In Gallant Company (40 page)

Read In Gallant Company Online

Authors: Alexander Kent

BOOK: In Gallant Company
6.55Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Man the braces. Stand by!' Bolitho strode to the side and added sharply, ‘Be easy, lads! Take your time.' He saw some of them pause to stare. After serving in a King's ship it was like a blasphemy to be told to take your time. He added, ‘You are
landmen
, remember?' It was unbelievable that some of them could grin and chuckle at such a stupid joke. ‘So forget you are prime seamen.'

Buller called, ‘But not for long, eh, zur?' Even he was laughing.

‘
Now
, Stockdale.'

With yards and rudder moving in clumsy unison, the little brig fell three points downwind, the
Revenge
's masts appearing to slide astern until she was running on a parallel course, her bowsprit and jib boom just overlapping the
White Hills
' taffrail, and half a cable away.

Obediently, or so it appeared, the other vessel followed suit, dropping even further with the wind and leaning over on the larboard tack. Fifty yards separated the two brigs now, with the
Revenge
still slightly astern. Each alteration of tack had given
White Hills
a few more precious minutes and a tiny lead on her unwanted companion.

Frowd said between his clenched teeth, ‘Thank the good Lord they have no prepared signals this time.'

‘You sound like the Sage.'

But Frowd was right. The enemy could have examined them at leisure had they had the time to create an efficient form of signalling as in more professional navies.

Apart from the creaming water alongside, the resonant slap and boom of canvas, it was very quiet on deck.

Moffitt remarked, ‘I can see one of 'em with a trumpet, sir.' He looked at Bolitho, his eyes calm. ‘I know what to say. I'll not let you down.'

Rabbett said, ‘You'd better not, matey. I've been in too many jails to rot in one o' theirs!'

Moffitt grinned and then waved his speaking trumpet towards the other vessel. Both brigs were moving swiftly on the same tack, and at any other time would have made a fine sight. Now, in their controlled advance, they each had a quality of menace. Like two wary beasts, the one unwilling to fall into a trap, the other afraid of showing weakness to her enemy.

It was then, even as someone waved back from the
Revenge
's quarterdeck, that the tension was shattered by a terrible scream. It was like something inhuman, a soul in hideous torment.

The seamen at the braces, or hiding beside their guns, peered round, horrified and then angry as the sound got louder and wilder.

Quinn gasped, ‘What is it, in the name of God?'

Stockdale said, ‘Gallimore, sir. His wound must 'ave burst.'

Bolitho nodded, tasting the bile in his throat, as he pictured the awful gangrenous, rotting flesh which had given off such a stench that he had had to move Gallimore to the cable tier.

‘Tell Borga to silence him.'

He tried to shut out the screams, to exclude the picture of the tortured man below.

A voice came across the water, bringing Bolitho back to danger and reality.

White Hills
ahoy! What in hell's name was that?'

Bolitho swallowed hard. Poor Gallimore's last moments of terror had unnerved the enemy as much as his own prize-crew.

Moffitt yelled, ‘Wounded man!' He staggered as the brig pitched through a steep-sided wave, but Bolitho knew it was an act. Moffitt was as nimble as a cat. But it gave more time. ‘Had a brush with the English! Lost some good hands!'

The scream stopped with dramatic suddenness, as if the man had been beheaded.

Across the water the other voice asked, ‘An' Captain Tracy? Is he safe? I've orders for him, y'see!'

‘He's wounded right enough.' Moffitt gripped the shrouds with his free hand, then relaxed his fingers as he whispered over his shoulder, ‘Them two guns, sir. Their crews have stood down.'

Bolitho wanted to lick his lips, to wipe the sweat from his eyes, anything to break the strain of waiting and watching the
other vessel. Moffitt had seen what he had not even dared to hope for. Maybe it was Gallimore's screams which, added to Moffitt's outward confidence and the fact that the
White Hills
was the right vessel in almost the right place, had convinced
Revenge
's captain that all was well.

But there was still the matter of Tracy's new orders. Probably details of the next rendezvous, or news of a supply convoy left open to attack.

In a few moments
Revenge
's captain would have to face the fact he was now in the senior position. He was the one who would have to decide what to do.

Bolitho said quietly, ‘He'll suggest we both heave to so that he can come over to us and speak with Tracy and see how he is.'

