"I will do my best to accommodate you," Colon said airily.
"Thank you. When is the next ship due with provisions from Puerto Rico?"
"I can't tell you that."
Ramage nodded his head regretfully. "Now, the last question: of the trenches you have dug, which is in the prettiest position - the most tranquil?"
"What an absurd question!"
"But important," Ramage said gently.
"Well, I don't really know. None is in what a civilized person would call an arbour."
"Nevertheless, you must express a preference."
"Well, I haven't one, I hate them all," Colon said impatiently, as though bored with trenches as a topic of conversation.
"I must press you to answer," Ramage said, with a slight edge to his voice. "Just one."
"No! Not even one."
"Well then," Ramage said, in a more reasonable voice, "may I ask which place in the whole island you regard as the most tranquil, trench or no trench?"
Colon gave a contemptuous wave with his hand. "The whole place is ghastly; I hate it."
He stamped his foot and said almost hysterically, "I hate it! I hate Puerto Rico! I hate the Tropics!"
"Do you?" Ramage said sympathetically. "Well now, you are putting me in a difficult position. I wish you'd just tell me of a tranquil place for a trench."
"Do be quiet about trenches!" Colon said peevishly.
"Graves, then," Ramage said.
Colon's eyes opened wide. "I don't like the way you said that!"
'"Graves'?" Ramage repeated with feigned surprise, shaking his head. "What's wrong with that?"
"You said it in a threatening manner."
"You can't accuse me of threatening you," Ramage said in a hurt voice, "I'm trying to arrange that everything is as you would wish it for your removal."
"My removal?"
"A polite euphemism for death," Ramage said flatly, and Colon fainted.
"Quick," Ramage said to Jackson. "Have you a piece of line or a belt? I want a garrotte."
" 'Ere," Stafford said, holding out a length of cord. "Can I be carrotter, sir?"
"There'll be no garrotting as such, but you can pretend. Tie a knot in one end and keep running it through your fingers. Look fierce!"
"Aye aye, sir."
"Look," Rossi said, taking the line expertly and tying one end in the form of an eye. "Put your left wrist in there. Now - the line goes over the head of the victim; up comes your left wrist; a jerk back hard and upwards with the right hand, so; knee in the back, like thees, as you jerk; and -"
"Rossi!" Ramage said, grinning at the Italian's professionalism and enthusiasm, "give it back to Stafford, he's coming round."
Colon moaned weakly and Ramage signalled to Jackson and Rossi, who lifted the man up, shook him and sat him back on the tree stump.
It was, Ramage noticed, the charred stump of a tree that had been hit by a bolt of lightning.
"Do you feel better?" he asked.
"You murderer!" Colon blurted.
"I'm not - yet!" Ramage said, and Colon fainted again.
"Gawd," Stafford grumbled as the Spaniard slid to the ground, "I'd 'ave to be quick to give 'im the carrot."
"Garrotte," Jackson said automatically as he bent over Colon. "By the way, sir, what do we want to know?"
"About the trenches. Why he's digging them. He says his orders are secret."
"Does he speak English, sir?"
"I didn't ask him, but he probably does."
"If he does, why don't you leave him with your barbaric crew?”
"None of that, Jackson!”
"No, sir, we won't touch him; but I guarantee he'll talk. In fact we'll have him singing."
Ramage nodded. "No violence, though."
"Guarantee not to touch him, sir."
"No need for guarantees; just remember, 'moderation in all things'!"
"Aye aye, sir; my grandfather always said the same thing."
As soon as Colon recovered and had been propped up on the stump of the tree once again, Ramage carefully arranged his face to look as brutal and ruthless as possible, and said icily: "Do you speak English?"
"A little."
"Now you have one last chance to tell me about the graves."
"Never," Colon said, with little conviction, and added despairingly, "They are not graves."
"I am busy," Ramage said haughtily. "I take my farewell. My men will deal with you."
The effect on Colon startled Ramage and the seamen: he gave a tragic and despairing moan, slid forward from the stump face down on the ground, his hands clutching at Ramage's feet.
"No," he whispered, "I cannot tell -"
Ramage, embarrassed, hurriedly stepped back, glanced at Jackson and said with as much melodrama as he could muster: "Farewell, señor, if you cannot tell, you cannot live..."
With that he turned and hurried away.
Only a fool never knows fear, he thought; but I'm damned if I can understand a man too craven to hide or control it. Colon believes he has only a minute or so to live. So far as he knows, I've given orders for him to be killed. A minute or so isn't long to clench your teeth, stand up and perhaps shout defiance. It's something you owe yourself, and surely it makes the going easier than weeping and tearing your hair out.
He hadn't gone twenty yards towards the camp before he began worrying about Jackson. Would the American be able to make Colon talk? Supposing Colon kept up his refusal? Was he prepared to die with the secret? Because that wretched example of foppery held the key to ... to what?
He stopped walking and stared at the distant horizon, his eyes out of focus and his mind racing.
Whatever Colon was up to with his gang of grave-diggers and platoon of armed sextons was absolutely no concern of his, except for the potential threat of the soldiers to the men of the Triton and Topaz. His only responsibility was the present safety of the two ships' companies and subsequent rescue.
Back at the camp Southwick was ready with reports on the day's activities so far: Appleby had gone off with the raft and was more than halfway to the wrecks; carpenter's mates from both ships had gone with him to find suitable timber for building a boat; his calculations on the provisions landed so far, and based on the regular Navy issue, showed that they had food for three months.
Ramage walked with Southwick round the provisions store, hidden under its tarpaulin and palm fronds, nodding to the Marine sentries, and then went on to inspect the magazine. The men had made an excellent job of building it, using the same method as Cornishmen had used for centuries to make their drystone walls.
In a couple of centuries' time, Ramage thought, someone is going to examine the remains of this little magazine and, knowing nothing of the hurricane, the Triton and the Topaz, wonder how a small building using such a remote system came to be erected on Snake Island. A building with such a tiny doorway that the men or women who used it would have to have been midgets...
At that moment he saw Jackson approaching; looking cheerful, almost smug.
"I think he's ready to tell you all about it, sir," Jackson said in reply to Ramage's inquiry. "I can't speak Spanish, as you know, but he made himself understood."
Ramage glanced at Colon and saw his dejected, hunchbacked walk, the reluctant, foot-dragging steps. "What did you do to him?"
"Well, sir..." Jackson began sheepishly, "we didn't lay a finger on him..."
Ramage eyed the seaman, and then laughed. "Lieutenant Colon will tell me all about it."
Jackson's face fell. "Honestly, sir, we didn't touch him. Just a bit o' play-acting by Staff and Rosey."
A few moments later Colon was led up by a gleeful Stafford, Rossi and Maxton.