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Authors: Dewey Lambdin

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You'll not have me, Jemmy, Alan swore to himself. If you try, I'll have you! Railsford'll never abide a sodomite in his ship, not with the Navy trying so hard to stamp it out on long cruises. We're not in Cambridge.
Kenyon came back on deck once more, and made his way
towards the taffrail, out of ear-shot of the other people in the harbor watch or the working parties. He crooked a finger to draw Lewrie to follow him.
“I am sorry to hear that Mister Claghorne passed over, sir,” Alan said, trying to mollify the man.
“He shot himself, Lewrie.”
“Ah, too bad.” Alan frowned. Claghorne had been an idiot, but there never had been anything in his life that Alan knew of that would force him to that. “Gambling debts, sir?”
“You, you little bastard,” Kenyon snarled. “Admiral Matthews gave him a commission after
Parrot
made port. He got her as his command, and the shame was too much for him.”
“But why in hell would they do that, sir?” Alan marveled. “He's the one struck her colors. Moody the bosun called him a coward to his face!”
“Ah, but remember, Lewrie, our passenger Lord Cantner and his lady, who thought you were so bloody marvelous that you'd saved their lives and their profits from the sale of his Jamaican properties, all the gold they'd brought aboard with them.” Kenyon sneered. “They went to Matthews and bade him make sure you were written up a hero, and that meant there could be no mention of the colors being struck—not quite the honorable usage of the white flag—and they didn't want it getting round that a British ship had done such a thing. Fortunately, there were no survivors from that privateer brig, you made sure of that.”
“Claghorne wouldn't allow us near her as long as she was afire, sir, and I was down with the Yellow Jack myself before we could do anything, so that is grossly unfair, sir,” Alan shot back.
“Keep a civil tongue in your head, boy,” Kenyon ordered. “So poor Claghorne is a new commission officer, senior in a victory over a more powerful foe, and what's the reward for a faithful first?”
“Promotion and command, sir,” Alan stated, in control again of his emotions.
“Yes. And would they transfer him into another ship?”
“If they had half a brain, sir, given the circumstances.”
“Aye, they would, but old Onsley is not blessed with brains, is he, Lewrie? More tripe and trullibubs upstairs to match the suet down below. What sort of chance do you think Claghorne had in command of a crew that knew him for a man who once was forced to strike? Whether or not there was a chance to fight that privateer, he was in command, and his decision was correct,
simply because he was a senior officer, do you comprehend that, Lewrie? You disobeyed him!”
“So you'd rather be dead or in chains, sir?” Alan demanded.
“Damn you to hell, sir!” Kenyon spat. “Have you learned no shame, no sense of guilt for what you have done? You cost a good man his life.”
“I saved yours, and every man-jack aboard, sir,” Alan retorted. “Besides, Claghorne was ready to strike as soon as he saw that brig, and nothing you or anyone else could have said would have changed his mind, and not doing everything in one's power to prepare a ship to fight, or offering no resistance when there's a chance to do so is cowardice, at least a court-martial offense on one charge, sir. But we did offer resistance, and I proved that resistance was possible, so Claghorne should have been strung up, or cashiered. Now it's not my fault Sir Onsley gave that fatuous clown
Parrot,
sir. Had he given it a little thought, he would have known it was a death sentence, and …”
“God, I knew you were base, but I had no idea you were such a cold-blooded, dissembling hound, Lewrie!” Kenyon marveled. “Had the colors still been flying, your resistance would have resulted in every man-jack, as you put it, slaughtered with cold steel. And to smear a good man's name, to call him a clown, a fatuous clown … I once thought highly of you, Lewrie. I asked for you in
Parrot.
I took you under my aegis when I saw how you were floundering about those first weeks in
Ariadne.
I'd like to think that what little you have learned about the Navy was partly my doing.”
“It is, sir, believe me.”
“I gave you my trust,” Kenyon went on, his heart almost breaking as the enormity of Alan's perceived sins overwhelmed his anger. “I brought you up from a seasick younker, taught you, gave you room to grow as a seaman, gave you responsibility, and I thought you were growing into a fine young man. But then you let me down so badly.”
