Authors: Ted Bell
“He ended the war with twenty-three victories, sir, awarded both the Distinguished Flying Cross and Distinguished Service Cross, with bar. He'd have had even more had he not been badly wounded.”
Hawke looked down at his young friend. The boy's eyes shone with pride for his great hero.
They both turned to watch as the Camel roared to the end of the airstrip and went into a severely steep climb, banked
hard right, and raced over the treetops back toward Hawke Castle and the blue waves of the channel. Nick's heart was in his throat, thinking of all the years it had been since his father had done these aerial stunts. Was he pushing himself too far? So full of joy, that he was oblivious to danger? He suddenly wanted his dad back safely on the ground.
But the acrobatics weren't over. The Camel raced south toward the tower, did another perfect loop around it, and then came speeding toward them once more, only a hundred feet in the air.
“Is he going to land?” Nick asked.
“I don't think so,” Hawke said. “He's not slowing.”
“But whatâ”
When the Sopwith was less than a few hundred yards from the group watching from the ground, Angus McIver suddenly inverted the plane.
He was flying completely upside down now, and yet he roared just over their heads as if it were the most natural thing in the world. A few hundred yards later, he inverted again, now right side up, did a sweeping left-hand turn over the forest, and lined up for his final approach to the airstrip.
“He's bloody amazing, that's what he is!” Gunner cried, squeezing Nick's shoulder. “Fifteen years in the Royal Navy, and I never saw the like of that kind of flying, I will tell you right now.”
“Good thing you remembered that length of hemp to tie him in,” Nick said, struggling to deal with the mixture of emotions fighting for space inside his mind. Fear, pride, and joy, all jumbled up.
Moments later, the Camel touched down in a bumpy landing and rolled to a stop just in front of the barn. A moment later, the sputtering big Bentley was silenced.
Nick rolled the steps over to the cockpit as his father hoisted himself up and out of the aircraft and carefully made his way down the steps to the ground, where Gunner handed him his cane.
Everyone raced toward him, cheering and applauding: first his wife, Emily, embracing him with tears running down her cheeks, then little Katie, then each and every one hugging him in turn.
Nick was the last to approach him. “Dad, I was so afraid that maybe you'dâ”
“What, son?”
“Iâit's been so longâI didn't think you'd remember everything andâ”
His father bent over until he was eye to eye with his young son. “Nicky, ever since that day I went down in the Ardennes forest, I've been dreaming of this very moment. In my dreams, almost every night, I was doing the things I just did. I remembered everything precisely, you see, how she felt before a stall, how much rudder to apply, how she tends to climb in a right-hand turn, or dive in a left turn because of all that engine torque. I haven't forgotten a thing because I've dreamed every moment of this day every night for over twenty years.”
Nick reached up and clasped his hands around his father's neck, pulling him closer so that he could whisper into his ear. “Teach
me
, Dad. Teach me how to do all those things. Teach me how to fly the Camel. Fly her just like you did. Loops, barrel rolls, all of it!”
“Well,” his father said, his eyes alight, “I don't know about that. How old are you now?”
“I'm twelve, Dad. You know that.”
“Twelve, is it? Well, as luck would have it, I'd just turned
twelve when my father taught me to fly in a Sopwith Cub. So I can hardly refuse, can I?”
Nick hugged his father as hard as he could and said, “I love you, Dad. When do we start?”
“First thing in the morning sound good?”
“Oh, yes, it certainly does. Yes, it sounds absolutely wonderful!”
And so it was that Angus McIver taught his son Nicholas how to fly an aeroplane. Feet, balletlike on the rudder pedals. A feather touch on the ailerons and elevators. The first months, Nick sat in his father's lap, both their hands wrapped around the joystick. It was terribly crowded, since the cockpit was meant for a single pilot, but they made it work.
In those first weeks, though he'd never admit it, Nick had been frightened out of his wits more than once. The Camel had a mind of its own, and if you weren't extremely careful, you'd find yourself diving out of control in the blink of an eye. Luckily, his father's hands and feet were never far from the controls, and, in an instant, he'd regain control. There were hard lessons well learned, Nick knew, because some day his father would not be there to save his life.
A few months later Nick finally heard his father say the words he'd been both dreading and longing to hear. “Well, Nicholas, I think you're ready to solo.”
And solo he did, his heart in his throat, hands trembling, scarcely able to believe that anyone trusted him enough to go up all by himself. What if he forgot something? Let his mind wander even for a split second? What ifâno. Such thinking was dangerous in itself. He'd been taught to fly by the best. And he would never, ever let his father down.
Everyone gathered outside the barn and watched the twelve-year-old boy roar down the runway in the twenty-five-year-old aeroplane. His mother held her breath, his father beamed with pride, and his sister jumped for joy when he lifted off the ground.