Quinn stared at him, his face like a mask. ‘Will we go about then, sir?'

‘Aye.' Bolitho stole a quick glance at the masthead pendant. ‘The moment he decides to shorten sail and head into the wind, we'll use our chance.' He called to the nearest gun crew, ‘Be ready, lads!' He saw an over-eager seaman struggling off his knees and reaching for a slow-match. ‘Belay that! Wait for the word!'

The
Revenge
's captain called, ‘We'll heave to. I'll be over to you as soon as –'

He got no further. Like some terrifying creature emerging from a tomb, Captain Jonas Tracy lurched through the fore-hatch, his eyes bulging from his head with agony and fury.

He carried a pistol which he fired at a seaman who ran to restrain him, the ball smashing the man in the forehead and hurling him on his back in a welter of blood.

And all the time he was bellowing, his voice stronger than most of the men around him.

‘Rake the bastard! It's a trick, you damn fool!'

From the other brig came a series of shouts and confused orders, and then like bewildered hogs the guns began to run out through the ports along her side.

Another seaman hurried towards the swaying figure by the hatch, only to be clubbed senseless by the pistol. That last effort was more than enough. Blood was spurting through the wad of bandages around his armpit, and his stubbled face seemed
to be whitening even as he tried to drag himself to the nearest gun, as if the life was flooding out of him.

Bolitho saw it all as in a wild dream, with events and sequences overlapping, yet totally separate. Gallimore's sudden cries had lured Tracy's guard from his post. And who could blame him? Tracy's terrible wound should have been enough to kill almost anyone.

And
Revenge
's captain's voice calling across to Moffitt must have somehow dragged Tracy from his unconscious state to sudden, violent action.

Whatever had begun it, Bolitho knew there was no chance at all of completing his flimsy plan.

He yelled, ‘
Run out!
'

He watched his men hurling themselves on their tackles, the four guns squeaking to the open ports with desperation matched only by despair.

‘Fire!'

As the guns crashed out in a ragged salvo, Bolitho shouted, ‘Stockdale! Put the helm down!'

As Stockdale and a helmsman spun the spokes, Bolitho dragged out his hanger, knowing that nothing, nothing on earth could change this moment.

He heard startled shouts from his own men and musket shots from the
Revenge
as like a wild animal the
White Hills
responded to the helm and swung up into the wind, sails shaking and convulsing, as the other vessel appeared to charge right across her bowsprit.

There were several isolated shots, his or theirs, Bolitho did not know. He was running forward, his feet slipping on blood as he tore past the dying Tracy towards the point of impact.

Like a great tusk the jib boom smashed through
Revenge
's rigging and stays, the impact shaking the hull and deck with the force of going aground.

And still the wind, and the
White Hills
' impetus, drove them harder and faster together, until with a tremendous crash, followed by the sounds of spars splintering in half, the two brigs came together in a brutal embrace.

Bolitho's ears were ringing to the sounds of falling rigging
and thrashing sails, of
Revenge
's topmast, complete with topgallant and a mountain of uncontrollable canvas, plunging down through the drifting gunsmoke to add to the destruction.

But he was angry, wildly so, and could not control himself as he waved his hanger and shouted, ‘Come on, lads!
At 'em!
'

He saw the dazed faces change to maddened excitement as they responded. In a small tide they charged towards the bows, while from aft Bolitho could hear Frowd and his collection of cripples firing across the arrowhead of water with every weapon they could lay hands on.

And here was the enemy's deck right beneath his legs. Staring eyes and wild shouts, while others struggled and kicked beneath the severed rigging and splintered woodwork.

A bayonet lunged out and sent a seaman screaming down into the smoke, but Bolitho let himself drop, felt his feet find their balance on the other deck, while on either side of him his boarding party surged forward to the attack. The man with the bayoneted musket swung wildly to face him, but Stockdale seized him and smashed the cutlass-guard in his mouth. As the man toppled away, Stockdale hacked him across the neck and finished it.

The first shocked surprise at seeing the
White Hills
turn towards them and deliberately force herself into a collision would soon give way to a rage and determination to overwhelm that of the boarders. This, Bolitho knew, but at a distance, as if it were already beyond his reach.

