Alexander Kent - THE INSHORE SQUADRON
Another said, `He's been in a battle, whoever he is.'
Bolitho stared at an elegant carriage which was waiting in the shelter of the wall.
Browne explained almost apologetically, 'I sent word as soon as we anchored, sir. It belongs to a friend of the family, and I am thankful he was able to get it here in time.'
Bolitho smiled. The carriage was beautifully sprung and would be vastly different from the London coach.
`You never cease to surprise me.'
A young lieutenant stepped forward and removed his hat. 'I am to give you these despatches, sir.' He was watching Bolitho with an unwinking stare as if to memorize every detail. 'From the port admiral, and from Whitehall, sir.'
Browne took them and handed them to Allday. 'Put them in the carriage, then tell your second coxswain to return with the barge to Benbow.' He added dryly, 'I assume you are intending to come with us?'
Allday grinned. 'I have packed a small bag, sir.'
Browne sighed. Allday had expanded like the tropical sun since Bolitho's recovery.
'My respects to the port admiral.' Bolitho pictured Herrick dictating his own lengthy reports for the dockyard, a task he hated, as did most captains. `Please give him my greetings.'
Browne gave the lieutenant, the admiral's messenger boy, a withering stare as he melted into the crowd.
Allday returned and climbed up beside the heavily muffled coachman.
But Bolitho hesitated, and turned to glance through the sallyport gate towards the anchorage. There were many vessels at anchor, but he was looking at the Benbow. In two weeks it would be another year. Eighteen hundred and one. What might it bring for the Benbow and all she carried within her fat hull?
He climbed up and into the carriage, sinking into the soft cushions with relief.
'Does it give much pain, sir? We can stay here awhile if you wish. The carriage and horses are yours for as long as you need them.'
Bolitho eased his legs gingerly back and forth. 'He must be a good friend.'
'He owns half the county, sir.'
Bolitho forced his limbs to relax a fibre at a time 'Drive on The surgeon's work appears to be holding together.'
He lay back and closed his eyes, remembering those first fleeting moments.
Allday's face, the surgeon's assistants all around him, the pain, his own voice groaning and pleading like a stranger's.
And this morning. The sailors cheering him. He had taken them to the verge of death and they could still wish him well.
The carriage's motion was like a hull in choppy water, and
14z The Inshore Squadron
as the clatter of hoofs and wheels across the cobbled street changed to the duller sound of a muddy road, Bolitho fell asleep.
‘Whoa, Ned! Whoa there, Blazer!'
Bolitho came out of his sleep with a start, aware of several things all at once. That it was much colder, and there was sleet gathering at the corners of the carriage windows. Also that his seat was rocking violently. More to the point, Browne was trying to lower a window, a cocked pistol in his hand.
Browne muttered, 'Goddammit, it's jammed!' He realized Bolitho was awake and added unnecessarily, 'Trouble, by the sound of it, sir. Footpads, or gentlemen of the road maybe.'
The window dropped like a guillotine and the freezing air filled the carriage in seconds.
Bolitho heard the horses coming under control, the slither and stamp of hoofs in mud. It was a fine place for a robbery. It looked like the end of nowhere.
The carriage stopped, and a man with a set of white eyebrows peered up at them.
Bolitho pushed Browne's pistol aside. It was Allday, his face and chest glistening in sleet and snow.
Allday said, 'Carriage, Sir! Off the road! Someone's hurt!' Browne climbed down and turned to protest as Bolitho clambered after him.
There was quite a strong wind, and as the two officers struggled after Allday their boat-cloaks streamed behind them like banners. The coachman stayed where he was, soothing his horses which were stamping nervously, their bodies steaming with heat.
The other carriage was a small one, and was lying on its side in a ditch beside the road. A horse was standing nearby, seemingly indifferent to what had happened, and there was a patch of blood near the rear wheel, vivid against the sleety mud.
Allday said, `Down here, sir!' He staggered up the slope, a man in his arms. One of the man's legs jerked at an unnatural angle, obviously broken.
'Easy, man!' Browne knelt beside him. `Stunned, poor devil.'
Allday said, 'Looks like he was trying to crawl away. To get help, most probably.'
They all stared at each other, and Bolitho snapped, 'Look in the coach. Here, pull me up!'
With some difficulty they dragged the door open and upwards like a gunport, the other being buried in the mud.
Bolitho said, `It's a woman. On her own.' He gripped the side of the door until the splintered wood pierced his skin.
It had not happened. He was still asleep and this was one more cruel twist to torture him.
