"Bah!" retorted the officer without checking his pace. "You talk now like a child or else you take me for one. How far could she have seen? What view could she have had at daylight if she was making her way to the Petite Passe where she is now? Why, the islands would have masked for her two-thirds of the sea and just in the direction too where the English inshore squadron is hovering below the horizon. Funny blockade that! You can't see a single English sail for days and days together, and then when you least expect them they come down all in a crowd as if ready to eat us alive. No, no! There was no wind to bring her up a companion. But tell me, gunner, you who boast of knowing the bark of every English piece, what sort of gun was it?"
Peyrol growled in answer:
"Why, a twelve. The heaviest she carries. She is only a corvette."
"Well, then, it was fired as a recall for one of her boats somewhere out of sight along the shore. With a coast like this, all points and bights, there would be nothing very extraordinary in that, would there?"
"No," said Peyrol, stepping out steadily. "What is extraordinary is that she should have had a boat away at all."
"You are right there." The officer stopped suddenly. "Yes, it is really remarkable, that she should have sent a boat away. And there is no other way to explain that gun."
Peyrol's face expressed no emotion of any sort.
"There is something there worth investigating," continued the officer with animation.
"If it is a matter of a boat," Peyrol said without the slightest excitement, "there can be nothing very deep in it. What could there be? As likely as not they sent her inshore early in the morning with lines to try to catch some fish for the captain's breakfast. Why do you open your eyes like this? Don't you know the English? They have enough cheek for anything."
After uttering those words with a deliberation made venerable by his white hair, Peyrol made the gesture of wiping his brow, which was barely moist.