As I See Fit: Part 3, Domestic Life
by Mebbie10
Part One
The Captain of the Indefatigable dipped his pen in the inkwell
of his writing
desk and continued his journal entry. "1793, June 10, Gibraltar".
His journal
consisted of one long letter, a letter never to be sent, a letter
to be read
by no one else in this life. Shaking the ink off, he put the pen
down, gazing
at the mountain that was the port of Gibraltar. His ship, moored
even with the
governor's residence, had been anchored with the stern northward.
He could
see the neck of land, north of the Rock that bordered the no mans
land between
the British possession and Spain.
He put the ribbon between the current pages and turned back
to the inside
front cover. He carefully unfolded the letter that rested there,
a letter read
many times, so many times that the folds were beginning to fray
and part. He
laid it down, handling it like it was the finest crystal, thin
as the paper
between his fingers. He covered his face with both hands and drew
a long breath.
Amanda, Amanda, oh Amanda.
A breath of wind blew through the open windows, swaying the
uniform coat that
hung on the back of the door and sending some papers, including
the letter to
the deck.
He fell to his knees to gather them up. The letter had come
to rest face up,
and he read the words before he retrieved it from the floor.
'1778, December 20. Teignmouth Castle'
'My Dearest Edward"
Edward, always Edward when she was tender, when she yielded
to him, their
limbs entwined, Edward, when she wanted him to know that she loved
him.
"My Dearest Edward" The writing was shaky, jerky.
The quill had sputtered.
Circles where once wetness had been stained the fine vellum paper.
Her paper.
Never Teddy in those intimate moments, never Captain Pellew,
as when they
were in public, or Sir Edward in those formal moments when she
was known as Lady
Pellew. Just Edward.
He couldn't see. He blinked at the tears that had come unbidden,
his throat
tightening as he fought them back. He wiped at his eyes with
the ruffle of
his shirt sleeve. A light knock sounded on the cabin door.
"Come." Young "acting" lieutenant Hornblower
entered the cabin. Hornblower
seemed startled at seeing his captain sitting on the deck, back
against the
bulkhead. "Are you all right, sir?"
"Of course, Mr. Hornblower, what is it?"
"Mr. Bracegirdle sends his compliments and says the last
of the new hands
have come aboard."
"Thank you, Mr. Hornblower. Please tell him to carry
on. I have complete
faith in the abilities of my officers. Please inform the deck
that unless there
is an emergency, to leave me undisturbed for the afternoon. We
are in port,
Mr. Hornblower."
"Yes sir, thank you sir." The young man backed out
of the cabin, knocking
into the sentry.
"Mr. Hornblower, pass the word for my servant, if you please."
"Aye, Sir." And the young man left the companionway
outside his cabin. Powers
must have been waiting, for he appeared immediately.
"Powers, take my gig, go ashore and see if you can get
some flowers, never
mind the cost. I will want them later this afternoon." Powers
nodded and
disappeared.
Alone again, Pellew drew a long, shattering breath and turned
his attention
back to the pages of the letter. Her letter. His lips curled
slightly upward
with a wan smile of memory. He read past the first words this
time.
"My Dearest Edward.
"I wish the news here at home were better. I know by
now you have been told
of little Eddy's passing. How I wish I had been able to pass
that to you
myself, but, Charlie was here, and I was unable to function.
With Lillie passing
just a few weeks earlier, I was quite unable to function. I know
he found a
way to let you know with tenderness. I could not have asked for
a better
friend.
"Oh, Edward, how I wish you were here. I need you so.
Both of the children.
The house seems so silent. Seems, oh what am I saying, it is
silent. I
think I will go up to London as soon as I'm able. I won't return
here until you
come home.
I have sent Richard to you with Charlie. Charlie says that
he will keep him
as midshipman, if you are not able or comfortable in taking him
under your
command. Give him my love and tell him to be good. It is safer
for him away from
Teignmouth until this influenza epidemic has run its course.
"Young Mr. Rochester looked in on me this morning. He
is all of thirteen and
very much the young gentleman. I felt well enough to go for a
short walk with
him. He makes me smile, Edward, he reminds me of you when we
were younger.
