Deathlands 118: Blood Red Tide (33 page)

Read Deathlands 118: Blood Red Tide Online

Authors: James Axler

Tags: #Science Fiction

At the sound of a sob, Ryan and J.B. looked across the ship. As the captain’s hand servant, Doc had sewn Oracle into a bit of canvas. Doc’s hands were still bloody. He sat on a crate next to Mr. Squid’s barrel. Mr. Squid sat inside, conserving her hydration for the battle. She had one suckered arm across Doc’s shoulders. Her arm contracted in slow, gentle contractions and the colors of the rainbow rippled across her flesh.

“Gunny, bring up your crews for the stern and bow chasers. Make everything ready. The
Lady Evil
is going to try and chip away at us, so make her pay for it. You’re at liberty to fire at will.”

J.B. grinned and put a knuckle to his fedora. “Mighty kind of you, Captain.”

Ryan descended from the stern to the main deck. Koa squatted among the Tahitians, muttering quietly. Since he’d shacked up with Tahiata he’d gone from a figure of foreign islander abuse to the de facto Polynesian commander. Gypsyfair had had no time to tailor him an officer’s jacket. The only one available had been too small, so he’d cut off the sleeves. Combined with his royal Hawaiian headdress and cape, his sartorial splendor was something to see.

Ryan crooked a finger. “Mr. Koa, if you please.”

Koa rose. “Yah, boss!”

“How’s the crew?”

“Freakin’ out, brah. Oracle made a speech, and the powers that be listened. Captain called the thunder, and he got struck down. Question is, is the trade done, or did he doom us?”

Ryan looked to where Oracle had fallen. The deck had been scrubbed clean of blood and gore except for two circles of coagulated blood where Oracle’s horrible ape paw and his genuinely scary skeletal hand lay on the wood. No crewman was willing to touch them, and neither Ryan nor Loral had seen fit to give the order. Ryan was just glad neither had started moving of their own accord. Oracle lay in state in his cabin.

“Do you know?” Koa asked.

Ryan considered everything Oracle had told him and Oracle’s last, terrible, unopened envelope. “No.”

“This crew’s hanging by a thread. They’ll fight, but that’s because they have no choice. No one knows who’s captain anymore. Morale is low. You got any ideas?”

“You’re girlfriend told me my best option was to win.”

“Tahiata’s a good woman, and that’s good advice.”

“...right before she offered to sleep with me on the beach.”

Koa’s eyes flew wide. “You dick!”

Heads turned around the deck. Ryan nodded. “Bet your last jack on it, poi-boy.”

Koa threw back his head and laughed. Given the ship’s situation, the sound was almost alien. “I will kill you, brah!”

Ryan ignored the insubordination and possible mutiny and spoke loud enough for all to hear. “If we win, I give the
Ironman
to you and Molokai, Tahiata gets the
Lady Evil
, then you two can have yourself a real naval battle.”

“Screw that. We learn those ships good, then maybe we sail around the horn and give those Falklanders a dose of Polynesian pain. I remember a challenge in the gov’nor’s hall!” Koa’s voice rose to a roar. “Maybe
Glory
wants a piece of that!”

Crewmen of every stripe shouted, whistled and whooped in affirmation. Ryan shouted above it. “Skillet!”

The cook shouted up the gangway. “What?”

“A meal for the crew!”

“Tahiata sent us off with some pig.”

“Cook it! Cook it all! Then douse all fires!”

“Aye!”

“Purser Forgiven!”

Forgiven squinted into the sunlight shining down the gangway. “Aye?”

“Tot of grog for every crewman who wants it after the meal, a stiff one!”

“Aye!”

The ragged cheers strengthened. Ryan strode to starboard and leaped onto the rail. He grabbed a shroud and looked at the
Ironman
behind and the
Lady Evil
pulling ahead. “We’ve run two continents, two oceans and sea. I’m tired of running.” Ryan turned to look at the crew. “Who wants to fight?”

The crew roared.

“Mr. Manrape!”

Manrape called back from the con. “Aye!”

“After the crew is fed and grogged—” Ryan turned his gaze back toward the
Ironman
disappearing into the distance “—turn this tub around.”

Chapter Twenty-Nine

The sound of cannon fire was continuous. Miss Loral was sailing rings around the
Ironman
. The
Lady Evil
had sprinted far ahead of the
Glory
to gain the weather gauge and hold her. The last thing either Sabbath had expected was for the
Glory
to turn about and attack the
Ironman
.

