The King's Privateer

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The King's Privateer Page 33

by Dewey Lambdin


  “Bloody hell, what does that mean?” Lewrie fumed.

  Whatever it had meant, it would have to do, for there were now six praos headed their way, rowing madly to get out of the gun-arcs of Lady Charlotte’s twelve-pounders. Between Culverin’s anchorage and shore there was a half-mile of water. With careful aim and gun-laying, Lewrie could expect his carronades to scour only half that distance, for a carronade was a very low-velocity gun for all its hitting power. The “Smashers” were close-in weapons.

  “Here they come!” Hogue yelled. “Stand ready, gun-captains! Aim for the two lead boats! One and two, take the one on the right! Three, four and five, take the one on the left!”

  Good for Hogue, Lewrie thought! A sensible young man who could see that the lead boat to their right was poorly manned and not much of a threat, while the one to the left had so far missed out on what horrors they were dealing out this day. Lewrie traded his Ferguson rifle for his telescope and saw that the boat on the left had what looked to be eight- or nine-pounders on its foredeck, and the pirates were swarming over those guns, readying them for firing.

  “Fer what we’re about t’ receive, may the good Lord make us joyful,” Murray sighed as the prao got her guns into action. A ball hit Culverin low on her larboard side, making her shudder heavily, while the second struck the bulwarks between number 4 and number 5 larboard guns and turned the wood into a burst of flickering teak splinters, cutting down the gun crews and raising a great howling among his crew.

  “Fire!” Hogue shouted once the praos were within their limited range. Culverin lurched sideways as the guns lit off. The first boat on the right almost leaped out of the water as she was struck, mast and large, leaf-bladed paddles flying in all directions, along with some of her hull. Arabian building techniques with rope and butt-joined board could not take such punishment, and she dropped back into the sea with a great splash as she came apart like an artichoke, spilling her crew into the water.

  The second boat to the left had her foredeck cleared by a hit, guns and men flying as the heavy twenty-four-pounder ball shattered amongst the barrels. Her mast came down and some powder cartridge bags went off with a great burst of dirty yellow smoke and flame. She came to a dead stop and began to sag down off the wind toward the western shore, right into Lady Charlotte’s guns.

  “Well, damn them,” Lewrie spat. The other four praos were now bearing off under human power, their paddles or oars slashing the sea as they fled east, out of range of the carronades that had smashed up their leaders’ boats like a giant’s fist.

  Lewrie turned to look seaward once more. The battery on the point had sunk one prao, but it looked like at least four would get out through the channel. And the two surviving pirate boats to the east were working their way along the line of the breakers in shallow water beyond the reach of even the high battery’s guns. Which was where the four that had challenged him were going.

  “Mister Murray?”

  “Sir?”

  “They’re going to get away from us if we sit here,” Lewrie said, feeling grim about it and more than willing, if given any kind of excuse, to let them do so. But it was his duty. “Fix buoys to the anchor cables and prepare to let slip. We’ll pursue them.”

  “Aye, sir,” Murray said with a sharp intake of breath.

  “Mister Hogue! Secure your guns for a while. We shall hoist sail, let slip the cables and get underway.”

  “Thank God for a simple rig,” Lewrie said scant minutes later. It would have taken a square-rigger half an hour to hoist sail, but little Culverin could simply hoist her jibs and gaff-sails, haul in on the sheets to angle those sails to the wind at the proper angle and she was moving ahead and under control. It made him wonder if a way could be found to rig a larger warship so simply, even if it took four masts instead of three. A fore-and-aft rigged ship with a deep, full-run keel for a good grip on the water so she could go to windward like a witch, with no courses … well, maybe a forecourse to lift the bows, and nothing higher-mounted than large tops’ls. Armed with carronades for the most part, with a few long-ranged muzzle-loaders amidships for …

  “Course, sir?”

  “The mind can do the oddest things at the worst moments,” Lewrie murmured, laughing at himself. He might not be alive half an hour from now if he took Culverin into that desperate pack of bloody-handed murderers now intent on escape, and even more dangerous than before. And here he was speculating on naval architecture!

