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    Bolitho 19 - Beyond the Reef


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      Table of ContentsSelected Historical Fiction Published by McBooks Press

      Title Page

      Copyright Page

      Dedication

      Chapter 1 - BAND OF BROTHERS

      Chapter 2 - STRANGERS

      Chapter 3 - ACCUSED

      Chapter 4 - REVENGE

      Chapter 5 - THE HAND OF A LADY

      Chapter 6 - THE GOLDEN PLOVER

      Chapter 7 - CONSCIENCE

      Chapter 8 - BREAKERS

      Chapter 9 - ABANDON

      Chapter 10 - POOR JACK

      Chapter 11 - A DAY TO REMEMBER

      Chapter 12 - WELCOME …

      Chapter 13 - … AND FAREWELL

      Chapter 14 - BAD BLOOD

      Chapter 15 - FROM THE DEAD

      Chapter 16 - POWER OF COMMAND

      Chapter 17 - SHIPS PASSING

      Chapter 18 - GHOSTS

      Chapter 19 - WE HAPPY FEW

      Is that a sail on the horizon?

      Douglas Reeman Modern Naval Library

      Selected Historical Fiction Published by McBooks Press

      BY ALEXANDER KENT

      The Complete

      Midshipman Bolitho

      Stand Into Danger

      In Gallant Company

      Sloop of War

      To Glory We Steer

      Command a King’s Ship

      Passage to Mutiny

      With All Despatch

      Form Line of Battle!

      Enemy in Sight!

      The Flag Captain

      Signal-Close Action!

      The Inshore Squadron

      A Tradition of Victory

      Success to the Brave

      Colours Aloft!

      Honour This Day

      The Only Victor

      Beyond the Reef

      The Darkening Sea

      For My Country’s Freedom

      Cross of St George

      Sword of Honour

      Second to None

      Relentless Pursuit

      Man of War

      Heart of Oak

      BY PHILIP MCCUTCHAN

      Halfhyde at the Bight

      of Benin

      Halfhyde’s Island

      Halfhyde and the

      Guns of Arrest

      Halfhyde to the Narrows

      Halfhyde for the Queen

      Halfhyde Ordered South

      Halfhyde on Zanatu

      BY R.F. DELDERFIELD

      Too Few for Drums

      Seven Men of Gascony

      BY JAMES L. NELSON

      The Only Life That

      Mattered

      BY DEWEY LAMBDIN

      The French Admiral

      The Gun Ketch

      Jester’s Fortune

      What Lies Buried

      BY JULIAN STOCKWIN

      Mutiny

      Quarterdeck

      Tenacious

      Command

      BY JAN NEEDLE

      A Fine Boy for Killing

      The Wicked Trade

      The Spithead Nymph

      BY DUDLEY POPE

      Ramage

      Ramage & The Drumbeat

      Ramage & The Freebooters

      Governor Ramage R.N.

