‘The only right way to swim,’ said the purser for the seventh time, ‘is to join your hands like you were saying your prayers’ – he narrowed his eyes, joined his hands very exactly – ‘and shoot them out so ‘This time he did strike the bottle, which plunged violently into the solomongundy and thence, deep in thick gravy, into Marshall’s lap.
‘I knew you would do it,’ cried the master, springing about and mopping himself. ‘I told you so. I said “Soonar or latar you’ll knock down that damned decantar”, and you can’t swim a stroke – prating like a whoreson ottar. You have wrecked my best nankeen trousars.’
‘I didn’t go for to do it,’ said the purser sullenly; and the evening relapsed into a barbarous gloom.
Indeed, as the Sophie beat up, tack upon tack, to the northward, she could not have been described as a very cheerful sloop. In his beautiful little cabin Jack sat reading Steel’s Navy List and feeling low, not so much because he had over-eaten again, and not so much because of the great number of men senior to him on the list, as because he was so aware of this feeling aboard. He could not know the precise nature of the complicated miseries inhabiting Dillon and Marshall. He could not tell that three yards from him James Dillon was trying to fend off despair with a series of invocations and a haggard attempt at resignation, while the whole of his mind that was not taken up with increasingly mechanical prayer converted its unhappy turmoil into hatred for the established order, for
authority and so for captains, and for all those who, never having had a moment’s conflict of duty or honour in their lives, could condemn him out of hand. And although Jack could hear the master’s shoes crunching on the deck some inches
above his head, he could not possibly divine the particular emotional disturbance and the sickening dread of exposure that filled the poor man’s loving heart. But he knew very well that his tight, self-contained world was hopelessly out of tune and be was haunted by the depressing sentiment of failure of not having succeeded in what he had set out to do. He would very much have liked to ask Stephen Maturin the reasons for this failure; he would very much have liked to talk to him on indifferent subjects and to have played a little music; but he knew that an invitation to the captain’s cabin was very like an order, if only because the refusing of it was so extraordinary – that had been borne in upon him very strongly the other morning, when he had been so amazed by Dillon’s refusal. Where there was no equality there was no companionship: when a man was obliged to say ‘Yes, sir,’
his agreement was of no worth even if it happened to be true. He had known these things all his service life; they were perfectly evident; but he had never thought they would apply so fully, and to him.
Farther down in the sloop, in the almost deserted midshipmen’s berth, the melancholy was even more profound:
the youngsters were, in fact, weeping as they sat. Ever since
Mowett and Pullings had gone off in prizes these two had been at watch and watch, which meant that neither ever had more than four hours’ sleep hard at that dormouse, lovebed age that so clings to its warm hammock; then again in writing their dutiful letters they had contrived to cover themselves with ink, and had been sharply rebuked for their appearance; what is more, Babbington, unable to think of anything to put, had filled his pages with asking after everybody at home and in the village, human beings, dogs, horses, cats, birds, and even the great hall clock, to such an extent that he was now filled with an overwhelming nostalgia. He was also afraid that his hair and teeth were going to fall out and his bones soften, while sores and blotches covered his face and body – the inevitable result of conversing with harlots, as the wise old-experienced clerk Richards had
assured him. Young Ricketts’ woe had quite another source:
his father had been talking of a transfer into a store-ship or a transport, as being safer and far more homelike, and young Ricketts had accepted the prospect of separation with wonderful fortitude; but now it appeared that there was to be no separation – that he, young Ricketts, was to go too, torn from the Sophie and the life he loved so passionately.
Marshall, seeing him staggering with weariness, had sent him below, and there he sat on
his sea-chest, resting his face in his hands at half-past three in the morning, too tired even to creep into his hammock; and the tears oozed between his fingers.
Before the mast there was much less sadness, although there were several men – far more than usual – who looked forward with no pleasure to Thursday morning, when they were to be flogged. Most of the others had nothing positive to be glum about, apart from the hard work and the short commons; yet nevertheless the Sophie was already so very much of a community that every man aboard was conscious of something out of joint, something more than their officers’ snappishness – what, they could not tell; but it took away from their ordinary genial flow. The gloom on the quarter-deck seeped forward, reaching as far as the goat-house, the manger, and even the hawse-holes themselves.
The Sophie, then, considered as an entity, was not at the top of her form as she worked through the night on the dying tramontana; nor yet in the morning, when the northerly weather was followed (as it so often happens in those waters) by wreathing mists from the south-west, very lovely for those who do not have to navigate a vessel through them, close in shore, and the forerunners of a blazing day. But this state was nothing in comparison with the tense alarm, not to say the dejection and even dread, that Stephen discovered when he stepped on to the quarter-deck just at sunrise.
He had been woken by the drum beating to quarters. He had gone directly to the cockpit, and there with Cheslin’s help he had arranged his instruments. A bright eager face from the upper regions had announced ‘a thundering great xebec round the cape, right in with the land’. He acknowledged this with mild approval, and after a while he fell to sharpening his catlin; then he sharpened his lancets and then his fleam-toothed saw with a little hone that he had bought for the purpose in Tortosa. Time passed, and the face was replaced by another, a very much altered pallid face that delivered the captain’s compliments and desired him to come on deck. ‘Good morning, Doctor,’ said Jack, and Stephen noticed that his smile was strained, his eyes hard and wary. ‘It looks as though we had caught a Tartar.’ He nodded over the water towards a long, sharp, strikingly beautiful vessel, bright light red against the sullen cliffs behind. She lay low in the water for her size (four times the Sophie’s bulk), but a high kind of flying platform carried out her stern, so that it jutted far over her counter, while a singular beak-like projection advanced her prow a good twenty feet beyond her stem. Her main and mizen masts bore immense curved double tapering lateen yards, whose sails were spilling the south-east air to allow the Sophie to come up with her; and even at this distance Stephen noticed that the yards, too,
were red. Her starboard broadside, facing the Sophie, had no less than sixteen gunports in it; and her decks were extraordinarily crowded with men
‘A thirty-two-gun xebec-frigate,’ said Jack, ‘and she cannot be anything but Spanish. Her hanging-ports deceived us entirely – thought she was a merchantman until the east moment – and nearly all her hands were down below. Mr Dillon, get a few more people out of sight without its
showing. Mr Marshall, three or four men, no more, to shake out the reef in the fore topsail
– they are to do it slowly, like lubbers. Anderssen, call out something in Danish again and
let that bucket dangle over the side.’ In a lower voice to Stephen, ‘You see her, the fox?
Those ports opened two minutes ago, quite hidden by all that bloody paintwork. And although she was thinking of swaying up
her square yards – look at her foremast – she can have that lateen back in a moment, and snap us up directly. We must stand on – no choice – and see whether we can’t amuse her.
Mr Ricketts, you have the flags ready to hand? Slip off your jacket at once and toss it into the locker. Yes, there she goes.’ A gun spoke from the frigate’s quarter-deck: the ball skipped across the Sophie’s bows, and the Spanish colours appeared, clear of the warning smoke. ‘Carry on, Mr Ricketts,’ said Jack. The Dannebrog broke out at the Sophie’s gaff-end, followed by the yellow quarantine flag at the fore. ‘Pram, come up here and wave your arms about. Give orders in Danish. Mr Marshall, heave to awkwardly in half a cable’s length. No nearer.’