CHAPTER 50

od's teeth, the Spanish are slow-witted rabbit-suckers.' On the forecastle of the Revenge, Drake watched the Armada in the first light of dawn through his tele-scope. 'We are at war. Did they expect us to sit back and wait for them to attack?'

'What could have distracted them?' Carpenter mused.

'Ha!' Drake laughed. 'Their topmen have finally seen us. Now there will be a commotion aboard their ships, and Medina Sidonia's prayers will amount to naught!'

Closing his tele-scope with a snap, Drake set about ordering his men to prepare for battle, boosting their spirits with loud bragging and comical contempt for their enemy.

If Carpenter had doubted whether Drake's skills matched his arrogance, he was convinced now. During the night, Drake, Howard, and the other commanders had left five ships floating in easy sight of the Armada. It had fooled the Spanish into thinking the entire fleet was steady, while eighty ships were taken upwind to claim the weather gage. The English now had the advantage.

Launceston waited calmly by the rail, as though the horrors of the previous day had never happened. But at times Carpenter saw the earl's eyes flicker towards him; a bond had been forged, however much Carpenter was repulsed by it. If Drake guessed what had happened, he showed no sign of it; the word had gone out that the cabin boy must have fallen overboard during the dark sail from Plymouth harbour.

'If they had had Drake's tele-scope they may have got an early warning in the grey light,' Launceston mused. 'We should give thanks that Walsingham and Dee see a greater picture than you or I.'

'I will give thanks if we survive this damnable thing,' Carpenter growled. 'I am not meant to feel the world rolling beneath my feet. Dry land for me, and soon!'

'Look. It begins.' Launceston indicated a squadron of eleven English ships streaming west and then tacking between the Armada and the Eddystone Rocks at a speed that must have startled the slow-moving galleons.

'Our race-built galleons,' Launceston noted approvingly. 'None faster.'

'Stop speaking some foreign language,' Carpenter snapped. 'Race-built? Is this some salty-haired sailor's argot?'

Launceston allowed himself a faint smile.

A signal flag went up on the mizzenmast of the lead ship, and instantly barking orders rolled out across the waves as the gun ports snapped open. The cannon on each ship in turn blasted the Spanish before the squadron raced back to the fleet, untouched.

At that moment, Carpenter and Launceston both noticed a curious sight and leaned across the rail to get a better look. Against the wind and the currents, a grey-sailed ship was limping away from the fleet, its starboard side blackened by fire. It was soon lost behind a wall of vessels, and before Launceston and Carpenter could question what they had seen, the Armada responded to the attack.

As Medina Sidonia fired his signal gun, the Spanish ships sailed into their prearranged battle order: a crescent, with a short spike in the centre, stretching several miles across. To an uneducated eye, the floating city looked imposing, a mass of white sails painted with the red cross of the Crusades, the water barely visible between them.

But Launceston waved a lazy hand towards the mass and said, 'See-they create an illusion. The warships are all on the outside of the formation, but inside ... useless hulks, transport ships ... Their number is much less than it appears.'

'Nevertheless,' Carpenter said, 'a single piece of shot will take me apart.'

The Disdain, Lord Howard's personal pinnace, sailed out to fire one shot at the Spanish: a challenge; and in response Medina Sidonia raised the Spanish royal standard ordering his fleet to battle.

'Is Swyfte out there, somewhere, aboard one of those enemy ships, I wonder?' Carpenter said as he watched the dense fleet begin to attack. 'What irony to be blown to pieces by your own countrymen after risking so much.' He struggled with his conflicted emotions and then said, 'Let us go below deck. It will be safer there, until we are needed.'

'Are you sure?' Launceston asked with an odd tone.

Flushed, his eyes blazing, Drake was consumed by the moment. As the Revenge raced towards the fray, it seemed to Carpenter that the fleet's vice admiral was overcome by a religious fervour.

On the gun deck, the master gunner watched tensely as the vessel clipped across the swell into position. His hand held high, he waited, and then released it with a bellow. Carpenter was not prepared for the shock of the devastating noise as the gunfire rolled in continuous thunder from the bow chasers, to the broadside cannon, to the stern chasers, and finally to the windward guns, flash after flash of red flame, acrid black smoke rolling out of the gun ports. He staggered back, clutching his ears at the pain of the volume.

From outside the stifling world of smoke and fire came the shriek of the shot tearing through the air, and the splash where it fell short or the thunderous boom and crack of disintegrating wood where it met its target. There were screams, too, louder and more shocking than the destructive boom of the cannon fire.

As each cannon fired, it was hauled back in and prepared for the next shot. With all the ships in the fleet, the noise never stopped. On the gun deck, it seemed to Carpenter that there was mad confusion as men ran back and forth with shot, stoking powder, cursing as they burned themselves on red-hot metal, diving out of the way of the recoil.

'This is hell ...' Carpenter choked, motioning for Launceston to follow him out.

In the open air, his ears still rang and he wondered if he would be permanently deaf. Staggering to the rail, he saw the Spanish return fire, but their response was leaden and they released only one shot for every three that came from English ships.

Launceston indicated movement among some of the ships. 'They are fleeing downwind,' he said. As some of the ships broke rank, they caused confusion among the others, crowding them as they tried to continue their attack.

Drake saw his moment and sent the Revenge to attack the wing where the squadron's flagship was unsupported. Drake was joined by another ship, the Triumph. 'Frobisher,' Launceston said with an approving nod.

The Spanish flagship faced the attack alone and saw its rigging and forestay and part of the foremast disintegrate under Drake's attack. As the San Martin continued to hold its ground, Drake marched by and announced loudly, 'It tries to draw us in. It is a trap, but we Englishmen are too clever for that!'

'He acts as if he is taking the air along Plymouth harbour,' Carpenter bellowed above the roar of cannon fire. 'Does this madness not trouble him in the slightest?'

Leaning on the rail, Launceston studied the bodies floating in the water, some so blackened and torn they could barely be identified as human. In one area, near the Spanish ships, they were so thick it seemed possible to walk across them without getting wet feet.

For the next three hours, the English taunted the Spanish, attacking then sailing out of reach of a response, before both fleets continued eastwards. The slow speed of the Armada, barely more than that of a rowboat, was a source of amazement to Carpenter, until Launceston pointed out that the fleet had to move at the speed of the slowest ship to keep the formation intact.

Beside them, observing through his tele-scope, Drake said, 'They appear to be protecting a grey-sailed ship. Why is that so important they would risk the loss of so many other vessels?'

'That ship must be vital to their strategy in some way,' Launceston replied.

Drake mulled over this puzzle for a moment before pacing the deck to check on his crew, but Launceston and Carpenter both remained focused on the mystery of the grey-sailed ship, and in their hearts they knew who was aboard.

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