      Ramage’s Prize

      Ramage & The Guillotine

      Ramage’s Diamond

      Ramage’s Mutiny

      Ramage & The Rebels

      The Ramage Touch

      Ramage’s Signal

      Ramage & The Renegades

      Ramage’s Devil

      Ramage’s Trial

      Ramage’s Challenge

      Ramage at Trafalgar

      Ramage & The Saracens

      Ramage & The Dido

      BY FREDERICK MARRYAT

      Frank MildmayOR

      The Naval Officer

      Mr Midshipman Easy

      Newton ForsterOR

      The Merchant Service

      SnarleyyowOR

      The Dog Fiend

      The Privateersman

      BY V.A. STUART

      Victors and Lords

      The Sepoy Mutiny

      Massacre at Cawnpore

      The Cannons of Lucknow

      The Heroic Garrison

      The Valiant Sailors

      The Brave Captains

      Hazard’s Command

      Hazard of Huntress

      Hazard in Circassia

      Victory at Sebastopol

      Guns to the Far East

      Escape from Hell

      BY JAMES DUFFY

      Sand of the Arena

      BY JOHN BIGGINS

      A Sailor of Austria

      The Emperor’s Coloured Coat

      The Two-Headed Eagle

      BY ALEXANDER FULLERTON

      Storm Force to Narvik

      Last Lift from Crete

      All the Drowning Seas

      A Share of Honour

      The Torch Bearers

      The Gatecrashers

      BY C.N. PARKINSON

      The Guernseyman

      Devil to Pay

      The Fireship

      Touch and Go

      So Near So Far

      Dead Reckoning

      The Life and Times of

      Horatio Hornblower

      BY NICHOLAS NICASTRO

      The Eighteenth Captain

      Between Two Fires

      BY DOUGLAS REEMAN

      Badge of Glory

      First to Land

      The Horizon

      Dust on the Sea

      Knife Edge

      Twelve Seconds to Live

      Battlecruiser

      The White Guns

      A Prayer for the Ship

      For Valour

      BY DAVID DONACHIE

      The Devil’s Own Luck

      The Dying Trade

      A Hanging Matter

      An Element of Chance

      The Scent of Betrayal

      A Game of Bones

      On a Making Tide

      Tested by Fate

      Breaking the Line

      BY BROOS CAMPBELL

      No Quarter

      The War of Knives

      Published by McBooks Press 2000

      Copyright (c) 1992 by Highseas Authors Ltd.

      First published in the United Kingdom by William Heinemann Ltd. 1992

      All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or any

      portion thereof in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,

      without the written permission of the publisher. Requests for such

      permissions should be addressed to McBooks Press, ID Booth Building,

      520 North Meadow St., Ithaca, NY 14850.

      Cover painting by Geoffrey Huband.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Kent, Alexander.

      Beyond the reef / by Alexander Kent.

      p. cm.—(Richard Bolitho novels ; 19)

      ISBN 0-935526-82-X (alk. paper)

      eISBN : 97-8-093-55268-2

      1. Bolitho, Richard (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Great Britain—History, Naval—19th century—Fiction. 3. Napoleonic Wars, 1800-1815—Fiction I. Title PR6061.E63 B49 2000 823’.914—dc21 00-058621

      All McBooks Press publications can be ordered by calling

      toll-free 1-888-BOOKS11 (1-888-266-5711).

      Please call to request a free catalog.

      Visit the McBooks Press website at [http://www.mcbooks.com] www.mcbooks.com.

      Printed in the United States of America

      For Kim, my Tahiti girl—

      with love

      1

      BAND OF BROTHERS

      THE NORMALLY sheltered waters of Portsmouth Harbour seemed to cringe under the intensity of a biting north-easterly which had been blowing for some twelve hours. The whole anchorage was transformed into an endless mass of cr
    uising whitecaps with lively catspaws to mark its progress around the many black-and-buff hulls of moored men-of-war, making them tug violently at their cables.

      It was late March, a time when winter was still reluctant to release its grip and eager to display its latent power.

      One of the largest ships, recently warped from the dockyard where she had suffered the indignities of repairs to the lower hull, was the second-rate Black Prince of 94 guns, her fresh paintwork and blacked-down rigging shining like glass from blown spray and a brief rainsquall which even now had reached as far out as the Isle of Wight, a dull blur in the poor light.

      Black Prince was one of the most powerful of her kind, and to anyone but a true sailor she would appear a symbol of sea-power, the country’s sure shield. The more experienced eye would recognise her empty yards, the canvas not yet sent up to give her life as well as strength. She was surrounded by lighters and dockyard longboats, while small armies of riggers and ropemakers moved busily about her decks, and the clatter of hammers and the squeak of tackles were evidence of the work being carried out in the deep holds and on the gun-decks.

      Alone by the packed hammock-nettings Black Prince’s captain stood at the quarterdeck rail and watched the comings and goings of seamen and dockyard workers, who in turn were supervised by the ship’s warrant officers, the true backbone of any warship.

      Captain Valentine Keen tugged his hat still tighter across his fair hair but was otherwise oblivious, even indifferent, to the biting wind and the fact that his flapping blue coat with its tarnished sea-going epaulettes was soaked through to his skin.

