expect we’ll hear all about it, come tomorrow.”
“Hark… gunfire, sir!” Westcott said of a sudden, head lifted as if sniffing the air like a hound.
No one aloft or on deck had seen the gun flashes, and the sound came down seconds later, after the flashes guttered out.
“Where away, the gunfire?” Lewrie yelled aloft, but no one had a clue.
“I
“Gunfire!” a lookout cried at last. “Deck, there! Gun flashes
“I see it, sir!” Midshipman Houghton cried. “
That was even
“Damme, could there be
“Pray Jesus we get to grips with
“We’ll
“Sorry, sir,” Simcock all but whispered, much abashed.
It took nearly that estimated half an hour to catch up with the trailing ships of the fleeing convoy, and to get close enough to one of them to speak her. “Hoy, there! This is
“Hoy, the
“Were you the one firin’ distress rockets?” Lewrie asked him.
“Aye! A big schooner come up from loo’rd and went aboard the ship astern of us, the
“Eat shit and die!” Lewrie muttered, and took a deep breath to calm himself before replying. “Where is
“Last we could see of her, she and the schooner put about onto larboard tack and headed off Sou’-Sou’west! Didn’t you
“God dammit!” Lewrie spat, realising that the
But, he could not do that. Once clear of the vicinity of the convoy, the privateer surely would head West for some American port to sell her off quickly, and trying to cut a course Westerly in hopes of stumbling across her and the privateer by mid-day tomorrow would be equally bootless. Besides, were there other privateers waiting to strike, he could not abandon the other helpless ships. He had to stay with the trade.
“Thankee, Captain Quarles! If the privateer schooner’s gone, ye may be safe for the night!” Lewrie called over.
“Ain’t you going after her?” Quarles demanded.
“I must stay with the convoy!” Lewrie shouted back. “And damned well ye know it… or should,” he whispered for his own benefit.
“Oh, too bad,” the Sailing Master said with a sigh. “But, we ain’t like that chap from the Bible… the Good Shepherd?”
“If we aren’t, Mister Caldwell, you can be damned sure that our Chaplain, Reverend Brundish, will
“How did it go?” Caldwell maundered on. “He went after the last wee lamb, instead of being satisfied with protecting the rest of his flock?”
“A parable, sir,” Midshipman Houghton supplied. “It was one of Lord Jesus’ parables.”
“
When it came time to round up the convoy at dawn, and chivvy them back into their proper columns after a long and fruitless night of wary patrolling, with the hands at Quarters and everyone sleepless and reeling, they could count up their losses.
Three ships had been plucked from the convoy during the night, by what was evidently a full three privateers, all of them schooners. The masters of a few ships that had escaped close encounters and had manoeuvred clear related breathless tales of being hailed and ordered to fetch-to by men who had declared their ships sailed with Letters of Marque and Reprisal issued by France. Some of those who had demanded surrender sounded French, but some sounded as English as plum duff!
Those losses had been galling enough, but to add to the misery there were the ones that had been damaged during the convoy’s panicky stampede to windward. The columns had shredded, wheeling away from the threat, bearing up towards the next column to starboard, and order had turned to shambles.
Another six vessels had gone aboard each other, tangling bow-sprits and jib-booms in another’s shrouds, or slamming hulls together and smashing chain platforms, which loosed tension on upper masts, and bringing them down in rats’ nests of sails, rigging, and spars. Those half-dozen not only had to be found, limping along astern of the rest, but rendered aid from sounder ships, or from the escort ships’ stores, as well.
“A very rum show, by Jove,” Captain Blanding mournfully said to his gathered captains early that next afternoon. “A rum show, I must say! And just how the deuce did they ever
No one wanted to touch
“Ehm…,” Captain Stroud finally broke the silence with a hesitant noise. “Might they have known to be on the lookout for a Summer trade, sir?”
“Uhm, possible, but…,” Blanding rejoined with a long sigh.
“Possibly the ‘runners,’ sir,” Lewrie felt just bold enough to add. “They were cruisin’ the likely course a trade’d take,
“From leeward… on a night as black as my boots,” Blanding mused most miserably.