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"Like other escorting vessels, Mister Larkin?" Lewrie pressed.

"Uhm, well… sorta like, sir, aye," Larkin ventured, nodding.

Lewrie clapped his hands in the small of his back and rocked on the balls of his feet, beginning to beam a sly grin. "What, gentlemen, did the learned Doctor Samuel Johnson call it, what was the word in his Dictionary for when you go in search of one thing, but find a better, all unexpected? Mister Adair, you're our resident scholar…"

"It is 'serendipity,' Captain," Lt. Adair supplied, grinning in mounting expectation. "We've discovered the French convoy, sir?"

"I do b'lieve we have, sir," Lewrie replied. "Mister Langlie, a point more Westerly, do you please. Put us bows-on to them, so they see a ship, for now. And I'll have the stuns'ls, sprits'l, and royals taken in, to boot. We may need to manoeuvre hard on the wind. Chain-slings to be rigged on the other yards, and boarding nets fetched out ready for hoisting. Mister Grace?"

"Aye, sir?"

"Bend on and be ready to hoist our number and the challenge in this month's private signals book… the one we share with the American Navy," Lewrie slyly said, "and dig into your flag lockers and get that Yankee courtesy flag ready to hoist as well. With our own near to hand, of course. Hop to it, gentlemen, make it happen, instanter!"

Was the convoy British, he'd eat his hat. It could only be the Americans, or the French-Choundas's convoy! The Jonathons would form much larger convoys, with dozens, or scores, of home-bound ships; and he either knew the names of every United States Navy warship sent to the Leewards to escort them, or he already knew them by sight!

Now, just let 'em hoist Yankee colours, and I'll know for sure, Lewrie gloated; let 'em try to answer with the right signals. Even if they got their hands on 'em, somehow, they can't bluff their way out with false identities/

"Aloft, there!" Lewrie cried to the lookouts. "How stand those American ships, astern of us?"

"Lead ship's nigh hull-up, sir!" one of them responded. "Rest are close astern o' her, showin' tops'ls and courses!"

"Uhm… I'll have to hoist the American flag from the foremast, sir," Midshipman Grace piped up near his elbow. "With the wind on the starboard quarter, and our bows direct at them, they'd not be able to see it plain, else. But Mister Elwes has the private signals ready on the larboard mizen halliards, sir."

"Very well, Mister Grace, scamper forrud and bend it on, then hoist it soon as you may," Lewrie bade him impatiently, and Mr. Grace scuttled off with the "gridiron" flag lightly bound in twine under his arm. Moments later, it was soaring aloft, still a colourful ball 'til it reached the halliard peak block, where a twitch and the power from the wind let it burst open like a bright flower to stream alee. One long minute passed before they got a reply.

"Deck, there! Near ship's hoisted colours… American!"

"Excellent!" Lewrie chortled. "Now, Mister Elwes, hoist away! And make what ye will o' that, Monsoor Frog."

The signals soared aloft and broke out in a string of nine code flags. The "convoy" was drawing closer, the nearest almost hull-up to Proteus, so there was no way they could not reply to them. But Lewrie had to pace about and stew for what felt like five minutes before that lone "escort" whipped off an answer.

"Well?" Lewrie demanded of Mr. Elwes, who was frantically flipping through his signals book.

"Can't make it out, sir," Elwes fretted. " 'Tis nothing current, not in the past six months' codes, at least. She shows a private number

for the USS Pickering, but Pickering is a Revenue Service cutter, and she hoisted her private number and the reply to our challenge out of proper sequence, sir."

"Then she's lyin' through her teeth," Lewrie gladly concluded, clapping his hands in glee. "Make to her the usual jibber-jaw, 'where bound' and such. Hah! Ask her if she's seen USS Sumter! That'll be int'resting. And on the starb'rd halliards, Mister Elwes, where she can't read 'em… hoist Hancock's number, followed by 'With All Despatch' and 'Enemy In Sight.' "

"American," Choundas muttered, sullenly fuming at this sudden and disturbing revelation. "American, of all things. Signal the rest of the ships to hoist American flags, Griot. We will bluff her."

"Oui, m'sieur, but… she hoists another set of signals. How do we answer them?" Griot asked him, striving to maintain the required sangfroid, but revealing his worry anyway. "She names herself in new codes that we do not possess. We were fortunate I had an out-of-date copy in my desk, but… is she a merchantman, or a man-of-war, we do not know until she closes us."

"Two corvettes and a well-armed schooner against a single brig of war, Griot?" Choundas scathingly sneered. "Merchant or warship, in another hour it will not matter, for she'll be our prize. We do know the code flag for 'Repeat.' Angled as she is on the Trades, her flags are difficult to read. She must come closer, fall a bit astern of us, or press a bit ahead, to make them readable. Close enough for you to sortie out and take her under fire, quickly re-enforced by La Resolue and Hainaut's schooner. Tell them we lost the latest signals book in a hard blow, and must fall back on the old one. Surely, they have it, still, and will accommodate a… fellow countryman." He chuckled.

"Ohe/" the main-mast lookout shouted. "Ships ahoy! Two… no, three ships to the starboard beam, astern of the nearest one! Three sets of topsails, top-gallants, and royals… headed North-West!"

"Merde, that close?" Griot griped, dashing back to the bulwarks with his telescope extended once more. "This near one must have masked them, if we see topsails, already. They could be up to us in another hour or so. Mort de ma vie, m'sieur. What if they are warships?"

"And what if they are a whole convoy?" Choundas barked back, in sudden loathing for the usually stoic Griot's uncharacteristic "windiness." And he'd thought him a Breton paragon, all this time, a worthy scion of the ancient Veneti, courageous as himself!

"They're almost hull-up to us, from the deck, sir," Lt. Langlie announced. "Six miles, perhaps? And our Yankee 'cousins' are closing us rapidly," he said, swivelling about for a peek aft.

"We'll be close-aboard the French in half an hour on this wind," the Sailing Master, Mr. Winwood, soberly opined. "And the Americans, so I do adjudge, will be up to broadsides a half hour after that,

s? sir.

"Mmhmm," Lewrie absently acknowledged them, all ascheme, and a bit too impatient to create a little inventive mischief and mayhem to wait that long. The strung-out convoy arrayed in-line-ahead was split in equal halves by Proteus's bisecting bowsprit. They could haul up harder on the wind and cut them off, they could wear once more and duck astern of them, go dashing for the lee-side and the vulnerably slow escorted ships… which?

Didn't plan on it, but I've led the Yankees to a fight, Lewrie pondered; / commit to battle, and Goodell'd never forgive me for wadin' in before he could get up, and there goes his grudgin' gratitude, and any chance o' future cooperation. Two corvettes, mayhap the schooner is an armed auxiliary, too, hmm… discretion the better part o ' valour, for once? Use my bloody head, for a rare once?