The Little Ships (Alexis Carew Book 3) (32 page)

BOOK: The Little Ships (Alexis Carew Book 3)
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Chapter 58

A
lexis made
her way onto
Belial’s
hull by the simple expedience of stepping through the gaping hole that had once been her ship’s gunports. She pulled a small, still figure along behind her and made her way to
Belial’s
stern.

She supposed she should leave Artley’s body with the rest being retrieved from throughout the ship and laid out on the gundeck, but couldn’t bear to leave him there alone. She owed him a moment’s time — time she’d not had to spare aboard
Shrewsbury
or even to keep him safe on
Belial,
nor to notice the moment of his death.

She settled into place at the stern and attached one of Artley’s lines to the guidewires.

“Damn you, Sterlyn. Why’d you come back? You could have stayed safe at Alchiba. Not … not come back so I could get you killed.”

She settled into place and gazed off past
Belial’s
rudder and planes.

Dobb and the others still alive were reviewing the damage, but there was little any of them could do.
Belial
was so holed that Alexis was afraid to try and reach any of the areas that might be undamaged — the magazine was still aired and only portions of the engineering spaces.

Most of the engineering spaces had been holed at the same time
Belial’s
gravity had failed. It was only by some miracle that
Belial
had survived, as the casing around the fusion plant was pocked and creased where shot had struck it, though never quite directly enough to breach it.

Her brief tour of the space had left her sick, as none of the civilians she’d sent there had been suited. Three had been shoved into a small compartment by the engineering crew and had miraculously survived, but the rest were dead. As were all of those who’d remained in
Belial’s
hold.

Other than those three only the seven who’d been able to fit into the ship’s magazine with Oakman had survived, including both Marie and Ferrau. She supposed she should be grateful for that, but it was hard to be grateful for anything when faced with such devastation.

Of her crew, there was only herself and four others, Dobb, Oakman, Chevis, and Hunsley, left alive. With no surgeon aboard to treat them during the action and with no one to be spared from the guns to take them below, most of those injured had been left on the gundeck where they fell, only to be struck again by enemy shot.

A hundred meters away the Hanoverese frigate sat still and silent as well, battered as much or more than
Belial
herself. A handful of suited figures were out on the hull there, and Alexis had to wonder what their butcher’s bill had been. She should send someone over to take charge of it, but there was hardly anyone to send. It would have to wait until the end of the fleet action and for some ship from whichever side won that to come along.

And if there is any justice, her captain will have survived, that I might see him hang.

She hoped
Belial’s
logs might be intact, and that the recordings of the Hanoverese firing into helpless, unarmed ships could be put to that purpose.

Alexis left Artley at the stern and crossed under
Belial’s
keel to the other side of her ship for a moment. Here the hull was largely intact; only a few of the frigate’s shots had managed to burn all the way through the gundeck to exit the far side. That, somehow, didn’t seem right — the horror inside shouldn’t be hidden like that.

In the distance she could see the lights of other ships and wondered what the outcome of the fleet action had been.

Then, a moment later, she supposed her question was answered. She stood and watched as, to leeward, a frigate beat her way against the wind toward
Belial
, New London’s colors bright against her undamaged hull.

Alexis couldn’t tell what ship — she was flying her number, but Alexis had no way of looking it up and didn’t immediately recognize it — but the frigate’s other signal sent her to her knees. First in manic laughter, then in wracking sobs.

Do you require assistance?

T
he frigate
,
HMS Magnanime,
hove-to to windward of
Belial
and the Hanoverese frigate. Both ships were so damaged that there was no way a boarding tube could be attached to either.
Magnanime
worked her sails to drift and edge broadside downwind until she was close enough for lines to be shot across the void between the ships.

Alexis and Dobb made the lines fast to whatever parts of
Belial’s
hull seemed least likely to snap off if force were applied.

No sooner had they made the lines fast than
Magnanime’s
crew began hauling the two ships together, but Alexis watched in surprise as spacers from
Magnanime
scrambled across the lines as well, risking exposure to
darkspace
away from the protective influence of the hull.