  “Close-hauled on the larboard tack for the harbor,” Lewrie said. “We’ll have to tack east or end up running aground, but that’ll give us a chance to fire into those boats running along the reef line.”

  Culverin could point high, but the wind was solidly out of the sou’east, and the best she could do was a little west of due south to approach the harbor entrance on a long board. Leadsmen swung chains to sound the depth ahead of her as she clawed her way seaward.

  “And a half, two!”

  “Helm alee! Off fores’l sheets!”

  Culverin tacked across the eye of the wind, onto a short board back to a heading of about 1 point, about 11 degrees, north of east. But she had gotten close enough to threaten those fleeing praos along the reef line inside the breakers.

  “Ready, sir!” Hogue called to him. “I make it about two cables.”

  “Try your eye, Mister Hogue!” Lewrie nodded. “Blaze away!”

  The guns on the starboard side came reeling inboard one at a time. The heavy balls, fired at maximum elevation and laid so close to the edge of the port-sills they almost singed the wood, failed to hit. They landed short, raising great feathery plumes of water into the air. But the praos checked their frantic pace and paid off the breaker line, stymied by fear.

  “Hands to the sheets! Ready to come about? Helm alee!” Alan commanded. He did not want to get too far to the east inside their harbor, for that would put him too close to the reefs to be able to tack to windward to reverse course. To wear ship downwind would lose him every inch of ground he had gained south for the entrance channel.

  “Now we shall try our luck against yonder bastards.”

  “Jesus!” Murray yelped, ducking into a half-crouch as a solid shot moaned overhead. “Where’d they get such heavy iron, sir?”

  “That was our battery on the hillside above the fort, Murray,” Lewrie commented, standing erect from his own crouch. “I pray those gunners know what they’re about with that heated shot.”

  “Didn’t miss our masts by a boat-length, sir,” Murray carped as Culverin sailed right through the ring-shaped splash of the spent shot half a minute later. “An’ they haven’t got the range for very much longer. Cain’t we signal ’em t’ stop, sir?”

  “Ah … uhm, I’m afraid that’s one signal we didn’t discuss, Murray,” Lewrie confessed, suffering another qualm at all he had not considered once again, and feeling the lack of prior planning acutely. “We shall have to trust to their good judgment.”

  “Good judgment from soldiers!” Murray gaped with a sour look.

  “Ready the larboard battery, Mister Hogue! Fire as you bear!”

  “And a half three!” the leadsman chanted.

  “As you bear … fire!” Hogue screamed, his voice cracking.

  Now the larboard guns lurched back on their recoil slides and a harsh, stinging cloud of powder blossomed forth, checked at the bulwarks by the winds and wafted back over them, blanking out the world for a minute. When the smoke cleared, the hands cheered at the sight of a pirate boat that was rocking keel-up about two hundred yards away, with survivors struggling and wailing about her.

  “And a half, two!”

  “Ready to come about!” Lewrie called. “Helm’s alee!”

  One more close-hauled short board on the starboard tack to the east, perhaps the last they could make as they neared the harbor entrance and the line of breakers. The next larboard tack would take them through the main channel and out to sea. Hogue let loose with a broadside from the starboard guns, once more h
itting nothing, but the pirates trapped in the lagoon were too rattled to notice, and shied off again.

  Back on the larboard tack. Breakers growling and fuming. The battery on the point firing at a boat ahead of them and straddling it with two shot-splashes, hitting it amidships with the third ball and shattering it so quickly that it jack-knifed like a paper boat, broke in two and went under.

  “Two more hands to the tiller, Murray!” Lewrie snapped. “Stand by to pinch her up as we cross the bar.”

  There was more depth in the channel this time of day as tidal flooding rushed into the harbor, softening the shock. But Culverin could still broach on that deceptively calm-looking swell if she hit it wrong.

  Culverin rose, soaring up on the swell, with a line of spume racing down past her sides, her bow cocking up for the skies.

  “Helm down!” Lewrie shouted. “Luff up square to the wave!”

  Four men threw their sinewy strength to the tiller to keep it from lashing to either side or throwing them overboard. Culverin lay on the tip of the swell, sails luffing and thundering, then began to fall as the wave left her behind, bow dipping until it looked as if she’d bury her bowsprit into the trough and keep on sliding down into the depths. She then began to gather speed after being checked in her slide.

