HOW ROGER AND HARRY TOOK PART IN THEIR.
The squadron, headed by the ship of
Cavendish himself, the Stag Royal, was well
on its way to the Indies across the Atlantic, having
taken in wood, water, and stores at the Western Islands.
Roger and Harry, by this time quite recovered from
their first sea-sickness, were fast asleep in their
bunks, it being their watch below, when they were
aroused by a cry on deck of “Sail-ho!”
followed by the question in another voice: “Where
away?”
“Right ahead, sir,” came
the reply. “She seems to be a large ship,
and Spanish by her rig.”
This was quite enough for the two
lads, who, springing out of their berths, dressed
with all possible speed and ran up on deck.
When they arrived there, however,
there was nothing to be seen from that level; but
twenty pairs of eager eyes were looking out from the
forecastle-head, anxious for the first glimpse of the
stranger, who was nearly certain to prove an enemy,
and therefore a prospective prize.
Presently a voice exclaimed:
“I see her, I see her; there she is right ahead
of us!” and at the same moment another hail floated
down from the masthead: “Sail-ho, again,
and several of them!”
By this time both Roger and Harry
could see the topsails of the ship first sighted,
and their hearts beat fast at the prospect of a coming
engagement.
“How many sail can you make
out?” shouted the officer on deck.
“I can see four more, besides
the one we sighted first, sir,” came the reply;
“and the ships look to me like a Spanish fleet
sent out to intercept us, for they seem to be hove-to
and waiting for something.”
“That is well,” replied
the officer, smiling at Roger; “let them only
lie-to until we reach them, and there is not much doubt
that they will get something in the nature of an extremely
disagreeable surprise.”
Now the fleet of Cavendish consisted
of three ships only the Stag Royal,
on board which were Roger and Harry, with Cavendish
himself, she being the flag-ship of the little squadron.
Behind, at a distance of about half a mile, came
the Elizabeth and the Good Adventure,
close together.
Cavendish, having come on deck shortly
after the first hail, looked at the fleet of the enemy,
and then cast his eyes over his own small squadron,
as if comparing in his mind the comparative strengths
of the two fleets.
Then he gave the order: “Prepare
the ship for action, men; clear the decks; get the
hammocks rolled up and triced along the bulwarks; open
the powder-magazine and get powder and shot on deck,
and see that the captain of every gun has a plentiful
supply of each. Also pass the word for the yeoman
of the signals to signal the Elizabeth and the
Good Adventure to prepare for action forthwith,
and to range up one on each side of me.”
Having given these orders, and seen
that the men hastened to carry them out, Cavendish
turned to Harry and Roger, who were standing together
anxiously looking ahead at the five ships, which were
growing larger and more distinctly visible to the
eye every moment.
“Well, young gentlemen,”
said he, “I mean to engage those five ships
that you see yonder, and so will you get your first
taste of the adventure you have come to seek.
See that you bear yourselves bravely; remember you
are fighting for your queen and the honour and glory
of your country. This coming engagement is going
to be no child’s play, you may take my word
for it. They are five vessels to our three, and
are more heavily armed and of bigger tonnage than are
we, by the look of them. But fear not, young
men; faint heart never won fair enterprise; and if
we should beat them as I am certainly determined
that we shall doubtless you will have
a handsome booty to handle after the battle.
Yet will it be hard fighting; and I trust that not
only you two, but every man on board these good ships
of mine will do his very utmost.”
With these words Cavendish turned
away, and went aft to give further orders. Meanwhile
the other two ships of his squadron, in answer to his
signal, had crowded on more sail, and were fast closing
up, one on either side of the flag-ship.
The hulls of the five Spaniards were
now quite plainly to be seen, and it was observed
that they were all prepared and waiting to give battle,
having slightly altered their formation since sighting
the English, in order to secure what they thought
was the best position for fighting their opponents.
They were by this time about two miles
distant, and had formed themselves into two divisions,
in the order now known as “column of line ahead”,
and were evidently expecting the English ships to run
in between the two squadrons thus formed, trusting
thus to be obliged to use only one broadside of each
ship, while the English would be compelled to use
both; the idea of the Spaniards being that with this
formation the English would pass between them one
at a time, and while each English ship would use both
broadsides upon entering the lane between the two
Spanish squadrons, she would be thereafter exposed,
with empty guns, to the fire in succession of the
five Spanish ships; that is to say, the two ships
in line ahead on the one side, and the three in the
same formation on the other.
