‘What sort of reception did you receive, Mr Q?’ he asked, affecting indifference as he struggled with the wax seals.
‘They kept me kicking my heels all morning, sir. Then the First Lord sent for me, sir. Rum old devil, begging your pardon. He sat me down, as polite as ninepence, and asked a lot of questions about the action in Nagtoralik Bay, the force of the Requin, sir . . . I formed the impression he was judging the force opposed to us . . . then he got up, paced up and down and looked at the trees in the park and turned and dismissed me. Told me to wait in the hall. Kept me there two hours then a fellow called Templeton, one of the clerks, took me into the copy-room and handed me these,’ he nodded at the papers which had suddenly fallen onto the table as Drinkwater succeeded in detaching the last seal.
‘It was rather odd, sir . . .’
‘What was?’ Drinkwater looked up sharply.
‘This cove Templeton, sir. He said, well to the best of my recollection he said: “You’ve smoked the viper out, we knew about him in May when we intercepted papers en route to France, but you caught him red-handed”.’ Quilhampton shrugged and went on. ‘Then he asked after Lieutenant Germaney and seemed rather upset that he’d gone over the standing part of the foresheet . . .’
But Drinkwater was no longer listening. He began to read, his eyes glancing superficially at first, seeking out the salient phrases that would spell ruin and disgrace.
The words danced before his eyes and he shuffled the papers, looking from one to another. Quilhampton watched, uncertain if he was dismissed or whether further intelligence would be required from him.
With the silent familiarity of the trusted servant Tregembo entered the cabin from the pantry. He held a filled decanter.
‘Cap’n’s got some decent wine, at last, zur,’ he said to Quilhampton conversationally. ‘Happen you’ve a thirst since coming from Lunnon, zur . . .’
Quilhampton looked from the Cornishman’s badly scarred face to the preoccupied Drinkwater and made a negative gesture.
‘Give him a glass, Tregembo, and pour me one too . . .’
It was not unqualified approval. St Vincent considered Waller should have been handed over:
Bearing in mind the political repercussions upon the sea-faring community of Kingston-upon-Hull I reluctantly endorse your actions, acknowledging the extreme measures you were forced to adopt and certain that service in any of His Majesty’s ships under your command will bring the man Waller to an acknowledgment of his true allegiance . . .
Drinkwater was aware of a veiled compliment. Perhaps Dungarth’s hand was visible in that. But he was not sure, for the remainder of the letter was pure St Vincent:
It is not, and never has been, nor shall be, the business of the Royal Navy to make war upon sick men, and your anxieties upon that score should be allayed. The monstrous isolation which the Corsican tyrant has condemned loyal men to endure, only emphasises the nature of the wickedness against which we are opposed . . .
Drinkwater relaxed. He had been believed. He picked up the other papers somewhat absently, sipping the full glass Tregembo had set before him.
. . . I am commanded by Their Lordships to acquaint you of the fact that the condition of the sloop under your command being, for the present unfit for further service, you are directed to turn her over to the hands of the Dockyard Commissioner at Chatham and to transfer your ship’s company entire into the frigate Antigone now fitting at that place . . .
‘Good Heavens, James. I am directed to turn the ship’s company over to the Antigone! Our old prize from the Red Sea!’
‘ ’Tis a small world, sir. Does that mean Melusine is for a refit?’
Quilhampton’s anxiety for his own future was implicit in the question. Drinkwater nodded. ‘I fear so, James.’
‘And yourself, sir . . .?’
‘Mmm?’ Drinkwater picked up the final sheet and the colour left his face. ‘God bless my soul!’
‘What is it, sir?’
‘I am posted to command her. Directly into a thirty-six gun frigate, James!’
‘Posted, sir? Why my heartiest congratulations!’
Drinkwater looked at his commission as a Post-Captain. It was signed by St Vincent himself, a singular mark of the old man’s favour.
‘About bloody time too, zur,’ muttered Tregembo, refilling the glasses.
Author’s Note
It is a fact that damage was inflicted upon the northern whale-fishery by French cruisers during the Napoleonic War. For details of the fishery itself, Scoresby Jnr has been my chief authority. There are significant differences between the hunting of the Greenland Right whale and the better known Sperm Whale fishery of the South Pacific. Chief among these was the practice of not reducing the blubber to oil as the comparative brevity of the voyage did not warrant it. Similarly I have used the noun ‘harpooner’ in preference to the Americanism ‘harpooneer’. Although it was well-known that the whale breathed air, it was still extensively referred to as a ‘fish’. At this period the Right Whale was thought to have poor hearing but acute eye-sight. Although known to overset boats, Mysticetus was a comparatively docile animal, far less aggressive than the Sperm Whale.
The delay in the sailing of the Hull ships is my own fiction but it is based on the fact that in 1802, during the Peace of Amiens, the government removed some of the press-exemptions extended to the officers of whalers in anticipation of further hostilities. It is therefore not difficult to excuse the whale-ship masters their suspicions. There were indeed plans of Hull and the Humber discovered en route to France in early 1803 and this forms the basis for Ellerby’s treachery. In addition he was not only acting traitorously but illegally, since he had breached an oath required of whaler captains that they would not profit from any activity in the Arctic Seas than that of whaling.
The extraordinary opening in the ice corresponds roughly to that found by Scoresby in 1806. It was however 1822 before the eponymous Scoresby discovered the great fiord, an inlet of which forms Nagtoralik Bay. Of Scoresby Sound the Admiralty Sailing Directions say ‘This ice-free land consists mainly of rugged mountains but . . . near the open sea the vegetation is luxuriant and game is plentiful.’ It is also ‘considered to be the most easily accessible part of the coast of East Greenland.’
Drinkwater’s reasons for suppressing his discovery are clear. When Beaufort was appointed Hydrographer to the Navy his habit of personally scrutinising all surveys combined with the remoteness of the locality to delay the publication of a spurious and anonymous survey of ‘Nagtoralik Bay and its surroundings’. By this time, of course, Scoresby’s name had become firmly connected with the area.
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