  “Helm up and give us way, close-hauled!”

  It was like rowing a boat across the surf line without going arse-over-tit or being rolled like a stranded whale. Culverin paid off and her sails filled with wind as a second swell gathered her up out of the trough where they could find air, thundering and flapping, then taking shape once more with a series of loud boomings.

  “Hold her no more than a point west of south, quartermaster!” Lewrie turned to say. Culverin soared upward once more, almost forcing him to his knees in her hurry to ascend to heaven, but she was halfway out of the wicked harbor entrance now. Even with her hellish tendency to go to leeward like a wood-chip, they would clear the western shoals under the point if they could only make this course good. To have to tack while fighting those entrance bar swells would be disastrous!

  “Two fathom!” the starboard leadsman howled.

  “Hold her!” Lewrie growled. “Pinch her up as you’re able, but for God’s sake, hold her head!”

  “And a half, two!”

  The point was astern, the shoals left behind in her wake. He breathed out as the leadsman found “three fathom” then “four fathom.” The broken reef wall would be no threat, not on a flooding tide that would put six fathoms over those tumbled ruins. They were beyond the threatening swells, too, out on the open sea.

  “Damn fine, damn my eyes if it wasn’t!” Lewrie said to his shaky helmsmen as they eased their death-grips on the tiller bar.

  “Thankee, sir, thankee right kindly,” they mumbled, working on their cuds again in mouths gone dry as desert sand.

  “Now let’s get after our pirate friends!” Lewrie exclaimed, beaming. “Mister Murray, they seem to be trending east, running for home and mother.”

  “Aye, sir. Want t’ tack an’ pursue ’em now, sir?”

  “Wait until we’re safely over this broken reef first, then lay her on the starboard tack,” Lewrie replied. “Break out the water-butts for anyone as thirsty as I feel for now. Gun crews stand easy.”

  “Aye, sir.”

  “Sail ho!” the lookout called.

  “Where away!”

  “Due south, sir!” the man replied. “Four points off the larboard beam! Full-rigged ship, sir!”

  “Damme, d’you think Mister Choate finally got here, sir?” Murray asked. “Now between us, we’ll put paid t’ these motherless buggers!”

  Lewrie took up his telescope and went up the mizzen shrouds to almost the top platform. He raised it to his eyes once he had an arm and leg threaded through the ratlines and stays to keep himself from falling, and took a look for himself.

  Three masts, pale tan sails, coming on for the island from the sou’west with the wind large on her starboard quarter. Already almost hull up. Good lines. Frigate-built, he thought. Ayscough chose well.

  A large swell over the broken reef wall lifted Culverin higher for about half a minute. Far off, another swell raised the stranger as well. Lewrie could espy a pale ochre hull with what looked to be a wide white gunwale stripe.

  “Poisson D’Or!” he cursed. “Choundas!”

  Why did he have to arrive now, of all times? Huge clouds of gunpowder hung over Spratly Island. Artillery still fired on those praos yet trapped in harbor or trying to run the gauntlet to sea.

  To see a strange ship giving chase to a pack of pirates fleeing to the east would be the final straw. They could not lure Poisson D’Or into harbor. Choundas would be wise to the game, and sail off for parts unknown, as sure as Fate!

  “Goddamn your bloody luck, you rotten shit!” Lewrie almost wept with frustration. Here he’d just won two battles in a fortnight, done away with pirates by the battalions, had sunk Frogs left, right and center, and all for nothing!

  What to do now, he pondered. One course of action was to go back to seal the entrance to the harbor, so most of the pirates could end up slaughtered. Or, he could pursue the eight who were getting away. If he did continue the chase, he might be able to lure Choundas into action, but the man had long-ranged guns to his short-ranged carronades. Stout as Culverin was, she’d be pounded to bits while he would be lucky to inflict even minor damage to Choundas.

  He raised his telescope again to peer at his foe. Poisson D’Or altered shape. She was turning north, putting all her masts in line, heading somewhere to the east of Spratly Island. To interpose between Culverin and Choundas’ fleeing allies.

