She refocussed tired eyes upon the first lieutenant, dragging them away from a distant horizon. âHe's on his feet this morning, Mr Drinkwater, I believe he is breaking his fast in the gunroom.' She looked shyly at Appleby. âI think Mr Appleby intends to try the ligatures this morning . . .'
Appleby nodded. âHe's a healthy boy and healing well, thanks to Catherine's ministrations. Would that all my patients could have such treatment.'
âIt's not your fault . . .' began the woman, breaking off with a look at Drinkwater. It was clear even to Nathaniel's preoccupied mind that there was an intimacy here, professional and ripeningly personal. It was curiously touching and he felt oddly embarrassed and strode across to the wheel where the helmsmen were half a point off course. Catherine Best influenced them all he reflected, suddenly irritable again.
âQuartermaster, you're half a point off your course. I'll have the hide off you for neglect if you don't pay more attention.'
âAye, aye, sir.' Drinkwater strode forward and cast his eyes aloft at the foremast, spun on his heel and surveyed the mainmast. âIt'll be t'gallant buntlines next, my cockers,' muttered the quartermaster to his helmsmen, shifting a quid surreptitiously over his tongue.
âMr Brundell!'
âSir?' The master's mate came aft.
âD'you not know your damned business, sir? Those t'gallant buntlines are in need of overhauling. Get about it on the instant!' He missed Brundell's wounded look.
Drinkwater came aft again, scowling at the men at the wheel whose downcast eyes were attentively following the lubber's line.
The pale form of Lieutenant Morris emerged from the companionway. Morris wore his uniform coat over his shoulders and his left arm was slung across his chest. Mild fever sharpened the malevolent glitter in his curiously hooded eyes and Drinkwater was once again disturbed by the almost tangible menace of the man.
âGood morning, my dear Drinkwater,' he hissed, little agglomerations of spittle in the corners of his mouth.
âMornin' Morris,' Drinkwater managed out of courtesy and passed aft.
Drinkwater judged the sun high enough to take an observation for longitude, ignoring Morris leaning negligently on the companionway, never taking his eyes off Drinkwater. In the middle of the calculation, hurriedly tabulated on a slate, a worried looking carpenter returned to the quarterdeck.
âWell, Mr Johnson?' said Drinkwater as he flicked the table of versines over.
âYou was right, sir. Shifted two tiers of barricoes under the sail locker to larboard o' the cables an' found a bleeding split, sir. Reckon the copper's off outside.'
âH'm, can you do anything with it?'
Johnson rubbed his chin which was blue with a fast growing stubble. âReckon if I shift a few more o' the casks I can tingle it from the inside, temp'r'y like, sir.'
Drinkwater nodded. âSee to it after breakfast, Mr Johnson. I'll have Mr Rogers send the mate of the day below at eight bells to shift the casks for you.'
He bent again to his figures.
âBeg pardon, sir?'
âYes, what is it?'
âHow did you know it was the larboard bow?'
Drinkwater smiled. âI thought she touched when we were entering Kosseir Bay, Mr Johnson. Probably hit a coral head and broke it off.'
Johnson nodded. âReckon that's the size of it, sir.'
Drinkwater watched him waddle off, saw him hop up onto the fo'c's'le and look into Gregory's hammock, then turn away shaking his head.
âStill a deuced clever and knowing dog are you not, my dear Drinkwater,' insinuated Morris. Drinkwater flicked a glance at the helmsmen. Their fixed expressions showed they had heard and Drinkwater was filled with a sudden anger.
âDon't presume upon our
friendship
, Morris, and mind your tongue upon
my
deck.'
But Morris did not react, merely smiled with his mouth, then turned away below. Drinkwater stared ahead. Mocha was eight hundred miles to the southward and the brig could not fly over the distance fast enough.
âMr Brundell!'
âSir?'
âAt eight bells have both watches hoist studdin' sails.'
âAye, aye, sir.'
He waited impatiently for the quadruple double ring and the arrival of Mr Lestock to relieve him.
