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Authors: Julian Stockwin

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BOOK: Tenacious
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Kydd lifted his glass and paused for quiet. “Gentlemen, the King.”

The words echoed strongly around the table. The simple ceremony of the loyal toast seemed to Kydd to draw together all the threads of his allegiance to king and country, and with others he followed with a sincere “God bless him.”

The solemn courtesies complete, other toasts were made:

“Foxhunting and Old Port”; “Our brothers at sea”; and the heartfelt “A willing foe and sea room!” Red faces testified to the warmth and the wine, and when the brandy had circulated
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Julian Stockwin

Houghton called, “Captain Pringle, might we press you to honour us with your flute?”

“Should I be joined by our excellent doctor, I would be glad to, sir.”

The marine was a proficient and sensitive player, and a lively violin accompaniment from the normally acerbic Pybus set the mood of the evening. Adams was persuaded to render a creditable “Sweet Lass of Richmond Hill” in his light tenor, and Renzi delivered a reading from his new copy of
Lyrical Ballads:
It is the first mild day of March;
Each minute sweeter than before,

The red-breast sings from the tall larch
That stands beside our door.

There is a blessing in the air

Which seems a sense of joy to yield
To the bare trees, and mountains bare,
And grass in the green field . . .

Houghton rose to his feet. He raised his glass and said softly,

“To
Tenacious.

“Tenacious,”
came the reply, with more than one murmured

“Bless her!” There were no ready words to describe the affection that the old 64-gun ship-of-the-line had won in the hearts of her officers, and Kydd felt a lump in his throat. He could see the others were affected, too.

In the quiet, a sudden knock at the wardroom door sounded overly loud. With rainwater streaming from his grego, the duty master’s mate awkwardly handed over an oilskin packet. “Cap’n, sir—urgent from Flag.”

It was unusual to the point of disquiet that the admiral had

Tenacious
15

seen fit to act immediately instead of waiting for the usual morning postal round, and all craned towards the head of the table.

Houghton scanned the covering letter, then looked up gravely.

“Gentlemen, you should be advised that the situation in Europe has intensified. Therefore we are to be recalled from this station to join that of Admiral the Earl St Vincent before Cadíz—we sail with the utmost dispatch.”

Taking the deck for his first sea-watch since leaving Halifax, Kydd strode to the ship’s side and looked down with satisfaction at the busy wake forming and spreading in a hiss of obedience, slipping astern to join the other side in a lazy track that stretched far into the distance.

He returned to the binnacle: the ship’s heading was within a whisker of east by south. His eyes rose to meet a look of reproach from the helmsman and he concealed a smile. He had no right to usurp the quartermaster’s responsibility for the course and knew only too well the irritation of a meddlesome officer-of-the-watch.

But these were momentous times. Since Houghton had received his orders from the admiral, he had been unsparing in his drive to get
Tenacious
to sea. Whatever additional information he was privy to had lined his face and he had issued each officer-of-the-watch stern instructions to clap on every stitch—but woe betide all should it cost even a single spar.

As he paced the quarterdeck, Kydd’s thoughts turned briefly to another matter: Gibraltar was less than a day’s sail away from Cadíz. It would serve his purpose well if they touched on that fortress port. It would give him great satisfaction to conclude a particular task there. He had decided on it after parting with his uncle in a remote settlement in the Canadian Maritimes.

Kydd stopped to feel the ship’s motion. Under all plain sail in
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Julian Stockwin

the brisk, quartering south-westerly,
Tenacious
heaved and rose over the long Atlantic rollers in a strong and compelling rhythm, pleasing in its regularity. He sensed the waves meeting her bow and surging aft under the keel, the vessel’s slow pitch conforming to its motion. But there was something further—a trifle, perhaps, but out of harmony with the concert of movement.

He glanced across the deck. Captain Houghton was taking the air on the weather side, walking with the first lieutenant. There was a full watch of the hands on deck and others were at work on their part-of-ship. Kydd signalled to the quartermaster that he was going forward, then made his way to the foredeck and stood feeling, sensing.

