Read His Majesty's Ship Online

Authors: Alaric Bond

Tags: #Historical, #Naval - 18th century - Fiction, #War & Military, #rt, #mblsm, #Royal Navy

His Majesty's Ship (40 page)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

 

 

 

 

      
They had almost drawn level with the flagship; her three rows of guns were much less than a cable away and pointing straight for them. Dyson could see the French gun crews on the upper decks as they went about the final stages of loading; an officer dressed in a splendid uniform rushed between them, his epaulettes flashing in the late afternoon light. He also noticed the yards move as they began hauling on the braces. Clearly the French had guessed his plan, and were working to move their ship out of danger. Regular sharp cracks told where French marksmen were firing from the tops while further intermittent volleys came from muskets and swivel guns manned by soldiers who lined the enemy's bulwarks.

      
Dyson collected the speaking trumpet from the binnacle, and raised it to his lips. He wanted no uncertainty, no confusion; nothing could go wrong, least of all because an order had been misheard.

      
“Lower battery will hold their fire.” He looked once more at the French ship and drew breath. “Now, Mr Gregory!”

      
The upper deck guns went off in a tight ripple, ending with the carronades on the quarterdeck. On the French ship he saw men fall, swept down by the rush of shot and musket balls. Guns stood unmanned, and the line of soldiers had all but vanished, although there was still the regular pop of musket balls hitting the deck from above.

      
“And again, lads!” Gregory bellowed for the men to reload, although Dyson was quite content. Their broadside had done its business; by the time the enemy's upper deck artillery was fit to fight again,
Vigilant
should be safely positioned off their counter, or a derelict. It was the heavy guns on the lower two decks that could do them real damage.

      
The French broadside came over their starboard bow just as Dyson was about to order
Vigilant
round. Now the range was so close that the noise of the shots coincided with them striking the ship, and
Vigilant
was pressed physically sideways and sternwards by the force. Men fell at every station, and a cloud of splinters and dust rose like smoke above the decks as they were ripped, pounded and mauled by the hot iron. With a crack like an axe striking a log the weakened starboard channels were taken out, ripping back the main topmast as they went. The spar fell slowly, reluctantly, as individual lines parted, until it finally crashed diagonally across the deck. Gregory was at the spot almost immediately and with a party of seamen took to hacking at the remaining shrouds in a desperate attempt to clear the wreckage before they lost all speed.

      
A gun fired unexpectedly from their lower gundeck. It was too early; Dyson held his breath, but none followed. Possibly a chance shot had struck the linstock, or a gun captain had panicked. Rogers must be keeping good order down there to stop the entire broadside from discharging prematurely. He made a mental note to commend him for it later.

      
With an effort that can only be summoned in battle, the bulk of the mast was gradually eased over the side, until it finally hit the ocean and was set free, while
Vigilant,
powered by her last ribbons of canvas, continued.

      
“Take her round!” Dyson yelled at the quartermaster, now manning the wheel himself with only one helmsman to assist. The ship began to turn, and was reluctantly guided into the teeth of the wind. For a moment momentum carried her, then she began to slow, with what sails that were left, flapping in protest. The flagship’s stern drew steadily nearer as the British ship’s bows came round and her speed decreased further. She was yards, feet, away from the optimum position, although now, with nearly all impetus spent,
Vigilant
barely moved across the water. With agonising lassitude her forecastle inched past the stern of the flagship, moving slowly, so slowly, away from those murderous guns, and into a position of relative safety.

      
Gregory's sword was raised once more; the upper deck guns were ready. Dyson found time to marvel at the resilience of men who could continue to load while an enemy broadside swept over them. A group of officers were plainly visible on the Frenchman's deck, and even at that distance Dyson fancied he could detect an air of panic about them as
Vigilant
continued onwards.
 

 

*****

 

      
King was out of station when she turned; after helping to clear away the mess of what once had been their main topmast, he had moved forward and now stood at the end of the waist, watching the gilded stern of the flagship as they rounded on her. Two heavy guns were run out just above the rudder, but that was all the fire they would face. as
Vigilant
crept closer. Then something caught his attention, and he looked forward, past the ship and the smoke that surrounded her.

      
The French seventy-four could just be seen coming round from behind the three-decker. King guessed that she must have turned some minutes ago, probably when Dyson’s plans had been revealed. Her guns were run out, and she would start to cross their bows shortly. He swung round and put his hands to his mouth as an improvised speaking trumpet.

      
“'t'other ship's on our starboard bow!” He panted, summoning more breath to bellow again. “She's passing the flagship an' crossin' us!”

      
Dyson heard the cry and assumed it had come from aloft. He looked to see who had spoken but with the mizzen staysail flapping, and amid the smoke and confusion of action he could not tell.

      
“Tell Mr Rogers to fire the starboard battery, then man the larboard as well.” he shouted at the nearest man, no midshipman being at hand. “He is to train the larboard guns for'ard. Do you understand?”

      
The man, Kelly, who had once claimed to be a tailor, nodded, touched his forehead and was off; Dyson watched him as he explained himself to the marine sentry, before continuing down the companionway. It would take a good thirty seconds for the message to be relayed. The upper gundeck sent a further cascade of iron across the short distance that separated the two ships. Dyson watched as officers on the poop and quarterdeck were swept to one side, and could actually hear the screams of the men as they fell. Almost without thinking he drew his sword from its scabbard and rested the blade comfortably over his right shoulder. At any moment they would rake the stern of a three-decker, and yet Dyson's mind was on the seventy-four. A broadside could be expected from that quarter; then they really would be for it.
 

