He’d started, spilt coffee. Greenleaf said, “Looks very much like Sloan, sir.”
   The Santa Eulalia was stopped, low in the water and listing dangerously to port. Smoke oozing from her internal fires drifted southeastward, a heavy blanket on the sea. Ainsty, secured alongside the Caracas Moon’s starboard side, was sixty yards to windward of the American as they forged slowly past her. They were just getting the deadweight of the half-tanker under way again, Ainsty on this side and Jouster on the other, steel-wire ropes bar-taut and quivering with strain. You kept well away from wires in that state of tension. If one parted, it could slice a man in half.
   Moving, though. Just …
   It was getting the movement started that took most time and effort. The strain had to be applied carefully, increased slowly and steadily and the two destroyers had to synchronize their efforts. To hold the hulk on course, you had to continue to strike a balance.
   Tugs were said to be coming out from Valletta. They’d been coming anyway to take over the tanker, but now they’d be redirected to the Santa Eulalia. One of the minesweepers was standing by her meanwhile.
   Looking down at the sea alongside, Paul guessed they were making about two knots. With about five miles to go. That was a guess too. But they had to get up-coast a bit and then turn to run down the swept channel to the harbour entrance, and it couldn’t be much less than that.
   Three knots, perhaps. Two and a half, anyway. And it was now just past noon.
   Spitfires—several groups of them—were flying north, all seemingly heading in that one direction. He turned to look astern. At the end of the long shine of the oil-leak from the tanker, the Santa Eulalia lay motionless, bleeding smoke. It was the Spitfires’ departure northward that had reminded him of her: the fact that she was alone and in very bad trouble, probably not far short of sinking, and that she seemed now to be losing the fighter cover as well as the protection of these destroyer’s guns. He thought the minesweeper had gone alongside her, but it was on the other side of her, and he still didn’t have binoculars. She looked very much alone, back there.
   “Tugs are passing, t’other side.”
   A signalman had said it, leaning over to address one of the lookouts. Paul asked him, “How many?”
   “Three, sir. Reckon it’ll be a race who gets in first, them or us. If they can ’old ’er up, that is.”
   In the north, a tail of smoke extending downward was a fighter destroyed. It had the look of a Spitfire, but it was too distant to be sure. Astern now he saw the three tugs from the Malta dockyard chugging down the oil-path towards the Santa Eulalia. It would be filthy luck, he thought, if she sank right there, after as much as she’d come through. The signalman said, nodding towards the sky ahead, “88s. Sods don’t give up easy, do they?”
   There were dogfights in progress, Spitfires versus others, in the northern distance. This side of that action, lower in the sky, he saw the Ju88s. But off to the left again, climbing towards them, was another batch of Spitfires. He pointed them out to the signalman.
   “They aren’t going to bother us this time.” Then he asked him—because signalmen saw signals, which a passenger did not—“Have we been told anything about any other ships arriving?”
   “Only them two, sir.”
   “Which two?”
   “The Miramar and the Empire Dance. They’re both inside an’ unloading.”
   “And that’s all?”
   “Well. There’s this lot, now.” He looked astern. “Except I wouldn’t bet on the Yank making it, would you, sir?”
   The tugs were getting their lines into her, back there. And this tow, meanwhile, was making a good four knots. Paul said, looking back at the American and crossing fingers on both hands, “She’ll make it.”
   One hour before dusk, six thousand miles away. Checking the time and glancing at the position of the sun, Nick recalled that this was the sunset he certainly had not counted on seeing.
   “Message passed, sir.”
   “Very good. Bring her round, pilot. And come down to two hundred revs.”
   Jordan had signalled, an hour ago: I decided to maximize my distance from the Bali Strait by holding to a more southerly course before turning east to join you. Sorry if this departure from our original intentions has caused you concern.
   Then later, in answer to a question from Nick, he’d sent: There is no Mrs Williams among my passengers.
   Nick hadn’t thought there would be. And Williams, not having known of there being any refugees in the American destroyer, would have no reason to be disappointed.
   Sloan was abeam to starboard: turning inward now. A handsome, fine-looking ship, Nick thought. He was putting her astern of Defiant so as to make night station-keeping simpler; and both ships were cutting speed now to sixteen knots.
   “Course one-nine-two, sir!”
   “Very good.”
