[Sir Ludar by Talbot Baines Reed]@TWC D-Link bookSir Ludar CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN 7/13
Where I was, the smoke was soon so dense that I could see but little clearly.
More than once, I know, the _Rata_ was in the thick of the fight, pounding away at the Englishmen, and receiving broadside after broadside in return, which crashed against the hull and shook me where I hung at the mast-head.
The sails round me were riddled with shot, and once or twice I, coming suddenly into view, became a special target for the enemy's marksmen. Little cared I! For at every shot that day the banner of Spain tottered lower and lower to its fall, and the flag of old England spread wider and more proudly in the breeze! Presently, I remember, an English ship named the _Vanguard_, slipped suddenly in betwixt the _Rata_ and another tall Spaniard, so close that we swung there all three together, with our yards entangled, and blazing away at one another, till I wondered if there could be a man left alive below. As for me, up where I was, I thanked Heaven that the smoke around me rose in clouds and hid me.
As it was, many a bullet, shot at random, whizzed through the cords to which I clung, and once a great booming shot tore away the streamer at the mast-head.
But so busy were all down below that no one troubled himself to look for the skulker aloft, who sat there, as it seemed, above the clouds, not even knowing, as the day wore on, whether the _Rata_ still belonged to the King of Spain or to her glorious Majesty. Suddenly, hard by, I heard a loud shout, and looking round, saw, on the yard-arm of the Englishman's ship, a smoke-bedimmed fellow, with his knife betwixt his lips, crawling towards where, at every lurch, the pole on which I squatted swung across his own.
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