time.'
From seaward, Kydd hoped that HMS
It was going to be that hardest of battlefields, the sea at night, with all that it meant for the accuracy of gunfire and distinguishing friend from foe in combat on a strange deck in the pitch dark.
With most certainly a larger crew in the privateer, the odds were shortening fast.
But their duty was plain and there could be no hanging back; there would be many sailors along the Cornish coast who would bless their names before the night was out—or not, should they miss this chance.
'Sunset, sir,' Standish said, in a low voice.
'Very well,' Kydd said briskly. 'Hands t' quarters and prove th' lookouts.' It was not impossible that Bloody Jacques could arrive at Black Head from the north. It was now just a waiting game.
The run ashore was timed for after dark and before the moon rose. The land in shadows lost its character and faded into gloom. Lights began to wink on ashore. Kydd lost sight of the tip of Black Head; it was time to get under way.
It seemed so at odds with the lovely scene, it should have been a time of serenity, perhaps a promenade in the warmth of the evening, hand in hand—he thrust away the thoughts.
Tysoe brought his treasured fighting sword. He acknowledged curtly and fastened it on. 'Man th' capstan— quietly now.'
The anchor broke ground and they ghosted out into the blackness. The tension began to work on Kydd, but at the back of them was the thought that he so much needed this success, for Rosalynd's sake. The pirate-privateer captured as well as the smuggling chief: it would secure his standing, no matter what Lockwood could contrive.
'Still! Absolute silence in th' ship!' Somewhere out there was the bloodiest foe on the coast—or not. If this was nothing but a wild-goose chase he would have Job back in irons instantly.
'Sir!' Andrews whispered urgently.
The midshipman's more acute hearing had picked up something. Kydd strained—then heard a regular series of tiny wooden squeals, precisely as if the yard on a lugger was being hoisted up the mast. And the sound came from closer in to the land: if this was the privateer he must have superlative knowledge of the coast. They rippled on through the calm water trying hard to catch a betraying clue, knowing Bloody Jacques would be keeping his own silence. But if that was indeed yards being swayed up, the pirate was hoisting sail to make his lunge.
A sudden thickening in the gloom to starboard was Black Head—the lugger was not there. Damn the blackness to hell!
From about a mile ahead Kydd heard a sudden cry of alarm. Then a ragged chorus of shouts carried over the water, followed by a pistol flash or two. Kydd's heart leapt as he willed
He heard more shots and the clamour of edged weapons rising, then falling away. It wasn't until long minutes later that they could see dark shapes on the water: two, close together. Kydd's strategy had been simple: he would close on the privateer, fire, and board in the smoke and surprise. The one thing he was relying on in this risky attempt was that half of the enemy would be away subduing the smugglers.
On
The vessel's angular lugsails were sheeting round urgently to the light westerly, but at this point of sailing a lugger's ability to sail closer to the wind was of no advantage since it was boxed in to the land, and
The wind freshened as they plunged south, all to
The Dodman stood stern and massive in the moonlight when they forereached on the lugger. If only Rosalynd could be there, Kydd thought—but this was his world, not hers; she would take no pleasure in seeing him about to hazard his life. It cooled his battle-fever: from now on, he realised, he had to consider two, not one. But had not her last words to him been, 'You must always do your duty'?
'Stand by, forrard!' he roared. The carronades were loaded with alternate ball and canister, there could be no reloading in this dark.
'Fire!' A split second later a twenty-four-pounder carronade blasted, its gunflash overbright in the gloom. At thirty yards' range there was no missing and in the moonlight leaping splinters could be seen as the ball struck home.
'We have him, damme!' Standish yelled in glee.
If they could do their work before the Dodman and the open Atlantic—but then, without warning, it all changed. There were frightened shouts in the lugger and it sheered up into the wind, sails banging and ropes all a-fly. Then the yards began to drop. It made no sense.
Standish looked at him. 'Sir, I do believe he wants to yield.'
It was impossible but the lugger had doused all sail and lay submissively to await her conqueror. 'Board an' bring that rogue before me, Mr Standish,' Kydd ordered.
His lieutenant returned quickly. 'Sir. I'm so sorry to tell you— but this is the smuggler, the other the privateer.'