somehow, and leave the Japans to the Japanese and to the pestilential Portuguese.” He saw Yabu and the captain staring at him. “I wouldn’t really, not yet. There’s a Black Ship to catch and plunder to be had. And revenge, eh, Yabu-san?”
“
“
“Sake, Anjin-san?”
“
The two ships were very near the massed fishing boats now, the galley heading straight for the pass that had been deliberately left between them, the frigate on the last reach and turning for the harbor mouth. Here the wind freshened as the protecting headlands fell away, open sea half a mile ahead. Gusts billowed the frigate’s sails, the shrouds crackling like pistol shots, froth now at her bow and in her wake.
The rowers were bathed with sweat and flagging. One man dropped. And another. The fifty-odd
He had prepared for battle as best he could. Yabu had understood that they would have to fight, and had understood fire arrows immediately. Blackthorne had erected protective wooden bulkheads around the helm. He had broken open some of the crates of muskets and had set those who could to arming them with powder and with shot. And he had brought several small kegs of powder up onto the quarterdeck and fused them.
When Santiago, the first mate, had helped him aboard the longboat, he had told him that Rodrigues was going to help, with God’s good grace.
“Why?” he had asked.
“My Pilot says to tell you that he had you thrown overboard to sober you up, senhor.”
“Why?”
“Because, he said to tell you, Senhor Pilot, because there was danger aboard the
“What danger?”
“You are to fight your own way out, he tells you, if you can. But he will help.”
“Why?”
“For the Madonna’s sweet sake, hold your heretic tongue and listen, I’ve little time.”
Then the mate had told him about the shoals and the bearings and the way of the channel and the plan. And given him two pistols. “How good a shot are you, my Pilot asks.”
“Poor,” he had lied.
“Go with God, my Pilot said to tell you finally.”
“And him—and you.”
“For me I assign thee to hell!”
“Thy sister!”
Blackthorne had fused the kegs in case the cannon began and there was no plan, or if the plan proved false, and also against encroaching hostiles. Even such a little keg, the fuse alight, floated against the side of the frigate would sink her as surely as a seventy-gun broadside. It doesn’t matter how small the keg, he thought, providing it guts her.
“
Here at the mouth the harbor narrowed to four hundred yards. Deep water was almost shore to shore, the rock headlands rising sharp from the sea.
The space between the ambushing fishing boats was a hundred yards.
The
The frigate was fifty yards astern, in mid-channel, heading directly for them, and making it obvious that she required the mid-channel path.
Aboard the frigate, Ferriera breathed softly to Rodrigues, “Ram him.” His eyes were on Mariko, who stood ten paces off, near the railings, with Toranaga.
“We daren’t—not with Toranaga there and the girl.”
“Senhora!” Ferriera called out. “Senhora—better to get below, you and your master. It’d be safer for him on the gundeck.”
Mariko translated to Toranaga, who thought a moment, then walked down the companionway onto the gundeck.
“God damn my eyes,” the chief gunner said to no one in particular. “I’d like to fire a broadside and sink something. It’s a God-cursed year since we sunk even a poxed pirate.”
“Aye. The monkeys deserve a bath.”
On the quarterdeck Ferriera repeated, “Ram the galley, Rodrigues!”
“Why kill your enemy when others’re doing it for you?”
“Madonna! You’re as bad as the priest! Thou hast no blood in thee!”
“Yes, I have none of the killing blood,” Rodrigues replied, also in Spanish. “But thou? Thou hast it. Eh? And Spanish blood perhaps?”
“Are you going to ram him or not?” Ferriera asked in Portuguese, the nearness of the kill possessing him.
“If she stays where she is, yes.”
“Then, Madonna, let her stay where she is.”
“What had you in mind for the Ingeles? Why were you so angry he wasn’t aboard us?”
“I do not like you or trust you now, Rodrigues. Twice you’ve sided, or seemed to side, with the heretic against me, or us. If there was another acceptable pilot in all Asia, I would beach you, Rodrigues, and I would sail off with my Black Ship.”
“Then you will drown. There’s a smell of death over you and only I can protect you.”
Ferriera crossed himself superstitiously. “Madonna, thou and thy filthy tongue! What right hast thou to say that?”
“My mother was a gypsy and she the seventh child of a seventh child, as I am.”
“Liar!”
Rodrigues smiled. “Ah, my Lord Captain-General, perhaps I am.” He cupped his hands and shouted, “Action stations!” and then to the helmsman, “Steady as she goes, and if that belly-gutter whore doesn’t move, sink her!”
Blackthorne held the wheel firmly, arms aching, legs aching. The oarsmaster was pounding the drum, the oarsmen making a final effort.
Now the frigate was twenty yards astern, now fifteen, now ten. Then Blackthorne swung hard to port. The frigate almost brushed them, heeled over toward them, and then she was alongside. Blackthorne swung hard astarboard to come parallel to the frigate, ten yards from her. Then, together—side by side—they were ready to run the gauntlet between the hostiles.
“Puuuull, pull, you bastards!” Blackthorne shouted, wanting to stay exactly alongside, because only here were they guarded by the frigate’s bulk and by her sails. Some musket shots, then a salvo of burning arrows slashed at them, doing no real damage, but several by mistake struck the frigate’s lower sails and fire broke out.
