hopelessly lost, and when the sun rose they'd find themselves far from where they were needed, unable to hit the pirates' camp in time to coordinate with Captain Lewrie's seaward attack. The pirates would be awake and ready for them, it'd turn into a disaster, and…!
'Passin' th' word, there… awf'cers, front,' the Marine said in a raspy, weary whisper.
Lt. Catterall almost tiptoed forward, trying to go quiet, but the many scrub bushes and palm-like swishing greenery made that a forlorn hope. He finally made out two men who stood before the kneeling sailors and Marines, men in cocked hats peeking round a thick cypress at something: Devereux and Capt. Nicely.
'Smell them, sir?' Devereux asked with a happy grin. 'We are there. They are there, just yonder, the other side of this wall.'
'A wall, sir?' Catterall said, trying not to sound 'windy' to his comrades-in-arms. 'Damme, not a fortification, is it?'
'Irregular,' Capt. Nicely hesitantly opined, wiping sweat from his brows with a calico handkerchief. 'Not
'No sentries, though,' Devereux took note.
'Might've heard us thrashin' about and already mustered behind this wall, just waitin',' Catterall grumbled.
'Don't croak, Mister Catterall,' Capt. Nicely chid him.
'Their fields of fire haven't been cleared,' Lt. Devereux said in further assessment, pointing at the stumps of downed trees and the many small trees that still stood, the irregular clumps of scrub bush that remained. 'Damn' shoddy way to maintain a fortification, really. The low places here and there
'We're too few to attack that.' Capt, Nicely sighed. 'If it
'No time for that, sir,' Lt. Devereux said with a hitch to his voice and a fatalistic shrug. He began to strip off his red coat and bright brass gorget, unwind his scarlet officer's sash, and discard his sword baldric with its rectangular brass plate, removing his sword from the frog and holding it scabbarded in his left hand. 'You gentlemen will excuse me for a few minutes, sirs?'
Devereux crouched down and warily sneaked from one large tree to the next 'til he'd reached the scrub, his spotless white shirt and breeches melding into the mists,
'Sweet Jesus,' Devereux whispered as he steeled himself, then rose to a half crouch and sprinted to the cover of a clump of bushes. Halfway there! Dry-mouthed, panting, fear-sweat popping on his skin, he scanned the wall for danger. It was one thing for him to stand by his men and order volleys. He stood the same odds as a private facing enemy fire then, but this!
There was more sand than grass near the foot of the irregular, rough-surfaced impediment… as if a lane
He crunched to the base of the wall, gasping like a hound, fears gibbering at his brain, his nerves twanging like harpsichord strings, chest upon its lumpy, irregular roughness as he tried to quiet the bellow's roar that came from his own frankly scared breathing, wanting to shush noises that his slightest movement made, the hollow tinkling and gravelly-
What the bloody Hell?
His left hand came up from his sword hilt to take up a palm full of loose, broken, sharp-edged but weathered shells! Clam and mussel, larger sun-bleached oyster shells. The smaller shells he rolled in his hand like dice before very quietly putting them back in place. Fighting to contain his giggles, he crept to his left under one of the high heaps 'til he reached a low saddle between mounds, peeked cautiously over it, and felt another giggling fit swell up, which he quickly stifled, then got to the business of reconnaissance, wishing he'd thought to fetch away pencil and paper.
'Well, damn my eyes!' Capt. Nicely gasped when told the nature of that forbidding 'fort.'
'Allow me to suggest, sir, that we bring our men up to the foot of the shell heaps,' Lt. Devereux said as he donned his uniform again. 'Load muskets and pistols, my men to fix bayonets as well, then wait for our ships' arrival. Once the camp's well stirred to confront that threat, would be the ideal time to strike right to the beach, cut right through their camp and take possession of the earthen mounds, so our musketry has the only high ground, forcing the pirates to clamber up in the face of our cutlasses, bayonets, and muzzles, sir.'
'Damme, I like it, Lieutenant Devereux!' Capt. Nicely chirped, suddenly reinfused with pep and vinegar. 'Like it, indeed, hah hah! And
'One flies what looks to be a French Tricolour, sir. T'other has no flag aloft,' Devereux replied as he hung his rank gorget about his neck once more and clapped on his cocked hat, taking time to set it in the regulation manner. 'Though the wind is limp, sir.'
'Harbour Watch aboard 'em?' Nicely pressed.
'Couldn't tell, sir,' Devereux said with a wry grin as he took his telescope from a side pocket of his coat. 'I quite forgot to put this in my waist-band, so… '
'Then let's be up against your heaps, sir, and I'll squint at 'em myself!' Capt. Nicely cheerfully, eagerly declared.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
C
A shambling steward fetched him a silver pot of hot