1Hornblower looked round the room to which the innkeeper and the sergeant of gendarmerie had jointly conducted them. He was glad to see a fire burning there, for he was stiff and chilled with his long inactivity in the coach. There was a truckle bed against one wall, a table with a white cloth already spread. A gendarme appeared at the door, stepping slowly and heavilyhe was the first of the two who were carrying the stretcher. He looked round to see where to lay it down, turned too abruptly, and jarred it against the jamb of the wall.

2Careful with that stretcher!” snapped Hornblower; and then, remembering he had to speak French, “Attention! Mettez le brancard . Doucement!”

3Brown came and knelt over the stretcher.

4What is the name of this place?” asked Hornblower of the innkeeper.

5“Cerbère. Hotel Iéna, monsieur,” answered the innkeeper, fingering his leather apron.

6“Monsieur is allowed no speech with anyone whatever,” interposed the sergeant. He will be served, but he must address no speech to the inn servants. If he has any wishes, he will speak to the sentry outside his door. There will be another sentry outside his window.”

7A gesture of his hand called attention to the cocked hat and the musket barrel of a gendarme, darkly visible through the glass.

8You are too amiable, monsieur,” said Hornblower.

9I have my orders. Supper will be served in half an hour.”

10I would be obliged if Colonel Caillard would give orders for a surgeon to attend Lieutenant Bushs wounds at once.”

11I will ask him, sir,” said the sergeant, escorting the innkeeper from the room.

12Bush, when Hornblower bent over him, seemed somehow a little better than in the morning. There was a little colour in his cheeks and more strength in his movements.

13Is there anything I can do, Bush?” asked Hornblower.

14Yes . . .”

15Bush explained the needs of sick-room nursing. Hornblower looked up at Brown, a little helplessly.

16I am afraid itll call for two of you, sir, because Im a heavy man,” said Bush apologetically. It was the apology in his tone which brought Hornblower to the point of action.

17Of course,” he said with all the cheerfulness he could bring into his voice. Come on, Brown. Lift him from the other side.”

18After the business was finished, with no more than a single half-stifled groan from Bush, Brown displayed more of the astonishing versatility of the British seaman.

19Ill wash you, sir, shall I? Anyou havent had your shave today, have you, sir?”

20Hornblower sat and watched in helpless admiration the deft movements of the burly sailor as he washed and shaved his first lieutenant. The towels were so well arranged that no single drop of water fell on the bedding.

21Thankee, Brown, thankee,” said Bush, sinking back on his pillow.

22The door opened to admit a little bearded man in a semi-military uniform carrying a leather case.

23Good evening, gentlemen,” he said, sounding all his consonants in the manner which Hornblower was yet to discover was characteristic of the Midi. I am the surgeon, if you please. And this is the wounded officer? And these are the hospital notes of my confrère at Rosas? Excellent. Yes, exactly. And how are you feeling, sir?”

24Hornblower had to translate, limpingly, the surgeons questions to Bush, and the latters replies. Bush put out his tongue, and submitted to having his pulse felt, and his temperature gauged by a hand thrust into his shirt.

25So,” said the surgeon. And now let us see the stump. Will you hold the candle for me here, if you please, sir?”

26He turned back the blankets from the foot of the stretcher, revealing the little basket which guarded the stump, laid the basket on the floor and began to remove the dressings.

27Would you tell him, sir,” asked Bush, “that my foot which isn’t there tickles most abominably and I dont know how to scratch it?”

28The translation taxed Hornblower’s French to the utmost, but the surgeon listened sympathetically.

29That is not at all unusual,” he said. And the itchings will come to a natural end in course of time. Ah, now here is the stump. A beautiful stump. A lovely stump.”

30Hornblower, compelling himself to look, was vaguely reminded of the knuckle end of a roast leg of mutton; the irregular folds of flesh were caught in by half-healed scars, but out of the scars hung two ends of black thread.

31When Monsieur le Lieutenant begins to walk again,” explained the surgeon, “he will be glad of an ample pad of flesh at the end of the stump. The end of the bone will not chafe—”

32Yes, exactly,” said Hornblower, fighting down his squeamishness.

