A Brig of War (9 page)

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Authors: Richard Woodman

Tags: #Historical, #War

BOOK: A Brig of War
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‘I've little choice; besides faith is said to move mountains.'

‘Shit!'

Drinkwater shrugged and went aft again. Despite the work of the past hours it was as if he had left Griffiths a few moments earlier. The old Welshman appeared not to have moved, to have shrunk in on himself, almost half-asleep until one saw those hawkish eyes, staring relentlessly astern.

There was no doubt that they were losing the race. The big frigate was clearly visible, hull-up from the deck and already trying ranging shots. As yet these fell harmlessly astern. Drinkwater expressed surprise as a white plume showed in their wake eight cables away.

‘He's been doing that for the past half hour,' said Griffiths. ‘I think we have about two hours before we will feel the spray of those fountains upon our face and perhaps a further hour before they are striking splinters from the rail. His hands clenched the taffrail tighter as if they could protect the timber from the inevitable.

‘We could swing one of the bow chasers directly astern, sir,' volunteered Drinkwater. Griffiths nodded.

‘Like that
cythral
Santhonax did the day he shot
Kestrel
's topmast out of her, is it?'

‘Aye.'

‘We'll see. It will be no use for a while. Did Lestock in his zeal douse the galley fire?'

‘I've really no idea, sir.' At the mention of the galley Drinkwater was suddenly reminded of how hungry he was.

‘Well see what you can do,
bach
. Get some dinner into the hands. Whatever the outcome it will be the better faced on full bellies.'

Half an hour later Drinkwater was wolfing a bowl of burgoo. There was an unreal atmosphere prevailing in the gunroom where he, Lestock and Appleby were having a makeshift meal. Throughout the ship men moved with a quiet expectancy, both fearful of capture and hopeful of escape. To what degree they inclined to the one or to the other depended greatly upon temperament, and there were those lugubrious souls who had already given up all hope of the latter.

Drinkwater could not allow himself to dwell over much on defeat. Both his private fears and his professional pride demanded that he appeared confident of ultimate salvation.

‘I tell you, Appleby, if those blackguards had not fouled up the starboard fore t'gallant stunsail we'd have been half a mile ahead of ourselves,' spluttered Lestock through the porridge, his nerves showing badly.

‘That's rubbish, Mr Lestock,' Drinkwater said soothingly, unwilling to revive the matter. ‘On occasions like this small things frequently go wrong, if it had not been the stunsail it would likely have been some other matter. Perhaps something has gone wrong on the chase to delay him a minute or two. Either way 'tis no good fretting over it.'

‘It could be the horseshoe nail, nevertheless, Nat, eh?' put in Appleby, further irritating Drinkwater.

‘What are you driving at?'

‘On account of which the battle was lost, I paraphrase . . .'

‘I'm well acquainted with the nursery rhyme . . .'

‘And so you should be, my dear fellow, you are closer to 'em than I myself . . .'

‘Oh, for heaven's sake, Harry, don't you start. There's Mr Lestock here like Job on a dung heap, Rogers on deck with a face as long as the galley funnel . . .'

‘Then what do we do, dear boy?'

‘Hope we can hold on until darkness,' said Drinkwater rising.

‘Ah,' Appleby raised his hands in a gesture of mock revelation, ‘the crepuscular hour . . .'

‘And have a little faith in Madoc Griffiths, for God's sake,' snapped Drinkwater angrily.

‘Ah, the Welsh wizard.'

Drinkwater left the gunroom with Lestock's jittery cackling in his ears. There were moments when Harry Appleby was infuriatingly facetious. Drinkwater knew it stemmed from Appleby's inherent disapproval of bloodshed and the illusions of glory. But at the moment he felt no tolerance for the surgeon's high-flown sentiments and realised that he shared with Rogers an abhorrence of abject surrender.

He returned to the deck to find the chasing frigate perceptibly nearer. He swore under his breath and approached Griffiths.

‘Have you eaten, sir?'

‘I've no stomach for food,
bach
.' Griffiths swivelled round, a look of pain crossing his face as the movement restored circulation to his limbs. His gouty foot struck the deck harder than he intended as he caught his balance and a torrent of Welsh invective flowed from him. Drinkwater lent him some support.

