more than one onza—the value formerly general
among them for slaves. He promised that the sum
spent by the encomenderos for that purpose would be
repaid afterward from the royal exchequer. However,
this did not seem any lessening of the severity, for
he improperly called those Indians slaves; but [among
themselves] their masters treat them and love them
as children, feed them at their tables, and marry
them to their daughters. Besides, slaves were
then valued higher. To the anger of those who
were about to be sold, was joined that of the encomenderos,
who were obliged to contribute from their property
for expenses—which, in their opinion, were
not very necessary—and to offend their tributaries
by forcibly seizing them; while they themselves would
never collect the price they were paying in advance,
which was [to them] the most certain thing. The
governor gave out that those galleys were to assure
the country and defend it from the danger that threatened;
for he knew absolutely that the emperor of Japon was
going to attack it with a huge war-fleet. Without
galleys it could not be defended, and consequently
he was forced to man them with those slaves, since
other rowers were lacking. These slaves were
not to be chained in the galley, or treated as convicts;
but would receive so great kindness that they themselves
would prefer that treatment to that of their owners,
whom they already had as fathers and fathers-in-law.
These arguments, and the pressing need for defense,
silenced all objections. But they did not silence
report, for already it was known that he had come
from Espana, pledged to the king, his ministers, relatives,
and backers, to the Ternate undertaking; and, although
he concealed it, unknown authors divulged it.
Yet some tried to persuade him not to entrust the
defense of Filipinas to the Chinese or Sangleys, for
no bond, natural or civil, had ever bound or attracted
them to any love for the islands. They bade him
remember the recent example of what those people did
on an occasion on which they were employed by his
predecessor, and to be on his guard against them.
He [i.e., Vera], sending a reenforcement of
men, ammunition, and food to the fort and settlement
of Cagayan—which is on the shore of that
island of Luzon, eighty leguas from the city of Manila—inasmuch
as he then had no ship in which to send them, and
being constrained by his present necessity, thought
that he could supply the deficiency by using for that
purpose a ship of the Chinese, then anchored at that
port and about to return to China. He ordered
the reenforcement to be embarked on that boat and
the Chinese to convey it; and to leave it, on passing,
at its destination, since that was directly on their
way. He promised the Chinese to recompense and
reward them for that service. They offered to
do it with great display of willingness, howbeit that
their cunning was seen in the sequel, and what opportunity
teaches to him that awaits it. The Chinese set