daggerlike at
Shammin' it, are you? he asked the distant French captain. Do a sloppy tack, just then, to reel us into gun- range? Make us cocky?
The big frigate hadn't been well handled, had luffed about as she'd come up to Stays, and had slowed to a crawl. They'd gained a full half mile on her before she was back up to speed bound Nor'east.
'Mister Knolles!' he shouted down. 'Hoist the main and mizzen t'~ gallant stays'ls! Get every stitch of canvas on her shell bear!'
And the winds… still out of the Sou'east, a backing Levanter. A sign of a weather-change, perhaps, he thought, lowering the telescope for a moment. He turned to look a'weather, over the arm threaded into the mizzen shrouds to maintain his perch. It was a clear horizon with no high-piled clouds to become thunderheads, no haze of a squall line. But there were cat's-paws and seahorses out there, faint wispy white irregularities that presaged a stronger breeze, winking at him from a slowly rolling sea.
'More wind coming, Mister Knolles!' he called down, then swung about to descend, to end up jumping from the bulwarks to the deck, and go to the wheel to peer into the compass binnacle. 'Might back on us, half a point, pray Jesus. We might be able to carry those t'gallant stays'ls. And half-reefed royals, too!'
'Aye, pray God, sir,' Knolles echoed.
Half an hour more, and
'She's heeled too much, sir,' Buchanon noted. ' 'Ey all three are, you'll note. Sailin' too much on th' shoulder, not th' keel. A long chase, but 'less she does somethin'…'
'Deck, there!
The pristine outline of the other ship-rigged sloop was smudged by a ragged haze of powder smoke, which ragged astern in a spreading, thinning pall, ragged alee and almost hid her from sight before they heard the faint, dull
Then, as
'Here's that wind, Mister Knolles,' Lewrie warned. 'Backing!'
'Helm alee, meet it, Quartermaster!' Knolles cried. 'Nothing to loo'rd, and mind your luff!'
Just as the shrill wind in the rigging could begin to rise in pitch,
'At wind-shift didn't reach her first?' Buchanon puzzled to the quarterdeck staff. 'Ah, 'ere she comes!'
The frigate heeled, as the change in direction and strength got to her at last.
And those two beyond she was protecting-they were heavily laden or poorly managed. Merchantmen, without a doubt, both of whom were rapidly being overtaken by their own escort and her pursuers. After a long glance, Lewrie didn't reckon that they were more than two miles to windward of the frigate-and
'We'll allow Commander Fillebrowne the windward side, Mister Knolles,' Lewrie said. 'Stand on as we are. Long as this breeze holds, that is.'
Another half hour passed, every ship thrashing and panting for the far horizon, but with the British warships closing the range, and the French frigate getting close enough to run down her charges. On her present course, she'd pass between them, risking being 'winded' by the massive spread of sail on the right-hand of the pair, slowing her even more. Every now and then, the impatient Commander Fillebrowne lit off his larboard bow-chaser, whenever
Still too far apart to beat to Quarters, Lewrie had the rations fetched up, with one man from every six-man mess dashing below to the berthing deck to bring up what had been abandoned. Today, like every Friday, it was a 'Banyan Day,' so the hands weren't missing much. A portion of cheese, some ship's biscuit, what remained of their mushy peas and their beer. More hop-flavoured water, that, than a genuine beer, a mere gnat's piss; but it kept longer in-cask than unhopped water did, and was never reduced in amount, like real water was. A sailor, ship's boy or bosun got a gallon a day of it.
'Yer Shrewsbury, sir,' Aspinall offered, fetching his plate to the taffrail flag-lockers, where Lewrie could dine in a semblance of privacy.
' Sandwich,' Lewrie countered.
'Not th' way I heard tell it, sir,' Aspinall countered, getting his little laugh again; his former master in London had told him that it had been Lord Shrewsbury who'd first ordered cold meat on a split half-loaf, creating the first 'sandwich' at the gaming-tables, too avid on a winning streak to break it, and not Lord Sandwich
'Cold pork, sir, sorry. Mustard, a slice o' mozzarella, with sweet gherkin… Shrewsbury, sir,' Aspinall tittered, after turning 'mozzarella' into a short aria.
'Oh, do bugger off, Aspinall,' Lewrie growled in good fettle.
'Knowing the lethargy of our Prize-Courts, Aspinall, I'd not hold my breath waiting.' Lewrie sighed between wolfish bites and blissful chewing. 'Why? You're not 'skint,' are you? In debt?'
'Nossir, nothin' like that. Just like t'have somethin' t'hand, like… t'send home now an' again,' Aspinall was quick to assure him. 'Never told my ma I was signin' 'board a warship, 'til it was done.'
'She poorly?' Lewrie enquired.
'A tad creaky, sir. Had a good place, when I left, but… never know when her people's position might change, or they take on someone younger t'do fer 'em.'
'Better this than go for a soldier, if you couldn't find some house yourself, to do for,' Lewrie told him. 'Aye, I'll see what the Prize-Court's up to, if you're worried.'
Aspinall was such a quiet fellow, always sidling about below on his chores, that he'd never given him much thought. 'Creaky'… that could mean rheumatic and feeble, all but unemployable when he signed aboard, and that was two years ago and more! His old clerk, Mr. Mountjoy, had written the lad's letters for him, read the one or two he'd gotten in reply, which were surely penned for his mother by a literate neighbour, shopkeeper or fellow house- servant.
Just
'Yea!' Midshipman Hyde exulted. 'Think he hit her that time!'
Lewrie gnawed off a larger bite and set the plate down, to get to his feet and go forward for a better look. The