The gunroom was crowded when he went below. Cots had been constructed in each of the two after corners, one for Dalziell, displaced by Catherine Best from his own cabin, the other, a hasty addition, for Morris. Gaston Bruilhac still slept beneath the table. Appleby was just emerging from the after cabin when Drinkwater sat for his bowl of burgoo.
The surgeon jerked his head over his shoulder as he caught
Drinkwater's interrogative eye. âTaken to his bed,' explained Appleby, âthe Gambia trouble again.'
Drinkwater sighed. Griffiths had taken the Kosseir débâcle very badly. He was never prodigal with the lives of his men, many of whom were old Kestrels, volunteers from the almost forgotten days of peace. The butcher's bill for the action with
La Torride
and the attack on Kosseir had been excessive. With the thunder of the silent guns ringing in his ears as they withdrew from before the battered but defiant town, Griffiths had succumbed to an onslaught of his malaria.
Finishing his breakfast Drinkwater went into the after cabin. The sweet smell of perspiration filled the stuffy space. Griffiths lay in his cot, his eyes closed, but he opened them as Drinkwater leaned over the twisted sheets.
âHow are you sir?'
âBad, Nathaniel,
bach . . . du
, but get me a drink, get me a drink . . .'
Drinkwater found a bottle and poured the wine.
âWatch them all, Nathaniel, watch them all. You were the only one I ever trusted.' There was a frantic quality about him, a desperation that Drinkwater suddenly found frightening, reminding him of Griffiths's fragile mortality. The idea of being left without him was unthinkable. As if divining Drinkwater's sense of abandonment Griffiths suddenly asked, âWhere are we? What the devil's our position?'
âLatitude . . .'
âNo
where? Where
for God's sake?' Griffiths had half sat up and was clawing at Drinkwater's sleeve, like a man who had laid down to sleep in a strange place and, on waking, is unable to recall his whereabouts.
âThe Red Sea, sir,' Drinkwater soothed.
Griffiths lay back as though satisfied. âAh,
Y Môr Coch, Y Môr Coch
is it . . .' His voice trailed off in a murmur of incomprehensible Welsh. For a while Drinkwater sat with him as he seemed to drift off into sleep.
Then Griffiths struggled up, an abrupt frown seaming his gleaming forehead. âThe Red Sea, d'you say? Yes, yes, of course . . . and we head south, eh?'
âAye sir.'
âDon't forget the sun's ahead of you, neglect the lookout at your peril . . .' He fell back from this vehement warning. Drinkwater
left the cabin and went to find Johnson and his party in the forehold.
Griffiths's warning was timely. The central part of the Red Sea ran deep but the approach to Mocha was made dangerous by many coral reefs. Sailing north they had always had the sun behind them, facilitating the spotting of reefs from the fore-masthead. Now the reverse was true and the force of a favourable wind lent a southerly course the quality of impetuosity. Drinkwater remembered his order to hoist the studding sails with a pang of cautionary misgivings, then allayed his fears with the reflection that this portion of the Red Sea was free of reefs except for the low islet of Daedalus Shoal some sixty leagues south-east of them.
He found Johnson busy crouched in the darkness between two timbers, the gleam of incoming water lit by lanterns held by ship's boys, burning weakly in the bad air. Johnson had a pad of picked oakum pressed against the leak to batten over with timber and tarred canvas. Drinkwater looked round him in the gloom.
âThe devil's task moving the casks, eh, Mr Johnson?'
âAye, sir. I reckon Josh Kirby's ruptured himself, like, beggin' your pardon.'
Drinkwater sighed. Another customer for one of Appleby's trusses. The hard physical labour of working His Majesty's ships of war resulted in frequent hernias, a debilitating condition for any man, let alone a seaman. Drinkwater knew of many officers who suffered from them too, and next to addiction to alcohol it was the commonest form of affliction suffered by seamen of all stations.
Returning aft he called on Mr Quilhampton. Opening the flimsy cabin door he found the boy sitting in a chair, reading aloud from
Falconer's Marine Dictionary
. Drinkwater was aware of a sudden thrusting movement as Gaston Bruilhac shoved past him in apparent panic.
