The Guns of Tortuga

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by Brad Strickland




  The Guns of Tortuga

  If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  “QUIET!” HUNTER SHOUTER IN A VOICE OF COMMAND THAT MADE BOTH OF US HUSH

  He then said, “Later we’ll have a council of war. But the first thing to do is get the ship safely to sea!”

  Already sails were dropping and filling with the night breeze, and already the Aurora was gliding away from the wharf. The moon went behind a cloud. I heard, or imagined I heard, the clatter of hooves from somewhere ashore. But if it was Steele, or Steele’s men, they were too late. The Aurora and those who sailed on her were safe.

  At least for the moment.

  Read all of the Pirate Hunter stories.

  Book One: Mutiny!

  Book Two: The Guns of Tortuga

  Book Three: Heart of Steele

  (coming soon)

  Affectionately dedicated to my middle son, Anthony Ramón Fuller

  —Thomas E. Fuller

  And to Amy, “the pirate’s daughter”

  —Brad Strickland

  http://www.piratehunter.info

  If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  First Aladdin Paperbacks edition March 2003

  Text copyright © 2003 by Brad Strickland and Thomas E. Fuller

  Illustrations copyright © 2003 by Dominic Saponaro

  ALADDIN PAPERBACKS

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster

  Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas

  New York, NY 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

  Designed by Debra Sfetsios

  The text of this book was set in Minion.

  Printed in the United States of America

  2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

  Library of Congress Control Number 2002108582

  ISBN 0-689-85297-5

  ISBN 13: 978-0-689-85297-8

  eISBN 13: 978-1-439-10463-7

  The Guns of Tortuga PROLOGUE

  Under the Pirate Flag

  MY NAME IS DAVID SHEA, though I make do with “Davy.” When my mother died of smallpox in March, 1687, I was sent to Port Royal, Jamaica, where my uncle Patrick Shea was a surgeon. In truth, we had a rocky beginning, but before long my uncle decided to make me his apprentice.

  Two of his patients impressed me. The first was Sir Henry Morgan, the famous old sea dog. Though he had aged and become merely an ailing politician and planter, he filled my head with tales of buccaneers and booty. The second patient was Lieutenant William Hunter of His Majesty’s Navy, recovering from grave wounds he had got fighting Captain Jack Steele, the fearsome pirate.

  When Lieutenant Hunter went back to sea, aboard the Navy frigate Retribution, my uncle shipped as surgeon, and I went as his loblolly boy. That meant, as I learned, a doctor’s assistant. To my horror, Hunter led a mutiny against the stern Captain Brixton. He and the mutineers, including my uncle, were captured and sentenced to death.

  But on the very day they were to hang, the twenty-odd mutineers escaped, and I was swept along with them, like a leaf in a windstorm. Days later we met Sir Henry Morgan once again. He gave us more men, nearly two hundred hardened old sailors, and the fine French-built frigate Aurora. Only then did I learn the truth: Hunter and my uncle were not really pirates, but pirate hunters. They had become mutineers as a disguise, so they could search out and sink the pirates that plagued American waters.

  And sure, I joined with them, for an orphan like me had nowhere else to go. It was a fine life.

  At least, it was until the morning we met the murderous big Spanish warship….

  Broadsides

  “ROUSE YOURSELF, lad! That bloody fool Hunter is going to get us all killed, and I don’t want you to miss it!”

  My uncle Patch stood roaring in the open door-way, tall, massive, and looking as well groomed as an unmade bed. Groggy and disoriented, I tumbled out of my hammock and onto the scrubbed deck of the Aurora’s sick berth, for Uncle Patch—or Patrick Shea, to give him his proper name—was the surgeon of the vessel and I was his servant, the loblolly boy.

