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“Are you insisting it has t’be Salobreña, Mountjoy?” Lewrie asked, all but gritting his teeth. That sense of old, of being Twigg’s dim but useful gun-dog, was back, with a vengeance.
“Given what little information I’ve been able to glean, these two objectives are the only ones about which I know the most,” Mountjoy grimly told him, shaking his head sadly. “Unless there are troops on the march, of which I would also know nothing, these two have no garrisons, no batteries, and the closest garrison would be at Órjiva, and that’s about ten miles inland, and they’re all infantry, so they’d take hours to hear of your presence in the first case, and even more hours to march down, arriving long after you’ve sailed, in the second.”
“Well…” Lewrie temporised, not caring for the prospects in the least, but feeling that he had no choice but to go along with it.
A fortnight at sea, weather permitting, just to burn one insignificant semaphore tower, then return to Gibraltar, would be a waste of everyone’s time and efforts.
“Very well, then,” he growled in surrender. “We’ll strike both, begi
“I s’pose the tower works round the clock?” Lewrie asked, leaning on the table with both hands. “Pig bladders for day signalling, and some sort of oil lanthorns at night? Good, then there’ll be more than enough oil for the burning, and I’ll only have to send a keg or two of gunpowder ashore t’help that along. Then…”
He studied the chart more closely, considering that the tower at Almerimar would be sending an urgent message as soon as Sapphire and Harmony were spotted closing the coast, to Roquetas de Mar to the East, to Adra in the West, with word of the raid sent as far as Salobrena and thence to Málaga.
“Then, Salobreña?” Mountjoy prompted.
“A diversion,” Lewrie finally explained. “Once the troops are back aboard, I’ll cruise Easterly and let the tower at Roquetas de Mar have a good, long look at us, perhaps stand as far as the Cabo de Gata, before turning out to sea. Let the Dons think I’m bound up the coast towards Cartagena, Alicante, or Valencia, instead. We’ll double back and go at Salobreña last, and land the troops in the full dark.”
“They’d be better at that, by then, is your thinking?” Mountjoy assumed, nodding quite cheerfully now that Lewrie had given in. “We have more of that good Spanish white, the tempranilla, and I’ve got a plate of some fresh cheese and good cured ham. D’ye think we need the mustard pot, too?”
“I’m a sailor, and we’re both British,” Lewrie said with a grin. “Of course, we need a dab of mustard.”
They went out to the rooftop gallery with the wine and a plate of cheese and cold cuts. Lewrie sat down and began to study the drawings of Salobreña, considering it the harder nut to crack, and the one that most worried him.
“You, ehm … mentioned some minor problems with the last raid? Some … worries?” Mountjoy asked as he poured the wine. “Have those settled, have you?”
“Hughes is the problem,” Lewrie said, almost spitting the name. “First, he over-rode my Midshipmen, Hillhouse and Britton, ordering them to land short of the battery, where it was darker, ’cause he didn’t wish to alert the sentries. I put ’em on notice that they were in charge on the water, and they’d land the troops where we pla
“You’ve spoken with him since you all returned?” Mountjoy asked with a quizzical expression. “How did that go?”
“Decidedly … not … well,” Lewrie barked in sour humour, and grimacing.
* * *
Lewrie had invited all officers to a celebratory “drunk” aboard HMS Sapphire, including Midshipmen Hillhouse and Britton to join them, along with the two Ensigns of the detachment of the 77th Foot, Gilliam and Litchfield. His first intent was to congratulate them all on an operation that had gone off rather well, then had waited ’til everyone was “cherry merry” in wine, following the old adage that in vino veritas; in wine there is truth. It was only then that he had suggested that an informal review of the raid might prove helpful to the conduct of future operations; what worked, what might be improved or done differently.
As Pettus and Jessop circulated among them to top off their wineglasses with a sprightly, effervescent Spanish white, they all had sat dumbfounded for a minute or two, Who in the world cared what a junior officer thought? They hesitated, slack-jawed—and “half seas over” it must be confessed—waiting for Lewrie or Major Hughes to speak and tell them what to make of their recent experience.
“Well, sir,” Midshipman Hillhouse at last spoke up, “we could have landed the 77th closer to the objective.”
“It was a long dash at the double-quick, yes,” Ensign Gilliam had said with a titter of remembrance, and at his daring to say anything. Major Hughes almost snapped his neck, whipping about to glare slit-eyed at Hillhouse, then in tooth-grinding affrontery as Ensign Gilliam spoke, as if he’d just been addressed by a talking tit-mouse.
Marine Lieutenant Keane, who had still appeared at least partially sobre, added that, in retrospect, the battery could have been taken more quickly if a sweep by two companies round both sides of the place might have done the trick, and they could have caught all the Spanish officers and gu
“That would’ve saved us a fair parcel of ammunition, what?” Lt. Staggs had chortled over their wasted volleys, which had raised a loud and drunken laugh and a chorus of agreement from all but Major Hughes, and it had gone on from there, loosening up, with everyone contributing. Some of the suggestions, of course, were just too silly, given the age, and state of inebriation, of the participants, but all in all, the session had proved to be somewhat productive, trailing off in remembrances of how much outright fun it was to smash and burn things, and how humiliated the Spanish soldiers had been, after being ordered to strip to shirts, trousers, and stockings, and all their uniforms, accoutrements, boots, and weapons had been piled inside their barracks and burned along with it.
Major Hughes, it must be admitted, most pointedly did not contribute much to the session, signalling his displeasure and unease with stifled harumphs, re-crossings of his immaculately-booted legs, black scowls, and now-and-then astonishingly high, or low, flappings of his thick eyebrows, and Lewrie had been convinced that he had heard some faint, deep growls rumbling in Hughes’s throat that rivalled a wakened bear or a large watchdog.
With the last ridiculous ideas shot down, it had been time for drinking games, “a glass with you, sir!”, and song. They were, for the most part, young enough to still be students, well-pleased with themselves, and reckoning themselves bold and gallant warriors. Food was served from the sideboard cabinet in the dining-coach; fingers of toasted cheese rolled in bread crumbs; baked potatoes filled with bits of bacon, cheese, and shredded onion; thick-sliced “Tommy”, fresh bread from shore, with sliced ham or roast beef and mustard for sandwich makings; and both sweet and dill pickles. Lewrie had been amazed by how they had managed to stagger to the sideboard, load their plates, and return to their seats after so much wine had been taken aboard. He’d shared despairing looks with Pettus, for his cabins would need a real cleaning in the morning, and had feared that his carpets would never be the same. Fortunately, all had managed to stagger to the larboard side quarter-gallery when caught short, and no one, thank the Lord, had puked.