The bow-wave swashed and hissed below; above him soared the headsails, taut and trim. But there
was
something. He turned to peer up, above the mighty fore-course, past the tops to the topsail and topgallant. Something was causing a hesitation, a brief interruption in the forward urge of the ship. He moved to one side until he could see the end of the bowsprit spearing into the sky ahead.

It soared and dipped but then Kydd saw what was happening.

It was not an up-and-down motion. Instead, it described a circle in the sky, certain indication that the helmsman was having to ease the wheel each time the bows met an oncoming sea. That was it—a griping caused by the ship’s tendency to come closer to the wind when her forefoot bit deep into the wave. Kydd was annoyed that the quartermaster had not noticed it: he knew that with every billow
Tenacious
was losing way through the water—

only a tiny amount, but there were countless thousands of waves across the Atlantic.

He turned on his heel and headed back, trying to work out how to resolve the problem. The usual remedy was to move provisions or guns aft, but the ship was fully stored and this would

Tenacious
17

be awkward and dangerous. Also, with but a single frigate nearly out of sight ahead, it would be prudent to leave the guns where they were.

He reached the quarterdeck and Houghton glanced at him curiously. Kydd did not catch his eye as he ordered the mate-of-the-watch, “Hands to set sail!” Stuns’ls had been struck earlier in the day and the man looked surprised. He hesitated, then hailed the boatswain.

“Mr Pearce,” Kydd told him, “as we’re lasking along, wind’s fr’m the quarter, I mean t’ take in the fore-topmast stays’l and then we’ll set the large jib.” The boatswain’s eyebrows rose, but after only the briefest look in the captain’s direction, he drew out his silver call.

Kydd knew it was not a popular order among the men. The large jib would have to be roused out from below and heaved up on deck, the long sausage of canvas needing thirty men at least to grapple with it. And the handing of the fore-topmast staysail, a fore-and-aft sail leading down from aloft, was hard, wet and dangerous, followed by the awkward job of hanking the large jib.

Houghton had stopped pacing and was watching Kydd closely.

The master emerged from the cabin spaces to stand with him and the first lieutenant, but Kydd kept his eyes forward as the boatswain set the men about their tasks.

The fo’c’slemen lowered the fore-topmast staysail, the men out on the bowsprit using both hands to fist the unruly canvas as it came down the stay. This was a job for the most experienced seamen in the ship: balancing on a thin footrope, they bellied up to the fat spar and brought in the sail, forming a skin and stuffing in the bulk before passing gaskets round it. All the while the bowsprit reared and fell in the lively seas.

Kydd stayed on the quarterdeck, looking forward and seeing
1

Julian Stockwin

occasional bursts of spray from the bow shoot up from beneath, soaking men and canvas. He felt for them.

At last the jib was bent on and began jerking up, flapping and banging, and the men made their way back inboard. Sheets were tended and the action was complete.

“Mr Kydd, what was your purpose in setting the large jib?”

Houghton called.

Kydd crossed the deck and touched his hat. “The ship gripes, sir. I—”

“Surely you would therefore attend to the trim?”

“Sir, we’re fully stored, difficult t’ work below,” he began, recalling his experiences as a quartermaster’s mate and the dangers lurking in a dark hold when the ship was working in a seaway.

“This way we c’n cure the griping an’ get an edge of speed.”

Houghton frowned and looked at the master, who nodded.

“Ah, I believe Mr Kydd means t’ lift the bows—you’ll know the heads’ls are lifting sails, an’ at this point o’ sailing the large jib will do more of a job in this than our stays’l.”

“And the speed?” Houghton wanted to know.

But Kydd could already sense the effects: the hesitation was gone and it felt much like a subtle lengthening of stride. He turned to the mate-of-the-watch. “A cast o’ the log, if y’ please.”

It was only half a knot more, but this was the same as sub-tracting from their voyage the best part of a hundred miles for every week at sea.

Kydd held back a grin. “And if it comes on t’ blow, we let fly, sir.”

Houghton gave a curt acknowledgement.

“Does seem t’ me she’s a sea-kindly ship, if y’ know what I mean, sir,” Kydd dared.

