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The King's Commission

Page 43

by Dewey Lambdin


  “Signal from Drake, sir,” Edgar said at his side, coughing on the sour smell of burned niters. “Cease fire.”

  “Very well, Mister Edgar. Mister Cox, cease fire!” Alan said. “Mister Edgar, my compliments to the purser, and tell him it’s past time for dinner. Have him issue some cold rations and small-beer for the hands.”

  “Aye aye, sir.”

  A rowing boat sped down from the frigates anchored in Britain Bay, and went aboard Drake while the men were eating and curing their battle-induced thirsts. After half an hour, the boat came back along the anchored brigs.

  “Sir, Captain Nelson directs me bid you to weigh,” the midshipman in the stern yelled, his voice cracking a little; he was awfully young. “You are to return to Britain Bay and re-embark your party.”

  “Very well,” Alan replied. “Well, that’s another fine mess we’ve made,” he added, turning to his quarterdeck people. “It’ll take the frigates down here tomorrow to shoot that battery silent.”

  “And make another landing, maybe on the other side of the island, now we know where the Frogs is concentrated, sir,” Cox said, free of his gun deck. He and his gunners looked black as Moors from all the grime of powder smoke on their skins. Alan could see the closest gun being sponged out with a water-soaked wool rammer, and other hands hoisting up buckets of seawater to sluice off the muzzles and touch-holes. The guns were hissing as the water cooled them like sated dragons.

  “Bowse ’em down to the port-sills and secure, Mister Cox,” he said. “Mister Fukes, get your people ready to veer out on the bower and take up the kedge soon as the gun crews are available. Wind’s coming about a little more westerly. Quick as you can, both of you, or we’ll end up rowing her out with the sweeps if the wind goes foul and leaves us on a lee shore.”

  The wind had swung, not so noticeable during the cannonading that had deadened it; now more southerly, with a touch of westing. Sure sign of a change in the weather, and that was usually a sign of worsening weather, especially in the Caribbean.

  They got the kedge up, heaved into short stays on the bower, but could not get it to release from the bottom. Damme, and this was going so well! Alan thought sadly.

  “Flukes hung up on a coral head, feels like, sir,” Fukes told him. “I can almos’ see ’er down there.”

  “Belay what you have, Mister Fukes. Hands aloft! Let go the driver and jibs! With a little forward way, we might sail her off.”

  “Aye, sir.” Fukes sounded dubious. And with good cause. The anchor obstinately refused to let go her grip on the coral bottom, and no amount of straining at the capstans was going to shift her. The ship sailed up until she was almost standing directly over the anchor, with the cable bar-taut, and if anything, inclined slightly from the vertical, bent back under Shrike’s forefoot and cutwater.

  “Least this’un ain’t the best bower, sir,” Fukes offered after coming aft from the beakhead. “An’ them other brigs ain’t havin’ much more luck’un us’un. Drake’s arready cut, sir.”

  “The captain will have my hide if I lose an anchor, even the small bower, Mister Fukes,” Alan groaned, thinking what a tongue-lashing he would receive when Lilycrop came back aboard.

  With nowhere else to go forward, Shrike was now beginning to circle about her anchor, and the timbers around the hawse-holes were groaning alarmingly. The bow was slightly down and thumping.

  “Well, shit,” Alan sighed, giving in to the inevitable. “Cut the cable, Mister Fukes. Aloft there, loose tops’ls! Helm hard alee and hold her wind abeam if you can. Braces, shift the braces to the larboard tack!”

  It was a sad trek back to Britain Bay, making slow progress until they could come to anchor again and clew up the sails to allow the boats to come alongside. Doctor Dome and his loblolly boys from the surgery appeared, ready to receive any wounded men from the shore party, and Alan thought to have a bosun’s sling rigged from aloft to help hoist injured men aboard.

  Then their first boat was coming up to the starboard entry port, and Alan could look down into her. Rossyngton had the tiller, and Alan was ready to rate him for preceding the captain’s boat to the chains, but a quick look at the second boat showed no sign of their captain, either. Yet Lilycrop’s old cox’n was in the first boat. Was he dead?

  “Sir!” Rossyngton shouted up as the boat thumped into Shrike’s chainwales. He was filthy and sweaty, his hat gone somewhere. “It’s the captain, sir!”

