âWhat are those?' I said to Hugh.
âGalleasses - ships that have both sail and oars. The oarsmen must be practising.'
We rode on, the road thankfully beginning to level out. It was another still, muggy day and I was sweating in my robes again. A bank of trees obstructed our view of the sea, but now I had a clearer view of the island. Several patches of white dots, soldiers' tents I imagined, were scattered along the coast. Next to the narrow mouth of the harbour the town was surrounded by walls, more white tents outside. There were large marshy-looking lakes on two sides of the town walls. Portsmouth, I realized, was a natural fortress.
Hugh pointed to a square white construction halfway along the shore. âSouth Sea Castle,' he said proudly. âThe King's new fortress. The cannon there can fire far out to sea.'
I looked out on the Solent, remembering my voyage home from Yorkshire in 1541, all that had happened afterwards. I shivered.
âAre you all right, Master Shardlake?'
âA goose walking over my grave.'
AT THE FOOT OF the hill the road was raised on earthen banks, passing over an area of marsh and mud with a narrow stretch of water in the middle spanned by a stone bridge. On the far side, where the land rose again, was a soldiers' camp. Men sat outside the tents, sewing or carving, a few playing cards or dice. On the bridge soldiers stood inspecting the contents of the cart in front of us.
âThis is the only link between Portsea Island and the mainland,' Hobbey said. âIf the French were to take it the island would be cut off.'
âOur guns will sink their fleet before they land,' David said confidently. Absorbed in the view, he seemed to have forgotten about Lamkin, and his mother's attack on him. Yet there was something haunted in his face.
A soldier came up and asked our business. âLegal matters, in Portsmouth,' Hobbey answered briefly. The soldier glanced at Dyrick's and my robes and waved us on. We clattered over the bridge.
We rode across the island, along a dusty lane between an avenue of trees. Hugh turned to Hobbey, unaccustomed deference in his voice. âSir, may we ride across and get a closer look at the ships in the Haven?'
âYes, please, Father,' David added eagerly.
Hobbey looked at him indulgently. âVery well.'
We turned along a side lane and rode towards the water. We passed close to a large dockyard where dozens of men were labouring. There were several wooden derricks and a number of low structures including a long, narrow one which I recognized as a rope-walk, where lengths of rope would be coiled together to form thicker ones, dozens of feet long if necessary. Piles of large tree trunks lay around, and carpenters were busy sawing wood into different shapes and sizes. A small ship stood on a bed of mud carved into the shore, supported by thick poles. Men were working hard repairing it. There was a constant sound of hammering.
A little to the south of the dock we turned aside from the lane and halted the horses by a mudflat next to the sea, from which a welcome breeze came. There was a smell of salt and rot, the mud spattered with green seaweed. Here we had a clear view of the ships across the water. Eight of the galleasses, sixty feet long and each with an iron-tipped battering ram in front and several cannon protruding from gun ports at the side, moved across the calm, blue-green water, smooth and fast despite their boxy shape. They were using both sails and long lines of oars. I heard the regular beat of drums marking time for the oarsmen. They made impressive speed. We jumped as one fired its guns, puffs of black smoke rising from their mouths followed by loud reverberating cracks. Then it turned round, astonishingly fast.
Dyrick gave it an anxious look. Hugh gave a little mocking laugh. âDo not worry, sir, they are only practising. There are no gunballs in the cannon. No need to be afraid.' Dyrick glared at him.
âIt is their manoeuvrability that makes them so dangerous to an enemy,' Hugh said with pride.
My attention was focused on the four great warships, anchored at some distance from each other in the harbour. Their sails were reefed now and they rode gently on the calm water. They were enormous, like castles on the sea, dwarfing the galleasses. A big rowing boat was tied to the stern of each, no doubt for transporting men and supplies from shore. It was an extraordinary sight, one I realized few would ever witness. The warships were beautiful, with their clean lines and perfect balance on the water. The sides of the soaring fore- and after-castles, and the waists in the middle, were brightly painted, the Tudor colours of green and white predominating. Each had four enormous masts, the largest rising a hundred and fifty feet into the air, flags of England and the Tudor dynasty flying at the top. The largest warship made my head spin to look at it; I guessed it was the
Great Harry
, the King's flagship. A massive flag bearing the royal arms flew from the aftercastle. I saw tiny figures moving to and fro along the decks, and other ant-like figures clambering in the mesh of rigging. High in the masts I made out more men standing in little circular nests.
David said, âThose are the fighting tops. Your archers may go there.'
Even at this distance and on horseback I had to look up to see the topmasts. Hundreds of seagulls wheeled and swooped among the ships, uttering their loud sad cries.
âThat men can make such things,' Hugh said wonderingly.
Two of the galleasses approached the
Great Harry
. With remarkable speed they turned side on, the oars almost ceasing to swing. The drums stopped. They held position as though about to fire a broadside at the great warship, then the drum sounded again; the galleasses wheeled round and shot down towards the mouth of the harbour. Other galleasses were making the same quick manoeuvres with the other ships. Practice, I thought, for when the French warships come.