But if they imagined that the English
were going to walk open-eyed into such a simple trap
as that they were vastly mistaken.
Cavendish saw at once what tactics
the enemy anticipated that he would adopt, and immediately
made up his mind to checkmate them by following a
totally different line of action; and accordingly he
promptly signalled for his other two captains to come
on board. This they did forthwith, and, taking
them into the cabin of his ship, he briefly and hurriedly
explained to them the manoeuvre he intended to adopt
to outwit the Spaniards.
This explanation was soon made, and
the two skippers immediately returned to their respective
ships.
The two squadrons had by this time
arrived within gunshot of each other, and Harry and
Roger, eager though they were for the fight to commence,
were yet conscious of a peculiar feeling something
akin to fright, in extenuation of which it must be
remembered that neither of the boys had ever been
in action before.
It was now half an hour after mid-day,
and one bell sounded on the three ships of the English
fleet.
At almost the same moment, and before
the sound of the bells had died away, the first shot
in the action was fired by the Spaniards.
Harry, who was watching the starboard
line or division of the enemy, saw a flash, and immediately
afterwards heard a whizzing sound, followed from somewhere
over his head by a sharp crash. Then a shower
of splinters fell round him and Roger, who was standing
close by; while immediately following this, down the
wind came the dull boom of the explosion.
Roger looked aloft to see what damage
had been done by the shot; it was not very much:
the fore topmast showed a white mark where a piece
had been neatly gouged out of it, and a few ropes
were severed, but nothing serious had happened.
In accordance with Cavendish’s
orders, no shot was fired in return by the English
fleet; and presently, as they were about half a mile
from the foremost Spanish vessels, a very hurricane
of smoke and fire burst from as many of them as could
bring their guns to bear on the little English squadron.
There was a crashing and crackling
all round, and Roger and Harry involuntarily winced
as the round-shot came flying through the bulwarks,
and spars and splinters came tumbling and flying all
around them. From behind them there came a shriek,
as some poor wretch met his death-wound, and from
across the water more shrieks were heard, announcing
that theirs was not the only ship that was struck.
“First blood to the enemy,”
shouted Harry to Roger through the turmoil of crashing
wood and the shrieks of wounded men.
“Yes,” replied Roger;
“but I wish they would give us orders to fire.
This plan of sailing along without making any reply
to the enemy’s guns is unnerving me, and it
seems to me that if we are fired upon much longer
without replying we shall have no men left in condition
to fight when we get alongside the enemy.”
“Never fear, Roger,” replied
Harry. “Cavendish knows what he is about;
and I think I see, even now, what manoeuvre he means
to execute.”
The three English ships were now heading
as though they indeed intended passing between the
two lines of the enemy’s squadron, and had so
far fired not a single shot. Suddenly, however,
when only separated by a few hundred yards, the English
changed their course two or three points to port,
and headed for the starboard side of the two ships
which constituted the right-hand line of the Spanish
fleet.
Thus the three English vessels were
for a few minutes opposed to only two Spanish ships,
the three others being unable to fire except through
their consorts.
This manoeuvre compelled the other
three ships to leave their present berths and run
before the wind, afterwards tacking before they could
range up on the opposite side of the English fleet
and so bring their guns to bear.
But during the time occupied by this
movement, the English ships were by no means idle.
Upon ranging up alongside the two
Spanish vessels, the sails of the English ships collapsed
as if by magic, the halliards being let go and the
clewlines manned; and, as the craft lost way, grapnels
were thrown, and the ships were secured alongside
two of the Spaniards.
At that period the Spanish war-vessels
were built with “flush” decks, that is,
their decks were level fore and aft, and without bulwarks,
and were of much greater length than the English vessels,
which were short, and therefore more easy to manoeuvre
than the Spaniards. Likewise there were raised
constructions at bow and stern, something like small
forts, called forecastles and aftercastles; the former
word still remaining under our modern term forecastle.
