Authors: Alexander Kent
“Had we been able to take her by boarding, sir, then . . .”
Hoblyn made as if to touch his arm but withdrew it to his side. Another constant reminder.
He replied harshly, “It was not to be. They fired on a King's ship. There's not a judge in the land who would let them escape the scaffold, and rightly so!” He seemed to overcome the passion in his tone and added, “Be patient, Bolitho, you will have your men.” He waved his stick towards the shore. “They're there,
somewhere.
”
Bolitho turned away as Allday returned to his thoughts. It was not the first time he had acted alone. But now it was different. This enemy flew no flag. It could be anyone.
He watched as Hoblyn limped to another hatch where some men were preparing tackles for hoisting smaller items of cargo on deck. His mind kept returning to the boy Matthew Corker's discovery. The berlin concealed in Hoblyn's stables. Where did it come from? Hoblyn had arrived at the dockyard in an expensive carriage of his own, so had proved once again, if proof was needed, that he was a rich man. There could be no connection between Hoblyn and the schooner. It was far too risky. Any one of her hands might have turned King's evidence to save his neck, and damn anyone who was left secure.
Hoblyn remarked, “I suggest you do your utmost to get
Snapdragon
out of Chatham. I think you're going to need her. After your escapade with this schooner Their Lordships will likely feel more inclined to offload some of these patrols from the revenue cutters to your shoulders.” He turned so that the sunlight glittered in his eyes. “Who knows? I may discover more intelligence for you to act upon.” He shaded his eyes with his disfigured hand and watched as his carriage moved slowly along the waterfront.
Bolitho followed his gaze and saw what he imagined was the white wig of Hoblyn's servant inside the carriage.
A lieutenant of the guard called to the boat alongside as Hoblyn limped carefully to the entry port.
Then he paused and glanced once more along the scarred decks.
“Speak to Paice's people, Bolitho. It would come better from you.” He gave him a searching stare. “Your man was unhurt, I trust? I know how you value his services.”
So casually said. Or was it?
Bolitho replied, “He is on an errand for me, sir.”
He felt something like sick relief as Hoblyn lowered himself into the boat.
I wish to God I knew where he was.
The marine lieutenant watched him impassively and said, “We shall have a guardboat pulling around us until all the cargo is unloaded, sir.”
Bolitho looked at him. A young, untried face. He remembered Paice's words. A man of war.
Am I really like that?
“Good. Keep your men away from the spirits too.” He saw the sudden indignation in his expression. “Even marines have been known to
drink,
you know.” He saw
Telemachus'
s boat hooking on to the chains. “I shall leave it to you, Lieutenant.”
On the short pull to the anchored cutter he noticed the way that the oarsmen watched him when they thought he was not looking. What was it now, he wondered? Respect, fear, or to learn what they were expected to become?
Paice greeted him at the cutter's side and touched his hat.
“All the wounded have been removed, sir. I fear that another of them died just before they left.” He shifted unhappily. “His name was Whichelo, but then you'd not know him, sir.”
Bolitho looked at the tall lieutenant and said, “
Know
him? Yes, of course. The one who was standing in full view by his gun. I am sorry the lesson had to be learned in death.” He walked towards the companionway. “May I have the aid of your clerk, or is he the purser today?” He stepped down and almost expected to see Allday on the deck below, watching and waiting. “I have some despatches to be copied.” He turned on the companion ladder, his face warm in the sunlight. “After
that,
prepare for sea, Mr Paice.”
Paice stared after him, his mind still grappling with Bolitho's cool acceptance of what had happened. Such a short while in their midst and yet he had even recalled the man who had just died.
Paice clenched his big hands. Bolitho had somehow managed to use that information like part of a lesson as well as a warning. Perhaps what he had seen and done since he had first gone to sea as a twelve-year-old midshipman had honed all the pity and compassion from him.
Paice thrust through the throng of seamen who were working on repairs to seek out Godsalve the clerk, so he did not see the man who had just left him in turmoil.
Bolitho knelt in the small cabin, the uncompleted model ship grasped in both hands like a talisman.
A man of war?
Allday groped his way around the small timbered outhouse feeling for anything he might use as a weapon.
All afternoon the party of six prisoners with an armed escort of seamen had marched along the road towards Sheerness. When dusk came, the midshipman named Fenwick who commanded the group ordered a halt at a small inn where he was received with familiarity, although not with warmth. The other five prisoners were locked in an outbuilding with their legs in irons as an extra precaution. Allday, apparently because of his superior status as a sailmaker, was kept apart.
Allday returned to a crate where he had been sitting. The stage was set, he thought vaguely. He had heard the midshipman explaining just a bit too loudly to the seamen in the press gang why he was separating them in this fashion.
Once, the man who had first approached Allday came to the outhouse with some water and a hunk of bread.
“Is this all?” Allday had smelled the rum on the man's breath. It was what he needed more than anything.
The man had grinned at his anger. “The others ain't gettin' nuthin'!”
Allday had tried to question him about the proposed escape. How would the midshipman explain it to his superior?
The man had held up his lantern to study him more closely. “Leave it to us. Yer talks too much. Just remember wot I told yer!”
If only he could lay hands on a dirk or a cutlass. Maybe they had already seen through his feeble disguise? Someone might even have recognised him, and they were holding him apart so that he could be silenced for good when night came.
At sea Allday could tell the time almost by the pitch of a hull, and on land, when he had spent a short while guarding sheep in Cornwall, he had grown used to reading the stars and the moon's position for the same purpose.
