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Dewey Lambdin - A King`s Commander

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Название:
A King`s Commander
Автор
Издательство:
неизвестно
ISBN:
нет данных
Год:
неизвестен
Дата добавления:
3 август 2018
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Dewey Lambdin - A King`s Commander

Dewey Lambdin - A King`s Commander краткое содержание

Dewey Lambdin - A King`s Commander - описание и краткое содержание, автор Dewey Lambdin, читайте бесплатно онлайн на сайте электронной библиотеки mybooks.club
Alan Lewrie is now commander of HMS Jester, an 18-gun sloop. Lewrie sails into Corsica only to receive astonishing orders: he must lure his archenemy, French commander Guillaume Choundas, into battle and personally strike the malevolent spymaster dead. With Horatio Nelson as his squadron commander on one hand and a luscious courtesan who spies for the French on the other, Lewrie must pull out all the stops if he's going to live up to his own reputation and bring glory to the British Royal Navy.

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A King`s Commander - читать книгу онлайн бесплатно, автор Dewey Lambdin

"On the up roll… Firel"

A broadside from the long Nines, the great-guns, crashed out in angry roars and a sudden fog-bank of smoke and sparks erupted from her starboard side. With the wind gauge, Jester was heeled too far over for her solid round-shot to score crippling damage aloft, the disadvantage of firing from upwind. Fall short, perhaps, skip into the enemy…

"Secure the starboard battery at run-in. Ready about? Helm a'weather! New course, nor'west, Quartermaster. Wear ship!"

He could feel his vessel wheel, her decks coming level, the wind coming stronger on the nape of his neck, as she pivoted within the pall of her broadside, which was hazing and misting as it expanded, thinning to show him the French corvette, which was… Firing!

Moans, warbles… eldritch screeches, wailing higher and higher in tone, even as Choundas's ship was suddenly surrounded by feathers of spray as his own shot arrived. Fired high, elevating quoins fully out and breeches resting on the carriages… and her decks angled upward to the force of the wind on her full-and-by course to windward.

Crashes aloft, crashes and bangs. The royal mast and yard upon the main was shattered at the doublings, bringing down the commissioning pendant, sails and ropes, in a blizzard. The fore t'gallant twitched as it was punctured by bar-shot and star-shot, punctures ripping open from luff to leach in an eye-blink. Fore-stays snapped, and the outer flying jib lashed out to leeward, shivering like a spook!

"Nor'west, sir!" Spenser called, easing his helm, watching the main tops'l for a clue to his luff and winds, with the pendant gone. "Ready, larboard batt'ry, sir!" Bittfield reported. Mile, or less, Lewrie judged, glad to have drawn first blood; or first honors, at the least. Better shootin' range.

"Fire, Mister Bittfield!" he urged, gripping the railing with one hand, chopping at the air with the other as if it held his sword. Cripple him, Bittfield, he thought grimly; save my poor arse! "Sure o' yer aim, now, wait for itt" Bittfield cautioned his gun captains, still not trusting Rahl to scamper about and train those barrels inward, so their shot would converge amidships of their target. Following along behind quickly, sensing how Jester rode the sea, when she'd rise up, decks almost level, pent on the uproll. Waiting for a good one, perhaps, a convergence of wave and counterwave.

Come on, you perverse bloody perfectionist, Alan wished to yell! "Ready… on the uproll… Firel"

A stunning blast of sound, explosions, and the scream of truck carriages running inward, axles and wheels howling, breeching ropes and restraining bolts juddering bar-taut making thick cable squeal, forged iron moan.

"Eat it, you bastarrddd!" Lewrie howled, too jittery to remain stoic and captainly. He never had been-never would be-any good at stoic.

At least, fear had turned to something useful, now that he was getting into a battle fever, the insatiable kind that would leave him wringing wet, spent, and gasping.

The French corvette returned the favor, again slightly later, just as Jesters double-shotted barrage reached her. There were more crashes aloft. The foremast fighting-top seemed to explode into dust, as a solid shot smashed into the upper mast, bringing down the tops'l and t'gallant together, cleaving away stays for both the inner jib and fore-topmast stays'l. Topmen aloft, swivel gunners and Marines in the top, came spilling out and down, riding the wreckage or flung bodily by the force of the strike! Two massive flashes of sparks and oaken splinters erupted alongside, amidships, as the main chains and stays writhed like disturbed asps, and the entire upper mainmast groaned and creaked, and supporting lower shrouds let go under the suddenly unequaled tension, popping as loud as musket fire!

"Hullin' her, sir!" Knolles cried. "Hullin' her, 'twixt wind and water!" he hooted as he pointed to larboard at their foe. Plumes of spray skipped in lines toward the French ship, some almost on her waterline, bursts of dust and wood splinters as she was hit above the water, around her midships gun ports.

"Half a mile, sir," Buchanon adjudged, more calmly.

"Run-out!" Bittfield was screaming, his voice breaking on all the reeking smoke, and his emotions. "Point yer guns! Carronades as well… stand clear? Ready… jirel Whoohoo!" He was gun-drunk.

"That's the way, that's the way!" Lewrie snarled, pounding his fist on the railing, just as caught up in the stink and roar of those monsters, his beautiful, reeking, but beloved guns, as the "Smashers" on the quarterdeck came reeling backward on their slide-carriages in a bitter cloud of spent powder. "Quartermaster, steer half a point to loo'rd. Close her."

He can't come up higher to the wind on me, all he can do is haul off, he thought with scintillating but frenetic crystal clarity. We'll rake his stern, unless he wears away. Or tacks! Twigg made sure he'd know I was here, available-he can't scamper off 'thout trying to do me in!

