"Bring her about to port, nice and gentle, but keep tightening the turn until she starts t' list. Then pull back," Captain Vex said.
"Aye, Captain," Colin Strong said with much less enthusiasm than usual. The big man looked like hell. The whole right side of his face and parts of the left were swollen and bruised in an angry clash of colors. Purples, yellows, even some blues and greens. The impact points were the fierce dark red of abraded skin and broken blood vessels. His upper lip was swollen and his eyebrow was split, a large scab caked on it from being hit with the tankard. Or maybe from the boot heel. Or from having his face bounced off the floor. He wasn't really sure. His right eye was now swollen shut, which was fine by him. Using both eyes quickly made his headache worse. His left arm was in a makeshift sling made from a triangle of old sailcloth.
He was slowly steering the ship with one arm. The crew had paused their work and put away their various tools, and were either down in the hold or holding onto something, ready in case anything went wrong. First Mate Danica North was mid ship in the role of Bosun, her pipe in one hand, holding onto a mast line with the other.
The Kestrel gracefully shifted her heading, turning slowly to the left. They weren't tacking the sails at all. The captain wanted to see how she turned with nothing but the sea's help.
"Thirty degrees," Colin said, marking the previous point the Captain had ordered as the maximum turn. The Kestrel seemed like she was doing fine. Colin tightened the turn. "Thirty five."
The Kestrel was riding low in the water. The nine smallboats added a lot of weight, and they'd countered the high balance with barrels of seawater down in the lower holds. Thirty five degrees of turn was a hard turn for any bigger ship. Normally it was easy for the Kestrel, but now the added weight and sub-optimal distribution brought on a lot of back pressure very quickly. The rudder strained. Colin braced himself and held the wheel firm. They were at full sail, but the wind was light, so they were only traveling at about half their top speed. Captain Vex scowled. The ship wasn't listing yet, but she was close. Colin kept turning the wheel.
"Forty degrees," he said. The deck was leaning. The timbers had begun to creak slightly. They were feeling the bounce of every wave now instead of cutting them. This was the Kestrel's usual "safe" turning radius. For other ships it would have been considered quite tight, possibly dangerous, but she was built for this. The extra weight was doing a number on her, but she was holding. At a higher speed she might not be able to take it, but for now, she was holding on the edge of steady.
"Forty two... Forty four..." A wave hit the starboard side of the prow and the Kestrel lurched under the push. Colin yanked the wheel the other way. Crew on the deck held tight as their weight was suddenly tossed. One man on the deck crew lost his footing and hit the deck but held tight to the mooring line in his grip. The ship creaked. Then, as quickly as it started it was over. The ship began to straighten out, the feeling and sounds of strain releasing. Colin released the wheel and let the water beneath them push the rudder back to straight. He was trying not to show it, but the strain of fighting the wheel and then the abrupt jarring as the ship listed had Colin feeling nauseated. His blood was thudding in his head.
"Set the knot at forty," the Captain said.
The ship's helm worked by pulling on tiller lines, thick ropes that ran from the wheel, down below the deck through a pulley system to the rudder below. Captain Vex had painted markings on her tiller lines, so the degrees of a turn were counted on the rope itself.
Colin took a knee, his breathing slow and measured as he fought back the throbbing between his eyes. He used his good hand to grab the tiller line above the forty degrees port mark. His mate grabbed below. They turned the thick rope in opposite directions. Colin's mate had to strain and use both hands. Untwisting a tiller line while it was under tension was not easy.
The three strands that made up the rope uncoiled slightly. Colin's new helmsman's mate threaded a smaller length of red-dyed rope through the strands of the tiller line. Colin released it, letting it go back to it's usual tension. The short length of red rope was now trapped at the 40 degree mark. The helm's mate wrapped the red rope around the line a few times, then tied it in a simple knot. Now, if the wheel tried to turn past forty degrees, the knot would catch and stop the wheel dead.
