payment was better than nothing at all.
Bolitho glanced at the aide. He had still not revealed his name. In the gloom he looked pinched up with cold and fear, his sodden clothes clinging to his body like rags. He was gripping a sword between his grimy fingers, the contrast as stark as the man's own circumstances, Bolitho thought. It was a beautiful, rapier-style weapon, the scabbard mounted in silver with a matching hilt and knuckle-bow. Like the dead French girl's handkerchief, was it his last connection with the life he had once known?
He ducked beneath the sails and saw the anchored ships up ahead. Three or four, coastal traders at a guess, their red, white and blue flags making the only stabs of colour against the drifting sleet and mist: Dutchmen waiting for the weather to clear before they worked out of their anchorage. No wonder they called Holland the port of the world. Who held the Low Countries enjoyed the rich routes to the East Indies and beyond, to the Caribbean and the Americas. Like the English, they had always been ambitious seafarers, and greatly admired, even as enemies when they had sailed up the Medway, attacking Chatham and firing the dockyards there.
He saw the Dutch skipper murmur to one of his crew, then pull out a watch from his tarpaulin coat. It was the size of an apple.
Bolitho said, 'Find out what they are saying.'
Brennier's aide seemed to drag himself from his despair, and after a slight hesitation said, 'Very soon now, Capitaine. The other vessel is around the next… how you say…
Bolitho nodded. It had been quicker downstream, and using the sails, small though they were, to full effect. Once aboard the other boat they would rest, perhaps find something hot to eat and drink before putting to sea when darkness fell. They might be unable to make contact with
He thought of Hoblyn, the terrified midshipman, the bearded braggart on the Rochester Road, and of Delaval's anguish when he had seen Tanner even as the trap had fallen beneath his frantic legs.
Through and above it, Tanner had manipulated them all. Bolitho bit his lip until it hurt.
Allday said, 'Over to larboard, matey!' The words meant nothing to the man at the tiller but Allday's gesture was familiar to sailors the world over.
'What is it?' Bolitho wiped his face and eyes with an old piece of bunting for the hundredth time to clear his vision.
'Bit o' bother, starboard bow, Cap'n.'
Bolitho wished he had brought his small telescope, and strained his eyes as he stood in the boat to follow Allday's bearing.
There was a smart-looking brig anchored in the deepwater channel, and her lack of heavy tackles or lighters alongside meant she was most likely a small man-of-war, or perhaps a Dutch customs vessel.
He saw the skipper staring at her too, his face creased with sudden anxiety.
Bolitho kept his own counsel. There were no boats on the brig's deck, and none in the water unless they were tied on the opposite side. So where were they?
He called quietly, 'Any movement?'
'No, Cap'n.' Allday sounded on edge. 'We only need half a mile and then-'
Bolitho watched as the weather decided to play a small part. A tiny shaft of watery sunlight came from somewhere to give even the drenching sleet a sort of beauty, and lay bare a part of the nearest land.
The Dutch skipper gave a sigh and raised his arm. Bolitho saw the fishing boat anchored a little apart from the others, and, even though he had not seen her before in daylight, he knew it was the one. He touched the Dutchman's arm and said, 'That was well done!'
The man showed his teeth in a smile. From Bolitho's tone he had guessed that it was some kind of compliment.
'Prepare to shorten sail.' He reached out with one foot and tapped the aide's leg. 'You can give the word.' The man jumped as if he had been stabbed.
Bolitho rubbed his hands together. They were raw with cold. Then he glanced at the dirty, patched sails and tried to gauge the final approach in this unfamiliar craft.
The sunlight was already fading, smothered by the approach of more sleet. But not before he had seen a sudden glint of metal from the fishing boat's deck, and even as he watched a figure in with a white cross-belt rose into view, staring upstream a few seconds before vanishing again below the bulwark.
The tiller was already going over, the skipper crouching down, his eyes fixed unblinkingly on the open channel beyond.
Allday exclaimed, 'God Almighty, that was close!'
Bolitho kept his eyes level with the bulwark and watched for another sign from the anchored fisherman. Boarded, it did not really matter by whom. The Dutch navy, customs men searching for contraband; or perhaps it was merely an unhappy coincidence, a routine search.
Unhappy was hardly the right description, Bolitho thought. It had seemed almost hopeless before. Without some kind of vessel, it was impossible. He glanced along the boat, shielding his face with one arm as the sleet hissed and slapped across the sails and rigging. In open water it would be more lively, even rough, if the angle of the sleet was any measure of it. He thought of
This boat had nothing. Just a compass and a few pieces of old equipment. He could not even see a pump.
He looked hard at Allday's crouching shoulders in the bow. Another risk. Was it still worth that?
Bolitho said suddenly, 'A good day for a shoot, Allday.' He spoke quickly as if his common sense might change his mind for him.
Allday turned as if he had misheard. '
When he had turned away he unbuttoned his coat and loosened the pistol in his belt where he had wedged it to keep it dry.
Bolitho glanced at his companions. The aide was staring emptily into nothing, and all the Dutchmen were watching the fishing boat which by now had drawn almost abeam.
Bolitho felt for his own pistol, then freed his sword. Two of the Dutchmen were visibly armed, the others might be too.
He waited for the aide to look up at him then said, 'In a moment I am going to take this boat away from here, m'sieu. Do you understand me?' The man nodded dully.
Bolitho continued carefully, 'If they refuse to obey, we must disarm them.' His voice hardened. 'Or kill them.' He waited, trying to guess what the man's broken mind was thinking. 'It is your last chance as well as ours, m'sieu!'
'I understand, Capitaine.' He crawled aft towards the tiller, his beautiful sword held clear of the filth and swilling water below the bottom boards.
Bolitho watched the oncoming curtain of sleet. It had blotted out some anchored vessels which moments earlier had been close enough to see in every detail. Once past the last few craft there would be nothing between them and the open sea.
'Be prepared, m'sieu!' Bolitho's fingers closed around the pistol. Against his chilled body it felt strangely warm, as if it had recently been fired.
Allday shouted, 'Larboard bow, Cap'n! A bloody boatload!' Bolitho saw a long, double-banked cutter pulling out from behind some moored barges, the scarlet-painted oars rising and falling like powerful wings as it swept towards them.
There were uniforms aft in the sternsheets, naval, as well as the green coats of the Dutch customs. A voice boomed over the choppy wavelets, magnified by a speaking trumpet.
The aide whispered, 'They call us to stop!' He sounded completely terrified.
Bolitho prodded the Dutch skipper and shouted, 'That way!
There was no need to show their weapons. The Dutchmen were, if anything, more eager to escape authority