Beauman when he paced up the beach; turned, to keep one wary eye on Sellers, too, who would be doing the same upon Cashman, and Lewrie, as well!
Lewrie swivelled to see what Hugh Beauman made of his brother's hapless expression, but that worthy was implacable. Hugh Beauman stood far back, hands clasped behind his back, heaving a great, resigned sigh of parting. A brief farewell grin creased his granite features.
He turned back to the principals, making a quick prayer for his old friend's success and safety, that he'd shoot straight and true and put a quick end to this, and a mercifully quick end of Ledyard, too. A man so foppish, petulant, and weak
Kit had been gazing out to sea, savouring perhaps his last precious taste of Life, but he did turn briefly, saw Lewrie's concern, and rewarded him with a quick lift of his chin, a faint grin, and even a wink!
'Ready, Colonel Beauman?' the doughty Hendricks called over the mewing of the gulls. 'Ready, Colonel Cashman?' Some seabirds glided down near the duellists, some flapping in place against the faint wind, as if begging for tossed morsels.
'Ready,' Cashman cried.
'Er… yes,' Ledyard Beauman managed. 'Ready.'
'Cock your locks! Begin your pace. And one, and two…'
Kit marched in short parade steps; Ledyard took childish giant strides, as if to turn fifteen paces into a furlong. 'And four, and five, and six…!'
' 'Ware!' Lewrie cried as Ledyard lost his nerve and turned too early, boots skidding on the hard sand, and levelling his pistol. The shout made Kit jerk to a stop, flinch, and start to turn about, and…
Ledyard had fired at Kit Cashman's back!
'Damn you!' Lewrie shouted, cocking his pistol and bringing it up to aim, with a quick plea for permission from Mr. Hendricks.
'Shit!' Cashman grunted. A pistol ball had struck him 'twixt his neck and the end of his left shoulder, bursting a bloom of scarlet on his white shirt!
'Well, damme!' Mr. Hendricks barked, his pistol now cocked and ready, but unsure of how to proceed. 'Shame, sir! Now, stand and…'
'Stand and receive, ya bastard!' Cashman roared as he completed his hunching turn and straightened his back.
'He's wounded, wait, wait!' Ledyard demanded, dancing from one foot to the other. 'Examine him, he has t'stop, mean t'say. Wait!'
'You must stand and receive, first, sir,' the disgusted umpire Mr. Hendricks ordained, his voice gone disdainfully formal.
'God
Lewrie was dumb-struck, and enrapted. One
And Kit was taking slow, careful aim,
Sellers broke position! His left hand clawed under his uniform coat for a hidden pistol, sprinting toward Ledyard Beauman and tossing him the ready-cocked, silver-chased 'barker,' who gawped at it like a drowning man would stare desperately at an offered rope-end.
The pistol flew toward Ledyard, who stopped shuffling, stretched out to catch it, but his shirt billowed at the waist as a ball punched him backwards, blood sheeting in an instant eruption, driving him down to fall on his rump with his arms still out-stretched for the gun like a stiff porcelain doll, legs and feet splayed heel-down in a vee!
Captain Sellers switched hands, flung up his right with his illegal pistol cocked, and aimed at Kit Cashman.
'Disgusting,' Mr. Hendricks hissed, outraged. 'Despicable!'
A gruff cry of pain from behind, from Hugh Beauman, to see both slain, then a brief silence, even from the gulls.
'Oh, Charlie,' they could clearly hear Ledyard Beauman weakly say to his cousin, giving him a shake or two. 'Ye fell down.'
Ledyard noticed his own wound, at last, the gout of blood that stained his breeches and shirt, that trickled from his fingertips as he probed the hole in his belly, just below his waistband, and began to moan, fret, and pluck at the cloth, still numbed.
'Damn my eyes, sir, but
Kit! Lewrie dropped his pistol where he stood and sprinted to Cash-man's side as he strode up-beach, himself. He held his pistol in his right hand, that hand pressed to the top of his left shoulder, his left arm dangling rigid at his side.
'Alan, ol' son. The bloody idiot
'Uhm… ragged, but clean through yer meat,' Lewrie announced after a long look under the torn shirt where two plum-coloured holes, front and back, almost made a single bear-bite. 'Don't
The very idea made Cashman dry-retch and wobble on his pins, a cold sweat popping out on his face as he staggered.
'Here, son, yer lookin' peaky. Sit ye down for a spell and be easy,' Lewrie said, helping him down, taking his pistol. 'Here, one of you! Mister… Geratt, is it?' he cried for a saw-bones.
The assistant surgeon came running, and Mr. Hendricks trundled down to see to him as well. 'Your wound is grievous, Colonel Cashman?'
'Not a bit of it, sir,' Cashman shrugged off, seconded at once by Mr. Geratt's pooh-poohing noises, and the assurance that no bones were broken as he swabbed, probed for cloth and such in the trough of the wound, and snipped away the odd ragged edge or two before binding and bandaging him and rigging a sling to immobilise Cashman's arm.
'Must apologise, Mister Hendricks,' Cashman said, making a
'Not