 

*****

 

      
On the lower gundeck there was still no sign of Rogers. When the gun captain on number seven had fired early, it had been Timothy who acted so promptly, and stemmed the premature broadside. With the confusion of the last few minutes the second lieutenant could be dead or wounded; Timothy cared not which. He received Kelly's message without comment before bracing himself to issue the order that would devastate a French three-decker.

      
“Starboard battery fire when you bear!”

      
The first gun spoke almost immediately, and the entire broadside was spent within twelve seconds.

      
“Starboard battery continue at will.” Timothy yelled as soon as the cacophony died. “Number two crew, clear larboard battery!” Only the nearest gun crew heard him. Davis began repeating the order in a strained falsetto as he moved stiffly down the deck, and before long the gun crews had divided and were manning both batteries. Timothy crossed the deck and waited while a larboard port was opened, then poked his head into the fresh damp air to look. It was a horrible sight; the jib boom of the seventy-four was in plain view now, in no time she would be in the ideal firing position across their bows.
 

 

*****

 

      
On the quarterdeck Humble watched as the stern windows of the flagship disappeared under the bombardment. To rake a ship at close range is to rip the very heart from her; the damage that their broadside caused to the three-decker was devastating. Those shots would continue through the hull, until they hit fabric or flesh enough to absorb their tremendous momentum. The elderly man trembled slightly, trying not to imagine the scene; the low decks packed with men; the noise and confusion; the panic. Two or three more broadsides like that would do serious damage to the structure of the ship, and probably kill or disable more than half her crew. He looked away and saw the other liner passing across their bows and in an instant knew that the same was about to happen to them.
 

 

*****

 

      
Dyson also watched the seventy-four. For all his preparations, there was little he could do.
Vigilant
had lost all speed, and was now totally unmanageable.

      
“Keep her hard over, quartermaster!” Dyson grunted. The gnarled face hardly nodded back in reply; he knew his duty, and he also knew that it was hopeless.

      
More shots were striking the deck all about him as the marksmen on the flagship's mizzen top took aim, but Dyson was strangely tolerant of them. They were no more than raindrops, compared to the tidal wave that was due at any moment.

      
It came, appropriately enough, like the seas breaking over their bows. The shots smacked into the dry timbers in a succession of tearing crashes, taking the bowsprit and foremast with them. Humble watched the wave of destruction as it thundered on, wiping the decks clear of men and fittings as it went. The master, who had been in action on several occasions, now felt a strange apathy take control. Seeing their previous broadside rake the flagship had altered him in a fundamental way; he felt listless and tired. The energy that had kept his fighting soul alive was suddenly missing. He was an old man, a grandfather thrice over; his war was done and as death swept towards him in a mighty rush he almost greeted it with relief.
 

 

*****

 

      
Below deck the men at the forward great guns were smashed into one with their equipment. Matthew stared in horror as Klier fell lifeless across his own weapon, only to be pulled roughly aside and tossed into the scuppers by Lewis and O'Conner.

      
“Bring her round!” Simpson was shouting, despite the carnage. Lewis and another began to haul the gun to train her forward. Matthew had one powder charge left, with both guns in action he must get more without delay.

      
“Load the charge!” Simpson shouted. With the loss of some men, and the dividing of the crew everyone had to work twice as hard. Matthew ripped the cover off the carrier and placed the cartridge into the waiting feeder, before setting off once more for the main hatch.

      
Flint stood at the breach of the gun, apparently content to watch the men as they worked. Lewis caught sight of his face and paused for a moment; Simpson also noticed the difference.

      
“Set your priming!” he bellowed into Flint's face, although there was little response. The shock of knowing his father for a coward had shaken Flint deeply. His eyes were set somewhere in the distance, and his mouth hung slightly open. Lewis was inserting the charge, and looking to his captain to announce it placed. Simpson grabbed the priming wire from Flint's limp fingers, and set it in the touch hole

      
“Home!” he shouted. The words seemed to jerk Flint from his apathy, and he looked about him.

      
“Get with it, man!” Simpson bellowed, Flint considered him. He turned, his face now filling with panic, to see Matthew coming back with two fresh charges slung over his shoulders.

      
Simpson pushed Flint to one side, inserted the firing tube, wrenched back the hammer and frizzen, and emptied a measure of priming powder into the pan. “Stand clear!” he bellowed before pulling the lanyard, and sending a twenty-four pound ball in the general direction of the French ship.

      
The boy watched the gun fire and paused, suddenly uncertain. A shot passed in front of him, just where he would have been if he had not stopped. Instead the shot hit O'Conner and wounded him horribly. Matthew dropped the charges, and looked up to Flint, his mouth opened in a scream that was totally without sound.

      
“Come on lad, move it!” Flint's voice was no more than a screech, and he spoke as much to himself as the boy. “Don't mind the noise, the one you hear has gone past—noise can't hurt you.” It was the instructions his father had given him that night, during the action with the revenue cutter. Neither watched as Lewis dragged the screaming O'Conner to the middle of the deck where he could die without getting in anyone's way. “Come on,” Flint continued. “We're dependin' on you!”

      
Matthew blinked and picked up his charges once more. Lewis returned from his work and reached for a cartridge, before turning and hurriedly inserting it and the feeder into the warm muzzle of the gun.

      
“Home!” shouted Flint, now back in his correct position, and feeling with his wire down the touch hole. The routine re-established, Matthew crossed the deck and handed the other charge to the feeder of the starboard gun before returning once more to the main hatch.

Other books

Holiday Hearts by A. C. Arthur
Circle of Deception by Swafford, Carla
Worth the Risk by Savannah Stuart
Touch by North, Claire
The Honey Queen by Cathy Kelly
Peter Pan by James Matthew Barrie


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024