Ramage and the Renegades r-12

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Ramage and the Renegades r-12 Page 24

by Dudley Pope


  He was deliberately avoiding looking at her face: he had seen every man and woman in the cabin was watching him and the men were rising - and yes, the women were clapping gently!

  She gave a little curtsy and said: 'Because I am the only person who has really met you .. .' She paused for a moment and Ramage glanced up: there was no mistaking her meaning. '... I have been given the task of introducing you - all three of you,' she corrected herself, 'to everyone present.'

  Ramage took Paolo's arm. Now he would hear her name! 'May I present Lieutenant Martin and Midshipman the Count Orsini.'

  Paolo took her hand and kissed it.

  'Ah, we have been reading about the Count's exploits in a recent copy of the Gazette,' she said and no one but Ramage seemed to notice that she had not offered her name.

  She led the way to the top table and introduced him first to the elderly man who had come from the next cabin, and the grey-haired woman sitting next to him, a woman whose fine-boned face still had an almost haunting mature beauty.

  'The Marquis of Rockley, the Marchioness: may I present Captain Ramage, Lieutenant Martin and Midshipman the Count Orsini...'

  Rockley? Somewhere in Cambridgeshire. Friends of the Temples and of Pitt. As he went through the ritual of being introduced, Ramage tried to place the couple more exactly, but in a few moments he was being introduced to the next couple. He recognized the name as belonging to a Kentish landowner active in Parliament. The last man was an officer in the military service of the Honourable East India Company, and Ramage apologized for his borrowed uniform, admitting to be uncertain to which regiment it belonged. The man laughed a little too loudly at the idea of a naval officer in a soldier's uniform, but the woman with him looked embarrassed.

  Ramage managed to glance at 'Miss for now' but she was looking away, deliberately it seemed. What was unusual about this uniform?

  Finally, with the last introduction completed, and before the woman had shown them to their chairs, the old Marquis stood up and tapped a glass with a knife to get everyone's attention.

  'If I may have a moment... you all know the identity of the gallant captain who gave us a sleepless night and at dawn presented us with our freedom. I know you want me to give him our thanks, and ask him to thank his officers and men as well. We know he and his men have more work to do tonight, and our prayers will be with them.'

  No reply was needed and amid clapping and hearty 'Hear, hears' Ramage sat at the head of the table, finding the Marquis on his right and 'Miss for now' on his left. Just as he noted the white cloth and napkins and was wondering what was going to happen next, Rossi marched in carrying a huge silver tea urn, followed by Jackson and Stafford with trays of various dishes.

  She was smiling at his bewilderment. 'A surprise for you: we hatched it up while slaving round the galley fire!'

  'I don't get such service in my own ship,' Ramage protested mockingly. 'I have one incredibly slow steward...'

  'The terms of the peace treaty,' the Marquis said. 'Could you give me some idea . . . ?'

  Ramage, realizing that this would be the first information from anything approaching an official source that the Marquis had heard, apologized for not having mentioned it earlier and told him all he could remember.

  'A sad business,' the Marquis commented. 'We won the war and now we've lost the peace. Still, Bonaparte will try again. Now tell me what brings your ship to this strange island?'

  Ramage described the omission in the Treaty and the British government's intention of taking advantage of it. The Marquis nodded. 'I should not care to be one of the garrison,' he commented.

  A few moments later he asked: 'Do you know India, Ramage?'

  Ramage shook his head. 'Their Lordships have kept me in the West Indies and the Mediterranean, I'm afraid.'

  'Breakfast tends to be a more social occasion out there than in England. It is not unusual to have guests arriving unexpectedly for breakfast.'

  'It is not unknown in the Ilha da Trinidade,' 'Miss for now' said, laughing easily.

  'I hope you have made our apologies for not sending out the proper invitations, Sarah,' the Marquis said, smiling.

  'His Lordship hasn't left cards yet, father.'

  She was watching him and he saw that she was a woman who could smile with her eyes. And talk, too, and at this moment her eyes were saying: 'There - now you know my first name, and you have met my parents, but you wonder about that uniform you are wearing.'

  It all passed in a moment and Ramage said in a humorous apology: 'My card case is in another uniform, which I forgot to bring with me.'