“I am sorry you see things that way, sir.” Alan calmed, knowing he would not be able to get through Kenyon's screen of bile with any logic. “But I was technically second in command of
Parrot
at the time, and had a responsibility to do everything I could to prevent us being taken. Lord Cantner's knowledge of government secrets, their persons, the ship's people …”
“Don't cloak your actions in any false sense of duty,” Kenyon snapped, back in rancor again. “I told you in my letter I'd not abide you in my presence, nor in my Navy, and I meant it.
There's a vile streak to you that belongs in the gutter, not strutting about a quarterdeck as a junior warrant. Now I'm first officer into this ship, I shall make sure you serve her, and the Fleet, no longer than necessary.”
“And satisfactory performance at my duties could not alter your resolve, sir,” Alan sighed, steeling himself to use his ammunition.
“Not a whit, Lewrie. I mean to see you cashiered, or broken to ordinary seaman and sent forward in pusser's slops.”
“That's devilish unfair, sir.”
“Not to my lights it ain't.”
“There are other officers who think highly of me in this ship, sir,” Alan countered. “Your intent will look like persecution.”
“I've been in the Navy ten years longer than you, Lewrie, I can find a way, believe me,” Kenyon promised with a lupine grin that lit his countenance for a bleak moment. “And when you are broken, I'll shed a martyr's tears over your lost potential. No one shall portray sadness more than I.”
“Ah, but you
are
good at acting, sir,” Alan let slip out as the threat loosened his last cautions. “By the way, sir, have you seen Sir Richard Slade in Kingston lately?”
“What do you mean, sir?” Kenyon asked, suddenly on his guard.
“I was just wondering if he was still buggering his little black link-boys, and the odd house-guest?” Alan replied. In for the penny, in for the bloody pound, he thought grimly.
“You think that I …” Kenyon spluttered, but Alan was delighted to note that the man had blanched a fresh, book-paper white under his deep tropical tan, and his eyes almost bulged out of his head.
“I was in ‘The Grapes' when you and Sir Richard came up in his coach, sir,” Alan went on. “I saw the crest on the door, recognized the man,
and
the naval lieutenant in the coach with him, sir.”
“I never suspected until now just how
filthy
you are, Lewrie,” Kenyon muttered, still floundering after that broadside to his hull. “All the more reason to break you and toss you back into the sinks and stews you came from!”
“But do I malign you, sir?” Alan asked, fighting a grin of triumph. “Or is your manhood just another sham?”
“You'll pay for this,” Kenyon said, once he had regained control over himself. He smiled wickedly, which smile made Lewrie
wonder if he was half the sly-boots he had thought himself just a second before. But he knew what he had seen, didn't he?
“A beslimed little get like you'll not hope to threaten me with a blackguard's tale, Lewrie,” Kenyon swore. “I promised I'd break you, and I shall. And I tell you this. For trying to blackmail me into leniency, I swear I'll see you at the gratings, getting striped by the cat. You'll leave the Navy wearing the ‘checkered shirt' that I'll put on you. I'll see you flayed raw and half-killed, and you know I can find a way to do it, don't you. Don't you? Answer me, you Goddamned rogue!”
“Aye, sir,” Alan was forced to admit, for the sin of not answering could be construed as a charge of dumb insolence, enough to get him dis-rated from master's mate, if Railsford was of mind.
“I assure you you'll pay,” Kenyon promised, with almost a lover's sweetness. “You'll not enjoy a moment's peace from this day on. And I also assure you, you'll not enjoy what's coming to you. Now get out of my sight!”
“Aye aye, sir,” Alan said, saluting and turning away. As he made his way blindly forward, he suffered a cold, shivering fit at what a cock-up he had made of things with his defiant remarks. There was a sheen of sweat on his body and he was like to faint from the encounter.
Damme, how could I have been so abysmally bloody stupid! he thought. If it was just Claghorne and
Parrot
, I could have found some way to prove my worth to the dirty bastard. Why did I have to say that? In for the penny, in for the pound, indeed! Why, why do I have to think I'm so bloody clever, when I just dig my grave deeper every time I do so?
