Rebellion - James McGee 11 стр.


The ship slewed violently.

Stuart yelled at his helmsmen: Hold her! Hold her!

Hawkwood hung on grimly. As the bow came up and the mainsail was sheeted home, he straightened, bit back the sour taste that had surfaced at the back of his throat, and found he was sweating profusely beneath the coating of spindrift.

How was that, Mr Smith? The lieutenant, one hand thrust into his jacket pocket, the other still attached to the binnacle, gave one of his trademark grins, though Hawkwood thought it might have been a little forced. Bracing enough for you?

At that instant a white-hot bolt of lightning shot across the cutters starboard bow. In the space of a heartbeat night became day, followed a split second later by a colossal thunderclap that sounded as if the entire sky had split asunder.

Several of the cutters crew flinched; some ducked as though expecting an enemy broadside.

Lord save us! Tredstow exclaimed loudly. He stared heavenwards.

Hawkwood wasnt certain if it was the reflection from the lightning that had turned the lieutenants face pale or if the blood had drained away of its own accord.

Griffins commander found his voice. His jaw tightened as he said hollowly, It would seem the storms a lot closer than Id thought.

A profanity hovered at the tip of Hawkwoods tongue. He swallowed it back quickly and let out his breath.

Which places us in a dilemma . . . Stuart continued. Weve still a fair distance to cover. In clement weather Id raise more canvas, but with the storm upon us, I cant risk it. Ive no option but to reduce sail. Well do our best but it could be that our only option is to try and ride it out.

The words had barely been uttered when the rain began to lance down.

It shouldnt have come as a shock. Its arrival had been prophesied only a few hours before, but the sheer force of it took every man by surprise.

God really does have a sense of humour, Hawkwood reflected bleakly, as icy needles rattled against his face and shoulders with the force of grape shot.

At least itll keep the Frogs at bay, Stuart said, grimacing at the sudden inundation. If theyve any sense, theyll still be a-bed.

Which is where I should bloody well be, Hawkwood thought. On dry land, if possible.

Perhaps youd rather go below? Stuart offered.

Hawkwood suspected that the lieutenant had made the suggestion not so much to keep him out of harms way as to prevent his one and only passenger from getting under everyones feet and jeopardizing the safety of the ship.

The prospect of returning to the cabins claustrophobic interior held little appeal. The combination of the ships gyrations and the odours below deck would more than likely result in him spewing his guts out the minute he lay down. Retreat, he decided, was not an option.

He shook his head. If its all right with you, Captain, I think Id prefer to remain upright.

At first, Hawkwood thought the lieutenant was about to deny him the choice, but his feelings must have been evident in his expression for Griffins commander merely nodded. Very well. In that case, Id be obliged if youd keep your movement about the deck to a minimum. We dont want any accidents. The lieutenants gaze shifted. Stand by to reduce sail, Mr Welland, if you please!

Aye, sir! Welland raised a hand in acknowledgement. From the speed of the response, it was clear the bosun had been waiting for such a signal. He yelled across the deck: Stand by foresl! He turned and eyed his lieutenant expectantly.

Stuart nodded. Now, Mr Welland!

The bosuns face streamed with spray. He turned back towards the men waiting by the ropes. Take in foresl!

Blocks squealed like stuck pigs as the jib and bowsprit were hauled in. Hawkwood marvelled at the mens skill. He stared up at the mast and yards and the huge mainsail and the spiders web of rigging and pulleys radiating from them. It was a miracle, he thought, how anyone could tell one rope from another. Nautical jargon had never failed to confuse him, nor, if he were honest, had it held much allure. It was a language as foreign as any hed encountered during his long army service.

And yet, he wondered, would it be any different for a sailor who found himself marooned on a battlefield? Was army slang any more intelligible to the uninitiated? Probably not, he decided. And, be he sailor or sapper, so long as every man knew what he was doing, what did it matter?

Hawkwood became aware that someone was leaning towards him. It was Tredstow. Water coursed in shiny rivulets down the seamans grizzled cheeks. He put his lips close to Hawkwoods ear, while a hand gripped Hawkwoods arm like a steel claw. I were you, Id hang on tight. This uns going to be a right cow!