"We walked down past the village church. I was tired
by then and went in for
a moment. I sat in our pew and remembered the first time I saw
you, you
impish boy."
Pellew spread the fingers of his left hand across his mouth,
he closed his
eyes, and he remembered too.
They had been so young and so in love, nothing could ever harm them.
His eyes opened. His buttocks ached, how long had he been
sitting on the d
eck? Still holding the letter carefully between the fingers of
his left hand
he groped into his watch pocket with the other. With quick and
deft movements
he flicked open the case. The portrait there was chipped and the
salt water of
many storms had eaten away at the right edge, but it was still
true as the
day it had been painted and the mahogany of her hair was as beautiful
as the
first time he had ever seen it.
'I'm not as young as I used to be.' He thought as he drew his
leg under him
to stand up. He could hear his knees pop as he came erect. His
mirror threw
back his gaze to rest on his own face. He saw the redness of his
nose and eyes.
Carefully refolding her letter he replaced it in it's accustomed
place.
Stepping into the quarter gallery he opened the wash cupboard
and sluiced
some water into the bowl. He looked up, glancing out the window
to the ship
anchored close by. Charlie's? No, the Calypso was inshore, closer
to the mole.
Another mirror, this one directly in front of him and impossible
to ignore. He
touched the hair at his temples. No, not one white hair among
them yet, not like
her's were before. Oh God, before. No. Not that either.
He dashed handfuls of water over his face and felt some of
the grit come away
from his eyes. The huck towel, with it's intricate weaving, a
gift, hung
within grasp, but he turned away. No he would not think that way
either. Not now.
He reached for one of the old yellowed ones on the shelf beneath
the bowl.
Still working the cloth between his fingers and dabbing the
last of the
moisture from his ear lobe he walked to the stern windows. The
light was getting
stronger over the rock, true morning was finally upon them. He
felt another gust
of hot wind through the cabin. He turned instinctively to be sure
his journal
was closed and the precious letter protected. Gibraltar could
have vicious
swings of temperature in the summer. Boatcloak needed at night
and early
morning, then get every stitch of clothing off and still stay
modest and in uniform
in the noon and early watches.
'Melancholy.' He thought, 'There is no other word for it. And
I should stop
thinking so much, especially in this place. When did all this
remembering start
anyway? I thought I could deal with it.' Sinking down on the cushions,
he
closed his eyes again shutting out the glint from the water below.
'When did this
start? With that damned Dreadnought Foster.'
A week ago, off Trafalgar, just after the Spanish had thrown
them out of
Cadiz, 'All those lives lost, all to assuage that ass Foster.'
With a groan, he
rested his head on the casing of the window. Only three rescued,
and Foster, of
course, lucky Dreadnought Foster.
A fast passage through the Straight and he would have been
a happy man.
Watering and wooding the ship at Cadiz had taken some time, but
it could not have
been helped. No food could be taken on, the Spanish harbormaster
had said all
of their supplies had already been depleted, and further, the
port itself was
on short rations till more stores could be brought from inland.
In view of
Foster's actions, it would have been better for the Indy if the
Spanish had waited
a few days to join their northern neighbors in an unholy alliance.
What had
Hornblower said? "God is on our side."
Never opening his eyes, he shook his head and let go a rueful
laugh. A fast
passage was all he had wanted. Their morbid cargo had mouldered
in his mind as
much as it had mouldered in the hold. The young man with butter
yellow hair
and the crude skull and crossbones on his hand was stuffed one
of his good water
casks in several gallons of the surgeon's purest sprits. 'I'll
have to make
good on that barrel with the dockyard. Harvey will sell me one,
I'm sure.' He
thought, 'We'll have to burn the other.'
Then they had found Foster, and he knew he must, in good form,
ask the man to
dinner. That had been a three days ago.
_______________
They had shared a glass before the cloth had been laid, Arthur
Bowles
automatically took his regular chair on his left and Anthony Bracegirdle
to his
right. The marine officer sat next to the master and Dreadnought
Foster by him.
