by Nevil Shute
He said: “Of course.”
“These Frenchmen that I have here in the ship,” said Simon. “In England they can none of them afford to drink the French wines, and they do not like the heavy English beer. When we come back, in two days or in three, they will be very happy. I would like that they should have each a bottle of French wine to their dinner — cheap red wine, like Pommard, or the St. Julien that English people drink. I will pay, but will you find the wine for me?”
The brigadier said: “I’ll look after that. I’ll have it there at Dartmouth waiting for you.”
I straightened up above the chart-table. “Well, away you go,” I said. “Wish I was coming too.”
We went on deck; the boat was waiting for us at the side. I took a last look round. Rhodes was there, and he came up to me.
“You going back to Dartmouth, sir?” he asked.
I told him that I was.
“If you see that Wren, Miss Wright,” he said, “would you remind her to be sure and feed my rabbit? She’s the Wren that drives our little Austin truck.”
“I’ll do that,” I said. “Anything else?”
He grinned and said casually: “Give her my love.”
“I’ll do that, too,” I said. McNeil was already in the boat, and I went over the side and joined him, smearing black, tarry paint over my bridge coat as I went. We pushed off, returning their salutes, and made our way back to the harbour in the rain.
It was nearly twelve o’clock. Neither of us wanted to leave Penzance or to sit down to lunch till we had seen them on their way. We went into a pub beside the harbour and had a couple of whiskies in silence; neither of us could think of anything to talk about except what could not be talked in a public-house. At a quarter to one we went out and walked up and down on the sea wall watching the ship.
At five minutes to one we heard the rumble of her Diesel motor over the water and saw that she was shortening her cable. The anchor came up to the hawse, and she turned to the south. She put on speed, and very quickly vanished in the rainy mist.
7
I WENT BACK to the Naval Centre and made a cryptic signal to V.A.C.O. to tell him that the ship was on her way. Then we had lunch and got on to the train; we arrived back in Dartmouth late at night and slept in the Naval College.
I say we slept, but speaking for myself, I was awake for most of the night. I had been intimately concerned with this venture from the beginning, and I had come to know the officers if not the ratings more intimately than was usual in operations that I had to do with. It makes it difficult to sleep when you possess that knowledge; you lie awake hour after hour, wondering whether, sitting at your desk, you could have thought more deeply for them, organized them better, made them safer in the perils that they had to face. It’s really not so good to know a ship so intimately as I knew Geneviève.
We did not hurry in the morning. By the shortest route, close round by Ushant, it is a hundred and seventy sea miles or so from the rendezvous where they expected to find the fishing fleet, to Dartmouth. Assuming that they left the area at two in the morning, they could not possibly arrive before six o’clock in the evening; in all probability they would be out another night unless they put in to some nearer port. There was nothing for us to do all day but to keep within hail of the telephone in the Naval Centre.
We made our way down there after breakfast. Outside the door the little Austin van was parked; the Wren driver was walking up and down disconsolately outside. She brightened when she saw us coming up the street, and went and stood by her car.
I stopped for a moment. “Miss Wright,” I said. She came to attention, which rather put me off. “I had a message for you from Lieutenant Rhodes. He wanted me to remind you to be sure to feed his rabbit.”
She coloured a little. “Very good, sir,” she said formally. And then more humanly she asked: “Did they go?”
This girl already knew sufficient to blow the gaff if any gaff was to be blown, and had known it for weeks. “They got off yesterday,” I said in a low tone. “They should have done their stuff last night. They may be back here late to-night or very early to-morrow morning.”
She said: “Thank you, sir, for telling me.”
“Keep it under your hat,” I said. “And don’t let Rhodes come back and find his rabbit hungry.”
She smiled at that; she was really quite a pretty girl.
I turned away, then stopped. “Oh, and one other thing,” I said. “He asked me to give you his love.”
