She was strangely familiar, but it had taken Partridge to explain the reason. He had said with professional interest, “I knows ’er, sir.
Of course he should have seen it. It was like the one additional twist of fate, for
He shifted the glass slowly to starboard and then held it on the two vessels in the middle of the line. Unlike the rest, they wore the red and yellow colours of Spain, placed for security’s sake in the centre where they could follow their admiral without having to display too much initiative. Initiative which had already cost their French allies dearly at St Vincent.
He heard Calvert murmuring to Midshipman Tothill, and when he lowered the glass saw him poring over the signal book, as if giving one last effort to make himself useful. Poor Calvert. If he survived this day, arrest and trial awaited him in England. Draffen’s friends would see to that.
Bolitho turned and saw Pascoe standing by the quarterdeck nine-pounders, a hand resting on his hip, and one foot on a bollard. The boy did not see him and was staring towards the enemy line.
He said to Keverne, “If possible we will break through by the Spanish ships. It will be the weakest point, if I am any judge.”
Keverne was watching
Bolitho looked at him gravely. “He will act as he sees fit.” He thought of Rattray’s heavy, bulldog face and guessed he would need no urging to close with the enemy. Only one thing counted now, that they could separate the French flagship from her consorts long enough to break the line and obtain the advantage of the wind. After that it would be every man for himself.
Vice-Admiral Broughton strode out into the sunlight and nodded curtly to the officers on the quarterdeck.
For a moment longer he looked at the lee division of ships, his eyes clouded with doubt and anxiety. Then he said, “The din of battle I can endure. But the waiting is torture.”
Bolitho watched him thoughtfully. He appeared calmer again. Or was it resignation? The admiral was wearing his beautiful sword, and beneath his coat the scarlet ribbon of the Bath. Was he so despairing that he was even offering himself as target to some French marksman? All at once he felt sorry for Broughton.
Recriminations and accusations were pointless now. He was watching his squadron and his proud hopes sailing towards what must seem certain destruction.
He asked, “Will you walk a while, Sir Lucius? I find it helps ease the tension!”
Broughton fell in step beside him without protest, and as they strode slowly up and down Bolitho added quietly, “The centre of the line is the best choice, sir. Two Spanish seventy-fours.”
Broughton nodded. “Yes, I saw them. Astern of them is the second-in-command.” He halted suddenly and snapped, “Where the hell is
“She is making good some repairs, sir.
Broughton looked at him for several seconds, his eyes very still. Then he asked, “Will our people fight?” He held up his hand urgently. “I mean
Bolitho turned away. “Have no fear on that score. I know them, and…”
Broughton interrupted, “And they know
“Yes, sir.”
When he looked forward again the enemy line had extended itself across either bow, so that it seemed to hide all of the horizon with a wall of sails. At any moment now the French admiral might guess what was happening, in which case they were beaten before they had made even the smallest impression on him. Had they been given more time, or better still the fluidity and independence denied to them by Broughton’s rigid demands, they could have sent some meaningless signal to Rattray and the others. It would have made the enemy believe that at any moment now they would tack and engage his line in the same hidebound traditional style still approved by so many. But without previous experiments of that sort, any false signal would throw their meagre resources into terrible and fatal confusion.
Unless… He looked at Broughton’s strained profile.
“May I suggest a general signal before the one to engage, sir?” He saw a nerve jumping in Broughton’s throat, but his eyes were unblinking as he stared at the oncoming ships. He persisted. “From you, sir.”
“Me?” Broughton turned and looked at him with surprise.
“You said earlier that our people know
Broughton shook his head. “I cannot do it.”
“May I speak, sir?” It was Calvert. “The signal should read ‘My trust is in you.’” He flushed as Keverne strode towards him and clapped him on the shoulder.
“By God, Mr Calvert, I never thought you had the imagination!”
Broughton licked his lips. “If you really believe…”
Bolitho nodded to Tothill. “I do, sir. Now get that bent on and hoisted immediately. We have little time left.”
He saw the sunlight flashing on glass as several officers on
But he turned swiftly as the air quaked and shook to a sudden roar of gunfire. The French flagship had fired, the orange flame spurting from gun after gun as she discharged a slow broadside towards the oncoming squadron. With the approach being diagonal, most of the balls were blind, and he saw them ripping through the short wave crests and throwing up water spouts far beyond the lee division. The smoke rolled down from the enemy in a steep brown fog, until only
Broughton was gripping his sword-hilt, his face tight with fixed concentration as another French ship fired and a ball slapped through the fore topsail and shrieked away over the water.
Bolitho said tersely, “
Faintly above the wind and the dying echo of cannon fire came the sound of cheering, distorted and vague, as if the ships themselves were calling the tune. As word was shouted from gun to gun and deck to deck the
Bolitho said quietly, “You see, sir? They don’t ask for much.”
He turned away as Broughton muttered, “God help me!”
More ships were firing now, and some of the balls were flicking across the water close by, and he saw several holes in the
He turned as Broughton said firmly, “I am ready. Signal the squadron to engage.” Before he hurried back to the rail he saw that Broughton’s eyes were bright with shock or surprise at hearing the cheers. Cheers for a short, trite signal which at the threshold of death could mean so much.
Bolitho shouted, “Make the signal, Mr Tothill!” To Keverne, “Man the braces. We will endeavour to keep station on
More crashes echoed across the shrinking arrowhead of water, and he felt the deck shudder as some hit home. He saw Meheux walking behind the forward guns, his sword bared as he spoke to some of the crews, his round face completely absorbed.
“Ready, sir!”
Bolitho raised his hand very slowly. “
The flags vanished from
swinging across the bowsprit until