did not notice Kempenfeltâs eyes twinkle with amusement.
After his brief tour of the frigate the admiral turned to Hope.
âYouâve a damned taut ship, Captain Hope. We shall find work for you to do. In the mean time . . .â he lowered his voice. Hope nodded and turned to Devaux. âCall all hands aft, Mr Devaux.â
There was a vast shuffling and scurrying to a twitter of pipes and a bellowing of orders. Red-coated marines stamped aft and gradually a sort of order fell on the ship. Kempenfelt stepped forward and addressed them.
âDâyou hear now my lads, Captain Hope has asked that I give ye all the news of your prize, the frigate
Santa Teresa
.â He paused to watch the shuffle throughout the assembly. Expectancy, kindled in their faces by the presence of the admiral, now became a restless eagerness. The ragged line wavered.
âYouâll be pleased to know sheâs been purchased for . . .â He tailed off as a buzz that swiftly became a hum broke out.
âSilence there!â yelled Devaux.
â. . . sheâs been purchased for 15,000 guineas sterling and youâll all receive your due according to usage and custom.â The admiral stepped back.
Devaux looked at Hope; he was smiling cherubically. Then,sensing the moment was right he called out:
âThree cheers for the Admiral . . .â
It was no longer half-hearted. They heard the noise on
Cerberus
a mile away. As the cheering died down Hope announced to Devaux, âMr Devaux, you may allow wives and sweethearts tomorrow, apparently the admiralâs office announced us a few days ago . . .â
Captain Hope was having his day. As he ushered the Admiral and his flag lieutenant into the cabin there were more cheers for the captain himself.
The dinner in Captain Hopeâs cabin that evening was, as naval dinners went, unremarkable. But the setting sun laid a path of glittering gold from the horizon to the very stern windows of
Cyclops
and invested the scene with some of its magic. The excited babble of talk amongst the juniors present and the natural elation due to the unaccustomed wine and natural headiness of the occasion nevertheless lent to the proceedings a degree of memorability.
Copping had provided a banquet within the limits of his materials. If Kempenfelt was unimpressed by the cookery he did not show it and to the short-rationed midshipmen any meal of more than one course automatically assumed the dignity of
haute cuisine
.
Fortunately the
Santa Teresa
âs loot had yielded a sufficiency of both Oporto and Jerez wines which made up for the indifference of Hopeâs claret. Some Havana cigars were also salved which, after the duff and capons had been consumed, filled the air with the aromatic luxury of their blue smoke.
A bare hour after they had sat down Drinkwaterâs body was enjoying the pleasant sensations of a mild drugging. His stomach was distended to unusual proportions and his head just beginning to assume that lucid detachment from his limbs that is the pleasantest but also the briefest stage of drunkenness. As for his forgotten legs, they reclined as he had negligently left them before the increase in his cerebral concentration had drawn all the energy from them. He heard without fully comprehending the senior officers discussing Kempenfeltâs new code of signals. The admiralâs explanation of Rodneyâs action off Martinique passed through his aural organs and left his brain to seize on and amplify certain graphic phrases that his overwrought imagination dwelt on.
Hope, Price, Keene, Devaux and Blackmore listened to the rear-admiral with professional deference, but to Drinkwater the splendid figure of Kempenfelt poured forth the very stuff of dreams.
After the loyal toast Kempenfelt proposed one to the
Cyclops
âs gallantry in the night action off Cadiz. In turn Hope toasted an admiral âwithout whose