Michael Sullivan - The emerald storm

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Hadrian felt the nausea rising in his stomach once more. His face must have betrayed his misery.

"Don't worry. Seasickness usually only lasts three days," Wyatt assured him, as he put the cards in his breast pocket. "After that both of you will be fine."

"If we can stay on board that long. I don't know anything about being a ship's cook."

Wyatt smiled. "Don't worry. I've got you covered. Poe will do most of the work. I know he looks young, but he'll surprise you.

"So, how is it that I get an assistant?"

"As ship's cook, you rank as a petty officer. Don't get all excited though. You're still under of the boatswains and their mates, but it does grant you the services of Ordinary Seaman Poe. It also exempts you from the watches. That means so long as the ship's meals are on schedule, the rest of your time is your own. What you need to know is that breakfast is promptly at the first bell of the forewatch," Wyatt paused. "That's the first time you'll hear a single bell toll after eight bells is rung just after the sun breaks above the horizon.

"So have Poe light the galley fires shortly after middle watch. He'll know when that is. Tell him to make skillygalee-that's oatmeal gruel. Don't forget biscuits. Biscuits get served at every meal. At eight bells, the men are piped to breakfast. Each mess will send someone to you with a messkid, sorta like a wooden bucket. Your job will be to dish out the food. Have Poe make some tea as well. The men will drink beer and rum at dinner and supper, but not at breakfast and no one on board will risk drinking straight water."

"Risk?"

"Water sits in barrels for months, or years if a ship is on a long voyage. It gets rancid. Tea and coffee are okay 'cause they're boiled and have a little flavor. Coffee is expensive though, and reserved for the officers. The crew and the midshipmen eat first. After that, Basil, the officers' cook, will arrive to make meals for the lieutenants and captain. Just stay out of his way.

"For dinner make boiled pork. Have Poe start boiling it right after Basil leaves. The salted meat will throw off a thick layer of fat. Half of that goes to the top captains to grease the rigging, the other half you can keep. You can sell it to tallow merchants at the next port for a bit of coin, but don't give it to the men. It will make you popular if you do, but it can also give them scurvy and the captain won't like it. Have Poe boil some vegetables and serve them together as a stew, and don't forget the biscuits."

"So, I tell Poe what to make and dish it out, but I don't actually do any cooking?"

Wyatt smiled. "That's the benefit of being a petty officer; sadly however you only get a seaman's rate of pay. For supper, just serve what's left over from dinner, grog and, of course, biscuits. After that, have Poe clean up and like I said, the rest of the day is open to you. Sound easy?"

"Maybe, if I could stand straight and keep my stomach from doing back-flips."

"Listen to Poe. He'll take good care of you. Now you'd best get back in your hammock. Trust me, it helps. Oh, and just so you know, you would have been wrong."

"About what?" Hadrian asked.

"About thinking saiing was a safer line of work."

***

It was still dark when the captain called "All hands!"

A cold wind had risen and in the dark hours before dawn a light rain sprayed the deck adding a wet chill to the seasick misery that had already deprived Hadrian of most of his sleep. During the night, the Emerald Storm passed by the Isle of Niel and now approached the Point of Man. The Point was a treacherous headland shoal that marked the end of Avryn Bay and the start of the Sharon Sea. In the dark, it was difficult to see the shoals, but the sound was unmistakable. Somewhere ahead there came the rhythmic, thundering boom of waves crashing against the point.

The below decks emptied as the boatswain and his mates roused all the men from both watches with their starter ropes, driving them up to stations.

"Bring her about!" shouted the captain from his perch on the quarterdeck. The dignified figure of Lieutenant Bishop echoed the order, which Mister Temple repeated.

"Helm-a-lee!" shouted the captain. Once more, the order echoed across the decks. Wyatt spun the ship's great wheel.

"Tacks and sheets!" Lieutenant Bishop barked to the crew.

At the mizzen, main, and foremasts the other lieutenants shouted more orders which the boatswains reinforced.

Hadrian stood on the main deck in the dark and drizzling rain, unsure of his station or even if he had one. He was a cook after all, but it seemed even a cook was expected to lend a hand on deck when necessary. He still felt ill, but Royce appeared worse. Hadrian watched as Boatswain Bristol, a big burly man, ordered him up the ropes waving his short whip menacingly. Drained of color, Royce's face and hands stood out pale in the dark, his eyes unfocused and empty. He reluctantly moved up the main mast's ratlines, but he did not display any of the acrobatics of the day before. Instead, he crawled miserably and hesitated partway up. He hovered in the wet rigging as if he might fall. From below Bristol cursed at him until, at last, he moved upward once more. Hadrian imagined that the higher into the rigging Royce went, the more pronounced the sway of the ship would be. Between that, the slippery wet ropes, and the cold wind-driven rain, he did not envy his friend.

Several men were working the ropes that controlled the direction of the sails, but others, like him, remained idle waiting in lines, which the boatswains formed. There was a tension evident in the silence of the crew. The booming of the headlands grew louder and closer, sounding like the pounding of a giant's hammer or the heartbeat of a god. They seemed to be flying blindly into the maw of some enormous unseen beast that would swallow them whole. The reality, Hadrian imagined, would not be much different should they come too close to the shoals.

All eyes watched the figure of Captain Seward, anticipating something. The ship was turning, he could tell by the feel of the wind and the direction of the rain. The sails once full and taut began to flutter and collapsed as the bow crossed over into the face of the wind.

"Main'sl haul!" the captain suddenly shouted, and the crew cast off the bow lines and braces.

Seeing the movements Hadrian realized the strategy. They were attempting a windward tack around the dangerous point, which meant the wind would be blowing the ship's hull toward the treacherous rocks even as they struggled to reset the sails to catch the wind from the other side. The danger came from the lack of maneuverability caused by empty sails during the tack. Without the wind driving the ship, the rudder could not push against the water and turn her. If the ship could not come about fully, it would not be able to catch the wind again. If that happened they would drift into the shoals, which would shatter the timbered hull like an eggshell and cast the cargo and crew into a dark angry sea.

Hadrian took hold of the rope in his line and along with several others pulled the yards round, repositioning the sails to catch the wind as soon as she was able. The rope was slick and the wind jerked the coil so roughly that it took the whole line to pull the yards safely into position.

There was another deafening boom as the breakwater exploded and over the port bow a burst of white spray shot skyward. The vessel was turning fast now, pulling away from the foam, struggling to get clear. No sooner had the bow cleared the wind then he heard the captain, "Now! Meet her! Hard over!"

His voice was nearly lost as another powerful wave rammed the rocks just beside them, throwing the Emerald Storm's bow upward with a rough lurch that staggered them all. On the quarterdeck, Wyatt followed the order, spinning the wheel back, checking the swing before the ship could turn too far and lose her stern into the rocks.

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