Hornblower and the Atropos. C. S. Forester

It was the end of the second dogwatch and the hands were being called.

“I’ll have the main course taken in, Mr. Turner,” he said.

He wrote his night orders by the faint light of the binnacle; the ship to be kept close‑hauled on the starboard tack; he was to be called if the wind shifted more than two points, and in any event he was to be called immediately before moonrise in the middle watch. The gloomy little cabin when he retired into it was like a wild beast’s lair with its dark corners where the light of the lamp did not penetrate. He lay down fully clothed, endeavouring to keep his tired mind from continuing to try to solve the problem of what the Castilla intended to do. He had shortened sail, as she would probably do. If she did not, he had the heels of her and might overtake her in daylight. If she did anything else, if she tacked or wore, he was doing what was probably best to find her again next day. His eyes closed with fatigue, and did not open again until they came to tell him the middle watch had been called.

The west wind, dying away though it was, had brought a slight overcast with it, enough to obscure the stars and deprive the small moon, almost in its last quarter, of most of its light. Atropos, still close‑hauled, was now, in the lessening wind, only flitting with the waves that came on to her starboard bow, meeting them elegantly like a stage beauty extending her hand to a stage lover. The dark water all around seemed to fall in with the mood and to murmur pretty conventionalities. There seemed no imminence of blazing death. The minutes passed in warm idleness.

“Deck there!” That was the masthead lookout hailing. “I think I can see something, sir. Right away on the starboard bow.”

“Get aloft with the night glass, youngster,” said Turner, who had the watch, to the master’s mate beside him.

A minute passed, two minutes.

“Yes, sir,” came the new voice from the masthead. “It’s the loom of a ship. Three miles — four miles — fine on the starboard bow.”

The night glasses trained round more forward.

“Maybe,” said Turner.

There was a tiny patch of something darker than the surrounding night; Hornblower’s night glass could tell him no more than that. He watched it painstakingly. The bearing of it seemed to be altering.

“Steer small!” he growled at the helmsman.

For a moment he wondered if the patch was really there; it might be something his mind suggested to his eye — a whole ship’s company could sometimes imagine the same thing if the idea was once put in their heads. No, it was undoubtedly there, and drawing across Atropos’ bows, more than could be accounted for by any wavering of her course with bad steering. It must be Castilla; she must have swung round at midnight and come hurrying down wind in the hope of pouncing on her prey by surprise. If he had not shortened sail she would be right on him. The Spanish lookouts were not up to their work, for she was holding on her course.

“Heave‑to, Mr. Turner,” he said, and walked across to the port side to keep the Castilla under observation as Atropos came up into the wind. Castilla had already lost most of the advantage of the weather gage, and in a few minutes would lose it all. The slowly‑moving clouds overhead were parting; there was a faint gleam of light through a thin patch, further darkness, and then the moon shone through a gap. Yes, that was a ship; that was the Castilla, already far down to leeward.

“Deck, there! I can see her plainly now, sir. On the port quarter. Captain, sir! She’s wearing round!”

So she was. Her sails gleamed momentarily bright in the moonlight as they swung round. She had failed in her attempt to surprise her enemy, and was making a fresh one.

“Lay her on the port tack, Mr. Turner.”

The little Atropos could play catch‑as‑catch‑can with any big frigate in this sort of weather. She swung round and headed into the wind, her stern to her pursuer again.

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