Read The Continental Risque Online
Authors: James Nelson
Rumstick could still make out the ship, but just barely, for she was running away to the southward. To his surprise the schooner was not running north but rather east, straight at them, close-hauled, the bone in her teeth reflecting the moonlight as it boiled around her cutwater. He hopped back to the deck and hurried aft.
âTottenhill, that schooner's making right for us. I think she's a man-of-war, must be an escort to the merchantman.'
âVery good. And watch your mouth, I won't tolerate your disrespect any longer.'
Disrespect? You ain't seen disrespect, Rumstick thought. He turned toward the waist. âHurry it up, hurry it up! Load and run out!' Only half of the guns had drawn their shot, and not one of them was yet reloaded with chain.
And then the schooner was on top of them. They could see the big gaff-headed sail looming over the bow as she charged along, close-hauled, flinging herself at a more powerful enemy.
âHands to braces!' Rumstick shouted.
âBelay that, God damn it!' Tottenhill fairly screamed, âRumstick, you keep your damned mouth shut!'
âAre you going to let him rake us? Aren't you at least going to show him a broadside, even if we got nothing loaded?'
Whatever Tottenhill had to say to that was lost in the gunfire. Nor would it have mattered, for the schooner had tacked across the
Charlemagne
's bows and was crossing starboard to larboard, firing as she went, her four-pounder balls tearing the length of the brig's deck.
The captain of number two gun spun around as if he were dancing and fell, dead before he hit the deck. A ball plowed into the foremast fife rail, smashing it to pieces, tearing up the running rigging made fast there. The jib and the fore staysail collapsed, their halyards parted by the round shot, and fell into the water, dragging under the bow.
âDamn it, damn it, damn it!' Rumstick shouted as he leapt up on the heel of the bowsprit, grabbed on to the headsail sheets, and pulled. âOn deck there,' he shouted at the nearest gun crew, âgive me a hand here, haul these motherless things back aboard!'
The schooner had passed them by, and now it looked as if she was tacking around to deliver another raking broadside. And with the sails dragging in the water and the way nearly off of her, there was nothing that the
Charlemagne
could do about it.
Rumstick let out a bellow, a roar of anger and frustration as he hauled the wet canvas aboard.
Lieutenant Rumstick could just make out the schooner, half a cable away, but his vision had been hurt by the flash of her guns at close range. The last of the headsails were pulled aboard and the gun crew returned to their duty. Rumstick dragged the dead gunner clear of the path of his gun's recoil.
The first broadside from the enemy did an extraordinary amount of damage, quite out of proportion to the pathetic weight of iron she threw. That was the price the Charlemagnes had paid for Tottenhill's refusal to fall off, thus allowing the schooner to fire her round shot down the entire length of the brig's deck.
But now the guns were reloaded with chain and running out. âSail trimmers!' Tottenhill called out. âLarboard tack!' To the helmsmen he called, âStarboard your helm!'
The
Charlemagne
turned to larboard, presenting her starboard broadside to the defiant little enemy. The two vessels were broadside to broadside, sailing parallel to one another, no more than fifty feet apart. This was where the
Charlemagne
could use her superior firepower to good effect.
âFire when you bear!' Tottenhill shouted, and at that three of the brig's guns went off, blasting their loads of chain shot at the schooner's rig, hoping to render the sails unmanageable while leaving the hull intact.
Rumstick peered through the night, but he could make out only a vague outline of the schooner. Another of the
Charlemagne
's guns blasted away, then another, lighting the enemy up in the flash. He could see no damage done to the other vessel, and he wondered if any of the shots had told.
Then the schooner's shape seemed to change, seemed to contract, and for a wonderful moment Rumstick thought that they had brought her mast down. And then he realized that they had not. She was just tacking, turning up into the wind, presenting her bow to the
Charlemagne
once the Americans had discharged their broadside.
âShe's tacking!' Rumstick shouted aft.
Tottenhill was watching the schooner as well. âStand by for stays!' he shouted. âStart coming up,' he said to the helmsmen. He was going to tack the
Charlemagne
, keep the two ships side by side, but that was the wrong thing to do, and with the headsails gone it was unlikely that they would make it around.