He felt Allday beside him. 'You all right, sir?'
'Look inside.' He could barely control his voice.
Allday thrust his leg through the door and gingerly eased himself inside. Out of the bitter wind and wet the interior seemed almost warm.
He reached out and touched the body, then started with alarm as her head lolled slowly towards him.
'Oh, my God!'
Bolitho said, `Help me inside.'
He did not even feel his bandaged thigh jar against the door. All he could see and feel was the woman's body, her velvet cloak flung to her feet by the impact. The same long chestnut hair, almost the same face, feature by feature. She would even be about Cheney's age, he thought despairingly.
Hardly daring to breathe, he cradled her shoulders in his arm, and after another hesitation he thrust his hand under her breast. Nothing. He licked his lips, sensing Allday's strength, willing her to live.
There it was, a slight beat under his fingers.
Allday said hoarsely, 'Nothing broken, I'd say, sir. Nasty bruise on her temple.' With surprising gentleness he brushed some hair from her face. `I'd not believe it if you'd not been here, an' that's no lie.'
Bolitho held her carefully, feeling her low breathing, the warmth of her body growing against his own.
He heard Browne calling from the road. `What is happening, sir?'
Poor Browne, he could probably see nothing from his place beside the injured coachman.
And what was happening? Bolitho wondered helplessly. A girl who looked so like Cheney, but was not. A twist of fate which had brought them together on the empty road, but not for long.
Allday said, `We'd best get her to our carriage, sir.' He was watching Bolitho worriedly. 'Reckon she'd have died in this cold, but for us.'
Bolitho climbed out of the coach, his mind confused. Even the setting was as he had always imagined it. The coach smashed and overturned. Cheney carrying their unborn child, trapped inside. The coachman had been killed, but Ferguson, Bolitho's one-armed steward, had been with her. Ferguson had somehow carried her two miles to find help, but to no avail. Bolitho had gone over it so often. If these strangers,had been actors they could not have recreated it more truly, more savagely.
Browne said, `I've fashioned a splint for his leg. He's a bit stunned.' He looked vaguely through the sleet, his cocked hat shining like glass. 'Lord Swinburne has an estate near here.' He shouted at the coachman, 'Do you know it?'
The coachman nodded, probably unwilling to become further involved. `Yes, sir.'
It was then Browne sensed that something else was happening. He watched Allday carry the limp body to the carriage and turned to ask Bolitho about her. But he was already climbing into the carriage, his face a mask of concentration.
Allday came back again and looked at the injured coachm
Browne whispered fiercely, 'What is it, man?'
Allday regarded him more calmly than he felt. 'Mr Browne, sir, if you want to assist, I suggest you help search the other coach for baggage. There'll be thieves aplenty here soon. Like crows round a gibbet. Then, if you would, you can tie that stray horse on behind us. I'm not much of a hand with horses.'
As Browne obediently started for the coach Allday added, 'He will tell you if he wants to, sir. No disrespect to you, an' none taken, I hope.'
He said it so bluntly that Browne knew he meant that he could go to hell if he chose to.
Then something he had heard seemed to rouse his mind like a voice.
'She's like his dead wife, is that it?'
Allday sighed. 'That's the strength of it, sir. I knew her well. I couldn't believe my eyes just now.' He stared at the other carriage, its outline blurred in the steady sleet. 'As if he doesn't have enough on his mind.'
He said it with such bitterness that Browne decided to leave it there.
Later, as the carriage turned warily on to another road, the freed horse trotting obediently behind, Browne watched Bolitho as he and Allday protected the woman against any sudden lurch.
Pale from shock, and yet her skin held more than a hint of sunlight. She had obviously been abroad, and quite recently, he thought. Browne put her age at about thirty. She was lovely, there was no other description. A gentle mouth, which even the pain and shock could not spoil.
And her hair, he had never known such a fine rich colour.
One of her hands fell from beneath her cloak, and Browne saw Bolitho reach out to lift it back again. Watched him falter in a manner he had not seen before. Perhaps it was the ring on her finger. Someone else's, which was only to be expected, he thought. He saw the sadness in Bolitho's eyes and felt strangely moved. In fantasy such things should never happen. Browne often had dreams of his own. Of the perfect girl riding towards him. Taking so long that the pain was only endurable because of the perfect ending which would some day be his.
The ring had prevented even a dream for Bolitho.
Allday said, 'We're passing a lodge, sir.' He cocked his head to listen as the coachman shouted something to the gatekeeper.
To himself he added bitterly, 'I wish to God we'd done what Captain Herrick asked and stayed aboard for another night. Then he'd never have known about her.'
