The Time Pirate (46 page)

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Authors: Ted Bell

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Nick saw one sailor, standing atop the fo'c'sle, either rum-drunk or stupid, strike a match and put it to his pipe bowl. The pipe was ripped from his mouth by a passing officer, and the slaggard was marched under escort down to the ship's brig, with a sentence of fifty lashes awaiting him.

The French were perhaps two hours away from the enemy position. The small group of officers on the quarterdeck, standing near the helm, had been discussing the last critical elements of the strategy as the battle plan unfolded.

“Precisely how many marines will you need for this delicate operation of yours, sir?” de Grasse asked Lafayette.

“As many as your swiftest jolly-boat can accommodate, Admiral. How many oarsmen does she carry?”

“Eight of my best,” de Grasse replied. “Strong, swift, and silent. You will not find better oars in La Royale.”

“Then ten stout, well-armed marines and four gun crews would not unduly overburden the craft?”


Pas du tout
,” the Admiral said. “Not at all.”

“It would mean almost thirty men aboard, myself included,” Lafayette said. “We can't afford the risk of swamping.”

“It will mean exactly thirty, sir,” Nick piped up. “That is, if you would allow me to go aboard the enemy vessel with you.”

“This is the most dangerous work, Nick,” the Marquis said. “There may well be fierce hand-to-hand combat once we board the enemy vessel. I strongly urge you to remain aboard here, out of harm's way. For the time being, at least.”

“But I am the only one aboard personally acquainted with William Blood, sir. I would like to face him. He has, over the years, brought much grief upon me and my family. My sister in particular. I assure you, I will be no bother. Besides, he's slippery as an eel, that one is, but I know his ways. I truly believe I can be of help.”

“You will need arms.”

“I am armed, sir. I have this.”

Nick showed Lafayette the double-barreled flintlock pistol, and the Marquis grinned his approval.

“And I give you this,” he said, presenting Nick with a beautifully carved dagger. “King Louis XVI gave it to me, but as he now wants my head, I'm no longer fond of it.”

“Thank you very much indeed, sir, but I already have such a weapon,” the boy said, producing a fearsome-looking bone-handled blade.

“Where did you get that?”

“Why, from Billy Blood himself, sir. Old Bill once nailed my dog's own ransom note to my front door with it. This will not
be the first time I've used his own dagger against him. I once plunged it into his leg, ‘ere he'd kill my friend Lord Hawke.”

“I marvel at this child,” de Grasse said, laughing. “He never opens his mouth without something astounding issuing forth. Do not underestimate him, Monsieur le Marquis. Though young, he's obviously experienced. With his knowledge of Blood, I think he might enhance your chances of success.”

“I agree. Young Nicholas will join the boarding party.”

Nick smiled, greatly relieved. He had not forgotten, nor would he ever, the smirk on Blood's face when he had dropped Kate into the black hole of the oubliette.

“Thank you, sir.”

All looked aloft at the sound of snapping canvas. “Bit of a blow building out of the south,” de Grasse said, moistening his finger and holding it high. “We should reach the enemy's position destination sooner than I thought. I suggest you all retire to your bunks for an hour's sleep. I'll awaken you in sufficient time to prepare for the preliminary attack.”

The French fleet ghosted into Swagman's Bay and silently dropped anchor sometime around three o'clock in the morning. There was severe lightning to the east, but the Admiral was fairly certain they'd not been seen entering.

De Grasse and Valois had searched charts of the whole eastern seaboard of New Providence Island for just such a location as this. Protected by a curving point of high land on its northern extremity, the bay was completely out of sight of the enemy. It required deep water (it was over ten fathoms) and must be within striking distance of the pirate armada. Everything would depend upon surprise. The sudden appearance just before dawn of twenty-eight French warships
bearing down. Cannons blazing, shocking, unsuspected, and brutally terrifying to a hopefully confused and disorganized, but far greater, enemy force.

All, in fact, depended upon the genius of Lafayette and this strange and mysteriously wise English boy, Nicholas McIver, de Grasse thought.

De Grasse stood resting his elbows on the starboard rail by the bow. His fleet captains had all reported for a final meeting in the ship's wardroom. The final battle plan had been endorsed by all. The fleet was in full readiness for the pre-dawn attack on the one hundred ships of the pirate armada.

De Grasse was watching the longboat leave the relative safety of the hidden bay. It was carrying the Marquis de Layafette, his young aide, ten highly trained French Marines, and four gun crews, off into the pitch-black darkness. Every man aboard the launch was dressed in black-dyed sail canvas, their faces and hands smeared with burnt cork. A second boat, smaller, with only Valois and only five hand-picked men aboard, also clothed wholly in black canvas, was trailing a few hundred yards behind, in the longboat's wake.

