ships?”
“There are the Austrians,” Major Dalton suggested, “the Russians?”
“The Austrians, sir!” Cromwell scoffed. “No sooner do the Austrians field an army than
it is destroyed! The Russians? Would you trust the Russians to free Europe when they
cannot liberate themselves? Have you been to Russia, sir?”
“No,” Major Dalton admitted.
“A land of slaves,” Cromwell said derisively.
Lord William Hale might have been expected to contribute to this conversation for, as
one of the six members of the East India Company’s Board of Control, he must have been
familiar with the thinking of the British government, but he was content to listen with
a faintly amused smile, though he did raise an eyebrow at Cromwell’s assertion that the
Russians were a nation of slaves.
“The French, sir,” Cromwell went on hotly, “face a rabble of enemies on their eastern
frontiers, but none on their west. They can therefore concentrate their armies, sure in the
knowledge that no British army will ever touch their shore.”
“Never?” the merchant, a solid man called Ebenezer Fairley, asked
sarcastically.
Cromwell swung his heavy gaze on this new opponent. He contemplated Fairley for a
while, then shook his head. “The British, Fairley, do not like armies. They keep a small army.
A small army can never defeat Napoleon. Ergo, Napoleon is safe. Ergo, the war is lost. Good
God, man, they might already have invaded Britain!”
“I pray not,” Major Dalton said fervently.
“Their army was ready,” Cromwell boomed with a strange relish in this talk of British
defeat, “and all they needed was for their navy to command the channel.”
“Which it cannot do,” the barrister intervened quietly.
“And even if they did not invade this year,” Cromwell went on, ignoring the lawyer, “then
in time they will succeed in building a navy fit to defeat ours, and when that day comes
Britain will have to seek peace. Britain will revert to its natural posture, and its
natural posture is to be a small and insignificant island poised off a great
continent.”
Lady Grace spoke for the first time. Sharpe had been pleased and surprised to see her at
supper, for Captain Chase had suggested that she eschewed company, but she seemed
content to be in the cuddy though so far she had taken as little part in the
conversation as her husband. “So we are doomed to defeat, Captain?” she suggested.
“No, ma’am,” Cromwell answered, softening his pugnacity now that he addressed a
titled passenger. “We are doomed to a realistic settlement of peace just as soon as the
jackanapes politicians recognize what is plain in front of their faces.”
“Which is?” Fairley demanded.
“That the French are more powerful than us, of course!” Cromwell growled. “And until we
make peace the prudent man makes money, for we shall need money in a world run by the
French. That is why India is important. We should suck the place dry before the French take
it from us.” Cromwell snapped his fingers to instruct the stewards to remove the plates
which had held a ragout of salted beef. Sharpe had eaten clumsily, finding the thick
silverware unwieldy, and wishing he had dared take out his folding pocket knife which he
used at meals when his betters were not present.
Mathilde, the Baroness von Dornberg, smiled gratefully as the captain replenished her
wine glass. The baroness, who was almost certainly nothing of the sort, sat on Captain
Cromwell’s left while opposite her was Lady Grace Hale. Pohlmann, resplendent in a
lace-fringed silk coat, sat next to Lady Grace while Lord William was to the left of
Mathilde. Sharpe, as the least important person present, was at the lower end of the
table.
The cuddy was an elegant room paneled with wood that had been painted pea-green and
gold, while a brass chandelier, bereft of candles, hung from a beam alongside the wide
skylight. If
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