She blushed suddenly scarlet; it seemed that I had hit the bull’s-eye quite unwittingly. “He did what, sir?” she muttered.
I grinned. “You heard me the first time,” I said, and turned and went into the Naval Centre with McNeil.
I rang up V.A.C.O. and told the duty officer where I was in case any news came through, and I did the same with C.-in-C. Western Approaches. It was then eleven o’clock in the morning, and there was nothing to do but sit and wait for news.
It’s very trying when you have to wait like that. McNeil and I did not talk much; we sat there smoking our pipes, trying to read and concentrate upon our newspapers in the bare little office. So many things could have happened to them apart from enemy action. It had been a dark night up till two o’clock, though it had not rained much; at Dartmouth visibility had been poor, and it was probably much worse around Ushant. We had sent them in in the dark night to close a coast that was unlit and sown with reefs. To the north of their area ten miles of half-tide rocks run out from St. Mathieu to Ushant; to the south the Saints stretch a great tongue of reefs westward fifteen miles off-shore. In the middle of the area the reefs outside Le Toulinguet stretch two or three miles out; in amongst all that mess they had to find their fishing fleet. The tides were strong round there; in places they ran four or even five knots. If in the darkness and the run of tide they were five miles out in their position at the end of a hundred-and-thirty-mile trip, they might have met disaster absolute.
I sucked my pipe and tried to read the news, which was all bad. The Russians were being driven farther and farther back, and now the Germans were approaching the Crimea.
McNeil and I went out to lunch in turn, one of us staying by the telephone. We walked up and down outside the office after lunch in the fitful sunshine between bursts of rain; the Wren was still there waiting with her little truck. At about four o’clock I went and saw the secretary, an R.N.V.R. lieutenant.
“There’s the Watch Point up on the cliff, sir,” he said. “We’ve got a direct line to that. Your Wren knows where it is, and I’ll have any call that comes put through to you there.”
I went down with McNeil and got into the truck, telling the Wren to take us to the Watch Point. She said eagerly: “Are they coming in, sir?”
“It’s not time,” I said. “They can’t be here much before dark.”
The Watch Point was a little camouflaged hut on the cliff-top, half sunk in the earth. There was an old petty officer in charge and a signalman with him; they had a good big telescope upon a stand and a couple of pairs of field-glasses. Three hundred feet below us lay the sea, grey, dappled, and corrugated with wind. It was a better place to wait than in the office.
The signalman made tea, and I had the Wren in and gave her a cup. She sat in a corner silent, waiting with us. We waited on there, smoking patiently, talking very little, hour after hour. And in the end they came.
The signalman first saw them at about half-past seven, when the light was beginning to fade. He saw a vessel through the telescope many miles out, heading for the harbour. We all had a look in turn, continuously; even the Wren had a look, the signalman helping her with the focusing. When they were three or four miles out and we were quite clear it was Geneviève I rang through to the duty officer and told him they were coming in.
“Make them a signal to go straight up to their mooring at Dittisham,” I said. “I shall go round and meet them there.”
“Very good, sir.”
I sent a message to t
heir mess steward at Dittisham to get a meal ready, and then we left the hut and got into the truck. Half an hour later we drew up outside the villas, left the Wren there to help with the meal, and walked down to the hard.
The vessel was already in sight down the reach, coming up in the last of the evening light. Down at the water’s edge there was an R.N.V.R. surgeon-lieutenant waiting in the boat, who had come out from Dartmouth on a motor-bicycle. A rating rowed us out towards the mooring as the ship drew near, and we scrambled over the side before she was secured.
Simon met us and helped us over the bulwark. He was in fishing clothes, dirty and unshaven, and very, very tired.
He said: “We got a Raumboote with the flame-gun, sir.”
McNeil said: “You did get one? God, that’s fine! Did you sink her?”
He shook his head. “I do not know. I think she may have sunk in the end. She was all burning end to end when we had finished, but we did not stay around. And then the rain came down again, and we lost sight of her.”