  And there was Lieutenant Lilycrop, splayed out amidships between the oarsmen where he could not have been seen, his cox’n supporting his head and shoulders, and another man helping hold his legs up out of the bilges. He was gritting his teeth in agony and rolling his head back and forth to keep silent before his men.

  The bosun’s chair was lowered immediately, and Lilycrop helped into it and secured with a line about his waist. Gentle hands were there to ease his passage up the side, to keep him from bumping against the timbers. The stay-tackle hauled him up and over the gangway bulwarks and swung him over the waist. Lieutenant Lilycrop’s right foot had been wrapped up in someone’s shirt for a bandage, tied with small-stuff to keep it from falling off, with another length of twine about his leg above the knee to control the bleeding. Even so, his sodden wrap left a trail of blood droplets as he was lowered to the deck.

  “Make haste here, damn your eyes, Mister Lewyss!” Alan called as he gained the waist and knelt over his stricken commander.

  “Calm as does it, Mister Lewrie,” Dr. Lewyss urged in a soft voice, patting Alan on the shoulder with a blood-grimed hand. “The captain already knows he’s hurt, and we don’t want him to take fright from all this yelling. Got to gentle the wounded, so ye do, like one would with a colt. Make ’em feel they have a chance, else they take fright and go all cold and grey. Seen it happen, and then you lose them, sure as Fate.”

  Lewyss shouldered on past him and knelt by the injured leg. As the loblolly boys were readying a carrying board, and Lilycrop was being freed of the bosun’s sling, Lewyss unwrapped the bandage. Once he saw the wound, he could not help wincing and sucking air in through his clenched teeth at the sight.

  The captain’s right ankle was shattered. The shoe and stocking had been removed, though pieces of silk stocking still clung to the wound. The foot was a wine-dark horror, swollen beyond recognition, and hanging from the ankle by only a few remaining tendons at an obscene angle. Lewyss spanned his hand above the ankle, as though deciding just where he would start sawing to take it off, and found another wound, this one a bruise with a small blue-black hole in the center that oozed blood.

  “Captain, sir,” Lewyss said with as much false good cheer as he could summon. “We’ll get you below to the surgery and fix you right up. Nothing for a man to worry about. ’Tis going to be a handsome thing as the ladies’ll gush over in future. Take a few sips on this while my lads get you below, and there’s more where that came from.”

  “Oh, shut up, you bloody Welsh fraud.” Lilycrop grimaced. “I know you’re to take my foot off. Gimme that bottle and get on with it, damn your eyes.”

  Lewyss offered him a small pocket flask of rum, which the captain bit the stopper from and spat out. He drained it at one go.

  “Hurry, Mister Lewyss, I beg you,” Alan urged in a harsh whisper.

  “Lewrie, that you?”

  “Aye, Captain.”

  “Don’t stand there lookin’ like a specter, sir. Ship alright? No wounded aboard?” Lilycrop asked between waves of pain.

  “All well, sir,” Alan said, close to tears. “We lost the small bower, sir.”

  “Small enough price.” Lilycrop groaned as he was rolled over onto the carrying board and lashed down. “Doctor, have you no more rum fer me, damn you? Let’s get goin’! Get it over with, for the love of God!”

  Lewyss nodded to his hands, and they lifted the captain up to carry him away, gripping onto the loops of rope in the carrying board to maneuver his form down the steep ladders of the main hatch to the surgery aft in the cockpit
.

  “It’ll have to come off, of course, sir,” Lewyss whispered sadly. “I could leave him most of the calf, but for that second wound. There’s a musket ball about a hand-span above the ankle, and bones sure to be broken there. At least he’ll have half his calf, and the knee, of course. Make things much better for him when it comes time to fit him for an appliance. He may walk almost naturally.”

  “Then you’d best be about it, Mister Lewyss,” Alan snapped.

  “Time enough, sir,” Lewyss said, not to be hurried. “Let him have some more rum first, and let the numbness set in. If you will excuse me, sir.”

  “No one else wounded, Mister Rossyngton?” Alan asked, once the doctor had taken himself below to his sad duty.

