banishing his gloomy thoughts. He was about to duck through the door into the cabin when he noticed the boat. It was a dark shape and attracted attention by the slight gleam of phosphorescence at its bow and the pallid flashes of the oar-strokes. He thought at first it was a guard-boat, but its movement lacked the casual actions of a bored crew. Moreover, it had curved under the stern of their nearest neighbour, the Jason, and was heading directly towards Andromeda. Something about the purposeful approach disturbed Drinkwater; his apprehension about death was displaced by something more immediate. Was this another of His Royal Highness’s ridiculous jokes? He could not imagine any other reason for the night’s tranquillity being disturbed now that His Most Christian Majesty had been landed upon his natal shore to claim the crown restored to him by the grace of Almighty God, the bayonets of the Tsar and the Royal Navy of Great Britian.
From the greater vista of the stern window in the cabin, Drinkwater could see the boat holding unwaveringly to its course towards Andromeda.
‘Bound to be orders, confound it,’ he muttered, unaware that talking to himself was becoming habitual. ‘Damn and blast the man!’ he swore, pulling the night-shirt over his head and reaching for his breeches. Above his head he heard the faint sound of the marine sentry at the taffrail hail the approaching boat. He kicked his stockinged feet into the pumps he had worn aboard the Impregnable earlier that night and peered again through the stern windows. He could see the boat clearly now, the faint gleam of her gunwhale crossed by the moving oar looms. The synchronized swaying of her oarsmen chimed its rhythm with the surge of the phosphorescent bow-wave as the boat dipped and rose slightly under their impetus. He sensed as much as saw these resolved dynamics, a perception born of a lifetime at sea, subconscious in its impact on his intelligence. His conscious mind, compelled to wait for an explanation, briefly diverted itself by a recollection of his wife Elizabeth, whose wonder at first seeing phosphorescence in the breakers running up on the shingle strand of Hollesley Bay had given him a profound pleasure.
‘You must have seen so many wonders, Nathaniel,’ she had said, ‘while I have seen so very little of life.’
‘I wish I could have shared more with you,’ he had replied kindly. He tossed the recollection aside as he heard quite clearly the query from the boat.
’ C’est Andromeda?’
‘The devil…’ He struck flint on steel and had lit a candle when the tap came at the door. Midshipman Paine’s disembodied features appeared round the door.
‘Captain, sir?’
‘I’m awake, Mr Paine, and aware we have a French boat alongside.’
‘Aye sir, and a military officer asking to see you, sir.’
Drinkwater frowned. ‘To see me? You imply he asked by my name.’
‘Asked for Captain Nathaniel Drinkwater, sir, very particularly. Mr Marlowe said I was to emphasize that, sir.’
‘Very well, I assume the officer at least was British.’
‘Oh no, sir, Mr Marlowe said to tell you he had a lot of plumes on his shako and Mr Marlowe judged him to be either a Russian or a Frenchman.’
Drinkwater was dragging a comb through his hair while this exchange was in progress. It was not in his nature to bait midshipmen, but Drinkwater knew, though the cockpit thought he did not, that Paine had acquired the nickname ‘Tom’ on account of having the surname of the English revolutionary. He was a solemn but rather prolix lad.
‘And what did you make him out to be, Mr Paine?’
‘Well, he does have a fantastic shako, sir, but his voice is … well, I mean his accent is …’
‘Is what, Mr Paine?’ enquired Drinkwater, pulling on the full dress coat that he had disencumbered himself of when he had returned from the flagship. ‘Pray do not keep me in suspense.’
‘Well it’s English, sir.’
‘English?’
‘But Mr Marlowe