McNeil went on with Simon; Colvin came up to us. “This is a damn good show,” I said. “Did you get any casualties?”
“Not one,” he said. “They never got a single round off at us. That fire-gun surely is the goods.”
I asked a few more hurried questions, but the men were obviously very tired and I wanted them to get ashore. The full report could wait till they had had a meal and some sleep; there was no urgency. I told Colvin to get everyone ashore and hand over to the shore party for an anchor watch.
Boden said: “What about the Jerry? Do we take him too, or leave him here?”
Colvin said: “Leave him here the night. He’s all right as he is.”
“Do you mean a German?” I asked, startled.
“Sure,” said Colvin. “We picked one up out of the water, but he died pretty soon.” He paused. “We put him down alongside the fuel-tanks. Do you want to see him?”
I turned to McNeil. “They’ve got a dead German,” I said. “Do you want to have a look at him?”
“So I hear. I think perhaps we’d better, and then take him ashore to-morrow.”
Colvin took us down into the hold beside the tanks. There was a long figure lying covered by a blanket. “He’s not a pretty sight,” said Colvin. “He was pretty well burnt up before he got into the water.”
He removed the blanket.
“No,” I said, “he’s not.”
McNeil asked: “Had he any papers on him?”
Colvin shrugged his shoulders. “I dunno,” he said. “To tell the truth, we didn’t kind of fancy going through his clothes. We reckoned that was the shore party’s job.”
He replaced the blanket and we went on deck. The ratings were being ferried on shore in batches. I found Rhodes and said:
“This is a damn good show. Did you have any difficulty?”
“Not a bit, sir. It went exactly as we planned.”
“Fine. You’d better get on shore now and get a hot meal and some sleep. We’ll make out a report in the morning.”
“Very good, sir.”
He turned away; I stopped him. “I gave your message to the Wren,” I said.
“Thank you, sir.”
“I should bloody well think so,” I replied. “Next time you want a go-between, just you give the job to Brigadier McNeil.”
André was there. I spoke a few sentences to him in my lame, halting French, telling him to tell the ratings that they had put up a damn good show, and that the admiral would be very pleased with the ship. He replied with a volley of which I understood one word in five, and we beamed at each other, and then it began to rain.
It was practically dark and there were only a few of us now left on board. Boden was at my elbow, obviously very tired. I said to him: “I expect you could do with some sleep.”
“I’m not tired, sir,” he said. And then he said: “It’s a fine thing, that flame-thrower. There were three of them on the bridge, and they were just blotted out. And the two by the aft gun — they just disappeared.” He paused. “I think it was one of them we picked out of the sea.”
“Very likely,” I said. “We’ll make out a report in the morning.”
“Will we be going out again, sir?”
“I don’t know. We’ll have to think about that.”
“We ought to go again, sir. It’s a fine game this — better than anti-submarine. I mean, you can see what you’re doing.”
The boat came back again. “Go on down,” I said to him. “The thing to do now is to have a meal and some sleep.” And a bromide for him, I thought; the surgeon would provide that. Boden went down into the boat; I followed him, and we were ferried ashore in the darkness and the rain.
In the two villas most of them were at supper. I told Simon that I would be out in the forenoon, and I had a word with the surgeon-lieutenant about bringing the dead German ashore and about the bromide.
He nodded. “Two or three of them can do with something of the sort,” he said. “I’ll look after that — I’ve got some stuff with me. I’ll stay here for an hour or two.”
McNeil and I left them; they would not settle down while we were there. We went back in the little lorry driven by the Wren to the Naval Centre, and I put in a telephone call to V.A.C.O. The admiral was still in his office and I spoke to him and gave him the substance of what had happened.
“That’s very satisfactory,” he said. “Give the ship my congratulations, Martin — no, I’ll make them a signal. And I should like to see the commanding officer, that Captain Simon, as soon as he has finished making out his report. I shall be here for the next two days.”