He fetched up somewhere on the fo'c'sle and pretended to study the angle of the anchor cable and the chafe-gear on the hawse, as he found his breath and tried to still the rising panic in his heart. Where was salvation? Should he go to Railsford immediately and tell him what he had seen? There was a good chance Railsford would not believe him, or Kenyon would have a good excuse for his actions in that coach. He and Sir Richard had been childhood friends, and what was more natural than a goodbye kiss between old friends? It could be painted a lot more innocent than what Alan had seen. And he was sure of that, wasn't he?
Should he parley his new fame into a transfer? He would have to state reasons, and would be back to the same contretemps.
Should he simply cash out and escape? Damned if he would!
You and your mouth, Lewrie! he castigated himself. You and your bloody, stupid temper! I've tossed the dice this time, damme if I haven't!
D
esperate
spent another week swinging at her anchorage in the inner harbor, as Hood's presence forced the dockyard officials to pay attention to her final repairs, and Alan Lewrie spent that week staying as far forward or aft of the first lieutenant as one could in so restricted a world as a 6th Rate frigate. When forced by duty into immediate vicinity he sweated buckets trying to shrink into his coat and hat to be as anonymous as possible. Oddly, once Kenyon had gone through the ship with a fine-tooth-comb with the warrants and department heads, he had ducked aft into the wardroom as officers did in harbor and stood no watches. And when forced to converse with him, Kenyon showed absolutely no malice or any signs that they had ever had a cross word with each other, which possibly made Lewrie even more nervous than anything else Kenyon could have done.
He'll wait till we're at sea where he can really bugger me, Alan concluded to himself, almost writhing in dread anticipation of how many ways he could be caught out at his duties by an alert and vengeful first officer. With grudge enough, the bloody wooden figurehead could be found derelict and flogged, he realized.
“Passin' the word fer Mister Sedge an' Mister Lewrie!”
Alan was torn from his frightful imaginings and summoned aft to Railsford's quarters, which brought even more dread to his already tortured soul. He could not remember one good thing
ever happening in the great cabins, even if Treghues was no longer there as their occupant.
Railsford had seemed to expand since his promotion to command. He lolled in a leather-padded dining chair behind a new desk in the day cabin. The furnishings were not as fine as Treghues' had been, much of the dining table and chairs bought used from a shore chandlery, or put together by the carpenter's crew out of such limited selection of lumber as could be found in English Harbor or across the island at St. John's.
Railsford seemed merry enough as they removed their hats and tucked them under their arms. He had one leg flung across a chair arm, his shirt open and his stock removed to savor the balmy breeze that blew in through the transom windows and the open skylight and ventilator chute.
“Admiral Hood informs us he's to seat an examining board day after tomorrow,” Railsford began, stuffing tobacco into a clay church-warden, while Freeling puttered about striking flint and tinder to get a light for him. “I thought you two might be interested in it. Mister Sedge, what say you?”
“Beggin' yer pardon, sir, but I'd not be interested.”
“The devil you say!” Railsford gawked. “You'd pass easy.”
“Aye, sir, I might,” Sedge agreed with a small smile. “I've been at sea since I was nine on family ships, sir. But I intend a career in merchant service 'stead of the Navy.”
“But still—” Railsford shrugged, his pipe now lit.
“The Navy don't pay, sir, and my family needs money to get back on their feet after what the Rebels looted from us,” Sedge concluded in a sigh. “The Navy's only been temp'rary. Sailin' master's high enough for me, and more suited to my future employment, sir.”
“Hmm, if you are sure, I don't suppose anything I say could convince you,” Railsford acquiesced. “I wish you joy of your career. But after the war, there'll be a glut of qualified officers once the Fleet's been reduced. Passing may give you the leg up.”
“Aye, sir, but my uncle and my dad still have two ships, and I'd be at least a mate come hell'r high water,” Sedge told him smugly.
“Thank you, Mister Sedge, that'll be all, then. Well, Mister Lewrie, what about you?” Railsford asked as Sedge left.
“Yes, sir!” Alan answered with alacrity, sensing escape from his problems. “But only … I don't have six years on ship's books, sir.”
“Oh, the devil with that, there's a war on, and no one gives a tinker's damn about piddling details, not on a foreign station.”
