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Southwick came aft, beaming.

'Satisfied, sir?'

'Perfectly, Mr Southwick.'

'If you did it like you did last time, sir, we'll be all right.'

 Ramage glanced up sharply and was just about to tell him to watch his tongue when he realized the man was serious: the fool really thought the first attempt was well done. Well done -with ten corpses already bundled over the side without ceremony and fifteen men below wounded, three of them - in John Smith's phrase - dragging their anchors for the next world....

He put the telescope to his eye and looked at the Belette, judging the distance. He waited and then without looking round called to Jackson, Haul down the "Preparative"!'

'Aye aye, sir.'

 Half a mile away: that’d give the Belettes six minutes to get out of the Tower and board the frigate. God, it had been a temptation to give them ten minutes, so there would be no risk to the Kathleen: in that time they'd either have captured the ship, or the survivors would be jumping over the side in confusion, giving him plenty of warning of their failure.

 But by allowing them six minutes he was gambling on the Kathleen coming alongside a couple of minutes after they had boarded, just as the French quit the guns to fight them off. The Kathleen's carronades barking at their heels might tip the scales, showing the French they were trapped between the boarders from the Tower and the guns - and possibly more boarders - from the Kathleen.

 He looked at the Belette's transom and was surprised to see the damage done by the Kathleen's carronades. Realizing it would do the Gunner's Mate good to see the result and tell the: men, Ramage called: 'Edwards — take the glass and have a  look at the damage. I want the next broadside to be as effective, if we have to fire it.5

 The man ran aft and took the telescope, steadied himself, and gave a whistle. 'Well, we certainly wrecked the cabin!'

 A typical reaction, thought Ramage, smiling to himself: the idea of smashing up the captain's accommodation in one of the King's ships while acting under orders obviously appealed to him.

 'But sir—' exclaimed Edwards, and then stumbled as the ship gave a violent roll. He steadied himself and again looked through the telescope. '—Yes! By God, sir, more men are going on board!'

 Ramage snatched the glass: Edwards was right, but the men were British: dozens were lining the edge of the cliff and jostling their way down a few feet to swarm across the fallen masts, and the masts themselves were already thick with sailors.

 'Run out the guns, Mr Southwick! Quartermasterl Steer as if your life depends on it!'

 The Belettes had quit the Tower and started to board much more quickly than he'd allowed, blast it: now he had to increase speed to help them - just when he wanted to make his final approach as slowly as possible: a cutter took a lot of stopping.

 He swung the telescope downwards again to the root of the masts: there was no sign of smoke, so perhaps the French in the ship had not yet spotted the seamen scrambling down towards them. Ramage said a silent prayer that the men were not yelling, so they could benefit from surprise.

 Looking back along the edge of the cliff he could see the sea­men were thinning out: a good half of them were on the masts or already on board. Why were there no French uniforms on the cliff? The break-out from the Tower must have taken them completely by surprise.

 Ramage shut the telescope with a snap: the Kathleen was so close he could see enough with the naked eye.

 The cutter's quartermaster was watching the leeches of the jib and mainsail like a hawk, reacting with the tiller to every gust of wind. The ship was so close under the cliffs that the  wind was fluky, much of it blowing down at an angle, and changing direction slightly.

 'Mr Southwick - I want those men in position with the grapnels and heaving lines. Tell the foredeck men to be ready to back the jib.'

 The frigate's stern was looming up large: now he could see right along her side: the guns were run out and again trained as far aft as possible. He could see that her chainplates, thick boards sticking out edgeways from the hull and originally supporting the shrouds that held up the masts, would be a problem. No, maybe not - they might be just a bit too high to tear at the Kathleen's shrouds.

 He saw seamen, each with a grapnel in his hand, stationing themselves along the side of the cutter, and John Smith, lately the Third and now the Second, was already out on the end of the bowsprit, partly hidden by the luff of the jib.

 Six men with grapnels, another half dozen to handle the jib sheets and halyard, ten more to get the mainsail down - well, there were very few left to handle the guns.

 The most dangerous time will be after the Belettes are on board the Kathleen and she's getting under way again: if the French manage to get the guns and fire even a couple of rounds...

Ramage rubbed his forehead as another idea came to him.

 Since his own carronades would not do much good - firing them into the ship risked killing Britons as well - he decided to gamble on the Belette's guns having been left while the French tried to fight off the boarders.

 'Jackson! Pick a dozen men and as soon as we get alongside, board her and cut through as many of the breechings and side tackles as you can. Then do what you can to help the Belettes.'

 If the French fired a gun without the thick rope breeching -which stopped it after being flung back a few feet by the recoil - the gun would career right across the deck, killing any­one standing in the way.

 Jackson grinned with pleasure, drew the sword presented to Ramage by Sir Gilbert, and ran along the guns picking his men.

 Two hundred yards to go ... How much way did this damned ship carry? Blast, a wave punched her bow round to larboard, but the quartermaster quickly put the tiller over for a second and the cutter came back on course.

 Yet Ramage was in a better position than he thought: he could now see the full length of the frigate's side and the Kathleen's course was parallel to and fifteen or twenty yards to sea­ward of the frigate's centre-line.

A hundred and fifty yards ...

'Mr Southwick - ease the mainsheet.'

That began to slow her up handsomely.

'Overhaul the mainsheet and the weather jib sheet.'

 That ensured the ropes would be clear for the moment he ordered the jib to be backed, when the wind against the canvas would try to thrust the bow to leeward, away from the frigate. But hardening on the mainsheet at the last moment and putting the tiller over would push the bow up into the wind towards the frigate. The two opposing forces should balance and cancel each other out, leaving the cutter hove-to right alongside the frigate, close enough for the men to throw the grapnels and hook them over the bulwarks.

A hundred yards, maybe less, and the blasted cutter was going along like a runaway coach: damnation, he had to risk it. If she stopped short of the frigate they were all in trouble, whereas if she was travelling too fast as she came alongside there was at least a chance of stopping her with the grapnels, or banging her hard against the frigate's hull with a sudden luff. 'Mr Southwick - we'll heave-to alongside. As soon as the grapnels are over, pull us in. I'll pass the word when to let fly the main and back the jib.'

 Seventy-five yards at a guess, and it was a rough guess at that.

 No one looked worried: Southwick's face was placid, the quartermaster was concentrating on steering, and Jackson was making some swipes with Sir Gilbert's sword, testing its balance.

'Mr Southwick, back the jib!' Ramage snapped.