Hornblower had taken the foot of the table as the youngest officer
among the
assembly, and as such before the dinner was over he would give
the loyal toast.
There was a younger lieutenant between Hornblower and Bracegirdle.
He wished within his deepest heart that the other young man,
another cub,
Kennedy, were there instead of the dour young Scot that had taken
his place.
'Archie, you made me laugh.' Another reason for the man in the
cask below, 'You
were killing my sons.'
That thought brought him up short. 'My sons.' He looked over
the glass at
Hornblower. 'Is that how I have come to think of you, Horatio?
As a son? I will
have to be twice as hard on you to mask my affection. My son.'
Almost a smile
at that thought, but one look at Hornblower's dinner partner stilled
that
action a borning.
The plates were laid and the dishes were brought in. He could
tell that his
steward was hard pressed to put a good meal in front of the officers.
A sea pie
with the last of the carrots from his stores, some potatoes with
the rot cut
out of them dressed up in dill and one short French bastard was
on the bread
plate for each of them at the table. The wine was in good supply
and there was
still some Stilton, one of the few cheeses that never seemed worse
for time in
the hold, perhaps because it was already half bad when it was
new in the
round.
The conversation had gone well enough. He had said the right
things and was
sure he had played the gracious host. He moved his food around
on the plate,
picking at it so the others would at least eat the pitiful mess.
It was a
travesty of a dinner, but there was a bright spot: Horatio Hornblower.
Arthur Bowles was sawing at some of the stringy cask hardened
beef as the
captain of the Indefatigable finally pushed the plate away and
picked up the
glass to keep his hands busy. Once again his eyes were drawn to
the young man at
the end of the table. He heard Bracegirdle say something, nodding
as if he
heard, he tried to catch the ends of the acting's conversation
with Captain
Foster. 'Bad piece of work that. No better than when we first
met.' He thought.
Hornblower's gaze was fully on Foster and he was totally engaged
in listening to
the visitor's tale.
'My God, I'm jealous!' The idea suddenly ran through him like
a stroke of
lightening. 'I'm jealous of Hornblower's regard!' Pellew sat the
goblet down on
the table with a thunk and picked up his linen, twisting it around
and through
his fingers. 'Eddy would have only been a couple of years older
than Horatio,'
Sliding around in his chair, he draped an elbow over the back,
'I've truly
taken this young man as a son.' The realization hit hard and it
was the truth.
Pellew touched the cloth to his lips to hide the tremble that
he knew must be
there and stared at the remains of the pie on it's platter.
'I'm proud of him too. All I'd hoped of my son, of Mandy's
son.' The sob
caught in his throat. Bowles, who knew him best out of all of
those around this
table, looked up, then back into his plate and industriously applied
himself to
forking up the last of the figgy dowdy swiping it around in the
hard sauce.
"Well, I was merely a passenger on the schooner on the
way to Gibraltar,"
Foster's voice cut through the hum of conversation. Edward Pellew
glanced up, to
find Horatio's gaze still resting on Dreadnought's face, intently
following
each word. Hate sprang alive in his chest and he brought his face
under the same
control that he showed when punishment was administered. "to
take command of
the Dreadnought when this Spanish frigate blocked our path. We
were out-manned
and out-gunned and should we have run, we would certainly be out-paced."
"Did he fire without warning, sir?" Bracegirdle said
as he reached for his
wine glass. All other conversation was stilled now. The marine
officer was half
turned in his chair to catch every word. Pellew could see Foster
gesturing
with one finger outstretched from around his own wine glass.
"Oh, they had the decency to fire a warning shot, the audacity of them!"
'A warning shot, you dolt, that's what it was. The Spanish
are nothing if not
punctilious in keeping with the rules of war.' The captain of
the
Indefatigable responded in thought, but not in word. It might
be better to stay silent
than to embarrass himself. Looking away from the table and letting
his finger
tap against his teeth, he fought to keep his face immobile and
his buttocks in
the seat.
"Three supply ships taken by the French in as many weeks
and now the Spanish
think they can do the same! Well this was one ship that they would
never
take." Foster shook his finger up in the air to punctuate
his words. The movement
drew Edward's attention back to the table. "So," Foster
continued, "I assumed
command of the schooner, gave the order that we should attempt
to rake her."
