righted itself for an instant before capsizing. A few men swam among the wreckage. Hornblower looked over to port; the other gunboat had been as hard hit, lying at that moment just at the surface with the remains of her crew swimming by her. Whoever had been in command of those gunboats had been a reckless fool to expose the frail vessels to the fire of a real vessel of war — even one as tiny as the
The chasse-maree and the
“Mr. Freeman, load with canister, if you please. We’ll run alongside the Frenchman. One broadside, and we’ll board her in the smoke.”
“Aye aye, sir.”
Freeman turned to bellow orders to his crew.
“Mr. Freeman, I shall want every available hand in the boarding-party. You’ll stay here —”
“Sir!”
“You’ll stay here. Pick six good seamen to stay with you to work the brig out again if we don’t come back. Is that clear, Mr. Freeman?”
“Yes, Sir Horatio.”
There was still time for Freeman to make the arrangements as the
“Lay us alongside,” said Hornblower to the helmsman. There was confusion on the decks of the
“Quiet, you men!” bellowed Hornblower. “Quiet!”
Silence fell on the brig; Hornblower had hardly to raise his voice to make himself heard on the tiny deck.
“See that every shot tells, you gunners,” said Hornblower. “Boarders, are you ready to come with me?”
Another yell answered him. Thirty men were crouching by the bulwarks with pikes and cutlasses; the firing of the broadside and the dropping of the mainsail would set free thirty more, a small enough force unless the broadside should do great execution and the untrained landsmen in the
“Down mains’l,” roared Freeman.
The
“Come on!” yelled Hornblower — it was desperately important to make sure of the
The brigs stood higher out of the water than did the chasse-maree; this time they had to climb upward. He got his left elbow over the bulwark, and tried to swing himself up, but his sword hampered him.
“Help me, damn you!” he snarled over his shoulder, and a seaman put his shoulder under Hornblower’s stern and heaved him up with such surprising goodwill that he shot over the bulwarks and fell on his face in the scuppers on the other side, his sword slithering over the deck. He started to crawl forward towards it, but a sixth sense warned him of danger, and he flung himself down and forward inside the sweep of a cutlass, and cannoned against the shins of the man who wielded it. Then a wave of men burst over him, and he was kicked and trodden on and then crushed beneath a writhing body with which he grappled with desperate strength. He could hear Brown’s voice roaring over him, pistols banging, sword-blades clashing before sudden silence fell round him. The man with whom he was struggling went suddenly limp and inert, and then was dragged off him. He rose to his feet.
“Are you wounded, sir?” asked Brown.
“No,” he answered. Three or four dead men lay on the deck; aft a group of French soldiers with a French seaman or two among them stood by the wheel, disarmed, while two British sailors, pistol in hand, stood guard over them. A French officer, blood dripping from his right sleeve, and with tears on his cheeks — he was no more than a boy — was sitting on the deck, and Hornblower was about to address him when his attention was suddenly distracted.
“Sir! Sir!”