- Published: 29 March 2022
- ISBN: 9781761043062
- Imprint: Random House Australia Children's
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 304
- RRP: $18.99
Brotherband 9: The Stern Chase
Extract
CHAPTER ONE
Hal smiled to himself as the Heron cut smoothly through the water, rising and falling gracefully; swooping over the small, even waves and sending showers of spray high into the air on either side of her bows as she sliced down into the troughs.
It was good to feel the slight vibration in the tiller and the surge of the deck under his feet once more. He and his crew had spent the winter building this new Heron and he was enjoying being back at sea, and in command.
They were off the Sonderland coast, well to the west of Hallasholm, carrying out final sea trials on the new ship.
‘She’s definitely faster than the old Heron,’ he commented to Stig, who was standing close by, keeping an eye on the taut curve of the sail.
His first mate smiled. ‘That’s only to be expected,’ he said. ‘She’s two metres longer on the waterline.’
Hal nodded. The extra length would make the ship faster through the water. But he had also had time to experiment with the cut of the sails – to shape them and reinforce them with extra seams so they formed a smoother, more efficient curve when the wind filled them. In addition, he had increased the height of the mast and yardarms, so the new ship carried more sail than the old.
All in all, he thought, it was a good result. But there was one thing that bothered him slightly, and that was one of the reasons they had put to sea – to test the new ship under a variety of conditions and see if she would deliver maximum performance.
‘Coming about!’ he called to Ulf and Wulf, who were crouched amidships by the sheets and halyards that controlled the sails.
Wulf signalled that they had heard him and were ready.
‘Tack!’ he called, putting the helm over and swinging the ship into the eye of the wind.
The twins brought the current sail down to the deck and hoisted its opposite number as the ship turned.
There, thought Hal, sensing a slight hesitation as the bow came around. But she had enough speed and momentum to carry her through the manoeuvre and, within seconds, the new sail had filled with a dull booming sound and was driving her firmly on the opposite tack, the slight hesitation left behind. But, still, he thought, it had been there. He had first sensed it earlier, when the wind had been lighter than the brisk breeze that drove them now.
‘Let out the sheets!’
The twins allowed the ropes that controlled the sail to loosen, and the sail to billow out somewhat, losing the tight, hard curve. As the pressure reduced, the speed fell away until Heron was coasting along, with the wind over her port side.
Hal waited, conscious of Stig’s watchful gaze. Thorn, in his position by the fin keel, was watching as well. Both of his friends knew what was on his mind. They had discussed it earlier that day when they had set out on these final trials.
‘She’s griping still?’ Stig asked quietly.
Hal nodded. ‘I’ll try her again,’ he replied, then raising his voice, warned the sail handlers. ‘Coming about!’
Wulf signalled that he and his brother were ready and Hal called out the executive order.
‘Tack!’
The tiller went over and the bow started to swing up into the wind. But this time, without the same speed and momentum behind it, the movement was slower and more tentative. Hal felt the resistance that shuddered through the hull as the bow pointed up and tried to cross the wind’s eye, then fell back to starboard, the sail shuddering violently and losing the wind so that Heron sagged off, away from the turn, and wallowed to a halt, sail flapping and sheets loose. Then the bow began to fall off further to starboard and the wind caught the sail, so that when Ulf and Wulf hauled in on the sheets, it filled once more and the ship steadied and slowly began to cut through the water, back on the original port tack.
Stig shook his head, a worried look on his face. ‘The old ship wouldn’t have failed to come about like that,’ he said.
Hal shrugged. He was relatively sure he knew where the problem lay and it would be easy to fix. ‘Her bow is sitting too low in the water. It’s causing resistance to the turn,’ he told Stig. ‘She simply needs re-trimming.’
He called to Ingvar and Jesper, who were watching events, crouched in the rowing well on the port side, several metres astern of the mast.
‘Move the cask back a metre,’ he ordered, and the two of them scrambled up onto the raised centre deck, where a twenty-litre cask of water was standing on the centre line, and where Hal had chalked a set of half-metre measurements.
They wrestled the cask back along the chalk line, settling it on the mark that Hal had indicated, taking a few seconds to make minor adjustments so the positioning was perfect. They knew that when Hal said a metre, he didn’t mean a metre and a bit, or ninety centimetres. He meant a metre.