  'Think nothing of it,' the Marquis said, pushing his cup towards Rossi, who was unused to wrestling with a large urn and its two taps. 'We half expected you. In fact your arrival has cost me a guinea.'

  Ramage raised his eyebrows questioningly and Sarah said: 'My father didn't think you could rescue us before the pirates cut our throats . . .'

  'The guinea?'

  'Oh, I bet him a guinea you would find a way.'

  'Obviously you are an optimist! If he won he could hardly collect!'

  She shrugged her shoulders as though dismissing any such thoughts of losing. 'After all, you did find a way.'

  Her matter-of-fact acceptance of it all irritated him; too much was being taken for granted.

  'We shan't know if we've been successful until nightfall.'

  The Marquis was quick to spot that Ramage had not spoken out of pique. 'In what way, Captain? After all, we're free and our former guards are your prisoners.'

  'Yes, but supposing a boat comes from the Lynx and they find they have neither guards nor hostages now in this ship or the Amethyst

  'What will they do?' the Marchioness asked.

  'I can only guess, ma'am. Certainly raise the alarm, which will mean the hostages in the Heliotrope and Friesland will be murdered, then probably the Lynx will try to escape.'

  'Will she succeed?' Sarah's voice was almost a whisper.

  'I doubt it. My second lieutenant, now in command of the Calypso, has his orders.'

  'But has he enough experience?'

  Her question was so harshly spoken that her father murmured: 'Sarah!'

  Ramage suddenly found he had lost all appetite for breakfast. 'All my officers have been in action many times. The two left on board the Calypso have been in battle more times, I imagine, than the people in this cabin have seen a full moon rise. Now, if you'll excuse -'

  He put his hands on the table and began pushing back his chair. She touched his left hand with her fingertips and murmured: 'I'm sorry: please stay. Don't spoil our first breakfast.'

  'Our only one,' Ramage muttered, 'and I feel none too comfortable in these absurd clothes.'

  She was the only one to hear him, and she went pale, withdrawing her hand. 'That was unworthy of you.'

  The Marquis, sensing currents he did not understand, turned to talk to his wife. Ramage then realized that to leave the table now would puzzle or embarrass everyone present, quite apart from taking him away from the immediate presence of the one woman he wanted to be with at the moment. What made him behave like this? Normally he did not take offence at what were obviously intended as ordinary remarks. Why now, he asked himself. The answer was almost stunningly simple: he was behaving like a spoiled child because he had thought that, however obliquely and however mildly, Sarah was criticizing him. Not even that - almost questioning his judgement. Not even that, he had to admit, repeating the phrase as though deliberately nagging himself: because she knew nothing of the way a ship of war was run, and nothing of the Calypso's officers (except himself and Paolo, whose name must have lodged in her memory). She did not know, and could not know, that Wagstaffe and Southwick were more used to being in battle than in a drawing room.

  'Am I forgiven?' she asked quietly, and the tone of her voice showed it mattered to her.

  'There's nothing to forgive, but I forgive you twice, so that you have two in reserve, like Papal dispensations.'

&nbs
p; She smiled with her eyes. 'We are making progress from our first meeting!'

  Quite involuntarily Ramage glanced down at her bosom: the scene of the first meeting, he thought to himself, is now modestly covered. He looked up to find her blushing slightly. Her eyes flickered down to his left hand, as though she had momentarily lost control of them, and he knew she was thinking the same, and the memory was not as displeasing as it might have been.

  Stafford came round with a napkin-covered basket of hot rolls. 'Bit 'ard, sir and madam,' he apologized, 'but they're yesterday's bake, 'otted up. No time to make fresh this morning.'

  'Thank you, Stafford,' she said with a smile that made Ramage feel unreasonably jealous of the Cockney, who went on to the other tables.

  'You know Stafford?'

  'Oh yes - remember, we were all slaving away in the galley: Jackson, Rossi and Stafford. They're very proud of themselves, too.'

  'Oh? In what way?'

  'They were boasting that they had served with you longer than any of the others in the Calypso. They were telling Mrs Donaldson and me how they helped you rescue Midshipman Orsini's - is she his aunt, the Marchesa di Volterra?'

