Read Under False Colours Online
Authors: Richard Woodman
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Sea Stories, #War & Military
'Sir? Is it you? Captain Drinkwater, sir?'
The speaker's carious teeth grinned from an unshaven jaw, his breath stank of poor diet and personal neglect. He swung round and called out, 'Hey, lads, it's the Cap'n!'
'You're from
Tracker
, ain't you?' Drinkwater asked grinning. 'How's Mr Quilhampton?'
The man turned and shook his head. ' 'E ain't so good, sir, but 'e put up an 'ell of a fight, bless yer!'
'What about Mr Frey?'
'I'm all right, sir!' said Frey running up and seizing Drinkwater's outstretched hand. His eyes were full of tears and the two men clasped each other with relief.
'Why, I'm damned glad to see you, sir, damned glad!'
January 1810
'How many of you are there?' asked Drinkwater eagerly, his mood transformed by the meeting with Frey. 'No, wait.' He turned to the grinning seaman who had first recognized him. 'I'd be obliged if you'd warn the men not to use my name.' He lowered his voice. 'I'm here incognito, d'you see.'
The man laid a finger beside his nose, winked and grinned lopsidedly, exposing his foul teeth. 'Aye aye, sir, I understands, we'll hold our tongues, don't you worry.'
'Very well then, be off and see to it!'
'Aye, aye, sir.'
Drinkwater turned his attention back to Frey. 'So, how many of you are there?'
Frey looked away. 'Eleven.'
'
Eleven
? God's bones, is that all?'
'That excludes the badly wounded, sir; there are seven of them, plus the Captain, Lieutenant Quilhampton. They took him to Hamburg last night.'
'Last night?' Drinkwater frowned. Had Quilhampton been somewhere within the Rathaus at the same time as he and Gilham? Had Davout summoned him for questioning in connection with the discovery of that damned portrait?
'He's badly wounded, sir,' Frey said, breaking his train of thought.
'How badly?'
'He took a sword thrust, sir, in his left arm, above the stump. It was gangrenous when we arrived here and Doctor Castenada had to perform a second amputation. Mr Quilhampton was in a high fever when they took him last night.'
'God damn!' Drinkwater blasphemed impotently. For a moment his thoughts were with his friend, lying delirious in the hands of the French, then he mastered himself. 'Is there somewhere less exposed that we can talk? This is Captain Gilham, by the way, the master of the
Ocean
, transport. Mr Gilham, a protege of mine, Mr Frey.'
The two men shook hands perfunctorily.
'They are very lax here, sir. There is talk about a new Governor having arrived ...'
'We know,' Drinkwater cut Frey short, 'but somewhere to talk, for the love of God, it's too cold here ...'
Frey led them into a barrack hut that appeared to be a sort of officers' mess. It was full of Spaniards, the remnants of Romana's Army Corps, left behind when Rear-Admiral Keats evacuated the bulk of the Spanish forces from Denmark.
Frey indicated a table and two benches reserved for the
Tracker
's pitifully small number of surviving officers.
'You had better make your verbal report, Mr Frey.'
Frey nodded, rubbing his hands over his pinched face. Drinkwater noted the grime of his cuffs and neck linen. His hollow cheeks had not been shaved for several days and his eyes were red rimmed and sunken.
'You recall the night of the tempest, sir?'
'Yes, very well.'
'We lost our foretopmast within the first hour. It was badly sprung and the stays slipped at the cap. As we strove to clear the wreckage we were continually swept by the sea and lost several men in the confusion, both aloft and from the deck. We burnt bengal fires for assistance, but were not certain of your whereabouts by then ...'
'We saw them and put about, but were unable to find you. Soon afterwards we were in like condition and drove ashore on Helgoland, but pray go on.'
'We were less fortunate, sir. By daylight we had three feet of water below and in so small a vessel it damned near had us foundering. We had precious little freeboard and were wallowing abominably. Mr Q., sir, was a tower of strength. Though we had lost a deal of our company, including both the bosun and carpenter, we got sail on her and strove to make northing ...'
'But the wind backed and drove you east.'
'Aye sir, you were in like case no doubt?'
'Aye.'
