'Er, land a gun an' drive 'im out?' Purchet countered.
Kydd ground his teeth. 'No, damn y'r eyes—he'd be a prize simkin should he neglect t' land sentries on both points, an' that's not the kind o' man I think he is.' His sister's patient tuition in polite discourse on his promotion to King's officer was wilting fast under the strain.
The quarterdeck fell into silence,
And still no sign of movement in the anchored vessel. Was it ever going to make a break for the open sea?
'The—the purser, sir?' Dacres said in astonishment.
'Yes, you heard. The purser.'
Kydd kept his silence while Ellicott scrambled up the hatchway. 'How many days' vittles do we have at hand?' he asked the man.
Ellicott shot a shrewd glance at the motionless French vessel. 'Sir, as you remember, you gave directions —'
'How—many—days ? '
'Er, no more'n three, five if we're three upon four.'
All
There had to be something. A rammer clattered to the deck at a nearby gun and the seaman shamefacedly retrieved it. Kydd swung round at the distraction, then realised the gun crews had been at quarters since dawn. 'Stand down at y'r weapons,' he ordered loudly. There was no question about dismissing them in the face of the enemy but at least they could take a measure of relaxation at the guns. 'And they shall have their grog. Mr Dacres?'
The gun crews accepted their three-water rum on the upper deck from the grog-monkeys with hushed voices and stifled laughter. They would usually be in a roar of jollity below on the mess decks at this time. By the long custom of the service they were entitled to a double tot before battle and Kydd had ensured they got it. Besides, it gave him precious time to think.
He paced up and down, oblivious of the glances that followed him. His passion had cooled and he now directed all his resources into cunning.
Then it came to him. 'Mr Dacres, find me a trumpet, an' someone who knows how to play one! This minute, d'ye hear?' Without waiting for a reply from the dumbfounded lieutenant he turned on his heels and went below. 'Mr Peck! Rouse out y'r writing tackle an' please to wait on me in ten minutes.' It would give him time to jot down a few ideas.
He settled at the table. Now just how was it done? He knew what he wanted, but was hazy in the details. Was it not a
'Sir?'
He motioned Peck to the other side of the table. 'You c'n write Frenchy?' he said severely.
'I do, sir, yes.'
'Then write this—in y'r best round hand.' Peck busied himself with his quill and Kydd focused his thoughts. His mind produced an image of the French captain in his own cabin, frowning over a paper handed to him by a shadowy petty officer. He began composing.
He waited for Peck to finish, then snatched the paper and scanned it quickly. The painful hours of learning with Renzi had yielded a workmanlike competence in the language but by no means a familiarity with the high-flown courtliness that seemed to be the style required in high diplomacy. But with a savage smile he decided that if he had erred on the side of plain speaking then so much the better. 'Ask Mr Dacres t' attend me,' he said to Peck. Dacres was fluent but Kydd did not want to be told what to say: they had to be his words—but with no misunderstandings.
Dacres took the paper as if it would catch fire but manfully worked his way through it. 'Sir, if I could suggest . . .' To Kydd they were footling changes but he allowed them in the final draft.
'Did you find a trumpet?' he asked, when they had regained the deck.
'Er, Able Seaman Ridoli—it would seem he has tolerable skill at the flugelhorn, which he assures me is a species of trumpet. As he will never be parted from his instrument, he therefore has it on board—'
'Get him in the boat. Mr Bowden, ye know what to do? When you reach th' rock, set Ridoli t' play for a space, then return.'
'May I know what he should play, sir?'
'Damn it, I don't know!' Kydd said irritably. 'Some kind o'