Once, as he ducked beneath a fallen yard to slash a man across the arm who was aiming a pistol at somebody, Bolitho caught a glimpse of his brief command. With her big mainyard sprung in two like a giant's longbow, and with the canvas and rigging piled over her forecastle like so much rubbish, she looked almost a wreck.

Beyond the debris, and licking above the thinning smoke, he saw a patch of scarlet, and realized that despite everything which had happened he had given the order to run up the colours, and yet could remember nothing about it.

‘This way, lads!' It was Buller, brandishing a boarding axe and a pistol. ‘Fight yer way aft!' Then he fell, his face set in an expression of complete surprise.

Bolitho gritted his teeth. Time, which they had won with such care, had run out.

From the
Revenge
's quarterdeck came the crash of a swivel gun, and Bolitho realized that someone was still firing at the
White Hills
. Above the din of clashing steel, screams and curses, he heard answering shots, and could picture Frowd yelling defiance, and waiting to die.

Somehow they had fought their way to the midships part of the deck, where the piled debris of cordage and broken spars made every move doubly hard, but where, if you hesitated, it was asking to be killed.

He saw Dunwoody rolling over and over on the bloodied deck, struggling with one of the
Revenge
's seamen, one hand cut to shreds as he tried to hold off the man's dirk while he groped for his fallen cutlass. Another man ran from the smoke, raised a boarding pike and drove it through Dunwoody's neck, pinioning his kicking body to the planking until the dirk stabbed him into stillness.

Bolitho saw it all, and as he struggled over an upended gig he found himself face to face with the
Revenge
's captain. Beyond him he could see the abandoned wheel and the torn splinters standing up from the quarterdeck like quills, the sprawled bodies and crawling wounded who had fallen to the four doubly loaded six-pounders.

Bolitho ducked as the man's blade sliced above his head, caught his foot in a trailing rope and fell heavily on his side. He watched the blade rise and plunge towards him again, and held up his hanger to take the brunt of the blow. The numbing shock jarred his shoulder like a kick, and he saw the other officer turn and run aft, leaving Bolitho rather than face a sudden rally of the boarding party. Rabbett, his cutlass bloody to the hilt, Carlsson, the Swede, with a bayoneted musket he must have snatched from one of the brig's men, even Borga, the Roman cook, who held a dirk in either hand like one of his ancestors in the gladiators' arena, were still here and ready to fight.

On the far side of the deck he saw Quinn with the rest of the boarders, white-faced and with blood running from his forehead, locked in combat with twice his own number.

Bolitho saw Couzens and yelled hoarsely, ‘Get back aboard! I told you to stay with Mr Frowd!'

He gasped and ducked as a shadow passed in front of him. Then with a sharp twist of his arm he brought the hanger round to lock with his attacker's cutlass.

The man was a petty officer of sorts and, he guessed, as English as himself.

‘You've bitten off too much this time,
sir!
'

Bolitho felt the man's strength forcing him back, the blade inches from his chest. It was not that he was a better swordsman, but his voice, if not Cornish, was certainly from Bolitho's own West Country.

Moffitt rose shaking his head like a prize-fighter, the blood of another victim glittering on his cutlass.

‘And
you!
'

Bolitho fell back with the petty officer on top of him. Moffitt's blade had been driven into his spine with such force it was a wonder it had not pinioned both of them.

Couzens was ducking and side-stepping wildly as figures staggered and kicked around him like madmen. Steel on steel, and from right aft a chorus of screams as a swivel exploded and burst apart amongst its own crew.

But he managed to shout, ‘I came to help!'

Bolitho shook his arm, feeling him cringe, as he said, ‘Take two men and get below! Tell them I want this brig set alight!' He knew the boy was terrified of him, his wildness, and his despair. ‘
Do it!
'

Shots were hitting the deck around him and making the corpses jerk to their impact. The
Revenge
's captain had sent marksmen aloft to mark down Frowd's puny challenge and to kill any of the boarders who looked like an officer or a leader.

Other books

The Ice Wolves by Mark Chadbourn
Horse Thief by Bonnie Bryant
Body Check by Deirdre Martin
Fishbone's Song by Gary Paulsen
A Devil in Disguise by Caitlin Crews
Scary Rednecks & Other Inbred Horrors by Ochse, Weston, Whitman, David, Macomber, William