lucky. 'He has the devil's own luck,' Lieutenant Otero, the
'A lucky pirate, it seems,' Sharpe observed drily.
'I sometimes wonder if what we call luck is merely the will of God,' Otero observed sadly, 'and that therefore Cochrane has been sent to scourge Spain for a reason. But God will surely relent.' Otero piously crossed himself and Sharpe reflected that if God did indeed want to punish Spain, then in Lord Cochrane He had found Himself a most lethal instrument. Cochrane, when master of a small Royal Naval sloop, and at the very beginnings of the French wars when Spain had still been allied with France, had captured a Spanish frigate that outgunned and outmanned him six to one. From that moment he had become a scourge of the seas, defying every Spanish or French attempt to thwart him. In the end his defeat had not come at the hands of Britain's enemies, but of its courts, which had imprisoned him for fraud. He had fled the country in disgrace, to become the Admiral of the Chilean Republic's Navy and such was Cochrane's reputation that, as even the
'And we are well armed!' the frigate's officers liked to boast. Captain Ardiles exercised the
Sharpe listened, smiled and made no attempt to mention that Lord Cochrane had fought scores of shipborne battles, while Ardiles, for all his gun practices, had never faced a real warship in a fight. Ardiles had merely skirmished with coastal brigs and pinnaces that were a fraction of the
The weather became as wild as the stories. It was supposed to be summer in these southern latitudes, yet more than one dawn brought hissing sleet showers and a thick frost which clung like icy mildew in the sheltered nooks of the
Most of the Spanish artillery officers succumbed to seasickness. Few of the sick men had the energy to climb on deck and, in front of the scornful sailors, lower their breeches to perch on the beakhead, so instead the passengers voided their bellies and bowels into buckets that slopped and spilled until the passenger accommodations stank like a cesspit. The food did not help the ship's well-being. At Saint Helena the
Sharpe and Harper, crammed together in a tiny cabin scarcely big enough for a dog, were luckier than most passengers, for neither man was seasick, and both were so accustomed to soldiers' food that a return to half- rotted seamen's rations gave no offense. They ate what they could, which was not much, and Harper even lost weight so that, by the time the
'I'm shriveling away, so I am,' he complained as the frigate quivered from the blow of a great sea. 'I'll be glad when we reach land, devils or no devils, and there'll be some proper food to eat. Christ, but it's cold up there!'
'No mermaids in sight?'
'Only a three-horned sea serpent.' The grotesque stories of the fearful Spanish army officers had become a joke between the two men. 'It's bad up there,' Harper warned more seriously. 'Filthy bad.'
Sharpe went on deck a few moments later to find that conditions were indeed bad. The ocean was a white shambles, blown ragged by a freezing wind that came slicing off the icesheets which lay to the south. The
The cloaked man, seeing Sharpe, carefully negotiated a passage across the wet and heaving deck, and Sharpe, to his astonishment, saw that it was the reclusive Captain Ardiles, who had not been seen by any of the passengers since the
'Cape Horn!' Ardiles shouted, pointing off to starboard.
Sharpe stared. For a long time he could see nothing, then an explosion of shredded water betrayed where a black scrap of rock resisted the pounding waves.
'That's the last scrap of good earth that many a sailorman saw before he drowned!' Ardiles spoke with a gloomy relish, then clutched at the tarred rigging as the
Sharpe hesitated, wanting his answer to be precise. 'He put me in mind of a man who has played a hugely successful joke on people he despises.'
Ardiles, who had flat, watchful eyes in a hungry, cadaverous face, thought about Sharpe's answer, then shrugged. 'Maybe. But I think he should have been executed for his joke.'
Sharpe said nothing. He could see the waves breaking on Cape Horn more clearly now, and could just make out the loom of a black cliff beyond the battered water. God, he thought, but this is a fearful place.
'They made me sick!' Ardiles said suddenly.
'Sick?' Sharpe had only half heard Ardiles's scathing words and had assumed that the frigate's Captain was talking about the seasickness that afflicted most of the army officers.
'Ruiz and the others! Fawning over that man! Jesus! But Bonaparte was our enemy. He did enough damage to Spain! If it were not for Bonaparte you think there'd be any rebellion in South America? He encouraged it! And how many more Spaniards will die for that man's evil? Yet these bastards bowed and scraped to him. Given half a chance they'd have licked his bum cleaner than a nun's finger!'
Sharpe staggered as the ship rolled. A rattle of sleet and foam shot down the deck and slammed into the poop. 'I can't say I wasn't impressed by meeting Bonaparte!' he shouted in defense of the Spanish army officers.