wind, she'd cross ahead
'Mister Knolles, ready about! Stations for Stays!' Lewrie said with a wry smile. 'We'll come to starboard tack. Make our new course east by south.'
'Aye aye, sir,' Knolles replied automatically, though sounding quizzical. 'Mister Porter, pipe hands to Stations for Stays. Ready to come about!'
'Only a purblind fool'd come about like 'at, Cap'um,' Buchanon opined. 'Meanin'
'My thoughts, exactly, Mister Buchanon,' Lewrie agreed with a soft laugh. 'Remind you of a mother goose, leading the stoat away from her hatchlings?'
'Flaggin' th' broken wing, aye, Cap'um.'
'That pair to the east'rd, they're hoping to get away. This'un might be their leader. A merchant poleacre, yes. But perhaps carrying a French naval officer aboard. As short of ships as they are, it might even be a well-
'Ready about, sir,' Knolles reported.
'Very well, Mister Knolles. Tack the ship about.'
Half an hour on starboard tack, floating almost without visible effort, now, across the seas, on a close reach with the winds nearly on her beam-Striding closer and closer to those two poleacres, who were forced by her presence, and the threat of the so-far unseen Cape Corse to haul their wind even farther, steer due east to try and
'Sail Ho!' came a cry from the foremast lookout, Rushing.
Lewrie twitched, almost began a quick dash to the shrouds to take a peek for himself, but checked his motion. It looked like an upright stumble, which made him blush in chagrin; chiding himself for appearing to start at the slightest omen, like a goose-girl!
'Two points to weather, that'd be…' he said, instead, stalking to the chart, trying to seem deliberate, this time. 'Down near the Cape, 1 believe, Mister Buchanon?'
'Aye, sir. Inshore o' Cape Corse, west o' it, do we see her with her royals'r t'gallants 'bove th' horizon,' Buchanon agreed.
'Show me the Frog; with any sense at all, who'd venture into San Fiorenzo Bay or its approaches by herself.' Lewrie frowned. 'Surely, tins new-come's bound to be one of ours.'
'Oh, bad luck, sir,' Knolles groaned. 'Another man o' war to go shares with, should we take these last two.'
'Well, they haven't a hope of our bilander, the tartane, or our dhow, at any rate, Mister Knolles. They weren't in sight when we took
'Signal, sir!' Rushing shouted down to them from far forward.
With both midshipmen, who normally were in charge of the signal nag lockers, away on prizes, it fell to Lewrie himself to delve into the binnacle cabinet drawers for the latest code combinations.
'Ah, hum… right, then,' he concluded, after a long moments fumbling over a loose sheaf of wrinkled papers that threatened to go overside with the wind. 'This month's recognition code, to the tee, gentlemen. She's one of ours. Mister Knolles? Do you have the White Ensign hoisted to the mainmast truck, and reply… uhm… Fifteen… Twenty-Two… Three… Repeater… Four. Got that?'
'Aye aye, sir,' Knolles called back, snapping his fingers at a man of the after-guard, one of those literate 'strikers' who assisted on the taffrails as a signalman.
Barely had that been bent on and hoisted high on the weather side of the mizzenmast, where it could be more easily read, than the newly arrived ship up to the sou'east hauled down her original hoist, and up went another one identifying her. Then a third; this one, orders.
'Pursue… Chase… More closely…' Lewrie translated, as the numerals were read off to him. Feeling like a half-wit midshipman all over again, at how long it was taking him, compared to the fluency of his inferiors. And with every eye on the quarterdeck upon him, too! 'To Loo'rd!' he completed, puffing out his cheeks in frustration.
Well, o'
'Haul our wind, Mister Knolles,' Lewrie snapped. 'Give us two points free, to east by north. And, topmen aloft, to set royals.'
'Aye, sir.'
Captain cashiered for her loss, first lieutenant court-martialed with him; fourth and fifth killed, third lieutenant convicted of cowardice… oh, she'd been a miserable old hag, even before then, and a terrible place for a seventeen-year-old to begin a naval career. Autumn of 1780, it was…
Damme, I'm gettin' bloody
He took a deep breath, clapped his hands together, and paced to the lee bulwarks with a telescope, to shrug off just how far back, in the antedeluvian age, he'd really gotten his 'ha'porth of tar'!
There was their bilander, pacing along about ESE, four or five miles alee and off the larboard quarter. Nearer in to them was their tartane, only a mile astern, but three miles alee. And Spendlove and his dhow- or whatever else one might call it!-was, of course, the poor third, behind them all, even though she'd been the last, nearest, taken. A clumsy, udder-swinging old cow to begin with, and now directed by English tars, who'd never even clapped
And the poleacre that had tried to decoy them away from her two consorts was…
'Christ, shat on a biscuit!'
She'd hauled her wind, worn about to run with the wind large on her starboard quarter, and was not three miles astern of
'Mister Knolles, new course… nor'east!' Lewrie shouted. 'And bend on a signal to our prizes… Make All Sail. And add 'Imperative' to that! Uhm… they are to…'
Half-past ten o'clock of the Forenoon Watch, by then, the winds beginning to abate, beaten into sullen submission by the oppressive and sultry heat of a Mediterranean July. Last summer around Toulon had been a coolish fluke of nature, all that rain and nippish cold. Here in the Ligurian Sea, summer winds were fickle, at best, a morning's gale blown out and hammered to compass-boxing zephyrs by midday. Just what they needed least, Lewrie thought. And hellish bad timin', too!
'Deck, there!' Rushing called from the foremast.
'Almost polite of him, consid'rin',' Lewrie said with a grimace. What that full-of-ginger post-captain yonder had