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THE BOMB VESSEL
Mariner’s Library Fiction Classics
STERLING HAYDEN
Voyage: A Novel of 1896
BJORN LARSSON
The Celtic Ring
SAM LLEWELLYN
The Shadow in the Sands
RICHARD WOODMAN
The Darkening Sea
Endangered Species
Wager
The Nathaniel Drinkwater Novels
(in chronological order):
An Eye of the Fleet
A King’s Cutter
A Brig of War
The Bomb Vessel
The Corvette
1805
Baltic Mission
In Distant Waters
A Private Revenge
Under False Colours
The Flying Squadron
Beneath the Aurora
The Shadow of the Eagle
Ebb Tide
THE BOMB VESSEL
Richard Woodman
This edition first published 2000
by Sheridan House Inc.
145 Palisade Street
Dobbs Ferry, New York 10522
www.sheridanhouse.com
Copyright © 1984 by Richard Woodman
First published in Great Britain 1984
by John Murray (Publishers) Ltd
First published in the U.S. 1986
by Walker and Co.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission in writing of Sheridan House.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Woodman, Richard, 1944-
The bomb vessel / Richard Woodman.
p. cm. — (Mariner's library fiction classics)
ISBN 1-57409-099-2 (alk. paper)
1. Drinkwater, Nathaniel (Fictitious character)—Fiction.
2. Great Britain—History, Naval—19th century—Fiction.
3. Copenhagen, Battle of, 1801—Fiction. 4. Napoleonic
Wars, 1800-1815—Fiction. I. Title. II. Series.
PR6073.0618 B6 2000
823'.914—dc21
00-059501
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN 1-57409-099-2
Contents
PART ONE: TSAR PAUL
1 A Fish Out of Water
2 A Knight Errant
3 The Bomb Tender
4 A Matter of Family
5 The Pyroballogist
6 Powder and Shot
7 Action off the Sunk
PART TWO: SIR HYDE PARKER
8 An Unlawful Obligation
9 Batter Pudding
10 Truth in Masquerade
11 Nadir
12 A Turbot Bright
13 Councils of Timidity
PART THREE: LORD NELSON
14 The Sound
15 Copenhagen Road
16 All Fool’s Day
17 The Last Blunders
18 The Meteor Flag
19 Ace of Trumps
20 Kioge Bay
21 A Child of Fortune
Author’s Note
PART ONE
Tsar Paul
“Whenever I see a man who knows how to govern, my heart goes out to him. I write to you of my feelings about England, the country that . . . is ruled by greed and selfishness. I wish to ally myself with you in order to end that Government’s injustices.”
TSAR PAUL TO BONAPARTE, 1800
Chapter One September 1800
A Fish Out of Water
Nathaniel Drinkwater did not see the carriage. He was standing disconsolate and preoccupied outside the bow windows of the dress-shop as the coach entered Petersfield from the direction of Portsmouth. The coachman was whipping up his horses as he approached the Red Lion.
Drinkwater was suddenly aware of the jingle and creak of harness, the stink of horse-sweat, then a spinning of wheels, a glimpse of armorial bearings and shower of filth as the hurrying carriage lurched through a puddle at his feet. For a second he stared outraged at his plum coloured coat and ruined breeches before giving vent to his feelings.
‘Hey! Goddamn you, you whoreson knave! Can you not drive on the crown of the road?’ The coachman looked back, his ruddy face cracking into a grin, though the bellow had surprised him, particularly in Petersfield High Street.
Drinkwater did not see the face that peered from the rear window of the coach.
‘God’s bones,’ he muttered, feeling the damp upon his thighs. He shot an uneasy glance through the shop window. He had a vague feeling that the incident was retribution for abandoning his wife and Louise Quilhampton, and seeking the invigorating freshness of the street where the shower had passed, leaving the cobbles gleaming in the sudden sunshine. Water still ran in the gutters and tinkled down drainpipes. And dripped from the points of his new tail-coat, God damn it!