33A very beautiful piece of work,” said the surgeon. As long as it heals properly and gangrene does not set in. At this stage the surgeon has to depend on his nose for his diagnosis.”

34Suiting the action to the word the surgeon sniffed at the dressings and at the raw stump.

35Smell, monsieur,” he said, holding the dressings to Hornblower’s face. Hornblower was conscious of the faintest whiff of corruption.

36Beautiful, is it not?” said the surgeon. A fine healthy wound and yet every evidence that the ligatures will soon free themselves.”

37Hornblower realised that the two threads hanging out of the scars were attached to the ends of the two main arteries. When corruption inside was complete the threads could be drawn out and the wounds allowed to heal; it was a race between the rotting of the arteries and the onset of gangrene.

38I will see if the ligatures are free now. Warn your friend that I shall hurt him a little.”

39Hornblower looked towards Bush to convey the message, and was shocked to sec that Bushs face was distorted with apprehension.

40I know,” said Bush. I know what hes going to dosir.”

41Only as an afterthought did he say thatsir,” which was the clearest proof of his mental preoccupation. He grasped the bedclothes in his two fists, his jaw set and his eyes shut.

42Im ready,” he said through his clenched teeth.

43The surgeon drew firmly on one of the threads and Bush writhed a little. He drew on the other.

44A-ah,” gasped Bush, with sweat on his face.

45Nearly free,” commented the surgeon. “I could tell by the feeling of the threads. Your friend will soon be well. Now let us replace the dressings. So. And so.” His dexterous plump fingers rebandaged the stump, replaced the wicker basket, and drew down the bed coverings.

46Thank you, gentlemen,” said the surgeon, rising to his feet and brushing his hands one against the other. I will return in the morning.”

47“Hadn’t you better sit down, sir?” came Browns voice to Hornblower’s ears as though from a million miles away, after the surgeon had withdrawn. The room was veiled in grey mist which gradually cleared away as he sat, to reveal Bush lying back on his pillow and trying to smile, and Browns homely honest face wearing an expression of acute concern.

48Rare bad you looked for a minute, sir. You must be hungry, I expect, sir, not having eaten nothing since breakfast, like.”

49It was tactful of Brown to attribute this faintness to hunger, to which all flesh might be subject without shame, and not merely to weakness in face of wounds and suffering.

50That sounds like supper coming now,” croaked Bush from the stretcher, as though one of a conspiracy to ignore their captains feebleness.

51The sergeant of gendarmerie came clanking in, two women behind him bearing trays. The women set the table deftly and quickly, their eyes downcast, and withdrew without looking up, although one of them smiled at the corner of her mouth in response to a meaning cough from Brown, which drew a gesture of irritation from the sergeant. The latter cast one searching glance round the room before shutting and locking the door with a clashing of keys.

52Soup,” said Hornblower, peering into the tureen which steamed deliciously. And I fancy this is stewed veal.”

53The discovery confirmed him in his notion that Frenchmen lived exclusively on soup and stewed vealhe put no faith in the more vulgar notions regarding frogs and snails.

54You will have some of this broth, I suppose, Bush?” he continued. He was talking desperately hard now to conceal the feeling of depression and unhappiness which was overwhelming him. And a glass of this wine? It has no labellets hope for the best.”

55Some of their rotgut claret, I suppose,” grunted Bush. Eighteen years of war with France had given most Englishmen the notion that the only wines fit for men to drink were port and sherry and Madeira, and that Frenchmen only drank thin claret, which gave an unaccustomed drinker the bellyache.

56Well see,” said Hornblower as cheerfully as he could. Lets get you propped up first.”

57With his hand behind Bushs shoulders he heaved him up a little; as he looked round helplessly, Brown came to his rescue with pillows taken from the bed, and between them they settled Bush with his head raised and his arms free and a napkin under his chin. Hornblower brought him a plate of soup and a piece of bread.

