“Then we know all we need to know,” said Sharpe.
“I must try and catch him,” said Hornblower. “Call all hands, Mr. Harcourt.”
“Aye aye, My Lord.”
After the automatic reply Harcourt opened his mouth again to speak, but he could make no sound come from it.
“I remember,” said Hornblower, his cup of unhappiness filling to the brim. “I said I would not need the hands before morning.”
“Yes, My Lord. But they’ll not be far. I’ll send along the waterfront and find ‘em. I’ll have ‘em back here in an hour.”
“Thank you, Mr. Harcourt. Do your best. Mr. Sharpe, we shall need to be towed as far as the Pass. Will you send and order a steam tug for us?”
Sharpe looked over at the dark man who had brought in the bearskin cap.
“Doubt if there’ll be one before noon,” said the dark man. “
“Noon,” said Hornblower. “Thirteen hours’ start.
“And she’s one of the fastest ships built,” said Sharpe. “She logged fifteen knots when she was being chased by
“What’s the Mexican port where she’ll take the soldiers on board?”
“It’s only a village on a lagoon, Corpus Christi, My Lord. Five hundred miles and a fair wind.”
Hornblower could picture the
“
That was an important point, a very important point.
“She’s armed, and she’ll be full of men, My Lord,” said Gerard.
That was another important point, and a very positive point at that. With her twelve-pounders and five hundred disciplined soldiers—and her large American crew as well—she could laugh at anything
Sweating in the stifling night, Hornblower felt like a lassoed wild animal. At every moment some fresh coil was being wound about him to render him more helpless. He was tempted, like a wild animal, to lose all self control, to lapse into mad panic, to fling away all his strength in an explosion of rage. He had sometimes seen, during his long professional career, senior officers giving vent to explosions of that sort. But it would not help. He looked round at the circle of faces in the lamplight; the faces wore the sober expressions of men who were witnessing a failure, men who were aware that they were in the presence of an Admiral who had made a woeful hash of the first important business he had encountered. That in itself could drive him insane with fury.
Pride came to help him. He would not sink to human weaknesses in the sight of these men.
“I shall sail in any case,” he said, coldly, “as soon as I have a crew and a steam tug.”
“May I ask what Your Lordship intends to do?” asked Sharpe.
Hornblower had to think quickly to make a reasonable answer to this question; he had no idea. All he knew was that he was not going to give up without a struggle; no crisis was ever alleviated by wasting time.
“I shall employ what time I have here in the composition of orders for my squadron,” he said. “My flag- lieutenant will write them at my dictation, and I shall ask you, Mr. Sharpe, to undertake the distribution of them by all the means you find available.”
“Very good, My Lord.”
Hornblower remembered at that moment something he should have done already. It was not too late; this part of his duty he must still carry out. And it would at least disguise the anguish he felt.
“Mr. Harcourt,” he said. “I have to commend you greatly on the excellent way in which you executed my orders. You carried out the task of observing
“Thank you, My Lord.”
“And this man Jones,” went on Hornblower. “No seaman could have acted with more intelligence. You made a good selection, Mr. Harcourt, and Jones justified it. I have it in mind to reward him. I can give him an acting rating and confirm it as soon as possible.”
“Thank you, My Lord. He has been rated before and disrated.”
“Drink? Is that why he was denied shore leave?”
“I’m afraid so, My Lord.”
“Then what do you recommend?”
Harcourt was at a loss.
“You could say to his face what you’ve already said to me, My Lord. You could shake his hand—”
Hornblower laughed.
“And be known through the Navy as the meanest Admiral who ever flew a flag? No. A golden guinea at least. Two guineas. I’ll give them to him myself, and I shall request you to give him three days’ leave as soon as we see Kingston again. Let him have his debauch, if that is the only way in which we can reward him. I have to consider the feelings of the whole squadron.”
“Aye aye, My Lord.”
“Now, Mr. Gerard, I’ll begin the writing of those orders.”
It was indeed noon before