toe the line properly, if you please.” The rows shuffl ed into line, to Kydd’s eyes their alert and loose-limbed bearing infi nitely preferable to the perfect rigidity of a line of soldiers.
He saw the captain approach, accompanied by the fi rst lieutenant, looking under pressure, with the captain’s clerk and Pringle.
Kydd whipped off his hat and prepared for inspection, but the captain managed only a rapid glance, a nod at Kydd and a few words with Lawes before he passed to the gun-deck below.
The offi cers assembled for sail drill had no indication of the captain’s mind when he appeared from his cabin. His fi xed expression could mean disappointment at the quality of the men he had seen earlier or satisfaction with the relative ease with which Tenacious had been manned.
In any event, now would be the time that reputations were won or lost, weakness and strengths revealed, not least of which would be that of the captain himself, as he reacted to the success or otherwise of the morning’s evolutions.
Kydd felt the tension. His eyes met Renzi’s and provoked a slow half-smile as both turned to face their captain.
“Loose and furl by mast and watch. I shall not want to exercise further today—but if we are not striking topmasts within the space of three days . . .”
Already at his station on the quarterdeck, Kydd watched the other offi cers move to the fo’c’sle, main deck and forward of the mainmast.
“Larb’d watch o’ the hands— haaaands to stations for making sail!”
Two hundred seamen raced to their stations, the fore, main and mizzen shrouds black with men heading for the tops; others
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61
ran to the pin rails at the ship’s side and the massive square bitts at the base of each mast, around which hung a complex maze of ropes.
Along the deck men hurried to the belaying points for important lines running aloft, braces, halliards, sheets. Petty offi cers pushed and bullied the hapless landmen into their places, showing no mercy to the slow-witted. It all seemed so straightforward now, but Kydd recalled his fi rst daunting experiences at tailing on to a rope, in the old 98-gun Duke William in these very waters.
When the muttering, cursing and murmuring had settled, the captain lifted his speaking trumpet. “Foremast, loose all sail to a bowline.”
Adams, clearly tense and waiting for the start, instantly lifted his head and blared up, “Lay aloft, royal yardmen! Lay aloft . . .”
“Belay that!” Houghton’s face was red with anger, and the hard edge in his voice carried forward. “Brace around, damn it, lay the yard fi rst, you fool!”
Adams’s command had been a mistake. Firmly anchored, and with but one mast with sail abroad, there was no opportunity to use another mast, with sails backing, to balance the forces.
His order would have seen the ship move ahead and strain at her moorings.
Crimson-faced, Adams stood down his men at the halliards, shifting them to the forebraces, and brought the yards round, as he should have done before sending the men aloft to set the sail.
Kydd knew his turn would come.
The exercise went on. At the foremast, sail cascaded down at the volley of commands, to hang limply forward. Minutes later, men returned to the yards, this time to furl the sail to a seamanlike stow. Houghton said nothing, his furrowed brow evidence of the direction of his thoughts.
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Julian Stockwin
“Mainmast, loose all sail to a bowline,” Houghton ordered.
He was staying with the larboard watch and moving along the masts: Kydd, at the mizzen, would be facing his test so much the earlier. Would his petty offi cers be reliable enough on the job, up there on the mizzen top? There was no chance that he himself would ever again be up there with them, to see their work, intervene if needed, chase down laggards . . . It took an effort of will to remain aloof and outside the real action, merely to direct in general—but at the same time the responsibility was
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