Authors: Julian Stockwin
Up the ladderway, slowly, dignified, and past the ship’s bell to the furthest deck forward. He went to the centre, sat cross-legged, motionless, and waited.
Time passed. He had chosen this place deliberately. It was before-the-mast territory, a seaman’s recreation space and sacred to the purpose, which any officer would not dream of trespassing upon in times of relaxation, as now.
This way they could approach him without fear, on their own ground. There might be before long a shamefaced confession, the men in a body coming forward with the truth.
He waited longer.
There was the sound of footsteps. A single person – who would it be that was—
But it was merely the watch-on-deck, a seaman sent to trim the riding light in the bows. He passed by with his lanthorn, his set face studiously ignoring Bowden. He performed his task, returning without a single glance at the extraordinary sight of an officer sitting on the foredeck, where by now there should have been companionable knots of sailors with clay pipes and leather pots of grog talking easily about their day, perhaps some with a violin or a tuneful voice.
Bowden realised he had to face up to the bitter fact: he had failed completely. None had come up to the foredeck. In a way it was not surprising: if some were inclined to break ranks and approach him they would be seen and marked down as informers. But he had been hoping for a collective resolve. And it had not happened.
‘You realise you were taking a terrible risk, old chap.’
‘Interfering with witnesses, I know. But, by God, I had to try – and I truly believe they would not have informed upon me to the authorities.’
Renzi felt for Bowden, his helplessness in the face of a pitiless Fate, but he carried its weight on his shoulders, too. He had come up with two schemes for rescuing Kydd by stealth but both foundered on the knowledge that he would certainly refuse, sturdily trusting in decency and common law.
He was hollow-eyed with worry, and Bowden looked much the same. They had run out of ideas and, with that, any options for the future.
Bowden wrung his hands over his failure with the Hannibals. ‘As I talked, I could see I’d lost them. There was no common ground, no way to communicate, speak their language …’
‘Stop!’ Renzi cried, as a flash of desperate inspiration came. ‘We’ve one last throw of the die. What if …’
The boat put off once more for
Hannibal
. It held only one passenger and hooked on at the fore-chains where no visiting boat would ever deign to go.
Hannibal
’s mate-of-the-watch sent the quartermaster hurrying forwards to intercept the stranger, but by the time he reached the fore-mast a figure had swung over the bulwarks and was inboard.
‘Hey, you – what d’ye think—’
‘Out o’ my way, cully! I got business wi’ the Hannibals,’ the thick-set man growled, knocking him aside.
He slid down the fore-ladder, crossed purposefully to the hatchway and clattered down to the main-deck.
In an age-old routine men were clearing the tables to raise them up against the side of the ship; in the dog-watches the space had changed first from a gun-deck to a mess-deck, and now was transforming again into the open space where at the pipe ‘Down hammocks!’ it would be their communal bedroom.
‘Who are you, then?’ the stranger was asked in astonishment.
Men crowded around to see what apparition out of the night had suddenly appeared in their midst.
The man said nothing, folding his arms and staring about him. More came up, and when the hubbub had died, he spoke.
‘I’m Toby Stirk, gunner’s mate o’
Billy Roarer
,’ he grated.
Puzzled looks passed between the men; the quartermaster hovered uncertainly.
He spoke louder. ‘An’ I’m come aboard
Hannibal
to tip me daddle to the gullion what did for Cap’n Tyrell.’
‘Aye, well …’
‘See, we goes back a long spell. I was gun captain in th’ old
Duke William
in the last war, when Mantrap was first lootenant o’ the barky.’
Glances of fellow feeling and a dawning respect began to appear.
‘A right bastard then as well, I’d reckon,’ one said.
‘Worse’n that,’ Stirk spat, his eyes glowing.
There were growls of sympathy and a stir in his audience. ‘Come on, Jeb – show yerself!’
A tall, serious-looking seaman came reluctantly forward.
‘Jeremiah Haywood.’
‘You did ’im?’ Stirk said quietly.
‘Aye, I did – but I’m not proud of it, I’ll have thee know,’ the man said, in a troubled voice. ‘Shootin’ in the back ain’t right for any man.’
There were encouraging shouts, and he went on, ‘Gives me two dozen f’r bein’ slow in stays, an’ another dozen afore the first was healed. When I saw him in front o’ m’ musket I just lost m’ rag an’ let fly, is all.’