Pellew shifted slightly in his seat, Arthur caught the movement
and looked
up, stopping his fork in the middle of the air. 'You don't like
this do you, my
friend?' Bowles thought rang clear though no words passed between
them.
'You know I do not.' The quick silent exchange done, Bowles
eyes went back to
his plate and after a hitch the fork completed it's travel to
his lips.
Perhaps the master knew Edward Pellew better than any man aboard,
shipped with him
off and on for nearly fifteen years. Arthur Bowles was keen to
his Captain's
moods and was the only confidant of the solitary man who inhabited
this cabin.
He considered his commander. The years had not been kind to Edward
Pellew. The
lines that were made from laughter ten years ago were deep crevases
of care
and pain now. Perhaps it had been a bad idea to suggest to old
Admiral Montague
to bring his name forward when the fleet needed captains for the
ships that
were being brought out of ordinary.
'Well, that is neither here nor there now. Pellew is my captain,
and we are
taking prizes. God willing, he'll not put too much store in this
young
Hornblower. I'm not sure he can take another blow on top of all
the others and still
remain whole.' The master turned his attention back to the story
that was
spinning itself out at the end of the table.
"Of course," Foster held forth, "I knew our
chances were slim, but I took
comfort from the fact that they should be forced to destroy their
prize. Had I
not acted the schooner and her supplies would at this very moment
would be in
the hands of the Spanish."
Edward Pellew could hold his silence no longer. "What of the crew?"
The question had come out of nowhere, drawing the attention
of the entire
dinner party. Hornblower's head came around sharply, with a momentary
look of
disgust that was immediately replaced by a mask of complacency.
"You have a question, Captain?" Even the word "captain"
had a tone of
derision in the retort from Foster.
"I was merely wondering how many of the crew did the Spanish
take from the
sea?"
"I have no idea! At the time my mind was engaged in more
important matters
than arithmetic." An idea seemed to occur to Foster as he
looked back from
Pellew to Hornblower, who had almost snorted a laugh at Fosters
comment. "Am I to
presume, Captain Pellew, that you would have surrendered?"
'I've made a blunder." Pellew thought as he looked from
face to face around
the table, but never meeting Hornblower's eyes. I should never
have challenged
him in this setting. "This is neither the time or the place,
sir, to discuss
tactics." Pellew fell silent. At least Foster would have
to bend to his wish to
discontinue the conversation. 'Damn it! I am Captain here!' He
thought. This
matter should drop right now. Pellew heard Bowles drop his silver
to the plate
and saw the master's fleeting glance of caution.
"Nonsense! We are all men of the sea here! You!"
Foster reached out and
tapped Hornblower on the sleeve.
"Yes, sir?"
Pellew shot a commanders warning glance at his young officer.
A warning that
was received, but with unexpected consequences: confusion.
"How would you have reacted in such circumstances?"
Pellew intervened. "I think perhaps.."
Foster had read Hornblower's hesitation, "Com on man, out with it!"
Bowles understood Hornblower's dilemma, how to frame an answer
that would not
alienate his hero nor disappoint his captain. He shook his head
once, trying
to indicate to the acting lieutenant not to answer, but to no
avail.
"Uh.I am pleased that the Spanish have been deprived of
our supplies, sir."
The choice of words was unfortunate and the delivery unavoidable.
Horatio
Hornblower knew immediately that he had committed what might be
an unpardonable
mistake.
"Now!" Foster hit the table, palms down, in triumph.
The table went silent. The arrow had gone home. Bowles saw
Pellew almost reel
backward in the chair. Instead, Pellew wrapped the napkin tighter
around his
fingers, this was an open insult to the captain of this vessel,
a senior
captain to Dreadnought Foster at that! No one around that table
was daring enough
to break the dead calm. Even Hornbower seemed to squirm in his
seat with
unease.
Enough! I have had enough of this man!' Pellew thought and
threw the damask
cloth straight into the remains of his uneaten meal and surged
up from the
chair, "I take my leave, sir." He turned from the table
without a backward glance.