   To call it “very good” was putting it rather mildly, he thought. A hundred and ninety-two degrees was the course from here to North West Cape, the top-left corner of Australia. A run of about seven hundred and fifty miles: at sixteen knots, two days. Then south down the Australian west coast for about the same distance, two more days, to Perth.
   Perth—or Fremantle—close to where Kate was. Or where she had been …
   Kate, my darling, please be there.
   Tugs had charge of the Caracas Moon now. Jouster was leading them and Ainsty followed, while four tugs dragged half a tanker into the Grand Harbour.
   Just minutes ago a Ju88 had crashed in flames right in the harbour entrance. Spitfires had driven others off: Spits circled now, on guard above Valletta.
   That noise: as Ainsty nosed in around the point, Paul suddenly caught on to what was making it. Brass bands, and people: about three-quarters of the island’s population—going mad. He could see them, as the view unfolded: bands, people, playing and cheering the ships in. Wherever there was a foothold—on roofs, balconies, walls, ledges, ramparts, the terraces and battlements of ancient fortifications, the Maltese had massed to welcome them. Hordes of people: waving, shouting, howling, clapping.
   Astern, the Santa Eulalia, with smoke still gushing out of her, was entering harbour with two tugs ahead and one alongside. She was very low in the water, and listing so hard that you’d guess she was on the point of foundering. The tugs were hauling her around to port, close in past a rocky promontory. The noise was indescribable: and it was moving, you could feel it in your throat. Ainsty’s crew were fallen in, in ranks for the drill of entering harbour. Two ranks of sailors on her foc’sl, some amidships on each side of the iron deck, another platoon on the quarterdeck: they’d become parade-ground sailors, suddenly. Up here on the compass platform the captain had exchanged his woollen hat for a uniform cap, and the two-and-a-half stripes on each of his reefer’s sleeves were bright, new-looking. From a distance, nobody could have guessed he hadn’t had more than a brief doze in a bridge chair for the last five days and nights. Paul was looking into the forepart of the bridge. Simpson saw him, and came aft to tell him quickly, “They’re taking the Caracas Moon into Dockyard Creek—round that next point on the left. Fort St Angelo, that heap is. The next point after it’s called Senglea, and we’ll be berthing in the creek—French Creek—beyond it.”
   The Empire Dance was alongside a wharf, stern-on to them as they passed. She was unloading, all her derricks busy and men swarming all over her, a mass of cargo streaming out of her to the wharf on one side and into lighters on the other. Beyond her, higher up the creek, he had a brief glimpse of the Miramar, the centre of an equally frantic discharging operation.
   The Santa Eulalia had stopped. She’d grounded, close to the rocky shore in that first bay. He guessed they’d got her into shallow water just in time. All three tugs were alongside her now. If they could contain the fire they’d most likely unload her there, into lighters. The noise of cheering and clapping and the blare of the brass bands never slackened, it was a constant roar of excitement and joy: it was marvellous, he 
thought, but it was also crazy. How many people here—ten thousand? More? But what they were getting was half a tanker, maybe three-quarters of that American freighter’s cargo, and two other ship-loads. At the cost of twelve merchantmen, an aircraft carrier, three cruisers and some destroyers: and those were the ships he knew about … The band they were passing was playing “Rule, Britannia!”. A hand fell on his shoulder. Turning, he found the doctor, Grant, where Simpson had been a moment ago. Grant shouted, “Bad news, sub. Your pal Willis. I’m extremely sorry.”
   “Dead?”
   The doctor nodded. The band had switched to “Scotland the Brave.” Paul hadn’t known Harry Willis well, but Willis had saved his life and now he was dead. So were Ron Beale, and Art Withinshaw, and Dennis Brill and Mick McCall and old Bongo Mackeson and young Gosling. And God knew how many others. The bands played and the people cheered and it made you want to cry: for the thrill in it, and pride, and sorrow too. But also, surprise. He wondered, If they act like this now, what in hell will they do when we start winning?
   POSTSCRIPT
   There was no cruiser Defiant or destroyer USS Sloan. In other respects the description of the Java Sea battle (27 February, 1942) and subsequent events is drawn from history. The Japanese landed in Java on 1 March.