âTottenhill, listen,' Rumstick called, running aft, ready to give advice that he knew was not wanted and would not be well received. âThey'llâ'
He got no further than that. The schooner was across their stern now and began pouring round shot into the
Charlemagne
's transom. A ball blasted through the taffrail, spraying the quarterdeck with splinters and felling one of the helmsmen with a chunk of caprail to the head.
âGod damn it!' Tottenhill shouted in frustration. The
Charlemagne
was coming up into the wind, ready to tack, while the nimble schooner was already falling off, out of range of their guns. In Rumstick's experience the brig had always been the quick and handy vessel, antagonizing their enemies, sailing rings around them. Now they were the bull, tethered and baited about by a quick and vicious dog.
âListen, Tottenhill, sod the schooner, never mind them,' Rumstick shouted. âIt's the ship that has the stores and they're running away from us! Go after the ship!'
âDon't you address me in that fashion, God damn your eyes!' Tottenhill shouted. âLet fly the headsails! Helm's alee!'
The remaining helmsman put the helm over and the
Charlemagne
turned up into the wind.
âLet fly the headsails!' Tottenhill called again, aware, as was Rumstick, of the conspicuous absence of flogging canvas.
âThere ain't any headsails, the schooner shot the halyards away,' Rumstick said in a caustic tone.
Overhead the leeches of the square sails began to flog. âMainsail, haul!' Tottenhill shouted, and the mainyard swung around as all of the square sails came aback. The
Charlemagne
turned up into the wind, farther and farther, until the breeze was blowing right down her centerline, and then she stopped.
There was an odd calm, an unnatural sort of quiet, as every man aboard stood waiting for the brig to complete her tack. The schooner was now all but lost from sight, running away to the northwest, and the ship had not been seen for the past ten minutes or more.
âYou're in irons,' Rumstick said quietly, as if anyone aboard the brig, particularly Tottenhill, did not know that. They had turned straight into the wind and turned no farther, and now the
Charlemagne
sat there, motionless, while all of the military supplies of New Providence disappeared in the night.
âMr Sprout,' Rumstick shouted, âbend the gantline to the fore topmast staysail and set it that way! On the main braces, brace up sharp starboard tack! Let go and haul!'
âRumstick, I shall not tell you again, you stupid ox,' Tottenhill shouted in a voice that could be heard clear to the jibboom end, âyou do not give an order aboard this vessel, damn it!'
âWell, I reckon somebody better start giving orders, giving orders that make some sense! You already lost the ship and the stores, I reckon, the whole goddamned reason we come here, you stupid bastard!'
Tottenhill glared at him. The mainsails remained aback and the headsails remained in a heap on deck, and all of the Charlemagnes stood watching the confrontation. Rumstick was aware of a shuffling, a low murmur from the men like water lapping along a hull.
âThat is it, sir, that is it! You shall consider yourself under arrest! You do not speak to me like that!' Tottenhill shouted back, but Rumstick did not hear. The bulkhead had now burst under the great pressure of his anger, anger that had been building since he had lost his position as first officer, and now it flowed in a great violent wave that would not be stopped.
âUnder arrest? You're a joke, sir, you little blockhead of a weasel! You calf! Get out of my way, little man!' Rumstick pushed him aside and, shouting forward, yelled, âI said brace them mainsails around, you whore's sons!' but the men in the waist stood sullenly glaring at one another or staring blankly aft.
âMr Rumstick is under arrest!' Tottenhill shouted. âNo one shall obey his orders. Hackett, Allen, Gray, escort Rumstick below.'
In a flash the three men were up on the quarterdeck, led by a grinning Hackett, who had gravitated aft at the first sign of confrontation. Behind them came three more, like jackals to a kill.
âYou'll have to come with us, Mr Rumstick,' Hackett said, still grinning. He took a step toward Rumstick, who stood passively watching, his arms hanging loose at his sides. Hackett took another step and paused, sensing the danger. âHere, Allen, Gray, take a hold of the lieutenant.'
Allen and Gray, less insightful than their leader, continued to advance on Rumstick. âCome along, sir,' said Gray, reaching for Rumstick's left arm.