'We fetched upon a bank, drove over it and anchored in its lee. When the gale abated we began to set things to rights. We had men at the pumps three hours out of every four and one fell dead from the labour. But Mr Q. drove us near as hard as he drove himself; we found the leak, clapped a fothered sail over it and began to gain on the water in the hold. We planned to empty half our water casks and wing 'em out in the hold for buoyancy, but the Danes came out in their confounded gunboats. They lay off and simply shot us to pieces with long twenty four pounders. We didn't stand a chance until they boarded us. Then we gave them cold steel, for there was scarce a grain of dry powder in the ship and that had been spent in the carronades. I think there were about forty of us when the action began ...'
'And James was wounded when the Danes boarded?' Drinkwater prompted.
Frey nodded. 'Aye, sir. He did his damndest ...'
'Mr Frey,' Drinkwater said after a moment, drawing Frey from the introspection he had lapsed into on recounting the fate of the
Tracker
. 'I would not have you think I ask this question from meanness of spirit, but what became of my personal effects?'
'We took some care of those, sir. Mr Q. had your chest sown into canvas and the whole tarred over. They weren't in the hold, d'you see, Mr Q. had 'em stowed in his cabin. When the Danes took the
Tracker
, they looted her of anything moveable. I'm afraid, sir,' Frey admitted, lowering his eyes, 'your chest was seized along with the ship's orders, sir.' He paused and looked Drinkwater full in the face. 'That was my fault, sir. I had forgotten about them in the heat of the action, sir, after Mr Q. was wounded ...'
Drinkwater looked at the crestfallen Frey. After Quilhampton had fallen the command of
Tracker
would have devolved to him, and in the bitter moment of surrender Frey had forgotten to destroy the brig's secret orders.
'So the enemy know we were bound for Russia?'
'Yes sir, and the private signals for the ...'
'Yes, yes, I realize that!' said Drinkwater sharply, aware of the irony.
'I'm mortified, sir, there's no excuse ...'
'I'm sorry, I spoke hastily, I implied no reproach, it's just that... well, never mind. You will have to admit these things in your written report, but I do not think you need concern yourself over much.'
'Sir?' Frey looked puzzled.
'No court martial will condemn an officer who has been through what you went through, Mr Frey and, by your account, gallantly defended his ship. You must submit to the court's judgement, of course.'
'I have already written my report, sir,' Frey said gloomily.
'Well, no matter of that now,' Drinkwater said. He was impatient to reassure Frey and though both he and Quilhampton — if he survived — would have to appear before a court martial, such considerations were in the future and Drinkwater was more urgently pressed by the present.
'Just one thing more, Mr Frey, before we decide what is to be done.' He noticed Frey's expression change, responding to the positive note in Drinkwater's voice. 'What happened after you submitted to the Danes? By what authority were you brought to Altona?'
'Oh, the French appear to control the Danes, sir. As soon as we got ashore, after the
Tracker
was looted and burned — for she was hulled and aground by the time we struck — we were turned over to the French garrison at a place called Tonning. The Danes, though willing to fight us at sea — for revenge on our attack on Copenhagen three years ago I reckon — seem to lack independence ashore. There are French troops quartered upon them. It was the French that finally took the ship's orders ... and your effects, sir,' Frey added as an apologetic afterthought. But what of you, sir?'
Drinkwater looked at Frey. He had been wondering about the precise circumstances in which the portrait had come to light and compromised Hortense. He would never know, of course, and there were far more immediate things to consider.
'Me? Oh, I will tell you one day, Mr Frey, when we are in better spirits and have put these present misfortunes behind us. Come, sir, tell me something about this place. You spoke — ah, Gilham, you have found something with which to break your fast.' Drinkwater looked up at the merchant shipmaster.
'This is for you: burgoo, though a thin stuff compared with our usual British fare, but 'twill warm you.'
'I'm obliged to you.'
'I will get some for your young friend if you'll hatch some way out of this damnable place.'
'You'll take your turn with us, not wait for Thiebault?'
'I don't trust that lizard, damn him, not now he's under the thumb of Marshal What's-his-name.'
Drinkwater could not resist a grin. 'Very well, now Mr Frey ...'
'Well, 'tis a hospital really, as you doubtless guessed. We were brought here because so many of us were wounded.'
'Were you one of them?'
'Only a trifle, sir, a scratch, that's all. Several men have died since we arrived, but we have been tolerably well treated, allowed to bury our dead, and the commissioned officers permitted, on parole, to walk on the river bank.'
'Ah, that's good. Have you given your parole?'
'I wouldn't, sir.'
'Why not?'
