This time there were no manoeuvres, no diversions. They
came steadily up the hill, at first at a trot and lastly at a furious run. They came straight at the guns, with no sign of fear, but in no kind of formation either, so that they reached the earthwork in dispersed order, the fleetest first, in tens rather than fifties, and they never
beat their way through the massed pikes and bayonets. Their chief arrived in the second wave, still running but scarcely able to see or fetch his breath: he leapt on to a body, slashing blindly at the seaman opposite him and fell back, his head split down the middle with an axe.
It was cruel fighting, kill or be killed, all in a great roar of sound and the clash of swords and spears, grunting and dust, sometimes a shriek. For what seemed a great while the enemy never fell back except for another spring forward; but the Dyaks and Malays were fighting uphill, against an enemy in close contact with strong-voiced competent naval and military commanders and sheltered by a moderate breastwork; besides, however great their courage, they were smaller, lighter men than the English, and at a given point, when there was a general withdrawal on the right and the centre, a regrouping for a fresh assault, Jack Aubrey felt the turn of the tide. He called out ‘Mr Welby, charge. Dianes follow me.’
The whole camp leapt on to the wall with a cheer. The drum beat and they hurle& themselves forward. After the first frightful clash the Marines’ weight and their exact order bore all before them. It was a rout, a total, disastrous rout: the Dyaks ran for their lives.
They ran faster than the English and on reaching the sea they leapt straight in and swam fast to the proa, as nimble as otters, perhaps a hundred men left.
Jack stood gasping on the shore, his sword dangling from his wrist. He wiped the blood from his eyes – blood from some unfelt blow – looked at the blazing schooner, its ribs outlined in fire, and at the Dyaks, already hauling on their cable. ‘Mr Fielding,’ he said in a strong, hoarse voice, ‘see what can be done to put out the fire. Mr White, gun-crews, gun-crews I say, come along with me.’
They toiled up again, those that were whole; and never before had Jack so felt the burden of his weight. The bodies lay thick
half-way to the camp, thicker in front of the earthwork, but he hardly noticed as he picked his way through just by the brass nine-pounder. Bonden, the captain of the gun and a faster runner, gave him a hand over the parapet and said ‘They are under way, sir.’ He looked round, and there indeed was the proa luffing up, coming as close to the awkward breeze as ever she could sail; the tide had been on the ebb long enough to bare the reef and she had to get all possible offing on the unhandy starboard tack to weather the west point with its shocking tide-rip and northward-setting current.
The gunner, helped by his surviving mate, arrived a moment later. ‘There is more match in my tent, sir,’ he called in a voice that hardly carried over the breastwork.
‘Never fret about that, Mr White,’ said Jack, smiling. ‘The first still has half a glass to go.’
And there it was in fact, untouched, unkicked in the turmoil and confusion of battle, smouldering away in its tubs, its smoke drifting away across the empty camp.
‘God love us,’ whispered the gunner as they crouched there laying the forward carronade,
‘I had thought the set-to was much longer. Four degrees, would you say, sir?’
‘Pitch it well up, master gunner.’
‘Well up it is, sir,’ said the gunner, giving the screw half another turn.
For a perceptible instant the match hissed on the priming:
the carronade spoke out loud and sharp, screeching back along its slide; all hands peered out and under the smoke and some caught the high curving flight of the ball. Jack watched it so intently that only his heart remembered to rejoice that the powder had proved sound, beating so hard it almost stopped his breath. The line was true: the ball short by twenty yards.
Jack ran to the nine-pounder, calling to the captain of the other carronade, ‘Four and a half, Willett. Fire as she rises.’
The carronade fired an instant later: a noble crash once more. This time Jack did not see the ball, but there was its white plume in the sea, just ahead of the proa, the line as true as the last. He heaved on his handspike, shifting the lay of the gun a trifle to the right, called
‘Stand by, there,’ and clapped
the match to the touch-hole. At the same moment the proa’s helmsman put his tiller hard over to avoid the shot and sailed straight into the point of its fall. There was no splash. For an instant all hands looked blank: then the two hulls fell apart, the great sail collapsed, the entire vessel disintegrated, and the whole, already spread over twenty or thirty yards of sea, drifted fast towards the west point and its terrible overall.
‘What is the cheering?’ asked Stephen, coming bloody-handed from the hospital-tent and peering molelike through spectacles he now wore for the fine-work of surgery.
‘We have sunk the proa,’said Jack. ‘You can see the wreckage sweeping past the cape.
They will be in the tide-rip directly -Lord, how it cuts up! – and no man living can swim through that. But at least we do not have to fear any reinforcements.’
‘You take your pleasures rather sadly, brother, do you not?’
‘They fired the schooner, do you see; and from what little I saw there is no hope of saving a single frame.’
Fielding heaved himself wearily over the corpses and the parapet, took off his battered hat, and said ‘Well, sir, I give you joy of your glorious shot: never was there such a genuine smasher. But I am very sorry to have to report that although several hands got burnt in their zeal, there is nothing, nothing we could do to save the schooner. There is not a single frame left entire – left at all. Even the keelson is gone; and of course all the planking. As well as the cutter.’
‘I am heartily sorry for it, Mr Fielding,’ said Jack in a voice intended as a public communication – a score of men were within earshot. ‘I am sure you and all hands did their best, but it was a hopeless blaze by the time we reached it: they had certainly spread tar fore and aft. However, here we are alive, and most of us fit for duty. We have many of poor Mr Hadley’s tools; there is timber all around us; and I have no doubt we shall find a solution.’
He hoped the words sounded cheerful and that they carried conviction, but he could not be sure. As it usually happened after an engagement, a heavy sadness was coming down over his spirits. To some degree it was the prodigious contrast
between two modes of life: in violent hand-to-hand fighting there was no room for time, reflexion, enmity or even pain unless it was disabling; everything moved with extreme speed, cut and parry with a reflex as fast as a sword-thrust, eyes automatically keeping watch on three or four men within reach, arm lunging at the first hint of a lowered guard, a cry to warn a friend, a roar to put an enemy off his stroke; and all this in an extraordinarily vivid state of mind, a kind of fierce exaltation, an intense living in the most immediate present. Whereas now time came back with all its deadening weight -a living in relation to tomorrow, to next year, a flag promotion, children’s future – so did responsibility, the innumerable responsibilities belonging to the captain of a man-of-war. And decision: in battle, eye and sword-arm made the decisions with inconceivable rapidity; there was no leisure to brood over them, no leisure at all.
Then again there were all the ugly things to be done after a victory; and the sad ones too.
He looked round for a midshipman, for by now most of the people had come up the hill again; but seeing none he called Bonden, the invulnerable Bonden, and told him to ask the Doctor whether a visit would be convenient. ‘Aye aye, sir,’ said Bonden, and hesitated.
‘Which you have a nasty trough up there’ – tapping his scalp – ‘that did ought to be looked to at the same time.’
‘So I have,’ said Jack, feeling his head, ‘but it don’t signify. Cut along now.’
Before Bonden could come back Richardson limped up to say that the Dyaks had taken the heads not only of the carpenter and his mate but of all those killed on the lower or middle ground. Some could not be identified: should the bodies be brought up? Were our own dead by the camp to be separated by religion? What was to be done with the dead natives?