James McGee - Rapscallion

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And as if to emphasize the fact, the calm was shattered by a blood-curdling howl and up on to the already crowded well deck erupted a seething tide of horror.

From his vantage point on the forecastle Hawkwood saw the throng of prisoners break apart. Sharp cries of panic rang out. He heard Lasseur draw in his breath. He wasn't sure what he was seeing at first. It was like watching beetles swarm over the carcass of a dead animal, except the creatures that were spewing out of the hatches and trampling over the Park were not beetles, they were human, and many of them were naked. Their hair was long and matted; their bodies were daubed with filth. The ones that were not naked might as well have been, for the rags they were wearing were little more than strips of tattered cloth. Some of them, Hawkwood realized, were wearing blankets, which they'd wrapped around themselves like togas. Hissing and screeching, fangs bared, they surged around the other prisoners like a marauding pack of baboons, leaping and prancing and in some cases laying about them with fists and feet. Others were beating mess tins. The noise was ferocious.

Yells of alarm echoed around the quarterdeck. As the militia gathered their startled wits and hurried to unsling their muskets, a uniformed officer materialized behind them, tall and thin. The dark, cocked hat accentuated his height. It was the commander of the hulk, Lieutenant Hellard. Flanked by the guards, the lieutenant strode quickly to the rail and stared down at the fracas below. His face contorted. Without moving, he rapped out a command. Half a dozen more guards, led by a corporal, appeared at a clattering run from the lean-to on the stern. Their fellow militia, already at the rails and secure in the knowledge that reinforcements had come to support them, drew back the hammers on their muskets. Within seconds, a battery of gun muzzles was aligned along the width of the quarterdeck.

With the ruction on the Park in full spate, the lieutenant raised his arm. The corporal barked an order and the militia took aim.

God's teeth! Hawkwood thought. He's going to do it!

But the lieutenant did not give the order. Instead he continued to watch the drama playing out on the deck. The militia guards' fingers played nervously with the triggers of their guns.

For two or three minutes the uproar continued. Then, suddenly, as if a signal had been given, the situation changed. The naked and toga-clad creatures began to pull back. The other prisoners started to regroup. Several, emboldened by the sight of the retreating horde, waded into their former tormentors, beating them towards the open hatchways. Some were wielding sticks. Arms rose and fell. Cries of pain and anger told where the blows landed. Driven back, the invaders were disappearing down the stairways from which they had so recently emerged, like cockroaches scuttling from the light.

Within seconds, or so it seemed, the attackers had all dispersed. Immediately, several hands were thrust aloft, palms open; a signal that the prisoners left on deck had the situation under control. The lieutenant, however, did not move, nor did he give any indication that he'd even seen the raised hands. Remaining motionless, he watched the deck. The prisoners stared back at him, chests heaving. Some were bloody and bruised. A tense silence fell over the Park. A gull shrieked high above. No one moved. It took another ten seconds before the lieutenant finally let his arm relax and stepped back. Immediately, the tension on the well deck evaporated. The militia uncocked and shouldered their muskets. The reinforcements turned about. The deck guards resumed their posts. The atmosphere on the well deck settled back into its habitual torpor. The hurt prisoners retired to lick their wounds.

Hawkwood discovered he was holding his breath. He let it out slowly.

"What happened there?" Lasseur breathed. "Who in God's name were they?"

"Romans," a voice said behind them. "Bastards!"

Hawkwood and Lasseur turned. It was Charbonneau.

"Romans?" Hawkwood said, thinking he must have misheard.

"Scum," Charbonneau said, his eyes blazing. "They live on the orlop. We don't see them very often. They prefer the dark. Some of them have been here longer than I have. We call them Romans from the way they wear their blankets, like togas. They have other names, but they're still animals. They used to be held in prisons ashore. Got sent to the hulks as punishment, I was told. Now it's the rest of us who're suffering — twice over."

"Some of them were naked!" Lasseur said, unnecessarily.

Charbonneau nodded. "They're the lowest of the lot. They'll be the ones who've gambled all their belongings away. It's how they exist. They have a mania for it. Cards and dice dominate their lives. Most start with money. When that's gone, they wager their clothes and their bedding, even their rations. Sometimes they starve themselves, hoarding their rations to sell them off and then start over again. When they run out of belongings or food they steal from others or roam the decks looking for peelings or fish heads. Even the rats aren't safe. Now and again they send out raiding parties, like the one you just saw."

"Rafales," Hawkwood murmured.

"Some call them that," Charbonneau said, eyes narrowing. "You've heard of them?"

Hawkwood nodded.

"Why don't the guards punish them?" Lasseur asked.

Charbonneau gave a dry laugh. "How? Look around. You think this place isn't punishment enough? In any case, the commander's hands are tied. They can't be flogged. No prisoner can. Direct physical punishment's forbidden, unless a British soldier or crew member is harmed."

"So he wouldn't have given the order to fire?" Lasseur said.

"Not unless there'd been a full-scale riot which threatened the safety of his men. As far as our commander's concerned, any disagreement between prisoners is dealt with by prisoners' tribunal." Charbonneau sniffed dismissively. "What goes on below deck stays below deck. It's got so that the guards hardly ever enter the orlop now. They leave them to get on with it. The rest of us don't go down there either. It's not safe. You saw what they were like."

Hawkwood remembered the scream he'd heard on his first night and the lack of reaction it had provoked. He looked across the Park towards the quarterdeck and watched as the hulk's commander removed his hat, turned his face to the sun and closed his eyes. The lieutenant stood still, letting the warmth soak into his skin. His hair was dark and streaked with grey.

After what must have been half a minute at least, the lieutenant opened his eyes and dropped his chin. Running a hand through his hair, he placed the hat back on his head and turned to go. Abruptly, he paused, as if aware that his unguarded moment had been observed. He looked over his shoulder. Hawkwood made no attempt to glance away as the lieutenant's brooding eyes roved slowly along the line of prisoners. As Hellard's gaze passed over his own, it seemed for a second as though the hulk commander's attention lingered, but then, as the lieutenant's stare moved on, the moment was gone. Hawkwood decided it had been his imagination, which was probably just as well. Clad in civilian clothes rather than the ubiquitous yellow jacket and trousers, Hawkwood knew he'd risked drawing attention to himself by making eye contact with the lieutenant. It had been an unwise move.

"Unless I'm mistaken," Lasseur commented softly as the lieutenant made his way from the deck, "there's a man who spends a lot of time in his own company."

The world began to revolve once more. Charbonneau drifted away. Beneath Hawkwood's and Lasseur's vantage point, a fencing class was being conducted. In the absence of edged weapons, the students were reduced to wielding the thin sticks that had been used to quell the recent invasion — still a risky venture given the confines of the classroom — and the Park echoed to the click-clack of wooden foils.

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