The Nutmeg of Consolation by Patrick O’Brian

Martin digested this for some time, and then said in a low voice, ‘The little girls have quite a family of pet rats now.’

‘Indeed? I knew they had one apiece, but not several.’

‘Half a dozen at least,’ said Martin. ‘Do you think that might be a Norfolk Island petrel?’

‘It might be, too. There is a group of them somewhat to the east. No, my dear Martin: the east is to the right.’

‘Surely not in the southern hemisphere?’

‘We will ask Captain Aubrey. He will probably know. But to the right, for all love. Ah, they are vanished and gone.’

They returned to the rats, how mild in temper they were, and placid, and how they were to be seen wandering about in the day, well above the hold and even the cable-tier: the hands put it down to the unnatural cleanliness of the ballast, flooded every night and pumped clear every day. It was known that rats fattened on the smell; and now, with the barky tossed about so that her ballast was fairly scoured, as clean as Deal beach, there was no smell.

‘Sail ho!’ cried the masthead, and this time in answer to Jack’s ‘Where away?’ the lookout answered ‘Right ahead, sir. As right ahead as ever could be. Square rigged, but ship or brig I cannot tell.’

The Surprise had been making sail methodically ever since she had obtained her fix with the Angerich Shoal, and now she was making a good ten knots. The sail ahead was travelling faster, and presently Oakes at the jack called down that she was ‘certainly a ship, weather studdingsails aloft and alow.’

Then later, ‘Man-of-war pennant, sir.’ And later still, when she was hull-up on the rise,

‘Two-decker, sir.’

‘Ha, ha,’ said Jack to Pullings, ‘she must be the old Tromp, fifty-four. Billy Holroyd has her now. Did you ever meet Captain Holroyd, Tom?’

‘I don’t think so, sir. I know him by name, of course.’

‘We were shipmates in the Sylph when we were boys.’ Then louder, Pass the word for Killick.’

‘Sir?’ cried Killick, appearing like a jack-in-the-box.

‘Turn over my pantry and see what we can manage in the way of a feast.’

‘She has thrown out the private signal, sir,’ said Reade to Mr Davidge, the officer of the watch. Davidge repeated the news to Pullings, now serving as first lieutenant again, and Pullings told Jack, who ordered the usual reply, to be followed immediately by Heave to and come to supper, while at the same time the Surprise bore up to make the signal more perfectly legible and Jack called ‘Stand by to reduce sail and heave to.’

The Tromp’s response could not be made out for some moments, she being head on with the wind two points on the quarter, but then Reade, who had grown wonderfully adroit at managing a telescope with the far end on some support in the rigging, reported ‘It is Charged with dispatches, sir.’

‘He cannot stop,’ said Stephen to Martin. ‘I doubt he would be allowed to pause even if we were beset by ravening sharks, rather than by ravening curiosity.’

Nor did he stop; but he modified the strict rule by easing his sheets as his ship, a slab-sided, Dutch-built vessel on her way to India by Torres Strait swept past the stationary, wallowing Surprise within twenty yards, both captains standing on the hammock-netting.

‘How do you do, Billy?’ called Jack, waving his hat.

‘Jack, how do you do?’ replied Billy.

‘What news?’

‘In India they say Boney has done it again, somewhere in Germany – Silesia, I think. Two hundred and twenty guns taken, the Prussian right wing cut to pieces.’

‘What news from home?’

‘None when I left Sydney Cove. Amelia four months overdue andno. .

The rest of his words were lost, the strong wind sweeping them along with the ship. All the Surprise’s people had been listening openly, without shame: all faces showed the same disappointment; and when Jack gave the order ‘Brace up and haul aft,’ they carried it out with less than their usual zest and spring.

‘I am so sorry you will not see Captain Holroyd this bout,’ said Jack as they gathered for supper. ‘You would like him, I am sure. He has a very pure sweet voice, a true tenor, which is a rare thing in a service that requires you to roar like a bull in a basin. But still, I hope we shall profit from Killick’s thorough search of the pantry. There may be some Java delicacies that Mrs Raffles was so kind as to put up for us.’

