full-bottomed wig that marked him as a physician, if a somewhat old-fashioned one. He
was, for him, unusually well dressed in a snuff-coloured coat with silver buttons and
buckskin breeches; but the effect was spoilt by the long black sash that he wore wound
three times round his waist, which gave him an outlandish air in the English countryside.
On his saddle-bow lay a net, filled with a variety of mushrooms--bolets of all kinds, blewits,
chanterelles, Jew's ears--and now, seeing a fine flush of St Bruno's collops, he sprang
from his horse, seized a bush, and scrambled up the bank. As he did so an uncommonly
large black and white bird lifted from among the trees, its vast wings labouring in the calm.
Maturin's hand darted into the folds of his sash, whipped out a little spy-glass and
presented it well before the bird, now harried by a pair of crows, crossed the valley and
vanished over the hill that divided Ashgrove Cottage from the sea. With great satisfaction
he stared after it for a while and then lowered his glass to the cottage itself. To his surprise
he noticed that the little home-made observatory had been moved a considerable distance
to the right, a good furlong, indeed, to a point where the ridge dropped fifty feet. And there,
standing by its characteristic dome and overtopping it as Captain Gulliver might have
overtopped a temple in Lilliput, stood Captain Aubrey, resting an ordinary naval glass
upon the dome and peering steadfastly at some object far remote. The light was full on
him; his face was sharp and clear in Maturin's telescope, and with a shock the Doctor saw
not only that look of anxiety but also the marks of age and unhappiness. Stephen Maturin
had thought of Aubrey as powerful resilient cheerful youth itself for so long that this
change and the slow, weary motion as the distant figure closed the instrument and stood
up, his hand pressed to an old wound in his back, were unusually distressing. Maturin
closed his glass, picked the mushrooms and whistled his horse, a little Arab that came like
a dog, looking affectionately into his face as he made his awkward journey down the bank
with his hatful of collops.
Ten minutes later he stood at the door of the observatory. Captain Aubrey's bottom now
protruded from it, entirely filling the gap. "He must have his telescope as nearly horizontal
as it will go, and he bending double over it," reflected Dr. Maturin. "There is no weight lost
in these posteriors, however: would still tip the beam at fifteen stone." Aloud he said,
"Hola, Jack."
"Stephen!" cried Jack, shooting out backwards with surprising nimbleness in so large a
man and seizing his friend by both hands. His pink face was scarlet with pleasure, and a
slight answering flush appeared in Maturin's. "How very happy I am to see you, old
Stephen! How are you? Where have you been? Where have you been all this time?" But
recollecting that Dr. Maturin, as well as being a medical man, was also an intelligence
agent--that his movements were necessarily obscure--that his appearance might well be
connected with the recent Spanish declaration of war upon France--he hurried on,
"Looking after your affairs, no doubt. Splendid, splendid. You are staying with us, of
course. Have you seen Sophie?"
"I have not. I paused at the kitchen door, "asked the young woman was the Captain at
home, and hearing domestic sounds within--the massacre of the innocents came to my
mind--I merely left my offering and my horse and came along. You have moved the
observatory."