Home > My Bonny Light Horseman(4)

My Bonny Light Horseman(4)
Author: L.A. Meyer

Better to die fighting than to die on the scaffold at Newgate!

John Thomas slams his fist into the face of the Bo'sun, who goes down, his nose spurting blood. The Bo'sun drops his knobby, which Smasher McGee picks up and uses to flail away at all those on board who do not belong to our company, and he is deadly accurate with the thing. Soon there are men strewn all about the deck holding their heads in their hands.

I take a more practical approach in this melee. Seeing Bliffil down on his knees, trying to shake off Daniel's blows, I whip out my shiv, jump on him from behind, and wrap my legs about his middle. I take a fistful of his hair and pull back his head, laying the blade against his throat.

"You move, Bliffil, and the only reward you'll get is the one you got comin' on Judgment Day. You understand?"

A strangled gurgle is all I get from him, but it is enough.

I look over to see that John Thomas has picked up the stunned Bo'sun's Mate and lifted him up over his head. "Give my regards to Davy Jones, pig," he shouts as he pitches him over the side.

As the Bo'sun's splash is heard, the Captain shouts, "Enough of this! Boarding Party away!" and sailors and marines from the frigate swarm over the side and onto our deck. Smasher continues to flail away with the knobby and men fall, but I can see that all is lost—there are just too many of them.

"Brothers!" I shout to my crew. "Stop fighting! It is no use! Captain! Listen to me!"

My crew stops fighting, and there is a sudden silence as I address the Captain. "Let us go or I will cut his throat."

The Captain considers this and then shakes his head. "No, that cannot be. You are a wanted fugitive, and it cannot be said that Captain Hannibal Hudson let you slip away. No, if we have to fire on you and sink you, then I am sure that Lieutenant Bliffil will thank God with his dying breath that he was able to do his duty. Gunner's Mate, are all the guns primed and ready to fire?"

"Yes, Sir."

"Well, then, prepare to fire, upon my order."

We are not as high as the other ship, but we are high enough to look squarely down the barrels of the loaded cannon. I can smell the burning of the matchlock.

"Wait," I say, not loosening my grip on Bliffil's hair nor relaxing my legs from about his waist, nor taking the blade from his neck. "Let my men and my ship go and I will give myself up."

"No, Missy, don't do it!" cries Daniel. "We'll fight them! We'll—"

A Royal Marine now has him by the scruff of his neck, and he gives the lad a vigorous shake, but still the boy struggles on.

I see the Captain, who I now am able to observe is a large man with long blond hair tied back with a blue ribbon, considering this. He thinks, and then he says, "Agreed. Now, just how shall we accomplish this transfer of female fugitive and Intelligence Officer?"

Hmmm. The man has a sense of humor, and I store that fact away.

"You will give me your word as an officer and gentleman that you agree to my terms," I say. "And I will release this sack of dung and then board your ship as your prisoner. Do you so give me your word?"

"I do. Now, let's get on with this. Mr. Curtis, will you see to fishing out our very damp Bo'sun's Mate? Mr. Bennett, make all preparations for getting under way again. London awaits and I think all will agree that it holds many more charms than does this desolate stretch of ocean."

Hear, hear is heard once again. These men are anxious to get back home.

I release Bliffil and jump back from him, so as to stay out of his reach. He, as expected, spins around and makes a grab for me, and I dance back away from him and hold my shiv between us.

"I will be your captive when I set foot on that ship, but not before, Bliffil," I say. "Now get off my boat!"

"Ha, ha! Mr. Bliffil," crows the Captain, "it seems your little bee has a stinger! For your own safety you must come back aboard. Don't worry, our marines will see to your fearsome captive!"

There are roars of laughter from the man-of-war and Bliffil reddens and says, just loud enough for me to hear, "Oh, I will get you for this, slut, and for what you did to me back on the Dolphin, oh, yes, I will." And he climbs back aboard the other ship, the ship whose name I do not yet know but which will be my home for many, many days. Perhaps, even, my last home.

Two Marines come up to me and one of them takes me by the arm. "Give me the knife and come along," he says.

"Please wait a moment, Corporal. Higgins, if you would get my seabag?"

Higgins nods and goes below and returns with not only my seabag but also his.

"We are ready. Lead on, soldier," says Higgins. Higgins, you can't...

"Hold on there," says Bliffil, upon seeing that Higgins means to go with me. "Just the girl. Not the man. She cannot be allowed any allies on board."

"Why not?" asks the Captain.

"Sir, she has her ways of bending men of low degree to her will. She has been in command of two ships, and one of them was a British warship, the Wolverine!"

"That," says the Captain, pointing at me, "was in command of one of His Majesty's ships? Impossible, Sir!"

"The books, Sir, the stories that are told throughout the fleet," pleads Bliffil. "She is that very one!"

"I never believed those stories," snorts the Captain, "but very well. The Intelligence Branch must be served, I suppose. Bring her aboard alone."

I am shoved forward. "Sergeant, will you take my bag and see that my knife goes back in it? Thank you."

The Marine looks up to the Captain, who nods and says, "Yes, her bag, too. Maybe she has something presentable in there that she can wear on the voyage."

