Authors: Richard Woodman
âThou art my battle-axe and weapons of war,' the Reverend Jonathan Henderson had declaimed at Divine Service that morning, âfor with Thee I will break in pieces the nations, and with Thee I will destroy kingdoms,' he had railed, and if no one understood the finer theological points of his subsequent deductions, all made the blasphemous connection between Jeremiah's imputed words and themselves.
âStand ready, sir,' Mr Belchambers squeaked at the companionway, âmaximum elevation,' he went on repeating Drinkwater's orders from the quarterdeck, âno sign of the Russian ships. Target to be the battery, starboard broadside.'
Quilhampton grinned. The boy had the phrases arse-about-face, but he was cool enough. He stooped and peered through the adjacent gun-port. He saw the smoke suddenly mushroom from the end cannon, wafting outwards in a great smoke-ring, but no fall of shot followed.
âMake ready!' Belchambers's squeak came again.
âMake ready there, starbowlines!' Quilhampton roared with mounting excitement.
A second smoke-ring mushroomed from the embrasures of Point Lobos.
âThey're bloody well saluting us,' muttered Quilhampton, frowning.
âHold your fire, sir! There's a flag of truce putting off from the shore.'
A groan of disappointment ran along the gun-deck.
â
Capitán
, my brother, Don José Arguello de Salas,
Commandante
of His Most Catholic Majesty's city of San Francisco extends his most profound apologies for this most unfortunate mistake.'
âDamn you Don Alejo. Where
is
your brother? I demand to know more of this affair, this so-called
mistake
which I know to be nothing short of a towering fabrication, a . . . a . . .' words failed to express Drinkwater's angry sense of outrage.
So many half-guessed-at truths had found their answers in the hour since the flag-of-truce had first been seen. But Don Alejo was not a man to concede a thing. As Drinkwater faltered, the wily Spaniard rammed home his counter-stroke.
âWe are both guilty,
Capitán
. You, please, you steal our schooner,
La Virgen de la Bonanza
.'
âThat is an outrageous allegation . . .'
â
Capitán
, please, it is one of the confusions of this war.'
âIf you had informed me, as you were duty bound to do, that she brought news of our new alliance, I should not have been forced to capture her. You, Don Alejo, acted outside all international law by selling, yes sir,
selling
His Britannic Majesty's ship
Patrician
to the Russian power in the person of Prince Rakitin
after
you had heard that your country was once again an ally of mine. Such an action is the basest and most dishonourable that I have ever heard of.'
âA little mistake,
Capitán
Drinkwater,' snapped Don Alejo,' a little . . . what did your English papers say, eh? Ah,
sÃ
, a quibble, like when your ships come under your Admirality orders and attack Bustamente's frigates and blow up the
Mercedes
and send
women
to God before you have a declaration of war! It is nothing! Nothing!' Don Alejo made a gesture contemptuous dismissal.
âBut you traded, Don Alejo,
sold
my ship. You have been trading with the Russians ever since Rezanov came, eh? Your Most Catholic Master does not approve of his servants trading in his monopolies.'
âIt was for my country that I remove your ship. You too-much
disturb trade. Now we are at peace and allies, you have your ship back.' Don Alejo spoke in a lower key. âPerhaps,
Capitán
Drinkwater, you should be a little obliged to me . . .'
âUpon my soul, why?' asked Drinkwater aback.
âWhen you first take me prisoner,
Capitán
, Don Jorge Rubalcava, he want to tell you to go to Monterey. There you not escape. There you lose your ship. Here in San Francisco . . .' He shrugged, a gesture full of implications and Drinkwater understood that Don Alejo was beyond his comprehension in cunning. Whatever the venal sins of his brother, Don Alejo would emerge on the winning side. If he knew of the presence of gold in California, as that shrewd observation of Quilhampton's suggested, Don Alejo was not the man to make the knowledge public. Had he in some subtle way suggested to Doña Ana Maria that honour was at stake and so ensured Drinkwater's escape through her action? Looking at him, Drinkwater thought the thing at least a possibility. And Don Alejo had nothing to lose by it, for Drinkwater might have failed, lost in some obscure and savage
fracas
on the coast. He shuddered at the mere recollection of the night raid on the Columbia River.
âNow,
Capitán
, as to the matter of your men . . .' said the Spaniard smoothly.
Drinkwater frowned. âI shall expect them returned instantly.'
âAs soon as Don Jorge takes possession of the
aviso, Capitán
.' Don Alejo smiled victoriously. Drinkwater opened his mouth to protest the injustice of losing their prize. Then he remembered the gold and felt the weight of those nuggets dragging down the tails of his full-dress coat. When the time came, he thought, he could purchase comforts enough to compensate his men for the loss of their paltry share in the schooner. Perhaps they were better off, for the matter might lay before a prize-court for years, and only the attorneys would benefit. Besides, he had other matters to attend to. There were despatches, brought weeks earlier, carried overland to Panama with the news of the rising against the French, then up the coast in
La Virgen de la Bonanza
. Don Alejo swore he had intended to pass them to Drinkwater on his release, the very day Drinkwater had succeeded in escaping. And there was still the Russian power to destroy.
Don Alejo was holding out a glass.