âGood mornin', Mr Q. What the deuce has that puppy been up to to look so damned guilty?'
âMorning sir.' Quilhampton frowned. âDamned if I know, sir. It's rather queer, but despite my assurances to the contrary he's still terrified of all the officers sir, especially the captain, you and your friend Mr Morris.'
Drinkwater snorted. âMr Morris, Mr Q, is an old “Admiralty acquaintance” with whom I never saw eye to eye. You may disabuse
yourself of ideas of intimacy.'
Quilhamptom appeared pleased.
âWhat are you reading?' asked Drinkwater, aware that he should not discuss even Morris with a midshipman. âAre you communicating with the French boy?'
âYes, sir,' said Quilhampton enthusiastically, âFalconer has a French lexicon appended to his dictionary, as you know, sir, and we're making some progress. If only he wasn't so damned nervous.'
âWell I'm glad to see you so cheerful, Mr Q.' He forebore mentioning the ligatures. If Appleby was premature in drawing them Quilhampton would suffer agony. That was the surgeon's province.
At noon Drinkwater and Lestock observed their latitude. Both expressed their surprise that the brig was not more to the south but their ponderings were interrupted by a strange cry from the masthead.
âDeck there! Red Sea ahead!'
Such an unusual hail brought all on deck to the rail. The sea had lost its brilliant blue and white appearance and at first seemed the colour of mud, then suddenly
Hellebore
was ploughing her way through vermillion waves. This strange novelty caused expressions of naïve wonder to cross the faces of the men and Drinkwater remembered Griffiths's muttered â
Y Môr Coch
'. They dropped a bucket over and brought up a sample. It was, in detail, a disappointing phenomena, a reddish dust lay upon the water, the corpses of millions of tiny organisms which, in dying, turned a brilliant hue. In less than an hour they had passed out of the area and the men went laughing to their dinners.
The sight, the subject of a long entry in Drinkwater's journal, drove all thoughts of the suspect latitude from their minds.
When he came on deck again at eight bells in the afternoon he based his longitude observation on the latitude observed at noon. He was not to know that refraction of the horizon made nonsense of the day's calculations. They were well to the south and east of their assumed position and for some it was to be a fatal error.
But it was Lieutenant Rogers whose greater mistake spelled disaster for the brig. They had experienced the magically disturbing phenomena of a âmilk sea' many times since that first eruption of phosphorescence in the southern Indian Ocean.
Conversations with officers at Mocha, experienced in the navigation of the eastern seas, had led them to remit their instinctive fear of shoaling which was often occasioned by this circumstance. They had heard from Blankett's men how captains and all hands had been called and precious anchors lost on several occasions when an officer apprehended the immediate loss of the ship on a shoal in the middle of the night. Subsequent soundings had shown a depth greater than the leadline could determine and the âfoaming breakers' were discovered to be no more than the phosphorescent tumbling of the open sea.
But such arcane knowledge bestowed on a man of Rogers's temperament was apt to blunt his natural fears and he disallowed the report from the masthead with a contemptuous sneer.
And so, at ten minutes after three on the morning of the 19th August 1799 His Britannic Majesty's Brig of War
Hellebore
ran hard ashore on the outlying spurs of Abu al Kizan, ironically known to the Royal Navy as Daedalus Reef.
Chapter Fourteen The Will of Allah | August 1799 |
Drinkwater was flung from his cot by the impact. In the darkness he was aware of shouts, curses and screams. The entire hull seemed to flex once as a loud crack was followed by the crash of falling spars and blocks, the muffling slump of canvas and the peculiar whirring slap of ropes falling slack across the deck. In his drawers he pushed his way through the confused press of men making for the upper deck. As he emerged he was aware that the lofty spread of the brig's masts, rigging and sails were gone, that the mighty arch of the heavens spread overhead uninterrupted. Lieutenant Rogers stood open-mouthed in shock, refusing to believe the evidence of his eyes.