‘I'm all right.
Du
, but 'tis a dreadful thing, old age. Take the deck for a while, I've need to clasp the neck of a little green friend.'

He was on deck ten minutes later, smelling of sercial but with more colour in his cheeks. He cast a critical eye over the sails and nodded his satisfaction.

‘It may be that the wind will drop towards sunset. That could confer a slight advantage upon us.'

It could, thought Drinkwater, but it was by no means certain. An hour later they could feel the spray upon their faces from the ranging shots that plummetted in their wake.

And the wind showed no sign of dropping.

Appleby's crepuscular hour approached at last and with it the first sign that perhaps all was not yet lost. Sunset was accompanied by rolls of cloud from the west that promised to shorten the twilight period and foretold a worsening of the weather. The brig still raced on under a press of canvas and Lestock, earlier so anxious to hoist the stunsails was now worried about furling them, rightly concluding that such an operation carried out in the dark was fraught with dreadful possibilities. The fouling of ropes at such a moment could spell disaster and Lestock voiced his misgivings to Griffiths.

‘I agree with you, Mr Lestock, but I'm not concerned with stunsails.' Griffiths called Drinkwater and Rogers to him. The two lieutenants and the master joined him in staring astern.

‘He will see us against the afterglow of sunset for a while yet. He'll also be expecting us to do something. I'm going back on him . . .' He paused, letting the import sink in. Rogers whistled quietly, Drinkwater smiled, partly out of relief that the hours of passivity were over and partly at the look of horror just visible on Lestock's face.

‘Mr Lestock is quite correct about the stunsails. With the preventer backstays I've no fear for the masts. If the booms part or the sails blow out, to the devil with them, at least we've all our water and all our guns . . . As to the latter, Mr Rogers, I want whatever waist guns we can work double shotted at maximum elevation. You will not fire without my order upon pain of death. That will be only, I repeat only, if I suspect we have been seen. Mr Drinkwater, I want absolute silence throughout the ship. I shall flog any man who so much as breaks wind. And the topmen are to have their knives handy to cut loose anything that goes adrift or fouls aloft. Is that understood, gentlemen?'

The three officers muttered their acknowledgement. A ball struck the quarter and sent up a shower of splinters. ‘Very well,' said Griffiths impassively, ‘let us hope that in forty minutes he will not be able to see us. Make your preparations, please.'

‘Down helm!'

The brig began to turn to larboard, the yards swinging round as she came on the wind. The strength of the wind was immediately apparent and sheets of stinging spray began to whip over the weather bow as she drove to windward.

‘Full an' bye, larboard tack, sir,' Lestock reported, steadying himself in the darkness as
Hellebore
lay over under a press of canvas.

Drinkwater joined Griffiths at the rail, staring into the darkness broad on the larboard bow where the frigate must soon be visible.

‘There she is, sir,' he hissed after a moment's pause, ‘and by God she's turning . . .'

‘
Myndiawl
!' Drinkwater was aware of the electric tension in the commander as Griffiths peered into the gloom. ‘She's coming onto the wind too; d'you think she's tumbled us?'

Drinkwater did not answer. It was impossible to tell, though it seemed likely that the stranger had anticipated Griffiths's manoeuvre even if he was unable to see them.

‘He must see us . . .'

The two vessels surged along some nine cables apart, running on near parallel courses. Drinkwater was studying the enemy, for he was now convinced the frigate was a Frenchman. Two things were apparent from the inverted image in the night glass.
Hellebore
had the advantage in speed, for the other was taking in his stunsails. The confusion inherent in the operation had, for the moment, slowed her. She was also growing larger, indicating she did not lie as close to the wind as her quarry. If
Hellebore
could cross her bow she might yet escape and such a course seemed to indicate the French captain was cautious. And then several ideas occurred to Drinkwater simultaneously. He could imagine the scene on the French cruiser's deck. The stunsails would be handled with care, men's attention would be inboard for perhaps ten minutes. And the Frenchman was going to reach across the wind and reduce sail until daylight, reckoning that whatever
Hellebore
did she would still be visible at daylight with hours to complete what had been started today.

