harm
'Aye, aye, sir,' Lewrie answered, knowing what Lieutenant Coltrop down in the Turks had felt like at last.
'Don't get too close to Walker's Cay, don't spook 'em out too soon, Captain Lewrie,' Rodgers warned him. 'If they're there.'
'Should I be so fortunate as to get across the Bank in a whole vessel, I'll not, sir,' Lewrie commented wryly.
'Still have that Trinity House sailing master, Gatacre aboard?'
'No, sir,' Lewrie sighed. 'Commodore Garvey promoted his first officer off
'So Lieutenant Garvey is now third in
'Rising like a spring tide, his career does, sir.'
'Gawd, old 'Horry' must bloody love
'Aye, aye, sir.'
Lewrie scrambled over the side into the stern sheets of his gig for a lumpy ride back to
At last, he thought, though; I'll get my coffee, my shave, and my bloody breakfast!
Chapter 7
As the crow flies, it was only forty miles sailing from the deep-water entrance on the western side of the Little Bahama Bank, roughly eight miles north of Memory Rock, to deep water on the east side, in the middle of Walker's Cay Channel.
In the wake of the storm, though, the winds had gone lunatic. One hour they might have nor'easterlies, the next hour they'd clock around from the north or the nor'west The morning's watch had been sailed nearly close- hauled to weather, but in the afternoon, they even had winds up the stern from the west.
It took
They anchored at true dark at about 78°32' west and 27° 10' north at the Lily Bank's southeast extremity, having covered only a heartbreaking thirty-two miles, eight tantalizing miles short of Walker's Cay.
Just a bit before sunrise the next morning, they found depth enough and open water to the nor'east, except for one quick fright when it shoaled around a circular submerged outcropping from eighteen feet deep to a bare ten. Then, within musket-shot of the northern side of Walker's Cay Channel, they'd shaved the topaz shallows of Matanilla Reefs southernmost tip to give the island a wide enough berth so any pirates in harbour would not be alerted, but giving
They then headed out to sea to meet
'Your schooner is there, sir!' Lewrie told Rodgers in his cabin, which Lewrie had to admit was even fancier than his own. 'May not be your pirate schooner, but a schooner. And a three-masted ship, too.'
'How near did you go?' Rodgers fretted. 'Think they saw you?'
'No, sir,' Lewrie grinned. 'We struck our topmasts and reefed the gaff courses and jibs low to the deck, then kept off seven miles, with only our lower masts and fighting tops showing. They showed no sign of alarm, long as we had 'em in sight.'
'Damned good, Lewrie!' Rodgers nodded in relief. 'They must think we're still huntin' 'em off Grand Bahama, or goin' all the way north-about outside the Little Bahama Banks. Where exactly?'
Lewrie spun the chart around on the table, so everyone couldhave a good view; he and Rodgers, the sailing masters Fellows and Cargyle, and the first officers.
'They're in this long tongue-shaped inlet north and west of the island proper, sir,' Lewrie sketched out. 'They've rocks and shoals to their nor'west on the east side of Walker's Cay Channel, coral and exposed rocks north, and shallows on the east to Seal Cay. But there is a chain of tiny islets running nor'west from the western tip of the island. They're anchored here, half a mile or less off the beach by the last one west. They must have fifteen to eighteen feet depth in there, sir.'
'Sand bars on the south side of Walker's Cay, too, sir,' John Fellows stuck in. 'They trail off south then east all the way to this Grand Cay. And there's reputed to be a one-fathom shoal sou'west of the island. About here, perhaps. Making one entrance channel into their sheltered inlet off those islets, sir.'
Lewrie thought it odd that Cargyle said nothing at all, but he put that down to the man having been daunted by Rodgers' aggressive personality in the past. He thought it an unproductive relationship.
'They're in a cul-de-sac!' Rodgers elated. 'If that shoal you suspect does lie to the sou'west, Mister Fellows, then there are only two escape routes. They come to deep water in Walker's Cay Channel and run out that way, or they take the eastern side of your shoal back down south over the Little Bahama Bank again. How big is it?'
'No one knows, sir, sorry to say,' Fellows fidgeted nervously. 'But… from the south end of
'And were
Oh, bloody suffering Hell, Alan thought as he saw where Commander Rodgers was jabbing at the chart.
'You enter Walker's Cay Channel ahead of us, go south and east until you get 'round the six-foot shoal that forms the two channels, and block the southern one. Your guns have as much reach as mine, so we have them between us to squeeze! If they can anchor a proper ship that far up this tongue of deep water, then we can sail right up and give 'em broadsides at pistol-shot range from two directions.'
'I see, sir,' Lewrie nodded.
'Feel game for one more quadrille 'cross this bloody little pond, sir?' Rodgers demanded, much amused.
'Of course, sir!' Lewrie replied with false ardor. To get to the desired position by sunrise, and sunrise would be best if Rodgers wished tactical surprise, he would have to take
Now I know why Lieutenant Coltrop turned so pale, Alan thought! This is going to be trickier than falling downriver from Chatham from one stream anchor's grapple to the next! At least
'That's my lad, Captain Lewrie!' Rodgers praised. 'I knew you had the bottom for it!'
'Long as I have a bottom under me by tomorrow noon, sir,' he rejoined with a wry expression.
'And a half, two!' the leadsman cried mournfully, telling his depth marks on the lead-line by feel.
'Bloody wonderful,' Lewrie complained softly. 'Wind's right up our arse. The current's running dead-set against us. And the chip log's no clue to our speed, 'less we take time to anchor and measure the flow. And to top it off, 'tis darker than a cow's gut tonight!'
'Who'd be a seaman, hey, sir?' Arthur Ballard chuckled back.