This smaller, secondary gig had been one of Lafayette's last ideas. It was, he'd said, one he'd learned from Washing-ton's Continental artillerymen that cruel winter at Valley Forge. To kill time during the long cold hours, the troops would make small bombs: a small sack, filled with black powder and wrapped into an oil-soaked linen ball, then dipped in boiling pitch and allowed to harden before being plunged into molten wax to waterproof them. They'd been used by saboteurs against enemy vessels large and small to great success.

But now, attached to each bomb was a long-burning fuse cord that would give Valois's men time to get away long before the explosion. The longer the fuse, the more time you
had. And, Lafayette and his brave boarding party would need all the time they could get if they were to succeed this night.

Nicholas McIver and the Marquis de Lafayette had together conceived a brilliant but bold and extraordinarily dangerous plan. It was now under way. Only time would tell if victory or death awaited them.

43
THE GREATEST PIRATE ARMADA EVER

G
ently now, gently,” Valois whispered as the smaller of the two advance boats slipped almost soundlessly through the tropic darkness. A thin, wispy fog had rolled in and now lay atop the water, providing additional cover. The two oarsmen shipped oars and let the small craft glide up under the stern overhang of the first pirate ship they'd come to. When they reached the giant ship's rudder, the bowman reached out and grabbed it, stopping all forward motion.

So far, so good.

The narrow little fireboat had not been spotted approaching the enemy fleet. Nor, as far as Valois could tell, had the larger advance boat commanded by the Marquis de Lafayette aroused any untoward suspicion. That vessel had the far more dangerous task. Slipping quietly through the endless maze of the sleeping fleet until they located Captain Blood's infamous flagship
Revenge.
And then boarding her.

“Are you ready,
mon ami
?” Valois asked a crewman standing in the bow.
“Avec le pamplemousse?”

The man held his grapefruit-sized bomb aloft, and you could see the white teeth of his smile in the midst of his cork-blackened face.


C'est bon,
” Valois said. “
Commencez
.”

The crewman stowed the bomb in a burlap sling designed specifically for the purpose. Then he began his rapid climb upward on the rudder, using his hands, knees, and feet, just like a monkey.

Valois held his breath, musket at the ready, watching the man scramble all the way to the very top of the massive stern. There, affixed just aft of the stern rail, he would locate the pintle, a massive rudder bolt inserted into a gudgeon, a large circular iron fitting attached to the transom. The pintle and gudgeon created a hinge so that the rudder might swing freely. It was this gudgeon and pintle arrangement that also held the giant wooden and iron rudder fast to the vessel's stern.

In a sea battle, a ship without a rudder was something akin to a sitting duck—dead in the water. Without benefit of her rudder, any ship was rendered useless, nearly uncontrollable in battle.

The bomber went about his work quickly and deftly. Once his bomb was tightly secured to the gudgeon with tarred rope, the crewman let fall the slow-burning fuse cord. It fell, stopping two feet short of the water. And there all the fuses would remain, unlit.

Until it was time.

The man descended the thirty-foot-high rudder far more quickly than he'd risen. He loosened his grip on the rudder's trailing edge and slid down the wet surface as easily as you would a greased pole. A moment later, he was safely back aboard the gig.


Pas de problème?
” Valois asked him softly.

“No problem at all, sir.” Again, the white teeth in the middle of the blackened face. Valois was much encourgaged by this first success.


Alors
, where away our next victim?” he said.

“Three hundred yards just off our port beam, sir,” replied one of the two oarsmen. “A big one, 74 guns, I think. Lanterns fore and aft. All quiet on deck, though.”


Allons vite,
” Lieutenant Valois whispered. “Let us go quickly. So many boats, so many bombs, so little time.”

A few hundred yards away, Valois could make out Lafayette's vessel, winding its way through the pirate fleet, searching for
Revenge
.

“There she lies, I believe,” Lafayette said to Nick, who sat beside him in the bow. In a low voice, he added, “Blood's
Revenge
.” The great ship was lying to under a close-reefed top mainsail, and Nick knew there must have been a great blow earlier in the day, for this was storm-rigging.

“It is indeed,” Nick whispered at his side. “I saw her with my own eyes, riding at anchor in Port Royal.”

Lafayette looked at him. “Port Royal? I forgot to ask. What the devil were you doing in the most dangerous port in all the Caribbean!
Du monde
!”

“I was only there for a brief time, sir.”

“And when might this have been?”

“Some time ago, sir. You see, Blood had kidnapped my young sister, Kate. So I went down there to bring her safe home.”

“She is safe now?”

“She is indeed, sir.”

“Where?”

“In England, sir. With my parents . . . in the year 1940.”

“Where you belong, too, eh?”

Lafayette smiled, tousled the boy's hair, and said, “
Fantastique
,
Nicholas! Now listen to me very, very carefully. Once we slip aboard the enemy vessel, I must insist you stay close by my side. No matter what happens. Do you understand?”

“I do, sir.”


C'est bon
. Tell me something. I've heard tell Blood likes his grog dulcified with cane juice, and he likes it frequent and strong.”

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