Ryan’s bet had paid off. The
Ironman
was huge, even bigger than the
War Pig,
but she had been built after the fall. She was a far from perfect imitation of the oceangoing junks of old, and so were her cannons.
Ironman
had a lot of them, but they were crude, small and slow. The
Glory
was a museum piece, and her cannons had been forged in a long vanished, far better time of craftsmanship.
Glory
’s blaster crews had a century-old tradition of excellence, and they had J.B. Dix riding herd on them as gunny.

The
Glory
was pounding the
Ironman
to pieces.

Her cannons were larger, faster and better aimed, and she clung a hundred meters out to the
Ironman
’s
starboard side and smashed out her blaster ports with terrible precision. The
Ironman
shot for sails and spars, and damage was being done. Ryan was inches from giving the order to lower
Glory
’s aim and shoot to smash
Ironman
’s hull at the water line.

Ryan and Koa stood at the prow and fired. The one-eyed man and his Scout longblaster were the only shooters in the battle with an optic, and he shot for officers and gunners. Koa had his beautiful, wood-furnitured AR and swept the
Ironman
’s tops. Ryan squeezed his trigger and killed the third man to take the
Ironman
’s wheel. Sabbath was not to be seen. Ryan shouted over the sound of cannon fire. “Koa, I told you the
Ironman
would be yours and Molokai’s! But—”

“Sink the fucker!” Koa shouted. His AR pinged out a last spent shell. “Empty!”

“Take command of the Tahitians!” Ryan ordered. “Go!”

Koa scooped up his war club and ran down to join the
Glory
’s platoon of war-screaming Polynesians. The
Ironman
turned to bring her stern about. Like the
War Pig,
she had four stern chasers to the
Glory
’s two. With most of his starboard weapons silenced, Sabbath was taking a last desperate shot at cracking one of the
Glory
’s masts. Ryan saw his chance and shouted down the hatch. “Gunny, go for the
Ironman
’s rudder! Fire as she bears!”

J.B.’s voice was ragged from the powder smoke filling the lower deck. “Aye!”

The
Ironman
poured in fire, but it was slackening. Their predark blasters were few in number and running out of shells. The sharpshooters in the
Glory
’s tops were doing cold-hearted chilling work. The cannons below went silent. Ryan watched the
Ironman
desperately try to bring her four stern cannons to bear. The enemy ship gave J.B. a perfect line. He shouted the order. “Fire as they bear!”

The
Glory
’s port side cannons began going off with slow, terrible precision. Cannonballs smashed low into the rudder of the
Ironman
. Ryan watched black-painted wood shatter and throw white splinters with the blows. Cables broke, and the rudder suddenly sagged like a broken fan in its housing.

The
Ironman
was dead in the water.

Ryan felt a terrible surge of hope with the crippling of the
Ironman
.
Glory
could turn and take the
Lady Evil
in a stand-up duel of sailing and gunnery and then come back for the
Ironman
later. “Miss Loral!”

Loral had already seen it. “Mr. Manrape, hard to starboard! Bring us about on the
Lady!

Ricky broke ship’s protocol as he shouted in desperate warning. “Ryan! Ryan! The
Ironman!

Ryan looked back at his stricken prey.

A cannon rumbled across the
Ironman
’s forward deck. The weapon’s barrel was long and narrow and painted brown against rust. Ryan’s lips skinned back from his teeth in a snarl as he saw the protruding projectile. The black iron spearhead had huge, sharpened tines pointing backward past the muzzle. Ryan would have given anything for another loaded mag for his Scout. He drew his SIG and began firing as fast as he could pull the trigger. One hundred meters on a pitching deck was long. The black and white face-painted crew rolled the weapon up to the rail. They slammed anchoring hooks into the scuppers and fired. The iron spear flew, twenty feet of chain rattled out from the shank and the rest of the line behind it was heavy rope.

The cannon was like Skillet’s harpoon blaster, except this weapon was made for harpooning ships.

Ryan saw the trajectory and roared. “Atlast! Atlast!” The man looked up from desperately splicing cable at the bowsprit. The giant iron shank smashed through him. “Atlast!”

The massive harpoon head crunched into the deck. DontGo ran forward screaming. “Atlast!”