David pointed eagerly at the second largest ship. It was the nearest, perhaps a quarter of a mile away. It had a long, high aftercastle and an even higher forecastle from which a long bowsprit, supporting meshed lines of rigging, stretched out fifty feet. At the bottom of the bowsprit a large circular object was fixed, brightly coloured in concentric circles of red and white. âA rose,' David said. âThat is the
Mary Rose
.'
âThe King's most favoured ship,' Hugh said. âIf only we could see them move. That must be astounding.'
On top of the aftercastle of the
Mary Rose
I saw a cage of what looked like netting, held in place by wooden struts. I wondered what it was.
Dyrick pointed to what looked like the ribs of some giant beast protruding from the mudflats near us. âWhat's that?' he asked Hobbey.
âThe ribs of some ship that foundered there. Those sandbanks are treacherous, the big warships have to be careful in the Haven. That is why most are outside, at Spitbank.' He shook his head. âIf the French come it will be difficult, perhaps impossible, to get all our ships in the Haven. At anchor they need two hundred yards to turn, I am told.'
âJust within bowshot of each other,' Hugh observed.
âThere may be more dead ribs rising from the sea in a few weeks,' Feaveryear said sombrely.
âYou're cheerful,' Barak told him.
âYou joke,' Feaveryear said angrily, âbut war is ungodly and God will punish ungodly things.'
âNo,' Hugh said. âOur ships will deal with the French as Harry the Fifth did. Look at them - they are wonders, marvels. If the French come close we will board and destroy them. I wish I could be there.'
âCan you swim?' I asked.
âI can,' David answered proudly.
But Hugh shook his head. âI never learned. But I am told few sailors can. Most would be carried down by the weight of their clothing.'
I looked at him. âDo you feel no fear at the thought?'
He stared back with his usual blank expression. âNone.'
âThe heartstone he wears protects him.' David said, a touch of mockery in his voice.
âHow so?'
âIt's supposed to prevent a stag from dying of fear,' Hobbey said wearily.
âPerhaps it does,' Hugh said.
I looked across the boys' close-shaven heads to Hobbey, who raised his eyebrows. On this matter we were on the same side.
WE RODE UP to the town walls, joining the end of a queue of carts waiting to get in. I noticed a gallows a little way outside the walls, a body dangling from it. On a patch of slightly higher ground between the road and one of the large ponds flanking the city was another soldiers' camp, near a hundred conical tents. Men sat outside. I saw one man repairing a brigandyne; he knelt, sewing the heavy armoured jacket, which lay on the ground. Away from the shore the air was muggy again: most of the men had cast off their jerkins and were in their shirts. One small group, though, wore short white coats, each with two red crosses stitched on the back; some village had evidently put together a home-made version of the official costume.
Hugh and David's attention had been caught by a sight familiar enough to me now; a couple of hundred yards away mounds of earth had been thrown up to make butts and some soldiers were practising with their longbows, shooting at oyster shells.
âCome along,' Hobbey said warningly and reluctantly the boys looked away.
We approached the city walls. They were thirty feet high, surrounded by a moat-like ditch and to my surprise built not of stone but of packed mud. Only the small crenellated battlements on top and the large bastions set at intervals were of stone. Men were still working on the walls, some hanging by ropes from the top, piling up new layers of mud and stabilizing them with hurdles and wooden planks. The stone bastion enclosing the main gate was massive, its circular top bristling with cannon. Soldiers patrolled the fighting platform running along the top. Close to, Portsmouth seemed more like a hurriedly erected castle than a town.
We joined the end of a long queue of carts waiting to enter the gate, which stood on a little rise, approached by a bridge across the moat. This town was, indeed, a fortress.
âThis earth wall is a far cry from the walls of York,' I said to Barak.
âIt's part of the fortifications Lord Cromwell built everywhere along the coasts in '39, when it seemed the French and Spanish might attack together to bring us back under the Pope. They were cobbled together in a hurry. I know that it kept him awake at nights,' he added sadly.
âBy heaven, this place stinks,' Hobbey said. He was right, a cesspit smell hung heavy in the air. He looked across to the tents. âIt's the soldiers, using the mill pond as a sewer. Pigs.'
âWhere the fuck else are they supposed to go?' Barak muttered under his breath. I thought, he is right; the ordure had nowhere to go in the flat marshy land around the city. The foul odours would only get worse as time passed, threatening disease.
We all turned at the sound of a loud, angry animal bellow. Behind us a heavy wagon drawn by four great horses had pulled up. The sound came from an enormous, muscular bull in a heavy iron cage.
âThere's going to be a bull-baiting,' I said to Barak.
âWith dogs probably, for the soldiers.'
Looking ahead, we saw that inside the gate was a complicated enclosed barbican, and that a cart loaded with barrels had got itself stuck. More carts pulled up behind us.
âWe'll be here for ever,' Dyrick said impatiently.
âMaster Shardlake!' I turned as I heard my name called. A young man was running across from the tents. I smiled as I recognized Carswell, the recruit in Leacon's company who hoped to be a playwright. His mobile, humorous face was as tanned as leather now. He bowed to our company. âYou have come to Portsmouth then, sir?'
âAy, on business. We have just seen the ships in the harbour. We wondered if you might be on one of them.'