We watched in horror from the rail of the Victory, but there was nothing we could do. Dr Nuñez sat on a water cask with his head in his hands, groaning and muttering to himself. Dom Antonio strode angrily from one end of the ship to the other, his drawn sword in his hand, slapping it from time to time against his thigh, while Dr Lopez trotted behind him, with soothing, meaningless words. He had donned a bejewelled breastplate, an ornamental thing of little military value, but with it he still wore his square physician’s cap of purple velvet. Nothing could more clearly have spelled out our helplessness, our absurdity. This was an affair of Drake’s, not ours, just one more episode in his long personal war of attrition with Spain.
Sir John Norreys seemed helpless, for he had lost control of our untrained mob of men, his experienced soldiers far too few to marshal them into any kind of order. Drake, meanwhile, was sending fire parties in amongst the ships in the harbour, most of which were careened or laid alongside the quays under repair. Within a few hours smoke was drifting across the water toward us from those ships his sailors had managed to set on fire.
I tried speaking to Captain Oliver, who had retired to his cabin, as if to mark his wish to have no part in what was happening on shore.
‘Do you have any idea of how long we will be here, Captain?’ I asked. ‘If ever it is possible to get the men and the supplies back on board the ships?’
He gave me a bleak look. ‘I was concerned from the start that we were encumbered with this rabble. I would send my own crew ashore to secure provisions, but I dare not risk their lives amongst those drunken louts. We will never be able to reprovision until they drink themselves into a stupor and we can send reliable men to load up what we need.’ He grimaced. ‘That may take several days.’
‘But surely now Sir John will give up his plan of seizing the town,’ I said.
‘He has sent no signal to that effect.’
‘But these men are incapable–’
‘Aye, they are certainly incapable, but he has the experienced troops from the Low Countries.’
‘Only about eighteen hundred men,’ I said. ‘Enough to take possession of the undefended lower town, I suppose, but not the walled citadel, the old town up on the hill. We have no artillery.’
‘We have not,’ he agreed, ‘and the ships’ guns have not the range to reach so far. The garrison up there does have cannon. They have been firing down on our men.’
‘I have seen it. So what must we do?’
‘Await the first opportunity to reprovision, then hope we can persuade Sir John to abandon this unnecessary diversion of capturing the citadel of Coruña. Sir Francis is likely to want to do what damage he can, to both ships and town, but I doubt he will want to be held up here by a long siege.’
‘He would prefer to be at sea, hunting for the Spanish treasure ships.’ I smiled. Drake’s intentions were always easy to foresee.
He returned my smile, somewhat ruefully. ‘Aye, he would.’
Speaking to Oliver was a wasted effort. The captain himself was no better informed than I was. I returned to the foredeck and joined the other watchers there.
There was nothing for it, then, but to wait on events and hope that Sir John would change his mind or that Drake would persuade him to leave Coruña as soon as the fleet was reprovisioned. An early departure would benefit the whole expedition. As for Walsingham’s mission, in all this chaos, I could not see how I could make my way ashore and go in search of his agent Titus Allanby. I had been given very little information to guide me, apart from the fact that he was working as a tailor. I could see that it was a profession which might offer opportunities for gathering information.
Like most of the agents in the service, Allanby sent few details back to London about where he was living or even what he was calling himself, for fear that his reports might be intercepted. It was often necessary for agents to change addresses frequently and even to change their identity. Since Allanby had been working as a tailor, he was presumably living in the lower town and not up at the citadel, unless – it suddenly occurred to me – he had secured himself a position as a tailor to the military, which would have given him better access to the kind of information Walsingham would want him to seek out. It would be difficult enough for me to go ashore into the chaos of our soldiers’ wild rampage through the streets of the lower town. To gain access to the citadel would surely be impossible. The one thing which might work in favour of my going into the town, although it was damaging to our expedition, was the continuing west wind which Drake had feared would drive us ashore on to the French coast. As long as it continued to blow so fiercely, and until we could round up our drunken troops and load our provisions, here we would stay in the harbour at Coruña. The longer we stayed, the more chance I might have of going ashore.
I would need to think of some reason which would convince either the captain of our ship or one of the senior army officers to authorise such a venture. Sir John Norreys had met me briefly the previous year in Amsterdam, when Andrew Joplyn and I had discovered the conspiracy to supply arms and transport barges to Parma’s Spanish troops. I thought I had noticed a nod of recognition from Norreys when I had joined in the discussion about bypassing Santander and coming directly to Coruña. Perhaps, when he had managed to get the army under control, I should approach him. I could not tell him the details of my mission, for that must remain secret, but he knew I worked for Walsingham, and that might prove enough. Or I might think of some other reason for landing.
In the meantime, there was little I could do but wait and watch with the rest of the Portuguese party on deck. Norreys, in any case, had returned to his own ship before we reached Coruña and was probably now on shore himself, attempting to gain control over the rioting soldiers. He had been known for ruthlessness in his younger days, in particular against the Irish, but from all I had heard from discussions in Seething Lane, he conducted more orderly campaigns now. In any case, he would never sanction the kind of wild disorder we were witnessing in the town, which was a serious threat to his authority and that of his officers. I had seen some squadrons of the Low Countries troops disembarking and beginning to march through Coruña. I supposed they were attempting to round up such of the disorderly soldiers as were still on their feet and able to roll barrels to the quayside for ferrying out to the fleet. What the fate would be of the men lying insensible in the streets of the town, I could not imagine. Such flaunting of orders would normally call down the most severe of punishments, either flogging or even death, but so many of the soldiers were involved in the riotous behaviour that we could not afford to lose them all. Ever since the desertions at Plymouth, before ever we set sail, the number of our troops had been reduced below what had originally been planned.