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Authors: Richard Woodman

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Chapter 6
April–May 1804
The Secret Agent

As April turned into a glorious May, Lieutenant Rogers continued to smart from Drinkwater's rebuke. It galled him that even the news that the
Bonaparte
had been condemned as a prize and purchased into the Royal Navy – thus making him several hundred pounds richer – failed to raise his spirits. There were few areas in which Rogers evinced any sensitivity, but one was in his good opinion of himself, and it struck him that he had come to rely upon his commander's reinforcement of this. Such hitherto uncharacteristic reliance upon another further annoyed him, and to it he began to add other causes for grievance. Drinkwater's report had said little, certainly nothing that would elevate his first lieutenant and place him on the quarterdeck of the prize as a commander. In fact Drinkwater had sent the prize into Portsmouth with the wounded under the master's mate Tyrrell, so, apart from his prize money, Rogers had dismissed the notion that he could expect anything further from the capture. In addition to this it seemed that the impetus to
Antigone
's cruise had gone, that no further chance of glory, advancement, or simply resuming his normal relationship with Drinkwater would offer itself to him. He took refuge in the only action left to him as first lieutenant; he harried the crew.
Antigone
's people were employed constantly in a relentless series of drills. They shifted sails, exercised at small-arms and cutlasses, and sent down the topgallant and topmasts. To kill any residual boredom they even got the heavy lower yards across the rails a-portlast. When Drinkwater drily expressed satisfaction, Rogers demurred respectfully and repeated the evolution until it was accomplished to his own satisfaction.

For his part, Drinkwater accepted this propitiation as evidence of Rogers's contrition, and his own better nature responded so that the difference between them gradually diminished. Besides, news of Gorton's slow death at Haslar Hospital seemed to conclude the incident.

Towards the end of April they had spoken to the 18-gun brig-sloop
Vincejo
on her way to the westward, with orders to destroy the coastal trade off south Brittany. Her commander had come aboard and closeted himself with Drinkwater for half an hour. Their discussion
was routine and friendly. After Wright's departure Drinkwater was able to confirm the speculations of the officers and explain that their late visitor was indeed the John Wesley Wright who, as a lieutenant, had escaped from French custody in Paris with Captain Sir Sydney Smith. He also mentioned that Wright was far from pleased with the condition of his ship, its armament, or its manning, and this seemed to divert the officers into a discussion about the ‘
Vincey Joe
', an old Spanish prize, held to be cranky and highly unsuitable for its present task.

Drinkwater kept to himself the orders Wright had passed him and the knowledge that Wright, like himself twelve years earlier, had been employed by Lord Dungarth's department in the landing and recovery of British agents on the coast of France. The orders Wright had brought emanated from Lord Dungarth via Admiral Keith, and prompted Drinkwater to increase his officers' vigilance in the interception and seizure of French fishing boats. Hitherto fishermen had been largely left alone. They were, as D'Auvergne had pointed out, the chief source of claret and cognac in England, and were not averse to parting with information of interest to the captains of British cruisers. But their knowledge of the English coast and its more obscure landing places, the suitability of their boats to carry troops and their general usefulness in forwarding the grand design of invasion had prompted an Admiralty order to detain them and destroy their craft. In this way
Antigone
passed the first weeks of a beautiful summer.

It was from their captures, and from the dispatch luggers and cutters with which Lord Keith kept in touch with his scattered cruisers, that Drinkwater and his officers learned of the consequences of the attempt made by discontented elements in France to assassinate Napoleon Bonaparte. The Pichegru-Cadoudal conspiracy had implicated both wings of French politics and been exposed in the closing weeks of the previous year. It had taken some time to round up the conspirators and had culminated in the astounding news that Bonaparte's gendarmes had illegally entered the neighbouring state of Baden and abducted the young Duc D'Enghien. The duke had been given a drum-head court-martial which implicated the Bourbons in the plot against Bonaparte, and summarily shot in a ditch at Vincennes. Drinkwater's reaction to the execution of D'Enghien combined with the orders he had received from Wright to extend
Antigone
's cruising ground further east towards Pointe d'Ailly.

‘Standing close inshore like this,' Drinkwater overheard Rogers
grumbling to Hill as he sat reading with his skylight open, ‘we're not going to capture a damn thing. We're more like a bloody whore trailing her skirt up and down the street than a damned frigate. I wish we were in the West Indies. Even a fool of a Frenchman isn't going to put to sea with us sitting here for all to see.'