"Good-bye, Higgins," I say, an unbidden tear working its way down my cheek. "You have been so good to me."

"Good-bye for now, Miss," he replies, loud enough for the Captain to hear. "Rest assured there will be an army of lawyers on the dock in London when you arrive."

"Be that as it may," says the Captain, "but we are wasting this fine breeze. Get her up here and let us be gone. Is the Bo'sun back aboard? Good."

"Good-bye, lads," I say to the rest of my crew. "Do not worry about me. I have a way of getting through things like this."

They stand in a row, Jim Tanner furiously wiping his nose that's still oozing blood from the fight, John Thomas and Smasher nursing bloody knuckles, and young Daniel glaring at my captors with pure hatred in his crying eyes.

"Good-bye, Missy."

I turn my own tear-streaked face from them and climb up onto the deck of the man-of-war.

"Cast off those lines. Get back aboard, the rest of you!" roars the Captain. "Goddammit, could you be any slower? Mr. Fleming, you have the con! Get us on our way! Christ, at this rate we'll never round Margate!"

"Topmen aloft to make sail!" shouts the Lieutenant. "Throw off those lines! Move it!"

The deck explodes with activity—orders are shouted, men race aloft to drop the sails, gangs of sailors haul on the buntlines to raise the heavy canvas, all an ordered chaos that is very familiar, and true, very dear to me. How sad that I will be here as prisoner and not as seaman, on what will very probably prove to be my last voyage on this earth. Oh, well, I'm not dead yet.

I am, however, drawn up and forced to stand before the Captain. Bliffil appears beside me and grabs me by the arm. "Tears, is it?" he rasps in my ear. "From one such as you?" He flings me back to the Sergeant of Marines. "Let's get her below and into the brig! I will search her there!"

"Hold on, Mr. Bliffil," says the Captain. He has been looking up and examining the set of sail and now, seemingly satisfied with what he sees, brings his gaze once again on me. "You will what?"

"You saw with your own eyes, Sir, that she had a knife up her sleeve. See, here is where she keeps it," says Bliffil, grabbing my arm and pulling back my sleeve, exposing my forearm sheath. "I must search her at once for other weapons. For the safety of everyone aboard."

"She will be searched, Mr. Bliffil," says the Captain, "but not by you." He turns to an officer standing next to him and says, "Mr. Bennett, please send for Dr. Sebastian and have him meet us down in the brig."

Mr. Bennett, who seems to be a very senior Lieutenant and who is the First Mate, says, "Aye, Captain," and nods to a young midshipman who scurries away and down a hatch to no doubt fetch the ship's surgeon.

"All right," says the Captain with a final look at the sails, "let us go below and show this ... creature ... to its new quarters."

As I am led across the deck to the hatchway, I steal one last glance across the sea at the Nancy B. Alsop, my gallant little schooner, its sails tight and its Faber Shipping, Worldwide, banner snapping bravely in the breeze.

Oh, how happy I was not an hour ago!

Chapter 2

We are below and I am in the brig, while the others stand outside. I note that the cage is constructed differently from the usual ones in which I've been jailed. This one has been built into the bow of the ship three levels down, such that it is a triangle, with two of its walls being the leaking hull of the ship, and the third made of thick wood with a barred door in its center. There are the usual amenities—a hard bench, a moldy blanket, a chamber pot, and that's it. The door has not yet been closed. There is a lantern hung by the hatchway, shedding its dim light on this dismal place. I seat myself on the bench and wait.

Bliffil has been going through my seabag, uttering an occasional Aha! The two Marines take their posts at either side of the cage door, and we are soon joined by the aforementioned Dr. Sebastian. He is a small, dark-haired, and rather sour-looking man of about thirty-five years, and he carries with him a black bag containing, I expect, medical instruments.

"You will examine this person, Doctor," says the Captain, "for proof of gender—I'm still not convinced we have not captured a wayward boy—distinguishing marks, state of health, and ... er ... cleanliness, and all that. When you are finished, bring her to my cabin with your report. Mr. Bliffil, if you are quite through, please leave."

"Sir, I must protest," sputters Bliffil.

"And, you, Sir, must do as you are told," says the Captain, with a cold edge to his voice, making it quite plain that he is not used to his orders being questioned. The Captain leaves, trailed by a still-sputtering and protesting Bliffil.

The Doctor turns to the Marines. "This would be better done in my surgery, as the light here is too dim. The orlop is one deck up. Bring her there." He turns and leaves.

The Sergeant reaches in and pulls me to the hatchway. "Don't try nothin', you."

I don't try nothin', knowing it would avail me little. I meekly follow the Marine up the stairs to the next level and into another space.

It is the orlop, the surgery, and the Doctor was right—it is better lighted. There are a number of lamps on the walls, and he goes around turning them up. The place gets even brighter, the light glinting off the many surgical tools hung on pegs—saws and cleavers and sharp knives that I know are for the hacking off of destroyed limbs after a battle. There is also a microscope, next to which are specimens, pieces of something or other, and next to them some crude drawings of the same. There is also a large, flat operating table.

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