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Authors: Dewey Lambdin

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BOOK: The Invasion Year
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“We’ve just finished a round of trials with cask torpedoes, as designed by a Mister Cyrus MacTavish, sir,” Lewrie told him. “And an awful waste o’ time and materials they were.”

“Good, then, you understand the basic concept,” Speaks replied. “What we will deal with are
catamaran
torpedoes, a different kettle of fish, entirely.”

“Catamarans,” Lewrie said, sounding highly dubious. Catamarans were work-stages used alongside a ship’s hull to scrub, clean, or paint, to tend to the maintenance of channel platforms, dead-eye blocks, and mast shrouds. They were little more than two great baulks of timber for buoyancy, with planking nailed across them.

“Much bigger than the casks of which you speak, sir, and with much more powder aboard than that upstart American, Mister Fulton’s, copper sphere torpedoes,” Speaks informed him. “That’s why we’ve the
Penarth
. She’s all sorts of capstans, windlasses, and standing jib-arms for unloading tons of coal in cargo nets at one go. She’s an old and ugly bitch, but she’ll suit my purposes. Our purposes, rather.”

“What the Devil are
they
like, sir?” Lewrie enquired, hoping to get down to business and put the money out of mind; and that Captain Speaks would be fair-minded enough to consider the matter over and done as well. When he’d replaced him,
Thermopylae
’s officers and warrants had spoken highly of him, and his concern for the hands’ welfare. The fellow was touted as the typical “firm but fair” sort.

“Are all your officers and Midshipmen aboard at this minute, Captain Lewrie?” Speaks asked, instead.

“All but my First, sir, Lieutenant Westcott,” Lewrie told him.

“Damme! Recall him at once,” Speaks ordered. “It’d be better were they all on hand for a demonstration, all together, so we do not have to go over it in dribs and drabs.”

Westcott won’t care for that,
Lewrie thought with a tiny secret smirk;
He’s most-like up to his ears in some chit’s tits, by now. Did he leave his whereabouts? I can’t recall.

“I’ll see to it, sir, though it may take some time to hunt him up,” Lewrie said. “Lieutenant Westcott said he had relatives down from home, and may be showin’ them the sights.” A fib, not a lie, that!

“No later than Four Bells of the Day Watch, then, Captain,” Speaks demanded. “Or on your head be it, what?”

“Aye, sir,” Lewrie answered, thinking that this sharp-tongued and impatient man was not
quite
the genial and easy-going Speaks that had earlier been advertised. “Faulkes?” Lewrie asked of his clerk. “Did Mister Westcott leave his shore address with you?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Pass word for my boat crew, and go ashore and recall him. Do express my sincerest apologies, but he is needed back aboard at once.”

“Yes, sir,” Eaulkes replied, eager to get off the ship for two hours or so himself.

“Good taste in cabin furnishings, Lewrie,” Captain Speaks said after Faulkes dashed out. “Quite … comfortable, I’d imagine.”

That sounded like a back-handed condemnation, another way to say that Lewrie’s great-cabins were a touch
too
fine, not the Spartan bare-bones indifference to personal comfort expected by the Navy.

“Thankee, sir,” Lewrie said, watching Speaks rise and go aft towards the transom settee.

“You carry your
wife
aboard, sir?” Speaks asked, espying that wide-enough-for-two hanging bed-cot.

“I am a widower, sir … two years ago,” Lewrie told him, with a slight dis-approving edge to his voice.

“Good God, are those cats?” Speaks further growled, spotting Toulon and Chalky, curled up together on the coverlet. “Mousers, I’d hope?”

“Passing-fair at it, sir, but mostly company,” Lewrie replied. “You’ve your parrot, I’ve my cats. They’re nigh mute, but amusing.”

“I despise cats,” Speaks huffed. “Can’t abide them. Give me a good dog, now … that’s another matter.”

What
else’ll
he find fault with?
Lewrie sourly wondered.