Moanings and warbles, dire humming, and this time round-shot hit lower. Jester reeled like a punch-drunk boxer as she was hulled, shuddering with each savage blow taken. A portion of the larboard gangway bulwark caved in, scattering waisters and brace-tenders. Splinters and shards from shattered iron shot keened amid the sudden screams of pain and fright. Men were down, lucky Jester's lucky people were bleeding, dying!

"He's tacking! Sir, he's tacking!" Spendlove wailed from the larboard side. "Swinging sou'east, into wind!"

"Broadside, Mister Bittfield, now! Aim high!" Lewrie ordered. "Take her rigging down while she's busy comin' about! Knolles, ready to wear about to east-nor'east!"

"Er ist vounded, zir!" Rahl cried up from the waist, "I send to Herr Crewe…?" Even as Crewe boiled up from the midships hatchway ladders, still in his white apron and list slippers from the magazine.

"The stays, sir," Knolles panted beside him, smudged with soot and smoke, his hat askew. "Might bring all the main topmasts down if we come about."

"The windward stays are sound, sir. Might ease the lee'uns, if we wear. Hands to the braces, ready to wear, sir," Lewrie retorted.

"Run out yer guns…" Mister Crewe intoned more calmly. "Prime yer guns… cock yer locksl"

"Porter, hands to the braces, ready to wear nor'east!" Knolles bellowed into his brass speaking trumpet.

"Point yer guns…! Quoins half out… ready… fire!"

No, dammit… Lewrie groaned to himself; you rushed 'em, they'll shoot too low, and…!

In, they lurched, all but number five larboard nine-pounder, which had been struck dead on the muzzle, and blown backward off its truck carriage, trunnions ripped from the cap-squares, and its crew savaged.

Brutal noise and a hellish reek of the roasting damned, Jester shaking and rattling under Lewrie's feet and hands, the enemy blotted out by the massive gush of burned niters.

"Ready, sir," Knolles gasped.

"Wear ship! Helm alee!" he snapped, soon as he heard, scampering to the larboard side so he could see, pressing up against the bulwarks to peer out through all that smoke to see if he'd hurt Choundas.

Being flung backward, thrown off his feet as a ball blasted in just above the gunwale, splinters and shards flying upward, an erose chunk carving the face of the bulwark down to the thickness of a single plank! Feeling his ship being pummeled and punctured beneath him, her stout scantlings wailing in agony!

"Sah, you kilt?" Andrews demanded, looming over him, filling his entire vision. Lewrie blinked, and kept on blinking, to clear the red haze that kept blinding him.

Blind, he gibbered wildly; blind as Nelson! Oh, the bastard… he's done for me! He flailed his arms and legs, found that they still were attached and obeying. Rolled to his side and retched the coppery taste from his mouth, knowing what blind fear tasted like at last…

A crumpled calico handkerchief smeared his face, mildewy and redolent of tobacco. Blinking mindlessly, panting and gasping air in terror of what bad news might be coming. But his sight cleared, with Andrews's ministrations. A firm hand clasped the handkerchief to his scalp.

"Carry on, Mister Crewe!" he heard Knolles rasp. People were walking around him, as uncaring as if he were a misplaced hammock roll.

He felt the guns go off, the deck on which he lay shiver as the ship was punched sidewise by her own recoil. There was a regular beat of juddering coming from her hull, even more insistent than his racing heart. God, there'd be another broadside in reply, soon!

"You tell me, Andrews… am I killed?"

"Got yah scalp shaved, sah. Blood in ya eyes, but…"

"Help me up."

"Best hold dat right dar, sah… firmlike. Staunch de blood."

He held the cloth with his left hand, clung to the railing over the waist with his right, and almost swooned and saw double. The pain was coming, and he sucked air between his teeth as the first wave hit, going crosseyed with it. He swabbed his face, his eye sockets, with his right sleeve, forever staining that fancy gold-lace slash-cuff… but he could see, with both eyes.

"Ooh, Law'," Andrews flinched for both of them, as a broadside came inboard.

More smashing timbers, more screaming side planking, as French carronade shot joined their long guns. That juddering got noticeable, became a deep, plucking hum instead of an unnatural motion. Through it all, the gun crews slaved away, swabbing and overhauling tackle, rushing up cartridge and shot, ramming it home and pricking the vents.

"Run out yer guns…!" Crewe roared, not so calm anymore, and caught up in the madness.

Alan took another suck of breath! There lay Choundas's vessel, not one cable to leeward of Jester''s left side, just a little ahead, and sailing parallel to them, her own side looking gnawed at, stove-in here and there, her pristine white gunwale turning gray with spent powder stains.

"On the uproll… fire!" Mister Crewe bugled. A ragged broadside crashed out, stuttering up and down Jester's ports. The enemy corvette lurched and seemed to wince as she was struck again by a hailstorm of shot, delaying the run-out of her own guns a precious moment.

"Payin' off, sir!" Spenser called from the wheel. "No jibs…"

Jester could not lay close to the wind without them, and slowly swung leeward, in spite of a large portion of lee-helm. She and that corvette would angle together slowly, closing the range, if Choundas held his course. Lewrie groaned as he saw that the wind would let her pinch up to weather, at least one point or more. Choundas could throw his ship up so close to luffing that he could bow-rake Jester, at nigh musket shot, in another minute.

"Mister Knolles, ready to haul our wind, course nor-nor'east," Lewrie snapped, the effort of shouting making his head seem to explode with fresh pain. "Mister Crewe, one more broadside, then switch over to the starboard battery! We'll rake his stern!"

"Oh, Lord," someone whispered in awe as Choundas's corvette lit up in flames, flinging long thrusts of smoke at them. She fired another broadside!


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