No loyal toast to end this meal, no stomach at ease with it's
dinner, except
perhaps Captain Foster, whose eyes danced at witnessing Edward
Pellew's
frustration.
"I fancy you shall go far young man," Foster exclaimed
once again slapping a
palm on Hornblower's arm. "I fancy you shall!"
Those were the last words that Edward Pellew heard as he grabbed
for his boat
cloak and walked out into the night.
Edward Pellew sat on the very edge of the mizzen top, after
the hard wood of
the dining chair the sanded timbers were almost comfortable. Foster
would
never come up here. He was safe from everyone for a few minutes.
He would not stay
long. The fresh air lifted the hair that had escaped his queue
and revived
him.
He let his legs dangle, held the edge of the grating and stretched
his back,
deep breaths stilled the anger inside him. Being with Foster,
even for a few
moments, drove him backwards, before the Indy, before his knighthood,
before
the Nautilus and Pownall, back to Captain Stott and the snotty
baby midshipman
whose loose mouth had forced him from the middy's berth and before
the mast
with the common seamen. He could still feel the heat of Pownall's
cat, the fire
that refined him into who he was. Oh, yes, Foster remembered,
remembered too
well, but he was unable to make capital of his knowledge. Pellew
was above him
in seniority and in peerage and would always be. So much for Foster's
power
over him, it was nothing, nothing at all.
He gazed up, past the Indy's commissioning pendant at the main
truck, the
stars were beginning to brighten, Mars burned in the East with
a light that would
be almost as bright as the moon. He drew up one leg and locked
his arms
around it, he rested his chin on his knee, amazed that he was
still limber enough
to do it. The genuine hint of a smile crept around the corners
of his mouth, it
died as he heard someone coming hand over hand up the futtocks.
He twisted,
arms coming loose and thigh falling back to the wood.
"Arthur?"
"Edward." Arthur Bowles grunted as he tucked his
belly into the edge of the
top, his legs coming free from the shrouds below.
Pellew extended a helping hand to his sailing master, an amused
grin graced
his face as he did so. "How long has it been since you've
been up here?"
Bowles got his knees onto the boards. "Seems like years.
I could not take the
lubbers hole, everyone is watching down below. My dangling feet
will be the
talk of the messes at breakfast I expect."
The two men laughed softly into the evening, companionable
silence followed
for some minutes.
"I've been with you longer than I was married." Pellew said.
It was several beats before the master answered with a simple
yes. Bowles
waited. "You are troubled, Edward?"
"By Foster, no. He's just a pest whom I let get under
my skin. That will not
happen again." The captain's arm swept the sky. "The
stars were this bright
that night, after I mean. When the fires were out and the smoke
finally cleared
away, they were this bright." Silence again, Pellew's head
went down, Bowles
could see the dip between his shoulders, but his face was lost
into the growing
darkness. "Why do we have to go to Gibraltar, Arthur? Why
us? There are
plenty of other ships, we should have been ordered back to the
channel."
Bowles knew Pellew was really talking to himself. He looked
down to the men
at the helm. The sentry was making his way to the belfry and Hornblower,
who
had turned up on deck preparing for the change of watch reached
for the
sandglass.
Pellew watched the lanky midshipman, acting lieutenant now,
as the lad's long
fingers grasped the wooden frame of the glass and turned it. Like
the
clockwork the glass mimicked, the bell began its peel from forward.
"There's a lad with great potential." Bowles said
as Hornblower retreated to
his station by the wheel. "You set great expectations on
him, but them, you do
that with all your 'young gentlemen.'"
"No, Arthur, this ones special. When he came aboard, he
was so serious, he
reminded me of Eddy. His tiny voice: 'I will take care of her,
father.' That
same look, tough and confident. Do you miss Araminta?"
"Every day." Bowles turned away, but smiled, the
memory was pleasant, she had
said goodbye at home and did not come to the wharf. They had been
denied
children, but what they had was enough for them.
"I thought I had put them behind me. It's been ten years,
Arthur. Then this
youngster-Hornblower-and finding that half finished letter to
Wyndham in Jack's
things." Pellew fell silent.