  From the deck above, I could hear the pounding of boots and bare feet and the rolling of the drum as the crew rushed to their battle stations. This had happened before. In September 1687, Captain William Hunter had taken the Aurora from the former buccaneer Henry Morgan and had set out in it to be a pirate. Or so all the world thought. We on the ship knew that she was actually a pirate hunter, and her goal was to bring to justice Jack Steele, a deadly enemy to King James II of England and to all of His Majesty’s ships and subjects.

  Now it was January, 1688, and since September, we had taken five Spanish privateers, all of them small vessels that had given up without firing so much as a shot. The Aurora’s fame was growing, and it was Hunter’s hope that before long Steele would come to believe we were pirates and so would let down his guard.

  “Hurry, Davy,” snapped my uncle again. “This time Hunter’s caught a tiger, and he will neither let go of it nor show it a clean pair of heels!”

  I shook my head and tried to clear it. In the distance, something that sounded like thunder boomed in across the sea. The shouts from above were now loud with laughter. I wondered about our crew, some of them navy men but most of them middle-aged retired buccaneers, friends of Henry Morgan’s. What was it about danger that made them laugh so much?

  “What is it, then? A navy ship? Or is it—” I babbled, tugging on my clothes.

  “The Irish have a better command of language than that. Up and out with you! We’ll have our work cut out for us when they start firing.” My uncle had unlocked the cabinet that held his operating instruments and had begun to pull out trays with scalpels, pledgets, catgut, bone saws, and other equipment.

  “’Tis unfair you are, Uncle! What is going on?” I have been told that I sound more Irish when I get excited, and perhaps it is true. Though I was raised in England, my late mother was Irish, and it was from her that I learned to speak.

  My uncle set the trays side by side on a shelf he had caused to be mounted on the sick berth bulkhead. It was a tidy arrangement with a lip to keep the trays from sliding off when the ship rolled, and compartments that just fit the trays to keep them from moving back and forth when he was operating.

  He turned to me, dusting his hands. “On deck! Do you not hear that bloody drum? On deck and all will become clear!”

  Quick as thought, I was scrambling up the ladder to the deck. Everything looked just the way it had sounded belowdecks. Sailors were running back and forth, hanging from the rigging, shouting and waving their cutlasses. The ones not engaged in this manner were running out the guns on the Aurora’s starboard side, clearing the decks for action.

  “Make ready, my lads, make ready!” rang out a laughing voice. Captain William Hunter stood next to the helmsman and the whipstaff, legs spread, hands on hips, head thrown back. We had been operating as pirates for nearly five months
, but his appearance still seemed most strange to me. Gone was the elegant officer of His Majesty’s Royal Navy that Sir Henry Morgan had recruited. In his place was the most piratical-looking fellow north of the Spanish Main.

  William Hunter was resplendent in a long emerald green coat with red frogs and piping. His blouse and pants gleamed white, separated by the yellowest silk sash its owner could find. And where he had found his hat with the ostrich plumes was still a mystery. Mr. Adams, the second officer, had speculated that the captain had a natural flair for the theatrical. What Uncle Patch had said barely bore repeating.

  “That’s it, lads,” he sang out again, grandly pointing to starboard with his cutlass. “Run them out, run them out! Let’s show them what we’re made of!”

  “We won’t have to show them,” Uncle Patch snarled as he clambered up next to him. My uncle looked more the pirate type than Captain Hunter, for he was a tall, broad-shouldered man who would have looked more at home in a boxing ring than standing over a patient. Looks can deceive, for he had a delicate touch and was well known as one of the finest surgeons afloat. He clung to the rail and stared into the distance, shouting, “What we’re made of will be apparent to all, for it presently shall be spread all over the decks! Tell me now, are we really to attack that brute?”

  Hunter threw back his head and laughed long and loud, an act that never failed to annoy my uncle. Indeed, I believe that is just why Hunter did it. I ran to the starboard railing and pushed my way between sweating and swearing pirates old enough to be my grandfather. Then I just stood there with my mouth open.

  The thunder I had heard hadn’t been thunder.