58Mm,” said Bush, tasting. Might be worse. Please, sir, dont let yours get cold.”

59Brown brought a chair for his captain to sit at the table, and stood in an attitude of attention beside it; there was another place laid, but his action proclaimed as loudly as words how far it was from his mind to sit with his captain. Hornblower ate, at first with distaste and then with increasing appetite.

60Some more of that soup, Brown,” said Bush. And my glass of wine, if you please.”

61The stewed veal was extraordinarily good, even to a man who was accustomed to meat he could set his teeth in.

62Dash my wig,” said Bush from the bed. Do you think I could have some of that stewed veal, sir? This travelling has given me an appetite.”

63Hornblower had to think about that. A man in a fever should be kept on a low diet, but Bush could not be said to be in a fever now, and he had lost a great deal of blood which he had to make up. The yearning look on Bushs face decided him.

64A little will do you no harm,” he said. Take this plate to Mr. Bush, Brown.”

65Good food and good winethe fare in the Sutherland had been repulsive, and at Rosas scantytended to loosen their tongues and make them more cheerful. Yet it was hard to unbend beyond a certain unstated limit. The awful majesty surrounding a captain of a ship of the line lingered even after the ship had been destroyed; more than that, the memory of the very strict reserve which Hornblower had maintained during his command acted as a constraint. And to Brown a first lieutenant was in a position nearly as astronomically lofty as a captain; it was awesome to be in the same room as the two of them, even with the help of making-believe to be their old servant. Hornblower had finished his cheese by now, and the moment which Brown had been dreading had arrived.

66Here, Brown,” he said rising, “sit down and eat your supper while its still hot.”

67Brown, now at the age of twenty-eight, had served His Majesty in His Majestys ships from the age of eleven, and during that time he had never made use at table of other instruments than his sheath knife and his fingers; he had never eaten off china, nor had he drunk from a wineglass. He experienced a nightmare sensation as if his officers were watching him with four eyes as large as footballs the while he nervously picked up a spoon and addressed himself to this unaccustomed task. Hornblower realised his embarrassment in a clairvoyant flash. Brown had thews and sinews which Hornblower had often envied; he had a stolid courage in action which Hornblower could never hope to rival. He could knot and splice, hand, reef, and steer, cast the lead or pull an oar, all of them far better than his captain. He could go aloft on a black night in a howling storm without thinking twice about it, but the sight of a knife and fork made his hands tremble. Hornblower thought about how Gibbon would have pointed the moral epigrammatically in two vivid antithetical sentences.

68Humiliation and nervousness never did any good to a man—Hornblower knew that if anyone ever did. He took a chair unobtrusively over beside Bushs stretcher and sat down with his back almost turned to the table, and he plunged desperately into conversation with his first lieutenant while the crockery clattered behind him.

69Would you like to be moved into the bed?” he asked, saying the first thing which came into his head.

70No thank you, sir,” said Bush. Two weeks now Ive slept in the stretcher. Im comfortable enough, sir, and itd be painful to move me, even ifif——”

71Words failed Bush to describe his utter determination not to sleep in the only bed and leave his captain without one.

72What are we going to Paris for, sir?” asked Bush.

73God knows,” said Hornblower. But I have a notion that Boney himself wants to ask us questions.”

74That was the answer he had decided upon hours before in readiness for this inevitable question; it would not help Bushs convalescence to know the fate awaiting him.

75Much good will our answers do him,” said Bush, grimly. Perhaps well drink a dish of tea in the Tuileries with Maria Louisa.”

76Maybe,” answered Hornblower. And maybe he wants lessons in navigation from you. Ive heard hes weak at mathematics.”

77That brought a smile. Bush notoriously was no good with figures and suffered agonies when confronted with a simple problem in spherical trigonometry. Hornblower’s acute ears heard Browns chair scrape a little; presumably his meal had progressed satisfactorily.

78Help yourself to the wine, Brown,” he said, without turning round.

79Aye aye, sir,” said Brown cheerfully.

