“He’ll probably be content to keep us waiting, even if it’s just to teach us who’s pulling the strings. It could be a while.”
Lasseur turned. There was a bleak look in his eyes. “Any longer in this place and I swear I’ll go mad.”
“One day at a time,” Hawkwood said. “That’s how we have to look at it. I hate to admit it, but the bastard was right about one thing.”
“What’s that?”
“We should be patient.”
Lasseur grimaced. “Not one of my better virtues.”
“Mine neither,” Hawkwood admitted, “except, we don’t have a choice. Right now, I don’t think there’s much else we can do.”
Lasseur nodded wearily. “You’re right, of course. It does not mean I have to like it, though, does it?”
Hawkwood didn’t answer. In his mind’s eye he saw again the mob of prisoners rising out of the hatches and the mayhem they had created. Lasseur had referred to the hulk as a version of Hell. From what Hawkwood had witnessed so far, the privateer’s description had been horribly accurate. In his time as a Runner, Hawkwood had visited a good number of London’s gaols: Newgate, Bridewell, and the Fleet among them. They were, without exception, terrible places. But this black, heartless hulk was something different. There was true horror at work here, Hawkwood sensed. He wasn’t sure what form it took or if he would be confronted by it, but he knew instinctively that it would be like nothing he’d encountered before.
The interpreter had been wrong about the smell. After four days, Hawkwood still hadn’t grown used to it. Grim smells were nothing new, living in London had seen to that, but in the enclosed world of the gun deck, four hundred bodies generated their own particular odour and, despite the open ports and hatches, the warm weather meant there was no way of drawing cooler and fresher air into the ship. The sea breezes afforded no respite. They brought only the damp, faecal aroma of the marshes, which hung across the polluted river like a moisture-laden blanket.
That said, Hawkwood decided Murat might have got it wrong when he’d nominated fever and consumption as the most prominent causes of death aboard the ship. From what Hawkwood had seen, it was more than likely one of the main culprits was unremitting boredom.
While a proportion of the hulk’s inmates did engage in productive pursuits such as arts and crafts, giving or receiving lessons, or setting themselves up as shoemakers or tradesmen in tobacco or other goods, it seemed to Hawkwood that they were in the minority. A vast number of the ship’s population opted to pass their days in idleness. Even on the gun deck, men gambled. It wasn’t difficult to recognize the ones who’d fallen under the spell. The quiet desperation in their eyes as they laid down their cards or took their time lifting the cup from the little cubes of bone, knowing their inevitable descent to the deck below had already begun, was evidence enough. Others engaged in more dubious dealings: the manipulation of weaker inmates through theft, intimidation and sexual gratification, followed by threats of reprisal if their authority was questioned. Some sought sanctuary by curling up and sleeping wherever there was room – and there wasn’t much room. The remainder seemed content merely to wait and to die.
In an attempt to evade the stink, Hawkwood kept to the forecastle as much as possible, sometimes with Lasseur for company. To avoid remaining sedentary, he’d lent his labour to the hulk’s work parties. This had drawn comment from some of his fellow prisoners. Most officers regarded such labour as beneath their dignity and preferred to pay a substitute to carry out any manual tasks assigned to them. The going rate was one sou or ten ounces of bread from the day’s rations.
Hawkwood had no such qualms, having served in the Rifles, where every man was expected to pitch in. And even before that, as a captain, it had always been Hawkwood’s contention that he would never assign a task to one of his soldiers that he wasn’t prepared to do himself. It had been a good way to garner loyalty and in the heat of battle it had served him and the men he’d led very well. So Hawkwood had willingly lent his back to hoisting supplies on board and swilling down the foredeck and the Park after supper. Better the smell of honest sweat in his nostrils than the all-pervading stench of the hulk’s lower deck.
Lasseur, too, had done his share of manual graft, working alongside Hawkwood at the hoist and in the ship’s hold. The temperature within the ship was such that jackets and shirts were soon discarded. The prisoners’ backs ran wet with sweat and it was easy to tell whether an inmate was new on board or a regular member of a work party: the irregulars were the ones whose flesh was as pale as paper.
Lasseur’s hide carried the healthy sheen of a seaman whose voyages had taken him to warmer, far-flung climes. His torso was well formed without being muscular, and evenly tanned – in contrast to some of the men, whose forearms and faces were the only areas of their bodies that showed the effects of exposure to the sun. The rest of their skin, normally covered by a shirt, looked bleached white in comparison.
What also set Lasseur apart were the marks of the lash across his spine. Hawkwood had passed no comment on the scars. He’d enough of his own, including the ring of bruising around his throat, which had drawn a few curious looks both when he’d taken the bath prior to his registration and when he removed his shirt during the work details.
Lasseur had noticed Hawkwood’s passing glance at his back and had made only one comment: “I wasn’t always a captain.”
“Me neither,” Hawkwood had told him, and that had been enough. The rest of the men, whose quizzical looks might have indicated a desire for explanation, they ignored.
When he wasn’t labouring in a work party or talking with Hawkwood or Fouchet, or sometimes with the boy, Lasseur spent most of his time pacing the deck and gazing restlessly across the estuary, locked within his own thoughts. With so many bodies crammed in one place, physical solitude was but a dream. Hawkwood knew there wasn’t a man on board who wouldn’t try and seek solace in the privacy of his own mind. He sought it himself when he could, and took advantage of the opportunities it offered to observe shipboard routine at close quarters. And in the course of his observations Hawkwood had seen enough to know that making a successful escape from the hulk looked well nigh impossible. Moored a stone’s throw from the middle of a busy estuary; surrounded by inhospitable marshland; heavily guarded by its contingent of militia and a commander who was fully prepared to use deadly force against the slightest infraction, the ship was too well sealed.
According to Ludd’s reckoning, four men had made it off the hulk in recent weeks. In the short time he’d been on board, Hawkwood had yet to uncover a single clue as to how they might have done it. He’d tried to pin Fouchet and the others down, but to his frustration they had been of no more help than Lieutenant Murat.
With the exception of those who’d retreated into their own little world and the denizens of the orlop deck, most of the prisoners seemed content to co-exist in small social groups centred round their messes. Many would probably have no idea there’d been an escape, let alone have any knowledge of how it had been accomplished; their first inkling that something untoward had taken place would come with the increased activity of the hulk’s commander and his crew, and the heavy-handed actions of the guards as they inspected and emptied the deck to take an unexpected body count. Someone as well informed as Fouchet would know more, but the teacher was too cautious to discuss such matters with a new arrival, particularly in the light of Murat’s reference to informers. Hawkwood had operated clandestinely before and, though patience did not come easily to him, he’d learned that a subtle approach would achieve better results than barging around asking too many pertinent questions.
Ludd’s suspicion that there was organization behind the escapes had been confirmed by Murat. Yet Hawkwood was still no wiser as to who was behind it. He wondered how long it would be before the translator got back to them. A week? Two? Or would it be a month? Or longer? The thought made his blood run cold. His rendezvous with Ludd was in three days. Would he have anything