  The sun was rising up out of the east like a burning orange, the sky deep royal blue, the sea almost black. And where the sky met the water, ships were fighting with flashes of fire, billows of smoke and, seconds later, the crash of cannon fire.

  I strained with the rest of the crew to see what was happening. Three of the four vessels were sloops, or at least the one still firing and the one burning were. The only mark of the third was a sinking mast and men clinging to floating debris. And in the middle …

  Hunter bellowed, “She’s flying colors, Mr. Adams. See if you can make them out!”

  “Aye, aye, sir!” Mr. Adams, who in his former days had been one of the oldest midshipmen in the Royal Navy, climbed the rigging to the maintop, whipped out his telescope, and scanned the battle. So did I, but from the deck.

  The great three-masted ship unleashed another broadside into the burning sloop, sending sparks and burning wood exploding into the air. Whoever the men were on it, they were no cowards. With the ship burning and sinking from under them, they managed to get off one last broadside. I rubbed my eyes. Surely the shot hadn’t actually bounced off those towering black sides?

  With hand to mouth, Mr. Hunter called up, “Are her colors red, Mr. Adams? Does she fly the red flag! Is it the Red Queen?”

  The Red Queen was Jack Steele’s huge warship. Was the monster firing its cannons before us the flagship of that pirate king? Were we going to meet face to face with him at last? The great guns boomed again, and the burning sloop began to go down.

  “Use your eyes!” Uncle Patch snapped. “The Queen’s the color of fresh blood, but that thing’s the color of old pitch!” The strange ship fired again, a shattering broadside that sent up a storm of smoke. “Devil’s heart, how many guns does the beast bear?”

  Then the dawning light hit the great ship’s flag. It was indeed red. And gold.

  “She’s a Spaniard, Captain!” sang out Mr. Adams. “Spanish flag as big as Castille and gaudy as a Mexican sunset!”

  Hunter had seen as well, and his shoulders sagged. I knew he had been hoping for the Red Queen and for Jack Steele, for he bore the man an ancient grudge. But none of his disappointment showed in his voice as he called up, “And her adversaries, Mr. Adams?”

  In the maintop, Mr. Adams clapped his telescope to his eye. “Can’t tell anything of the sinking ones, sir, but the one that’s left flies the Jolly Roger.”

  “Good,” Uncle Patch said with a grim nod. “So the Dons are doing our job for us. More power to them, say I. Let’s be off, now, and out of danger.”

  I stared at the massive ship as it loosed another broadside. I had never seen a Spanish warship before. She was long, broad, and tall, and gunfire erupted from at least three different decks. And she seemed strangely steady, barely rocking as the cannons fired.

  “A real Spanish beauty, that one,” said Mr. Jeffers, the one-eyed gunner next to me as he prepared his gun. He turned his head and gave me a grim smile. “Slow as Christmas in stays, but she sails as steady as a castle on a rock. The Dons build them wide and heavy, they do. Not all slim and frenchified like this here skiff.” Like most gunners, Mr. Jeffers felt that the whole aim of shipbuilding was to keep the guns steady.

  “We have the wind gage. Bring her about, Mr. Warburton,” Captain Hunter shouted to our hulking helmsman. “Stand ready for battle, men!”

  “Ready for—have you lost your senses, man?” sputtered Uncle Patch, waving his arms. “She’s a hundred forty feet stem to stern if an inch, she’s probably got twice as many guns as we have, and she’s so broad, you could berth the Aurora on her decks and not touch the rails! And she’s sinking pirates! Pirates, for all love, and doing our very job for us! Leave the brute alone, William!”

  Hunter grinned at him. “What, and miss this golden opportunity?”

  My uncle glared at him. “You consider being blasted into waterlogged kindling a golden opportunity?”

  Hunter stared across the sea at the ships. We were coming down with the wind, skimming fast toward them, and they grew moment by moment. Shaking his head, he said, “Why, you Irish leech, what better way to spread the legend of the daring pirate ship Aurora amongst the Brotherhood of the Coast than to save a shipload of buccaneers from the king of Spain?”

