Ahead there were several days of slow sailing across the mouth of the great St Lawrence before they made the shallower waters of the Grand Banks, then the doubling of Cape Race for St John’s and landfall.
The Halifax-bound leaver division of the convoy had parted, and now the convoy was mainly smaller ships, bringing out supplies for the important cod fishery, with some larger vessels who would touch at St John’s before making south for the United States. Kydd knew them all by sight now, and it would be strange after a month and a half of ocean travelling when their familiar presence was no longer there.
With the wind dropping all the time, the seas lost their busy ruckling of the long, easy swell. There was hardly a gurgle or a splash from the ships’ languorous sliding through the grey water. Quite different from the fetid heat and glassy calms of the doldrums, this was simply the removal of energy from the sea’s motion.
A sudden cry came from the masthead lookout. ‘Saaail hoooo! Sail t’ the nor’ard, standin’ towards!’
A distinct stir of interest livened the decks. This was much too early for the sloops and gunboats of St John’s they were to meet, and a single sail would be bold to challenge a ship-of-the-line.
‘My duty to the captain, and I would be happy to see him on deck,’ the officer-of-the-watch, Adams, told his messenger, but it was not necessary. Houghton strode on to the quarterdeck, grim-faced.
‘You’d oblige me, Mr Kydd, should you go aloft and let me know what you see.’
Kydd accepted a telescope from Adams and swung up into the rigging, feeling every eye on him. His cocked hat fell to the deck as he went round the futtock shrouds – he would remember to go without it next time – and to the main topmast top, joining the lookout who politely made room for him.
‘Where away?’ Kydd asked, controlling his panting. Breaking the even line of the horizon was a tiny smudge of paleness against the grey – right in their path. He brought up the telescope. It was difficult to control: even in the calm sea the slow roll at this height was sufficient to throw off the sighting. He wedged himself against the topgallant mast, feet braced against the cross-trees, then got his first good look at the pale pyramid of sail head on. His heart jumped. The glass wandered and the small image blurred across.
‘What do you see?’ Houghton bellowed from below.
Kydd swept the telescope to each side of the pyramid. Nothing. Tantalisingly he caught brief glimpses of it, now getting sharper and larger, but there was never enough time to fix on it. He prepared to lean over to hail the deck, then noticed wan sunlight shafting down close to it. He would give it one last try.
A glitter of light moved across the sea towards it. He raised his telescope – and saw it transformed. ‘Deck hooo! An ice island!’
The whole incident had gone unnoticed by the convoy, for the height-of-eye of Tenacious’s lofty masts ensured she saw it well before any other, but all were able to take their fill of the majestic sight as they passed hours later. Up close, it was not all pure white: there were startling pale blues, greens and dirty blotches – and such a size! There was an awed silence along the decks as men came up to stare at the silent monster from the frozen north.
The wind died, leaving a lethargic swell and the ship creaking and groaning under a dull, pearly sky. While Houghton paced up and down in frustration, Kydd noticed one of the larger vessels of the convoy far to the leeward edge. As with all ships, her sails hung lifeless from her yards but for some reason she had none on her foremast, not even headsails. ‘Odd,’ he mused to the master. Then a signal jerked hastily aloft from her mizzen peak halliards. Without wind to spread the flags it was impossible to make out the message, but there was clearly activity on deck.
‘Damn the fellow!’ Houghton snapped. Virtually dead in the water, there was little Tenacious could do to investigate further.
‘I thought so,’ the master said, seeing the dead white of a fog-bank advancing stealthily in eddying wreaths that hugged the sea surface and eventually engulfed the ship in a blank whiteness. The muffled crump of two guns sounded from somewhere within the white barrier; in conjunction with the flags this was the agreed signal for distress.
Houghton stopped. All eyes turned towards him. They could not lie idle if there were souls in need of them.
‘Away launch, if you please, Mr Pearce.’ He paused to consider. ‘A bo’sun’s mate and ten men, and we’ll have two carpenter’s mates in with ’em – and pass the word for the surgeon.’
He looked about the deck and caught Kydd’s eye. ‘See what all the fuss is about, Mr Kydd. If the ship is at hazard of foundering and our men can save her, do so. Otherwise advise her master in the strongest terms that a King’s ship is not to be troubled in this way.’ Kydd knew perfectly well why he had been selected for this duty – as the most junior officer, he would be the least missed if he were lost in the fog.