  'Yes, aunt,' he said, his voice as neutral as he could manage.

  'I had the impression she was much younger. And very beautiful.'

  'She is young. Only a few years older than Paolo.'

  'And he is her heir?'

  'At present, yes.'

  'You mean, if she doesn't marry and have a son of her own.'

  'Yes,' he said. 'A son or daughter. If she dies childless.'

  'Is that likely?'

  'She left England recently to return to Volterra, so I don't know what she's doing.'

  'Travelling through France? Isn't that dangerous? I wouldn't have thought Bonaparte...'

  'We tried to warn her.'

  'But noblesse oblige.' It was a comment, an acknowledgement rather than a judgement.

  'Noblesse hardly obliges you to put your head in a noose,' he said sourly.

  'Perhaps the Marchesa knows her own people best.'

  'No, she has yet to learn Non ogni giorno e festa.'

  'My Italian is sketchy but from Latin, "Not every day is a festa"?'

  'Yes, now try, Non ogni fiore fa buon odore.'

  'Hmm . . . "Not every flower makes a good odour"?'

  ' "Not every flower smells sweet" - yes, it's impossible to make direct translations, but she trusts Bonaparte's treaty.'

  'Your Italian sounds fluent.'

  Was she changing the subject from Gianna? 'It should be: I was brought up there as a child.'

  'And you love the country.'

  'Yes, that helps, too. But my French and Spanish are good enough, although at the moment they are not my favourite peoples.'

  A sudden smell of hot food made him turn, and he saw his three seamen placing covered dishes on the sideboard. Jackson came over and whispered to Ramage, who spoke to Sarah. She nodded. 'We always do help ourselves. It all smells delicious.'

  Rossi came up the companionway to the halfdeck holding several shirts in one hand. He saluted Ramage and said: 'For the "guards", sir. I took the brightest the prisoners were wearing, so they'll be seen from the Lynx.'

  Ramage gestured to the five Calypsos who would be pretending to be guards while exercising the hostages, 'I hope they're watching from the Lynx, so that your acting won't be wasted. And by the way: you are supposed to beprivateersmen. Don't hit any of the "hostages" but don't behave in a friendly fashion either. Keep two or three yards away from them.'

  He tried to remember the wording of Bowen's report on the days he had spent watching the Earl of Dodsworth. Eight women walking the deck for half an hour, followed by eight men for half an hour. They used the after companionway. The guards had cutlasses and Bowen presumed pistols, though they were too far away for him to see.

  The sun was high over the island now and beginning to heat up the deck. Ramage could see half a dozen tropic birds soaring over the northern headland and the shadows were shortening on the western side of the hills. The Earl of Dodsworth's decks had not been scrubbed for many days, and her captain would be shocked if he could see the stains where the guards had been swilling rum and spitting tobacco juice. He went down the companionway and called for the women to go on deck.

  He could see that to an onlooker everything was normal in the Calypso: the two boats used by the surveyors were anchored off the beach and he had watched the men, tiny ants in the distance, start their long climb into the hills. The boat making the soundings was slowly crossing the bay, stopping every few yards for a man to heave the lead. The bosun would be commanding Martin and Paolo's boat today, dressed up in officer's breeches, coat and hat. Some time this morning the boat would, apparently by chance, pass close to the Earl of Dodsworth, in case there were messages to be passed.

  Sarah was as good as her word, calling instructions to the Calypsos. 'One of you should spit over the side - well, not exactly spit. . . they delighted in trying to embarrass us.'

  'Spurgeon,' Ramage called. 'Relieve yourself at the larboard entryport.'

  'Well, sir... I... er, well, I don't think I can, sir, I just went a'fore the ladies...'

  'Pretend,' Ramage growled.

  After a few minutes, Sarah walked past where Ramage was waiting in the lee of the halfdeck. 'As soon as we spread out, the guards would get excited and make us bunch up together.'

  Riley had heard her words and began shouting: 'Come on, you women! Keep together; this ain't a parade to church, yer know!'

  'Perfect,' Sarah said. 'That's just the sort of thing they used to say.'

  Jackson suddenly called urgently: 'There's a boat leaving the Lynx!'

