Authors: Richard Woodman
Drinkwater had no idea how Santhonax had persuaded De Winter to allow him the use of the yacht. She flew the Dutch tricolour from her peak but there was no mistaking the significance of that sinister weft at the masthead. Drinkwater thought of the corpse of Major Brown, of the hanged mutineers of the
Culloden
, of the scapegoats of the Nore and of the collusion between Capitaine Santhonax and the red-haired witch now in Maidstone Gaol. He was filled with a cold and ruthless anger.
âLarboard battery make ready!'
The yacht was on the larboard bow, broad-reaching to the north east and closing them. For a few minutes they both ran on, lessening the range.
âEase her off a point,' then in a louder voice, âfire when you bear, Mr Bulman!'
Almost immediately the first report came from forward and Number 2 gun recoiled inboard, its crew fussing about it reloading. A ragged cheer broke from the Kestrels as they opened a rolling fire. Holes appeared in the yacht's sails. She was trying to cross
Kestrel
's bow to rake and Drinkwater had a sudden idea.
âDown helm! Headsail sheets! Hard on the wind!'
Kestrel
turned, presenting her bow for the raking broadside but at a time of her own choosing and too quickly for Santhonax to take full advantage. Only two balls from his broadside came near and they struck harmless splinters from the starboard gig. âStarboard guns! Starboard guns!'
Traveller held his hand up in acknowledgement, as if coolly assuring his commander that no last minute manoeuvre would rob Jeremiah Traveller of his moment. He had all the quoins out and the guns at full elevation as they made to cross the yacht's stern.
But Santhonax rose to the occasion. The yacht turned now, spinning to starboard so that the two vessels passed on opposite courses at a combined speed of nearly twenty knots. Doggedly they fired gun for gun, time permitting them one shot from each as they raced past. Drinkwater saw huge sections of the yacht's rail shivered into splinters. Jemmy Traveller had double shotted his guns.
Then the whine of shot, the impact, thumps and screams of the yacht's fire turned
Kestrel
's deck into a shambles of wounded and dead men who fell back from their cannon. Aft, Drinkwater laid his pistol at a tall man near the yacht's tiller and squeezed the trigger. The ball missed its mark and the fellow coolly raised his hat and smiled. Drinkwater swore but he was cold as ice now, lifted onto a terrible, calculating plane that was beyond fear. He had surrendered to providence now, was a hostage to the capricious fortune of war and had long forgotten his earnest promises to Elizabeth. Elizabeth was of another world that had no part in this dull and terrible October afternoon. For this was not the Nathaniel known to Elizabeth, this was a man who had taken the French lugger and quelled incipient mutiny. This was an intelligent man butchering his fellows, and doing it with consummate ability.
âUp helm! Stand by to gybe!'
There was a scrambling about the decks as Jessup, aware of Drinkwater's intentions, whipped the shocked men to their stations. He had not yet felt the pain of the splinter in his own leg.
Kestrel
swung round in pursuit of the yacht, heeling violently as her huge boom, barely restrained by its sheet, flew across the deck. The unsecured guns of the starboard battery rolled inboard to the extent
of their breechings and those of the larboard thumped against the rail, their outboard wheels in the water that drove in through the open gunports. They steadied after the yacht. Across her stern they could see her name;
Draaken
. Shot holes peppered her sails as they did their own, and frayed ropes' ends streamed to leeward from her masthead.
Drinkwater never removed his eyes from his quarry, gauging the distance. It was closing, the yacht with her leeboards sagging down to leeward as
Kestrel
came up on her larboard quarter. He was aware of, rather than saw, Jessup clapping a set of deadeyes on a weather shroud, wounded in the action, that had parted under the sudden strain of that impetuous gybe. And beneath his feet there was a sluggishness that told of water in the hold. Even as his subconscious mind identified it he heard too the clanking of the pumps where Johnson was attending to his duty.
âMr Traveller!' There was no answer, then Jessup called âJem's bought it, sir . . .' There was a pause, eloquent of eulogy for a friend. âI'll do duty if it's the starboard guns you'll be wanting . . .' There was a high, strained quality of exaggerated emphasis in Jessup's voice, also present in his own. He knew it for the voice of blood-lust, a quality that made men's words memorable at such moments of heightened perception.