‘No,' said Hill reflectively, and Drinkwater put down his book to hear what he had to say in reply. ‘But it could be that that is just what the Old Man wants.'

‘What? To be seen?'

‘Yes. When I was in the
Kestrel
, cutter, back in ninety-two we used to do just this waiting to pick up a spy.'

‘Wasn't our Nathaniel aboard
Kestrel
then?'

‘Yes,' said Hill, ‘and that cove Wright has been doing something similar more recently.'

‘Good God! Why didn't you mention it before?'

Drinkwater heard Hill laugh. ‘I never thought of it.'

In the end it was the fishing boat that found them as Drinkwater intended. She came swooping over the waves, a brown lugsail reefed down and hauled taut against the fresh westerly that set white wave-caps sparkling in the low sunshine of early morning. Drinkwater answered the summons to the quarterdeck to find Quilhampton backing the main-topsail and heaving the ship to. He levelled his glass on the approaching boat but could make nothing of her beyond the curve of her dark sail, apart from an occasional face that peered ahead and shouted at the helmsman. A minute or two later the boat was alongside and a man in riding clothes was bawling in imperious English for a chair at a yardarm whip. The men at the rail looked aft at Drinkwater.

He nodded: ‘Do as he asks, Mr Q.'

As soon as the stranger's feet touched the deck he dextrously extricated himself from the bosun's chair, moved swiftly to the rail and whipped a pistol from his belt.

‘What the devil are you about, sir?' shouted Drinkwater seeing the barrel levelled at the men in the boat.

‘Shootin' the damned Frogs, Captain, and saving you your duty!' The hammer clicked impotently on a misfire and the stranger turned angrily. ‘Has anyone a pistol handy?'

Drinkwater strode across the deck. ‘Put up that gun, sir, d'you hear me!' He was outraged. That the stranger should escape from an enemy country and then shoot the men who had risked everything to
bring him off to
Antigone
seemed a piece of quite unnecessary brutality.

‘Here, take this.' Drinkwater turned to see Walmsley offering the stranger a loaded pistol.

‘Good God! What,
you
here, Walmsley! Thank you . . .'

‘Put up that gun, sir!' Drinkwater closed the gap between him and the spy and knocked up the weapon. The man spun round. His face was suffused with rage.

‘A pox on you! Who the deuce d'you think you are to meddle in my affairs?'

‘Have a care! I command here and you'll not fire into that boat!'

‘D'you know who I am, damn you?'

‘Indeed, Lord Camelford, I do; and I received orders to expect you some days ago.' He dropped his voice as Camelford looked round as though to obtain some support from Walmsley. ‘Your reputation with pistols precedes you, my Lord. I must insist on your surrendering even those waterlogged weapons you still have in your belt.' He indicated a further two butts protruding from Camelford's waistband.

Camelford's face twisted into a snarl and he leaned forward, thrusting himself close to Drinkwater. ‘You'll pay for your insolence, Captain. I do not think you know what influence I command, nor how necessary it was that I despatched those fishermen . . .'

‘After promising them immunity to capture if they brought you offshore I don't doubt,' Drinkwater said, matching Camelford's anger. ‘No fisherman would have risked bringing you off and under my guns without such assurance. It's common knowledge that we have been taking every fishing boat we can lay our hands on . . .'

‘And now look, you damned fool, those two got clean away . . .' Camelford pointed to where the brown lugsail leaned away from the rail, full of wind and hauling off from
Antigone
's side as her seamen stood and witnessed the little drama amidships.

‘And you have kept your word, my Lord,' Drinkwater said soothingly, ‘and now shall we go to my cabin? Put the ship on a course of north north-east, Mr Q. I want to fetch The Downs without delay.'

‘Who the hell is he?' Rogers asked Hill as first lieutenant and master stood on the quarterdeck supervising their preparations for coming to an anchor in The Downs. ‘D'you know?'

‘Yes. Don't you recall him as Lieutenant Pitt? Vancouver left him ashore at Hawaii back in ninety-four for insubordination . . .'

‘Is he the fellow that shot Peterson, first luff of the
Perdrix
, in, what, ninety-eight?'

‘The same fellow. And the court-martial upheld his defence that Peterson, though senior, had refused to obey a lawful order . . .'