Hawkwood had once been told that on clear days, depending on the location, it was possible to stand on an English clifftop and view the other side of the Channel. Sometimes, it was said, France looked close enough to touch.

Had he first heard that from one of Griffins crew, hed have considered the man at worst a liar, at best an imbecile. Cloaked in darkness and dwarfed on every side by waves almost as high as the cutters main yard, the prospect of an imminent landfall looked an unlikely prospect. For all the headway she was making, Griffin might as well have been not two leagues from France but two hundred. But she was trying her best to get there.

Cutters, Hawkwood knew, were built for speed. It made them ideal for patrols and the carrying of dispatches. He did not know, however, how many men it took to crew one. If pushed, hed have hazarded a guess and estimated about forty. From what he could see, every man jack of them appeared to be topside, including, he supposed, Purser Venner, though it wasnt easy to make out features in the tumult and the darkness. Either way, every spare inch of decking looked to be occupied, with the men at their stations, ready to defend the ship against the elements; which they were doing, heroically.

From the moment of its opening salvo the storm had raged without let-up, increasing in strength with each passing minute. Under the relentless assault from wind, rain and waves the deck had become as treacherous as an ice sheet. All hatches had been battened down and it would have been a foolish man who tried to make his way from bow to stern unaided, so safety lines had been rigged, running fore and aft. With a dark and angry sea only too eager to ensnare its first victim, the men of the Griffin were clinging on for dear life.

Hawkwood knew that in the running of the ship he was no more than excess cargo. The knowledge didnt sit well. Hed never been comfortable with the role of spectator. It was one thing to relinquish all responsibility for transporting him to his destination to the lieutenant, but to entrust his safety to another party made him distinctly uneasy. He needed to be doing something.

So hed put his proposal directly to Griffins commander.

Im a spare body, Captain. Put me to work.

The lieutenant had been about to dismiss Hawkwoods offer out of hand but then, as before, the look on his passengers face had made him pause. After an exchange of meaningful looks with his second-in-command, hed nodded, turning quickly to his two helmsmen.

Im a spare body, Captain. Put me to work.

The lieutenant had been about to dismiss Hawkwoods offer out of hand but then, as before, the look on his passengers face had made him pause. After an exchange of meaningful looks with his second-in-command, hed nodded, turning quickly to his two helmsmen.

Fitch! Youve a new volunteer! Bates, youre relieved! Report to Mr Welland for new duties! Before you do, find Mr Smith a tarpaulin jacket. To Hawkwood, he said, Itll be less cumbersome than that riding coat youre wearing. Adding, Please do exactly as Fitch tells you. No more, no less. Is that clear? Anything happens to you, theyll have my innards for garters!

He yells pull, I pull, Hawkwood said.

Stuart nodded. You have it. Tell me, Mr Smith, do you know your opera?

Hawkwood stared at him.

Heart of oak are our ships . . .? Its something my father used to sing to me. I suspect were about to discover if the words hold true. Bates! Hurry up with that damned coat!

The moment the helmsman, Fitch, moved along, allowing him room to grasp the tiller bar, Hawkwood discovered why it was a two-man job. Above him, Griffins mainsail still stretched between gaff and boom but under the lieutenants orders the sail had been reefed in tight, leaving just enough canvas aloft to enable the helmsmen to preserve some semblance of authority. Trying to maintain steerage-way, however, was like wrestling a bucking mule. It felt to Hawkwood as if his arms were being torn from their sockets. There was only one course of action: hang on, obey Fitchs directions as best he could, and trust to salvation.

In times of adversity hed often wondered whether death might not be some sort of merciful release. Inevitably, the feeling had always dissipated, but every now and then a new situation would arise when the notion reared its ugly head. This night was fast turning into one of them.

Fighting in the Spanish mountains, hed known cold and rain, but nothing like this. The wind force hadnt lessened either. If anything, it had escalated substantially, causing them to tack more times than Hawkwood could remember, with the inevitable drenching results. Despite the tarpaulin jacket, hed never been so wretchedly wet in his entire life. Spray or rain, it made no difference. His hands were numb; he could hardly feel the ends of his fingers. Hed also lost all sense of time. The passing of the hours had become irrelevant. All that mattered was survival.