“Really, sir?” Alan brightened, wondering if he could stand on firmer ground as a passed midshipman, if he wasn't immediately made a lieutenant. Please, dear God, I promise I'll keep my mouth shut! Please!
“If your records are in order, and you may answer their questions sensibly, they'd have no reason to refuse you, Mister Lewrie,” Railsford told him, now puffing a wreath of smoke around his head.
“Then I would like to try, sir,” Alan agreed quickly.
“You're fortunate that I can give you a good report, as well as Captain Treghues over in
Capricieuse
, all in harbor at the same time. And the former second officer and your old commander in your first two ships as well, just in case you didn't keep your professional
bona fides
in order,” Railsford maundered on lazily.
“Ah, the first lieutenant, sir.” Alan turned a touch gloomy at the thought of Lieutenant Kenyon, and the very idea of having to depend on him to put in a good word for him now.
“I'll ask of him for you,” Railsford offered. “Now, there's not much time to study, so you'd best be about it. Dine with me this evening and I shall fill you in on procedure and what the likely questions are to be. Go through your
Falconer's
and especially your navigation texts. Mister Sedge would be a good tutor.”
“Aye, sir,” Alan nodded. God, what if I'm passed for lieutenant? he speculated once on deck again. There
must
be openings for dozens of officers in all these ships, else they'd never seat the bloody board! Well, maybe a dozen in all. And how many midshipmen to examine? A hundred? In one day, two days? They can't spend more than half an hour on any of them, could they? Maybe even a quarter hour. I'm not stupid, and I have learned a lot. And there must be plenty of idiots who'll stand no chance before a board. I could be one of those dozen who pass and receive a posting into a new ship. Even if I don't get an immediate posting, I could become prize-master the next time we take a foe, and be away from Kenyon again, free as the birds. Or, he concluded grimly, God help me, I could fail and be stuck here.
 
“Well turned out, I see,” Railsford commented on Lewrie's uniform as he was announced into the after cabins. “I trust you're saving your best for the board.”
“Aye, sir,” Alan replied, feeling on tenter-hooks at the sight of Lieutenant Kenyon seated aft on the transom settee with a glass of wine in his hand.
“Take a seat, Mister Lewrie,” Railsford directed, meaning to put him at his ease. “Address yourself to that decanter of claret in front of you. Just in from home on the packet, though I fear it did not travel at all well. Still …”
“Thankee, sir,” Alan replied, clawing a stemmed glass from the towel and pouring it almost full.
“I must tell you that when I informed Captain Treghues of your intent to attend the examining board, he was delighted at the idea,” Railsford related, seating himself at the dining table. “Mister Kenyon, do come join us for a companionable drink before supper is served.”
“Aye, sir,” Kenyon said. When he sat down, Alan was pleased to note that, though the night was relatively cool, the first officer wore a sheen of sweat on his brow and his upper lip, and beads of moisture trickled down his cheeks.
“Little did you realize, Mister Kenyon, that our prodigy here would be presenting himself for the chance at a commission in your lifetime, hey?” Railsford began with a small jest.
“Indeed not, sir,” Kenyon chuckled with a superior little drawl, like a gambler whose hole-cards will take the game as soon as he shows them. “I'd have expected more like another year or two of seasoning. Spent five years a younker before I stood a board.”
“The full six for me,” Railsford reminisced.
“Two years and a bit, though.” Kenyon frowned, warming to his theme. “Well, that's cutting it a bit fine, even in wartime.”
“But we were callow little cullies of twelve or thirteen.” The captain laughed, which made Alan dart a thankful glance at him. “Mister Lewrie was more mature when he first put on King's coat, and a cut above the average midshipman in intelligence to begin with.”
“Seasick in Portsmouth, and adrift in old
Ariadne.
In harbor,” Kenyon added with relish. “Took an hour to report to our first officer after he stepped below.”
“Still, he learned quickly,” Railsford said, chuckling at the image of Lewrie “casting his accounts” over the side of a ship safely moored in Portsmouth. “Some learn faster than others. I've no qualms about his prospects, if you don't.”
“Did I not learn, sir?” Alan interrupted, directing his gaze to Kenyon. “So many things. About the Navy. And
people
.”