Satisfied that they had the cask correctly positioned, Jesper turned and signalled the fact to Hal, then the two of them dropped down into the rowing well, their eyes fixed on the young skirl at the steering oar.
Hal nodded, saying quietly to Stig, ‘That should do it.’
The cask, full of water, weighed twenty kilograms. Moving it aft should have raised the bow slightly, altering the trim of the ship. Hal brought the ship up towards the wind. Ulf and Wulf, out of sheer habit, went to haul in the sheets and power up the sail, but he called out to stop them. He wanted to keep the speed and the power down to see if his slight adjustment had made Heron more responsive.
He glanced at the sail and at the wind telltale. The sail was full but bellying slightly. The wind was blowing over their port bow.
‘Ready to go about!’ he warned, then, ‘Tack!’
He shoved the tiller over and the bow swung up into the wind. This time, he didn’t feel the hesitation as it crossed the eye of the wind. The bow continued to swing sweetly and under control as the sail shuddered and collapsed. Then Ulf and Wulf hauled it down and sent the starboard sail up in its place.
There was the familiar WHOOMPH! as the sail filled and the twins hauled in the sheets to set it in a firm, taut curve. The Heron surged forward on the new tack, gathering speed as she went. Hal allowed himself a satisfied grin.
‘We’ll try it again!’ he called, and they repeated the action – allowing the speed to drop off, then swinging the ship to starboard, across the wind.
And again, she completed the manoeuvre without hesitation, turning smoothly onto the new tack and powering away once more. Hal’s grin grew wider as he moved the tiller slightly from one side to another. As ever, he enjoyed the feeling of the slight tremors passing through the tiller to his hands – tremors that told him the ship was a living being, not a lifeless assembly of timber, ropes and canvas. She was his, ready to do his bidding and to do it gracefully and smoothly. Gradually, the speed built up and she began to heel more to starboard as the twins held the sail taut.
‘Loosen up a little!’ he called, and the ship came upright.
The bow slashed through the water like a giant knife, sending spray high on either side. Contrary to expectations, releasing the sails a little so that the ship was more upright allowed it to plane, reducing the drag of the water on the hull so that she actually moved faster, sitting high out of the water.
It was an exhilarating feeling, but there was one aspect missing. On the old Heron, some fault or flaw in the hull or fin keel had created a slight vibration through the ship when she rose onto the plane this way, setting up a hum that resonated through the hull.
It had been a flaw, but Hal had always enjoyed it. Now that the hull didn’t vibrate the same way, he found he missed it. He wondered if there was some way he could induce that same hum on the new hull and keel. He made a mental note to experiment when they returned to Hallasholm.
‘Hal?’ Stig said quietly.
He came back to the present. Planing like this was exhilarating. But it also had its dangers. The ship was very close to being out of control and, to signal this, she began to roll from side to side, the roll becoming more pronounced with each movement.
If this continued for too long, the roll would take over, so that the helmsman was always behind the movement, unable to check it. When that happened, the motion became more violent and more rapid, until the ship spun out of control or capsized.
‘Slacken off!’ he called to the twins, and they quickly spilled wind out of the sail so that the ship sank down off the plane and the rolling ceased, leaving Heron sailing smoothly and docilely on her way.
Stig shook his head. ‘I never enjoy that feeling,’ he said.
Hal nodded. ‘No wonder they call it a death roll.’
Sensing that the experiment was over, Thorn made his way aft to join them. He gestured at the cask, sitting on the central deck.
‘That seemed to do the trick,’ he said. ‘But are we going to have to sail with a barrel of water sitting amidships?’
Hal shook his head. ‘I’ll rake the mast back a little when we get home,’ he said. ‘That’ll put enough weight aft to keep the bows up.’
Thorn nodded. He was an experienced sailor and he knew the feel of a ship. As a result, he had also noticed that she was crabbing slightly during low-speed tacks. But having the technical skill and know-how to fix it were beyond him. Those things he would happily leave to his young skirl.
‘Whatever you say,’ he replied.