A suited figure with lieutenant’s insignia on his arms reached her and touched his helmet to hers.

“Lieutenant Whitefield,
Magnanime.
Is your captain about?”

Alexis had to work her mouth for a moment to be able to respond. Her lips were dry and parched, and she’d finished all of her suit’s water long before.


Belial’s
mine.” She looked around at the damage and shook her head. “Was mine.” She fought down her feelings and tried to focus. “We’ve —” She closed her eyes and cringed at the number. “We’ve seven civilians in the magazine without vacsuits. Will you have some sent over so that they may board your ship?”

“You took refugees into action? Against a frigate?”

Alexis’ temper flared. “And where were you, sir? Behind the lines playing postman, with never a glance this way to see what was happening?”

Her vision seemed to darken as she spoke and her head spun. She grasped Whitefield’s arm to steady herself.

Whitefield looked from her to the Hanoverese frigate and back again.

“Your pardon,” he said. “I should not have spoken so. Come, let me get you across to
Magnanime.

A
lexis
and the others were taken first aboard
Magnanime
, where she made her report to the frigate’s captain, Captain Hutchings, and was told the outcome of the fleet action.

Magnanime
was not a part of Admiral Chipley’s fleet that had come to Giron, it seemed. She was with a fleet under Admiral Cammack, whose fleet and flagship,
HMS Royal Sovereign
, a massive, 100 gun three decker, had arrived at Alchiba to reinforce Chipley, only to find that neither Chipley nor the original transports for the invasion force had ever returned to Alchiba, and that a ragtag fleet of little ships had sailed to bring New London’s boys home.

Cammack had set out immediately for Giron, arriving in the midst of the action.

The Hanoverese fleet, now vastly outnumbered, had disengaged and fled.

“Admirals Chipley and Cammack exchanged some signals about the best course of action,” Hutchings said. “Admiral Chipley believed an aggressive pursuit of the Hanoverese was in order, while my Admiral Cammack felt it was best to see these transports safely home.”

Alexis eased herself in her chair and blinked. She was having a bit of trouble focusing on Captain Hutchings’ words. She was dressed in a too-large jumpsuit borrowed from one of
Magnanime’s
lieutenants. The smallest of them, but still several centimeters taller than she. Her own things were somewhere in the wreck of
Belial
or in her cabin aboard
Shrewsbury
, which was off with Admiral Chipley.

She’d barely had time to change out of her vacsuit before Hutchings was asking for her and she felt the dire need for a bit of time in the head to rinse the sweat from her body.

And a bunk. I should dearly like to make the acquaintance of one of
Magnanime’s
bunks. With the crew on the gundeck, even, just anywhere I might go to sleep.

“Carew?”

Alexis jerked, her eyes springing open. “I’m sorry, sir, I —”

Hutchings waved it away. “No, I wasn’t thinking. After what you … I can’t imagine.” He frowned. “Whitefield!”

Alexis jerked awake again at his bellow as Lieutenant Whitefield appeared in the hatchway.

“Sir?”

“Put Carew in a cabin until we can transfer her to
Royal Sovereign
. The admiral will want to speak with her.”

“Aye, sir.”

“Captain Hutchings,” Alexis said, “I don’t want to put anyone out of their cabin.”

Hutchings shook his head. “No trouble. We’ll be up with the flagship as soon as another frigate arrives here to take charge of the Hannie prize. No more than a watch.” He frowned. “I suppose Chipley will have all the prize money if he ever catches up with those that fled. With both Chipley’s fleet and mine In Sight here, the prize money for those that surrendered in this action will be spread thin as cucumber slices at tea.”

Alexis struggled to smile, knowing it was expected of her at a senior captain’s jest. The money for prizes was divided between the crews of all ships in sight of the action when the captured ship struck. With two New London fleets here near Giron there’d be many ships to divide what prize money resulted from the action, including whatever came of the frigate which had struck to
Belial
.

As for
Belial
herself? Alexis winced at the thought. With the damage so great, likely her ship would be scuttled in place, her fusion plant set to be breached and left to devour the hulk Alexis had turned her into.