Damned if he was going to sit there being discussed like a
thing
, and damned if he was going to let Kenyon lay doubts about him. Kenyon almost choked on a sip of wine at the last comment.
“Enough to stand before a board, I'll warrant,” Railsford went on, oblivious to Alan's little verbal shot. “Captain Treghues sent me a packet for you, Lewrie. Letter of recommendation, and a list of some questions you'll likely be challenged with. Ah, here's the one about outfitting a ship from truck to keel. And some other posers he's heard about over his years.”
“I'm most grateful for any aid from him, sir.”
“Didn't exactly love you when you first joined
Desperate
, did he?” Railsford shrugged. “Our late captain did not hold with dueling, and our Alan here had just put some Army bastard's lights out.”
“Yes, I heard about that,” Kenyon said. “Even if the girl was your admiral's niece, I'd not have approved, either.”
“Well, I can say it now he's got his new command and is gone from us,” Railsford stated. “Captain Treghues played the most devilish favorites, sometimes for the worst people. It was feast or famine for everyone, and no sense to it, no way of knowing how one may have offended.”
“His cater-cousin, Midshipman Forrester, sir.” Alan grimaced.
“Thank God we left the surly turd at Yorktown,” Railsford said with a laugh. “Yet, prejudiced as he was in the beginning, he came 'round to appreciate Mister Lewrie, so his praise is doubly blessed.”
“To everything there is a season, so to speak, sir,” Kenyon replied. “Approbation or shame. But did your captain shun the worthy and praise the unworthy by seasons, sir? Then perhaps … well, if he had learned of young Alan's past, and if he was, as I've heard, a perfect Tartar on religion and proper behavior, who's to know why Captain Treghues would recommend him now so highly. Or is it more of the same?”
“You speak of Mister Lewrie's antecedents, sir?” Railsford bristled a little at his first officer. “Our purser's brother straightened that out for him. There's no shame in having a shady past, or a Corinthian brothel-dandy for a father, if one may rise above it, sir. Excuse me, Mister Lewrie, if I portray your father in that light.”
“One might add forgerer, thief, bigamist, false witness and bugger, sir,” Alan ticked off cheerfully. “I'm told he only sticks his head out o' Sundays when he can't be taken for debts.”
“There's no family so blameless the light of day wouldn't turn up a rogue or two, Mister Kenyon. All the more reason to wish Lewrie well with the examining board, since he's risen so far above his own. A captain must not become too familiar with his officers and crew, so I will most definitely
not
mention the rumors of smuggling and ship-wrecking spoken about the Railsford's in the past back in Weymouth.” He gave them a look in conclusion that indicated they should laugh.
“I must confess I was not bound for the sea from the time I was breeched, sir, as you were,” Alan said to Railsford. “But, once I did get to sea, and I found my legs, as it were, I must own to an ambition to become a commission officer and serve as best I can.”
Oh God, Alan thought, if I heard another shit-sack like me spout such things, I believe I'd box his ears first and then spew in his lap. Damn Kenyon! First poison about my abilities, now these slurs on Treghues' opinion, and my past. Surely Railsford can see the bastard's prejudiced against me! I'll most likely fail the board and then he'll have me triced up and ruined if I don't put him in his place now!
“One would think you harbored some grievance against Lewrie yourself, Mister Kenyon,” Railsford chid his first officer.
“I wish him fortune with the board, sir, though I doubt he's seasoned enough to be a commission officer yet,” Kenyon countered with a beatific grin that belied his motives. He did look a little desperate, though, as he realized that he had overstepped the bounds of subtlety. He had his own place to earn with Railsford in this new ship.
“Perhaps, sir,” Alan said to Railsford, “Mister Kenyon remembers my first days aboard old
Ariadne,
when I as much confessed to him that I did not wish to make the sea my calling. But, Mister Kenyon, I remember as well, you once told me that you were not enamored of going to sea when you first joined, but that certain reasons made it necessary. Would your own personal history be reflected upon mine? Ordinarily I would not presume to inquire, but this seems such an informal occasion. Perhaps your beginning might make a merry tale.”
BOOK: The King's Commission
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