Not bloody likely, Alan thought. They had been at the Battle of The Chesapeake, where this self-same Admiral de Grasse had snatched victory from a budding disaster, and the British admirals, including Hood who now commanded their fleet, had stood about in stupefaction until there was nothing left to do but call if off. Hood had kept back the strongest division of the combined Leeward Islands and North American fleets, never even fired a ranging shot all day, and
They had had a hard dash south under a full press of sail for Barbados to carry word to Hood that the island of St. Kitts had been invaded by de Grasse and the French on the eleventh of January. Hood had sailed for Antigua to pick up seven hundred or so troops, all that could be spared, and then made a fast passage to round the southern shore of Nevis, the twin island to St. Kitts, to confront the French, dragging
Yesterday had been thought to be the day of decision, but all they had accomplished by their presence was to draw this massive Frog fleet out of its anchorage out to sea off Basse Terre. Rumor had it that Hood had wanted to sail right in and fire into the anchored ships, as they should have at The Chesapeake, but that had been postponed.
Once more, this de Grasse had been given a heaven-sent chance to escape the massacre of his fleet. The last time, he had destroyed any last chance to recover the Colonies. Would his luck hold, and would they begin to lose the fabulously wealthy Sugar Islands now?
'They's a gap!' Monk pointed out with alarm in his voice.
'Oh my dear Lord,' Treghues whispered, more a short prayer than a curse, for he was a fanatic when it came to quelling the English sailor's easy penchant for blasphemy. '
Alan couldn't watch-he'd been there before-and made his way to the starboard side to stand by midshipmen Avery and Burney, who had been relegated by duty to a poor view of the proceedings.
'Mister Lewrie,' Avery said coolly, echoed a second later by the startlingly beautiful Burney.
'Avery, Burney,' Lewrie replied, touching a finger to the brim of his cocked hat to return their salutes. Avery had been his best and nearly only friend in the Navy, especially on
'Goddamn my eyes, I hope they brought a good lunch,' Alan spat as he looked shoreward. At the last and most westward point of land above Fort Charles on Nevis, quite a crowd had gathered, treating the naval battle like a spectator sport and an excuse for a feast.
'Civilians, sir,' Avery agreed with a properly naval scowl of displeasure.
'May they get an eyeful, sir!' Burney said with some heat.
Alan didn't know quite what to make of Burney; he was sixteen, had a good kit and was obviously from money, but he was so keen, nautical and unfailingly of good cheer that Alan felt his skin crawl every time he was around him. Little get's got a fiddle, he thought suspiciously, as was Lewrie's usual wont. Besides, Burney was so beautiful in a manly, gentlemanly way, his features so clear and well-formed, that Alan felt like throwing shoes at him. Where were the usual boils, the pimples of a teen-aged midshipman-God help, he didn't even half stink like most people. It was uncanny.
'At 'em
The next ship ahead of
'Foiled, aha!' Treghues laughed, another sign of incipient madness to Alan's lights. Comdr. The Hon. Tobias Treghues had been a straight-laced prig of the worst blue-stocking sort at first, but between a head injury the year before, a 'slight' trephination by the ship's surgeon, and a course of medication consisting of a rare South American weed that Dr. Dorne referred to as
Sensing that Treghues was safe enough to approach this day without fear of being bitten, Alan wandered back past the wheel and the binnacle to the larboard side, after pausing to check the quartermasters on the wheel, the compass bearing, and the set of the sails.
'Bosun, we're nigh past the last of Nevis. Be prepared at the braces to take the wind abeam,' Alan cautioned.
'Aye, Mister Lewrie,' Coke grumbled, disliking to be told his duties by a jumped-up younker, but forbearing philosophically.
'Wonder if they left anything in the anchorage?' Lieutenant Railsford asked, plying a telescope northward toward the western-most point of land below St. Kitts' main-town, Basse Terre, and the anchorage in Frigate Bay.
'If they did, they'd best shift 'em afore ya kin say 'Jack-Puddin','' Monk opined, 'er we'll be among 'em a'sharin' out some solid-shot grief. We're head-reachin' the devils, damned if we ain't.'
'Hands to the braces, Mister Coke!' Lieutenant Railsford ordered. 'By God, this'll put a bone in our teeth!'
With the fresher airs playing between St. Kitts and Nevis down the narrow mile and a half channel, their small frigate began to fly, as did the larger ships of the line, leaving the leeward vessels in the French line behind, still caught in a pocket of stiller air to Nevis' lee. Even
'Now what's de Grasse done wrong here today?' Treghues demanded of his officers, once the ship was fully under control and the braces had been belayed by the waisters along the gangways above the guns. 'Avery?'
'Abandoned his anchorage, sir,' Avery said brightly.
'Burney?'
'He doesn't seem too eager to close us, sir, and fight at close pistol-shot,' Burney piped up, the eager student. 'And he stranded himself out in the second lee of the island before making his approach.'
'Lewrie, you're the student of that fellow named Clerk, what do you say?' Treghues asked, and Alan flinched recalling the last time he had dared to open his mouth back in September about Clerk's tactics book.
'If he wanted to fight, sir, he could have defended his anchorage, or backed and filled during the night much closer towards St. Kitts, sir,' Alan surmised. 'Starting that far to the suth'rd and out to sea from us, he practically gave it away. And he could have pushed through the gap
'Has Admiral Hood made any mistakes yet?' Treghues went on, loving his role of experienced teacher to his neophyte officers.