“Like it or not, Mr Herrick, we are not known to be at war with France.”

“Is there anything more I can do, sir?” He sounded wretched.

“Send a short report in Pigeon’s boat. In your own words. Someone should know what we are about.”

There was no point in mentioning that Raymond had shut them out of the settlement compound. Even Herrick might refuse to obey if he knew that.

“And, Mr Herrick.” He paused, holding his gaze. “Thomas. You will stay at anchor off Rutara until you get contrary orders. We will be safe here. The defences, and the Eurotas’s remaining guns, still command the entrance.”

Quietly he said, “Put her about, Allday. This is easy for no one.”

By the time the boat had reached the pier again there were men already swarming up Tempest’s rigging and out along her yards. That was good, Bolitho thought. It would keep Herrick too busy to think about those he was leaving astern.

He saw Keen at the inner end of the pier, his shirt open to his waist, his arms hanging at his sides.

He waited for Bolitho to reach him and then said huskily, “She’s gone, sir.” He looked at the sun. “Just this moment.”

Allday said, “I’ll deal with it, sir.”

“No!” Keen swung on him. “I will.” In a gentler tone he added, “But thank you.”

Bolitho watched him go. It had of course been a dream, hopeless from the beginning. In these beautiful surroundings. He let his gaze move over the beach and nodding fronds, the deep blue water. But they had stood no real chance. The young sea officer. The native girl from a barely known island.

He quickened his pace. But it had been their dream. No one had had the right to break it.

“Richard!”

He swung on his heel, seeing her running down from the makeshift hospital towards him.

He seized her and held her against him. “Oh, Viola, why did you leave the compound?”

But she was clinging to him, laughing and weeping all at once.

“I don’t care! Don’t you see, my darling Richard? No matter what happens, for the very first time we are together!”

Acting-Lieutenant Francis Pyper watched as they walked into the long hut. He had been feeling afraid, especially after seeing the activity aboard Tempest. Even now she was shortening-in her cable, and within the hour might have disappeared around the headland.

But he was no longer afraid.

Sergeant Quare crunched towards him. “Sir? Message for the captain. Two natives sick in the village. He should be told at once.”

Pyper nodded, his mouth dry. “I will tell him.”

Quare removed his hat and wiped the inside with his hand. Poor little bastard, he thought. Won’t be long now. They’ll start to drop like flies. He had seen it in the Caribbean. In India. All over the bloody place.

He saw Blissett walking towards the pier and bellowed, “Do your tunic up! Where the hell d’you think you are, man?”

That made him feel slightly better.

“Halt! Who goes there?”

Bolitho stepped into a white patch of moonlight and showed himself.

“Sorry, sir.” Sergeant Quare grounded his musket. “Wasn’t expectin’ you again.”

“All quiet?” He leaned against a tree and listened to the hissing roar of surf along the outer reef. Timeless. Confident.

“Yessir.” The marine sighed. “They’ve been burnin’ some more poor devils in the village. Heard ’em chantin’ and wailin’.”

“Yes.”

Bolitho checked himself from sitting down. He was tired out. Sick and weary from the constant work. It had been eight days since Tempest had set sail, and there was still no word from anybody. Not that he expected much help from the village. There had been several deaths, and Hardacre had told him that some more natives had been found dying in a canoe on the other side of the island. They had been strangers, and had probably brought the disease with them. Itak was the name given to the fever. It wasted its victims away in no time at all. Threw them into a desperate struggle for breath while they burned up from within.

Each day Bolitho inspected his men, searching for any sign of it. But apart from weariness and strain, they were behaving well. Which was more than could be said for the men inside the compound. Bolitho had sent Keen to request that food and drink be lowered over the palisade. In fact it had been thrown down, and Keen had heard sounds of drunken laughter, as if the place was turning into a madhouse.

So next day Bolitho had gone himself. After waiting in the sun for a long time, watched, and he suspected covered, by two guards in a blockhouse, Raymond had appeared above him.

Bolitho had said, “We need help, sir. If the people in the village are left to themselves they may become too weak to burn their dead-”

He had got no further.

“So you have come to beg, have you? You thought you could override me by sending your ship away! Well, you’ve got your new command now! A native hut, and a handful of ruffians to do your bidding! My precious wife will soon come running back when she sees what she has thrown away!” He had sounded wild, even jubilant.

Bolitho had made another try. “If I take the watch off the Eurotas I will have enough hands to manage until the fever is gone.”

“You keep your men away from my ship!” His voice had risen almost to a scream. “My men have orders to open fire if a single boat puts off to her! You’ve lost your ship, Captain, and I’ll not have you touch mine!”

He had found Keen and the others waiting for him with the news of another death. It was pitiful the way the natives were accepting it. The gods were angry. Tinah knew about Tuke and the sacred island. If the whole of his people discovered the truth too they would see their suffering as the direct result of intrusion.

He looked at the stars and shivered. If he had acted sooner he might have been able to seize the Eurotas under cover of night. But that was too late. Raymond’s threats, and their own fear of the Itak, would make sure of a hot welcome from the loaded swivels.

If he could not get word to Herrick, and the schooner failed to return soon, he would know Narval had been taken. In the name of the Revolution or through an open mutiny made no difference now. Tuke would demand payment for his help to Genin’s cause, and the Frenchman could hardly refuse. But how would he do it? A legalized position with the new regime, a ship, a letter of marque, or the promise of gold when Genin eventually reached Paris?

To make the wound more bitter, Bolitho realized that as soon as Narval had gone and Tuke had obtained the reward he was seeking, news would quite likely arrive to say that England and France had been at war for months.

It would be the end of Bolitho’s career. In Raymond he had a deadly enemy. And in London they would be looking for a scapegoat to cover their anger at losing both the French frigate and a pirate who would still need to be hunted by men-of-war desperately required in the line of battle.

He thought of Raymond’s words when he had shouted down at him. That was his only comfort. Viola had worked ceaselessly at his side, carried encouragement from her makeshift hospital to the village where she had helped to nurse the sick and take care of the children left behind.

She was lying in the hut where he had just left her. He had knelt over her, listening to her regular breathing, afraid to touch her and break her sleep.

The sergeant asked, “I hope you’ll pardon me, sir, but what are we goin’ to do?”

“Do?” He ran his fingers up through his hair. “Wait. When the schooner comes I’ll get a message to her master. At least we will know if Narval is still hereabout.”

“This island, sir. The one you told us of. ’Ow far away is it?”

“Rutara is well north of here. Some five hundred miles.”

Bolitho thought of it even as he said the words. The winds had been light but favourable. Herrick should have taken up his station even if he had been unable to destroy Tuke’s schooners. He would certainly not run into the trap which had caught them before.

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