The coach came to a halt and female voices seemed to flood into it.
'Lawd bless us, sea officers, no less! Lend a hand there! You, tell Andy to saddle up and ride for the doctor!'
Browne said, 'Lucky I remembered this place, sir.'
But Bolitho did not hear him, he was already following the others towards the entrance of the big house.
Lord Swinburne seemed far too small a man to command so much authority and in such a magnificent house.
He stood with his buttocks dangerously dose to a roaring fire and looked from Bolitho to Browne with the searching intelligence of a winter robin.
`Damn me, what a story, sir. And it's good to have you with us, er, Bolitho. King's officers are rare out here. The army and the fleet have taken all the young men away. How my steward manages to run things I dare not ask!'
A servant girl entered the tall double doors and curtsied.
'Beg pardon, m'lord,-but the doctor has arrived.'
'Damn yer eyes, girl, show him to the room! Tell him I've something to warm his tripes when he's done!'
The girl curtsied again, giggled and fled.
Swinburne chuckled. 'You're off to London y'say, sir? Well, why not stay with us tonight? My head groom says this will blow over soon. You'll be a damn sight more comfortable here than in some flea-infested inn, I daresay!' He was enjoying his unexpected visitors.
Bolitho stretched his leg and felt the heat from the fire easing away the throbbing pain.
Swinburne said with sudden gravity, 'Good to know we have some young men to command our-fleets. God knows, we're going to need 'em. I hear that Nelson is back from the Mediterranean and already with the Channel Fleet. There are big events in the making, I'd say.'
Bolitho took a glass from another servant. The wine was dear and cool. Made on the estate from some ancient receipt, most likely. The way they did it in Cornwall, and all such counties which had to live off their own resources.
Lord Swinburne knew more than he did. But he could drum up no excitement or interest. All he could think of was the girl upstairs. The touch of her. The scent of her hair as he had held her in the carriage. He was a fool, mad even, to compare her with Cheney. It was over. Sooner or later, by some method or other, he would have to find a release.
Browne said, 'I should like to stay here, m'lord. My father often speaks of you.' He looked at Bolitho. 'Will it suit, sir?'
Bolitho was about to refuse, to show rudeness if necessary, if only to escape and hide with his despair. But he saw a round little man with glasses coming through the room and knew he was the doctor.
`Well, how is she?'
The doctor took a goblet of brandy and held it admiringly against the fire.
'Nothing broken, but she needs to rest. It was a bad shock, and she has bruises on her body like a prize-fighter.'
Browne tried to appear unconcerned, but he was thinking of that lovely girl naked and helpless under the doctor's eyes.
The doctor added, 'She's conscious now, thank God. Her ladyship is looking after her, so she's in good hands.' He held out the goblet to be refilled. 'By God, m'lord, I'd no idea the smugglers ran their cargoes as far as this!'
Lord Swinburne grinned fiercely. 'You impertinent devil! If there was another doctor in five miles you'd not set foot in here again!'
They were obviously very good friends.
The doctor placed his goblet down carefully and crossed to Bolitho.
`Please be still, sir.'
Bolitho made to protest and then saw the blood glinting in the firelight like a cruel eye. The doctor was already unbuttoning his. coat.
`Will you allow me to take you to another room?'
Browne watched fascinated, Bolitho's resentment changing to embarrassment as the doctor added gently, 'I have seen enough brave men to know a wound, sir.'
As they left -the room, the tall officer leaning against the rotund doctor, Swinburne said, `You serve a remarkable man, Oliver. It might be the making of you yet.'
'If Rear-Admiral Bolitho is unfit to continue tomorrow I shall leave without him, m'lord.' Browne considered his decision. It would almost be worth it just to see Sir George Beauchamp's face when he marched into the Admiralty on his own with Bolitho's despatches. 'I think he would only fret and worry otherwise.'
'Good thinking, Oliver, m'boy. The roads are not what they should be.'
The doctor returned, buttoning his coat, as if that was his way of showing he was no longer working.
He dropped his voice. 'This is a terrible wound, Lieutenant. A good man did the work, but it needs far more patience than your superior is prepared to give.' He held his hands to the fire. 'He was lucky to have such a good surgeon from what I have heard and read.'
Swinburne said, 'Well? What are you doing about it?'
'I'll keep him here, if I may. I believe he is a lonely man. The sudden change from swift action to life ashore might do him more harm than good.' He gestured around the great pillared room. 'But in this humble abode, and with Christmas almost on us once more, I think he might fare better!'