The spanker was brailed up again as Virago's stern passed through the wind. Drinkwater tried to conceal the trembling of his hand, which was as much due to his fever as his apprehension, while he tried to hold the images of the approaching luggers in the circle of the glass. Thanks to the twilight they had been close enough when first spotted. They were scarcely a mile distant as Rogers shrieked at topmen too tardily loosing the topgallants for his liking.
'Look lively you damned scabs, you've a French hulk awaiting you if you don't stop frigging about…'
'Beg pardon, sir.'
Drinkwater bumped into a crouching seaman scattering sand on the deck. He abandoned a further study of the enemy and looked to the trim of the sails. Easton was at the con now, still rubbing the sleep out of his eyes.
'We'll make up for Harwich as soon as we're clear of the Shipwash Sand, Mr Easton. Do you attend to the bearing of the alarm vessel.'
'Aye, aye, sir.'
Daylight was increasing by the minute and Drinkwater looked astern again. He could see the long, low hulls, the oddly raked masts and the huge spread of canvas set by the luggers. He was by no means confident of the outcome, and both of the pursuing sea-wolves were coming up fast.
Drinkwater walked forward again. Rogers reported the ship cleared for action.
'Very well. Mr Rogers, you are to command the two chasers in the cabin. We will do what damage we can before they close on us. They will likely take a quarter each and try to board.' Rogers and Easton nodded.
'Mr Easton, you have the con. From time to time I may desire you to ease away a little or to luff half a point to enable Mr Rogers to point better.'
'Aye, sir, I understand.'
'Mr Mason the larboard battery, Mr Q the starboard. Rapid fire as soon as you've loosed your first broadside. For that await the command. Mr Rogers you may fire at will.'
'And the sooner the better.'
Drinkwater ignored Rogers's interruption. 'Is that clear gentlemen?'
There was a succession of 'ayes' and nods and nervous grins.
Drinkwater stood at the break of the low poop. The waisters were grouped amidships, the gun crews kneeling at their carronades. They all looked expectantly aft. They had had little practice at gunnery since leaving Chatham and Drinkwater was acutely conscious of their unpreparedness. He looked now at the experienced men to do their best.
'My lads, there are two French privateers coming up astern hand over fist. They've the heels of us. Give 'em as much iron as they can stomach before they close us. A Frog with a bellyful of iron can't jump a ditch…' He paused and was gratified by a dutiful ripple of nervous laughter at the poor jest. 'But if they do board I want to see you busy with those pikes and cutlasses…' He broke off and gave them what he thought was a confident, bloodthirsty grin. He was again relieved to see a few leers and hear the beginnings of a feeble cheer.
He nodded. 'Do your duty, lads.' He turned to the officers, 'Take post gentlemen.'
It suddenly occurred to him that he was unarmed. 'Tregembo, my sword and pistols from the cabin if you please.'
He looked aft and with a sudden shock saw the two luggers were very much closer. The nearer was making for Virago's lee quarter, the larboard.
'God's bones,' muttered Drinkwater to himself, trying to fend off a violent spasm of shivering that he did not want to be taken for fear.
'Here zur,' Tregembo held out the battered French hanger and Drinkwater unhooked the boat cloak from his throat and draped it over Tregembo's outstretched arm. He buckled on the sword then took the pistols.
'I've looked to the priming, zur, and put a new flint in that 'un, zur.'
'Thank you, Tregembo. And good luck.'
'Aye, zur.' The man hurried away with the cloak and reappeared on deck at the tiller almost at once.
A fountain of water sprung up alongside them, another rose ahead.
'In range, sir,' said Easton beside him, 'they'll be good long nines, then.'
'Yes,' said Drinkwater shortly, aware that his tenure of command might be very short indeed, his investment in Virago a wasted one. An uncomfortable vision of the fortresses of Verdun and Bitche rose unbidden into his mind's eye. He swore again softly, cursing his luck, his fever and the waiting.
Beneath his feet he felt a faint rumble as Rogers had the chaser crews run the 6-pounders through the stern ports. He thought briefly of the two portraits hanging on the forward bulkhead and then forgot all about them as the roar of Virago's cannon rang in his ears.
He missed the fall of shot, and that of the second gun. At least Samuel Rogers would do his utmost, of that Drinkwater was certain.
At the fourth shot a hole appeared in the nearer lugger's mizen. Beside Drinkwater Easton ground his right fist into the palm of his left hand with satisfaction.
'Mind you attend to the con, Mr Easton,' Drinkwater said and caught the crest-fallen look as Easton turned to swear at the helmsmen.
The nearer lugger was overhauling them rapidly, her relative bearing opening out broader on the quarter with perceptible speed. 'Luff her a point Mr Easton!'
'Aye, aye, sir.'
Virago's heel eased a little and Rogers's two guns fired in quick succession.
Drinkwater watched intently. He fancied he saw a shower of splinters somewhere amidships on the Frenchman then Mason was alongside him.
'Beg pardon sir, but I can get the aftermost larboard guns to bear on that fellow, sir.' The enemy opened fire at that very moment and a buzz filled the air together with a whooshing noise as double shotted ball and canister scoured Virago's deck. Drinkwater heard cries of agony and the bright gout of blood appeared as his eye sought out the damage to his ship.
'Very well, Mr Mason…' But Mason was gone, he lay on the deck silently kicking, his face contorted with pain.
'You there! Get Mr Mason below. Pass word to Mr Q to open fire with both batteries. Independent fire…'
His last words were lost in a crack from aloft and the roar of gunfire from the enemy. The mainyard had been shot through and was sprung, whipping like a broomstick.
'Mains'l Mr Easton! And get the tops'l off her at once…' Men were already starting the tacks and sheets. Matchett's rattan rose and fell as he shoved the waisters towards the clew and buntlines, pouring out a rich and expressive stream of abuse. Even as the car-ronades opened fire Virago slowed and suddenly the leeward lugger was upon them.
Lining her rail a hedge of pikes and sword blades appeared.
'Boarders!' Drinkwater roared as the two vessels ground together. A grapnel struck the rail and Drinkwater drew his hanger and sliced the line attached to it.
He saw the men carrying Mason drop him halfway down the poop ladder as they raced for cutlasses.
'God's bones!' Drinkwater screamed with sudden fury as the Frenchmen poured over the rail. His hanger slashed left and right and he seemed to have half a dozen enemies in his front. He pulled out a pistol and shot one through the forehead, then he was only aware of the swish of blades hacking perilously close to his face and the bite and jar in his mangled arm muscles as steel met steel.
The breath rasped in his throat and the fever fogged him with the first red madness of bloodlust longer than was usual. The cool fighting clarity that came out of some chilling primeval past revived him at last. The long fearful wait for action was over and the realisation that he was unscathed in those first dreadful seconds left him with a detachment that seemed divorced from the grim realities of hand to hand fighting. He was filled with an extraordinary nervous energy that could only have owed its origins to his fevered state. He seemed wonderfully possessed of demonic powers, the sword blade sang in his hand and he felt an overwhelming and savagely furious joy in his butchery.