  My uncle spluttered speechlessly.

  “The captain’s clapped a stopper on Patch,” Mr. Jeffers guffawed, digging his horny elbow into my side. “He’s got brains, he has. Ain’t seen thinkin’ that twisted since ol’ Cap’n Morgan’s day. ’Course, Cap’n Morgan couldn’t sail worth a tinker’s—”

  I was no longer listening to Mr. Jeffers. I was trying to make myself as small as possible next to the railing. We were going into battle and I wanted to see it. As I wrote, we had taken our share of prizes in the previous months. But they had surrendered after a shot across their bows. None of them had carried anything like treasure, but Hunter had taken from them what booty they offered. After he had stripped the ships of powder and shot, he let them go, knowing they’d tell others that the Aurora was seeking prey.

  This fight was going to be the real thing, and if my uncle remembered he’d sent me onto the deck, I’d be back in the relative security of the surgery when the battle started, safe and blind as a doorknob. I fleetingly wondered where we were exactly. Two days before we had passed Puerto Rico on our larboard, and we had sailed mostly north and west since then, but I was no navigator. We were at sea, and that was all I knew.

  Despite my uncle’s logical ravings, the Aurora, once she had changed her tack, came down at a fine pace toward the battle. Mr. Adams, at a nod from Captain Hunter, ran up our own colors, a jet-black silk flag with a stark white skull and crossbones in the center. The crew had stopped laughing and shouting and instead stood crouched over their weapons and guns. Their faces were split into tight grins that reminded me of wolves. Or sharks.

  In less time than it takes to tell, we were bearing down on the conflict. The Spaniard was between the burning sloop and her final enemy, off her starboard bow and maneuvering desperately to avoid the big ship’s deadly broadside fire. We were coming up on the Spaniard’s larboard stern, and so far she gave no sign of having spotted us.

  “Aim for her masts and sheets, lads,” Hunter shouted. “We don’t have time to hammer her hull, and if we did, it would make no odds. I think she might just slap our f
aces for us. Cut her masts down! Once we’re past her, we don’t want her catching us! Hit her fast, hit her hard, and then run like the devil!”

  We bore down on them, and the stern of the Spaniard loomed up. I saw running men at the rail. The Dons had spotted us, and they were fast to catch on that we weren’t friends. Her two stern chasers opened up on us, but their shot went a hundred yards wide. Her best gunners must have been concentrating on her victims.

  “A shame, I calls it,” muttered Mr. Jeffers. “Best guns in the world and couldn’t hit the broad side of Jamaica if they was anchored in Port Royal Harbor.”

  Then we were slipping by her and I could make out her name in huge gold letters across her stern: CONCEPCIÓN. I stared up great black wooden walls, my eyes wide. The Concepción towered at least ten to fifteen feet above us, like a castle on a rock.

  “Fire as they bear!” ordered Mr. Hunter.

  “Now’s butcher’s work, lad,” Mr. Jeffers said with a grin, his slow-burning match steady over his gun’s touchhole. “Up a mite. A mite more. Hold!” The gun crew had raised the barrel by wedging in quoins. They leaped away. I hunched behind the railing and stuffed my fingers in my ears. Then everything happened at once.

  Mr. Jeffers whipped down his match and arched his body. His gun roared, recoiling with a devil’s hammer blow that would have crushed any sailor behind it. As the smoke cleared, I saw the Concepción’s gunports fly open, exposing row upon row of gigantic twenty-four-pounders. The world erupted into ear-shattering sound and disappeared into a sulfuric cloud of gun smoke. The Aurora shuddered as the twenty-four-pound cannonballs screamed overhead and some slammed into us. I heard men screaming and cursing and stared in horror at the six-inch wooden splinter that quivered in the railing next to my head.

  “Again, lads, again!” Hunter’s bellow sounded far off and tiny after the gunfire. “Hit her again, before she can recover and hole us like cheese!”

 

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