‘Right. Well, let me go on an’ finish m’ yarn about
Duke William
. Could be interestin’ to some.’
He paused, letting all eyes find his. ‘See, I’m rememberin’ a young able seaman, runs afoul o’ the bugger. No fault o’ his, and a prime sailorman as ever there was, but he’s triced up and gets the lash as nearly sees ’im fish-meat. Didn’t I tell you his name? Why, it was young Tom Kydd as was.’
Realisation came slowly, but when it did there were sharp intakes of breath and uneasy looks.
‘Yes, mates. One of us. Come aft the hard way, now he always takes care o’ them as fights the ship for him. I’ve known him off ’n’ on for years since, and
never
’ave I seen ’im let down ’is shipmates. Never.’
Haywood turned pale.
‘Now he’s in a right stew, no one t’ look out for ’im, no bugger to speak up for ’im. An’ all because us jolly tars won’t see ’im right in the article of owning t’ the crime.’
He turned and faced Haywood, looking at him steadily. ‘I’m not the one t’ peach on another, but if Tom Kydd gets his’n, on account another won’t step forward, I’d let every ship, watch, every mess-deck an’ every shellback in the whole o’ King George’s Navy know the name o’ the one who let him suffer. This I swear!’
In the shocked silence not a soul moved.
Then Haywood threw back his shoulders as though getting rid of a load. ‘No need for threats, mate. M’ mind was made up beforetimes. I’ll go. He’ll not swing.’
Stirk nodded slowly. ‘Cuffin. I’m still goin’ to tell it like it is – that as brave a cove as I know did the right thing when he could’ve walked away from it all.’ He held out his hand. ‘I want to shake yer hand, Mr Haywood.’
He did so, slowly and solemnly.
Turning quickly, Haywood pushed through the crowd, heading aft. ‘Where yer goin’, Jeb?’ someone called.
‘I said I’d do it, an’ I am – an’ that’s right now.’
The others hurried after him, but he strode on.
Stirk forced his way through and grabbed him by the arm. ‘Jeb, mate. Let’s see it’s done right
by you
. Not a lot o’ sense to give yourself over without you has someone t’ speak for ye. Don’t yez have L’tenant Bowden servin’ in this hooker still?’
‘Aye. An’ he’s aboard, in his cabin this hour.’
‘So let’s see him.’
The crowd had now swollen to more than a hundred and others swarmed up from the identical lower deck to join the throng. The young master’s mate tried to stop them, but Stirk was having none of it. ‘Ask L’tenant Bowden if he’s at liberty t’ come an’ talk.’
Bowden appeared out of the cabin spaces, looking tired and bewildered. ‘Mr Stirk, what are you … What do all these men want?’
‘Theys askin’ f’r a steer, like,’ he said to the young lieutenant, realising it must look like rank mutiny.
‘Er, what do you mean?’
It was the work of brief minutes to explain.
Bowden looked incredulous for a moment, then found his tongue. ‘You did right, you men. And I’m to do my part.’
To the master’s mate, he snapped an order: ‘Away all boats!’
‘B-but, sir, I can’t—’
‘Damn your eyes! I’m off to see the admiral. Do you question my order, sir?’ As senior officer on board HMS
Hannibal
he had every right, of course.
Hundreds of sailors swarmed down the side and tumbled into the boats, shipping oars and setting out for the shore. They passed ship after ship of the squadron, dark and lifeless as they settled down for the night, then too late coming to their senses as the boats pulled by, fully loaded with excited men.
At the stone steps the seamen disembarked and immediately hoisted Haywood on to their shoulders, setting off with Bowden proud and determined at their head through a late-night St John’s rudely awakened by the excitement.
It was exhilarating and fearful, shocking and exotic to be caught up in events that had changed things so fast and so completely. As they turned into the avenue leading to the admiral’s residence, the enormity of what they were about to do must have penetrated, for the excited shouts died away until there was now nothing but a silent body of hundreds of men tramping up to the torch-lit entrance of the Admiral’s Pen.
From the lights within, Bowden guessed that a card party was in progress – Cochrane was known to be partial to his bridge. Bowden held up his hand, and when the men had shuffled to a stop, he went up to the door and knocked.
A footman answered and was shocked by what he saw out in the darkness silently waiting. ‘S-sir?’
‘Admiral Cochrane. On a matter of extreme urgency,’ Bowden demanded.
‘Er, yes, sir. Immediately, sir!’
There was a slight delay before an irritated Cochrane appeared.