      Without looking, he knew that the men on watch near the deserted double-wheel were very aware of his presence. A quartermaster, a boatswain’s mate and a small midshipman who occasionally raised a telescope to peer at the signal tower or the admiral’s flagship nearby, a sodden flag curling and cracking from her main truck.

      Many of the men who had served the guns around him when they had fought and all but destroyed the big French three-decker off the coast of Denmark had been taken from his command while the ship had undergone repairs from that short, savage embrace. Some for promotion to other vessels, others because, as the port admiral had put it, “My captains need men now, Captain Keen. You will have to wait.”

      Keen allowed his mind to stray back over the battle, the terrible sight in the dawn when they had gone to assist Rear-Admiral Herrick’s Benbow in his defence of a twenty-ship convoy destined for the invasion of Copenhagen. Shattered, burning hulks, screaming cavalry horses trapped below in the transports, and Benbow completely dismasted, her only other escort capsized, a total loss.

      Mercifully Benbow had been towed to the Nore for docking. It would be too painful to see her here every waking day. A constant reminder, especially for Vice-Admiral Sir Richard Bolitho, whose flag would soon break out again from this ship’s foremast. Herrick had been Bolitho’s oldest friend, but Keen had been more angered than saddened by Herrick’s behaviour both before and after Benbow’s last fight. It might well be her last too, he thought grimly. With the many ships they had seized from Copenhagen to bolster their own depleted fleets and squadrons, any dockyard might think twice before committing itself to such a programme of repairs and restoration.

      Keen thought of Bolitho, a man he cared for more than any other. He had served him as midshipman and lieutenant, and with him in the same squadron until eventually he had become his flag captain. Keen imagined him now with his lovely Catherine, as he had done so often since their return to England. He had tried to close his mind to it, not to make comparisons. But he had wanted a love like theirs for himself, the same challenging passion which had captured the hearts of ordinary people everywhere, and had roused the fury of London society because of their open relationship. A scandal, they proclaimed. Keen sighed. He would give his soul to be in the same position.

      He walked to the small table beneath the overhang of the dripping poop and opened the log at the place marked with a piece of polished whalebone. He stared at the date on the damp page for several seconds. How could he forget? March 25TH 1808, two months exactly since he had put the ring on the hand of his bride in the tiny village church at Zennor, which had given her her name.

      Like the battle which had preceded his wedding by four months, it seemed like yesterday.

      He still did not know. Did she love him, or was her marriage an act of gratitude? He had rescued her from a convict ship, and from transportation for a crime she had not committed. Or did his uncertainty stem from the fact that he was almost twice her age, when he believed she could have chosen anyone? If he did not contain it, Keen knew it would drive him mad. He was almost afraid to touch her, and when she had given herself to him it had been an act without passion, without desire. She had merely submitted, and later during that first night he had found her by the embers of the fire downstairs, sobbing silently as if her heart had already broken.

      Time and time again Keen had reminded himself of Catherine’s advice when he had visited her in London. He had confessed his doubts about Zenoria’s true feelings for him.

      Catherine had said quietly, “Remember what happened to her. A young girl—taken and used, with no hope, and nothing to live for.”

      Keen bit his lip, recalling the day he had first seen her, seized up, almost naked, her back laid open from shoulder to hip while the other prisoners had watched like wild beasts, as if it had been some kind of savage sport. So perhaps it was, after all, gratitude; and he should be satisfied, as many men would be merely to have her.

      But he was not.

      He saw the first lieutenant, James Sedgemore, striding aft towards him. He at least seemed more than pleased with his lot. Keen had promoted him to senior lieutenant after the tough Tynesider Cazalet had been cut in half on this same quarterdeck on that terrible morning. The enemy ship had been the San Mateo, a powerful Spaniard sailing under French colours, and she had crushed the convoy and its escorts like a tiger despatching rabbits. Keen had never seen Bolitho so determined to destroy any ship as he had been to put down San Mateo. She had sunk his old Hyperion. He had needed no other reason.

