| SEAFLOWER - SAMPLE CHAPTER
The low thud of a court-martial gun echoed over Portsmouth in the
calm early-summer morning, the grim sound telling the world of the
naval drama about to take place. Its ominous portent also stilled
the conversation on the fore lower- deck of the old receiving ship
lying further into the harbour. There, Thomas Kydd’s pigtail
was being reclubbed by his closest friend and shipmate, Nicholas
Renzi.
‘I wish in m’ bowels it were you,’ Kydd said,
in a low voice. He was dressed in odd-fitting but clean seaman’s
gear.
Like Renzi, he was a shipwrecked mariner and his clothes were borrowed.
A court-martial would try the sole surviving officer, and Kydd,
who had been on watch at the helm at the time, was a principal witness.
There was a muffled hail at the fore hatchway. Kydd made a hasty
farewell, and clattered up the broad ladder to muster at the ship’s
side. The larboard cutter bobbed alongside to embark the apprehensive
witnesses. In the curious way of the Navy, Kydd joined diffidently
with the petty officers, even though with the death of his ship
his acting rate had been removed and therefore he was borne on the
books of the receiving ship as an able seaman.
His testimony, however, would be given as a petty officer, his
rate at the time.
The pleasant boat trip to the dockyard was not appreciated by Kydd,
who gulped at the thought of crusty, gold-laced admirals and captains
glaring at him as he gave his evidence, which might well be challenged
by other hostile officers. In fact recently it had not in any way
been a pleasant time for Kydd and Renzi. Their return as shipwrecked
sailors to the land of their birth had been met with virtual imprisonment
in a receiving ship; at a time of increasingly solemn news from
the war it was a grave problem for the authorities how to announce
the loss of the famous frigate Artemis. Their response
had been to keep the survivors from the public until a course of
action had been decided after the court-martial, with the result
that both Kydd and Renzi had not been able to return home after
their long voyage. As far as could be known, their loved ones had
had no news of them since the previous year, and that from Macao,
their last touching at civilisation.
The cutter headed for the smart new stone buildings of the dockyard.
The last half of the century had seen a massive expansion of capability
in the foremost royal dockyard of the country, and it was a spectacle
in its own right, the greatest industrial endeavour in the land.
As they neared the shore, Kydd nervously took in the single Union
Flag hanging from the signal tower. This was the evidence for all
eyes of the reality of a court-martial to be held here, ashore,
by the Port Admiral. The court would normally meet in the Great
Cabin of the flagship, but the anchorage at Spithead was virtually
empty, Admiral Howe’s fleet somewhere in the Atlantic looking
for the French. The marine sentries at the landing place stood at
ease – there were no officers in the boat needing a salute,
only an odd-looking lot of seamen in ill-fitting sailor rig. There
were few words among the men, who obediently followed a lieutenant
into an anteroom to await their call. Pointedly, a pair of marines
took up position at the entrance.
It seemed an interminable time to Kydd, as he sat on the wooden
chair, his hat awkwardly in his hand. The voyage across the vast
expanse of the Pacific and the early responsibility of promotion
thrust on him had considerably matured him, and anyone who glanced
at his tanned, open face, thick dark hair and powerful build could
never have mistaken him for anything other than what he was, a prime
seaman. His past as a perruquier in Guildford town was now unimaginably
distant.
‘Abraham Smith,’ called a black-coated clerk at the
door.
The carpenter’s mate stood and limped off, his face set.
Kydd remembered his work on the foredeck of Artemis in
the stormy darkness. Men here owed their lives to the raft he had
fashioned from wreckage and launched in the cold dawn light.
The clerk returned. ‘Tobias Stirk.’ The big gunner
got to his feet, then paused deliberately and looked back at Kydd.
His grave expression did not vary, but his slow wink caused Kydd
to smile. Then he thought of the trial, and his heart thudded.
© Julian Stockwin 2003
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