80There was a whole bottle of wine left as well as some in the other. This would be a good moment for ascertaining if Brown could be trusted with liquor. Hornblower kept his back turned to him and struggled on with his conversation with Bush. Five minutes later Browns chair scraped again more definitely, and Hornblower looked round.

81Had enough, Brown?”

82Aye aye, sir. A right good supper.”

83The soup tureen and the dish of stew were both empty; the bread had disappeared all save the heel of the loaf; there was only a morsel of cheese left. But one bottle of wine was still two thirds fullBrown had contented himself with a half bottle at most, and the fact that he had drunk that much and no more was the clearest proof that he was safe as regards alcohol.

84Pull the bellrope, then.”

85The distant jangling brought in time the rattling of keys to the door, and in came the sergeant and the two maids; the latter set about clearing the tables under the formers eye.

86I must get something for you to sleep on, Brown,” said Hornblower.

87I can sleep on the floor, sir.”

88No, you cant.”

89Hornblower had decided opinions about that; there had been occasions as a young officer when he had slept on the bare planks of a ships deck, and he knew their unyielding discomfort.

90I want a bed for my servant,” he said to the sergeant.

91He can sleep on the floor.”

92I will not allow anything of the kind. You must find a mattress for him.”

93Hornblower was surprised to find how quickly he was acquiring the ability to talk French; the quickness of his mind enabled him to make the best use of his limited vocabulary and his retentive memory had stored up all sorts of words, once heard, and was ready to produce them from the subconscious part of his mind as soon as the stimulus of necessity was applied.

94The sergeant had shrugged his shoulders and rudely turned his back.

95I shall report your insolence to Colonel Caillard tomorrow morning,” said Hornblower, hotly. Find a mattress immediately.”

96It was not so much the threat that carried the day as long-ingrained habits of discipline. Even a sergeant of French gendarmerie was accustomed to yielding deference to gold lace and epaulettes and an authoritative manner. Possibly the obvious indignation of the maids at the suggestion that so fine a man should be left to sleep on the floor may have weighed with him too. He called to the sentry at the door and told him to bring a mattress from the stables where the escort were billeted. It was only a palliasse of straw when it came, but it was something infinitely more comfortable than bare and draughty boards, all the same. Brown looked his gratitude to Hornblower as the mattress was spread out in the corner of the room.

97Time to turn in,” said Hornblower, ignoring it, as the door was locked behind the sergeant. Lets make you comfortable, first, Bush.”

98It was some obscure self-conscious motive which made Hornblower select from his valise the embroidered nightshirt over which Marias busy fingers had laboured lovinglythe nightshirt which he had brought with him from England for use should he dine and sleep at a governors or on board the flagship. All the years he had been a captain he had never shared a room with anyone save Maria, and it was a novel experience for him to prepare for bed in sight of Bush and Brown, and he was ridiculously self-conscious about it, regardless of the fact that Bush, white and exhausted, was already lying back on his pillow with drooping eyelids, while Brown modestly stripped off his trousers with downcast eyes, wrapped himself in the cloak which Hornblower insisted on his using, and curled himself up on his palliasse without a glance at his superior.

99Hornblower got into bed.

100Ready?” he asked, and blew out the candle; the fire had died down to embers which gave only the faintest red glow in the room. It was the beginning of one of those wakeful nights which Hornblower had grown by now able to recognise in advance. The moment he blew out the candle and settled his head on the pillow he knew he would not be able to sleep until just before dawn. In his ship he would have gone up on deck or walked his stern gallery; here he could only lie grimly immobile. Sometimes a subdued crackling told how Brown was turning over on his straw mattress; once or twice Bush moaned a little in his feverish sleep.

101Today was Wednesday. Only sixteen days ago and Hornblower had been captain of a seventy-four, and absolute master of the happiness of five hundred seamen. His least word directed the operations of a gigantic engine of war; the blows it had dealt had caused an imperial throne to totter. He thought regretfully of night-time aboard his ship, the creaking of the timbers and the singing of the rigging, the impassive quartermaster at the wheel in the faint light of the binnacle and the officer of the watch pacing the quarterdeck.

