Quarterdeck (17 page)

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Authors: Julian Stockwin

Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Sailors, #Seafaring life, #General, #Great Britain, #Sea Stories, #Historical, #War & Military, #Fiction, #Kydd; Thomas (Fictitious character)

BOOK: Quarterdeck
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124

Julian Stockwin

Pybus was busy with the men in the bottom of the boat. “So, we go home,” Kydd said, searching around for the compass. “Now do ye remember what course . . .”

Ashen-faced, Rawson held out a splintered box and the ruins of a compass card. With an icy heart Kydd saw that their future was damned. The wall of dull white fog pressed dense and fea-tureless wherever he looked, no hazy disc of sun, no more than a ripple to betray wave direction. All sense of direction had been lost in the fi ght and there was now not a single navigation indi-cator of even the most elementary form to ensure they did not lose themselves in the vast wastes of the Atlantic or end a broken wreck on the cold, lonely Newfoundland cliffs.

Kydd saw the hostility in the expressions of his men: they knew the chances of choosing the one and only safe course. He turned to Rawson. “Get aboard an’ fi nd the Frenchy’s compass,” he said savagely.

The midshipman pulled the boats together and clambered into the chaloupe. In the sternsheets the man Kydd had bested held up the compass. Rawson raised his hand in acknowledgement, and made his way aft. Then, staring over the distance at Kydd with a terrible intensity, the Frenchman deliberately dropped the compass box into the water just before Rawson reached him.

Disbelieving gasps were followed by roars of fury, and the launch rocked as men scrambled to their feet in rage. “We’ll scrag the fucker! Get ’im!” Poulden fi ngered the swivel nervously: if they boarded he would no longer have a clear fi eld of fi re.

“Stand down, y’ mewling lubbers!” Kydd roared. “Poulden!

No one allowed t’ board the Frenchy.” He spotted Soulter, the quartermaster, sitting on the small transverse windlass forward.

“Soulter, that’s your division forrard,” he said loudly, encompassing half the men with a wave. “You’re responsible t’ me they’re in good fi ghtin’ order, not bitchin’ like a parcel of old women.”

Quarterdeck

125

“Sir?” The dark-featured Laffi n levered himself above the level of the thwarts from the bottom boards where he had been treated for a neck wound.

“Thank ’ee, Laffi n,” Kydd said, trying to hide his gratitude.

If it came to an ugly situation the boatswain’s mate would prove invaluable.

“We’ll square away now, I believe. All useless lumber over the side, wounded t’ Mr Pybus.” Smashed oars, splintered gratings and other bits splashed into the water.

“Dead men, sir?” There was a tremor in Rawson’s voice.

Kydd’s face went tight. “We’re still at quarters. They go over.” If they met another hostile boat, corpses would impede the struggle.

After a pause, the fi rst man slithered over the side in a dull splash. His still body drifted silently away. It was the British way in the heat of battle: the French always kept the bodies aboard in the ballast shingle. Another followed; the fl oating corpse stayed with them and did not help Kydd to concentrate on a way out of their danger. The fog swirled pitilessly around them.

“Is there any been on th’ Grand Banks before?” Kydd called, keeping his desperation hidden.

There was a sullen stirring in the boat and mutterings about an offi cer’s helplessness in a situation, but one man rose. “I bin in the cod fi shery once,” he said defensively. Kydd noted the absence of “sir.”

“Report, if y’ please.” The man scrambled over the thwarts.

“This fog. How long does it last?”

The man shrugged. “Hours, days—weeks mebbe.” No use, then, in waiting it out. “Gets a bit less after dark, but don’t yez count on it,” he added.

“What depth o’ water have we got hereabouts?” It might be possible to cobble together a hand lead for sounding, or to get
126

Julian Stockwin

information on the sea-bed. He vaguely remembered seeing on the chart that grey sand with black fl ecks turned more brown with white pebbles closer to the Newfoundland coast.

“Ah, depends where we is—fi fty, hunnerd fathoms, who knows?”

There was nowhere near that amount of line to be found in the boat. Kydd could feel the situation closing in on him. “Er, do you ever get t’ see th’ sun?”

“No. Never do—like this all th’ time.” The man leaned back, regarding Kydd dispassionately. It was not his problem. “Y’ c’n see the moon sometimes in th’ night,” he offered cynically.