Seeing that the experimental manoeuvres were done with and Heron was heading for home, Stefan had resumed his normal lookout position on the masthead. His voice reached down to them now.
‘Sail ho!’ he called. ‘Sail on the port bow!’
CHAPTER TWO
All eyes swung to follow the direction of his pointing arm. But from the deck, nothing was yet visible. A few seconds later, Stefan corrected his initial warning.
‘Not one, but two ships! Close together!’ he called.
Hal and Stig exchanged a quick glance. It was not unheard of for two ships to be sailing in company, although as a general rule ships travelled alone. But to be close together indicated something more sinister.
Stig moved to the starboard bulwark and sprang lightly up on it, steadying himself with one hand on a stay. ‘I see them!’ he called, just as Stefan added more detail.
‘Their sails are down! They’re hove to!’
Hal felt his pulse quicken. Two ships close together, stopped in the water and with neither having a sail hoisted – Stefan’s first warning of sail ho had been standard terminology for sighting a ship – usually spelled one thing.
Stig quickly confirmed that such was the case. ‘They’re fighting!’ he called. ‘The nearer ship is a raider, and she’s closed alongside the other to board her.’
Hal glanced down the length of the Heron. The crew were all turned towards him, watching him expectantly. ‘Arm yourselves!’ he ordered.
There was an instant scramble for the rowing wells, where the Herons kept their personal weapons. Hal gestured to Edvin as the healer emerged with his sword slung round his waist. The crew’s shields were ranged along the bulwarks of the ship.
‘Pass me my sword,’ Hal requested, and Edvin moved aft to retrieve Hal’s sword from the skirl’s personal locker. Hal took it and, while Edvin steadied the helm, whipped the sword belt round his own waist and buckled it firmly in place. Then he took the tiller again with a nod of thanks.
‘Ulf! Wulf! I’m bringing her as close to the wind as she’ll bear!’
The twins nodded their understanding and bent to the sail handling sheets. The two ships were in the worst possible position for a swift approach – almost dead upwind of the Heron. Hal teased the tiller around, bringing the ship up into the wind until the sail began to flutter along its leading edge. Then he let her fall back a degree or two as Ulf and Wulf adjusted the sail.
Thorn came striding back down the deck to confer with his skirl. He was the fighting commander on board the ship and he would lead the charge onto the enemy’s deck. He was buckling on his massive club-hand as he came, having removed the wooden hook that he used for day-to-day matters. He raised his eyebrows in a question as he looked at Hal, deferring to the younger man’s judgement and seamanship.
‘We’ll reach her in two long tacks,’ Hal said, understanding the unspoken question. ‘We’ll board her from astern, over the starboard quarter.’
The grizzled warrior nodded assent. It was what he had expected. He looked at Stig, who had dropped down from the port bulwark and was swinging his axe experimentally.
‘You ready?’ Thorn asked.
Stig grinned back at him. ‘Lead the way,’ he said and, as Thorn made his way for’ard, followed in his footsteps. The others in the crew stood aside to make room for the two warriors who would lead them aboard the other ship. Jesper, Stefan and Ingvar would follow them. Edvin would go next, with Ulf and Wulf – staying in their sail handling positions till the last moment – being last to board.
Hal would stay by the tiller unless he saw the need to join the fight on the enemy ship’s deck.
Beside him, crouched on the deck, Kloof lay with her chin on her outstretched forepaws. Her eyes flicked from side to side, watching the preparations among the crew. As they took their positions and handled their weapons, she uttered a low, rumbling growl from deep in her chest. She knew what was coming. She had seen it before.
‘Steady,’ Hal cautioned her. ‘You stay here.’
The dog’s reply was another growl.
It wasn’t just a sense of righteousness that compelled Hal’s decision to join in the fight. Some years back, Erak had signed contracts and treaties with the other countries bordering the Stormwhite Sea, setting up Skandia and her powerful fleet of warships as custodians of the sea lanes. After a long history as predators, Skandian wolfships were now committed to stamping out piracy and providing a protective umbrella under which commercial traders could go safely about their business.
It was Hal’s sworn duty, if he saw a trader being attacked by pirates, to go to the ship’s aid and to sink or take the corsair.