‘What the devil?’ he spluttered, seeing the hundreds of men quietly before him.
‘Sir,’ Bowden said quickly, ‘these men have come in support of their shipmate, who begs he might be allowed to admit to the death of Captain Tyrell.’
‘Am I hearing you right, Mr Bowden? He knows what he’s about in so doing, I trust.’
‘He does, sir. And he’s firm in his mind that it’s the right thing to do in the circumstances.’
Cochrane hesitated only for a moment, then threw to the footman inside, ‘Blue drawing room!
‘Well, Mr Bowden, do come in, and your men too.’
The room was soon crowded beyond belief. The admiral stood before them, bemused but in firm charge.
‘Now what’s this about, Lieutenant?’
Bowden brought Haywood to the front and said, ‘This is the man, sir – Jeremiah Haywood, main topman.’
The admiral brought his fierce gaze on to Haywood. ‘So you wish to admit to slaying Captain Tyrell.’
‘Yes, sir. It weren’t Mr Kydd, no, sir.’ His voice quavered but he returned the gaze steadily.
‘Then you’d better tell me about it – and be aware, it may well be put up as evidence later.’
‘Aye, sir. Well, it were like this. We was advancing up t’ this ridge, like, an’ because the Frogs was firin’ at us we took cover under all this green stuff. I looks up an’ sees Cap’n Tyrell flop down under the ridge, right ahead o’ me. And, well, ’cos I’d taken two dozen in two days from him just afore, I saw red an’ fired at him when—’
Quick as a flash, Cochrane intervened: ‘Ah, now I see what happened. Very clear, now I know.’
He looked benignly at the topman. ‘It was very courageous of you, Haywood, to bring this to my attention and you have my heartiest approbation of your act.’
He turned to Bowden. ‘Well, that clears that up. For the sake of Mr Kydd, just as well.’
‘Sir?’ the lieutenant said uncertainly.
‘Can’t you see it, man? It was an accident, is all! Any fool can see that. Your man taking hasty cover in all those sticks and leaves, accidents with a loaded musket will happen, a twig caught in the trigger, that kind of thing …’
‘No, sir, I did it, an’ I own to it.’
‘Nonsense! You had an accident and didn’t want to admit to it to your officer until you saw Captain Kydd unjustly accused. Quite understandable.’
‘Wha’? No, sir, I really—’
‘Let’s leave it at that, shall we? You men will want to get back to your ship before you’re, er, missed.’
Bowden, his mind in a flood of relief, could only stammer, ‘Th-thank you, sir. And on behalf of—’
But Cochrane had already returned to his guests. He smiled at his wife. ‘Ah, yes. I’d almost forgotten. My dear, do see if Captain Kydd is free to join us.’
Kydd stood on his quarterdeck once more, pink with pleasure at the honour the wardroom had done him in laying on this reception and dinner in
L’Aurore
.
‘Welcome aboard, madam,’ he said, to yet another lady of station, delighted to be personally greeted by the captain. As his unjust detention had been quickly dismissed at the highest level, it would never do for it to be noticed by lesser mortals.
The deck was quickly filling with notables and friends but this was the reception – only special guests would move on to the dinner afterwards. One in particular, Louise Vernou, was received with the utmost warmth by
L’Aurore
’s captain as she approached on Renzi’s arm.
Yet in the midst of all his happiness Kydd had to accept that the fortunate turn of events had not extended to remedy one recent adversity. He could not get out of his mind the shock – the horror – on the faces of the dinner guests when Tyrell had done his worst and he had been revealed as a base-born common sailor.
His happiness faded when he realised that while his naval colleagues’ sentiments were genuine and deeply felt, those of society were not. They were here for one reason and one only – to be seen with the victor of Marie-Galante. After this occasion, when the memory dimmed, he could not expect to be welcomed at events where the high-born disported.
‘Why, Captain, you’re thinking on other things?’
Kydd turned in surprise. It was Wrexham – and next to him Miss Amelia.
‘Oh, er, just checking the lay of the downhaul,’ he managed.
‘After such a stroke, you should be proud of yourself, sir!’ the planter said warmly. ‘I’ve above a dozen ships that can now sail without fear, my credit restored and, dare I say it, my competition removed. The whole of the Leeward Islands owes you much, sir, now the vermin are put down and trade is resumed.’
‘I thank you for your kind words, sir, but do make notice that I’m one only of many who achieved this victory.’