      Keen often found himself wondering if Bolitho would have held to his threat to keep pouring broadsides into San Mateo, which had already been crippled in the first embrace at close quarters. Until they strike their colours. Thank God someone still sane enough to think and act in that hell of iron and screaming splinters had brought the flags tumbling down. But would he have continued, without mercy, otherwise?

      I may never know.

      Lieutenant Sedgemore touched his hat, his face red in the stinging air. “I shall be able to get the sails ready for bending-on tomorrow, sir.”

      Keen glanced at the Royal Marine sentries by the hatchways and up on the forecastle. With the land so close there were always the reckless few who would try to run. It would be hard enough to get more hands, especially in a naval port, without allowing men the opportunity to desert.

      Keen had much sympathy for his men. They had been kept aboard or sent directly to other ships to fill the gaps, without any chance to see their loved ones or their homes.

      Keen had spent more time than was necessary on board, simply to show his depleted company that he was sharing it with them. Even as it crossed his mind, he knew that too was a lie. He had stayed because of his fear that he might make Zenoria openly reject him, unable even to pretend.

      “Something wrong, sir?”

      “No.” It came out too sharply. “Vice-Admiral Bolitho will be coming aboard at noon.” He looked across the nettings at the shining walls of the dockyard and harbour battery and on to the huddled buildings of Portsmouth Point, beyond which the Channel and the open sea were waiting. Bolitho might be over there already; at the old George Inn, perhaps? Unlikely. Catherine would be with him. He would not risk a snub or anything else which might distress her.

      Sedgemore kept his young features impassive. He had never really liked his predecessor, Cazalet. A fine seaman, admittedl
    y, but a man who was so coarse in his speech and behaviour that he had been hard to work with. He watched the bustling figures at the tackles, swaying up more bales and boxes from one of the lighters alongside.

      Well, he was the first lieutenant now, in one of the navy’s newest and most powerful three-deckers. And with an admiral like Sir Richard Bolitho and a good captain like Keen, there would be no stopping them once they were at sea again. Promotion, prize-money, fame; there was no end to it, in his mind anyway.

      It was the navy’s way, Sedgemore thought. If a dead man’s shoes were offered, you never waited for a second chance.

      Keen said distinctly, “Tell my cox’n to prepare the barge, and have the crew piped at six bells. Inspect them yourself, although I doubt if Tojohns will leave anything to chance.”

      He glanced at the open log again where the midshipman-of-the-watch was writing something, his tongue poking from one corner of his mouth with great concentration. Another picture crossed his mind. His coxswain, Tojohns, on his wedding day only two months ago, supervising the garlanded carriage which had been towed by the midshipmen and petty officers of this ship, his ship, with himself and his young bride inside.

      He turned aft and stalked away beneath the poop to seek the one place he could be alone.

      Sedgemore watched him go and rubbed his chin thoughtfully.

      A post-captain—what Sedgemore himself would be one day if everything went well for him, and he managed to avoid Cazalet’s fate.

      To be captain of a ship like Black Prince … He looked up and around him. There was no higher reward for any man. He would want for nothing.

      He saw the midshipman staring at him and rasped, “Mr M’Innes, I’ll trouble you not to waste your time, sir!”

      It was uncalled for; but it made him feel more like a first lieutenant.

      Lieutenant Stephen Jenour caught his breath as he turned the corner above the shining dockyard stairs which led directly down to the landing stage. After two months ashore either working for Vice-Admiral Sir Richard Bolitho or visiting his parents in Southampton, he felt at odds with the sea and the bitter wind.

      He thrust open a small door and saw a blazing fire shining a welcome across the room.

      A uniformed servant asked coldly, “Your name, sir?”

      “Jenour.” He added sharply, “Flag lieutenant to Sir Richard Bolitho.”

      The man bowed himself away, muttering something about a warming drink, and Jenour was childishly pleased at his ability to command instant respect.

      “Welcome, Stephen.” Bolitho was sitting in a high-backed chair, the fire reflecting from his gold lace and epaulettes. “We have a while yet.”

     


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