He brushed the stained breeches ineffectually, fervently wishing he could exchange the stiff high collar for the soft lapels of a sea-officer’s undress uniform. He regarded his muddied hands with distaste.
‘Nathaniel!’ He looked up. Forty yards away the carriage had pulled up. The passenger had waved the coach on and was walking back towards him. Drinkwater frowned uncertainly. The man was older than himself, wore bottle-green velvet over silk breeches with a cream cravat at his throat and his elegance redoubled Drinkwater’s annoyance at the spoiling of his own finery. He was about to open his mouth intemperately for the second time that morning when he recognised the engaging smile and penetrating hazel eyes of Lord Dungarth, former first lieutenant of the frigate Cyclops and a man currently engaged in certain government operations of a clandestine nature. The earl approached, his hand extended.
‘My dear fellow, I am most fearfully sorry . . .’ he indicated Drinkwater’s state.
Drinkwater flushed, then clasped the outstretched hand. ‘It’s of no account, my lord.’
Dungarth laughed. ‘Ha! You lie most damnably. Come with me to the Red Lion and allow me to make amends over a glass while my horses are changed.’
Drinkwater cast a final look at the women in the shop. They seemed not to have noticed the events outside, or were ignoring his brutish outburst. He fell gratefully into step beside the earl.
‘You are bound for London, my lord?’
Dungarth nodded. ‘Aye, the Admiralty to wait upon Spencer. But what of you? I learned of the death of old Griffiths. Your report found its way onto my desk along with papers from Wrinch at Mocha. I was delighted to hear Antigone had been purchased into the Service, though more than sorry you lost Santhonax. You got your swab?’
Drinkwater shook his head. ‘The epaulette went to our old friend Morris, my lord. He turned up like a bad penny in the Red Sea . . .’ he paused, then added resignedly, ‘I left Commander Morris in a hospital bed at the Cape, but it seems his letters poisoned their Lordships against further application for a ship by your humble servant.’
‘Ahhh. Letters to his sister, no doubt, a venomous bitch who still wields influence through the ghost of Jemmy Twitcher.’ They walked on in silence, turning into the yard of the Red Lion where the landlord, apprised of his lordship’s imminent arrival by the emblazoned coach, ushered them into a private room.
‘A jug of kill-devil, I think landlord, and look lively if you please. Well, Nathaniel, you are a shade darker from the Arabian sun, but otherwise unchanged. You will be interested to know that Santhonax has arrived back in Paris. A report reached me that he had been appointed lieutenant-colonel in a regiment of marines. Bonaparte is busy papering over the cracks of his oriental fiasco.’
Drinkwater gave a b
itter laugh. ‘He is fortunate to find employment . . .’ He stopped and looked sharply at the earl, wondering if he might not have been unintentionally importunate. Colouring he hurried on: ‘Truth to tell, my lord, I’m confounded irked to be without a ship. Living here astride the Portsmouth Road I see the johnnies daily posting down to their frigates. Damn it all, my lord,’ he blundered on, too far advanced for retreat, ‘it is against my nature to solicit interest, but surely there must be a cutter somewhere . . .’
Dungarth smiled. ‘You wouldn’t sail on a frigate or a line of battleship?’
Drinkwater grinned with relief. ‘I’d sail in a bath-tub if it mounted a carronade, but I fear I lack the youth for a frigate or the polish for a battleship. An unrated vessel would at least give me an opportunity.’
Dungarth looked shrewdly at Drinkwater. It was a pity such a promising officer had not yet received a commander’s commission. He recognised Drinkwater’s desire for an unrated ship as a symptom of his dilemma. He wanted his own vessel, a lieutenant’s command. It offered him his only real chance to distinguish himself. But passed-over lieutenants grew old in charge of transports, cutters and gun-brigs, involved in the tedious routines of convoy escort or murderous little skirmishes unknown to the public. Drinkwater seemed to have all the makings of such a man. There was a touch of grey at the temples of the mop of brown hair that was scraped back from the high forehead into a queue. His left eyelid bore powder burns like random ink-spots and the dead tissue of an old scar ran down his left cheek. It was the face of a man accustomed to hard duty and disappointment. Dungarth, occupied with the business of prosecuting an increasingly unpopular war, recognised its talents were wasted in Petersfield.
