But it had been a near thing this time. His sword had tangled between his legs, and for a brief moment as the barge had dropped beneath him he had seen the water swirling to pluck him from the ship's side and had heard Allday call out with alarm. Soaked and angry Bolitho managed to pull himself up to the safety of the entry port, and as the pipes shrilled in salute and the side party stiffened to attention he glanced quickly at their wooden expressions, expecting to see amusement or disappointment that he had not indeed fallen, if only to provide a ready topic of gossip for the lower deck.
Winstanley guided him to the quarterdeck, his resonant voice held down with obvious effort. He was a giant of a man, loose limbed and outwardly ungainly, but gave an immediate impression of great competence. His face was toughened and seamed from countless voyages, but his small twinkling eyes and the mass of crowsfeet around them gave an equal impression of a ready sense of humour.
The captain of a flagship, even that of a lowly commodore, needed all of that and more, Bolitho thought grimly as he squelched up the ladder and into the shelter of the poop.
Winstanley was saying gruffly, "I was watching your ship through my glass. She looks a mite different from the last time I saw her. Like new she is." He glanced up.at the commodore's broad pendant which streamed stiffly from the masthead. "The Vectis will sail for Plymouth now that you've arrived to relieve her, and after that it'll be my turn." He gripped Bolitho's arm as they approached the stern cabin. "Next to me you're the senior captain, so I've no doubt Hyperion will wear his pendant in due course."
He must have seen the question on Bolitho's face for he said quickly, "I'll speak with you later. Pelham-Martin is no man to keep waiting."
He opened the door and Bolitho followed him into the cabin, his hat jammed beneath his arm, and conscious of the wet footmarks across a rich, pale coloured carpet as he approached a littered table which was arranged to one i side of the stern windows.
The commodore was seated comfortably at a highbacked chair, seemingly relaxed in spite of the slow, sickening motion around him. He was incredibly broad, but as he got slowly to his feet Bolitho sensed something like shock when he realised that Pelham-Martin was extremely short and his effort at standing made little difference at all. All his bulk seemed to go into his breadth, like Tomlin, the Hyperion's bosun, but there the similarity ended. He had a round, pale complexioned face and his fair hair was cut in a newly fashionable short style. But whereas it may have suited the Navy's younger bloods, it merely made the commodore's head appear even smaller when compared with the great bulk beneath it.
"Welcome, Captain." His voice was smooth, even gentle. "You must have made a quick passage." His eyes moved calmly over Bolitho's bedraggled appearance, but he did not remark on it. Then he waved to some chairs and pointed to a silver wine casket which swung gently from the deckhead. "A drink perhaps?"
Across his bulky shoulder Winstanley gave the merest shake of his head and Bolitho said, "No, thank you, sir. Not for the moment."
He saw Winstanley relax slightly and noticed that Peiham-Martin was smiling. He was grateful for Winstanley's warning, yet at the same time he was irritated at being put to some private test for the commodore's own purpose.
"Well, I expect you have read all the available reports, Bolitho. Our duty here is to patrol the approaches to the Gironde Estuary and stop any shipping entering or leaving. I have made a signal to Vectis to sail for Plymouth for repairs. She lost her mizzen in a great gale some two weeks back, and spare spars are in great demand here. In a few months' time we will be joined by two more sail of the line, and by then we should know what the Frogs intend to do, eh?" He leaned back comfortably and smiled. He looked more like a rich merchant than a sea officer, Bolitho thought vaguely.
He heard himself say, "The French will be out before that, sir."
Pelham-Martin's smile stayed fixed on his small mouth. "You say so? Where did you gather this information?" He leaned forward slightly. "Has the admiral been keeping something from me then?"
Bolitho smiled. "No, sir. But I have been reading all the available reports, and I consider that the French will have to break out soon if they are to be of any use to their cause."
Pelham-Martin nodded slowly. "That is a masterpiece of self-deception, Bolitho." He waved one hand towards the windows and through the salt-stained glass Bolitho could see the next ship astern throwing the spray across her bows, yet giving the impression of ponderous indestructibility.
The commodore added calmly, "These ships will prevent any such foolishness." He seemed to become impatient and dragged a chart from beneath some leatherbound books. "We are here," he stabbed the chart with one pink finger, "and I have placed the two frigates, Spartan and Abdiel, on the southern approaches to warn of any attempt by the enemy to cross into this area from Spanish waters." The finger moved towards the rambling coastline above the Gironde. "Here I have deployed my third frigate, Ithuriel, in the exact area to see and report any French attempt to leave Bordeaux for the north."
Bolitho looked up. "And the sloops, sir?" Again a quick shake of the head from Captain Winstanley, but Bolitho's anger at Pelham-Martin's easy dismissal of his ideas had thrust caution at one side.
"Sloops?" Pelham-Martin nodded gravely. "You have indeed read your reports, Bolitho." The smile vanished. "I have despatched them to Vigo for, er, extra stores."
Bolitho looked away. It was incredible. Vigo, on the north-west coast of Spain, was over four hundred miles away. Further from the Gironde Estuary than Plymouth itself!
The commodore's hands. began to tap a slow tattoo on the edge of the table. Like two smooth, pink crabs. He asked quietly, "You seem to disapprove?"
Bolitho kept his tone level. "The frigate Ithuriel is all alone so close inshore, sir. And the other two frigates are too far to the south'rd to assist her if she is attacked."
Pelham-Martin eyed him for several seconds. "Ithuriel's captain has my orders, my orders, d'you understand, to close the squadron the moment he sights any sign of activity." The smile came back slightly. "I understood that you had been a frigate captain, Bolitho? Surely you do not deny the Ithuriel's captain the chance to prove his worth?"
Bolitho said flatly, "I think he would stand no chance at all, sir."
Winstanley shifted on his chair. "What Captain Bolitho means is…"
Pelham-Martin lifted one hand. "I know what he means, Winstanley! Not for him the business of blockade, dear me, no! He wants to drive headlong ashore and seize some wretched ship for prize money, no doubt!"
"No, sir," Bolitho gripped the arms of his chair. He had made a bad start. Worrying about Inch and Stepkyne, his near fall into the sea from his barge under the eyes of the squadron had pared away his normal reserve when dealing with senior officers., "But I do believe that unless we know exactly what we are blockading we can never take steps to deal with whatever ruse the French will employ."
The commodore stared at him. "My orders are to patrol this area. That is what I am doing. Really, Bolitho, I do not know what you were told aboard Vice-Admiral Cavendish's flagship, but I can assure you we are well aware of the task entrusted to us here."
"I did not go aboard the flagship, sir." Bolitho saw a quick flash of surprise in the other man's eyes before the shutter dropped again. He added quietly, "My orders were sent across to me." It was a lie, but only half a lie.
But the effect of it was instantaneous and more than surprising. Pelham-Martin dragged a gold watch from his straining waistcoat and said, "Please me by going on deck, Winstanley. Just make sure that all my despatches were sent across to the Vectis before she left the squadron, eh?" As soon as the door closed behind the other captain he continued evenly, "I am sorry if I seemed unwilling to listen to your appraisal of our situation here, Bolitho." He smiled and lifted a decanter from the silver casket. "Some brandy, eh? Took it from a French coaster a week ago." He did not wait for a reply but poured it liberally into some glasses which had been concealed below the table. "The fact is, I do not always see eye to eye with Sir Manley, you know." He watched Bolitho above the rim of his glass. "It is a family matter, a deeply rooted dispute of some standing now." He wagged the glass. "Not unknown in your family too, I believe?"