‘Having the name Pitt helped a great deal, I don't doubt,' said Rogers. ‘He resigned after it though, a regular kill-buck by the look of it. I thought Drinkwater was going to have a fit when he came aboard.'

‘Oh he'll get away with almost anything. He's related to Lord Grenville by marriage, Billy Pitt by blood, and, I believe, to Sir Sydney Smith. I daresay it's due to the latter pair that he's been employed as an agent. I wonder what he was doing in France?'

‘Mmmm. It must take some stomach to act as a spy over there,' Rogers's tone was one of admiration as he nodded in the direction of the cliffs of Gris Nez.

‘Oh yes. Undoubtedly,' mused Hill, ‘but I wonder what exactly . . .' The conversation broke off as a thunderous-looking Drinkwater came on deck.

‘Are we ready to anchor, Mr Rogers?'

‘Aye, sir, as near as . . . all ready, sir.' Rogers saw the look in Drinkwater's eye and went forward.

‘Very well, bring-to close to the flagship, Mr Hill, then clear away my barge!'

Drinkwater had had a wretched time with the obnoxious Camelford. In the end he had virtually imprisoned the spy in his own cabin with a few bottles and spent most of the time on deck. Actually avoiding a ridiculous challenge from the man's deliberate provocation tested his powers of self-restraint to the utmost. He found it hard to imagine what on earth a person of Camelford's stamp was doing on behalf of the British government in France. After they had anchored, Drinkwater went below and found Camelford slumped in his own chair, the portrait of Hortense Santhonax spread on the table before him. He opened his mouth to protest at the ransacking of his effects but Camelford slurred:

‘D'you know this woman, Captain Drinkwater?'

‘The portrait was captured with the ship,' Drinkwater answered non-committally.

‘I asked if you know her.'

‘I know who she is.'

‘If you ever meet her or her husband, Captain, do what I wanted to
do to those fishermen. Shoot 'em both!'

Drinkwater sensed Camelford was in earnest. Whatever the man's defects, he was, at that moment, making an effort to be both conciliatory and informative. Besides, experience had taught Drinkwater that agents recently liberated from a false existence surrounded by enemies were apt to behave irrationally, and news of Santhonax or his wife held an especial fascination for him. He grinned at Camelford.

‘In
his
case I doubt if I'd hesitate.'

‘You know Edouard Santhonax too, then?'

Drinkwater nodded. ‘He was briefly my prisoner on two occasions.'

‘Did you know Wright was captured in the Morbihan?'

‘Wright? Of the
Vincejo
?'

‘Yes. He was overwhelmed in a calm by a number of gunboats and forced to surrender. They put him in the Temple and cut his throat with a rusty knife.' Camelford tapped the cracked canvas before him. ‘Her husband visited the Temple the night before, with a commission from the Emperor Napoleon . . .'

‘The
Emperor
Napoleon?' queried Drinkwater, bemused by this strange and improbable story.

‘Hadn't you heard, Captain?' Camelford leaned back. ‘Oh my goodness no, how could you? Bonaparte the First Consul is transfigured, Captain Drinkwater. He is become Napoleon, Emperor of the French. A plebiscite of the French people has raised him to the purple.'

Following Camelford's welcome departure, Drinkwater was summoned to attend Lord Keith. As he kicked his heels aboard Keith's flagship, the
Monarch
, Drinkwater learned that not only had Napoleon secured his position as Emperor of the French but his own patron, Earl St Vincent, had been dismissed from the Admiralty. The old man refused to serve under William Pitt who had just been returned as Prime Minister in place of Addington. Pitt had said some harsh things about St Vincent when in opposition and had replaced him as First Lord of the Admiralty with Lord Melville. But Drinkwater's thoughts were not occupied with such considerations for long. His mind returned to the image of Wright lying in the Temple prison with his throat cut and the shadowy figure of Edouard Santhonax somewhere in the background. He wondered how accurate Camelford's information was and what Camelford was doing in France. Was it possible that a man of Camelford's erratic character had been employed to do
what Cadoudal and Pichegru had failed to do: to assassinate Napoleon Bonaparte? The only credible explanation for that hypothesis was that Camelford had been sent into France in a private capacity. Drinkwater vaguely remembered Camelford had avoided the serious consequences of his duel with Peterson. If that had been due to family connections, was it possible that someone had put him up to an attempt on the life of Bonaparte? Pitt himself, for instance, to whom Camelford was related and who had every motive for wishing the Corsican Tyrant dead.

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