Home>>read Quarterdeck free online

Quarterdeck(85)

By:Julian Stockwin


Kydd stood his ground with folded arms. He knew he could probably make a good account of himself, but he would not be the first to make a move.

‘Spyin’ dog! Y’ knows what happens t’ spies?’

‘Are ye as chuckle-headed as y’ look? I’m no spy, skulkin’ around. I’ve got just as much right t’ take the air here as – as y’r Frenchy there.’

One of the bystanders came up. ‘He’s right, y’ knows. Both furriners, stands t’ reason y’ can’t pick one over the other.’

‘Hold y’ noise, Darby.’ Schroeder strode across. ‘You, sir!’ he called at Kydd, standing aggressively between him and the ship. ‘Will you account for your presence as an officer of a belligerent power at the lawful mooring-place of a ship of the opposing nation? Or shall it be spying?’

Kydd held his temper. ‘No.’

Schroeder started. ‘You’re saying—’

‘I said, “No”, which is to say I do not have t’ account to you or any man for what I’m about on m’ lawful business on a public highway.’

Schroeder’s jaw hardened, but Kydd looked past him to the privateer. Scores of men were pouring on to the wharf, scattering the onlookers.

Kydd waited. Surely they would not dare anything in broad daylight, before witnesses. But then they spread out in a line and moved towards him. Kydd tensed, the features of individual seamen resolving, alien chatter quietening to a purposeful advance.

Kydd stood firm. They came closer and stopped in front of him, undeniably seafarers, but with their sashes, floppy liberty caps and Mediterranean swarthiness, there was something distorted and menacing about them. They shuffled together to form a barrier, and when Kydd moved to go round it, they blocked his way again. Kydd spotted the figure on the foredeck and bellowed, ‘Let me pass, y’ villains!’ The officer shrugged and called out an unintelligible stream of French. It was stalemate: there was nothing for it but as dignified a retreat as possible.

Kydd stalked off, seething at being outwitted by the French. At the very least he had hoped to report back on the ship, her state for sea, guns, anything he could see. Now he would have to admit he hadn’t been able to get close.

He forced his mind to focus on the situation and by the time he’d reached the cross-street he had a plan: he would see the other side instead. That implied a boat; the tide was on the make, which would allow him to drift past and take his fill of the scene.

Kydd found the young lads playing in the same place and he called across to Peter, ‘A silver sixpence wi’ King George’s head on it should you tell me where I c’n hire a fishin’-boat.’

The dory was double-ended and handy. In borrowed oilskins, Kydd set the little boat drifting along, an unbaited line over the side.

The privateer, the Minotaure de Morlaix, was big. Work was going ahead on the mizzen, a new spar chocked up ready on the wharf, but there appeared to be no hurry. Kydd scanned the vessel: her clean lines meant speed but also implied limited sea-endurance, given the large crew.

His attention was caught by a peculiar break in the line of bulwarks with their small gunports. A whole section amidships had been lowered on hinges – inside Kydd glimpsed the astonishing sight of the black bulk of a long gun, mounted on some sort of pivot, another barely visible trained to the other side of the ship. But this was no ordinary gun: it was a twenty-four-pounder at least. The armament of a ship-of-the-line on a near frigate-sized vessel.

This must have been the origin of the sound of heavy guns that had mystified Tenacious at sea earlier, and although there appeared to be only one on each side, it would be enough to terrorise any victim and certainly give pause to a similar sized man-o’-war; a grave threat let loose on the trade routes of the continent. It was sheer chance that had placed the only other ship-of-the-line in North America across the Frenchman’s path.

After returning the boat and gear he walked back along the tree-lined road, deep in thought, but the only conclusion he could come to was the impossibility of his situation.

A man in an old-fashioned black tricorne hat stopped him. ‘Are you Lootenant Kydd?’

‘I am.’

‘I’m a constable o’ Exbury township,’ he said importantly, ‘an’ I’m instructed by the selectmen to advise ye that a warrant fer a town meetin’ has been issued concernin’ you.’

‘Ah – does that mean they wish me t’ attend?’

The constable looked aghast. ‘No, sir! Only citizens o’ this town c’n attend a town meeting. Mr Dwight jus’ wants ye to know that y’r matter is being looked into, is all.’