But scaled up in this dark hut he had no way of telling and it made him more uneasy.
He wondered what Bolitho was doing. It worried him to think of him managing on his own. But something had to be done. He tensed as he thought he heard a slight sound through the door.
Now the truth.
He could feel his heart pounding, and tried to control his breathing.
If it is to be murder
âhe would take one with him somehow.
Lanternlight made a golden slit up one side of the door, and a moment later a bolt was drawn. Then the seaman peered in at him.
Allday saw the midshipman's white collar-patches glowing beyond the lantern, and sensed the sudden tension. Even the seaman seemed ill at ease.
“Ready?”
Allday left the hut and almost fell as the lantern was shuttered into darkness.
The midshipman hissed, “Stay together!” He peered at Allday. “One foul move and by God I'll run you through!”
Allday followed the midshipman, his eyes on his white stockings. It was not the first time he had made this trip, he thought grimly. Rough ground, with scrub and bushes, the smell of cows from a nearby field. Then over a flint wall and towards a dark copse which loomed against the early stars like something solid. Allday's ears told him that nobody else from the press gang was coming with them. He heard the seaman behind him stagger, and tensed, expecting the sudden agonising thrust of steel in his back. But the man uttered a whispered oath and they continued on through the darkness. The trees appeared to move out and surround them like silent giants, and Allday knew from the midshipman's uneven breathing that he was probably doubly afraid because of his own guilt.
“This is far enough!” Midshipman Fenwick raised an arm. “Here it is!”
Allday saw him stopping to peer at a large, half-burned tree trunk. The meeting point. How many others had come here to sell themselves, he wondered?
The seaman spat on the ground and Allday saw the glint of a pistol in his belt, a cutlass bared and held in his fist; no doubt he was ready to use both.
Allday pricked up his ears. The creak of harness, perhaps, but if so the horses must have muffled hooves. Where was it? He strained his eyes into the darkness, so that when the voice spoke out he was surprised at its nearness.
“Well, well, Mr Fenwick, another of your adventures.”
Allday listened. The speaker had a smooth, what he would call an educated voice. No accent which he could recognise, and Allday had heard most of them on all the messdecks he had known.
Fenwick stammered, “I sent a message.”
“You did indeed. A sailmaker, you say?”
“That is so.” Fenwick was replying like a frightened schoolboy to his tutor.
“It had better be, eh?”
“There is just one thing.” Fenwick could barely form his words for trembling.
The voice snapped, “More money, is it? You are a fool to gamble. It will be your undoing!”
Fenwick said nothing, as if he was unable to find the courage.
Allday watched the shadows. So it was gambling. The midshipman was probably being threatened because of debts. Allday stiffened and felt the hair rise on his neck. He had heard a footfall somewhere to his left, a shoe kicking against loose stones. He could still see nothing, and yet he sensed that there were figures all around them, unseen among the trees.
Fenwick must have felt it too. He suddenly blurted out, “I need help! It's this manâ”
Allday crouched, ready to spring, and then realised that Fenwick was pointing at his armed seaman.
“What about him?” The voice was sharper now.
“Heâhe's been interfering, doing things without coming to me. I remembered what you said, how it was plannedâ” The words were pouring out in an uncontrollable torrent.
The voice snapped, “Put down your weapons,
both of you!
” When neither of them moved, Allday heard the metallic clicks of pieces being pulled to full cock. Then two shadows emerged from the opposite side, each armed with what appeared to be a hanger or, perhaps, a cutlass.
The seaman dropped his own blade and then tossed his pistol to the ground.
He rasped, “It's a bloody lie! The
young gentleman
's gutless! You can't take 'is word fer nuthin'!”
Allday waited. There was defiance in the man's tone, anxiety too.
The voice asked, “And Spencer, if that is your name, why are you here?”
“I'll repay my escape by working, sir.”
“Mr Fenwick, how have you left matters at the inn?”
Fenwick seemed completely stunned by the change of manner. The unseen questioner was smooth, even jocular again.
“IâI thought we could claim Spencer had escapedâ”
The seaman sneered, “See? Wot did I tell yer?”
“I have a better idea.” There was a creak, as if the man was leaning out of a window of his carriage. “To have this sailmaker make good his escape, we need a victim, eh? A poor dead sailor-man murdered as he tried to prevent it!”
The two shadows bounded forward and Allday heard the seaman gasp in pain as he was beaten to his knees.
“Here!”
Allday felt the cold metal of a cutlass grip pushed into his fingers.
The voice said calmly, “Prove your loyalty to the Brotherhood âSpencer. That will bind both you and our gallant midshipman closer than ever to our affairs.”
Allday stared at the kneeling figure while the others stood clear. The cutlass felt like lead, and his mouth was as dry as a kiln.
The voice persisted, “Kill him!”
Allday stepped forward but at that moment the seaman threw himself on one side, scrambling for the pistol which he had dropped.
The explosion and the flash which lit up the motionless figures by the burned tree was like a nightmare. It all happened in seconds and Allday gritted his teeth as he saw the pistol fall once more, still gripped by the sailor's hand, which had been severed at the wrist by one blow from a cutlass. Even as the man rolled over and gave one last shrill scream the same attacker raised his blade and drove it down with such force Allday heard the point grate into the ground through the man's body.
The sudden silence was broken only by the sudden muffled stamp of nervous horses, the far-off barking of a farm dog, then the sound of wheels on some kind of cart-track.