“Pass the word for the doctor,” said Hornblower.
There were many things to do; it was his duty to make contact with the Turkish authorities if they did not make contact with him. But first of all, without wasting a moment, it was necessary to make arrangements for the operation on McCullum. The man’s life hung in the balance, and far more than his life.
Chapter XII
Hornblower sat waiting in his cabin. “A few minutes” had been Eisenbeiss’s estimate of the time necessary for the operation. It was necessary, Hornblower knew, to work as quickly as possible, so as to minimize the shock to the patient.
“In the old Hannibal, sir,” said the sickberth attendant whom Hornblower had questioned regarding his experience, “we took off eleven legs in half an hour. That was at Algeciras, sir.”
But amputations were relatively simple. A full half of all amputation cases survived — Nelson himself had lost an arm, amputated on a dark night in a moderate storm at sea, and he had lived until a musket bullet killed him at Trafalgar. This was not an amputation. It was something which would be worse than useless if Eisenbeiss’s diagnosis was incorrect and which could easily fail in any case.
The ship was very still and quiet. Hornblower knew that all his crew were taking a morbid interest in the fate of the “poor gentleman”. They were sentimental about McCullum, lying at death’s door as a result of a bullet wound he need never have received; the fact that he was going to be cut about with a knife had an unholy attraction for them; the fact that in a few minutes he might be dead, might have gone through those mysterious doors they all feared to go through invested his personality with some special quality in their eyes. Sentries had to be posted to keep out all the sentimental, the inquisitive and the morbid-minded among the crew, and now Hornblower could tell by the silence that his men were waiting in shuddering silence for the climax, hoping perhaps to hear a scream or a groan, waiting as they would wait to see a condemned criminal turned off the hangman’s cart He could hear the heavy ticking of his watch as he waited.
Now there were distant sounds, but sounds in the little wooden ship were susceptible to so many possible interpretations that he would not at first allow himself to think that they might arise as a result of the ending of the operation. But then there were steps and voices outside his cabin door, the sentry speaking and then Eisenbeiss, and then came a knock.
“Come in,” said Hornblower, trying to keep his voice indifferent; the first sight of Eisenbeiss as he entered was enough to tell Hornblower that all was as well as could be hoped. There was an obvious lightheartedness about the doctor’s elephantine movements.
“I found the bullet,” said Eisenbeiss. “It was where I thought — at the inferior angle of the scapula.”
“Did you get it out?” asked Hornblower; the fact that he did not correct Eisenbeiss for omitting the “sir” was proof — if anyone had been present to notice it — that he was not as calm as he appeared.
“Yes,” said Eisenbeiss.
He laid something on the table in front of Hornblower, with a gesture positively dramatic. It was the bullet, mis-shapen, flattened to an irregular disc, with a raw scratch on one surface.
“That is where my scalpel cut into it,” said Eisenbeiss proudly. “I went straight to the right place.”
Hornblower picked the thing up gingerly to examine it.
“You see,” said Eisenbeiss, “it was as I said. The bullet struck the ribs, breaking them, and then glanced off, passing back between the bone and the muscle.”
“Yes, I see,” said Hornblower.
“And there are these as well,” went on Eisenbeiss, laying something else in front of Hornblower with the same sort of conscious pride as a conjuror at a fair bringing the rabbit out of the hat.
“Is this the wad?” asked Hornblower, puzzled, and making no attempt to pick up the horrid little object.
“No,” said Eisenbeiss, “that is how my forceps brought it out. But see —”
Eisenbeiss’s large fingers plucked the object into successive layers.
“I have looked at these through my lens. That is a piece of a blue coat. That is a piece of silk lining. That is a piece of linen shirt. And those are threads of a knitted undershirt.”
Eisenbeiss beamed with triumph.
“The bullet carried these in with it?” asked Hornblower.
“Exactly. Of course. Between the bullet and the bone these portions were cut off, as they might be between the blades of scissors, and the bullet carried them on with it I found them all. No wonder the wound was suppurating.”
“You address me as ‘sir’,” said Hornblower, realizing, now that the tension had eased, that Eisenbeiss had been omitting the honorific. “The operation was otherwise successful as well?”
“Yes — sir,” said Eisenbeiss. “The removal of these foreign bodies and the draining of the wound brought immediate relief to the patient.”
“He did not suffer too much?”
“Not too much. The men who were ready to hold him still had hardly anything to do. He submitted with good spirit, as he promised you he would. It was well that he lay still. I feared further injury to the lung from the broken ribs if he struggled.”
“You address me as ‘sir’,” said Hornblower. “That is the last time, doctor, that I shall overlook the omission.”
“Yes — sir.”
“And the patient is going on well?”
“I left him as well as I could hope — sir. I must return to him soon, of course.”
“Do you think he will live?”
Some of the triumph evaporated from Eisenbeiss’s expression as he concentrated on phrasing his reply.
“He is more likely to live now, sir,” he said. “But with wounds — one cannot be sure.”
There was always the likelihood, the unpredictable likelihood, of a wound taking a turn for the worse, festering and killing.
“You cannot say more than that?”
“No, sir. The wound must remain open to drain. When applying the sutures I inserted a bristle —”
“Very well,” said Hornblower, suddenly squeamish. “I understand. You had better return to him now. You have my thanks, doctor, for what you have done.”
Even with Eisenbeiss gone there was no chance of quietly reviewing the situation. A knock on the door heralded the appearance of Midshipman Smiley.
“Mr. Jones’ compliments, sir, and there are boats heading for us from the shore.”
“Thank you. I’ll come up. And if Mr. Turner’s not on deck tell him I want to see him there.”
Some of the gaily-painted boats in the distance were under oars, but the nearest one was under a lateen sail, lying very close to the wind. As Hornblower watched her she took in her sail, went about, and reset it on the other tack. The lateen rig had its disadvantages. On the new tack the boat would fetch up alongside Atropos easily enough.
“Now listen to me, Mr. Turner,” said Hornblower, reaching the decision he had had at the back of his mind — overlain until now by a host of other considerations — for the last two days. “When you speak to them you are to tell them that we are looking for a French squadron.”
“Beg pardon, sir?”
“We are looking for a French squadron. Two sail — that will do. A ship of the line and frigate, escaped from Corfu three weeks back. The first thing you ask is whether they have touched here.”
“Aye aye, sir.”
Turner was not very clear on the point yet.
“Admiral — Admiral Harvey has sent us in for news. He’s cruising off Crete looking for them with four sail of the line. Four will do. Enough force to make them respect us.”
“I see, sir.”
“You’re quite sure you do?”