“Your ship, sir!” Captain Speaks said, turning to face Lewrie. “When I came aboard she
looked
‘ship-shape and Bristol Fashion.’ ”

“We try t’keep her all ‘tiddly,’ sir,” Lewrie blandly said. “I find that the French make that difficult, now and then.”

“So much like my old
Thermopylae,
” Captain Speaks said, seeming to mellow at the mention of his last command. “Of the same Rate, and weight of metal. You were at Copenhagen.”

It sounded like a petulant accusation.

“Aye, sir.”

“Got a chance to fight her,” Speaks said with a grunt.

“We did, sir. And went up the Baltic to scout the state of the ice and enemy harbours on our own,” Lewrie answered. “We rejoined the fleet the night before.”

“Lost good Mister Ballard,” Speaks sadly mused, pacing about the cabins as if they were his own. “Arthur was an excellent First Officer to me. Would have made a fine Captain, had he lived. I liked him very much. Though you didn’t know him as long as I—”

“He was my First Officer in the
Alacrity
for three years, sir, in the Bahamas, ’tween the wars,” Lewrie interrupted.

He goin’ t’blame me for that, too?
Lewrie angrily thought.

“I did not know,” Speaks gruffly said. “Well, sir! Be sure to be aboard
Penarth
by Four Bells, and Lieutenant Clough and I will show you what we’re to work with, and familiarise your people with the procedures.”

“Very well, sir. I’ll see you to the deck,” Lewrie offered as he went for his hat, which he’d left on the dining table.

“No need, sir,” Captain Speaks quickly said. “I might take one or two minutes to savour being aboard a frigate, again.”

“You’d wish a brief tour, sir?” Lewrie asked.

“No, no, don’t wish to bother your people,” Speaks insisted.

“No bother at all, sir, and since I’m goin’ on deck, too…,” Lewrie said, but Speaks was already halfway to the doors to the weather deck. He had to trot after him, then pass him as Speaks idled on the outer deck between the guns. Lewrie was at the top of the gangway by the break of the quarterdeck by the time Speaks made a slower way up the ladderway. “Side-party for departure honours, Mister Houghton,” Lewrie ordered his senior Midshipman from the corner of his mouth.

Captain Speaks paused at the top of the ladderway, hands in the small of his back and gazing forward to the forecastle, taking in all the bustle of
Reliant
’s hands, the mathematical exactitude of all the yards and maze of rigging. Speaks heaved a deep sigh, which came out as a throat-clearing grunt, then became all business-like as he doffed his hat in departure. The bosun’s calls tweedled, muskets and swords were presented to see him over the side, right to the last moment when the dog’s vane of his hat dropped below the lip of the entry-port.

Poor old shit’s jealous, by God!
Lewrie told himself;
I have a command, and he don’t … not a real’un.

Captain Joseph Speaks would have recovered from his pneumonia by April of 1801, but Admiralty had not offered him another warship, and then the Peace of Amiens had
kept
him ashore on half-pay. Mid-May of last year had seen at least an hundred ships put back in commission, but … none of them were his, and when finally recalled to active service, what had he gotten? Not a frigate or warship commensurate with his seniority, but a
project
!

No wonder he’s turned sour as crab-apples!
Lewrie realised.

CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

Before boarding one of
Reliant
’s cutters for the long row out to
Penarth,
Lewrie had time enough for a private moment with Lieutenant Westcott.

“Should Captain Speaks make mention of it, some of your family are down to Portsmouth to see you, Mister Westcott,” Lewrie muttered to him. “Which took you ashore. He might have a ‘down’ on ye, else.”

“Thank you for covering for me, sir,” Westcott said with a wide grin, not one of his usual quick flashes.

“And was a good time had by all?” Lewrie japed, with a leer.