By this time the watch had been set, topgallants taken in long since and topsails double-reefed; and when three bells in the first watch struck they could be heard in the great cabin, remote but clear, the last note hanging up unpaired. Automatically Jack glanced at the dining-cabin door, which ordinarily opened as regularly as that of a cuckoo-clock, with Killick in the place of the bird saying ‘Supper is on table, sir, if you please,’ or ‘Wittles is up,’ according to the company.

It did not open, though there appeared to be a scrabbling behind it, and Jack poured more madeira. ‘But now I come to think of it, Mr Martiq,’ he said, ‘I believe you prefer sherry as a whet. Pray forgive me . . .’ He reached for the other decanter.

‘Not at all, sir, not at all,’ cried Martin. ‘I had far rather drink madeira. I should not change this madeira for any kind of sherry. It is dry but full of body; it has given me the appetite of a lion.’

Stephen walked over to his ‘cello and sitting on the stern-window locker he played over the Rakes of Kerry in pizzicato. ‘You should hear that at some far grassy crossroads on a fine Beltane night with the fire on the hill and the pipes playing and five fiddles and the young men dancing as though they were possessed and the young women as demure as mice but never missing a step.’

‘Pray play it again,’ said Jack. He did; then again with variations and even some thoughts of his own. At length the door opened and Killick stood there in the opening, pale and apparently demented. ‘Is supper ready?’ asked Jack.

‘Well, the soup part of it is, sir,’ said Killick hesitantly. ‘Sort of. But sir,’ he burst out, ‘the rats has ate the smoked tongues, ate the preserves, ate the potted char . . . ate the last of the Java pickles. . . And they are walking about there, paying no heed . . . staring . . .

saucy. . . I turned everything over, sir; everything. It took me hours.’

‘Well, at least they cannot have got at the wine. Put that on the table, serve the soup and tell my cook to do what he can. Bear a hand, bear a hand, there.’

‘A Barmecide feast, sir, I am afraid,’ said Jack.

‘Not at all, sir,’ said Martin. ‘There is nothing I prefer to . . .’ He hesitated, trying to find a name for salt beef, eighteen months in the cask, partly de-salted, cut up very small and fried with crushed ship’s biscuits and a great deal of pepper: ‘. . . to a fricassee.’

‘Still,’ said Jack, ‘I am sure the Doctor’s divertimento in C major will . . .’ He almost said

‘divert our minds’ but in fact ended with ‘prove a compensation.’

It was some days later, after a violent blow that was said, and rightly said, to foretell a calm, when they were no more than a couple of hundred miles from Sydney, that Stephen, finding his bedside box of coca-leaves empty, went down to the store-room he shared with Jack to bring up a new supply. The leaves were packed tight in soft leather sausages sewn over with a neat surgical stitch, each in a double oiled-skin envelope against the damp. He had almost exactly calculated the dur

ation of each and, apart from the current, already-opened pouch, there were easily enough of the comfortable little parcels to last till he should reach Callao; for it was from Peru that the coca-leaves came.

The pouches were in a particularly massive and elegant ironwood chest with intricate Javanese brasswork over its top and sides and although he had heard and seen much of the strange confident behaviour of the rats he had no fear of them in this particular instance: apart from anything else this store-room was used for wine, cold-weather clothes, books -it had nothing to do with the pantry. Yet he was not the first sailor to be deceived by a rat. They had gnawed their way up through the very plank, up through the bottom of the chest itself. There was nothing left but rat-dung. Nothing. They had eaten all the leaves and all the leather impregnated with the scent of the leaves and they were clearly eager to get at the chest again, a group of them standing just outside the lit circle of his lantern, waiting impatiently to gnaw at the wood on which the pouches had lain.

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