The English vessels were then, as
mentioned above, shorter by a good deal than those
of their opponents, and so the total length of the
three English ships was covered by that of the two
Spanish vessels, which fact preserved them for the
moment from the fire of the other three ships of the
enemy. Roger now saw the reason why Cavendish
had reserved his fire. Immediately his ships
came alongside those of the enemy, the broadsides
of all three were simultaneously discharged, with fearful
effect, for amid the crash of falling spars and rending
timbers could be heard the cries and shrieks of the
wounded, and the moans of the dying.
A dense cloud of smoke spread over
the decks and concealed the combatants from one another,
but the din was terrific; while orders and shouts,
hoarse words of command, and fierce oaths mingled with
the cheers of the English.
The sternmost vessel of the enemy,
which was the one that had received the concentrated
broadsides of two of the English ships, was now on
fire somewhere on her lower-deck; three or four of
her ports were blown into one big opening, and her
decks were a very shambles of dead and wounded.
The fire below made very rapid headway,
and effectually prevented her men from working the
lower-deck guns; it thus happened that with one discharge
from the English guns one of the two Spanish ships
engaged was seriously crippled.
The two craft, however, responded
gallantly from their upper decks with what cannon
they were still able to serve, and a perfect hail of
arrows and arquebus bullets swept the English decks,
mowing down men in all directions.
The English had quietly reloaded those
of their broadside guns that were on the side of the
enemy, the guns of the port broadside being still
undischarged.
“Now, lads,” roared Cavendish
above the clamour and din of rending timber and falling
spars, “give them another broadside; and let
the musketeers on the upper decks and the bowmen in
the fore and after castles follow it up with a volley,
in order to clear their decks. Immediately after
the discharges the boarders are to follow me!”
At the commencement of the engagement
Roger and Harry, seeing what was likely to happen,
had laid aside their light rapiers and armed themselves
with a pair of pistols apiece and the more formidable
English hanger as used by the ordinary seamen; and
shoulder to shoulder they stood by the starboard bulwarks,
ready to spring as soon as Cavendish should give his
order to board.
Meanwhile the three other Spaniards,
seeing the manoeuvre of the English and the danger
of their consorts, had made all sail as quickly as
possible, and were now running away before the wind
in order to go about and stand up on the starboard
tack to engage the English vessels and relieve their
companions, which were in a somewhat parlous state.
The guns of the English ships’
starboard broadsides now once more opened fire with
a simultaneous crash, which was immediately followed
by a discharge of musketry and arrows which laid low
on the Spaniard’s deck nearly every living soul
who had not taken what cover the deck structures afforded.
“Now, boarders,” roared
Cavendish, his voice ringing high above the turmoil,
“away with you, and do not leave their decks
until their flag comes down!”
With a wild cheer the seamen, headed
by Cavendish who was closely supported
by Roger and Harry, who were respectively second and
third on the enemy’s decks, dashed
at the Spaniards.
One of the two Spanish ships was now
blazing fiercely, having been set on fire by the discharges
of the English guns, and her crew were beginning to
think that the time had arrived for them to leave her.
In this opinion they were confirmed by the English,
who were gradually driving them from their own decks
to those of their consort. They were thus, as
it were, between two fires, and were badly hampered
by the necessity to climb from the one vessel to the
other. Those of them who could not gain the
deck of the other ship were driven overboard, and
very few of them survived to reach their goal.
“Quickly, lads,” shouted
Roger; “drive these fellows off the deck, and
let us regain our own ship while we can. The
other Spaniards are drawing up, and will be on us
before we are ready for them if we do not look sharp.”
The seamen, animated by his voice,
and seeing the necessity for doing as he said, redoubled
their efforts, and, with hearty cheers, massed themselves
together and charged along the reeking and slippery
decks.
The Spaniards, unable to resist the
weight of the charge, scattered, and, finding no other
way of escape, dashed below; but they could not so
easily avoid the victorious English, who followed and
hunted them out of their hiding-places.
As Roger and Harry, having dashed
below in pursuit, were running down one of the narrow
alleyways, searching for hidden Spaniards, a man sprang
from behind a curtain and aimed a heavy blow with his
sword at Roger, who was foremost, cutting him down.
With a faint groan Roger fell, and
Harry stumbled over his body, thus enabling the Spaniard
to effect his escape.
