‘Maragall, how many are there left?’

‘This person is the only man left in the house: he says Esteban is in the colonel’s room. The colonel is not back yet.’

‘Come.’

Stephen saw them walk into his timeless dream: they had been there before, but never together. And never in these dull colours. He smiled to see Jack, although poor Jack’s face was so shockingly concerned, white, distraught. But when Jack’s hands grappled with the straps his smile changed to an almost frightened rigour: the furious jet of pain brought the two remote realities together.

‘Jack, handsomely, my dear,’ he whispered as they eased him tenderly into a padded chair. ‘Will you give me something to drink, now, for the love of God? En Maragall, valga’m Deu,’ he said, smiling over Jack’s shoulder.

‘Clear the room, Satisfaction,’ said Jack, breaking off- several prisoners had come up, some crawling, and now two of them made a determined rush at Dutourd, standing ghastly, pressed into the corner.

‘That man must have a priest,’ said Stephen.

‘Must we kill him?’ said Jack.

Stephen nodded. ‘But first he must write to the colonel- bring him here - say, vital information - the American has talked - it will not wait. Must not: vital.’

‘Tell him, sir,’ said Jack to Maragall, looking back over his shoulder, with the look of profound affection still on his face. ‘Tell him he must write this note. If the colonel is not here in ten minutes I shall kill him on that machine.’

Maragall led Dutourd to the desk, put a pen in his hand. ‘He says he cannot,’ he reported. ‘Says his honour as an officer -,

‘His what?’ cried Jack, looking at the thing from which he had unstrapped Stephen.

Shouting, scuffling, a fall on the way up.

‘Sir,’ said Bonden, ‘this chap comes in at the front door.’ Two of his mates propped a man into the room. ‘I’m afraid the prisoners nobbled him on the way up.’

They stared at the dying, the dead colonel, and in the pause Dutourd whipped round, dashed out the lamp, and leapt from the window.

‘While trying to escape,’ said Stephen, when Java Dick came up to report. ‘Oh, altogether too - too - Jack, what now? I cannot scarcely crawl, alas.’

‘We carry you down to the gunboat,’ said Jack.

Maragall said, ‘There is the shutter they carry their dead suspects on, behind the door.’

‘Joan,’ said Stephen to him, ‘all the papers that matter are in the press to the right of the table.’

Gently, gently down through the open streets, Stephen staring up at the stars and the clean air reaching deep into his lungs. Dead streets, with one single figure that glanced at this familiar cortege and looked quickly away: right down to the quays and along. The gunboat: Satisfaction’s party there before them, ready at the sweeps. Bonden reporting ‘All present and sober, sir, if you please.’ Farewell, farewell, Maragall: God go with you and may no new thing arise. The black water slipping by faster, faster, lipping along her side. The strangled chime of a clock among the neat bundles of loot under the half-?deck. Silence behind them: Mahon still fast asleep.

Lazaretto Island left astern; the signal lanterns swaying up, answered from the battery with the regulation hoist and a last derisive cry of ‘Cochons’. And the blessed realisation that the dawn was bringing its usual slackening of the tramontane - and that the sail down to leeward was the lively.

‘God knows I should do the same again,’ said Jack, leaning on the helm to close her, the keen spray stinging his tired, reddened eyes. ‘But I feel I need the whole sea

to clean me.’ -

Chapter Four

‘Will the invalid gentleman take a little posset before he goes?’ asked the landlady of the Crown. ‘It is a nasty raw day - Portsmouth is not Gibraltar - and he looks but palely.’ She was on the point of appropriating the chambermaid’s ‘more fit for a hearse than a shay’ when it occurred to her that this might cast a reflection upon the Crown’s best post-?chaise, now standing at the door.

‘Certainly, Mrs Moss; a capital idea. I will carry it up. you put a warming-?pan in the chaise, I am sure?’

‘Two, sir, fresh and fresh this last half-?hour. But if it was two hundred, I would not have him travel on an empty stomach. Could you not persuade him to stay dinner, sir? He should have a goose-?pie; and there is nothing more fortifying than goose-?pie, as the world in general knows.’

‘I will try, Mrs Moss; but he is as obstinate as a bee in a bull’s foot.’

‘Invalids, sir,’ said Mrs Moss, shaking her head, ‘is all the same. When I nursed Moss on his death-?bed, he was that cross and fractious! No goose-?pie, no mandragore, no posset, not if it was ever so.’

‘Stephen,’ he cried, with a meretricious affectation of gaiety, ‘just toss this off, will you, and we will get under way. Is your great-?coat warming?’

‘I will not,’ said Stephen. ‘It is another of your damned possets. Am I in childbed, for all love, that I should be plagued, smothered, destroyed with caudle?’

‘Just a sip,’ said Jack. ‘It will set you up for the journey. Mrs Moss does not quite like your travelling; and I must say I agree with her. However, I have bought you a bottle of Dr Mead’s Instant Invigorator; it contains iron. Now just a drop, mixed with the posset.’

‘Mrs Moss - Mrs Moss - Dr Mead - iron, forsooth,’ cried Stephen. ‘There is a very vicious inclination in the present age, to -,

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