It took Pelham rather longer this time, for he had to spell out ‘lady’ and ‘still’. Nevertheless, he managed to get it hoist inside of seven minutes.
The reply, however, was half an hour in the coming, and in the meantime the crew were piped down to breakfast. Peto himself remained on deck the while, determined as he was to have the business concluded before battle was joined –
Flowerdew brought him chocolate in a silver pot, on a tray with two other cups and saucers.
‘Ask Miss Codrington to join me,’ he said gruffly. ‘And Mr Lambe.’
Rebecca came at once. ‘It is a beautiful morning, is it not, Captain Peto?’
Peto cleared his throat. ‘It is indeed, Miss Codrington. I fancy your father will be well pleased with the weather: light airs, just enough to make easy headway without too much sail set – just the thing to enter Navarino Bay.’
‘Shall we be able to see it, Captain Peto? We are not so very far away, are we?’
Peto cleared his throat again, and consciously. ‘We are some dozen and more miles out. Yon brig, the
Rebecca nodded. ‘And there is still no sign of the ship that will take us off?’ She said it quite matter-of- fact.
‘There is not,’ replied Peto, gravely. ‘I am waiting on a signal telling me where is the
‘They are. Mr Pelham has been most kind. And Mr Flowerdew.’
His steward, standing by, looked sheepish as Peto turned to him, and then back to Rebecca.
But both were spared any remark by Midshipman Pelham’s hailing from the poop. ‘
Peto put his glass to his eye. He could not read a signal without the codebook, but he might judge the length of it well enough.
It was mercifully, and encouragingly, brief. Pelham had it out in no time. ‘ “From flag,
‘
Pelham was already rifling through his Admiralty progress book and the Navy List. ‘Ex-Revenue-cutter, sir.’
‘
‘Yes, sir, cutter,’ Pelham confirmed, mistaking the captain’s exasperation. ‘Mr Robb, sir.’
Peto huffed. He considered it were no consolation had its captain been called Nelson. But, if a cutter was all the admiral could spare . . . ‘Very well, Mr Lambe: have the officer of the watch report as soon as
‘No, sir.’
‘Then join me at mine, if you will.’ He turned to Rebecca. ‘Miss Codrington?’
‘I have not, Captain Peto.’
‘Then you may well have your last egg this side of Malta.’
While he was perfectly capable – indeed, inclined – to interpret liberally (some said flout) the Admiralty’s fighting instructions, in matters of routine Captain Sir Laughton Peto observed to the letter the customs of the service. The practices he had learned in the midshipmen’s berth, the aptness of which he had witnessed time and again, were to him as the rubrics of divine worship were to his father: to be followed without variation, lest a greater error ensue. And so at breakfast this morning he wore his best linen, shirt-points white as chalk, cuffs unchafed. His sea coat was sponged clean, its formerly invisible nap teased back to life with a steaming bowl, comb and a score years of Flowerdew’s know-how, and the gold braid restored by the application of soap and water with ancient tooth brush to a glister that would do justice to a Portuguese high altar.
Rebecca wanted to say something – ‘How smart is your appearance, Captain Peto’ – but she sensed she ought not to: Lieutenant Lambe’s turnout was no less to be remarked on, and she could hardly favour the one without the other. Instead she made seamanlike conversation (the captain did indeed seem rather distracted in his thoughts), but not once did she enquire of the
As Flowerdew poured his captain a third cup of coffee, there was a sharp knock at the steerage door. Lambe made to rise, but Peto shook his head. ‘In good time,’ he said, as Flowerdew shuffled off to answer (now that, evidently,
Flowerdew opened the inner door to admit the officer of the watch.
‘Yes, Mr Wilsey?’ said Peto, airily, as one who knew what was to follow.
‘Signal from the flagship, sir. “Close up to signal distance.” ’
The admiral’s intention had been to enter the anchorage just after midday. Why order him up now when he had sent him to windward for the night?
Lambe was already on his feet as Peto rose. ‘Make sail, Mr Lambe . . . And clear for action.’
‘Ay-ay, sir!’ The glint in his lieutenant’s eye scarcely made the acknowledgement necessary.
Flowerdew brought hat and sword.
‘Miss Codrington, you will accompany me to the quarterdeck until such time as
Rebecca took it. She knew not to detain him with any speech, though she was dismayed rather by the suddenness of their parting. She began fumbling in her workbag. ‘Wait, a moment, if you will, Captain Peto,’ she begged, anxiously, until she was able to produce what she sought. ‘I should like you to have this.’
She held out a folded square of dark blue silk.
Peto took it, colouring a little, and clearing his throat once more. No woman had ever given him anything, except his mother (so many necessaries when first he had gone to sea) –
‘It is not quite finished, Captain Peto. I had intended embroidering the date, but—’
Peto cleared his throat most determinedly. ‘Quite. Just so. It is most handsomely done, Miss Codrington. A very proper memento. I thank you.’ He folded it very carefully, and placed it in the inner pocket of his coat.
As they left the cabin, the marine drummer was already beating to quarters, and the first of the carpenter’s mates had begun knocking the dowels from the bulkheads of the steerage. Peto had seen the work so many times, yet still the business of clearing for action thrilled every nerve-ending in his body. Banging, shouting, cursing, crashing . . . the order midst chaos, reason midst bedlam: it spoke of the umpteen-hundred men working to a single noble purpose, of his reliance on them, and of theirs on him. And he delighted in it.
He looked down into the waist to see men hauling with a will on the gun tackle, and boys bringing up powder as if coals to a fire. His breast swelled with pride, and his mind cleared itself of every triviality in the knowledge that he was responsible for everything –
‘No sign of
Peto cast his eyes to the tops. ‘There is no need to inform me of a negative, Mr Wilsey.’ He said it kindly enough, but there was no use his beating about the bush with a lieutenant wanting promotion.
Nevertheless, Wilsey’s ‘Ay-ay, sir’ was a half-swallowed affair.
By now the topgallants were set, and