"Did I do right, Arthur?" Pellew didn't look around.
Bowles didn't answer
right away. "I should have found another way. I didn't need
to kill that young
man. I should have found another way." He repeated. "What
will I tell his
mother?"
He stood up, automatically leaning toward the mast for balance
as it swung in
its arc. He pulled his weskit down into place and shrugged his
jacket smooth.
Bowles reached for the backstay. Pellew stopped him with a hand
on his arm.
"Arthur," He proffered his hand. The master took it.
One up and down motion and
Pellew held it fast between them. "Thank you." The men
slid to the deck where
the watch had changed and the Indy nosed her way through the tack
and into
the straits.
Hand over hand, trying not to look like a lubber, he slid down
the backstay,
following Bowles, praying that the master didn't miss and go over
the side, a
dive from here in this darkness would probably kill them both.
On this ship,
at this time, Bowles was the man who had served with him the longest.
With
enough seniority and prestige, he was able to request, and receive
his chosen
sailing master. His feet hit the rail and he swung inboard. A
quick glance at
Hornblower caught the young man's sigh of relief when his captain
once again had
his feet solidly on the deck.
He should take a tour of the ship, a normal thing for him this
time each day.
Once round his little kingdom, ensuring the condition of his lady
and her
crew. Bowles was coming forward, his steps sounding lightly, the
rustling of
papers stuck in his book and the creaking of the lantern ring
heralding his
approach.
"Very well, Mr. Bowles, let's get at it. My cot calls."
"Aye, sir."
It was a learned thing, going below decks with his scraper.
The bulkheads
were low and even he had to bend backwards to descend the ladder
to the
upperdeck. The galley stove, it's fires banked, still had a few
hot spots, the heat was
oppressive. It would get worse the further south they went. Gibraltar.
He
shook his head.
"Problem, sir? Bowles stepped forward, a stub of pencil
appearing in his
hand.
"No."
A few words with the older middies and he moved forward to
ensure that the
younger ones were tucked in. This always brought a smile to his
lips. How brave
these little youngsters could be. Mr. Lapping's hat had fallen
from it's place
over the swinging hammock to the deck. Pellew swept it up and
replaced it
between the worm and the deckhead. Three hundred souls in his
keeping. Two
hundred and eighty his own crew, twenty from the supply ship and
those picked from
the Justinian's demise. All his responsibility.
He passed the wardroom, he would only enter that hallowed sanctum
if duty
warranted it or if invited. A few words with the purser and they
dropped into the
hold. The flickering lantern the only light in that benighted
place. Hogs
heads lined the passageway, one, roped tightly to the ringbolts
was newly
restaved. Jack Simpson. His minds eye could see the limp blonde
hair floating in the
spirits as they closed the barrelhead and tamped it snug. The
remembered sight
haunted him all the way back to his cabin.
That had been one of the hardest things he had ever done. What
did he owe
Wyndham Simpson to bring her son to her? The silent argument raged
in his head as
he passed the sentry. He had fallen back on the door as soon as
the latch had
assured his privacy. His fingers were spread against the wood
and his head
rested on the upper panel,'
The steward had lit the lamps against the ever-increasing gloom.
The dinner
and his spell in the tops had cut into his work time. 'Even a
captains time is
not his own.' He thought as he approached his desk. A desk which
was piled
with papers and ledgers that would have to be double-checked,
for he was
ultimately responsible to the admiralty for every consumable aboard
his vessel.
He sat heavily in the chair, reaching for the purser's books.
His hand
brushed the loosely folded letter. The address was to Mrs. Wyndham
Simpson. So she
had never remarried, and she had stayed in Gibraltar. His fingers
found the
foolscap and he picked it up. Truth be told, if this letter had
not been found he
would have buried Midshipman Simpson at sea and have been done
with it. The
open letter still lay on his writing table in his sleeping cabin.
The writing beckoned him like a siren's song.
He read:
"Mother: I hesitate even to call you that. You hated me
since before I was
born. You didn't even claim me until you hoodwinked that poor
soul who was a
depraved as you into marriage. Andyour other child? The one you
cared to claim.
