the opposite, starboard tack where she held a-try about four points from the wind.
'I thought so!' Hambly said, against the bluster of the wind at the edges of the half-deck. 'He's seen enough of the western ocean t' know that if there's a turn f'r the worse, the shift will come out of somewheres close to th' north, and wants to get his staying about over with now.' It also meant that
Kydd had experienced Caribbean hurricanes, but this was of a different quality: the cold at its heart gave it a unique dark malice. Like the other officers, Kydd stayed on deck. At noon they took stale bread and cold tongue, biscuit and anchovies, then resumed their vigil.
Suddenly, a mass of panic-stricken men burst up from the after hatchway, spilling on to the deck, falling over themselves to be out. A chill stabbed at Kydd. A seaman shouted hoarsely, 'Gotta loose gun!'
Bryant dropped his food and raced for the hatchway, shouting to Kydd, 'A dozen micks—now!'
Because of the weather the hammocks had all been stowed below in the lowest deck. Kydd stood in the hatchway, snatching a dozen men to a halt. 'Down t' the orlop—we'll go under.' He plunged recklessly down the hatchway, praying they would follow. As he passed the level of the gun-deck he had a brief glimpse of a squat black creature crouching for the kill. He hurried on.
Finally in the orlop he paused to allow his eyes to adjust; then he set the men to work. In the wildly heaving gloom hammocks were passed up while Kydd cautiously entered the deserted gun-deck. The gun stood out brazenly from the ship's side. The muzzle lashing had pulled its ringbolt from rotten wood and some weighty motion of the ship had subsequently caused the iron forging of the breeching tackle on one side to give way. The big cannon had swung out and, held by a few stranded ropes, was all but free.
Bryant stood to one side with a crew of seamen armed with handspikes. Kydd signalled to the first men to come up.
'Stand your ground!' the first lieutenant roared, at the men hesitating at his back. The whites of their eyes showed as they fearfully hefted their handspikes and waited for the order. When Kydd's men had temporarily stopped the beast with hammocks thrown in its path, Bryant's would hurl themselves on it with the handspikes in an attempt to overturn it.
'Er, can we help?' Lieutenant Best, accompanied by half a dozen marines, stood uncomprehending and hesitating at the hatchway.
'No! Get 'em away.' Kydd appreciated his courage but a crowd was not needed—only a handful of daring, active seamen. He glanced behind him: Chamberlain, the midshipman, with the agility of youth, Lamb, a spry topman, Thorn, steady and quick— he had enough.
'Each a mick, an' follow me—rest, wait until we has it cornered, then move in fast.' He seized a trussed hammock for himself and moved forward, feeling the eyes of Bryant's crew on him.
'Chamberlain—here! Lamb 'n' Thorn, get in behind it!' He spotted Best, still hovering. 'Get out of it,' he snarled, and pushed the crestfallen officer away.
They must close in at whatever risk: Bryant's crew could do nothing until the beast was stopped and then they had seconds only. The next few minutes would see heroes — or death. Warily he approached the cannon, trying to gauge the seas outside.
The bows began to rise again and he tensed, but the downward motion of the cannon abruptly changed course as the wave angled under her keel, and it rumbled headlong towards the ship's side and where Best stood, paralysed with horror.
It happened very quickly: a fatal wavering and the two-ton monster caught him, snatched him along, and slammed against another—a choking squeal and a brief image of spurting blood, limbs and white bone. Best's body was flung to the deck.
Yet his sacrifice was the saving of the ship. Caught in the gun's small wheels his body caused the cannon to slew and stop. Kydd hurled his hammock in its path. Others threw themselves at it, Bryant's crew with handspikes levering furiously, frantically.
They had won.
Shaken, Kydd needed the open decks.
Hambly was standing by the main shrouds, looking up at the racing dark clouds and the torn seascape. On seeing Kydd, he shouted, 'We're takin' it more from the west, I fear.' The rest of his words were snatched away by the wind's blast.
'And this means?' Kydd had not heard Houghton approach behind them. Hambly wheeled round, then respectfully accompanied them to the shelter of the half-deck.
'Sir, it means the centre o' the storm is placin' itself right in our path. We'll be down t' bare poles at this rate —we should really bear away an' scud instead of lyin' to. There's no hope this storm is goin' to blow itself out, sir.'
Kydd wondered whether the real reason