'Oh, don't encourage him, Mister Maclntyre,' Parham tittered. 'Lord, Mister Ballard, sir. The captain cannot play, and Mister Maclntyre can neither sing, nor speak the King's English of a sudden. A proper shambles, that is.'
'That's enough, that is, Mister Parham,' Ballard smirked.
'And a Jacobite tune, too, sir,' Parham continued. 'Disloyal to King George, is it not, Mister Maclntyre?'
'Masthead, Mister Parham?' Ballard intoned with a cock of his head and frown enough to let him know his antics had best stop.
There was another verse, without vocal accompaniment this time, before the music ended with an embarrassed cough. Lewrie emerged on deck moments later in breeches and shirt, and looked around as the afterguard and watch-standers suddenly found something vital to do, or something fascinating to see over the side.
'Sea's getting up,' Lewrie stated, scanning the horizon about them. 'She swims a mite more boisterous than in the forenoon.'
'Aye, sir,' Lieutenant Ballard replied primly. 'Winds are yet steady from the nor'east. Some backing in the gusts to east. Might be half a gale, no more, sir. The weather horizon's clear, for now, though we are getting whitecaps now and again.'
The rigging whined with a sudden gust of wind that came more from the east, with perhaps a touch of southing.
'Smell rain, Mister Fellows?' Lewrie asked, twitching his noseaweather as the gust faded and the winds clocked back to the expected nor'east of the Trades.
'Sweet water somewhere, Captain,' Fellows agreed. 'Just a hint now and again. I'd wager squalls by seven bells.'
'Have the hands eat?' Lewrie inquired.
'Aye, sir,' Ballard reported.
'Topmen aloft, then. Take in the tops'ls and brail up secure. Then we'll have gun-drill as we planned. But no more than one hour,' Lewrie ordered, face wrinkled wary. 'We'll practice wearing ship to either beam and firing broadsides at a chase.'
'Aye, aye, sir,' Ballard agreed. 'Bosun, pipe 'All Hands!' Do you send topmen aloft! Trice up, lay out, and brail up tops'ls!'
'If this is a late cyclone, Mister Fellows, could we shelter in a hurricane hole on Grand Bahama north of us?' Lewrie asked as the men thundered up from the mess deck. 'What about Hawk's Bill Creek?'
'Hmm,' Fellows squinted, taking off his cocked hat to scratch at his gingery scalp. 'Do we stand on west- nor'west the rest of the day, sir, we'd be too far to loo'rd of Hawk's Bill Creek, and would have to beat back to it, with Grand Bahama a lee shore to larboard. And Grand Bahama's a graveyard for an hundred ships caught such. Nasty coast in a southerly wind. But… Cross Bay on the western tip should be abeam by late afternoon, sir. 'Round behind Settlement Point in Cross Bay, there's a good holding ground. Low-lying land, with nothing to break a gale, but much calmer waters behind the breakers and mangrove swamps.'
'Keep that in mind, if this isn't your regular gale. We could ride a gale out, reaching south. After gun-drill, we'll lay out four anchor cables, just to be safe,' Lewrie decided.
'Very well, sir,' Fellows agreed.
By six bells of the Day Watch, three in the afternoon, it was clear that this was no average tropic squall line. The horizon astern had darkened to a deep slate gray, shot through widi ragged sizzles of distant lightning at the base. The high-piled white clouds of morning had turned gray and lowering, and raced themselves overhead to loo'rd. They took in the outer jibs, reefed the gaff courses once, then for a second time, before wearing ship north for shelter, with
The first sprinkles of rain hit them as they beat into harbour around Settlement Point, short-tacking easterly, and the wind gusted from the east-sou'east hard enough to make it difficult to breathe.
'About here, sir!' Fellows had to shout in Lewrie's ear. 'Best bower, then second bower out there, to south'rd of the first!'
'Ready, forrud!' Lewrie yelled through a speaking trumpet 'Mister Neill, be ready to tack her. Ready, Mister Harkin? Helm up and meet her 'midships! Jesus, let go forrud!'
'Larboard your helm! Let go main course halyards! Back forrud sheets!' Lewrie called.
And pray both the bitches bite, Lewrie thought,
'Hand the courses, hand the jibs!'
Down came the last scraps of sail, leaving
She snubbed! The best bower anchor, weighted with thirty feet of fist-thick chain and a two-pounder brass boat-gun to ease the jerking which might dislodge the flukes, had held! And a moment later, so did the second bower, similarly weighted on its rode.
'Mister Harkin, pay out half a cable on each hawser and even the scopes!' Lewrie called, then turned to Ballard. 'You wanted delegated action at Conch Bar, Mister Ballard? Now you have it! Off you go! Make it quick before the storm's really upon us!'
'Aye, aye, sir!' Ballard replied, summoning his boat crews. They would row out the stream and kedge anchors from astem and set them down to match the angles from the bow cables. 'Cony, Odrado, let's go!'
It took an hour of juggling and pulley-hauley to equalize scope on the cables. By then, as the hands fell exhausted from the capstans, the storm was upon them, and a curtain of furious rain sheeted over the decks, blanking out all vision beyond a couple of feet, blowing so hard it was nearly horizontal. Lightning forked and arced around them, one explosion striking the island, the next so close-aboard their hair went on end, and the thunderclaps were so loud and continuous it felt like
Lewrie was wet right through, the rain driving past tarred tarpaulin coat and hat like they were gauze, soaking breeches and shirt. Cool as the rain was in the winds, he was clammy and hot beneath, and stiff with blown salt- water, cloth flogging painfully.
With the storm had come unnatural, eerie nightfall, a yellow-green dusk torn by lightning bursts on either hand. Trees ashore bent and tossed, sickly green. Palmetto fronds and leaves came slapping in the air to cling wetly for a moment, then be torn away to swirl aft.
'What's astern should we drag?' Alan asked Fellows in one of the few partings of the rain in which they could take bearings.