I saw her in Covent Garden with the red silk of her dress tucked
up. A pretty
shilling she cost."
Pellew threw the blotted paper to the desk where if fell across
his journal.
He grabbed it as if it had been a coal ready to burn through to
his own
precious letter inside the cover.
He swept it away. 'Perhaps it would be better to just burn
this.' He thought.
He raised the glass of the lantern and moved the paper closer
to the flame.
The light shown through the cheap paper and he saw his own name.
The flame had
already begun to char the edge, he pressed out the glowing embers.
He read on.
"Now I find myself under the command of your idol, Edward
Pellew. Mother, I
do not know what you saw in him. He is a weakling, oh not in the
same was Keene
was, but the chink in his armor is a man named Hornblower."
Pellew raised his eyebrows at this revelation. Had he been
that obvious with
his favor?
"I can assure you of his misery in twenty four hours."
Then that last unfinished paragraph:
"We are due to meet the supply ship tomorrow and I will
drop this in the
pouch. By the way, put three hundred pounds to my account at the
bank. All my
uniforms and kit went down with Justinian and I am wearing cast
offs from Pellew's
middies berth. They are all lousy."
This time the letter did fall to the flames.
That had all been a day past now. Edward looked out at the
glistening of the
waves in the bright Gibraltar morning. This had been a foul few
weeks. But
there had been one more bright spot before Foster had left the
Indy. Looking back
on that evening he was sure his face had held its command immobility.
He had escorted Foster to the side. Hornblower had been in
command of the
side party. Foster halted next to the acting lieutenant.
"Mr. Hornblower?" Foster said.
"Sir?"
"When we next meet, I believe you will have your commission, sir."
Horatio responded with another confused, "Sir?"
Never one to be put off Foster forged ahead, "Well I presume
you are putting
yourself forward for lieutenant?"
Edward saw the hesitancy in Hornblower's actions and turned
away, 'Horatio -
don't.' was his only thought. 'I will not interfere, I will not
let him hurt
me.' The lad would have to learn to conceal his emotions, as Edward
Pellew had
to do every day for over ten years. He had to look back, he had
to hear and
see what the answer would be. Their eyes met in a moment of distinct
and clear
communication.
Hornblower chose his words carefully. Pellew fought back the
smirk as he
listened to the lad's reply. "That is my captains decision."
It was all the
Captain of the Indefatigable could do to keep the grin from his
face. He stretched
his neck and thrust his chin forward. This was better. Much better!
It was time
to get his 'acting' off the flame.
"The port admiral awaits." He said as he gestured
toward the ladder. A few
steps more and Foster was over the side and away from his ship.
***
After the prerequisite visit with the port admiral and seeing
Foster securely
into the admiral's care, Pellew sat with Captain Eustis Harvey
in the
admiralty offices. Harvey was pouring them coffee and reading
over the list of needs
for the Indy. Pellew sat quietly, the remainder of a slice of
toast in his
hand and adding sugar to his brew. He looked past Harvey into
the night sky, the
darkness brightened by the lights of the dockyard. A place that
never slept,
it seemed.
"And, one oaken water cask?" Captain Harvey looked
up from the four-page
list. "What happened to yours? They were fresh from Portsmouth,
were they not? Did
it leak?"
"No. No." Pellew replied, not really wanting to tell
Harvey what he did with
it. "Look here, Eustis, I'm ready to pay for it. I used it
for something else
than holding water and it is unsuitable for any other use now.
In fact, I've
sent it off ship." He put the fragment of bread down to reach
for his pocket
book.
"Oh very well. I won't ask. I do have another. But these
others,
re-victualling. I'm afraid I can't fill these needs. There are
not enough staple supplies
on this whole rock to fulfill this order."
"What?"
"We haven't had a supply ship in for a month, one is due in today-"
"It won't be here." The thought followed on 'Damn
Foster. How will I feed my
men?'
"The Spaniards?"
"Yes." Pellew looked at the list that was still in
Harvey's hands. "I suppose
we will have to reduce rations?"
