'Stand by, Mister Spendlove!' Lewrie alerted the Second Officer, in charge of the main guns in the waist. 'You will make sure that all pieces fire as they bear, and bow-rake her!'
'Not quite yet… not quite…,' Lt. Westcott was muttering to himself, flexing his knees to ride the easy scend and roll of the ship as he peered intently at the lead ship, judging the range.
'Here it comes,' Lewrie said with a grunt as the Frenchman's two chase guns exploded from her forecastle at last. Those projectiles did not sound like round-shot; there was a whole, thin chorus of light shot that went soaring high above the decks; expanding bar-shot, chain-shot, and star-shot. 'Should've laid a wager, Mister Westcott,' he said with another pleased grunt as sails aloft were pierced, a few lines parted, and some splinters were torn from the top-masts.
'I make the range a bit over a quarter-mile, sir,' Lt. Westcott informed him.
'Good enough for me, sir,' Lewrie told him, then lifted a brass speaking-trumpet. 'Mister Spendlove! As you bear, you may open upon her!'
'Aye aye, sir!
As if paced by a metronome atop a parlour
'Deck, there!' a lookout high aloft, above the mists and powder smoke, shouted. ''Er foremast's by th' board! Sprit an' boom timbers be shot away!'
Lewrie had a dimmer view from the quarterdeck; even so, he could make out the French frigate's foremast crashing down in ruin, the light royal and t'gallant top-masts above her cross-trees collapsing zig-zag, and yards and sails swirling like a broken kite. The stouter timber of the mast above the foremast's fighting top was leaning forward like a new-felled tree, to drape over her forecastle, roundhouse, beakheads, and the shattered jib-boom and bow sprit!
'Bow-raked for certain, by God, sir!' Lt. Westcott was enthusing.
'Lamb t'the slaughter, Mister Westcott,' Lewrie growled, utterly delighted with the mental image of that murderous chaos, the terror, dismemberments, and wounds they had just inflicted yonder. 'I don't see
If the plan had been to get up to gun-range to the British, then wear in-succession and lay the French squadron broadside-to-broadside, that hope was unravelling, fast. With her foremast gone, and all of her fore-and-aft headsails lost with it, the leading frigate was crippled in a twinkling, unable to turn quickly to parallel
'Ready, lads…
The starboard foc's'le 12-pounder bow chaser erupted once more, followed by all the starboard beam 18- pounders, joined this time by the stubby 32-pounder carronades-the 'Smashers'-and the quarterdeck 9-pounders. The range was even closer, and they
The smoke slowly cleared from their second deliberately aimed broadside, revealing the French frigate's new hurts. She had managed to come about at 45-degree angles, baring her larboard side as if trying to bring her guns to bear, but… her main-mast had been decapitated a few feet above the fighting top, perhaps by a lucky hit from one of the 32-pounder carronades, and the press of wind had brought all above it down onto her larboard bulwarks, the cross-deck boat-tier beams, and her waist. Her reefed main course sail lay like a funeral shroud over it all. If she tried to fire back, there were good odds she'd set herself on fire from the sparks scattered among all that wreckage! Only her mizen mast still stood, flying t'gallant, tops'1, and her spanker. Now she was completely unable to manoeuvre or maintain steerage way! Her Tricolour flag was missing, yet… after a minute or so, someone over there took a small harbour jack Tricolour up the mizen shrouds to the fighting top, and nailed it to the mast.
Yet in those thinning mists, now they were clear of the frigate, Lewrie had a much clearer view of that hulking French 74-gunner! She had been about a cable astern of her consort when the first broadside had been fired. She had yet to be engaged.
'And what are
The lead frigate was now an immobile hulk, unable to sail and making no discernible way except for a painfully slow wheel to the North, laying herself almost at right angles to her flagship's course as that two-decker came on under a full press of sail on the light winds and her captain suddenly faced a horrid choice: wear cross the wind and turn Northerly to avoid ramming into his crippled frigate, and continue the engagement in more traditional line- against-line, or put up his helm and pivot Sou'west to avoid 'going aboard' the frigate, and meet
'She turns to face
'Not
'If she clears the frigate, sir,' Westcott said, taking a deep breath as the two-decker barrelled down on the crippled frigate, wheeling with her helm hard down and her tall sides heeling so far over her lower gun-deck ports were only a foot or so above the sea.
'Lay us Due North, sir!' Lewrie snapped to his First Lieutenant. 'Mister Spendlove! We will engage the two- decker!'
'Aye, sir!' Lt. Spendlove answered, though Lewrie was sure that he had to gulp in alarm first; in great sea battles, the fighting was left to the line-of-battle ships, and frigates stood by to aid any who needed assistance or to repeat signals down the smoky line. They most-certainly did
'A collision would be nice about now,' Lt. Westcott said with a hopeful note to his voice after passing orders to the helmsmen and the brace-tending hands.
'It