I
t felt
like she’d barely had a moment’s rest before she was shaken awake and sent through a boarding tube to the flagship. Dobb and the other survivors from
Belial’s
crew, Marie, Ferrau, and the other civilians included, remained aboard
Magnanime,
or possibly were transferred to other ships in Cammack’s fleet. Alexis was never sure.

Alexis was whisked straight from the tube to the admiral’s day cabin where she again told her story, this time to Admiral Cammack and
Royal Sovereign’s
captain, Captain Wixson. There she related her experiences on Giron and during the action once more. Word came from the prize crew sent aboard the Hanoverese frigate, and Alexis learned what had occurred there during her action.

Apparently, the Hanoverese captain, furious that a ship so small as
Belial
was standing up to his ship and that his guncrews were performing so poorly, had left his quarterdeck for the gundeck just as one of
Belial’s
broadsides had arrived. He’d been struck down in the midst of haranguing his guncrews. In the confusion after his loss, the frigate’s guncrews had become even more haphazard until
Belial’s
fire had destroyed fully half the frigate’s guns. Further fire from
Belial
had struck the frigate’s quarterdeck, penetrating it and killing both the first lieutenant, then acting as captain, and fourth lieutenant. The second lieutenant took command, but, seeing the arrival of Cammack’s fleet, had determined to put paid to a bad bit of business and ordered the colors struck.

Alexis listened to the report in silence. She was torn between satisfaction that the frigate’s captain was dead and disappointment that he’d escaped further justice for his actions.

Finally she was shown to a cabin and left to rest — and that was the worst of all.

Dobb and the others were quickly absorbed into the fleet’s crews. They had the support of new mates and tasks to keep them busy. Alexis was left idle — she had no place in
Royal Sovereign’s
watch schedule and no duties.

At least fatigue and having to make her report of the action had kept her either occupied or left her mind muddled. Once she had time to rest and her mind was clear, she found herself left idle and with far too much time to think about the action.

Worse, the other lieutenants aboard the flagship either treated her with kid gloves or avoided her altogether. They seemed unsure of her status or of how to deal with her, which Alexis couldn’t blame them for. She’d not only lost a ship, but the refugees aboard and nearly all her crew as well. What did one say to such an officer?

For the most part she stayed in her cabin —
Royal Sovereign’s
eighth lieutenant had been moved to a midshipman’s cabin and those worthies had evicted a master’s mate from his — or alone at the wardroom table. Both Admiral Cammack and Captain Wixson invited her to dine with them nightly, but she was poor company and knew it. Her thoughts were elsewhere.

For hours she studied her tablet, searching for some tactic that would have changed the outcome of
Belial’s
last action, but found none. At last, she was forced to admit that once she’d determined to engage the frigate,
Belial’s
fate was sealed. As the alternative had been to allow more of the transports to be destroyed, she accepted that she’d had no choice.

That knowledge did little to alleviate the loss.

A
lexis jumped
, startled by the sudden rap on her cabin’s hatch.

“Come,” she said.

The hatch slid open and one of
Royal Sovereign’s
midshipmen stuck his head in. There were so many of them about the massive ship that Alexis had yet to keep them straight.

“Admiral Cammack’s asking for you to come to the quarterdeck, sir,” the boy said. “We’ve spotted the Alchiba pilot boat, I hear.”

Alexis frowned. Why would she be needed on the quarterdeck for that? Still and all, a summons from an admiral was not to be ignored. She rolled off her cot and straightened her jumpsuit. The midshipman slid the hatch open and Alexis frowned as she saw that Dobb, Oakman, Chevis, and Hunsley, all of those, at least who were in the Navy, who had survived
Belial
were also with him.

“Admiral’s asked for them, as well,” the midshipman explained.

Alexis led the way, more curious than ever as to why they’d all been summoned. They made their way to the quarterdeck and entered.

“Ah, there you are, Carew,” Cammack said as they entered. “Come over here, please, all of you.” He gestured to the spacers behind her. “Here around the plot, if you will.”

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