sunrise.'
Chapter 3
'Zey are merde,' de Crillart griped, picking at the faded bulwarks of their ship. 'Ze discipline, phfft… an' no one care to keep zem in proper fashion. 'Cep' for mon
After conferring with Charles, Bosun Porter and a senior hand from the French sailors' party, hurriedly inspecting several ships in the basin, they'd settled on a forty-gun frigate, an impressive ship to all outward appearances. Certainly not in cosmetics, but in lines.
Her bottom, they could see, was weeded, but she'd been careened and breamed in May, and her coppering had supposedly been redone. The uppr works were filthy and shabby, her bold paint faded and peeling so badly that she looked more like a merchant ship than a frigate, browned and seared, stained and grey. Her standing rigging was still sound, in need of slush and fresh tar, some hauling at the deadeye blocks to set her taut once more. Running rigging had stretched or shrunk, rope gone stiff and brittle, but a quick re-roving with fresh from the warehouses could renew that. Once they set to, British sailors made half a day's labour of what might have taken her French owners a week.
The important thing was that, once swept fore and aft, swabbed out, and vinegared, all the accumulated rat droppings, spider webs and dust, piles of trash and detritus overboard, she would be roomy. She would have bags of space on that long, beamy mass deck to accommodate hundreds of refugees or soldiers for the short voyage to Gibraltar. Should the winds turn perverse, she had the waterline to make a goodly way close-hauled, the beam to survive rough seas, especially as short-handed as they'd be forced to man her. And there was depth enough on the orlop to store salt-meats, water casks, wine and biscuit to feed a multitude for an entire month, if need be. And those salt-rations already aboard were still fairly fresh, so provisioning took less time on her than it would have aboard another ship.
Guns? Lewrie was a bit worried about that aspect, though being in a convoy with warships near at hand shouldn't present too much danger.
They could have taken others. There were even larger forty-four-gunned frigates, 3rd Rate 74's with even more space aboard-but they'd demand a much larger crew to work them properly. And some of those others had been in even poorer material state, so emptied of guns and rations that it would have taken a week to prepare them for sea, or were so weeded to the bottom of the basin, so neglected, it was a wonder they hadn't sunk at their moorings.
They chose her by midday on 17 December. And by dawn of the 18th, had her ready to warp out of her berth, set scraps of sail and work her out past the bomb-proof jetties, carefully keeping east'rd of the shoal which ran from the west jetty to the narrow channel through the log boom. By dinner, they were anchored close to the water-fort of St. Louis, beneath the protective shelter of Fort La Malgue. They'd simmered up supper for their refugees the night before, and had served a cold breakfast and dinner by then. Though nothing they could do by way of hospitality could really cheer those refugees.
Chevalier Louis de Crillart had come aboard, a lieutenant in command of a remnant of his Royalist light-cavalry troop, about a dozen men all told, and their families. There was a Major de Mariel, whose vineyards and estate lay just a little east of Fort St. Catherine, an infantryman with wife and three children, servants and their families, and perhaps twenty of his remaining soldiers and their families. Charles de Crillart's gunners-half of them had wives, girlfriends or kids. Some of Lewrie's own British Jacks had made the acquaintances of girls of their own, and had snuck out to fetch them to the guardhouse, onto
Madame de Crillart and Sophie de Maubeuge already had his sleeping coach. Louis and Charles, with two other single officers, shared a stack of straw mattresses in the dining space, and the day cabins were awash in once wealthy or once titled humanity; mattresses, luggage and children everywhere one looked. He was crammed into the chart space.
Finally, after receiving two more miserable boatloads of Royalists (though not their piles of possessions) and a reduced company of the 18th Regiment of Foot, the Royal Irish, he had to beg off. There were nearly 300 people aboard, excluding crew, and he didn't have room or food for a jot more.
'Where do I quarter my men, sir?' the officer of the 18th asked.
'We've space below, on the orlop, sir,' Lewrie informed him. 'A stores deck, Lieutenant, uhm…? between kegs and such, but…'
'Kennedy, sir,' the wiry infantry officer beamed, one of those fellows, Lewrie could see at a glance, who was able to abide almost anything with a smile upon his lips. 'Stephen Kennedy,' he added, shaking hands jovially. 'Yes, the orlop. We discovered all we wished to know, and
'Indeed, sir,' Alan smiled in reply. 'Heard any more? How are things…?' he asked, waving towards shore.
'Buggerin' awful, if you ask me, sir,' Lieutenant Kennedy grumbled with a scowl. 'Bloody damned Dons, bloody damned Dagoes. Cut an' run, they did. We were at Mulgrave, night o' the sixteenth? Frogs broke through the Spanish. Our Captain Connolly, he rained us, and a prettier set-to a man's never seen, sir. Held as long as we could, but had to retire… down to the shore, and
'So I gathered,' Lewrie nodded.
'Latest now, sir,' Kennedy went on, blowing his nose on a calico handkerchief. 'We lost Fort Malbousquet and Missicy. Damme,' he griped as a pack of children came tearing along the gun deck, hallooing and yelping, around and between them. 'We were in town by then. That Artigues, and the St. Catherine abandoned? Town, Malgue, and western forts was the new line. Well, the buggerin' Neapolitans, sir… just up an' ran! Nobody