on to us, and open to rakin' fire. Or we hold t'this course, and we barge into them, bows-on to
'Up to
'Aye, but I'd prefer to haul off… place ourselves 'twixt them and the East Pass into the river,' Lewrie schemed aloud. 'They'd
'They're hull-up already?' Lt. Westcott said, looking dubious. 'Surely they've spotted us, round the time we spotted them, sir.'
'Aloft, there!' Lewrie shouted, cupping his hands about his mouth. 'Have they turned away? And what is the order of their sailing?'
'Sailin' as
'They've seen us, right enough,' Lewrie told his officers. 'On a tear t'get into the Delta, to the Head of Passes, before we can close 'em! And in the same order as they were last night, with their troop ship to leeward so they could protect her.'
'She'll turn away,' the Sailing Master speculated.
'She'll press on, even if the others engage us,' Lewrie countered. 'She's too close to the end of her passage t'do else. Mister Westcott, shake the reefs from the main course and
'One can see them from the deck, sir!' Midshipman Grainger cried from the starboard mizen shrouds and a perch most of the way up them. Lewrie raised his telescope, focussed, then…
Inside that pearly mist, there were four complete sets of sails, rustling like spooks on the scant winds; there were darker smudges of hulls below them, and the mast-heads! They were
'Deck, there!' a new voice called. Midshipman Rossyngton had gone aloft to join the lookouts, and it was his thin piping that they heard. 'Lead two-decker stands on! The
Lewrie could see the hair-thin mast-heads pivotting, aligning themselves atop each other, as the three French warships came about to point roughly bows-on to their own line of battle.
The French would close them, with a frigate nearest to them and their two-decker 74 perhaps a cable further away, off the frigate's larboard quarters, and the trailing frigate even further away, off the 74's larboard quarter, like the last three fingers of Lewrie's left hand.
'Worn to larboard tack, sir?' Mr. Caldwell said, scratching his scalp with a pencil stub, up under his hat. 'They'll have to come off the wind 'fore they can cross our bows and rake us.'
'A clever way to close the range quickly,' Lt. Westcott mused.
'No, sirs… not clever at
'Aye, sir!' Grainger replied, hustling back to his duties by the flag lockers, perplexed by the term.
'He should've changed course no more than two points, in line-of-succession, not all at once,' Lewrie pointed out.
'They stay as they are and think t'sail down our starboard beam for broadsides on opposin' tacks, they're stacked on top of each other, 'less the followin' ships luff up in order t'fall in trail of the lead ship!' Lewrie urgently explained, arms swinging and his hands clapping before him, almost skipping about the deck in glee.
'And, do they come back to their original course, they'll end up bows-on to our
'Now, let's all pray Captain Blanding sees what we see,' Lewrie replied, turning to peer intently at
If Captain Blanding sent one of his lighter 32-gunned frigates off in chase that instant, from the rear of their line, it would take hours for one of them to fetch the two-decker transport into even
'Signal, sir!' Midshipman Grainger crisply reported. ''Form Line of Battle… Course West by North… With All Despatch'!'
'We've got 'em, Mister Westcott!' Lewrie exulted with a growl. 'By God, we've
CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN
They're coming back to line-ahead, sir!' Midshipman Rossyngton shouted down from the main-mast royal yard, a perch even more precarious than the cross-trees.
'Thankee, Mister Rossyngton!' Lewrie shouted back. 'Now come to the deck and take your station at Quarters! Hellish-odd,' he said in a much softer voice to Westcott as he lifted his glass to peer out for a sign of the foe. 'They see our mast-trucks and commissioning pendants, we see theirs, and all else is damn-all squiffy.'
'Aha, sir!' Lt. Westcott said, pointing with his telescope. 'I can just make out the lead frigate… there, sir! She'll be directly bows-on to us, square on our starboard beam, does she not alter course!'
Lewrie swivelled, found a ghostly bow sprit and jib-boom, about a mile to windward; found jibs and a foretopmast stays'l, then the tan-in-white square shapes of the leading frigate's forecourse and fore topsail. 'To windward of us… now
'I doubt they'll have
Lewrie looked up at the commissioning pendant; their line was on starboard tack, with the light winds from the Nor'east by East, and the French, after their last manoeuvre into line-ahead formation, were now sailing with those winds fine on their larboard quarters.
'And there's their seventy-four, just emerging astern of her,' Westcott added as the ponderous behemoth loomed up more solid from the mists, about a cable astern of the frigate.