It's the starboard battery I want, right enough Mr Jessup,' he confirmed, and it seemed that a steadying influence ran along
Kestrel
's deck. The wounded had been pulled clear of the guns from where Meyrick and his bearers could drag the worst of them below, to Appleby.
The surrounding battle had ceased to exist for Drinkwater. His whole being was concentrated on overhauling the
Draaken
, attempting to divine Santhonax's next move. Jessup came up to him.
âI've loaded canister on top o' ball, sir, in the starboard guns, an' the larbowlines will be ready to board.'
With an effort Drinkwater directed his attention to the man beside him. There was the efficiency he had first noted about Jessup, paying dividends at last. He must remember that in his report. If he lived to write it.
âThank you, Mr Jessup.' His eye ran past the boatswain. Forward he could see James Thompson checking the priming in a pistol and taking a cutlass from Short. Short, a kerchief round his grimy head, was lovingly caressing a boarding pike. By the companionway Tregembo was thumbing the edge of another pike and glancing anxiously
aft at Drinkwater. All along the starboard side the starbowlines knelt by their guns as if at gun drill. He could see the red beard of Poll pointed at the enemy.
A wave of emotion seized Drinkwater for a terrible moment. It seemed the cutter and all her people were in the grip of some coalescing of forces that stemmed from his own desire for vengeance. They could not have caught the same madness that led Drinkwater in hot pursuit of Santhonax, nor all be victims of the witchcraft of Hortense Montholon.
He shook his head to clear it of such disturbing thoughts. It was merely the result of discipline, he reassured himself. Then he cast all aside as ahead of them
Draaken
luffed.
Unable to escape, she would stand her ground while she had a lead, lie athwart
Kestrel
's bow, rake her and run north, delivering a second broadside as she did so.
âLie down!' Drinkwater commanded, lending his own weight to the tiller and turning
Kestrel
a quarter point to starboard, heading directly for the yacht.
The cutter staggered under the impact of
Draaken
's broadside. The peak halliard was shot through and the mainsail sagged down. Splinters rose in showers from the forward rails and a resonating clang told where at least one ball had ricochetted off a bow chaser. Someone screamed and one of the helmsmen dropped into eternity without a sound, falling against Drinkwater's legs. Then
Draaken
completed her turn and began to pass the cutter on the opposite tack, no more than twenty yards to windward.
âNow Jessup! Now!' Scrambling up from their prone positions the men gathered round the starboard guns.
Draaken
drew abeam. âFire!'
Drinkwater saw the bulwarks fly as smoke from the yacht's own fire rolled down over
Kestrel
. As it cleared he saw her sails flogging uncontrolled. Santhonax had let fly his sheets and
Draaken
was dropping to leeward. With her shallow draught she would drive down on top of the cutter as
Kestrel
lost way, her mainsail hanging in impotent folds, the gaff shot through and her jib blowing out of the bolt ropes through shot holes.
âLet fly all sheets! Boarders stand by!'
All along her side
Kestrel
's gunners poured shot after shot into the yacht as fast as they were able. It was murder and the cracking sails added to the screams of wounded men and the roar of the cannon. Then, in the smoke and confusion,
Draaken
was on top of them, her
mast level with
Kestrel
's tiller.
âBoarders aft here!' Drinkwater roared, lugging a pistol from his belt and drawing his hanger. Through the smoke he saw Tregembo and Short and James Thompson and half a dozen other faces familiar as old friends.
Kestrel
shook as
Draaken
ground into her and the Dutchmen passed lashings over anything prominent. The wind whipped the last shreds of smoke from the now silent guns and as it cleared they saw their enemy.
They were poised to board, round red faces hedged with the deadly spikes of cutlass, axe and pike. Drinkwater sought vainly for Santhonax and then forgot him as the Dutchmen poured over the rail. The Kestrels were flung back, swept from their own deck as far as the gigs in a slithering, sliding mêlee of hacking, stabbing and murdering. Drinkwater thrust, twisted and thrust with Tregembo grunting and swearing on his right hand and James Thompson on his left. He felt himself step on a body that still writhed. He dared not look down as he parried a clumsy lunge from a blond boy with the desperate look of reckless terror in his eyes. The boy stabbed again, inaccurately but swiftly in short defensive reflexes. Drinkwater hacked savagely down at the too-extended forearm. The boy fell back, unarmed and whimpering.