Although his father had taught him many aerobatic tricks, he thought it best, given the fact that his mother was in the audience, to simply fly straight and level toward Hawke Castle, do a simple banked turn around the tower, and then execute his best landing ever, pulling to a stop just in front of the cheering crowd.
He'd done it! He'd flown an aeroplane by himself! When no one was looking, he pinched himself just to make absolutely sure this wasn't just another dream.
Later, when he and Gunner were alone in the barn, refueling and going over every inch of the Sopwith, he turned to his friend with a question. “Gunner,” he said, thoughtfully, “do you think it would be possible for you to make me some bombs?”
“Bombs, is it? What kind of bombs?”
“Small ones, I should think. About the size of a large apple, perhaps. So I could hold one easily in my hand.”
“And what, exactly, do you intend to do with these bombs, lad?”
“I intend to make life miserable for those bloody German invaders, that's what I intend!”
Gunner had never seen the boy so fiercely determined in all his days. It was the kind of look he'd seen in men's eyes in wartime before. The kind of look that got brave men killed.
And it very nearly worked out just that way.
· Port Royal, Jamaica, July 14, 1781 ·
B
illy Blood's lips were moving. But his long-time companion, Snake Eye, now rowing his captain ashore in the captain's jig, couldn't hear a blasted word the old terror was saying. Crews aboard almost every ship at anchor were firing their flintlock pistols and blunderbusses into the air in a night of drunken revelry.
His royal highness, Captain William Blood by name, sitting atop his throne at the stern of the dinghy, was counting the number of pirate vessels lying at anchor here at Port Royal Harbor, most likely, whispering numbers to himself as he ticked 'em off, sloops, frigates, brigs, and barkentines. And every one of them full of rum-soaked crews and flying one of the many versions of the skull and crossbones.
There were plenty of ships lying at anchor to be counted, Snake Eye saw, but not nearly half so many as he knew Old Bill had been hoping for. Why, he'd told Snake Eye that very morning he was counting on a harbor full of fighting ships laying to at Port Royal when they arrived at Jamaica. The harbor was maybe a third full, at best.
“
Combien de bateaux?
“ the Frenchman Snake Eye hissed. “How many?”
“By my bloody count, only seventeen,” Blood muttered, clearly displeased.
“
C'est insuffisant, mon capitaine
. Not enough. We'll need ten times that number afore we're done.”
“Aye. Maybe ten times that. And more.”
Snake Eye, a fearsome seven-foot-tall Algerian-French sea warrior, known far and wide for his cruelty, ferocity, and the tattooed serpents enwreathing his face and the entirety of his bald head, had hoped to see the harbor full. He'd hoped to see outlaw barkys, frigates, and brigantines, lying hull to hull. Blood had invited every living outlaw and pirate in the Caribbean to this big parley at Port Royal. But it looked like precious few had accepted his invitation.
The captain hadn't confided his plans to Snake Eye. No one aboard the
Revenge
had been told the reason for the parley. Blood kept such things to himself. But the Frenchman was content. He'd know soon enough. Old Bill was up to something. And that usually meant lead would fill the air and gold the ship's coffers.
Snake Eye happily dug his oars into the water and pulled mightily. There was a full moon tonight, and the lights along Port Royal's waterfront dives, brothels, and rum dens were all ablaze. This, after all, was the home port of the Brethren of the Coast, as all the pirate captains liked to style themselves. It was the pirates' private enclave, and a stranger entered at his peril.
Snake Eye, after a month at sea, was eager to be ashore, with a belly full of strong Jamaican rum and back in the arms of a plump wench from Cap-Haitien, a beautiful octaroon
whom he'd taken a fancy to. Woman called herself Sucre, and sweet as sugar she was, too.
Perhaps by morning, Snake Eye guessed, the harbor would boast a few late arrivals. But there was a great war raging between the English and their rebellious colonists, the Americans. And Snake Eye knew many pirate captains had gone to the aid of either side in hopes of reaping great rewards.
Most had sided with the limeys, of course, believing rightly that the puny American forces under General Washington didn't stand a chance against the Royal Navy, the mightiest fleet on earth, and the deadly wrath of the well-trained British Army.
A full harbor by morning would make old Bill Blood felicitous and that in turn would have a most happy effect on his motley crew. They were a sorry lot, for the most part, half of them escaped prisoners from Bill's daring raid on the hellish penal colony at Hell's Island, and the other half thieving murderers who'd somehow evaded the law and were on the run. It was a far cry from the crew of Blood's last command, a ship's company of highly trained French officers and men who were
la crème
of Napoleon's Imperial French Navy.
Blood, who had already betrayed his native England for Napoleon's French gold, had subsequently lost command of his French frigate, the 78-gun
Mystère,
in a bizarre engagement with a much smaller warship, an English barkentine called
Merlin.
His mutinous French crew had betrayed him in the midst of battle; and a bloody English captain named McIver had taken
Mystère
as a prize off Greybeard Island in the Channel Islands.