The rum arrived. ‘You are a fish out of water, Nathaniel. What would you say to a gun-brig?’ He watched for reaction in the grey eyes of the younger man. They kindled immediately, banishing the rigidity of the face and reminding Dungarth of the eager midshipman Drinkwater had once been.
‘I’d say that I would be eternally in your debt, my lord.’
Dungarth swallowed his kill-devil and waved Drinkwater’s gratitude aside.
‘I make no promises, but you’ll have heard of the Freya affair, eh? The Danes have had their ruffled feathers smoothed, but the Tsar has taken offence at the force of Lord Whitworth’s embassy to Copenhagen to sort the matter out. He resented the entry of British men of war into the Baltic. I tell you this in confidence Nathaniel, recalling you to your assurances when you served aboard Kestrel . . .’
Drinkwater nodded, feeling his pulse quicken. ‘I understand, my lord.’
‘Vaubois has surrendered Malta to us. Pitt is of the opinion that Mahon is a sufficient base for the Mediterranean but many of us do not agree. We will hold Malta.’ Dungarth raised a significant eyebrow. ‘The Tsar covets the island, so too does Ferdinand of the Two Sicilies, but Tsar Paul is Grand Master of the Order of St John and his claim has a specious validity. At the present moment the Coalition against France threatens to burst like a rotten apple: Austria has not fired a shot since her defeat at Marengo in April. In short the Tsar has it in his power to break the whole alliance with ease. He is unstable enough to put his wounded pride before political sense.’ He paused to toss off the rum. ‘You will recollect at our last contre-temps with His Imperial Majesty, he offered to settle the differences between our two nations in single combat with the King!’ Dungarth laughed. ‘This time he has settled for merely confiscating all British property in Russia.’
Drinkwater’s eyes widened in comprehension.
‘I see you follow me,’ went on Dungarth. ‘For a change we are remarkably well informed of developments both at St Petersburg and at Copenhagen.’ He smiled with an ironic touch of self-congratulation. ‘Despite the massive subsidies being paid him the Tsar feigns solicitude for Denmark. A predatory concern, but that is the Danes’ affair. To be specific, my dear fellow, the pertinent consequence of this lunatic’s phobia is to revive the old Armed Neutrality of the Baltic States, moribund since the American War. The combination is already known to us and means the northern allies have an overwhelming force available for operations in concert with the French and Batavian fleets in the North Sea. I have no idea how to reconcile mad Paul with First Consul Bonaparte, but they are said to have a secret understanding. After your own experiences with the Dutch I have no need to conjure to your imagination the consequences of such a combined fleet upon our doorstep.’
Drinkwater shook his head. ‘Indeed not.’
‘So whatever the outcome . . .’ A knock at the door was accompanied by an announcement that the fresh horses had been put-to. Dungarth picked up his hat. ‘Whatever the outcome we must strike with pre-emptive swiftness.’ He held out his hand. ‘Good-bye, Nathaniel. You may rely on my finding something for you.’
‘I am most grateful, my lord. And for the confidences.’ He stood, lost in thought as the carriage clattered out of the yard. Less than half an hour had passed since the same coach had soiled his clothes. Already he felt a mounting excitement. The Baltic was comparatively shallow; a theatre for small ships; a war for lieutenants in gun-brigs. His mind raced. He thought of his wife with guilty disloyalty, then of Louise Quilhampton, abandoned in the dress-shop with Elizabeth, whose son he had brought home from the Red Sea with an iron hook in place of his left hand.
Drinkwater’s mind skipped to thoughts of James Quilhampton, Mr Q as he had been known to the officers of the brig Hellebore. He too was unemployed and eager for a new appointment.
He picked up his hat and swore under his breath. There was also Charlotte Amelia, now nearly two years of age. Drinkwater would miss her sorely if he returned to duty. He thought of her bouncing upon Susan Tregembo’s knee as they had left the house an hour earlier. And there was Tregembo, too, silently fretful on his own account at his master’s idleness.
