from England, and—” He managed a weak laugh. “—we didn’t lose a single man.”

“A ship’s surgeon? Bah! Anyone could fill that post. Most ships just carry a carpenter on board; he can cut off a cracked leg as well as anyone.”

Sterling folded his arms and took a deep breath. “I wouldn’t think it advisable to cut off any man’s leg, Dr. Carstens,” he said, nodding formally, “but all the same, I was glad to fill that post and I believe I did my best. The captain of the Gloria Elizabeth will vouch for my skill with herbs and healing, if you would like to inquire further.”

“I have no need of an assistant.” The line of the doctor’s mouth tightened a fraction more as he thumped his desk for emphasis, then waved the parchment in his hand. “But never let any man say I turned away another in need. You may stay with me a day or two, Sterling Thorne, but know this—I need no help from you or anyone else. I am as fit for service as I was when I arrived in Batavia.”

Sterling shook his head slightly and gestured to the window behind the doctor. “The town I walked through was a busy place, Dr. Carstens,” he said, smiling. “Surely there are more people who need a doctor than there are physicians to tend them. Why, the native population on this island alone must require a great deal of your time, and I saw a great many beggars and lame at the wharf.”

“I don’t tend savages or riffraff.” The doctor dropped Sterling’s letter to his desk. “If you wish to spend your time among that sort, that’s your affair. My nature does not induce me to mingle with harlots and shysters.” He looked across the desk with an expression of complete indifference. “I shall have my housekeeper show you to your room, then I suggest you look for a place of your own.”

“I will.” Sterling struggled to maintain an even, conciliatory tone. “And I am certain I will find patients enough no matter where I look. This is certainly a large enough place to support two doctors.”

Carstens’s lined lips puckered in annoyance. “The decent folk already have a physician, Dr. Thorne. As to the others—well, Batavia is not like Europe. For one thing, the warm climate makes common people take leave of their senses. Tempers are short, and morality is in small supply, particularly among the idlers and beggars. You should stay away from the docks and the wharf; the people who live there practice immorality that is not tolerated among decent and respectable people. If you fancy yourself a gentleman, you might as well take yourself back to a more gentle country.”

“I don’t fancy myself much of anything,” Sterling answered, irritated by the doctor’s mocking tone. “But I am a good physician, and I believe God himself commands us to look after those who are weak.”

He retrieved his letter from the desk, glanced pointedly at the empty chair he had not been asked to take, then pressed his hat to his chest. “If your housekeeper could show me to a basin, I’ll wash up and take myself to the streets. I would like to be as little trouble as possible, and am reasonably certain that a willing man of my skills can find a suitable position without too much trouble.”

“But not among the respectable folk of Batavia,” the doctor snapped, wagging a finger in Sterling’s direction. “I’m their physician, and I intend to remain so until the Almighty himself prevents me.”

“Then I give you good day,” Sterling said with another bow. “Until the Almighty prevents you, sir, I suppose I’ll have to look after folk who aren’t respectable.”

He spun on his heel and moved through the doorway before the old man could protest further.