Like a snake Rumstick's right arm struck out, his heavy fist smashing flat into Gray's face. Blood sprayed from the man's shattered nose as the force of the blow lifted him from the deck and tossed him back against the binnacle box.
Allen was actually backing away when Rumstick's foot caught him in the groin and doubled him over, then the foot came up again directly in his face and he joined Gray on the deck.
âArrest me, you sons of whores?' Rumstick roared. âCome on then, let's have at it!' He took a step back against the bulwark and his hand fell on the empty belaying pin he knew was there. There was shouting in the waist, the sounds of a tumult, but he could not take his eyes off the men he faced. He jerked the pin from the rail, a foot and a half of solid oak, turned and oiled, just as Hackett and the other three prepared to rush him.
âStop this! Stop this right now!' Tottenhill screamed. âRumstick, you will obey my authority!' But Rumstick was not listening anymore. He was well beyond listening.
Nor were his attackers prepared to back off, intent as they were on revenge for some perceived offense â Rumstick could not imagine what, nor, at that moment, did it matter â he had done them.
A sheath knife flashed out, and then another. Rumstick stepped forward, grabbing out with his left hand, diverting attention, and in a great sweeping arc he brought the belaying pin around and dropped one assailant to the deck like a sack of biscuits.
The shouting from the waist grew more frantic, some tumult on the edge of his vision. He had the impression that a great brawl had broken out among the men. But he had no time to look, or even think of what might be happening. Hackett was shouting for more help as the two remaining men came at Rumstick.
Then Weatherspoon was at his side, his dirk, not much longer than the sheath knives he faced, held in his steady hand. âPut those knives away, you stupid bastards,' the midshipman commanded with a surprising authority.
âMr Rumstick's under arrest! He's to come with us!' Hackett shouted, but he sounded less sure of himself now. He glanced around for Tottenhill, as did Rumstick, but the first officer had abandoned the fight aft and was standing at the break of the quarterdeck, apparently trying, through the force of his authority, to stop the riot that had erupted in the waist.
Rumstick had only a fleeting impression of what was happening, glances stolen while he concentrated on the standoff before him. He saw in the dull moonlight men rushing fore and aft, fists and belaying pins and handspikes rising and falling. Not a thought was left for the enemy ships making their easy escape. The
Charlemagne
was swept up in an internecine battle, a wild brawl in which every man aboard was engaged.
âPut down those knives!' Weatherspoon shouted again, and as if startled from their uncertainty, the two men advanced again, with Hackett standing behind them.
âSon of a bitch!' Rumstick roared, his voice like a cannon blast. The men hesitated, stopped, and then with a sweep of his hand Rumstick brushed aside the knife to his left and swung with the pin. He felt the rip and burn of the other knife plunging into his side. He checked his swing, catching the first assailant on the jaw and spinning him half around.
He turned toward the man who had stabbed him, the knife pulling from his flesh as he did. He was aware of the agony, the burning and the hurt, but he was far too angry to worry about it, or for the wound to slow him down. He wound up with the pin but the man was bent over double, Weatherspoon's dirk thrust deep in his belly, blood running down his slop trousers and onto the deck.
Weatherspoon pulled the dirk from the man's stomach, and with a gasp he collapsed to the deck. Then the midshipman was gone, running and leaping forward, to where, Rumstick could not imagine.
Tottenhill was standing over him now, having abandoned his attempt to stop the riot, shouting, âWhat in hell have you done?'
âWhat in hell have
you
done, you idiot!' Rumstick shouted at the first officer. He pointed toward the waist where men struggled as if fighting off a boarding enemy. âLook what your damned coddling has got us!'
âCoddling? Why you arrogant Yankee bastard! I have had no help from you, and no help from Biddlecomb, you have treated me like a leper since first I came aboard! I ⦠No!'
Tottenhill yelled.
Rumstick frowned, confused by that last shouted word, then felt a great blow to the back of his head, a staggering shock that pitched him forward over the bleeding form of his attacker and down to the deck at Tottenhill's feet. He rolled over, clutching his head, images swimming in his blurred vision. Hackett was there, grinning, a belaying pin in his hand.