  “No, sir. Just the captain,” the midshipman reported, shaken into somberness. “The landing was pretty much unopposed, sir, just some pickets to slow us down in the woods. But we came up against some heavy volleys once we were over the first hill. And we went to ground there, sir. We sent for a diversion against the town, as I expect you know, sir.”

  “Aye.”

  “The French fell back to a work above the town,” Rossyngton went on, between sips of small-beer from a large wooden piggin. “And they had field guns there, maybe four of ’em, six-pounders. We could see seamen as well as soldiers, sir. Hundreds of ’em. Captain Dixon had just ordered us to retire—not much we could have done in the face of that work—and the captain gave a little grunt, sort of, sir. This cannon ball came rolling out of the bushes, spent almost, but it hit his foot and just flipped him arse over tit, sir, like an acrobat. How he got the second wound, I don’t know, sir.”

  “Signal from flag, sir!” Edgar called. “It’s … ‘Captains Repair On Board,’ sir.”

  “Damn that fool yonder!” Alan spat. “And just how does he think our captain can manage that, I wonder?” He was feeling a heavy wave of guilt. If he had not been malingering, acting as if he was incapable of fulfilling his duties as a whole man, Lieutenant Lilycrop would still have a foot. It was his fault that that good man, a man who had treated him more than fairly, was now undergoing the horror of Lewyss’ knives, saws and probes. Then again, he rationalized, it could be him on the table, turning into a maimed figure of fun for the street urchins back home, who would taunt “Mr. Hop-kins” at any person with any sort of deformity.

  “Um, think you’d better go in the captain’s place, sir,” Caldwell suggested, interrupting his furious musings. “To the flag, that is.”

  “Hmm. Me?”

  “Yessir, with the captain down wounded, you’re in charge for now, sir,” Caldwell repeated.

  “Damme, I suppose I am, ain’t I?” Alan nodded, slowly comprehending it all.

  Alan’s boat ground against Albemarle’s side by the main-chains, with Cony holding fast with a painter and Andrews at the tiller as a temporary cox’un. It was with difficulty that he got up the man-ropes and battens to the deck. He was greeted with the shrill of bosun’s pipes and the side-party due a captain, which made him shrivel up with guilt once more. He had not known where the other officers stood in seniority to him, so he was the last aboard, and once he had doffed his hat in return salute he limped over to join the others.

  “I am Lieutenant Osborne, first into Albemarle, sir. And you are?”

  “Alan Lewrie, first officer of Shrike, brig o’ war,” Alan replied.

  “Sir, allow me to name you to the others. Lieutenant Lewrie of Shrike; Captain James King of Resistance, Lieutenant Charles Cunningham of Admiral Barrington, Captain Charles Dixon of Drake. Our second, Lieutenant Martin Hinton, and our Lieutenant Joseph Bromwich. I believe you have already met earlier, have you not? Captain Nelson shall receive you in a few moments.”

  It was not exactly a pleasant social gathering. They all looked devilishly grim after being checked ashore and obliged to cut and run from the heavier French battery.

  “Get that ashore, sir?” Captain King asked, noticing Alan’s slight limp.

  “No, sir. A few weeks ago on the Florida coast, when we were still part of Sir Joshua Rowley’s Jamaica Squadron,” Alan replied.

  “Any casualties, Charles?” Dixon asked of Cunningham.

  “Six wounded, sir,” Cunningham replied. “Including the bosun.”

  “We suffered two, one of ’em our sailing master,” Dixon told them all. “Damned fortunate, for all the damage we took. Gaff shattered, rigging cut up pretty well, and we have an eighteen-pounder ball in the timbers. Thank the good Lord they didn’t run to heated shot. And how did Shrike fare, sir?”

  “No one aboard is hurt,” Alan said. “One wounded ashore with you—our captain, sir, Lieutenant Lilycrop.”

  “Hurt sore?” Dixon asked.

  “He’s losing his foot at this moment, sir,” Alan stated.

  “Ah, I’m damned sorry,” Dixon sighed. “I tried to keep our casualties to a minimum ashore. No sense making a useless demonstration against their works and getting men killed for nothing.”

  “Trevenen says we should have reconnoitered last night, sent a boat ashore,” King said. “Might have saved us the trouble.”

  “Oh, him,” Lieutenant Cunningham sniffed. “I’m sure young Jemmy will put pen to paper about this.”