“ ‘All’
did,
sir,” Lt. Westcott cheerfully confessed, “and we’d have had a better, had Faulkes not found me. The lady’s most obliging and fetching, a recent widow of an apothecary. Sold up the business to another, but didn’t manage to gain all
that
much security. Thank God she can still afford to send the son off to a schoolmaster …
with
his dinner pail. Hours and hours on her hands, alone, most days?”

And yours on her,
Lewrie told himself, chuckling at the image.

“Whatever shall I
do
with you, Mister Westcott?” Lewrie teased.

“Swear I’m an abstinent and celibate Christian, should bully-bucks come and ask for me, sir!” Westcott rejoined. “And that I’m not here!”

*   *   *

Penarth
was a two-masted brig, fitted with shorter mast stubs to serve as crane supports, one aft of her foremast, the other forward of her main-mast, from which jib-arms could swing. She had much more freeboard than
Fusee
, the result of a much deeper hold for the coasting coal trade, and slab-sided, with none of the tumblehome designed into warships to reduce top-weight; her boarding battens were vertical, and a hard climb right
over
her bulwarks to an in-board set of steps, with no proper entry-port.

“Welcome aboard, sirs,” her “captain” said. Lt. Douglas Clough was indeed a Scot, but without a Highland “sawney” accent. He was red-haired and pale-complexioned, though, his hair, when he doffed his hat, frizzy and tightly curly-wavy. Clough was an odd-looking bird, for his forehead receded at a pronounced slant from a heavily beetled ridge of brow, his large, stubby nose almost matching the angle of his head so that it appeared that they were one precipitous slope.

“Captain Speaks has spoken … has explained the nature of the catamaran torpedo to you, sirs?” he asked.

“Only that they are a
form
of torpedo, sir,” Lewrie said for all.

“Let’s show them, Clough,” Captain Speaks grunted.

“This way, sirs. We keep them in the hold, out of sight. Nice and dry ’til deployed. If you will all follow me?” Clough bade.

Someone had done some modification work on
Penarth
to lengthen her main midships hatchway, perhaps turning two into one, and removing some cross-deck bracing timbers. They clambered down yet another very steep ladder into the belowdeck gloom, lit only by a pair of lanthorns built like the light rooms found in a warship’s powder magazines.

“Here they are, sirs,” Lt. Clough proudly announced, pointing to two large boat-like objects, one to either side of a narrow aisle running fore-and-aft. The objects were covered with tarred canvas on the outside, tapering bluntly at either end, and put Lewrie in mind of gigantic
cigarros
of the same colour as aged tobacco leaf.

“What
are
they?” Midshipman Rossyngton wondered aloud.

“Catamaran torpedoes, young sir!” Captain Speaks snapped back.

“We’ve eight aboard at the moment,” Lt. Clough explained. “Two here, two more forward on this temporary deck, and four more below in the lower hold. A catamaran torpedo is twenty-one and a half feet in length, much like a ship’s boat in size, three and a half feet in beam. They taper to blunt ends, with a slight rise a’low and a rise aloft, ha ha! The main mid-section is basically a sealed wooden chest, with the interior lined with lead to make it water-proof, and all the seams soldered to prevent any leakage once they’re in the water. They’re flat on the bottom and the top, though they do have a slight curve to their sides.”

“Much better than any creation but Fulton’s copper spheres,” Captain Speaks told them, as if they were his own idea.

“If they’re sealed, sir, how does one manage to set the timer and cock the igniting pistol?” Lt. Merriman, who had had more experience than the others with such devices, enquired, clambering up onto a cradle in which one of the torpedoes sat for a closer look.

“See that stand-pipe in the top?” Clough pointed out. “There’s a water-tight tompion at its mouth. When one removes the tompion, the starting lines are attached to it, and all one has to do is give both a good, hard yank, and one is in business, sir.”

“Aye, we’ve dealt with that before, sir,” Lt. Westcott said to their host, “but … how do you
set
the clock? You can’t get a hand down that pipe.”

BOOK: The Invasion Year
5.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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