Heartstone (Matthew Shardlake #5)(181)
We came round the town walls to the main gate. Peel showed the guard Rich’s letter of authority and we were allowed in at once.
The High Street was deserted now apart from patrolling guards, the windows of the houses and shops all closed and shuttered; I wondered whether the owners had all left. Inside one a dog howled. A solitary cart laden with freshly slaughtered sides of beef lumbered past, dripping blood onto the dust.
Oyster Street, by contrast, was as crowded as ever, soldiers and sailors jostling with labourers. Now the French had gone more supplies were being loaded onto boats at the wharf. We halted by the warehouses. Across the Camber there were now soldiers on guard even on the empty spit beyond the Round Tower. The English warships stood at anchor out in the Solent.
‘Will we be able to get a boat?’ I asked Peel worriedly.
‘We should with my letter, sir. Wait here a minute, if you please. I’ll get the horses stabled.’
‘You have the other letter? For Master West?’
He patted his satchel. ‘Safe in here. I am not a fool, sir,’ he added in a hurt tone.
‘Of course not.’ I looked across at the ships. ‘But please, be quick.’
We dismounted and Peel led the horses away. I saw the huge bulk of the Great Harry. There must have been a great panic on board when they saw the French coming. My eye found the Mary Rose, where Emma was with Leacon’s company. A company of soldiers marched down Oyster Street. They must have come straight in from the country, for they kept staring out to sea, eyes wide.
I heard a shout from below me. Looking down, I saw Peel standing with a boatman in a tiny rowboat at the bottom of some steps. ‘Hurry, sir,’ he called urgently. ‘Before someone requisitions it.’
THE BOATMAN, a young fellow, rowed quickly out, past heavily laden supply boats. I had a view of the French ships in the distance, the setting sun casting a red glow on a close-packed forest of masts. A sudden volley of gunfire sounded from them, booming across the still water. Peel sat up, eyes wide.
‘They’re trying to make us jumpy,’ the boatman said. ‘Bastard French serfs. They’re too far off to hit anything.’ He turned the boat and headed for the line of warships. Some of the smaller ones had retreated to the harbour, but forty or so rode in a double row, two hundred yards apart, turning slowly on their anchors as the tide ebbed. We rowed out to the Mary Rose. It had been night when I boarded her before, but now, in the fading daylight, I could see how beautiful she was, as well as how massive: the powerful body of the hull, the soaring masts almost delicate by contrast; the complex web of rigging where sailors were clambering; the castles painted with stripes and bars and shields in a dozen bright colours. The gun ports were closed, the ropes by which they were opened from the deck above hanging slack. A boat was already drawn up at the side, and what looked like boxes of arrows were being hauled up through gaps in the blinds to the weatherdeck.
‘I’ll row round to the other side,’ the boatman said. He pulled past the bow and the immense ropes of the twin anchors, then under the tall foremast with the red and white Tudor Rose emblem at its base. There were no supply boats on the other side. We pulled in. Again someone on the tops shouted, ‘Boat ahoy!’ and a face appeared on deck, looking down through an open blind.
Peel shouted up, ‘Letter from Sir Richard Rich for Assistant-Purser West!’ A few moments later a rope ladder came down, splashing as the end hit the water. Peel and I stood up carefully as the boatman grabbed the end. Peel looked at it anxiously.
‘Climb up behind me,’ I told him. ‘It’s not that bad, just keep a firm hold and don’t mind the swaying.’ I turned to the boatman. ‘You may have to wait a little.’
‘Yes, sir.’ He stood too, flexing stiff arms.
I began climbing the ladder, Peel behind me.
AGAIN I WAS helped through a gap in the blinds by a sailor. This time I was able to descend to the planks of the weatherdeck with a little more dignity. Peel followed, looking shaken. There was an immense bustle on the deck, which was full of soldiers as well as sailors. A young officer with a whistle on a purple sash was waiting for us. ‘You have a message from Sir Richard Rich for Master West?’ he asked abruptly. Peel took the letter from his satchel and held it up for the officer to see the seal.
‘Is it about those supplies we were waiting for?’ the officer asked me.
I hesitated. ‘The letter may only be given to Master West, then I must speak with him. I am sorry.’
The officer turned away. ‘Wait here with them,’ he ordered one of the sailors, and marched away to the forecastle.
I looked over the deck. Many of the soldiers sat with their backs against the blinds, between the cannon, some cleaning long arquebuses. Everyone is preparing for battle, I thought. The setting sun cast a red glow, broken by the shadow of the netting, making a strange latticework effect on the deck. Sailors carried pairs of gunballs to the guns in slings, cursing at stray soldiers to get out of the way, setting them up next to the guns in triangular battens. Boxes of equipment were being carried from forecastle to aftercastle across the walkway above the netting. I looked up at the aftercastle, saw heads moving under the netting there. It was too high to distinguish whether any of them were from Leacon’s company.
I turned to the sailor. He was a little bearded man, perhaps forty – old among all the young men. ‘How many soldiers on board now?’ I asked.