"So we've lost about ten degrees," Captain Vex said, half to herself. "We're still doing better than most ships our size. I guess we'll have tae hope we don't need to do anything fancy." She was not happy with the loss of maneuverability. She noticed that all the color had gone out of Colin leaving him looking sickly in the midday sun. "Have a seat, Mister Strong. Ye're relieved. Let's 'ave your mate get some practice on the wheel."
"Aye, Captain," Colin mumbled. He was thankful. Just that much exertion and he was worried he might vomit. He'd been in fights before, but nothing had ever felt this bad. He sat down on the long bench that ran the length of the rear of the quarter deck.
"What's your name, sailor?" the Captain asked the new Helmsman. "I don't recognize ye, so ye must be one of the hires we picked up in Prince's Cove.
"Aye, ma'am. Name's Alejandro Mesa," the young man said excitedly.
"Glad to have you, Mister Mesa. It's rare for a sailor to be anythin' but a rigger on their first day. I'm guessing ye have some experience on a the helm?"
"Aye, Captain. Some. Not on a ship this size thought." Mesa said excitedly. He was stocky and a few inches shorter than Belita. She guessed he was still a teenager from the sparseness of the hair on his face, but he had the brawny build of someone who'd been doing manual labor for years. "I grew up on a fishing boat. I had the wheel a few times."
"Well, this should feel similarly. The Kestrel's bigger, but she moves like a ship half her size. Did your family do ocean fishing, or stick tae safe waters?" Belita asked.
"Ocean, Ma'am," the stocky kid said.
"Ma'am an' Sir are for military folks, sailor. Just Captain will do fine on the Kestrel," Belita was smiling, but her tone was firm.
"Yes, Ma- uh, Captain," Helmsman Mesa said, a bit flustered.
"What's our course?" Belita asked.
"Uh..." the young man looked at the compass mounted to the top of the helm.
"The compass isn't going to tell ye our course, sailor," Belita said. She was deliberately giving him some pressure to see what he'd do.
"East? Nine... ah, ninety degrees," he said, trying to think, remembering what he overheard the First Mate telling Helmsman Strong earlier.
"And what's our heading?" The Captain asked.
The new helmsman looked at the compass again. "Northeast."
"So if our course is east, and our heading is northeast, that means our turn test took us pretty far off course. How about ye get us back on track?" Belita asked.
"Aye, Captain," Mesa said with a smile. He began to slowly turn the wheel, bringing them back to their intended course. The ship gently and gracefully swung back toward the east.
"Now we're running parallel tae our intended course," Belita said once the ship was headed east again. "We aren't far off, but if we were tae correct our heading after a storm, or after being pushed off our track by a current, if all we did was get back on our original heading we might miss our destination. After goin' off course, th' heading has tae be reassessed."
"How do I do that?" the Mesa asked. He looked like he was realizing he was in over his head, but was handling it well.
"Ye don't," Belita shook her head. She pointed to Will, who had just come out of the cabin directly below them and was squinting into the glare of the noonday sun. "That's the Navigator's job, or the First Mate if the Navigator is off duty or indisposed. If the both of 'em are unavailable, then it falls tae me."
"Alright. So what do I do until I get a reassessment?" he asked.
"Stay th' course you've been given." Belita said. "As ye gain more experience, ye'll learn to be able tae feel it when ye go off your course. The ship'll tell ye. When tha' happens, ye ask whoever has command of th' deck for a course check. Ne'er be afraid to speak up about that. Keeping us on course is your second most important duty."
"What's the first?" the Mesa asked.
"Don't crash." Colin rumbled from behind them.
Belita laughed, "Aye. Don't crash."
"So I should ask for a course check now?" the young helmsman asked.
"Not quite yet. We still have another steering check tae do. Just keep her steady a moment while the deck crew makes sure nothing came loose when we listed." the Captain said.
"Aye, Captain," Helmsman Mesa said, setting his eyes dead ahead and feeling the waters beneath trying to gently pull on the wheel. He wasn't doing much, but steering the ship was important. His young heart swelled.
"Missus North, we all secure?" Captain Vex called down from the rail.