But only if it was just.
âMr Lestock, Mr Appleby, you are sitting on a tribunal to determine the precise nature of an incident occurring in the middle watch last night during which the captain of the main top, Able seaman Tregembo, is alleged to have used abuse against Mr Midshipman Dalziell.'
The two warrant officers nodded, Lestock fidgetting since he had had to be relieved on deck by Trussel and was anxious about observing the meridian altitude of the sun at noon. Appleby was splendidly portentous but, for the moment, silent.
âLieutenant Rogers,' Drinkwater inclined his head to the second lieutenant sitting opposite with one leg dangling over the arm of his chair, contemptuously examining his nails, âis in the nature of the accusing officer.' He raised his voice, âMr Q!'
The door opened. âSir?'
âPass word for Mr Dalziell and then have Tregembo wait outside to be called.'
âAye, aye, sir,' replied the boy casting a frightened look round the interior of the gunroom which had changed its normal prefectural atmosphere to one of chilly formality. Dalziell knocked and entered. He had not had the sense to put on full uniform.
âNow Mr Dalziell, this is an inquiry to establish the facts of the incident that occurred this morning . . .' Drinkwater went laboriously through the formal processes and listened to Dalziell's carefully stated account.
He had gone forward on the rounds that were performed by either a master's mate or a midshipman at hourly intervals. He had found the man Tregembo asleep under the fo'c's'le with his legs obstructing the ladder and had stumbled over them. The man had woken and there had been an exchange. As a consequence Dalziell had ordered him below. There had been a further exchange after which Dalziell had brought Tregembo aft to the officer of the watch. âAnd Lieutenant Rogers said he would see the man flogged for his insolence, sir.' It was all very plausible, almost too plausible, and the malice in that last sentence set a query against the whole.
They called Tregembo. âWhat did you say to Mr Dalziell when he stumbled against you?' asked Drinkwater, careful to keep his voice and expression rigidly formal.
Tregembo shrugged. âI'd been awakened zur, I thought it was one of my mates,' he growled.
âWere you abusive?' butted in Lestock, âcome man, we want the truth.'
Tregembo shot a glance at Drinkwater. âHappen I was short with him, zur,' he conceded but repeated, âI thought it was one of my mates, zur . . . I didn't know it was Mr Dalziell, zur.'
âA storm in a tea cup,' muttered Appleby and Rogers flushed. Drinkwater was tempted to leave the matter there, but Lestock persisted to fuss.
âWhat
exactly
did you say, man?' he asked testily.
Drinkwater sighed, both Rogers and Dalziell were only holding their peace with difficulty. âCome Tregembo,' he said resignedly, âwhat did you say?'
Tregembo frowned. He knew Drinkwater could not protect him and his head came forward belligerently. âWhy zur, what I'd
say to a mess-mate, that he was a clumsy fucker . . . zur.'
Drinkwater stifled a grin and he saw both Dalziell and Rogers relax, as though their case was proved.
âThat seems to be clear abuse,' said Lestock and Drinkwater suddenly felt angry about the whole stupid business. Without Lestock's tactless interjections he might have ended it then and there, but he now had to take the offensive.
âNow think carefully, Tregembo. What was then said to you? Remember we want the truth, as Mr Lestock says.' Tregembo looked at Dalziell, opening his mouth then closing it again before he caught the intense expression in Drinkwater's eyes. He had known the lieutenant long enough to take encouragement from it.
âHe called me an insolent whoreson bastard, zur, and told me to get my pox-ridden arse below decks where it belonged.'
Drinkwater swung his glance swiftly to Dalziell. There was no denial from the midshipman, only a slight flushing of the cheeks. Dalziell blurted âAnd he called me a cocky puppy, damn it!'
âSilence, Mister!' snapped Drinkwater. âTregembo, do you mind your tongue in future when you address an officer.' The two exchanged glances and Drinkwater dismissed him. He turned to his two colleagues, suddenly aware that he had closed the case without consultation. âI am sure you agree with me, gentlemen, that Tregembo's initial remarks were made by mistake under the false assumption that another hand had tripped over him. The manner of Mr Dalziell's subsequent ordering of him below was of such a nature as to disqualify him from receiving the manner of address expected from an able seaman to a midshipman.' There was a sharp indrawn breath from Rogers but Drinkwater was undeterred. âThe midshipmen aboard any ship of which I am first lieutenant will be obliged to behave properly. I will not tolerate the apeing of bloods out whoring which seems the current fashion. It would not be in the interests of the ship to flog Tregembo.'