The moon was never used for navigation, to Kydd’s knowledge, and in any case he had no tables. There was no avoiding the stark fact that they were lost. There were now only two choices left: to drift and wait, or stake all on rowing in a random direction. The penalty on either was a cold and lengthy death.

“We got oars, we get out o’ this,” muttered one sailor to stroke oar. There were suffi cient undamaged oars to row four a side, more than needed; but the comment crystallised Kydd’s thinking.

“Hold y’r gabble,” Kydd snapped. “We wait.” He wasn’t prepared to explain his reasons, but at the very least waiting would buy time.

The fog took on a dimmer cast: dusk must be drawing in.

Now they had no option but to wait out the night. Danger would come when the cold worked with the damp of the fog and it became unendurable simply to sit there.

In the chaloupe the French sat tensely, exchanging staccato bursts of jabber—were they plotting to rise in the night? And now in the launch his men were talking among themselves, low and urgent.

He could order silence but as the dark set in it would be un-enforceable. And it might cross their minds to wait until it was

Quarterdeck

127

fully dark, then fall upon Kydd and the others, claiming they had been killed in the fi ght. The choices available to Kydd were narrowing to nothing. He gripped the tiller, his glare challenging others.

For some reason the weight of his pocket watch took his notice. He’d bought it in Falmouth, taken by the watchmaker’s claims of accuracy, which had been largely confi rmed by the voyage so far. He took it out, squinting in the fading dusk light.

Nearly seven by last local noon. As he put it back he saw derisive looks, openly mocking now.

Night was stealing in—the fog diffused all light and dimmed it, accelerating the transition, and soon they sat in rapidly increasing darkness.

“All’s well!” Laffi n hailed loyally.

“Poulden?” Kydd called.

“Sir.” The man was fast becoming indistinct in the dimness.

As if to pour on the irony the dull silver glow of a half-moon became distinguishable as the fog thinned a little upward towards the night sky. If only . . .

Then two facts edged from his unconscious meshed together in one tenuous idea, so fragile he was almost afraid to pursue it.

But it was a chance. Feverishly he reviewed his reasoning—yes, it might be possible. “Rawson,” he hissed. “Listen to this. See if you c’n see a fault in m’ reckoning.”

There was discussion of southing, meridians and “the day of her age” and even some awkward arithmetic—but the lost seamen heard voices grow animated with hope. Finally Kydd stood exultant. “Out oars! We’re on our way back, lads.”

They broke free of the fogbank to fi nd the convoy still becalmed, and away over the moonlit sea the silhouette of a 64-gun ship-of-the-line that could only be
Tenacious.

A mystifi ed offi cer-of-the-watch saw two man-o’-war boats
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Julian Stockwin

hook on as the missing Kydd came aboard. At the noise, the captain came out on deck. “God bless my soul!” Houghton said, taking in Kydd’s wounds and empty sword scabbard.

“Brush with th’ enemy, sir,” Kydd said, as calmly as he could.

“Compass knocked t’ fl inders, had to fi nd some other way back.”

“In fog, and at night? I’d be interested to learn what you did, Mr Kydd.”

“Caused us quite some puzzling, sir, but I’ll stake m’ life that Mr Rawson here would be very pleased to explain th’

reasoning.”

Rawson started, then said smugly, “Oh, well, sir, we all knows that f’r any given line o’ longitude—the meridian, I mean—the moon will cross just forty-nine minutes after the sun does, and falls back this time for every day. After that it’s easy.”

“Get on with it, then.”

“Well, sir, we can fi nd the moon’s southing on any day by taking the day of her age since new, and multiplying this by that forty-nine. If we then divide by sixty we get our answer—the time in hours an’ minutes after noon when she’s dead in the south, which for us was close t’ eight o’ clock. Then we just picked up our course again near enough and—”

Houghton grunted. “It’s as well Mr Kydd had such a fi ne navi gator with him. You shall take one of my best clarets to the midship men’s berth.” Unexpectedly, the captain smiled. “While Mr Kydd entertains me in my cabin with his account of this
rencontre
.”

Chapter 5

The Newfoundland convoy was now safely handed over off St John’s, along with
Viper
and
Trompeuse,
the ship signalling distress in the fog missing, presumed lost.
Tenacious
hauled her wind to sail south alone to land her French prisoners and join the fl eet of the North American station in Halifax.

