between the bomb-proof jetties, and out to join
'Springs on the cables, sir,' Lieutenant Scott informed him.
'Wash-deck pumps going? Filling room
'Aye, sir.'
'Let's be at it, then,' Lewrie grimaced, his stomach chilly with trepidation at the unknown nature of their work. And over the danger, which was
'Might as well be, sir,' Scott dared to assay a tiny, wry grin. 'It appears the Frogs already are.'
They walked amidships, to peer down into the mortar wells, then tip their hats to de Crillart and Esquevarre, who stood close together by the rearward lip, evidently engaged in some heated discussion.
'Non non, Comandante, Le Blond…' Charles de Crillart objected gently. 'Alain… mon capitaine, I attemp' to tell zis… monsieur Le Blond say ze s'irty pound' charge eez beau-coup, mais zis… ze Comandante insist…'
Don Luis de Esquevarre rattled off an expostulation in rapid Spanish, out of which Lewrie caught perhaps the odd word in ten, most of those mildly insulting.
'Senor,' he said, whipping out his copy of Falconer. 'Allow me to quote, and do you translate, Lieutenant de Crillart… aha, here it is.
' 'E say eez Inglese bull-sheet, mon capitaine,' de Crillart translated back. 'Zat eez on'y pour ze cyUnder chambre, et we 'ave een zis bombard, ze conical. 'E also say 'e eez tres esperi-ence viz artillery, an' 'e 'ave no need to be tol'… 'ow to soock eggs? Comment?' de Crillart shrugged in bewilderment.
To de Crillart's even further confusion, Lewrie laughed out loud, prompting a tiny upturn of one corner of Don Luis' mouth in return.
'Senor Comandante, I have implicit trust in your experience,' Lewrie cajoled, phrase by phrase as de Crillart transposed for him, 'but this is a ship, not a firm battlement or well-prepared battery… do you see here, under Range… practice table? Weights of charge?'
'Ah, si, capitan!' Don Luis brightened, pulling from a voluminous pocket of his ornate uniform coat a much- tattered, oft-rolled and thumbed table of practice, expostulating eagerly.
'Ze tres petit malentendu… ze lettle mis-un'erstan'ment?' Charles said with relief, at last. ' 'E eez 'ave een min' ze less of ze powder. 'E ees s'inking ze, uhm… nine poun', at firs'?'
'Whew!' Scott breathed out.
'I defer to his greater knowledge, tell him, Charles,' Alan said, doffing his hat, making sure he was grinning when he said it.
Up from the orlop came a powder charge, sacked by the called-for weight. Spanish bombardiers used paper cartridges. From the filling room came a shell, two burly Spaniards grunting with effort to carry it by its small, slippery handles. Don Luis and his
Down it went into the well, as the powder charge was rammed deep into the chamber, and the priming iron was thrust into the touch hole to both clear the vent and puncture the bag. Slowly the fixed shell was lowered into the stubby bore, handles and fuse hole up.
Don Luis took a deep breath, almost made to cross himself, as he waved the excess hands away and ordered the tallow seal on the fuse to be opened. 'Fosforo, preparado…!' he cried. 'Fuego!'
The smouldering port-fires touched both fuse and touch hole, and there was a split second of sizzle, then a tremendous blast! Down went the deck, as if shoved by the hand of God, and
Not so much a sudden detonation as it was a physical force, Alan felt his lungs rattle, his groin shrink, and his heart flutter when the mortar touched off, felt an invisible wave of pressure shove him back, rattle his coat-tails and hat, and fill his ears with a sound beyond a sound, almost too loud to register, except to set them ringing. Spent powder smoke spurted aloft in a sickly yellow-white column, reeking with sulphur and rotten eggs, smelling singed as lit kindling.
'Bloody Hell, that was…,' he coughed, fanning the air for some fresh as the gush of gun-smoke dissipated. 'That was
He'd loved the great-guns best of all the things he'd learned in the Navy; the power, the stink of them, their recoil and shud-derings. From little two-pounder boat-guns and swivels to long-twelves, from far-firing twenty- four-pounders to the stubby, ship-breaking 'Smashers,' the carronades, Lewrie delighted in things that went
'Damme!' Lewrie called, feeling a boyish glee rise in him. 'Don Luis! Volver a hacer? Let's do that
That afternoon,
French bursting-shell drummed around
Don Luis Esquevarre concentrated their fire upon the lesser battery to the sou'west, the one with two guns. Patiently, firing perhaps a round every two minutes, he probed the hills, first with the left mortar, then with the right hand. A dram less powder in the charge cartridge, three drams more the next shot; a tiny tinkering with elevation, half a turn on the great screw by the bracing block; heaving to turn about a single degree on the pintle.
'Fosforo… preparado…' he called, coatless and hatless by then, his voice hoarse from inhaling spent gunpowder and shouting for half a day. 'Fuego!'
Another monumental clashing roar, and the floating battery shuddering to her very bones, timbers crying in torment. Lewrie stood aft away from the noise, on what passed for a quarterdeck, a telescope to his eye, rested steady on the larboard mizzen-stay ratlines.
'Nineteen… twenty… twenty-one…' Midshipman Spendlove tolled off, counting on his fingers, for his watch only had a minute hand.
'Struck, sir. Twenty-two seconds,' he announced, and looked up to see a darker gout of smoke rise, almost mingling with the forest-fire pall that hovered continually over the Republican mortar battery. 'Oh, well. Closer, I
Suddenly, there was a massive eruption of smoke yonder, rising as silent as a squall cloud might on the sea's horizon, as if the French had reinforced the masked battery, and had just let fly half a dozen shells.