The old disease gnawed at him, tugging him two ways: Elizabeth and the trusting brown eyes of his daughter, the comforts and ease of domestic life. And against it the hard fulfilment of a sea-officer’s duty. Always the tug of one when the other was to hand.
Elizabeth found him emerging from the Red Lion, noting both his dirtied clothes and the carriage drawing steadily up Sheet Hill.
‘Nathaniel?’
‘Eh? Ah. Yes, my dear?’ Guilt drove him to over-played solicitude. ‘Did you satisfy your requirements, eh? Where is Louise?’
‘Taken offence, I shouldn’t wonder. Nathaniel, you are cozening me. That coach . . .?’
‘Coach, my dear?’
‘Coach, Nathaniel, emblazoned three ravens sable upon a field azure, among other quarterings. Lord Dungarth’s arms if I mistake not.’ She slipped an arm through his while he smiled lopsidedly down at her. She was as lovely as when he had first seen her in a vicarage garden in Falmouth years earlier. Her wide mouth mocked him gently.
‘I smell gunpowder, Nathaniel.’
‘You have disarmed me, madam.’
‘It is not very difficult,’ she squeezed his arm, ‘you are a poor dissembler.’
He sighed. ‘That was Dungarth. It seems likely that we will shortly be at war with the Northern Powers.’
‘Russia?’
‘You are very perceptive.’ He warmed to her and the conversation ran on like a single train of thought.
‘Oh, I am not as scatter-brained as some of my sex.’
‘And infinitely more beautiful.’
‘La, kind sir, I was not fishing for compliments, merely facts. But you should not judge Louise too harshly though she runs on so. She is a good soul and true friend, though I know you prefer the company of her son,’ Elizabeth concluded with dry emphasis.
‘Mr Q’s conversation is merely more to my liking, certainly . . .’
‘Pah!’ interrupted Elizabeth, ‘he talks of nothing but your confounded profession. Come, sir, I still smell gunpowder, Nathaniel,’ and added warningly, ‘do not tack ship.’
He took a deep breath and explained the gist of Dungarth’s
news without betraying the details.
‘So it is to be Britannia contra mundum,’ she said at last.
‘Yes.’
Elizabeth was silent for a moment. ‘The country is weary of war, Nathaniel.’
‘Do not exempt me from that, but . . .’ he bit his lip, annoyed that the last word had slipped out.
’But, Nathaniel, but? But while there is fighting to be done it cannot be brought to a satisfactory conclusion without my husband’s indispensable presence, is that it?’
He looked sharply at her, aware that she had great reason for bitterness. But she hid it, as only she could, and resorted to a gentle mockery that veiled her inner feelings. ‘And Lord Dungarth promised you a ship?’
‘As I said, my dear, you are very perceptive.’
He did not notice the tears in her eyes, though she saw the anticipation in his.
Chapter Two October–November 1800
A Knight Errant
‘Drinkwater!’
Drinkwater turned, caught urgently by the arm at the very moment of passing through the screen-wall of the Admiralty into the raucous bedlam of Whitehall. Recognition was hampered by the shoving that the two naval officers were subjected to, together with the haggard appearance of the newcomer.
‘Sam? Samuel Rogers, by all that’s holy! Where the deuce did you spring from?’
‘I’ve spent the last two months haunting the bloody waiting room of their exalted Lordships, bribing those bastard clerks to put my name forward. It was as much as the scum could do to take their feet out of their chair-drawers in acknowledgement . . .’ Rogers looked down. His clothes were rumpled and soiled, his stock grubby and it was clear that it was he, and not the notorious clerks, that were at fault.
‘I must have missed you when I tarried there this morning.’ Drinkwater fell silent, embarrassed at his former shipmate’s penury. All around them the noise of the crowds, the peddlers, hucksters, the groans of a loaded dray and the leathery creak of a carriage combined with the ostentatious commands of a sergeant of foot-guards to his platoon seemed to emphasise the silence between the two men.