'Mr Quilhampton forbade it, sir. He said 'twas enough to lose his ship, but he would not surrender his honour.'
'A Quixotic notion, but I apprehend he had ideas of escape, eh?'
'He did not know how ill he was.'
'I see,' Drinkwater paused, 'and are visits permitted to Altona itself?'
'Oh yes, we sent a man in to purchase foodstuffs ... before we ran out of money.'
'D'you think it possible to send a message to Altona? Do any of the villagers enter the hospital at all?'
Frey's brow creased in a frown. 'Well there is a boy that comes up with fresh bread and the Commandant has some intercourse with the place for his table ... Doctor Castenada would be the man to ask, sir. He is a remarkable fellow.'
'Is he to be trusted?'
'Aye, sir, as far as I can judge. He professes a dislike of the French.'
Drinkwater grunted and rubbed a hand across his stubbled chin. 'I used,' he said, 'to have some sneaking regard for 'em — unpatriotic, don't you know — but it seems to me that the Rights of Man was a not entirely dishonourable banner to fight under. Then last night Gilham and I saw a boy shot for hoardin' sugar ...'
'We hang smugglers, sir,' Frey said.
'That's rather why I had a sneakin' regard for the Frogs,' grinned Drinkwater. 'Now tell me, if I asked you to plan the seizure of a boat large enough to take two dozen men down stream, what would you say?'
Frey's face was transformed by sudden enthusiasm. 'I've thought about it, sir! There is little time, for the ice is already forming along the reed beds, but there's a ballast bed just below the village and they bring barges down from Hamburg and fill 'em there. They've sails and sweeps, a dozen of us could easily ...'
'How the devil d'you know all this if you refused your parole?'
'I didn't say I hadn't had a walk along the river bank, sir!'
'I think, Captain Gilham,' Drinkwater said, 'that we may have discovered an exit from our impasse.'
'I hope to heaven you're right, my dear fellow, for if your friend chooses to denounce you, well ... I don't think we have much time.'
Drinkwater needed no reminding that time was pressing. For all he knew Davout might have despatched a galloper that very morning with a message to Altona to have a certain 'Captain Waters' placed under close arrest.
Even if Hortense had not recognized him — and he was certain in his heart that his face had stirred some memory — it was likely that when confronted with the portrait and the story of its being found aboard a British man-of-war, the connection was inevitable.
Seeking a quiet corner, Frey took him to consult Castenada. The worthy surgeon provided ink and paper, nodding when Frey explained the new prisoner wished to communicate with someone in Altona.
For his own part, Drinkwater carefully wrote out the lines of Dante and encoded his message to Liepmann. It told briefly of their seizure in the warehouse, the interview with Davout and the suspected duplicity of Thiebault. Drinkwater also informed him of the fate of Johannes. Finally he made his request:
I ask that you find the whereabouts of Lieutenant Quilhampton, commander of the British ship seized at Tanning.
'Do you know of a Herr Liepmann, Doctor Castenada?' Drinkwater asked, 'I believe he lives in Altona.'
'
Si
... yes, yes. He is well known. You want that I, er, convey that message?' Castenada pointed at the final draft Drinkwater had copied out.
'Yes, is it possible, without risk?'
'Yes ... I will take it myself,' Castenada held out his hand and took the paper and stared at it. 'This is not English?'
'No ...' said Drinkwater cautiously, unsure of the Spaniard's trustworthiness.
'It is like the pharmacopoeia, eh?' Castenada smiled and folded the paper. 'Fortunately, Herr Liepmann is supplying me sometimes, my, er,' he frowned and scratched his head, failing to find the right word and ending his unfinished sentence with a shrug.
'Ah, medicines!' offered Frey.
'Yes, yes, of course, medicines.' Castenada smiled with satisfaction.
'How soon can you go into Altona?' Drinkwater asked.
'Today, I go today. In hospital like this I always want more of the, er, medicines, no?'
Drinkwater nodded. 'Very well ...'
He and Frey walked back across the parade ground where the snow was falling again. 'If he brings me a reply I shall know I can trust him, but it is better that I am not seen talking to him, for his sake as much as mine. Do you watch him, Mr Frey, and when he returns question him. This man Liepmann knows me and will reply in code. If Castenada plays his part, you may offer to get him and the twelve fittest Spaniards out of this place in your barge. Promise them that they will be repatriated to Spain at the expense of the British Government, d'you understand?'