Briefly Drinkwater paused. He sensed the Dutch attack falter as the British, buttressed by the solid transoms of the gigs, found their defence was effective.
âCome on the Kestrels!' Drinkwater's scream cracked into a croak but about him there was a hefting of pikes, a re-gripping of cutlasses and then they were surging forward, driving the Dutch before them. Over a larboard gun leapt Short, a maniacal laugh erupting from him as he pitched a man overboard then drove two more before him into the larboard quarter. They were disarmed and with his pike Short tossed them both over the shattered transom like stooks onto a rick.
Drinkwater swung himself left, across to the starboard quarter where the enemy were in retreat. âBoard the bastard, James, board the bastard!' he yelled, and next to him Thompson grinned.
âI'm with 'ee, Mr Drinkwater!' Tregembo's voice was still there and here was Hill, and Bulman with the chasers' crews, having fought their way down the starboard side. Then they were up on the rail and leaping down onto
Draaken
's deck, their impetus carrying them forward, men made hard and ruthless by months of blockade carried with them a more vicious motivation than the Dutch, torn from comfortable moorings and doing the bidding of foreign masters.
Opposition fragmented, lost its edge and above it all Drinkwater could hear the furious oaths in a fairer tongue than the guttural grunts of dying Dutchmen.
With careless swathes of the hanger Drinkwater slashed aft. A Dutch officer came on guard in front of him and instinct made him pause and come into the same pose but he was passed by Short, his face a contorted mask of insane delight, his pike levelled at the officer. A pistol ball entered Short's eye and took the back of his skull off. Still the boatswain's mate lunged and the Dutch lieutenant crashed to the deck, pierced by the terrible weapon with Short's twitching corpse on top of him.
Drinkwater stepped aside and faced the man who had fired the pistol.
It was Edouard Santhonax.
The Frenchman dropped the pistol and swiped downwards with his sword in the
molinello
he had used at Sheerness. Drinkwater put up his hanger in a horizontal parry above his head and the blades crashed together. Then Tregembo was beside him his pike extended at Santhonax's exposed stomach.
âAlive, Tregembo! Take him alive!' and on the last word, with a final effort Drinkwater twisted his wrist, disengaged and drew his blade under Santhonax's uncovered forearm.
Santhonax, attacked by two men, took greater terror from the levelled pike and tried to push it aside even as Tregembo obeyed Drinkwater and brought it up. The vicious point entered the Frenchman's face and ripped his cheek in a bloody, disfiguring wound and he fell back, covered in blood.
Drinkwater turned to see the deck of
Draaken
like a butcher's shambles. Lolling on the yacht's companionway James Thompson was holding his entrails, staring with disbelief. Drinkwater turned away, appalled. A kind of hush fell on them all, the moaning of the wind rising above the groans of the wounded. Then Hill said, âFlag's signalling, sir . . . Acts 27 verse 28 . . .'
âFor Christ's sake . . .'
All along the line of ships the smoke had cleared away. Admiral De Winter had surrendered and those of Onslow's commanders still with men on their quarterdecks able to open bibles obeyed their chief. They sounded and found, not fifteen fathoms, but nine. In great peril the British fleet secured their prizes.
Among them, her decks cluttered with corpses, her gear wounded, her bulwarks riven by shot, plunged the King's cutter
Kestrel
.
Chapter Sixteen | October 1797 |
âHow is he, Mr Appleby?' In the swaying lamplight
Kestrel
's cabin had the appearance of an abbatoir and Appleby, grey faced with exhaustion, was stained by blood, his apron stiff with it. They stared down at the shrunken body of James Thompson, the purser, his waist swathed in bloody bandages.
âSinking fast, sir,' said the surgeon, his clipped formality proper in such grim circumstances. âThe livid colour of the lips, the contraction of the nostils and eyebrows an indication of approaching death . . . besides he has lost much blood.'
âYes.' Drinkwater felt light-headed, aware of a thousand calls on his time, unable to tear himself away from the groans and stench of the cabin as though by remaining there he could expiate himself for the murder they had been doing a few hours earlier. âYes,' he repeated, âI am told he supported me most gallantly in boarding.'