He muttered his conclusions to Griffiths who pondered them for what seemed an age. ‘If that is the case we would do best to wear round his stern . . .'

‘But that means we might still encounter him tomorrow since we will be making northing,' added Drinkwater, ‘whereas if we hold on we might slip to windward of him and escape.'

He heard Griffiths exhale. ‘Very well,' he said at last.

There was half a mile between the two ships and still the distance lessened. At any moment they
must
be observed. Drinkwater looked anxiously aloft and he caught sight of a white blur
that was Lestock's face. Nearby stood Dalziell and Mr Q.

Hellebore
's mainmast was drawing ahead of the frigate's stem and Drinkwater could see her topgallants bunching up where the sheets were started and the bunt-lines gathered them up prior to furling. He was certain that his assumption was correct. But another thought struck him: one of the topmen out on those yards could not fail to see the brig close to leeward of them.

A minute later the cry of alarm was clearly heard across the three hundred yards of water that separated the two ships. Drinkwater tried to see if her lee ports were open and waited with beating heart for a wild broadside. He doubted that any of their own guns would bear. He could see Rogers looking aft, itching to give the order to fire. Lestock's fidgetting was growing unbearable while all along the deck the hands peered silently at the ghostly black and grey shape that was the enemy.

There were several shouts from the stranger and they were unmistakably French. A low murmur ran along
Hellebore
's deck.

‘Silence there!' Drinkwater called in a low voice, trusting in their leeward position not to carry his words to the frigate. ‘Mr Q. See to the hoisting of a Dutch ensign.'

A hail came over the water followed by a gunshot that whistled overhead, putting a hole in the leeward lower stunsail. A second later it tore and blew out of the bolt ropes.

The horizontal stripes of the Dutch colour caused a small delay, a moment of indecision on the enemy quarterdeck but it was not for long. The unmistakable vertical bands of the French tricolour jerked to her peak and her forward guns barked from her starboard bow. Three of the balls struck home, tearing into the hull beneath the quarterdeck making a shambles of Rogers's cabin, but no one was hit and then the brig had driven too far ahead so the enemy guns no longer bore. Eighty yards on the beam
Hellebore
drove past the cruiser's bowsprit.

‘He's luffing, sir . . .'

‘To give us a broadside, the bastard.' Griffiths looked along his own deck. ‘Keep her full and bye Mr Lestock, I'll not lose a fathom, see.'

Drinkwater watched the French ship turn towards the wind and saw the ragged line of flashes where she fired her starboard battery. Above his head ropes parted and holes appeared in several sails, but not a spar had been hit.

‘Ha!' roared Griffiths in jubilation, ‘look at him, by damn!'

Drinkwater turned his attention from the fabric of
Hellebore
to the frigate. He could hear faint cries of alarm or anger as she luffed too far and lost way, saw her sails shiver and the flashes of a second broadside. They never remarked the fall of shot. Griffiths was grinning broadly at Drinkwater.

‘Keep those stunsails aloft, mister, even if they are all blown to hell by dawn, we'll not have another chance like this.'

‘Indeed not, sir. May I secure the guns and send the watch below?'

Griffiths nodded and Drinkwater heard him muttering ‘Lucky by damn,' to himself.

‘Mr Rogers! Secure the guns and pipe the watch below. Mr Lestock, relieve the wheel and lookout, keep her full and bye until further orders.'

Lestock acknowledged the order and Drinkwater could not resist baiting the man.

‘It seems, Mr Lestock, that our opponent appeared to be the one with the lack of horseshoe nails.'

‘A matter of luck, Drinkwater, nothing more.'

Drinkwater laughed, catching Rogers's eye as he came aft from securing his guns. ‘Or of faith moving mountains, eh Samuel?'

When he looked astern again two miles separated the two ships. The French ship was again in pursuit but five minutes later she had disappeared in the first rain shower.

Daylight found them alone on an empty ocean and as the hours passed it became apparent that they had eluded their pursuer. They resumed their course, dragged the cannon back to their positions and continued their voyage. The stunsail gear needed overhauling for three booms had sprung during that night and several of the sails needed attention. A week later the even tenor of their routine had all but effaced the memory of the chase.

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