fight, they could bear off, or bear up to windward, and form line-of-battle. Or dash on, if Vice-Admiral Cosby ordered general chase, and run those Frog merchantmen to ground, one at a time.
'Mister Lewrie,' Captain Braxton decided, snapping his fingers to summon him to the windward side. 'We'll harden up, close-hauled.'
'Same course as yon forty-four, sir,' Lewrie nodded in understanding. 'Trading shots with her, though, sir… eighteen-pounders…'
'Are you a coward, as well as a fool, sir?' Braxton blustered.
'Sir, I am not!' Lewrie shot back. 'I'm as ready as you, when it comes to fighting this ship. I wished to ask if you wanted to overhaul in her best gun range, sir, or lask down to her on a bow-and-quarter-line. Allow me to suggest we lask, sir, then haul our wind, cross her stern and rake her… sir.'
Call me any kind of fool, or sham, he thought; but you
As if sensing that he
'Close-hauled, aye, aye, sir,' Lewrie parroted, going amidships. 'Bosun, hands to the braces! Hard-sheets! Lay her full-and-by!'
He could see the French frigate from the deck by then, long and sleek, like a cut-down line-of-battle ship, a touch of poop, a bit of forecastle, with her courses well up over the horizon. She swung from dead on their bows to the starboard side, just forward of abeam as
What a bloody wasted effort, Lewrie thought, his senses acute and calculating. He felt they should be hauling their wind, going for the Frog 5th Rate like a terrier, then nipping past her stern at close range. Give her a well- timed broadside, then dash on past to get at the merchantmen. Every ship in sight would share in the prize-money if one or all of them were taken. But
'Excuse me, sir,' he asked, going back to windward to join his captain. 'Should we not allow her four-points- free, so we may fall to loo'rd, onto her, sir?'
'It is my decision, sir. Now be still!' Braxton hissed, wheeling on him. 'The squadron, sir, will daunt them. She'll haul wind, she can't trade fire with the liners. Attend to your duties, sir.'
'Sir, should she haul her wind, there's still the Indiamen-'
'I gave you an order,
'Aye, aye, sir.'
'There, d'ye see, hah?' Braxton hooted with scorn suddenly. 'She's falling off, at last. Turning to run! Now, Mister Lewrie…
'Aye, aye, sir,' he replied evenly.
Damme, another puzzle, he carped! Should be
'Bosun, prepare to wear to the starboard tack.'
'Aye, wear, Mister Fairclough,' Lewrie repeated testily. 'Stations for wearing ship! Main clew garnets… buntlines, there!' He called through the speaking trumpet. 'Spanker brails, weather main and lee braces! Manned?'
Hands darted to the pin rails and fife rails to undo belays on the running rigging, to tail on and prepare to take a strain once the lines were free of all but the last over-under hitch on belaying pins.
'Come on, lads! Smartly, now!' he urged them.
'Drive 'em, bosun! Smartly!' Braxton interrupted. 'Lay on yer starters!'
The hands
'Oh, Christ…' Lewrie whispered, seeing the game for what it was at once. 'Come
'Overhaul weather lifts! Man the weather braces! Rise fore-tack and sheet!'
'Clear away head bowlines, lay the head-yards square! Shift over jib fore-sheets! Come
'Jaysis, bloody…!' the senior helmsman yelped suddenly, and Lewrie turned his head to see the huge double wheel's spokes spinning like a St. Catherine's wheel at a fair. The steering-tackle ropes bound 'round the wheel drum were sizzling and smoking as they unwound themselves! 'No helm, sir, no helm!'
'Avast, there!' he called, trying to head off disaster. 'Back the foresheets, flat 'em in!
Too late.
This ought to be damned int'restin', Lewrie thought, with what felt like a stupefied calmness; we're going to
'Lee braces, damn you! Smartly! Let go weather braces!'
With a tremendous whooshing sound, much like a gargantuan bird, the spanker filled and flew across the quarterdeck overhead, dragging the men of the starboard after-guard, tailing on what was now a weather sheet, in a tug of war they could never win.
They let go, tumbling in a heap. They let
Both sheets, Lewrie goggled:
'Heavy-haul on the braces, fore, main and cro'jack!' he howled as