'Aye, sir,' Owen replied around the stem of his pipe. 'Now, gun-captains, lowest elevation, an' wait for the down-roll! Wads atop your ball, rammer-men! Don't dribble the damn things out now!'
The ship creaked ominously as she slewed about. Cargo made dry rustling sounds as crates and bundles shifted slightly against restraining ropes and baffle-boards. The helm was put over so quickly
Then she was brought back up to the wind a couple of points, to steady on a parallel course to the stranger, to steady her own decks for a surer gun-platform.
'Half a cable!' Lewrie estimated, leaning out one of the ports alongside the cold iron barrel of a carronade. The larboard chase-gun banged, and he ducked back inboard quickly. 'Wait for it!'
Eighteen-pounders roared out their challenge, lighting the sea amber and bright red between the two ships, giving him short snatches in which to see the other ship. It
'Cock your locks… stand by… on the down-roll… together… Fire!'
All four larboard carronades took light as one. There was some spectacular noise that had everyone's ears ringing, a brilliant burst of light worthy of a lightning strike, fading from bright yellow to a dull burgundy, and a wave of burnt powder rushed back in the ports as bitter as rotten eggs. With the wind fine on their larboard quarter once again, most of it blew away past the bows, but enough was blown back onto the lower gun deck to be-fog them and set them all wheezing.
Damme to hell, but I love artillery, Alan exulted silently! The power, the noise, even the stink of 'em! And what they can do.
'Yes, by God!' he crowed, leaning out the port once more. In the after-flash of the last eighteen-pounder, he could see large ragged rents in
'Reload!'
'Musta kept 'alf their hands at Quarters t' fire that quickly, sir,' Owen guessed. Usually it took ten minutes for even a Royal Navy vessel to clear decks, load and run out their batteries. 'Mighta been plannin' on doin' the same for us this night.'
'There's a biter bit, boi God!' Hoolahan whooped.
Then the gun-captains were standing back from priming their carronades, fists in the air while their excess hands tailed on the tackles to haul the guns up to the port-sills once more. The upper deck guns began to howl again, and it was time for another crushing broadside.
Five, six times, they fired-about ten minutes of battle at the hottest pace the crews could sustain for a short time. Slowly, the return fire from
'Mister Lewrie!' one of their midshipmen yelled from the after companion-way. 'Close your ports, secure your guns, and come on deck for the boarding party, please sir!'
'Aye aye.'
They gained the upper deck, dug into the open weapons tubs at the base.of the main-mast and fetched cutlasses and pistols. This time, Alan had his own pistols: the small pair he'd purchased long ago in Portsmouth when he first kitted out as a midshipman, and a brace of dragoon pistols he'd carried away from Yorktown. He checked the primings and stuffed them into the Hindoo
'Grapnels, bosun!' Choate was yelling. 'Form up, lads! Stand ready! Lower the boarding nettings. Now,
With a concerted howl, they were up and over their own bulwarks, leaping onto
Lewrie leaped, banging one knee on the ship's side, getting one foot on the Frenchman's bulwark, and a precious handhold on a loose stay that felt like it was half shot-through and ready to come free at any second. He had a brief glimpse downward at the bloody water foaming between
He hauled hard on the stay to throw himself forward out of danger, and stumbled to his knees to the deck. Ignoring the pain in his knee, he rose up and started swinging his sword for his life! A man tumbled into him from behind, knocking him flat once more. Then there was a volley of shots that cleared the deck around him for a moment, allowing him to get to his feet.
'At 'em, Telestos!' He yelled. A French sailor came at him with a pike leveled like a charging cavalry lancer. A quick move to parry from left and below, pushing that wicked pike-head away to his right and past his shoulder, then a riposting thrust at the belly.
The Frenchman screamed almost in his ear, a foot of Gill's best English steel in his entrails, lost his grip on the pike, and dropped away like a spilled sack of meal, almost dragging Lewrie with him as his ravaged stomach muscles tried to clench around the blade. Alan had to plant a foot on the man's chest and thighs to drag his sword back out, bringing forth the slithering horrors contained within.
Dark faces with swarthy mustaches and whiskers came raving on
*'Kill, kill the dirty French!'
Percival and McTaggart were headed forward with a large pack of seamen, teetering their way over the boat-