‘Stand by to go about!’ he warned. ‘Tack!’
With the altered trim, and with the ship sliding across the wind at full power, there was no hesitation this time. The bow swung smoothly through the wind. The starboard sail came sliding down while the port sail rose quickly to the masthead, taking the wind, billowing out, then steadying as the twins hauled in and set it firmly to the wind.
The ship necessarily lost speed in the manoeuvre, but within twenty metres on the new tack she had recovered and was heading obliquely towards the battle at full speed. Hal saw movement in the port side rowing well and Lydia climbed up on deck, moving across towards him. She was slinging her quiver of darts over her left shoulder. Her atlatl hung from her belt.
Her role in the coming fight was a long-distance one. She wasn’t equipped or trained for close-in fighting – although she could defend herself quite effectively at a pinch. Instead, she stayed back and protected the backs of the Herons as they fought, picking off any threatening enemies with her well-placed darts.
‘They haven’t seen us yet,’ she remarked.
Hal gazed keenly at the two ships, locked together. Their crews were a struggling mass in the bow of the trading ship – a wide-bodied vessel with plenty of room for cargo, but a corresponding lack of performance. Lydia was right. The raiders were intent on their prize and the trading crew had retreated to the bow, where they were struggling to hold off the boarders. Neither group had eyes for the small Skandian ship bearing down on them.
‘Let’s hope they don’t until it’s too late . . . for them,’ Hal replied. Kloof growled again and Hal looked down to silence the dog with a warning gesture. The last thing he wanted now was for Kloof to alert the enemy by barking a challenge at them.
‘Settle, girl,’ he warned her and Kloof lowered her chin to her paws again, emitting a series of frustrated growls and grumbles.
‘Time to tack again,’ Hal said, judging the speed and the angle with his eye. He wanted to slide Heron in alongside the pirate, on her starboard side. Mindful of the warning he had just issued to Kloof, he gave a low whistle to alert Wulf and Ulf, then indicated the tack with a hand signal before putting the helm over once more.
The little ship came round smoothly and accelerated towards the two ships. Hal could see now that they were locked together by grappling ropes, thrown from the pirate to secure her prey alongside.
‘Who are they?’ Lydia asked.
Hal, assuming she meant the pirates, replied, ‘They look like Iberians. There are eyes on the bow.’
He had noticed this detail on the previous tack. Iberians painted eyes on the bow of their ships. It was a tradition that went back to an ancient superstition. Their forebears had believed the eyes allowed their ship to see the way in unfamiliar waters. He shook his head grimly. Of all the seagoing nations Erak had originally approached, the Iberians had been the most reluctant to join in paying for the Skandian fleet’s protection. That was because the Iberians had a much greater interest in piracy than the others.
Heron was sliding in closer now. There was only forty metres to go. He called to Ulf and Wulf. ‘Drop the sail!’
He didn’t want to slam into the Iberian ship at full speed. The sail slithered down in an untidy heap as the twins released it, and instantly the ship began to lose speed. Hal saw that he had judged it nearly perfectly as Heron glided in beside the pirate, the last of her way coming off her as she nudged against the other ship’s side.
Jesper and Stefan swung grapnels over the side, hooking them into the Iberian’s bulwarks and heaving on the ropes to bring the two ships together. As they did, Thorn turned to the waiting group of warriors and shouted his time-honoured battle cry:
‘Let’s get ’em!’
As he bellowed the command, he leapt nimbly onto Heron’s railing, then up onto the pirate ship, his massive club swinging in small arcs, seeking a target. Stig was half a pace behind him, fanning out to his left, his battleaxe ready. The rest of the crew scrambled aboard in their turn, yelling their own versions of Thorn’s battle cry.
They swarmed across the Iberian ship’s deck. All her crew were aboard the trader, which accounted for the fact that Heron had been able to approach unnoticed. In a matter of seconds, the yelling Skandians had crossed the empty deck and were dropping down onto the trader.
It wasn’t until they were almost upon the pirates that they were noticed.
Brotherband 9: The Stern Chase John Flanagan
Pirates have stolen the Skandians' best ship and it's up to Hal and the Heron brotherband to find them in the unputdownable ninth adventure in the New York Times bestselling series.
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