prepared their pieces for firing.
'Wind's backed a piece,' Fellows commented, eyeing the commissioning pendant aloft as it swung to stream more abeam. 'And holding. Might have westerlies once the sun's up and hot.'
'Better that than heading us and short-tacking up this damned channel,' Lewrie agreed, smiling in anticipation. He felt there was something most agreeable about having Rodgers in command, with none of the awesome burden of decision upon his shoulders this once, and a clear and subordinate role to play. After his independent cruise in the Caicos, this was as easy as sailing with a full squadron.
'Got 'em, by Jesus!' Fellows cheered.
'That puts us about… four miles south of their anchorage?' Lewrie guessed. 'Speed, Mister Mayhew?'
'Uhm…!' the midshipman stalled as he cast the chip log in haste. 'Six knots, sir!'
'Half an hour to close-broadsides, then,' Lewrie calculated in his head. 'A quarter-hour if they get under way and try to fight their way out. Aloft, there! What's happening in the anchorage?'
'They be makin' sail, sir! Both ships!'
'Pity there ain't no prize money for captured pirate ships,' Fellows sighed. 'A full-rigged ship of theirs'd bring a pretty penny.'
'Shoals to starboard! Five cables!'
'One point to windward, Quartermaster,' Lewrie said with a nod. 'Keep her in deep water, well as you may.'
'Aye, aye, sir!'
'Shoals to larboard, five cables! Clear water ahead!'
'Center of the channel, then, Quartermaster,' Lewrie beamed.
'Damned fool!' Lewrie spat as he used bis spyglass from his perch on the after shroud lines, halfway up to the fighting top. The full-rigged ship was turning west to challenge
'She'll be on our shoal if she shaves the southern bank of the channel that close!' Fellows was hooting in derision.
'She'll hope to get past before
But
'Schooner dead ahead, fine on the bows, sir!' a lookout called.
Lewrie swiveled about and saw their particular foe about a mile away and closing. Down-sun as
'Mister Ballard, broadsides to either beam!' Lewrie shouted as he jumped down to his quarter-deck. 'We'll wear across the channel to block it. Mister Fowles, your gunners'll have to hop lively for me!'
'They will, sir!'
'Helm up to windward to bare the larboard battery.'
'As you bear… fire!'
Seven-cables' range; three-quarters of a nautical mile, and cold iron barrels tore the morning apart as the six- pounders barked and came thundering inboard to snub on the thick breeching-ropes! Shot struck fantastkrplumes of spray short of the schooner in a ragged line before her bows.
'Shoals ahead, three cables, deep water to larboard!'
'Helm alee, Mister Neill. Bear up, close-hauled, Mister Ballard!' Lewrie ordered. 'Stand by the starboard battery!'
Gun captains transferred to the starboard side while loaders and rammermen, tacklemen and powder monkeys remained to larboard to complete swabbing out and reloading the expended guns. To carry the full complement of five men per gun deemed necessary to serve their six-pounders would have taken fifty men out of the sixty-five adults aboard, so it was standard drill to work both sides short-handed in preparation for moments such as this, and required only thirty.
'Open yer gun ports!' Fowles was droning on. 'Done, larboard? Come run out starboard. Gun captains, point! Cock yer locks!'
'Fire as you bear, sir!' Lewrie shouted.
The schooner had turned away to the west, almost in-irons into the teeth of the wind, and, if she held that course, would end up on that uncharted shoal of theirs.
'Fire!' Fowles called as the deck rose up level and hung still for a moment. 'Ah,
They'd fired individually, but on the uproll, which forced them to hurry in tugging the lanyards on the flintlock strikers, so it was more a planned broadside. This time they hit her and she shook like a piece of meat taken by a shark, and paid off the wind in disarray to point her bows at
'Hands wear ship, ready the larboard battery!'
Lewrie was zigzagging up the channel, blocking any hope of escape, and going wide to present all his guns.
'Fight me, you poltroon!' Lewrie screamed across the waters. 'Got no stomach for a
The schooner fell away to run sou'east, dangerously close to the sand bars south of Walker's Cay, trying to shave a passage down the channel.
'Shoals ahead, two cables!' some lookout screeched on the bow.
He could not hold this course a minute longer, Alan realized. The schooner's master was praying that he'd have to bear away soon, whilst he could continue to run south and perhaps get astern of the gun ketch that was tearing his little command to bits.
' 'Vast, there!' Lewrie shouted. He was out of syncopation in his turnings with the schooner. 'Mister Ballard, lay us full-and-by to weather on the larboard tack. Then once you have way 'nough, tack us and wear about sou'east, to keep us ahead of them!'
'Aye, aye, sir!' Ballard grinned, nodding with understanding. 'Hands to the sheets and braces, hands wear ship aweather! Mister Harkin, prepare for stays!'