âA toast to our new alliance,
Capitán
 . . . to
Dos de Mayo
 . . . the second day of May, the day Madrid rose against the French. It is a pity good news travels so slow, eh?'
He knew he was not supposed to see her, that she broke some imposition of her father's or her uncle's to contrive this clumsy meeting on the path. She was as lovely as ever and yet there was something infinitely sad about the cast of her features, despite her smile. She held two books out to him. They were his log and journal and he took them, thanking her and tucking them under his arm with the bundle of despatches Don Alejo had at last given him. He smiled back at her.
â
Señorita
, I am indebted to you for ever for my freedom, even,' he added, the smile passing from his face, âfor my very life.' He paused, recalling how close he had come to the ultimate act of despair and her face reflected her own grief. Then he brightened. âAnd thank you for your kindness in retrieving my books.'
âIt was nothing . . .'
âYou knew about the changes in your country's circumstances?'
She nodded. â
SÃ
.'
âAnd disobeyed your father?'
âMy father is sometimes deceived by Don Alejo.' Drinkwater remembered her obvious dislike of Don Alejo.
âHe was engaged in some illegal traffic with the Russians?'
She shrugged. âAll would have been well had Nicolai lived.'
âIt was fated otherwise, Señorita.'
â
SÃ. Qué será será
,' she murmured.
âWhy did you release me?'
She looked him full in the face then. âBecause you told the truth about Nicolai.'
âIt was a small thing.'
âFor me it was not. It has changed my life. I am to go into a convent.'
He remembered the Franciscan. âIt is the world's loss,
Señorita
.'
âI prayed for your wife and family . . .Â
Adiós, Capitán
.'
â
Adiós, Señorita
.' He bowed as she turned away.
Drinkwater watched through his glass as Hill brought
La Virgen de la Bonanza
to her anchor under Point Lobos that evening. He watched Don Jorge Rubalcava board her and wished he could shoot the treacherous dog with Mack's long rifle that now lay below in his cabin. Then he swung his glass to see if the rest of the bargain was being kept. He watched the boat approach, returning the ragged remnants of his men from the chain gang of servitude. By the time Hill and Frey came back from the schooner,
Patrician
's anchor was a-trip.
âI would not stay in this pestilential spot another moment,' he remarked to Hill as the sailing master made his report. The knot of officers within hearing nodded in general agreement. Only Mr Frey stood pensively staring astern.
âShe intends to become a nun, Mr Frey,' he snapped, an unwonted harshness in his voice.
CHAPTER 21 | September 1808 |
Drinkwater stared at the empty bulkhead. The paint was faintly discoloured where the portraits of Elizabeth and the children used to hang. Before him, on the table, were scattered the contents of the despatch brought weeks ago by the
aviso
. It had been a day of explanations, not least that of the most perplexing of his worries, one that had concerned him months earlier at the time of their departure from the Nore.
Some departmental inefficiency had delayed it and now it had been sent out after him to the West Indies, overland to Panama by mule and shipped up the Isthmus, to be opened and scrutinised by Don Alejo Arguello, no doubt, before finding its way to him. It was months old, so old, in fact, that its contents were rendered meaningless by the train of events, except that they heartened him, gave him some insight into his apparent abandonment by the head of the Admiralty's Secret Department, Lord Dungarth. He read the relevant passage through again.
I write these notes for your better guidance, my dear Drinkwater, for I find, upon my return from Government business elsewhere, that Barrow has sent you out insufficiently prepared. Seniavin declined to serve against us after his Imperial master succumbed to the seductions of Bonaparte, having seen service with us at an earlier period in his career. Rakitin is a less honourable man, untroubled by such scruples and well-known to some of your fellow officers. I would have you know these things before you reach the Pacific, for it reaches me that he is to command a ship of someforce, perhaps a seventy-four, and capitalise upon the work done by Rezanov
 . . .
Drinkwater folded the letter. So, Dungarth had been absent on Government business elsewhere. Drinkwater was intrigued as
to where that business might have been. Had his Lordship been back to France? He had made some vague allusions to Hortense Santhonax having become the mistress of Talleyrand. She had turned her coat before, might she not do so again?
He thrust the ridiculous assumption aside. That was altogether too fanciful. What advantage could either Hortense Santhonax or the French Foreign Minister derive from betraying such an unassailably powerful man as the Emperor Napoleon? It was a preposterous daydream. He picked up another letter. The superscription was familiar, but he could not place it. Then he recollected the hand of his friend, Richard White. Drinkwater slit the seal, anticipating his old shipmate must be writing to inform him he had hoisted a rear-admiral's flag.
A deck below Captain Drinkwater, Lieutenant Quilhampton was also reading a letter.
I am sure you meant no unkindness
, Catriona had written,
but I assure you that if the necessity to which you were put was painful to you, it was doubly so to me. You had the benefit of long consideration, I had only the most profound of shocks. I have burned those letters you returned but, sir, circumstanced as I am, I must risk all reputation and request you repent yourself of so rash an act
.
âGod bless my soul,' he muttered, âwhat a surprise! What a marvellous, bloody surprise!'
Drinkwater read White's letter with a profound sense of horror. Following so soon upon the last he could scarce believe its contents and compared the dates. But White's was written a full fortnight after Lord Dungarth's and he had no reason to doubt its accuracy.