   The Malta convoy is more thoroughly fictional. There was no convoy from the west in February: that month’s attempt to supply the island was from Alexandria, and no ships at all got through. So it was necessary to invent one—in order to get Paul to Malta. The fictional convoy story is based loosely on the facts of Operation Pedestal, which took place a few months later. Pedestal opened with the loss of the carrier Eagle, and two cruisers and the tanker Ohio were hit in one ( Italian) submarine’s torpedo salvo at the entrance to the Skerki Channel. Among the fourteen ships in convoy was an American freighter called the Santa Elisa, but she was not among the five ships—two of them sinking—that reached Malta.
   Selected Historical Fiction Published by McBooks Press
   BY ALEXANDER KENT
   The Complete Midshipman Bolitho
   Stand Into Danger
   In Gallant Company
   Sloop of War
   To Glory We Steer
   Command a King’s Ship
   Passage to Mutiny
   With All Despatch
   Form Line of Battle!
   Enemy in Sight!
   The Flag Captain
   Signal—Close Action!
   The Inshore Squadron
   A Tradition of Victory
   Success to the Brave
   Colours Aloft!
   Honour This Day
   The Only Victor
   Beyond the Reef
   The Darkening Sea
   For My Country’s Freedom
   Cross of St George
   Sword of Honour
   Second to None
   Relentless Pursuit
   Man of War
   Heart of Oak
   In the King’s Name
   BY PHILIP MCCUTCHAN
   Halfhyde at the Bight of Benin
   Halfhyde’s Island
   Halfhyde and the Guns of Arrest
   Halfhyde to the Narrows
   Halfhyde for the Queen
   Halfhyde Ordered South
   Halfhyde on Zanatu
   BY JAN NEEDLE
   A Fine Boy for Killing
   The Wicked Trade
   The Spithead Nymph
   BY BROOS CAMPBELL
   No Quarter
   The War of Knives
   Peter Wicked
   BY C.N. PARKINSON
   The Guernseyman
   Devil to Pay
   The Fireship
   Touch and Go
   So Near So Far
   Dead Reckoning
   BY DUDLEY POPE
   Ramage
   Ramage & The Drumbeat
   Ramage & The Freebooters
   Governor Ramage R.N.
   Ramage’s Prize
   Ramage & The Guillotine
   Ramage’s Diamond
   Ramage’s Mutiny
   Ramage & The Rebels
   The Ramage Touch
   Ramage’s Signal
   Ramage & The Renegades
   Ramage’s Devil
   Ramage’s Trial
   Ramage’s Challenge
   Ramage at Trafalgar
   Ramage & The Saracens
   Ramage & The Dido
   BY V.A. STUART
   Victors and Lords
   The Sepoy Mutiny
   Massacre at Cawnpore
   The Cannons of Lucknow
   The Heroic Garrison
   The Valiant Sailors
   The Brave Captains
   Hazard’s Command
   Hazard of Huntress
   Hazard in Circassia
   Victory at Sebastopol
   Guns to the Far East
   Escape from Hell
   BY JAMES L. NELSON
   The Only Life That Mattered
   BY SETH HUNTER
   The Time of Terror
   The Tide of War
   The Price of Glory
   BY DOUGLAS W. JACOBSON
   Night of Flames
   The Katyn Order
   BY JULIAN STOCKWIN
   Kydd
   Artemis
   Seaflower
   Mutiny
   Quarterdeck
   Tenacious
   Command
   The Admiral’s Daughter
   The Privateer’s Revenge
   Invasion Victory Conquest
   BY DEWEY LAMBDIN
   The French Admiral
   The Gun Ketch
   HMS Cockerel
   A King’s Commander
   Jester’s Fortune
   BY JOHN BIGGINS
   A Sailor of Austria
   The Emperor’s Coloured Coat
   The Two-Headed Eagle
   Tomorrow the World
   BY ALEXANDER FULLERTON
   Storm Force to Narvik
   Last Lift from Crete
   All the Drowning Seas
   A Share of Honour
   The Torch Bearers
   The Gatecrashers
   BY DAVID DONACHIE
   The Devil’s Own Luck
   The Dying Trade
   A Hanging Matter
   An Element of Chance
   The Scent of Betrayal
   A Game of Bones
   BY JAMES DUFFY
   Sand of the Arena
   The Fight for Rome
   
   
   
 
 All the Drowning Seas: The Nicholas Everard World War II Saga Book 3 Page 33