102Now he was a nobody; where once he had minutely regulated five hundred mens lives he was reduced to chaffering for a single mattress for the only seaman left to him; police sergeants could insult him with impunity; he had to come and to go at the bidding of someone he despised. Worse than that—Hornblower felt the hot blood running under his skin as the full realisation broke upon him againhe was being taken to Paris as a criminal. Very soon indeed, in some cold dawn, he would be led out into the ditch at Vincennes to face a firing party. Then he would be dead. Hornblower’s vivid imagination pictured the impact of the musket bullets upon his breast, and he wondered how long the pain would last before oblivion came upon him. It was not the oblivion that he feared, he told himselfindeed in his present misery he almost looked forward to it. Perhaps it was the finality of death, the irrevocableness of it.

103No, that was only a minor factor. Mostly it was instinctive fear of a sudden and drastic change to something completely unknown. He remembered the night he had spent as a child in the inn at Andover, when he was going to join his ship next day and enter upon the unknown life of the Navy. That was the nearest comparisonhe had been frightened then, he remembered, so frightened he had been unable to sleep; and yetfrightenedwas too strong a word to describe the state of mind of someone who was quite prepared to face the future and could not be really blamed for this sudden acceleration of heartbeat and prickling of sweat!

104A moaning sigh from Bush, loud in the stillness of the room, distracted him from his analysis of his fear. They were going to shoot Bush, too. Presumably they would lash him to a stake to have a fair shot at himcurious how, while it was easy to order a party to shoot an upright figure, however helpless, every instinct revolted against shooting a helpless man prostrate on a stretcher. It would be a monstrous crime to shoot Bush, who, even supposing his captain were guilty, could have done nothing except obey orders. But Bonaparte would do it. The necessity of rallying Europe round him in his struggle against England was growing ever more pressing. The blockade was strangling the Empire of the French as Antæus had been strangled by Hercules. Bonaparte’s unwilling alliesall Europe, that was to say, save Portugal and Sicily—were growing restive and thinking about defection; the French people themselves, Hornblower shrewdly guessed, were by now none too enamoured of this King Stork whom they had imposed on themselves. It would not be sufficient for Bonaparte merely to say that the British fleet was the criminal instrument of a perfidious tyranny; he had said that for a dozen years. The mere announcement that British naval officers had violated the laws of war would carry small enough weight, too. But to try a couple of officers and shoot them would be a convincing gesture, and the perverted statement of facts issued from Paris might help to sustain French public opinionEuropean public opinion as wellfor another year or two in its opposition to England.

105But it was bad luck that the victims should be Bush and he. Bonaparte had had a dozen British naval captains in his hands during the last few years, and he could have trumped up charges against half of them. Presumably it was destiny which had selected Hornblower and Bush to suffer. Hornblower told himself that for twenty years he had been aware of a premonition of sudden death. It was certain and inevitable now. He hoped he would meet it bravely, go down with colours flying; but he mistrusted his own weak body. He feared that his cheeks would be pale and his teeth would chatter, or worse still that his heart would weaken so that he would faint before the firing party had done their work. That would be a fine opportunity for a mordant couple of lines in the Moniteur Universel—fine reading for Lady Barbara and Maria.

106If he had been alone in the room he would have groaned aloud in his misery and turned over restlessly. But as it was he lay grimly rigid and silent. If his subordinates were awake they would never be allowed to guess that he was awake, too. To divert his mind from his approaching execution he cast round in search of something else to think about, and new subjects presented themselves in swarms. Whether Admiral Leighton were alive or dead, and whether, if the latter were the case, Lady Barbara Leighton would think more often or less often about Hornblower, her lover; how Marias pregnancy was progressing; what was the state of British public opinion regarding the loss of the Sutherland, and, more especially, what Lady Barbara thought about his surrenderingthere were endless things to think and worry about; there was endless flotsam bobbing about in the racing torrent of his mind. And the horses stamped in the stable, and every two hours he heard the sentries being changed outside window and door.