The sharp "clunk" slowed to a rhythmic "kerlunk" but the men at the capstan pushed with a wilclass="underline" this was nothing compared with weighing anchor in a high wind and nasty sea.
Ramage walked to the ship's side and sighted along the barrel of one of the carronades. He could not see the French frigate because she was still hidden by the side of the port, showing that the ship had not yet been trained round enough. Sir Henry joined him.
"I say, Ramage, I must admit I'm enjoying all this. Must be twenty-five years (think of it, a quarter of a century) since I trod the decks of a frigate. You lose a lot with promotion, you know. Manoeuvring a fleet isn't half the fun of handling a single frigate!"
"Then I'll stay in the lower half of the Post List, sir," Ramage said with a grin. "I'm more interested in handling a ship than a fleet!"
"What commands have you had up to now?"
"The Kathleen cutter was my first, sir. I lost -"
"Yes, I remember, you deliberately got yourself run down by that Spaniard, the San Nicolas, to help Commodore Nelson, as he then was."
"Yes, sir. After St Vincent Their Lordships gave me the Triton brig. I ran her on a reef in the West Indies ..."
Sir Henry thought a moment. "Wasn't that after you lost your masts in a hurricane? You drifted up on a Spanish island - yes, Culebra, wasn't it? And found some treasure?"
"We were lucky," Ramage said. "Then another ship, and I was lucky enough to capture this frigate, which I was allowed to keep."
Ramage knelt and sighted along the carronade barrel again. He could just see the French frigate now, and the slow "kerlunk" of the pawls and Aitken's occasional shout showed that the Calypso was being hauled round only a degree at a time, to bring the guns to bear.
He stood up and saw that the hawser now running from the stern made a large angle with the anchor cable, which vanished away to larboard. He heard a hail from Jackson, followed by a shout from Aitken, and the capstan gave a single "kerlunk", followed by a relieved sigh from the men at the bars.
Kneeling once again, Ramage sighted along the carronade barrel and found himself looking directly at the French frigate's deck.
Aitken came up. "Jackson's ready to open fire, sir."
There was something about the first lieutenant's hesitation that made Ramage raise a questioning eyebrow. "Er," Aitken said, glancing at Sir Henry, "the gentlemen are down there among the guns, sir, and . . ."
"They can watch from the fo'c'sle," Ramage said. "Tell Jackson to begin firing as soon as the deck's clear."
He and Sir Henry waited three or four minutes, then Ramage excused himself and hurried to the quarterdeck rail, where Aitken was looking down at the maindeck. Hill was talking to General Cargill by Jackson's gun while the rest of the hostages were standing up on the fo'c'sle.
"It's that damned general, sir," Aitken muttered. "The rest went forward without any fuss."
Ramage, after looking down directly below the quarterdeck rail and making sure that Rennick and his Marines were drawn up, said to Aitken: "I'll deal with this."
He clattered down the ladder, deliberately making noise; walking past the mainmast, he saw that all the guns' crews on the larboard side were deliberately facing outboard to avoid looking at Hill and the general, who were standing just inboard of number four gun.
"Good morning, general," Ramage said politely. "We shall be opening fire as soon as our guests are on the fo'c'sle."
"Guests!" Cargill exploded. "Damnation, man, I am a general in the King's service, and I want to watch these men. I want to make a report to the Board of Ordnance about their ability. Not often the Board get a report from an unbiased witness."
"How right you are, sir," Ramage agreed coolly, "but you'll see better from the fo'c'sle: no bulwarks and hammock nettings to force you to peer through a gunport."
"I'm staying here," Cargill said stubbornly.
"All guests - by that I mean everyone not forming part of the Calypso's ship's company - have been requested to go to the fo'c'sle if they wish to watch the shooting."
"I'm staying here."
"General, you have the choice: the fo'c'sle or your cabin."
"What the devil do you mean by that?"
"The captain of this ship has given the guests the choice. He has given an order," Ramage said, speaking slowly and clearly. "The choice is contained in an order - that the guests will go either to the fo'c'sle or their cabins."
"And if I choose to ignore the order of some whippersnapper and stay here?"
Ramage turned and waved to Rennick, who promptly began marching forward, followed by Sergeant Ferris at the head of a party of three men.
As soon as Rennick stamped to attention in front of Ramage with a questioning "Sah?", Ramage turned to Cargill.
"General, I repeat; you go to the fo'c'sle or your cabin."
By now Ramage could sense the tension throughout the ship. From the fo'c'sle the rest of the former hostages watched, looking down and able to hear every word spoken since Ramageand Cargill were standing only a few feet from them. The seamen forming the guns' crews were now standing with resentment showing in their stance.
"You be damned, Ramage," Cargill sneered.
As Ramage turned towards Rennick, he saw Sir Henry watching from the quarterdeck. Rennick had a confident look on his face and Ramage had the impression that Sergeant Ferris would quite happily toss Cargill over the side.
"Lieutenant," Ramage said formally to Rennick, "escort the general down to his cabin."
Cargill had gone white. Did he realize he had gone too far? Had he realized that neither Sir Henry on the quarterdeck nor the other two admirals on the fo'c'sle had interfered on his behalf?
"Oh, very well," he said ungraciously, "I'll go to the fo'c'sle."
Ramage knew that now was the time to establish who commanded the ship: Gibraltar was many hundreds of miles and many lives away. "No," he said, "you'll go to your cabin." He nodded to Rennick, who said to Cargilclass="underline" "If you'll come this way . . ."
"Ramage!" Cargill exclaimed, "you don't dare put me under an arrest! I've warned you, I am a general in the King's service."
"You have disobeyed the lawful command of the captain," Rennick said quietly, "with the third lieutenant and the lieutenant of Marines of this ship, and three admirals, one general, a marquis, two earls and a viscount as witnesses . . . sir," Rennick added as an afterthought.
Cargill looked round like a trapped animal and then walked to the ladder leading down to the gunroom.
As soon as the Marines had clumped away, Ramage walked the few paces to the breech of Jackson's gun. He looked at the frigate and then, after telling Jackson to carry on, went to the next gunport.
Jackson, with the long lanyard in his hand, stood behind the gun, far enough back to be out of reach of the recoil, and peered along the sight. Stafford stood close to the flintlock and Rossi and Gilbert were beside the breech, ready with handspikes.
Jackson gestured with his left hand. Both seamen slid the metal tips of their handspikes under the breech end of the carriage and levered it over a few inches. Jackson held his hand up, and they stood back. So much for traverse, Ramage thought to himself: always train "left" or "right" in gunnery orders. Now for elevation. Jackson signalled again, and the two men put their handspikes under the breech and raised it slightly as Stafford pushed in the wooden wedge, better known as the coin, which governed how high or low the breech was raised from the carriage, and thus controlled the range by the angle of the barrel.