As they approached there was a marked drop in temperature; chunks of broken ice were riding the deep Atlantic green of the sea and there was a bitter edge to the wind. Thick watch-coats, able to preserve an inner retreat of warmth in the raw blasts of an English winter, seemed insubstantial.

Landfall was made on a low, dark land. It soon resolved to a vast black carpeting of forest, barely relieved by stretches of grey rock and blotches of brown, a hard, cold aspect. Kydd had studied the charts and knew the offshore dangers of the heavily indented rock-bound coast fl anking the entrance to Halifax.

“I’m advising a pilot, sir,” the master said to the captain.

“But have you not sailed here before?” Houghton’s voice was muffl ed by his grego hood, but his impatience was plain: a pilot would incur costs and possibly delay.

Hambly stood fi rm. “I have, enough times t’ make me very respectful. May I bring to mind, sir, that it’s less’n six months past we lost
Tribune,
thirty-four, within sight o’ Halifax— terrible
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Julian Stockwin

night, only a dozen or so saved of three hundred souls . . .”

While
Tenacious
lay to off Chebucto Head, waiting for her pilot, Kydd took in the prospect of land after so many weeks at sea.

The shore, a barren, bleached, grey-white granite, sombre under the sunless sky, appeared anything but welcoming. Further into the broad opening there was a complexity of islands, and then, no doubt, Halifax itself.

The pilot boarded and looked around curiously. “Admiral’s in Bermuda still,” he said, in a pleasant colonial drawl. “Newfy convoy arrived and he not here, he’ll be in a right taking.”

Houghton drew himself up. “Follow the motions of the pilot,” he instructed the quartermaster of the conn.

With a south-easterly fair for entry, HMS
Tenacious
passed into a broad entrance channel and the pilot took time to point out the sights. “Chebucto Head—the whole place was called Chebucto in the old days.” The ship gathered way. “Over yonder,” he indicated a hill beyond the foreshore, “that’s what we’re callin’ Camperdown Hill, after your mighty victory. Right handy for taking a line of bearing from here straight into town.”

Running down the bearing, he drew their attention to the graveyard of
Tribune.
Up on rising ground they saw the raw newness of a massive fortifi cation. “York Redoubt—and over to starb’d we have Mr McNab’s Island, where the ladies love t’ pic-nic in summer.”

The passage narrowed and they passed a curious spit of land, then emerged beyond the island to a fi ne harbour several miles long and as big as Falmouth. Kydd saw that, as there, a southerly wind would be foul for putting to sea, but at more than half a mile wide and with an ebb tide it would not be insuperable.

Tenacious
rounded to at the inner end of the town, there to join scores of other ships. Her anchors plummeted into the sea, formally marking the end of her voyage.

• • •

Quarterdeck

131

“Gentlemen,” Houghton began, “be apprised that this is the demesne of Prince Edward, of the Blood Royal. I go now to pay my respects to His Royal Highness. I desire you hold yourselves ready, and when the time comes, I expect my offi cers to comport themselves with all the grace and civility to be expected of a King’s offi cer in attendance on the civil power.”

The wardroom took the orders with relish. Every port had its duties of paying and returning calls; some were more onerous than others, with entertainments that varied from worthy to spirited, but this promised to be above the usual expectation.

For Kydd it would be high society as he had never dreamed of.

Receptions, royal dinners, lofty conversations. All grand and un-forgettable. But would he be able to carry it through like a true gentleman? Just how could
he
strut around as though born to it?

It was daunting—impossible.

Soon the wardroom and spaces outside became a beehive of activity with servants blacking shoes, boning sword scabbards, polishing decorations, and distracted offi cers fi nding defi ciencies in their ceremonials. The ship, however, lay claim to attention fi rst: dockyard stores brought from England were hoisted aboard lighters and taken in charge, and a detachment of the 7th Royal Fusiliers came aboard to escort the regimental pay-chest ashore.

Fore and aft,
Tenacious
was thoroughly cleaned down, then put in prime order: the cable tiers were lime whitewashed, brick-dust and rags were taken to the brasswork, and cannon were blackened to a gloss with a mixture of lamp-black, beeswax and turpentine. Bryant took a boat away and pulled slowly round the ship, bawling up instructions that had the yards squared across exactly, one above the other.

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