  It had to happen, Ramage thought bitterly, pulling off his uniform jacket. A man in a white shirt could be a guard because the bulwarks hid his breeches. He stared at the Lynx through the gunports, using a telescope he had found in the binnacle drawer. Four men at the oars, a couple of men sitting in the sternsheets. Not Tomás, nor Hart. Nor was the boat in any rush: whatever she was doing and wherever she was going, it was something routine. If she came to the Earl of Dodsworth ...

  With the exception of the Marchioness, who was sitting in a chair right aft, the women were in a bunch, Sarah being closest to him. She had very quickly worked out a way of talking to him.

  'Er, Captain...'

  He turned, lowering the telescope.

  'Yes, "Miss for now"?'

  'Lady Sarah, actually, Captain...' Ramage recognized the querulous voice of Mrs Donaldson, a big-boned woman who was the wife of the owner of jute factories in Madras. 'Her father is a marquis, you know.'

  'Forgive me, Lady Sarah,' Ramage said, and from the impatient shake of the head knew he had not added to his knowledge of her. As Lady Sarah she could be the unmarried daughter of the Marquis, but if she had married someone without a title, she would still be Lady Sarah. Only if she had married someone with a title of his own could she have become 'Lady Blank'. But. . . the devil take it, he could not even remember the Rockleys' family name!

  'Is the boat coming here?' demanded Mrs Donaldson.

  'To us or the Commerce. I can't tell yet because the Commerce is almost between us and the privateer.'

  'The hostages in the Commerce - your men have not rescued them yet?'

  'The Commerce has no passengers, as far as we can make out.'

  'What happens if the boat comes here?'

  'If the men come on board, then we have lost the game.'

  'Why? How ridiculous! There can only be a dozen men in that boat!'

  'Half a dozen,' he could not resist correcting her, particularly since the number had no relevance.

  'Well, you have two dozen! You can easily capture them,' Mrs Donaldson declared. 'Why, we women could deal with them!'

  'I'm sure you could,' Ramage said gently. 'And having killed or secured them, then what happens?'

  As Mrs Donaldson gave her views Ramage saw that Sarah had at last realized th
e problem: she bit her lower lip between her teeth, but Mrs Donaldson, in a patronizing voice, announced: 'Why, we add them to our prisoners and tell that horrible privateer man that now we have hostages, and if he doesn't go away we'll hang them all! Won't we, ladies!' She looked round her for agreement. A couple said, 'Yes, of course,' with the eagerness of nitwits, while the others were watching Sarah, perhaps unsure of what was making her doubtful but, after having her as a neighbour for so long, aware of Mrs Donaldson's intellectual shortcomings.

  'I assure you, madam, that the privateer captain would not jib at the sight of a dozen of his men dangling by their necks from nooses: privateers are desperate men, and if only a few survive the action, it means their share of the spoils is bigger.'

  'Don't you believe it, Mr Ramage -'

  'Lord Ramage,' Sarah corrected, ignoring Ramage's request in her exasperation.

  'Oh, indeed? One of the Blazeys, then? How interesting. St Kew, in Cornwall, isn't it? You must be the Earl of Blazey's son -'

  'If that boat does not return safely to the Lynx, madam,' Ramage interrupted her, 'the privateer captain will give a signal which will result in all the passengers in the Friesland and Heliotrope being killed by the guards. Four men and four women in the Dutch ship, two men, two women and two children in the French.'

  'Oh dear me, what will happen? You must do something, young man; do something at once!'

  'He is trying to decide now, and he doesn't need your help,' one of the women said. 'Come on, leave the captain to his business.' With that the woman walked aft, followed by several of the others. Mrs Donaldson, however, stood where she was, twirling her parasol and tapping a foot.

  'Young man, I demand to know what you intend doing!'

  Ramage nodded to Rossi, who politely but firmly took Mrs Donaldson's arm. 'Signora, is down to your cabin now, the sun is too strong.'

  'But I don't wish -'

  'This way,' Rossi said, 'is dangerous, too much sun.' He took Mrs Donaldson's parasol and held it so low she could hardly see and, with her protesting that she liked the sun, the Italian had her almost trotting along the deck.

 

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