open, baring the hideous wounds beneath, cloth stained bright red over purpling puckers and slashes. His face was a new-paper white, his eyes unfocused, and his breath a faint, labouring wheeze, with small flecks of foamy blood on his lips.
'Mister Durant, Mister Hodson… see to Mister Nicholas, while I see Mister Sevier below,' Shirley said, getting to his feet and leading the loblolly boys and their burden to the gun-deck ladder.
'What happened, Mister Nicholas?' Lewrie asked the terrified boy, who stood and shuddered, all but blubbering, as blood dripped from his injured arm.
'S-Samboes, sir,' Nicholas replied between chattering teeth, 'Hundreds of 'em! Broke the line. They were in the trenchworks with knives and bayonets, killin' our people left and right, and laughing fit to bust, sir! Jemmy, he… him and the Army signallers against a dozen, and him with just a pistol and his dirk! They got that far behind our lines, sir, before… I saw. one of the signalmen running and shouting they were all being slaughtered, and I…'
What little Mister Nicholas needed, first of all, was a hug and a lap, Lewrie thought, but that was impossible; he was a 'gentleman volunteer,' a future officer.
'I tried, sir, honest I did!' Nicholas wailed, fresh tears coursing down his cheeks, cutting clean runnels in the filth on his face as he shivered, trying to remain 'manful' before the ship's people. 'But they were jab-bin' him and cuttin' at him after he was down, before we got there, and then they came for me, and they were so big and horrid, sir, and if the soldiers hadn't come… I lost my dirk, sir. I looked for Jemmy's, too, but they took it 'fore they were run back across the trenchworks. I'm sorry, sir! I lost my dirk!'
A gentleman's blade, be it inherited sword or humble dagger, was part of his honour; to Nicholas, he had failed miserably at saving his fellow midshipman and friend, had been bested and wounded when faced with face-to-face combat, and, to top it all, had lost his blade. Sure sign of failure, perhaps even a sign of cowardice, to drop it and run.
The 6-pounders and carronades bellowed again; Lewrie had to wait to speak 'til the echoing roar passed.
'No matter, Mister Nicholas,' he said, touching Nicholas on his left shoulder. 'You went to his aid like a brave fellow, and helped the Army stop their charge after he rushed to yours. Then you brought him back aboard, so he could be among his shipmates. No shame in any of that.'
So he can most-like perish among his shipmates, Lewrie thought.
'Now, let the surgeon's mates tend you,' Lewrie said, giving him another reassuring pat on the shoulder before returning to the quarterdeck. But he could hear Mr. Nicholas's cries when they tried to peel his coat off, to cut his shirt sleeve away and lift the cloth from the wound; Nicholas sounded like one of his sons after skinning a knee, and nowhere near a stoic young 'gentleman volunteer.'
'Ready way up there?' Wandsworth was shouting to the 'gunners on the foc'sle. 'Ready, here? Fire!'
Midshipman Grace interrupted Lewrie's gloomy thoughts. ' Halifax has hoisted another signal, sir. It's 'Captain Repair on Board.' '
'We still fly 'Unable' and 'Am Engaged,' Mister Grace?' he asked, hands in the small of his back.
'Aye, sir.'
'Haul 'em down, then rehoist 'em in reply,' Lewrie said with a snarl. 'He don't like that, he can go fuck himself.'
'Uhm… aye, aye, sir!' Grace said, blushing and tittering.
By dusk, when the wagging signal flags could no longer be read and Proteus had shot away her last stand of grapeshot, her last cannister of musket balls, even the lot scavenged from pre-made loads for the 12-pounder great-guns, the ship fell silent.
Halifax had not responded to her call for shot, but had anchored about a cable's distance away in deeper water, along with the merchant ships she had escorted into Mole Saint Nicholas.
Rather surprisingly, those hired ships had become beehives of activity, disembarking boatloads of soldiers who were quickly rowed to the beaches and quays, followed by heaping piles of supplies, ammunition, and field guns.
When the last shot had been fired, Lewrie called for his cox'n and boat to be rowed over to Halifax. Pointedly, he did not change to a clean uniform, nor scrub his face and hands; the greyness of his uniform from the gun smoke fog would speak for him.