Ryan reloaded as men aboard the
Ironman
ran the harpoon cable to the capstan. Crewmen heaved themselves against the levers. The
Ironman
was drawing
Glory
into an embrace of death. The harpoon head ripped free of the deck and dragged Atlast screaming with it. Half a dozen tines sank deep into the bowsprit with the combined weight of two ships of war behind them. Atlast howled as his flesh failed between both. DontGo hacked at the chains with his boarding ax to no avail. Ryan shouted to the tops. “Jak, machine blaster! Clear the
Man
’s capstan!”

Ryan and Loral had agreed to put the
Glory
’s one machine blaster up in the tops. Jak leaned into the stock of the ancient M-60 general-purpose machine blaster and rained lead on the
Ironman
’s capstan crew.

Loral’s voice carried like the scream of a leopard over the chaos. “Ryan!”

Ryan snapped his gaze across the ship just in time to see a second harpoon blaster on the other end of the
Ironman
fire at
Glory
’s quarterdeck. The
Ironman
had two capstans. The grapnel drew furrows in the deck and sank into the rail.

The
Glory
was hooked. Men on the
Ironman
heaved on the capstan spars and reeled her in like a fish. Ryan’s gut went cold as an army boiled up from the
Ironman
’s hatches. He had been to Canada, and he recognized the tuques, long shirts, leggings and war clubs. When Sabbath had gone through the Northwest Passage, he had taken on Canadian sec men as marines. Lots of them. J.B.’s cannons were emptied and would not respond in time. Ryan was still an amateur ship commander, and despite his surprise turnabout, the Sabbaths had played him.

Ricky shouted from the tops. “
Lady Evil
is on us!”

Ryan looked back. The
Lady
was on a perfect oblique course to avoid J.B.’s cannons, just like J.B. had taken on the
Ironman
’s rudder. The
Lady
’s bow chasers fired. One cannonball tore a chunk from the
Glory
’s mainmast. The second blasted the Kelper Balls into bloody, exploding strings. The
Glory
couldn’t move. Ryan watched in horror as the
Lady Evil
turned in slow pirouette to give the
Glory
another oblique broadside that could not be answered.

Ryan roared, “Down! Down! Down!”

Every
Glory
crewman hugged the deck.

The
Lady Evil
’s cannons roared. Spars broke, rigging snapped and fell, and splinters flew like flying knives. Ryan jumped up to see the
Lady
turn again. She came in prow first like she intended to ram. Ryan racked his slide home on his last mag as the two brass harpoon blasters on the
Lady Evil
fired and tore man and deck apart. Ryan watched her forward capstan turn and her cannons give the
Glory
another broadside. Rope, sail and wood fell and a half-dozen Tahitians were decimated.

Doc appeared at Ryan’s side. He had his sword in one hand and his LeMat in the other. “My dear Ryan.”

“No time, Doc!”

“You are captain now. I have been ordered to defend you at all costs. Truth to tell, I would have done so anyway without an order.”

Ryan’s world closed in on him as he flung a glance back at the quarterdeck. Miss Loral was down. Manrape attended her. With the
Glory
harpooned from both sides, there was no point in manning the con. The titan rose as two Mapuche hustled Loral down the hatch to Mildred in the med. Manrape took up his silvery scattergun and snapped on the red-painted bayonet.

Doc held out a J.B. Special. “It was always going to come to this. Your plan is sound. We can win.”

Ryan felt Oracle’s last envelope of doom burning in his pocket as he took the blaster and slung it. Ryan barked orders. “Onetongue, form the Phalanx! Yerbua and Nirutam, sound all hands on deck except cannon crews! Everyone abovedeck, fire your personal blasters dry! Ready your J.B. Specials and wait for the order!”

The drums pounded. Cannons fired as J.B. continued to rip out the
Ironman
’s guts. Ryan strode across the ship with Doc as his shadow. Techman Rood fell into step with a carved, ivory, dragon-hilted samurai sword. Strawmaker draped his cape over his arm and fell into formation. Gallondrunk ran to join them with his terrible walrus iron. Skillet stood waiting by the gangway with his double harpoon longblaster and assortment of cleavers of all sizes. Nubskull and Smyke were already by the con.

Other books

The Devil Earl by Deborah Simmons
All Fired Up (DreamMakers) by Vivian Arend, Elle Kennedy
The Perfect Machine by Ronald Florence
Resurrection by Curran, Tim
Michael Thomas Ford - Full Circle by Michael Thomas Ford
The Sex Surrogate by Gadziala, Jessica
Easy and Hard Ways Out by Robert Grossbach
Kiljorn Commander by K. D. Jones