forenoon there would be muskets and a target dangling at the yardarm. He passed Renzi, standing gazing at
In the evening, cutlass drill was delayed. Houghton had been talking with the master, who made no secret of his distrust of the weather and both watches took off the royals and sent down the masts. Before the end of the dog-watch the breeze had freshened from the north-west. 'Don't care what they calls it—
It was peculiar in Kydd's experience: cloudless skies and exuberant seas, perfect weather, but the wind was increasing to a degree that in English waters would give rise to concern for the future.
After supper Kydd arrived to take over the watch.
Kydd eyed the canvas and sniffed at the wind. 'M' duty t' the captain an' I advise taking in th' courses,' he told his messenger.
Houghton came on deck. 'I see
'Aye, sir,' Kydd said carefully, 'but
Admittedly, their line was now more of a gaggle in the evening gloom as they watched lanthorns jerkily mounted to the mizzen top of
It would mean a longer, harder job but the watch below would not be disturbed. However, within twenty minutes the wind had changed from an insistent stream to a buffeting, squally threat. 'Mr Pearce, I mean to turn up all the hands in striking courses,' Kydd told the boatswain, who went to fetch his mates. Houghton arrived quickly. The seas were higher, but in a way that was peculiar to this landlocked sea: short, steep and rapid, meeting the bow in a succession of sharp explosions of white.
Their consorts began distancing themselves: sea room was becoming necessary in the increasingly boisterous conditions, even with the half-moon's occasionally cloud-dimmed light. 'Keep the men on deck, Mr Kydd,' Houghton said, drawing his coat round him.
In less than an hour it had worsened. The moon was now all but obscured by lower-level racing scud and the topsails bellied and tautened to iron-like rigidity. 'I'll trouble you to close-reef the tops'ls,' Houghton ordered.
Men crowded into the weather shrouds and began climbing. It was murky and indistinct—Kydd knew they were going as much by feel and familiarity with their aerial world as sight. They would be deadly cautious, transferring hold from one hand, one foot to another only when it felt secure. Slamming wind gusts could shake the hold of the unwary and send them, helpless, to their death. When they reached the tops and eased out on the yard they would no longer even be free to hold on—balancing on a thin footrope with empty space beneath, they had to lean over and, with both hands, fist the maddened canvas into submission, then secure the points with a reef knot.
Still the wind increased, hammering in from the north-west with a flat ferocity. At one in the morning a particularly savage squall shook and pummelled the ship. With a report like gunfire, the topsails blew to pieces and
The wind's noise in the bar-taut rigging was a rising howl that tore at the reason; this was nature gone mad. Seas, driven up by the frenetic wind, caused an ugly roll, which threw serious strain on spars and rigging. Preventers and rolling tackles could help, but when squalls and rain clamped in there was nothing for it but endurance through the long night, with occasional half-glimpsed pinpricks of lanthorn light all that could seen of other ships.
Finally dawn came in a grey welter of cold spray and whipping wind. As the light extended, lookouts in the tops spotted other ships scattered around the gale-lashed seascape, calling their names down one by one as they recognised them. The vessels altered course to form up the squadron once more.
But which was the flagship? And there were no frigates. All that could be seen were two ships-of-the-line and another further off that must be Admiral Nelson. Yet there was something not right with the distant vessel. As they beat their way closer it became clear:
With tumbled masts and no steadying canvas aloft, the ship rolled grievously, on every plunge showing her copper or submerging her lower gunports. Conditions on board would be indescribable, but she was still gallantly holding a course.
Houghton took a telescope, braced himself against the savage roll, and focused on the stricken vessel. The master moved up next to him. 'A boat cannot live in these seas, Mr Hambly,' Houghton said. 'We can do nothing for them.'
'No, sir,' said Hambly, neutrally. 'But on this board he stands into mortal peril, sir ...'
'The land?'
'Corsica, sir. Dead to loo'ard an' not so many miles.' The awesome force of the gale from the north-west had driven the squadron towards the craggy coast of Corsica to the south-east— but how close were they?
'He must wear, o' course.'
With the wind blast on the larboard side any sail that
'They'll tack, then?'
'No, sir,' Hambly responded. 'She wouldn't a-tall get through the wind's eye. I fear we're t' see a calamity very soon, sir.'
It was inconceivable: the greatest fighting admiral of the age, in his own flagship, beaten on to the rocks, then