frigate was lashing along, but still overpressed, within a half mile of her merchantmen.
'Ahem, Mister Knolles,' he said, swallowing. 'Kindly beat us to Quarters. I think we're close enough, at last.'
'Aye aye, sir! Bosun, Sergeant Bootheby, turn out your drummers! Beat to Quarters!'
Gun crews closed up, starboard ports open and great-guns run out,
'Haulin'!' Half a dozen throats spoke at once. She
'Mister Knolles, haul us two points free, and ease the braces,' Alan ordered. 'But be ready to come back on the wind when I say so. Mister Crewe?' he called to the Master Gunner below.
'Aye, sir?'
'Ready with starboard broadsides. Load with chain, bar and star shot. Quoins out, and aim for his rigging!' Lewrie chortled. Being alee of their foe had one advantange: His windward guns would be elevated higher than the frigate's, which would be firing her larboard battery, the lee side… the canted-over, low side. Even with
He looked astern.
'A point higher, sir. Sidle up and close the range.' Lewrie fretted, pacing the starboard bulwarks, from the gangway ladder near the trunk of the main mast, to abeam the wheel-drum. 'Wait for it, Mister Crewe! Pick your moment when we round up!'
The frigate was on
'Least he's stayin' to fight, Alan breathed in relief.
'Haulin'!' those half dozen commentators shouted once more. A change in aspect, as the frigate fell away even more off the wind, her gun-ports open and filled with black muzzles. She'd turn on
'For what they're 'bout to receive…' Spenser breathed from the helm, with Brauer and two mates now manning it.
'Better them than us'n,' Mr. Tucker the Quartermaster's Mate completed.
Savage bellows, far deeper than the barks of a chase-gun, those Frog 18-pounders roared out, her whole side lit up and befogged by a well-timed broadside! Huge pillars and feathers of spray rose round
'Close-haul, Mister Knolles! Get ready, Mister Crewe!' Alan screeched. 'As she comes back on the wind!
'Ready… wait'll she steadies, lads! On the up-roll..
'Stop yer vents! Swab out! Charge yer guns…!' Mr. Crewe was howling, at men who'd suddenly gone half deaf to the fierce but higher barking of the 9-pounders.
'Off the wind, Mr. Knolles. Two points free, again.' 'Aye, sir.' Knolles coughed, turning his attention inboard after trying to see what damage they'd done.
As the smoke thinned and drifted off alee, Lewrie could espy some damage aloft aboard the frigate, which was rounding back up to lay closer to the wind. They'd caught her at a bad angle-for her, at any rate; almost forward larboard bows-on, their iron-mongery all aimed close together. She was missing her main and fore royal masts, high above the deck, and her fore t'gallant, and fore t'gallant stays'l were holed and flapping, ready to tear apart from the bolt-ropes! They'd crippled her!
More firing, as
'Ready, sir!' Crewe reported from the foot of the starboard ladder. 'Disablin' shot, still, Cap'um.'
'Very good, Mr. Crewe, we'll be rounding up shortly.' He beamed back. Closer still, too; they were now well within Range-To-Random-Shot-less than a nautical mile! He watched the frigate go hard on the wind, to serve
'Helm a'weather, Mr. Knolles! Haul our wind, and show them our stern!' Lewrie called. 'Can't stern-rake us bad at that range!' 'Aye aye, sir!'
'Steady, thus!' Knolles shouted, chopping his forearm to show the course, after a glance aft.
Spray, close-aboard, the fatal moaning and screeching of heavy shot as it missed the ship by inches, caroming off the wave-tops near the starboard side. More feathers of spray to starboard and larboard, first tall and impressive at First-Graze, then ricocheting past in a series of, bounds. And a quick, hard shudder, and the deadly
'Helir alee, Mister Knolles. Lay us full-and-by. Mr. Crewe? Stand ready!' Lewrie barked, angry that his beautiful ship had been hit, and suddenly filled with a need for vengeance.
Up to the winds edge they swept again, the deck canting over hard before she steadied. Mister Crewe paced aft behind his gunners, judging the best moment, kneeling to peer out a gun-port. 'Ready… on the up-roll!
A monstrous jarring bellow of noise, the decks blotted out by an opaque, reeking fog. The deck shuddered in sudden recoil as she heeled once more.
The smoke cleared quickly as Mr. Crewe fisted and shoved his men to hasten their work, kept them hopping to stop their vents and swab out, to align the run-out tackle and recoil tackle, then begin to reload.
'Splendid, Mister Crewe! Serve 'em another!' Knolles cried, slamming his right fist into his left palm over and over.
They'd decapitated the French frigate! Now she was missing both fore and main royals entirely, and both fore and main t'gallant sails were flagging bits of shredded laundry. Lewrie eyed her with a telescope and saw ant- figures scurrying from her main top along the main-course yardarm to free the gaskets of that large sail, to restore the power she'd just lost. The frigate rode more upright on her keel, now they'd shorn her of that over-press of sail. Slower, unable now to scamper off to weather, she'd have to stand and fight. But, like a wounded bear, she'd be a