  “Bastard!” Lewrie growled. For little danger, Choundas would appear to have saved that terrified remnant, driven off an English ship and restored his luster among the Mindanao pirates. And, he would end up escaping, after all, to some port where they had no hope of finding him. “Bastard!”

  Chapter 9

  “And you could not pursue him?” Mr. Twigg demanded, sounding as if he did not believe one word of Lewrie’s report.

  “Once we’d convinced the rest of the praos to surrender, sir,” Lewrie replied, striving to keep a cool head in the face of Twigg’s unspoken sneering, “after I had returned to harbor and blocked their escape, I did sail off to the east’rd, for two days, sir, but found no sign of him or the pirates who did get out of harbor. After that two days, I felt it my duty to return to Spratly and defend it until Lieutenant Choate arrived with Cuddalore to relieve me, sir.”

  They held their conference on Telesto’s poop deck, under the canvas awnings with lots of liquid refreshments, instead of the airless great cabins below, for the day was sunny, hot but breezy.

  “And the estimable Lieutenant Choate is where, sir?” Twigg inquired.

  “Off the coast of Borneo, sir,” Lewrie stated. “He unloaded his cargo of supplies, then told me to remain here as harbor-guard. He would scout to the sou’east, up to windward, from the Rajang River delta to Balabac Strait. He took along one of the captured praos in tow, sir, so he could go close inshore.”

  “Good thinking, that,” Ayscough said of his first lieutenant.

  “A bit too late, that,” Twigg retorted.

  “Let me remind you, Mister Twigg, that you were still of the opinion that Choundas would be here by mid-June, and in that you were dead-wrong!” Captain Ayscough rumbled deep in his chest, arms folded over his stomach. “I also get the sense that you disapprove of Mister Lewrie’s actions here on Spratly. Well, let me tell you, I have read his full report, even if you have not, and as a commission Sea Officer I find no fault with his conduct of our campaign so far, nor with any decision he has made. My report shall contain my highest approbation for his actions, actions in the very best traditions of the Sea Service!”

  “Hmmpf!” Twigg sniffed loftily. “Two sea-dogs whelped from the same litter. Your approval is only natural, but a chance was missed!”

  If anything, the alr
eady strained relationship between Twigg and Captain Ayscough had grown even more testy in the weeks since Alan had last seen them, going past gentlemanly conduct to the words and sneers that back home would have resulted in a pre-dawn duel. Choate had warned him to expect the worst of them, and had expressed worries that their acrimony was bad enough to jeopardize the future conduct of their expedition. Perhaps that was why Choate had been so eager to get back to sea, so he would not be there when they arrived. They had come into port at Spratly three days earlier, the fifteenth of May. Choate had brought Cuddalore, a fine twenty-gunned merchantman, across the bar on the first of May, and had departed in a haste such as if all the imps of Hell were chasing him. Which, in a way, Alan realized, they were. He’d rather be anywhere than around these two headstrong men whose relationship had degraded to an open feud!

  “Why, thankee, Mister Twigg.” Captain Ayscough beamed. “That was a pretty compliment, to my lights, and I do take it as such! I would like to think I’d been as successful had I been in this lad’s shoes. The island taken with minimum casualties, a French cartel ship captured and burned. And not just any hired vessel, but one of Choundas’ outright ownership! A cartel ship, I might remind you, we were not even aware of, and she moored not a quarter-mile ahead of us for six months at Whampoa!”

  “Hmmpf!” Twigg reiterated, turning beet-red from that insult to his intelligence-gathering powers, his lips going twine-thin.

  “The harbor fortified and provisioned as good as any, and the encampment improved, though I am sure we have Sir Hugo’s skills as a soldier to thank for that as well,” Ayscough continued, inclining his head toward Lieutenant-Colonel Willoughby, who was sprawled in a canvas deck-chair with a glass of brandy in hand, booted feet up on the rickety deal table. Sir Hugo raised his glass and smiled beatifically.

  Lewrie could not help but swell with pride as his praises were sung so nicely. If Ayscough were any more complimentary, he imagined they’d commission a Te Deum Mass at St. Paul’s and lay on fireworks!

 

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