That stopped them in their tracks, as he took hold of the tiller sweep and began to force it leeward again, to hold them close-hauled on the wind.
"Trim us in to beat, then hoist the rowboat over the side. The lee side, where the 'Bloody' ship cannot see it," Choundas roared. He used his free hand to sweep back his boat cloak to reveal the pistols in his waist belt, the hilt of his sword. "Once around the island, we are out of its lee. There will be wind. There we will tack, and run into shore. Then we will get in the boat and row in, with this ship as our shield. They will not see us doing this, until it is too late. Do you understand me? Bien. Trиs bien. Now, do it!"
Out of desperation, with no other option they could agree to in their fear of capture and death, they obeyed. Choundas forced himself to smile, which made him look malevolent, but competent enough to save them. Though some made the sign against the "evil eye" as they crossed themselves for luck. Feral, brutally ugly… but he looked like a real officer who knew what he was doing; they obeyed him.
Too bad I didn't have Hainaut with me, Choundas thought, leaning his hip against the long tiller bar; with four pistols, I'd have killed that idiot, and done this hours ago!
"Helm a'weather, Mister Spenser," Lewrie was forced to say. "Ease us two points off the wind." The shore of the island was coming up fast, and he'd have to bear away to avoid its shoals. The tartane was only a half mile ahead of him now, but she was able to shave closer inshore… still hard on the wind, and brush Jester off, recapturing the windward advantage. He'd have to cede her the inshore route.
"Mister Rahl!" he shouted through cupped hands. "Grapeshot and scrap, to damage her rigging! Cripple her, sir!"
Rahl tried, firing at extreme elevation, but it was too far for grapeshot, and Jester had no star-shot, bar-shot, or chain-shot for the carronades that could whirl across the half-mile gap. Rahl could hit her, evident by the multiple froths of small hailstorms in the waters around her, but it was too light to do crippling damage. And she wasn't ducking high and low anymore, either, but was being unflinchingly steered as close to the wind's edge as she could be. And beyond the island, there was a narrow channel that led to a deep inlet, winding back west, the tall headland at the western edge of Vado Bay. There was a village at either place, a beach below the headland where fishing boats landed, where the pounding of surf had created a gravelly shingle. More rocky would be the narrow channel, with few places to land safely.
"Herr Kapitanl" Rahl announced in a parade-ground bark. "I go back to der solit-shot, ja, zir?"
"Aye, Mister Rahl!" Lewrie shouted back.
"We've almost got him," Mister Peel said. "If he's aboard, after all, that is, Captain Lewrie."
"Thankee, Mister Peel, for reminding me what fools we might yet be," Lewrie groaned, most happily unaware of Peel's existence for the last few hours.
"I borrowed Lieutenant Knolles's telescope, sir," Peel told him. "The last few minutes, there's been a fellow steering her who's wearing some sort of uniform. It could be that's part of a deliberate sham but I rather hope not."
"No more'n me, I assure you, Mister Peel." Lewrie yawned, badly in need of more coffee, though the galley fires had been extinguished, once they'd opened fire. "Oh, well shot, sir! Serve her another!"
Rahl's round-shot from the larboard carronade had slammed into the sea so close-aboard the tartane that she reeled leeward, her masts shaking and her deck heeled almost a full forty-five degrees for a moment!
But she came back upright, slowed by the drag of the knockdown but sailing doggedly on. Not turning for the narrow, rocky channel!
"Right, she's for the beach on the headland!" Lewrie exulted as the island came abeam, and he could see the wrinkly cat's paws stirring the waters beyond it, a fluke spiraling off the headland. "The town, Mister Peel. Know it? Who holds it now?"
"Genoese troops, I think, sir. Don't think the Frogs have come over the heights this near Vado yet." Peel perked up. "Inland might be a different story, but…"
"Deck, there! Chase is tacking!"
"Damn him, damn him!" Lewrie groaned. Jester had to sail more than half a mile farther before she had enough clearance from the coast to come about! The tartane was just a little east of the tip of the headland, and could come back to nor'west by north and run in.
"Wind's backin', sir!" Spenser exclaimed, feeding spokes alee to keep Jester on the wind's edge, as he'd been ordered.
"He's tacked right into a shift!" Knolles screeched. "Headed, again, by God, sir!"
"Stand on, and ready the larboard battery," Lewrie ordered.
The tartane had run into an invisible wall, almost coming to a full stop as she met the wind change head-on, forced to bear away more and more westerly to find the proper angle, fall away at a huge angle even beyond that to get some speed up before she could come back to a beat. The wind was now out of the nor'west, and Jester could turn up nor'east to run in much closer to the headland and the beach. And the struggling tartane.
Chases were like that sometimes, Lewrie realized; plod astern of a ship for hours, never fetching her a yard closer, but all along, gaining slowly. And suddenly, one's ship seemed to leap forward, and there she was, close enough for point-blank broadsides, as if someone had conjured the Chase to reappear within spitting distance. Within the blink of an eye, there she was, not a quarter-mile off, just back to speed but set too far west of the now-visible beach to ground upon it, and forced to tack again to the nor'east, slowing her even more!
"They've a boat alongside, sir!" Knolles shouted as he lowered his glass. "Starboard side!"
"It's him!" Peel cried. "Looks like Choundas, at any rate."
Lewrie raised his own glass. Yes, so close now, he could fetch that ant-figure on her quarterdeck to almost fill the ocular, head-to-toe, he could recognize his foe of old, in the red breeches and waistcoat, the gold-laced blue coat and boat cloak of a French Navy officer!
"Mister Crewe, run out the larboard battery, and open fire!"
It was rushed, too rushed, with the range closing so quickly it made accurate aim impossible, going from a quarter-mile to two hundred yards in a trice. Round-shot went whizzing far overhead, splashed too far short, and too steep to ricochet. Only a few ball struck the tartane. And missing the rowboat completely! Men were tumbling down into it, Choundas among them, just as it was cast off to wallow astern, the tartane bumping and grinding alongside as it fell away, with no one at the helm. Falling down toward Jester, and just big enough to present a danger of collision! And mask her fire!
"Shift fire to the rowboat, Mister Crewe!" Lewrie howled, hot for murder. "Cony, hands forrud to fend that damn' thing off! Mister Spenser, your eye, sir, to match course with her. Where's Andrews?"
"Heah, sah," his cox'n answered, leaving his lee side carronade.
"Go below and fetch me my Ferguson rifle, the one with the screw breech," Lewrie snapped. "There's a shot pouch, cartouche box, and a powder flask stowed in my smaller sea chest in the bed space. Before that bastard rows out of range, hurry!"
Crewe got off another ragged broadside, rushed again, but a lot more accurate. Feathers of spray flayed the sea around the rowing boat, short, wide, a little over, so close-aboard they skipped once, caromed over the oarsmen to Second Graze near the headland's shoals. But nary a bit of harm could they do!
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