I rang off and we went back to the College for a late, scratch meal before bed. Next morning we went back to Dittisham and settled down with Simon and Colvin in the ward-room to hear the full story. And what it amounted to was this.
They left Penzance at about 13.00 in a squall of rain. It was warm and rainy all the afternoon, with visibility varying between one mile and five miles. They saw two aircraft of the Coastal Command and flashed their code sign at them with an Aldis lamp; they saw no enemy aircraft. They kept their speed meticulously, doing ten and a half knots in each hour by the log and plotting their tidal drift each hour with wind corrections. They set their course to pass seven miles to the west of Ushant, and as darkness fell they were approaching the island.
They had a bit of luck there, because the fog-signal was going from the lighthouse at Le Jument; they heard it faintly in the distance. It was too distant and too faint to give them more than an approximate bearing, but what they got out of it checked more or less with their dead reckoning, and they changed course off Ushant according to plan.
They were then upon a course as if to enter Brest, and they were perhaps twenty-five miles from the entrance to the Rade. There was some danger that they might meet a patrol vessel, so they put on their red and green sidelights and slung a white light half-way up the mast, fishing-boat style. At the same time they manned the flame-gun and made ready for action.
They were not intercepted. Visibility was poor, with occasional showers of rain. They had time in hand, and slowed to eight knots, at which speed their engine was much quieter. They stopped two or three times to take a sounding, and went on upon a course for Cap de la Chèvre.
They ran two and a half hours, about twenty miles upon that course, into the region which the French call L’Iroise. At any point in that course they might have met the fishing fleet, but they saw nothing of it. What they actually saw, at about 23.45, was a flashing light, which they identified as a minor lighthouse called Le Bouc, upon a rock about two miles west of La Chèvre.
Simon and Colvin bent over the chart-table together. “That’s the boy,” said Colvin. He put his pencil on the rock. “Just about where he should be, and if that’s not a bloody miracle, I’d like to know what is.”
Simon stared fixedly at the little pencil-line that marked their course. “The light must mean that there are vessels out to-night,” he sai
d. “So much is certain: they would not have the lighthouse alight unless it was necessary to them.” He turned to Colvin. “This lighthouse, is it useful to ships going in and out of Brest?”
The other shook his head. “It’s right out of their way. It only serves ships going to Douarnenez.”
“Then it must be alight for the fishing fleet, or for their Raumboote.”
“Seems like it.”
Their course for the last twenty miles had been south-east, parallel with the string of reefs that runs from Ushant to La Chèvre, broken by the entrance to Brest. The fleet could not be to the north of that course, therefore if it was out at all it must be either ahead of them in the bay of Douarnenez or to the south down by the Chaussée de Sein, which we call The Saints. They stood on into the bay, still burning all their steaming lights.
Visibility was a bit better by that time. They saw the great bluff of La Chèvre and went on past it right into the Bay of Douarnenez. They were in the enemy’s waters with a vengeance then, in range of batteries that could have blown them out of the water with the greatest of ease. They must have been seen from La Chèvre; in all probability their steaming lights protected them.
They got within about six miles of Douarnenez at about one o’clock in the morning. There was no sign of the fishing fleet in the bay. They turned and steamed along the south shore of the bay, about two miles from land, heading back towards the west.
Near Beuzec, suddenly, a searchlight leaped out at them, and caught and held them in its glare. From the wheel-house Simon shouted out in French— “No firing. Two or three of you wave your hands at them. So — that is good.” The white light lit up every detail of the ship, blinding, intolerable. They puttered on upon a steady course towards the west, each moment expecting a shell.
Then the light went out, and for some time they could distinguish nothing in the inky darkness.
Simon turned to Colvin. “We must look very like a fishing-boat,” he said.
“Sure,” said the other. “If we didn’t we’d be looking like a butcher’s shop by now.”