the ship where his men sat round the guns, ready to spring into action when ordered.
“Mister Merriman,” he called down, “see Bosun Sprague and assemble an armed boat crew. Mister Simcock?” he said to their officer of Marines, who had been idly pacing the starboard gangway behind the file of a dozen Marines posted by the bulwarks and rolled hammock nettings. “I’d admire some of your men to go with Mister Merriman to see just what’s out there, and board it, if it’s manageable.”
“
“May I have Cox’n Desmond and your boat crew, sir?” Lt. Merriman asked. At Lewrie’s emphatic nod, the Third Lieutenant turned about to point at Desmond, Furfy, and the rest, summoning them to the gangway and the starboard entry-port. “I’ll take one of the towed barges, sir, so we’ll have room enough for the ‘lobsterbacks.’ ”
“Very good,” Lewrie agreed. “Make sure you’ve a boat compass, and mark your reciprocal course. We’re not goin’ anywhere quickly, so we should be easy to find,” he japed.
“Mister Houghton,” he called to their oldest Midshipman, “I wish you to take the second barge, and some Marines, and seek out the boat out yonder,” he ordered, pointing off in the general direction that his ears had determined, repeating his warning to take a good boat compass.
“It ain’t whales, lads, and it ain’t sea-monsters,” Lewrie told them as loud as he dared. “They’re Frog fishermen, most-like, lost in the fog, and they haven’t a clue that
That seemed to satisfy most of the crew, though not all.
“Both the barges are away, sir,” Lt. Westcott reported. “Mister Houghton’s is almost out of sight, not a musket-shot off, and the other is already swallowed up. Wish you’d have sent me, sir,” he added.
“Are they gunboats, I need you here, sir,” Lewrie said. “If we end up seizing a couple of fishing smacks, there’s not enough glory in ’em. Why, Mister Westcott?” Lewrie posed with a grin. “Are ye in need of favourable notice with Admiralty? One of your
“Frankly, sir, but for the chance to be blown sky-high by one of our bloody torpedo contraptions, it’s been a dull Summer,” Lt. Westcott replied. “Looking for a bit of honest excitement was my desire.”
“Captain Speaks
“Just so long as we
Lewrie paced back to the binnacle cabinet, with his First Lieutenant dutifully following him.
“We’re making two and a half knots, sir, barely,” Mr. Caldwell, the Sailing Master, reported, his coat damp from supervising the cast of the log. “I was wondering about what you said, sir… that the local French fishermen would stay closer to shore, and no stiff wind could’ve blown them this far out where they might run into some of our ships on close blockade?”
“Aye, Mister Caldwell?” Lewrie prompted, feeling a shiver that he might be wrong in thinking that they had blundered into only small boats. He was
“Might the French have tried to sneak a convoy of invasion boats up the coast, and got caught the same as us in this odd turn of the weather?” Mr. Caldwell posed. “There’s a good, sheltered inlet South of us by Avranches and Saint Hilaire,” he said, referring to the chart for a moment. “Were they building
“And if they are a convoy of invasion craft, they might have an escort or two, is what you’re thinking?” Lewrie asked him, feeling yet another shiver of dread.
“Do we blunder up close to one, sir, perhaps they’ll take us for one of their big, three-masted
“Houghton’s boat must be upon it, whatever it is!” Lt. Westcott snapped, going to the larboard side in more haste than officers of the Royal Navy usually displayed. “French, for certain, by God!”
That demand was answered by a volley of musket shots, soft pops, and cracks muffled by the fog, from Midshipman Houghton’s men or the French they could not tell, but there came a human wail of surprise or pain, and thin cheers!
“Whatever it is, it sounds as if Mister Houghton thinks he can board it and take it, sir!” Westcott called over his shoulder. Even as he turned back to look out-board, there came a few more muffled cracks too soft for muskets; it sounded as if Houghton, his sailors, and the Marines might actually be aboard and close enough for pistol-shots!
“Dear Lord, if they’ve troops aboard!” Mr. Caldwell cautioned.
“Doesn’t sound like it,” Lewrie said after listening intently for more clues. There were no more shots, and only one more chorus of cheers, triumphant sounds, before the day went still once more, and he could not tell if it was British cheers, or from the French, who might have out-manned, swarmed, and over-awed Midshipman Houghton’s party to take them all prisoner. All Lewrie could hear was the groans from the barely swaying masts, the tilting yards, and
“
“
It took a few more seconds for that strange boat to appear to the people on the quarterdeck. First there was nothing but whiteness and fog, then a faint and darker shadowy bulk that magically materialised, only slowly taking solid form.
“What the Devil is
The French boat looked to be no further off than a long musket-shot, a two-masted
“A