Half-stunned from the force of his
fall, Harry raised himself and bent over Roger.
“Roger, Roger,” he exclaimed,
“are you much hurt? Speak to me, lad.”
But Roger made no reply, lying perfectly
still, with a stream of red slowly spreading from
under his head and staining the white planking.
Suddenly, from above sounded a harsh cry.
“Back, back, every man of you,
and cut the ships adrift; the Spaniards are firing
the magazines; back, for your lives!” Loud and
imperative rang out the voice of Cavendish.
“Quick, lads, for your lives, or we shall be
all blown up together!”
“Roger, Roger, wake, lad,”
cried Harry; “the ship has been set on fire,
and will blow up directly. Heavens, what can
I do?”
But Roger never stirred; so, as there
was nothing else to be done, Harry took his body under
the arms and began to drag him along toward the nearest
hatchway.
At this moment the broadsides of the
English again rang out, showing that the other three
Spaniards were drawing up, and were within gunshot.
Meanwhile, on board the Spanish ship
no sound was to be heard save the roar and crackle
of the flames, as Harry, putting out all his strength,
lifted the inanimate body of his friend to his shoulder,
and plunged along the passage through the blinding
and suffocating smoke.
He was dashing forward, holding his
breath as much as possible, with his eyes smarting
with smoke, and feeling as though they would burst
from their sockets, when he crashed up against some
obstacle, dropping the body of Roger from the force
of the contact. A puff of fresh air now blew
the smoke aside for a moment, and Harry saw what was
the cause of his stoppage. His way was blocked
by a stout oaken door, that had evidently been closed
by some seaman when he retreated upon hearing the
alarm that the magazine was in danger of being fired.
Harry dragged frantically at the handle
and turned it wildly, but in vain; the door was secured
on the other side by some kind of spring latch, and
escape seemed impossible.
The smoke meanwhile was momentarily
becoming more and more dense, and it was now an agony
to breathe, while every second of delay meant awful
danger; and Roger seemed to be rapidly bleeding to
death for want of attention to his wound.
Harry looked round for some instrument
with which to force the door, and his eye fell upon
a handspike, probably dropped by some flying foe.
Seizing this, he smashed madly at the door, till at
length the panel splintered under his frantic blows;
then, putting his hand through the opening, he felt
for the latch, found it, and the door opened at his
touch.
Once again raising Roger in his arms,
he staggered blindly along; and at last, bleeding
from contact with splinters, and his hands almost raw
with wielding the handspike, he reached the foot of
the companion-ladder and dashed up it with his still
inanimate burden in his arms.
On reaching the deck he saw that the
grapnels had been cut, the three English vessels had
drifted some hundreds of yards away, and were even
then engaging the three other Spanish ships which had
come up; and the air was again full of the roar of
cannon, the crashing of timbers, falling of masts,
shrieks, groans, cries, orders, and imprecations.
The Spanish ship which had been in
company with the craft that caught fire had vanished,
and only a few timbers and fragments were floating
on the surface; she had evidently been sunk by the
terrible fire of the English guns.
The ship on which they now were, the
Maria Dolorosa, was by this time a spouting
fountain of flame, from her bows as far aft as her
mainmast. Her guns were exploding one after another
as the fire reached them, and added their thunder
to the already awful din.
Harry raised his voice, and shouted
over the water with all the power of his lungs to
the English ships, but the continued roar of the cannon,
mingled with the rattling crash of musketry volleys,
the shouted commands of the officers, the hoarse outcries
of toiling and fighting men, and the crash of rending
wood as the broadsides tore their way into the vitals
of the reeling ships effectually drowned his outcries;
while everybody was far too busily engaged to notice
his critical situation.
“Ah, Roger!” said he,
apostrophising the inanimate figure that lay at his
feet as he stood at the extreme edge of the poop, in
order to be as far away from the furnace heat as possible, “Ah,
Roger, I fear, dear lad, that our lives are coming
to an end even before we are fairly launched on our
adventures! Oh, why cannot they !”
At this moment there was a roar as
if all earth and heaven were dissolving in chaos,
and Harry, feeling as if he were being whirled downward
into everlasting night, knew no more.
The fire had at last reached the magazine!