The Nutmeg of Consolation by Patrick O’Brian

Like them he saw the Gornélie come closer as the Nutmeg glided diagonally across the bay, disappear from his field of vision as she took the first dog-leg in the channel and reappear ten minutes later on the second, remarkably closer, still firmly moored; and as the Nutmeg continued her turn the motionless Cornélie and the sea around her moved steadily forward almost as far as his eyes could follow. It was now that he saw a signal break out at her masthead, just two imperative flags reinforced by a quarterdeck gun: the jet of smoke and then the crack, loud in this waiting silence. A strong Voice from the deck

above him: ‘Stand by. Stand by, there. Man the lee-braces,’ and the ship vanished beyond the edge of the sash light.

For Jack she was still very dearly in sight, and he did not

need his glass to see her open ports fill with eighteen-pounders run out.

The Nutmeg was tracing the long curve that was to carry her alongside the frigate, now almost right ahead and broadside on. The French colours ran up to the Cornélie’s mizen-peak:

Jack waited for the warning shot.

There was no warning shot. Instead the three aftermost eighteen-pounders fired to kill almost simultaneously.

‘All hands,’ called Jack as the balls raced overhead at topsail height a few yards to starboard. It was clear that his disguise had been pierced, but although he might be raked fore and aft he still hoped to sail the Nutmeg close enough to engage with real effect.

Below him in the waist the bosun sprung his call:

the officers came running up to the quarterdeck. ‘Courses and staysails,’ said Jack. ‘Bear a hand, bear a hand, bear a hand, there. Mr Crown, cast off the painted strips. Mr Fielding, ensign and pennant.’

Stephen heard the crash of a ball somewhere forward, and then in a turmoil more apparent than real his door slid open and Seymour called in his ear ‘They have smoked us, sir. Captain desires you will go below.’

The Cornélie’s remaining eighteen-pounders fired in a long rippling sequence, her side vanishing behind the smoke. Holes appeared in the topsails and courses; the tack of the mainsail, just belayed, sprang free; the balls sent water splashing from the forecastle aft; several shot up white fountains close at hand; the last shattered the larboard cathead.

‘Good practice for such a distance,’ observed Jack.

‘Very creditable, sir,’ said Fielding. ‘I wish it may not improve, however.’

A pause during which the Nutmeg, in spite of her wild maincourse, advanced two hundred yards, and then in a deliberate fashion all the Cornélie’s larboard guns fired, one after another. Six balls hit the hull, masts or yards; one carried away half the larboard quarter-gallery; and the sixteenth came the length of the ship at chest height, killing two men on the forecastle and three on the quarterdeck: Miller, just next to Jack Aubrey, a hand at the wheel, and the master.

‘Man the lee braces,’ called Jack, wiping Miller’s blood from his face: and to the men who had instantly taken over the wheel, ‘Port your helm.’

The Nutmeg turned fast to starboard, and in a voice that reached the orlop he gave the infinitely welcome order ‘Fire as they bear.’

Now the sick-berth echoed not only with the sledge-hammer blows of the enemy’s shot but the much louder cracking roar of the Nutmeg’s thirty-two-pounder carronades and the

shriek of their slides as they recoiled. Stephen, Macmillan and Suleiman the loblolly-boy were already busy – splinter-wounds, contusions, a forearm broken by a falling block – but as they stitched and bandaged and splinted they nodded to one another with satisfaction.

Bonden, carrying young Harper down in his arms, said ‘We are slogging it out, sir; a pleasure to see.’

So they were, and the sky echoed and re-echoed with their thunder, a continuous roar beneath the separate explosions.

The Nutmeg, like most Dutch twenty-gun ships, carried all her armament on a single deck: she was firing into the wind, so that her smoke was instantly swept away: it was therefore easy for the quarterdeck to see the pitch of her thirty-two-pound balls. She was firing remarkably fast, at least twice the speed of the Cornélie, and her teams were working perfectly together, ammunition coming up from the magazines with clockwork regularity: but at high elevation their shot was wild, and at low, though their line was true, the balls fell short. The Cornélie was slow by any standard, partly because she was firing to leeward and the eddying smoke obscured her view;

but even at three quarters of a mile she was shockingly accurate. Furthermore, although she was clearly husbanding her powder, never wasting a shot, she quite certainly was not limited to four barrels nor anything like it.

‘Stand by the chasers,’ called Jack. ‘Mr Fielding, we will wear ship.’

The Nutmeg turned, bringing the wind right aft, came up again on the starboard tack and sailed off as she had come. As she turned the stern-chasers managed to get in three shots each, two of which certainly went home; but the Cornélie fired two broadsides, the first of which might have dismasted the Nutmeg if she had not put her helm hard over at the right moment. The second fell short.

‘If they had fired as quick as they fired straight,’ reflected jack, ‘we should have been hard up in a clinch, and no knife to cut the seizing.’ He did not confide this thought to his first lieutenant however but said ‘She is finding it hard to win her anchor.’ Even without his telescope he could make out that the shorthanded Cornélie was having a wretched time at the capstan; and with it he could see the straining red-faced men, sometimes only three to a bar, trying to force the drum to turn: then shifting over to the other cable, heaving on that, veering the first and so trying again, rather than leave anchor and cables so many thousand miles from any replacement.

‘And they are having no better luck with their longboat,’ said Fielding. Jack turned, and there on a small reef not a quarter of a mile from the shore, was the Cornélie’s massive longboat, firmly wedged on a falling tide. From the white water on either side it was clear that in his haste to join the ship the coxswain had steered for a narrow passage through the coral, the nearest way, and had misjudged the breeze or his draught or the leeway, if not all three. With real pleasure Jack saw that the active officerin a skiff directing their urgent attempts at unloading the casks and refloating the boat was Pierrot Dumesnil, that amiable young man, now in a frenzy of exasperation.

‘They have their work cut out for some little while. But not for too long, I hope,’ said Jack, looking up at the sun. ‘There is not a world of time to spare. Now, Mr Walker?’

‘A foot in the well, if you please, sir,’ said the carpenter, ‘but me and my mates have three comfortable plugs in the holes -there was only three hit us near or under the waterline. But the launch and the spars either side have suffered something cruel, and your larboard stern-gallery is well-nigh wrecked.’

Jack also heard the bosun’s report, which had few surprises

– he could see cut rigging and damaged sails on every hand -and then he said to Fielding,

‘Let us heave to in the fairway with a stage over the side, as though we were in danger of foundering. Half a dozen hands can make the proper show while the rest are knotting and splicing: and we should pump, but on the far side. Mr Conway, pray ask the Doctor whether it would be convenient for me to come below. Mr Adams,’ he said to his clerk, ‘did you take notes?’

‘Well, sir,’ said Adams, ‘I hardly knew what to do. Seeing we had not beat to quarters, officially we were not in action; so I made what I may call unofficial remarks. And seeing our people were not killed in regular action, I told the sailmaker I thought they should be sewn up in their hammocks, not disposed of in the usual way. I hope I did right, sir.’

‘Quite right, Mr Adams.’

Down to the orlop, and by the time he reached it his eyes were sufficiently used to the gloom between decks for them to see Stephen’s hands bright red under the hanging lamp.

‘How much have we suffered?’ he asked.

‘Three splinter wounds died of loss of blood as soon as they were brought down or before,’ said Stephen. ‘Apart from that I have six in a very good way, with the blessing; a broken arm and some contusions; no more. For the dead you know better than I.’

‘The master, I grieve to say; young Miller; Gray, a good man, at the wheel; and two more on the forecastle – a single raking shot.’

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