Part 4 (1/2)
'My word, Rooke, I thought myself the quickest jack-in-the-box in the regiment, but I see I must not be complacent!'
Rooke tried to frame a reply, but Silk did not wait.
'p.r.i.c.kles, sunburn, mosquitoes, and, I doubt not, snakes. Perhaps unfriendly natives too. However, the worse it is to experience, the better it will read on the page. The natives are what I need. Their shyness is disappointing. This expedition may provide an opportunity to chat to the elusive fellows. And whatever other outcomes, we will have brought a little favourable attention on ourselves.'
He winked.
'The long view, my friend, never lose sight of the long view of our time in New South Wales.'
The long view was hard to keep sight of when faced with New South Wales one yard at a time. Rooke sat in the cutter with the rest of the party, hearing the dip and suck of the oars as the sailors propelled them along the harbour towards the west. In the bow, the governor had a thwart to himself, peering with his telescope. Silk sat alertly behind him, now and then leaning forward to respond to some remark from the governor that Rooke could not hear. Beside Silk, Lieutenant Willstead also leaned forward, his bony face eager, trying to make his mark. Willstead had been on Sirius. All the way across the Atlantic, all the way across the Great Southern Ocean, Rooke had watched him trying in vain to make his mark with the governor. His ambition was too naked on his lean face, his ingratiating smile too much a matter of mechanics. Silk had just as much ambition, but did not seem to care, and when the governor turned on his thwart to comment on some point of interest, it was always to Silk that he spoke.
Behind Rooke sat two privates on either side of a big bearded prisoner: the governor's shooter, Silk had told Rooke, brought along to bag them their suppers. He was like a haunch of beef himself, Rooke thought, his ma.s.sive shoulders all of a piece with his powerful neck. He met the man's eyes: shrewd, knowing, sceptical.
Lieutenant Gardiner of Sirius was in charge of the boat. He balanced himself in the stern while the sailors laboured over the oars, steering them up the harbour. On the northern sh.o.r.e, high dark prows of headlands hung over the water, the sombre woods pressing down into their own reflections. To the south the land was lower, each bay and promontory s.h.i.+ning with the glossy leaves of mangroves. Now and then between them a crescent of yellow sand was like a punctuation mark. Gulls bobbing on the water turned their heads to watch the boat pa.s.s, pelicans seemed to smile to themselves. The tide was behind the boat, sweeping it around bend after bend, the banks narrowing until what had been a harbour became a river.
They rounded a long low promontory and found themselves sliding past a slope of gra.s.s on which four or five natives sat around a fire, staring at the boat. They were like a tableau being dragged across a stage. And of course, from the point of view of the natives, the boatful of staring strangers must be a tableau sliding through their field of view.
'Turn in, Lieutenant,' the governor called along the boat to Gardiner. 'Back oars and bring us in to them.'
He stood up in the bow as the boat drew closer, took off his hat and waved it.
'Good morning!' he shouted. 'Good morning, friends!'
The natives did not wave back. As Rooke watched, the tableau moved and a woman rose from beside the fire, scooping up a child against her breast, and walked away into the bushes. One by one the others got up and followed her. They did not seem to be hurrying but, by the time the boat was close enough to land, the clearing was empty.
'Shall I jump ash.o.r.e, sir?' Willstead asked. 'I could jump ash.o.r.e, sir, and go after them.'
But there was something about Willstead's voice that the governor could not seem to hear.
'Row on, Lieutenant Gardiner,' he called, an edge in his voice. 'We will not waste time here.'
The river narrowed to a stream winding between deep banks and finally their way was blocked by flat slabs of rock piled up in shelves down which water tinkled and shone.
'Terminus, gentlemen!' Gardiner called, and backed the boat in to where one of the slabs of rock fell away into deep water.
Willstead and Silk got out and turned to help the governor, but he was getting his angles and joints out over the gunwale with considerable dexterity.
'Thank you, gentlemen, but as you see, I am already here.'
He looked up at the steep banks on either side, scoured to bare rock in places by past floods, and was already setting off while he gave orders over his shoulder.
'Thank you, Lieutenant Gardiner, I will expect you at this spot in three days' time. Now Captain Silk, come alongside me if you please, we will lead the way. Lieutenant Willstead, will you be good enough to come after us. Lieutenant Rooke, be so kind as to bring up the rear and record our line of march. Sergeant, you and the privates will march with the gamekeeper.'
Rooke laughed, thinking the governor had made one of his rare witticisms, but he turned in his angled way and fixed him with a cold eye. Rooke coughed into his hand.
