'Well?' demanded Duroc.
Montholon closed the door behind him.
'Were you followed?' asked Lejeune.
'I don't think so,' said Montholon.
'Well, where is it to be?' Duroc pressed, fuming with impatience.
'Is the Emperor fit to travel?'
'He'll have to travel, whether he likes it or not,' snarled Duroc. 'The point is where to? You do know, don't you?' The tall man turned on Montholon, 'Or have we got to hang about while your sister ...'
'Hold your tongue, Duroc!' snapped Lejeune, closing his book, standing up and stepping up to Montholon to place a consoling hand upon his shoulder. 'Take no notice of Gaston, Etienne, he's a boor.'
Duroc grunted again and poured another glass. He also filled a second and handed it to Montholon. 'No offence,' he grumbled.
'He's just a big-booted bastard,' Marbet added genially, smiling conciliatorily, his eyes on Montholon. 'Well, Etienne?'
‘It's to be the Azores, gentlemen,' Montholon said, then raised the glass lo his lips.
There was a sigh of collective relief, then Lejeune, as though finding the news too good, asked Montholon, 'So it is not to be Elba?'
Montholon shook his handsome head. 'No. I am told there has been much debate. The bastards cannot agree ...'
'What of the Tsar?' Lejeune pressed.
'He consents. Absolutely' Montholon replied.
But Lejeune's caution had communicated itself to Duroc. 'He's a damned weathercock. Let us hope he doesn't change his mind.'
Montholon shook his head again. 'No; apparently Talleyrand's stratagem was too seductive.'
'He'd be a damned fool not to consent,' remarked Marbet, 'and your sister had this from Talleyrand himself, eh?'
'Yes,' Montholon nodded, 'the source is impeccable.'
Duroc snorted derisively. 'The source is peccant, you mean ...'
Montholon's eyes flashed and his hand moved to his sword hilt. 'You've no right...!'
'Gentlemen, please!' Lejeune snapped and rose smartly, extinguishing the quarrel. 'I will not tolerate such childish behaviour.'
'Well, Montholon's news settles matters,' added Marbet, recalling them to their duty.
The officers sighed, their strained features relaxed and Marbet ordered Delaborde to refill all their glasses, then turned to Lejeune.
'And your ships, my Admiral... ?'
'Are ready. They can sail the instant they receive word.'
'And the Azores ... ?'
'The Azores?' repeated Lejeune, a gleam of satisfaction lighting his curiously dark eyes, 'They are perfect!'
Marbet snatched up his glass: 'To the new enterprise!'
'Damnation to the English!'
'Long live the Emperor!'
CHAPTER 1
The Company of Kings
A pretty sight, sir.'
Captain Nathaniel Drinkwater lowered the glass and looked at the suave young lieutenant resplendent in the blue, white and gilt of full dress, his left fist hitched affectedly on the hilt of his hanger.
'Indeed, Mr Marlowe, very pretty.' Drinkwater replaced the glass to his eye and steadied the long barrel of the telescope against the after starboard mizen backstay.
'Redolent of the blessings of peace,' Marlowe went on.
'Very redolent,' agreed his commander from the corner of his mouth.
Marlowe regarded the rather quaint figure. They were of a height, but there the resemblance ended. Against his own innate polish, Marlowe thought Captain Drinkwater something of a tarpaulin. True, his uniform glittered in the late April sunshine with as much pomp as Lieutenant Marlowe's own, and Captain Drinkwater did indeed sport the double bullion epaulettes of a senior post-captain, but judging by the way they sat upon his shoulders, he looked a little hunchbacked. As for the old-fashioned queue, well, quaint was not the word for it. It was like an old mare's braided tail, done up for a mid-summer horse fair! The irreverent thought caused him to splutter with a half- suppressed laugh. It sounded like a sneeze.
'God bless you, Mr Marlowe.' The glass remained steadfastly horizontal. 'Tis the sun upon the water and all these gilded folderols I expect.'
Drinkwater swung his glass and raked the accompanying ships. To starboard His Britannic Majesty's ship- rigged yacht
Beyond the
As a sop to His Royal Highness's vanity for this short, but auspicious command, His Majesty's Frigate
Other ships in company were the British frigate
Having scanned this impressive group of allied ships, Drinkwater closed his glass with a snap and turned on his heel, almost knocking Lieutenant Marlowe off his feet.
'God's bones, man ...!'
'I beg pardon, sir.'
'Have you nothing better to do than hang at my elbow?'
'I was awaiting your orders, sir?'
'Keep an eye on the flagship, then. I imagine the prince will want some evolutions performed before we arrive at Calais.'
The warning was a product of Drinkwater's brief encounter with His Royal Highness and his flag-captain the previous afternoon, when he had joined the squadron off Dover and had reported aboard the