The sense of dread rose in his chest as, yet again, the cutters bow disappeared beneath another enormous wave. As the mass of water exploded over the forecastle it looked for one terrible moment as though the end of the shortened bowsprit had been sheared away. But then, ponderously, Griffin began to rise. At first, it was as though the sea was refusing to relinquish its grip until, with a supreme effort, she broke free, thrusting herself into the air like a breaching whale, the water running in gleaming cataracts from her forward rigging. Her bow continued to climb until it seemed she would fall back upon herself, such was the steep angle of her ascent. Finally reaching the vertex, Griffin hovered, but only for a moment before gravity took hold once more, drawing her back down into the seething well below.

The hull shuddered under the impact. A vivid streak of lightning zig-zagged across the sky. It was followed by another massive rumble directly overhead. As the echoes died away, it struck Hawkwood that if there was such a thing as the voice of God, it would probably sound a lot like that last roll of thunder.

And if thunder was a vocal manifestation of the Almightys wrath then the howling of the wind had to represent the grief of ten thousand souls trapped in purgatory. Which was why Hawkwood missed the warning shout. The first he knew something untoward had happened was when he saw a knot of seamen break apart as if a grenade had been tossed into their midst.

He heard Fitch bellow, Keep hold, God damn it! and as he hung on to the tiller he watched helplessly as the carronade broke free from its cradle and 10 cwt of cast-iron ordnance careered towards the lee bulwark, shedding slivers of twisted eyebolt from the damaged carriage in its wake, along with threads of pared cordage that were left whipping to and fro across the deck like decapitated sea serpents.

Gathering momentum, the carronade headed for the port scuppers, trailing mayhem as the more quick thinking among Griffins crewmen tried to grab on to the pieces of rope still attached to the metal barrel. The slippery conditions proved too much for them, however, and they found themselves dragged along by the weight, while others scrambled aside, slipping and sliding on the water-soaked planking, some falling full length as they tried to get out of the way. The sound of the carronade hitting the bulwark was loud enough to be heard over the storm. As was the scream.

The bulwark absorbed the brunt of the collision, the remainder was borne by the one crew member whod been unable to scramble clear in time. Sent sprawling, hed only been able to watch, paralysed with fright, as the heavy metal cylinder hurtled towards him. As the carronade hit the raised side of the ship it tipped, trapping the seaman beneath it, crushing his chest and shoulders and shattering his ribs and pelvis into matchwood.

It took eight men under the guidance of Lieutenant Weekes to pull the wreckage free and drag the body to one side, but by then it was too late. The crewman was beyond help. Even as they strove to gather up the corpse the rain and seawater were already rinsing the blood from the scuppers.

As the debris was cleared away and the dead man was carried below, Fitch turned and glared at Hawkwood over his shoulder. Despite the water teeming down the coarse face, there was no hiding the anger in the helmsmans eyes. By Christ, I hope youre worth the bloody trouble!

Hawkwood kept silent. There was nothing to be gained by responding to Fitchs outburst. Had he been in the helmsmans position hed probably have come close to voicing the same sentiment and if he hadnt put it into words, hed likely have thought it. Seafaring men, much more than soldiers, were prone to superstition. Any break with routine that resulted in catastrophe was likely to be deemed portentous by the less rational members of a close-knit crew. He suspected the men of the Griffin were no different in that regard. Theyd now lost one of their own and despite the death occurring while the ship was effectively on a war footing, it wasnt beyond the bounds of possibility that given the absence of both women and albatrosses, theyd place the blame for the freak accident squarely on the presence of a stranger. Which, Hawkwood supposed, was true, indirectly, though hed had no personal hand in the mans death. But suspicious minds had a habit of creating their own twisted brand of logic. The diplomatic thing to do, therefore, was remain silent, let Fitch vent his spleen and pray they didnt lose anybody else.

For the storm showed no signs of weakening; unlike the cutters crew who, bruised and battered by the ordeal, were growing ever more weary.

Hawkwood wasnt a religious man. Had he been, he might well have regarded the struggle being waged about him as some sort of fitting parable in which a gallant David was battling the storms fearsome Goliath. But Griffin was no David. There was no sling and no stone. Here, Goliath was in the ascendancy.

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