handsomeness, her gunports open and carronades cranked forward ready for another broadside.
'The troops ashore have the palisade, sir,' Murray pointed out. 'An English flag's flyin' on that tower o' theirs.'
'Three points of larboard helm, now, quartermaster. Stand by the starboard battery! Fire!' Lewrie shouted, oblivious to what was taking place on the island, almost lost in blood lust to finish off his part of the day.
The carronades roared out their challenge one at a time.
'Take your time with your aim, sirs!' Lewrie told his gunners.
Hogue brought down his arm, and his voice was lost in the howl of the guns. More shattered wreckage soared about her as the iron shot ripped her open. Masts quivered and shed blocks and cordage in a rain. The men at her helm were scythed away by a ball that struck on her quarterdeck bulwarks. A quarterdeck gun and its carriage took to the sky, tumbling over and over before splashing into the water to the downwind side!
'She'll go aground on the beach!' Lewrie shouted in triumph. 'Cease fire! Cease fire! Mister Murray, round us up and let us get ready to anchor. About there, I should think. Springs on the cables.'
Before they could lower their sails and drop their bower, the French ship struck. By then, she was well heeled over and sinking, low in the water. With the wind behind her, she hit the shoals and sand, the savage coral heads of the harbor's western shore, going at least 2 knots per hour. Not enough forward progress to tear her open, but enough to jam her onto the coral heads and pound and pound, so that she came apart slowly. Her masts stayed erect for a time before the strain on the larboard rope stays became too great and they popped, one at a time, to lower her masts yard by jerking yard until they groaned and split to topple into the sea.
They got
'Sail ho!' the lookout called from aloft.
'Oh God, what next?' Lewrie asked the heavens. 'Where away? What ship?' he shouted back.
'Whew,' Lewrie sighed, laughing at his own fear. 'Whew!'
Chapter 7
'…
He wrote in his lieutenant's journal, which would also be a first draft for his report to Captain Ayscough when he came to the island, and the official account of the venture someday in far-off London and the Admiralty.
'We discovered storehouses ashore in the palisaded fortress.'
'Hmm,' he speculated. It wasn't exactly a fortress, now, was it? A bamboo log palisade with ship's planking for reinforcement, and built so amateurishly one could have hurled a large dog through it anywhere one wished. Still, 'fortress' would read better back in official circles than 'armed cattle pen.' He dipped his goose-quill pen in ink and continued, more than a little tongue-in-cheek.
'The goods amassed were considerable, both gen'l trade goods to an estimated value of Ј50,000, quantities of Gangetic Opium Silver rendered into 1 oz. bars (Chinese
He leaned back and took a sip of a rather good Bordeaux that had traveled exceptionally well all the way from its point of origin to this dry and rocky Hell halfway around the world, and outlined to his superiors what a clever little fellow he had been.
How he had dismounted some of
He concluded by listing the very few dead and wounded among the Native Infantry, the utter lack of hurt to his ship or his men, the great number of French dead and wounded, the names of the Americans who had died or been hurt by capture or captivity and strong praise for those of his warrants and seamen he thought deserving.
'What else?' he muttered, leaning back in the rattan chair that creaked and gave most alarmingly as he did so. The table, the very walls of this shore house were of the same material, fetched from God knew where. Surely not from anything that grew on the island, that was for certain. Even the thatch of the roof was of palm fronds, and fairly fresh, too. So it had been a recent import to Spratly Island. He thought about putting down his suspicions that the Illana pirates had already come to visit, but decided against it. A lieutenant's journal was for wind, tide and sea-states, for weather or ship's routine. For a different slant on events-not for idle musings.
He closed the ink-pot, sluiced his pen-nib off in a cup of water and blew on the pages he had written to dry them. A slow process, that. Mr. Brainard had promised cooler climes at Spratly, but if this was in anyway dryer, or cooler than Bencoolen, it was a matter of degree only.
They had had several spells of freshening weather as the winds shifted more sou'easterly to the seasonal norms of the summer Monsoons. Wind, lashings of rain, cool, blustery half-gales that so far had not swelled to ship-threatening storms. The cisterns and rock-pools had filled with water, and
Frankly, they had enough livestock to start a well-run estate, and that was just the imported animals. What ran wild on the island could keep one awake at night with their miniature stampedes and alarums. Everyone had been eating well ever since they arrived.
He finally got the ink dry enough to roll up the pages and tie them with a hank of thin rope, then went out to check on his latest project. Rather, his father's latest project, for which he was giving up a few crew members.