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The Tyrant by Eric Flint and David Drake

Demansk winced. “If that thing falls on our ship . . .”

Thicelt’s lips were pursed. “Indeed. I think in the future we’ll tell the sailors—there it goes!”

His outstretched finger was pointing at the other jar, the one already hanging over the steam ram. The two men assigned to the task had cut the rope holding it up. Demansk could see the jar plummeting downward. The rope which had been holding it up came whipping behind, up and out of the simple pulley through which it had been threaded.

An instant later, he lost sight of the jar. He thought he heard it shattering on the curved iron deck of the steam ram, but wasn’t certain.

It hardly mattered. That it had shattered was not in doubt. Demansk could see the squad assigned to the next task already at work. The “incendiaries,” Trae called them. Four of them, now standing at the rail of the woodclad and firing their odd-looking arquebuses down at the steam ram.

“Odd-looking.” For a moment, Demansk found himself amused by the thought. How quickly we adjust. There was a time, not so long ago, when I would have called any firearm “odd-looking.”

But he had grown accustomed to the sight of arquebuses and cannons by now, even if he didn’t have his son’s easy familiarity with the devices. And even Demansk could tell that these guns were never designed for normal combat. Their barrels were much too short and wide, as if they had simply been designed to fire something coarse at very close range.

Which, indeed, they had—and the word “fire” was appropriate. Demansk heard four little explosions, coming so close together they sounded almost as one, and saw what looked like four lances of flame spearing down onto the still-invisible steam ram.

Within three seconds, the ram was no longer invisible. Not exactly. The inflammable liquid with which the shattering jar had coated the steam ram—some ungodly concoction made up by Trae and his design team of apothecaries-turned-arsonists—erupted in flame. Followed, an instant later, by a huge cloud of roiling black smoke.

Again, Demansk found himself holding his breath. This was, in theory, the most dangerous part of the operation—especially if the enemy vessel’s ram had become wedged in the heavy baulks which formed the woodclad’s “hull.”

They weren’t really part of the hull. The true hulls of the woodclads were heavy in their own right, much more so than a normal warship’s. But the real protection came from heavy timbers bolted on, which could be replaced after a battle.

Provided, of course, that the woodclad itself survived the battle. The problem wasn’t the ramming damage. Demansk could see for himself, now, that Thicelt and Trae’s estimate had been quite correct. The woodclad had obviously come through the impact with no real damage to the ship’s own structure. An impact like that would have broken a normal war galley in half. Or, at the very least, hulled it enough to cause it to sink rapidly. Instead, the woodclad, after recovering from the initial jolt, was remaining level and steady. From what Demansk could see, it hadn’t even sprung any leaks.

No, the real danger came from the fire which the woodclad had created on its enemy. If the Islander’s ram hadn’t gotten wedged, the thing should pass easily enough. Demansk could see that the woodclad’s crew had taken up positions to combat any spreading of the flames onto their own ship. Except, of course, for the oarsmen nearest to it, who were now frantically using their oars to try to push off from the burning enemy ship.

If the ram was not wedged, they weren’t in much danger. As much as seamen feared fire, it wasn’t really likely to happen here. The heavy timbers of the woodclad’s hull wouldn’t take flame easily, and the sailors had already removed all of the sails and rigging which presented the worst fire hazard.

But if the ram was wedged . . .

A vivid image came to Demansk’s mind. Trae’s infernal oily concoction, spreading all over the steam ram as the jar burst. Rivulets of the horrid stuff, already starting to burn, spilling through the ventholes and the gunports—slits narrow enough to provide protection from missiles, but not from a mass of liquid. Then, in the hellish interior of the steam ram, the stacks of wood which it used to fire its furnace—and, worst of all, the gunpowder for its guns. Most of it stored more or less safely away in the powder room, to be sure, but not all of it.

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Categories: David Drake
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