âDamn you, Drinkwater, damn you to hell.' Rogers leapt from the chair.
âBe silent, sir!' stormed Drinkwater, suddenly furious at Rogers. Then, in a quieter tone he turned to the master and surgeon. âWell gentlemen, d'you agree?'
âOf course, Nathaniel, damned stupid business if you ask me.' Appleby eyed Rogers disapprovingly.
âIs my character to be disputed by an apology for a pox-doctor . . ?' he got no further. Emerging from his cabin Commander Griffiths appeared. The five men in the gunroom rose to their feet. He had clearly heard every word through the flimsy bulkhead.
âI approve of your decision, Mr Drinkwater, just as I disapprove of your conduct, Mr Rogers.' Griffiths spoke slowly then paused turning his lugubrious face on Dalziell. His bushy white eyebrows drew together. âAs for you, sir, I can think of only one place where your presence will not infect us all. Proceed to the fore t'gallant masthead.'
The commander passed between Rogers and the scarlet midshipman with ponderous contempt and made for the upper deck.
They had rolled Polaris and the constellations of the far north below the horizon without ceremony. To the south blazed Canopus, Rigel Kentaurus and the Southern Cross, whilst Orion wheeled overhead, astride the equinoctial. They had picked up the south-east Trades in five degrees south latitude and romped southwards. The matter of Dalziell faded from Drinkwater's mind almost as soon as the boy had descended from the mast-heading. Ruling all their lives, burying their petty quarrels with its stern and soothing rhythm, the routine of a King's ship proceeded remorselessly. They had avoided all ships in case any were French cruisers. It was unlikely, but only a single mischance could disrupt the delicate strategy of empire. Even a ship of equal force might jeopardise their mission and it was likely that a French cruiser in the South Atlantic would be one of their fast, well-found frigates.
On a morning of alternating sunshine and shadow as an endless stream of fair-weather cumulus scudded before the fresh wind and the large dark petrels and bizarre red-footed boobies swooped about the ship, the matter of Dalziell was revived.
Appearing to take his meridian altitude Mr Quilhampton was found to possess a black eye.
âWhere the deuce did you get that from, young shaver?' asked Drinkwater who had of late made a practice of joining Lestock on the tiny poop to help determine the brig's latitude.
âOh, I banged into my cabin door, sir.' The boy was nearly sobbing and the excuse was clearly fabricated. He failed to catch the sun successfully and it was Dalziell's smirking âI made my
altitude seventy degrees fifty-four minutes, Mr Lestock,' that formed the suspicion in Drinkwater's mind that he might be the cause of Mr Quilhampton's misery. It seemed confirmed by the muffled grunt from the young midshipman as the first lieutenant agreed his own altitude within a minute of Dalziell's. Lestock pursed his lips in disapproval when Quilhampton announced his failure.
âMr Q has a contused eye, Mr Lestock. Cut along to the surgeon, cully, and get him to look at it.' He watched the boy move away and turned to Mr Dalziell. âNow what d'you make our latitude?' He knew he was displacing Lestock but noted that Dalziell was suddenly less confident. The sun was chasing them south, would cross the equator in a day or so and the calculation was elementary. A mere matter of addition and subtraction but Dalziell baulked at it. Drinkwater suspected he cribbed frequently from the younger boy who showed a certain aptitude for the mysteries of astronomical navigation.
âEr, sixteen degrees, er . . . about sixteen degrees south, sir, er . . .' he frowned over his slate while Lestock tut-tutted and nodded agreement at Drinkwater's figures.
âPerhaps you would do better studying Robinson, Mr Dalziell, than thrashing your messmate.'
Dalziell's open-mouthed stare as he descended the ladder made him chuckle inwardly. He remembered wondering as a midshipman how the first lieutenant always seemed so omniscient. Experience was a wonderful teacher and there was little new under the sun. The reference to the late object of their observations further amused him and he was in a high good humour as he returned his quadrant to its carefully lashed mahogany box. It was only on straightening up from the task that his eye was caught by the little watercolour of the American privateer
Algonquin
, wearing British over Yankee colours. She had been his first command. It was a trifle stained by damp now and had been done for him by Elizabeth before they were married. The thought of Elizabeth scudded like one of those cumulus clouds over his good humour. In the oddly circuitous way the mind works it made him think of Quilhampton and the misery that could be a midshipman's lot. He called the mess-man. âPass word for Mr Quilhampton, Meyrick.'