The wardroom was a quite different place from what it had been a day or so before: officers sat at table for dinner together in

Tenacious

1

the usual way, but now they were in sea-faded, comfortable uniform and there was always one absent on watch. And instead of the stillness of harbour repose, there was the soaring, swooping movement of deep ocean that had everyone finding their sea-legs once more.

Fiddles had been fitted round the table—taut cords at the edge to prevent plates tumbling into laps; glasses were never poured more than half full and wetted cloths prevented bottles sliding—

all familiar accompaniments to sea service.

The chaplain entered for dinner, passing along hand by hand to steady himself. “Do take a sup of wine,” Kydd said solicitously.

“Thank you, perhaps later,” Peake murmured, distracted.

He reached for the bread-barge, which still contained portions of loaves—soon they would be replaced with hard tack—and selected a crust. “I confess I was ever a martyr to the ocean’s billows,” he said faintly.

Kydd remembered the times when he had been deprived of Renzi’s company while Peake and he had been happily disputing logic, and could not resist saying, “Then is not y’r philosophy comfort enough? Nicholas, conjure some words as will let us see th’ right of it.”

Renzi winked at him. “Was it not the sainted Traherne who tells us . . . let me see . . . ‘You never enjoy the world aright, till the sea itself floweth in your veins, till you are clothed with the heavens and crowned with the stars and perceive yourself to be the sole heir of the whole world’?”

Peake lifted dull eyes and said weakly, “I believe the Good Book may be more relied upon in this matter, as you will find in Proverbs, the thirtieth chapter: ‘There be three things which are too wonderful for me . . . the way of an eagle in the air . . .

the serpent on a rock—and the way of a ship in the midst of the sea.’ ”

Bampton’s voice cut above the chuckles. “That you can safely
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Julian Stockwin

leave with us, Mr Peake, but we’ll have early need of your services, I fancy.” Adams gave the second lieutenant a quizzical look. “You don’t really think we’d be cracking on like this unless there’s to be some sort of final meeting with the French? It stands to reason,” Bampton continued.

The table fell silent: the frantic preparations for sea, the storing of powder and shot, and last-minute fitting and repairs had left little time for the contemplation of larger matters.

Renzi steepled his fingers. “Not necessarily. All we have is rumour and hearsay. We have abandoned the Mediterranean with reason, that we can no longer support a fleet there, and therefore every vessel of ours is undefended prey. In this case we have no means of intelligence to tell us what is happening, hence the wild speculation.

“Now, we do know of General Buonaparte and his designs on England—the landing boats in every northern French port, the daily inspections of his Army of England. Do you not feel it the more likely that he will ransack Toulon and Cartagena for ships of force to swell the Brest fleet to an unstoppable power that will overwhelm us? Rather, that is, than retain them in a landlocked sea for some sort of escapade far away.”

“Just as I said.” Bampton snorted. “A conclusion with Mr Buonaparte, in the chops of the Channel somewheres, I’d wager, and—”

“Except we’re being sent south to Cadíz.”

“Renzi, old trout, you’re not being clear,” Adams admonished him.

“Am I not? Then it could be that I am as much in the dark as you. Are we to be part of a grand fleet about to break into the Med again? Or might it be that we being only a sixty-four—a fine one indeed as I am obliged to remark—our purpose is merely that of releasing the more warlike seventy-fours?”

At the head of the table Bryant glowered. As first lieutenant

Tenacious
21

his interest in a future bloody battle and the subsequent custom of promotion to commander for an active officer had been all too apparent on the quiet North American station. The prospect of sitting out his battle far from the action was hard to endure.

“There’s a reason for it, never fear,” he said loudly. “Jervis ain’t the one to ask for ships without he’s got a plan. My money’s on him takin’ Buonaparte as he heads north with the Toulon squadron afore he can join up with the mongseers off Brest.”

It was exhilarating sailing, a starboard tack with winds quartering, mile after deep-sea mile on the same course. As they edged south the weather brightened, the vivid white of towering clouds and hurrying white-horse seas contrasting pleasingly with the deep ultramarine of the water.

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