the brightness of his eyes the only sign of amusement or joy the laconic older man ever evinced to others. 'Fair winds and deep water, then, for most of the day, sir. I will, for the space of it, breathe much easier.'

'Perhaps even caulk a bit, Mister Winwood?' Lewrie pretended to scoff. 'Heavens, where is your famed industry flown, then?'

'Held in reserve, sir, for more trying circumstances,' Winwood insisted. 'I assure you, sir, I do not flag in my zeal for accuracy or-'

'Never mind, Mister Winwood,' Lewrie said with a sigh, expecting that, should they be in active commission together for ten years, 'jest' and Winwood would never be mentioned in the same breath.

'Mister Catterall, you have the deck,' Lewrie said, turning to their Third Lieutenant. He took one last look at the gun-deck as the artillery was tompioned and bowsed snug to the bulwarks, a final peek aloft at the commissioning pendant for the wind direction, then went aft and below to his own breakfast.

Shore bread, butter and jam, a proper two-egg omelette with two strips of bacon and some grated cheese-done firmer and fluffier to his liking, not the runny Frog fashion-and Lewrie was sated. Once the tack to the Sou'Sou'east was completed, he thought, there would be bags of time to idle, with a cup of hot chocolate, and a new chapter in one of his books. Perhaps even one of Mr. Winwood's naps, he speculated, 'twixt then and 'Clear Decks And Up-Spirits' at Seven Bells of the Forenoon, then Noon Sights?

'Deck, there!' the faint cry came wafting down. 'Sail ho! Off th' larboard quarters!'

Boxing the compass in his mind, Lewrie frowned in puzzlement at that news, only slowly rising from the table to don one of his cotton coats; the wind was more Nor'east by North, and Proteus was now close-hauled on the starboard tack, steering Nor'west by North. For a ship to be sighted astern of her, off the larboard quarter, would put her down to the Sou'west of them.

How could they have missed her earlier, unless she was bound North from the Windward Passage, astern of them at dawn? Or, he also supposed, beginning to smile in anticipation, she had rounded Cuba by way of the Old Bahama Passage, south of Great Inagua, and was sailing Sutherly.

'Deck, there! Two sail off th' larboard quarters!'

Thud went the Marine sentry's musket butt on the deck. 'Midshipman o' th' watch, sah!'

'Come.'

'Mister Catterall's duty, sir, and…' Midshipman Grace began to say.

'I heard it, too, Mister Grace. Run tell Mister Catterall that I'll be on deck directly, and he is to ready the ship about.'

'Aye aye, sir!' Grace yelped with excitement, scuttling out in a twinkling to scamper up to the quarterdeck and relay his orders.

Before Lewrie could get to the quarterdeck, the bosun's calls were shrilling, and Proteus thundered to the drum of feet as the crew came up from below. Officers and mates were calling for order, readying them to wear off the wind and head Sou'west.

Leaving the evolution in capable hands, Lewrie took a telescope from the binnacle rack and went aloft, up the larboard mizen shrouds to just below the cat-harpings to 'weave' his limbs about the stays and rat-lines for a quick peek.

He saw what he thought were two schooner-rigged vessels, close together, the rake of their masts and the slant of their bat-wing fore and aft sails putting him in mind of American-built schooners; heading Sutherly, for certain, according to the 'arrow' of their jibs and main sails pointing in that direction. They were well hull-down, with only the upper parts of their sails showing, so far. Schooners were wicked-fast, but…

He grinned once more. Off the wind, though, unless they hoisted crossed yards, a frigate with its acres of sail and a long waterline could run them down, once it got a bone in its teeth. Placed as they were, with Proteus to windward, the schooners had nowhere to run, or beam-reach, where they could use their famous speed. Beating up near the eye of the wind was out, for Proteus was already there!

He shut the glass and scampered down as Lt. Langlie issued the final orders to wear. The after-guard who tended the mizen had little need of an officer in the rigging, to daunt their work.

'It couldn't be that Yankee Doodle revenue clown, d'ye think?' Lt. Catterall whispered, once they had fetched the schooners hull-up, after a hard hour of sailing off-wind. 'One schooner, chasing another? He might've gotten lucky. Sooner or later, anyone may.'

'All cats are grey in the dark, old son,' Lt. Wyman softly replied. 'Diff rent colour scheme to these… I think.'

'Do they part…' Catterall continued.

'Don't go borrowing trouble,' Wyman countered, looking shocked at the notion of two disparate Chases to run down.

Lewrie paced away from them, out of earshot. The dread of the schooners haring off on widely different courses had already occurred to him, and he didn't wish to hear such, either; the word was the sire to the deed… like causing the worst to happen just by saying it out loud. Or wishing on the wrong star!

The schooners had hardened up on the wind a bit, to use all the power of it they could; now they bore just a bit East of South, but on that course, they'd ram aground near Mole Saint Nicholas on the north arm of Saint Domingue's bay, did they stand on. That, or run into one more British blockader, and have to shy away.

Were they smart, Lewrie fretted, one might bear away Sou'west, angling for the Jamaica Channel, and the other, to put about and sail for Cuba 's eastern tip. Why they were still together, he could not fathom, for it was the obvious ploy. He could only catch one of them, and had already determined that the Cuba-bound one would be the easier prey; he could cut the corner on her and fetch her up, whilst the other stood a poor chance of sailing past Saint Domingue without being taken by another Royal Navy patroller. But here they both were, clinging to each other as if glued or chained, the one astern slightly slower than her consort. There were about two miles between them now, and Proteus was within two miles of the nearest.

And God help 'em, if they're more Yankees, Lewrie thought, still rankled by the wild goose chase that Trumbull had run them. The idea of wasting an entire day in pursuit of a brace of idiots would be galling.

Maybe I'll flog me one, Lewrie imagined, rather happily; for an example to the others!

He began to pace, head down and his hands clutched in the small of his back, unable to stand and wait any longer. Forrud along the larboard gangway, all the way to the forecastle and back, as if by pacing he could walk Proteus closer to them.

'Floggin'!' a seaman called, making Lewrie wonder if they were of the same mind, did these schooners turn out to be callow Americans.

'Summat carried away, there! 'Er mains'l's floggin'!'

Lewrie raised his head and peered at the far Chase; sure enough, her mains'l was now winged out and flapping like laundry, and she sat flatter on her bottom, instead of being heeled over so far, and in his quickly hoisted telescope he could barely espy a scurry of activity on her small quarterdeck, even a pair of ant-like figures ascending the shrouds to re-rove either her throat or peak halliard. He swung to see what the trailing schooner was doing, and found her standing on, still on course-no, by God! She was falling off the wind a bit, to run nearer her consort, as if she would come alongside and aid her!

'What in the world?' he muttered, puzzled even more.

Proteus now loped nearer the pair of them, almost within a long gun-range, and Lewrie quickly strode aft to his proper place among his officers on the quarterdeck.

'Mister Langlie, we'll try a ranging shot from the fore chases,' he snapped, once there, at the centre of the hammock nettings. 'If anything else, we'll put the wind up 'em.'

'Aye, sir! Mister Catterall… a ranging shot!'

'Aye aye!'

Moments later, after much fiddling, the starboard 6-pounder gave out a sharp bark, flinging a ball with the quoin completely out from underneath the breach to stretch the gun's reach. Lewrie could see that roundshot as it

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