When the boy came he had clearly been crying. He was fortunate, Drinkwater thought. The brig had no cockpit and the two
midshipmen each had a tiny cabin, mere hutches set on the ship's plans as accommodation for stewards. At least they did not have to live in the festering stink of the orlop as he had had to aboard
Cyclops
. But the atmosphere of Quilhampton's environment was a relative thing. It might be easier than Drinkwater's had been, but it was no less unpleasant for the boy.
âCome now, Mr Q, dry those eyes and tell me what happened.'
âNothing, sir.'
âCome, sir, do not make honour a sticking point, what happened?'
âN . . . nothing, sir.'
Drinkwater sighed. âMr Q. If I were to instruct you to lead a party of boarders onto the deck of a French frigate, would you obey?'
âOf course, sir!' A spark of indignant spirit was rekindled in the boy.
âThen come, Mr Q. Do not, I beg you, disobey me now.'
The muscles along Quilhampton's jaw hardened. âMr Dalziell, sir, struck me, sir. It was in a fair fight, sir,' he added hurriedly.
âFights are seldom fair, Mr Q. What was this over?'
âNothing, sir.'
âMr Quilhampton,' Drinkwater said sharply, âI shall not remind you again that you are in the King's service, not the schoolroom.'
âWell, sir, he was insulting you, sir . . . said something about you and the captain, sir . . . something not proper, sir.'
Drinkwater frowned. âGo on.'
âI er, I thought it unjust, sir, and I er, demurred, sir . . .' The boy's powers of self-expression had improved immeasurably but the thought of what the boy was implying sickened Drinkwater.
âDid he suggest that the captain and I enjoyed a certain intimacy, Mr Q?' he asked softly. Relief was written large on the boy's face.
âYes sir.'
âVery well, Mr Q. Thank you. Now then, for fighting and for not obeying my order promptly I require from you a dissertation on the origin of the brig-sloop, written during your watch below this afternoon and brought to me when you report on deck at eight bells.'
The boy left the cabin happier in spite of his task. But for Drinkwater a cloud had come permanently over the day and a dark suspicion was forming in his mind.
He spoke to Dalziell when he relieved Rogers at the conclusion of the afternoon watch. Quilhampton had delivered into his hand an ink-spattered paper which he folded carefully and held behind his back.
âFor fighting, Mr Dalziell, I require an essay on the brig-sloop. I desire that you submit it to me when I am relieved this evening.'
Dalziell muttered his acknowledgement and turned away. Drinkwater recalled him.
âTell me, Mr Dalziell, what is the nature of your acquaintanceship with Lord Dungarth?' Dalziell's face relaxed into a half-concealed smirk. Drinkwater hoped the midshipman thought him a trifle scared of too flagrantly punishing an earl's élève. That feline look seemed to indicate that he was right.
âI am related to his late wife . . . sir.'
âI see. What was the nature of your kinship?'
âI was second cousin to the countess.' He preened himself, as if being second cousin to a dead countess absolved him from the formalities of naval courtesy. Drinkwater did not labour the point; Mr Dalziell did not need to know that Lord Dungarth had been the director of the clandestine operations of the cutter
Kestrel
. âYou are most fortunate in your connections, Mr Dalziell,' he said as the boy smirked again.
He was about to turn away and give his attention to the ship when Dalziell volunteered, âI have a cousin on my mother's side who knows you, Mr Drinkwater.'
âReally?' said Drinkwater without interest, aware that Rogers had neglected to overhaul the topgallant buntlines which were taut and probably chafing. âAnd who might that be?'
âLieutenant Morris.'
Drinkwater froze. Slowly he turned and fixed Dalziell with a frigid stare.
âAnd what of that, Mr Dalziell?'
Suddenly it occurred to Dalziell that he might be mistaken in securing an advantage over the first lieutenant so soon after the tribunal. He realised Mr Drinkwater would not cringe from mere innuendo, nor could he employ the crudities that had upset Quilhampton. âOh, n . . . nothing sir.'