'Excuse me, sir,' Mr. Shirley said, just before he could leave the quarterdeck for his gig, and a salute from the side-party. 'That poor lad Sevier passed over, sir. And Mister Nicholas… the slash on his arm quite shattered it. We had to take it off, just below the shoulder, Captain.'
Lewrie blanched. 'Nothing else to be done?'
'No use of it, now, sir,' Mr. Shirley replied, 'and no feeling in it at all. Half-severed, already, and why he didn't exanguinate on the dock before your boat fetched him is a wonder, Captain.'
'Very well, then, Mister Shirley,' Lewrie said with a mournful sigh. 'You did your best for him… for them both. Thankee.'
'We were lucky with you, sir,' Shirley admitted. 'Those boys, well… there's only so much modern medicine may do, sorry to say.'
'Well, then…' Lewrie lamely said in answer, unconsciously massaging his left arm, and turning away.
'Damn you, Captain Lewrie! Damn you for blatant insubordination and arrogance!' Captain Blaylock howled, as soon as Lewrie had been let into his great-cabins under Halifax?, poop. 'You frigate captains are all alike, damn your blood… swaggerin' cock-a-hoops who think they hung the bloody moon I will lay formal charges before Admiral Parker and see you court-martialed! I'll see you broken, d'ye hear me?'
'That is your right, sir,' Lewrie wearily replied, prepared for a 'cobbing' since mid-afternoon, and steeled beforehand for any abuse that the choleric Captain Blaylock had in his shot-lockers. 'It will also be my right to point out to the court that I was unable to clear the mooring, since I was engaged in supporting the Army ashore. With testimony from the Royal Artillery officers aboard at the time, or the testimony of Brigadier Sir-'
'Blazing away at nothing!' Blaylock bellowed back. 'Firing off blank charges, just to excuse your insolence! Firing blind!'
'Indirect fire, sir… lofting grape and cannister to harass the slave troops,' Lewrie pointed out.
'There's no such bloody thing!'
'There is now, sir,' Lewrie responded, almost ready to chuckle in genuine insolence, too tired and sad to let Blaylock's insults get to him. The only thing that irked was the presence of Halifax 's lieutenants, summoned aft to watch their captain take the hide off an upstart. Lewrie snuck a peek from the corners of his eyes at them; some of the six seemed to enjoy the show, though the much put-upon Duncan and others seemed ashamed of the spectacle, their eyes on the painted deck covering. Disputes between Post-Captains, personal or professional in nature-most especially taking another officer to task or upbraiding a midshipman, petty officer or mate-was not to be done in public. If there was no way to find privacy, it was to be done out of earshot, with no noticeable vitriol or raised voices.
Good officers, good captains don't do it this way, Lewrie told himself; but Blaylock, well… says it all, don't it?
'It's impossible, damn your eyes!' Blaylock insisted.
'Then I suggest you ask of Captain Wandsworth, Royal Artillery, sir,' Lewrie coolly rejoined. 'He's rather proud of what we did, and is simply panting t'write a paper on it for the Royal Society. Oh, I dare say he'll take all the credit for it, call it the Wandsworth System of Supporting Fires, but he needed Royal Navy guns to do it, sir.'
Lieutenant Duncan and three others stifled smirks of glee, even snorts of taboo laughter. There then came a rap on the door.
'Come!' Captain Blaylock snarled, and a wary-looking midshipman entered the great-cabins. 'Well, what the Devil is it?'
'Excuse me, Captain sir, but Brigadier General Sir Harold Lamb has come aboard, and…' the boy managed to stutter.
'Well then, fetch him in, damn yer eyes!' Blaylock snapped.
The midshipman gulped, reddened, and dashed out of sight, coming back a long moment later to hold the door open while an Army officer and an aide-de-camp entered the great-cabins, ducking under the beams overhead, and almost managing not to knock their white wigs askew, or bang their noggins on the polished oak.
'Captain Blaylock?' the general officer in all the gilt lace and gimp enquired, fanning his sweaty face in the close warmth of the cabins.