Gamekeeper! The word suggested the society that Lancelot Percival James had boasted of at the Academy: pheasants and deer in a park artfully planted to enhance the prospect, cheerful peasantry tipping their caps to the squire riding by.
But New South Wales was no gentleman's estate. His Majesty's subjects were perched in a small sour clearing on the edge of the unknown. The land around them seemed without resources either animal or vegetable, and the gamekeeper was a criminal who had been given a gun.
The party fell in behind the governor. From the rear, Rooke could see the line of knapsacks bobbing along, and the heads bowed to avoid the whippy bushes. The prisoner, taller than anyone else, his powerful frame half bursting out of its threadbare check s.h.i.+rt, shouldered through everything in his path. He carried the governor's knapsack as well as his own, but they sat on his back like baubles.
The governor's announced aim had been to strike due west, but the party needed constantly to diverge north or south to avoid muddy creeks too wide to cross and impenetrable thickets where shrubs had engulfed fallen trees. They climbed down ravines full of creepers that caught around their ankles and hauled themselves up the steep rocky slopes on the other side from which they could see only another ravine.
At the back of the line, Rooke had a compa.s.s in one hand, a notebook in the other, his pencil behind his ear, counting his paces and noting each change of direction. He had ruled up the pages beforehand: Number of paces. Direction of march. As he scrawled in the columns he decided that the words march and direction did not do justice to the reality.
The place flowed past, a blur of namelessness. Tree. Another tree. Bush. Another sort of bush. White flower. Yellow flower. Red flower. To be unable to give things their proper names was to be like a child again. He remembered himself on the s.h.i.+ngle below the Round Tower, crouching over his pebble collection: big one, small one, light one, dark one.
The governor called a halt for the night beside a stream fringed with tall reeds. Rooke sat down and peeled off the knapsack, stuck to his back with sweat that was cooling unpleasantly as the evening chill came over the woods.
He watched as the sergeant reluctantly gave the prisoner a gun and a bag of shot. The man took the musket-like a toy in his enormous hand-and hefted the bag of shot in a practised way. He smiled from behind his beard, his lips rosy.
'You want supper, sir, it will want to be a d.a.m.ned sight more shot than that!' he said.
'Mind your tongue, man,' the sergeant was beginning, but the governor called out, 'It is all right, Sergeant, Brugden is to have whatever he needs.'
The sergeant's mouth became a compressed line as he doled out another handful of shot. Brugden grinned, showing powerful white teeth.
'Thank you, Sergeant,' he said. 'Thank you so very much indeed, sir.'
The sergeant watched him go, swaggering along the creek, the gun over his shoulder, his shadow long on the gra.s.s. On the hulks, Rooke thought, the man would not have been allowed even a pocketknife for cutting his bread. The sour-faced sergeant looked as though he were thinking the same thing.
The governor saw Rooke watching the man stride off.
'When in Rome, Mr Rooke,' he said. 'I know Brugden from home, he was a gamekeeper for the Duke of Portland before he unfortunately fell foul of the law, he is a rough sort of fellow but I have seen him hit a woodpigeon at a hundred paces.'
'But sir, if he wanders?' Willstead suggested.
The governor gave him a wry look. 'Yes, Lieutenant Willstead, if he wanders? Can you tell me where you think he might get to?'
Willstead blinked but had no answer.
Rooke sat down on a log and got out his notebook to tot up the paces and compa.s.s bearings. Thinking he might find it useful in the wilderness, he had paced out along Church Street, Portsmouth, Anne running beside him with the chalk, marking each step. The average length of stride of Lieutenant Daniel Rooke was thirty-three inches.
Here, stumbling, climbing and creeping by turns, such precision was irrelevant. Like Euclid, he would begin with an a.s.sertion and, since he was inventing, he might as well make the arithmetic simple: Let each pace be thirty-six inches.
When he had tallied everything up he marked their line of march on the sketch map of the place. It was a strange zigzag like the path of a beetle rather than a detachment of the king's armed forces.
He got up to take it to the governor but Silk intercepted him.
'How many miles, Rooke? How far to the west?'
Rooke pointed at where his zigzag line ended.
'By my reckoning, we are four and five-eighths miles southwest of the place we disembarked,' he said.
'Four and five-eighths? My word, you are a marvel, Lieutenant!'
Silk turned to Willstead, who had his shoes and spatter-dashes off and was sitting on a fallen log touching delicately at his blisters.
'Look, Willstead, can you believe it, Rooke can put us exactly here.'