  “Excuse me, sirs, but Captain Nelson will see you now,” Osborne told them, coming back on deck. He led them aft and below to the great cabins. Alan stuffed his hat under his arm and waited to see what their putative “commodore” looked like.

  Well, stap me, he thought at his first sight. I do believe if they made me a post-captain tomorrow, I’d look older than this’un.

  Captain Horatio Nelson was a skinny little hop o’ my thumb, not much taller than some minnikin, slim and coltish as a young whippet, and a good breeze looked enough to blow him right away. His light hair was long, lank and unpowdered, tied back in a Hessian tail of such length that it rivaled Lieutenant Lilycrop’s seamanly queue. His captain’s coat was the full-dress “iron-bound,” stiff with gold lace, and of a fashion more suited to the last war, with over-sized pocket flaps. Altogether, he looked like an actor in some Drury Lane production portraying a Sea Officer, deliberately mis-cast in some parody.

  “Gentlemen, well met,” he began in a high, slightly nasal voice. “Though I fear we meet not in a victory worthy of British Sea Officers. Lieutenants Bromwich and Hinton inform me they were obliged to cut and abandon the cannonade on the town battery. How many guns?”

  “At least four or five twenty-four-pounders, sir,” Cunningham said. “And near on five or six six-pounders, by my count. A substantial work. And they were manned by seamen, I believe. Very accurate gunners.”

  “And Captain Dixon, you encountered at least four more guns, of at least six-pounds shot, at a work blocking your advance?” Nelson asked.

  “Aye, sir.”

  “Quite a packet to be transported by La Coquette and that prize sloop now with the Dugay Trouin frigate,” Nelson said, playing with the stock of his shirt. “And how many troops did you encounter ashore, sir?”

  “I would estimate over two hundred men, sir,” Dixon said evenly.

  “I want to commend your sagacity, sir,” Nelson told him with a small, shy smile on his long, narrow face. “Another commander would have tried to force the issue against that work, and would have been repulsed with heavy casualties. Obviously, there are a lot more men ashore than the captive French officers in La Coquette told us. Captain King, did you learn any more from them?”

  “No, sir,” King replied. “They said they’d escorted ships here, and La Coquette had given up five of her twenty-six guns to form a battery. I estimated that they could not have landed much more than one hundred fifty troops, plus seamen gunners.”

  “But to man that many guns, and provide a guard force for both works, and still leave at least two hundred troops free to operate against Captain Dixon, would make how many, do you think?” Nelson asked, trying not to give the impression that he might like to tear King’s head off, even if he
did. “If there were other ships escorted here, of which I now am informed.”

  This is damned interesting, Alan thought, watching the young man grill the older (and, surprisingly, senior) post-captain over the coals. So post-captains can act just as ill with each other as any pack of surly midshipmen fighting over shares of a pudding?

  “It would make over five hundred men, sir,” Alan guessed aloud. “My captain says there’s nothing much on the other islands, so Grand Turk is the key, and they must have located all their force here.”

  “And you are, sir?” Nelson asked, turning to face him. He didn’t look pleased to be addressed, and thrown off the topic.

  “Lieutenant Lewrie, sir, of the Shrike brig. First officer. I stand in for my captain, Lieutenant Lilycrop, who’s in surgery now.”

  “The officer wounded ashore with me, sir,” Dixon added.

  “Yes, Mister Lewrie, over five hundred men, with twenty-four pounders,” Nelson said, turning to address all of them. “We put, what, about one hundred sixty-five men up against a French regiment, and a fortification with artillery heavier than any piece we have at our disposal. But, we may still seize the day. I propose to shift the frigates opposite the town to reduce the fortification. If we start now, we may pound upon it all night if need be. As for the brigs, make a demonstration above Britain Bay, at the far end of the island, to get the field troops marching that direction. Then, at first light, we land here, after taking anchor in Hawk’s Nest Anchorage, on the other side of the island from the town and battery. They shall have to abandon the work up north, and we may now concentrate our forces against theirs properly.”

  “Would it not be better to blockade the place for now, sir?” Captain King advised, shaking his head. “Send one of the brigs off to summon Admiral Hood? He must be back on station by now, after watering at Port Royal. Heavy guns and Marines from the liners …”

 

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