making him a trifle dizzy. The hatchway over his head was rigged with a grating, that grating covered with a tarred sheet of sailcloth, so there was no hope for any air.
The gun crews swayed to the easy motion of the ship, sweat running down their bodies in buckets. Shirts cast off, loose-legged slop-trousers rolled up to the knee, legs and feet bare, with only their kerchiefs above the waist, now tied 'round their heads to save their hearing once the guns began to sing.
'Stand by, the forrud chase guns!' a voice bellowed. And above the sound of the ship as she worked and groaned, they could hear drumming. Not the jerky, uplifting drumming of the ship's bandsmen, but a steady, monotonous
'Reckon 'at'll be th' slave-drivers, sir,' the senior quarter-gunner speculated as he shifted a large cud of tobacco in his mouth. 'Keep t' pace fer th' oars.'
'Saints praysairve us!' an Irish loader whispered, crossing himself, and fingering a tiny silver crucifix 'round his neck.
'And good artillery preserve us, Hoolahan,' Alan said with a brief grin. 'Good artillery and sharp-eyed gunners.'
A twelve-pounder barked from the starboard battery, then the lower gun deck drummed and echoed as the upper deck ports were drawn up and out of the way, and ten eighteen-pounders rumbled across the oak decks on their little wheels and ungreased axles loud as a cattle stampede. Alan crossed to the starboard side to peer out a slit-drain in one of the gun-ports. 'About eight cables off now, half a dozen of them. I can see…'
He was interrupted by the blast of the forward-most eighteen-pounder as it lit off, followed in stately, controlled progression by the rest of the starboard battery.
As he watched, a gun in the bow of the
'Stone shot, sir,' the quarter-gunner said. 'Bad powder.'
'Wind's dying,' Alan whispered, and shared a worried look with the man. The ocean was flatter, hardly ruffled by wind, heaving slow and steady, almost glassy-calm farther off toward the horizon. 'Do you know how to whistle, Owen?'
'I'll get on it directly, Mister Lewrie, sir.'
The hatch grating over their heads was drawn back and cast aside, and Hogue, the master's mate, stuck his head down to yell at them. 'Mister Lewrie, you're to try your eye once they're in your range. Both sides at once, if you please, sir!'
'Undo the lashings on the gunports and be ready to raise them.' Gunfire roared out again, this time from the larboard battery. And they could hear other guns off in the distance. Pirates' guns.
'We've one to starboard, closing us bows-on, about three cables off!' Alan shouted. 'Open the ports! Run out your guns! Take aim! Cock your locks!'
This
'Ready!' Alan called. 'As you bear… fire!'
The carronades barked as their light powder charges went off, ran back to slam into the stops of their slides. Wool rammers soaked in the fire-buckets were swabbing out at once. As the smoke slowly dissipated, Lewrie could see that their target had been smashed! The
'Ready, larboard!' he gulped in alarm.
'Jaysus!' Hoolahan yelped. There was a
'Run out!'
They beat the pirates to the first shot. Four thirty-two-pounder balls hit her squarely abeam, and she shook like a kicked dog. Huge holes opened in her sides, the guns canted up and disappeared somewhere amidships, and they could hear the screams. She rolled back upright, shaking her mast down in ruin, and kept on rolling, filling with the sea and went down like a stone!
'That's the way, lads! That'll teach the heathen devils!'
The chase-guns fore and aft were firing, the upper-deck batteries were speaking now, a lot faster than those controlled, steady broadsides of earlier. Now and then there were sharper bangs as a light two-pounder swivel gun up on the upper-deck bulwarks was fired, loaded with grape or canister. To starboard, one pirate vessel was almost under the bows, too close-in to be hit with any guns. Alan could hear muskets going off in volley, and the screams of the pirates as they were scythed down. There was a heavy thump, and
They had no boarding weapons on the lower gun deck. Usually they had no need of them. No pikes, cutlasses, pistols or muskets! Even Alan was without his sword. It was Hoolahan who gave a great Celtic howl of rage and rammed a handspike into the pirate's face, tearing it open and shoving him back over the side with a shriek of agony.
'Lowest elevation! Number two gun, ready… fire!' Lewrie shouted. The
'Filled shot!' Alan demanded. 'Give 'em grape and canister!'
Hollow iron balls were fetched from the garlands, rammed home and seated. The next
At that sight, the rest of the pirates bore away, paddles flashing quick as runner's heels to escape the unequal