"I'm afraid so. I do have some supplies, Edward. I'll
do what I can, but
there are ships that are in worse situation than you."
"I see. How long?"
"I can supply ten ships at half rations for thirty days."
"And there are fifteen ships in harbor."
"Yes."
"I see." Pellew drew his hands across his face. He
took a deep breath and
said nothing further about the matter.
The rest of the conversation had centered on what could be
done, not the
impossible. A quiet few minutes with an old friend and a walk
back to the harbor
with a heavy tread. He looked down into his launch. His crew waited
patiently.
Good men - every one. The thought came roaring back. 'How will
I feed my men?'
The row back to the Indy was silent; somehow his dour mood
was contagious.
Each of the men as they came up the side after him went quietly
to their mess.
News traveled quickly on a frigate and there were no secrets in
a small place.
He was absolutely sure that the entire crew knew of the shortage
of supplies.
Touching his hat to the quarterdeck he fled to the privacy of
his quarters.
His cot was prepared, a glance at his watch, the dear face
looking at him in
the dim lamplight. Pulling out the key, he pressed the clasp that
sprung the
back and wound it up. Then as he had done everyday since he was
married, he
said, "I love you Amanda Pellew." He snuffed out his
lantern and drew the worn
cot coverings against the early morning sun.
***
His servant awakened him with a smell of bacon and coffee. Dressing
gown
wrapped around his shoulders, he sat down to a plateful of eggs
with Jamaican hot
sauce. The ships poultry were still in good order, the eggs were
plentiful.
His servant bustled around the cabin making his bed and laying
out a fresh set
of linen.
Bracegirdle had made his morning report, sharing a bowl of
something that was
passing for oatmeal and a cup of coffee. Pellew knew his ship
was in good
order, the men fed, the harbor watch set and a liberty schedule
for those of his
crew that merited one. He noted that Mr. Hornblower and Mr. Cleveland
were on
that roster. It would do them good to be ashore for a few hours.
Still carrying his coffee cup, he moved to his writing desk.
Missives from
the port admiral and the admiralty in London lay there awaiting
his eyes. He
broke the seal on the port admiral's orders.
"By order of his Britannic Majesty ---" By God, Foster
had been correct! A
lieutenant's examination board would be convened. A momentary
wicked thought
passed through his mind, but no, he would not hold Mr. Hornblower
back. The lad
was going to sink of swim on his own.
"Powers."
"Yes, Sir Edward?"
How strange that had sounded in those early days, now it was
expected and
comfortable. "I'll see my clerk, the cook, the purser and
Mr. Hornblower. I'll
wind up with Mr. Bracegirdle again. In that order if you please."
"Yes, Captain."
"And, Powers-" The servant halted in mid stride.
"Yes, Captain?"
"You might eat a bit more food this morning."
"Aye, sir!"
The servant had shown no surprise at all. The whole crew must
know by now.
The meeting with Bracegirdle would not be a mere report, but more
like a council
of war. He pawed through the pile of paper on his desk. It would
be tomorrow
before he had any time of his own.
"Oh, Powers, one more thing."
"Aye, Sir?"
"Make a list of all my private stores and add them to
the ships stores.
Except for my Madera. We eat what the ship eats." He knew
very well that his
steward ate from his dishes. "Cut my portion back by two
thirds."
"Two thirds, sir?"
"Yes did you not understand?"
"I have it perfectly, sir."
***
"Now, idleness." Edward Pellew mused as he continued
watching the harbor. His
arms were folded and he leaned against the pillar of the stern
windows. The
hated order to reduce rations had gone out the previous evening,
just after the
last full square for the men. This morning's breakfast at six
bells had
consisted of what looked like a half teacup of watery stirabout
and a full cup of
weak coffee. That had been hours ago, dinner had not been called
yet and his
stomach rumbled.
His only consolation was that his belly was not the only one empty.
Turning back into the cabin his eyes again found the journal.
'Are these such
unwelcome memories?' he thought. 'I do love her, even now.' He
undid the
first few brass buttons of his weskit and pulled the chain through
the neck
opening of his shirt. A moment later the catch was undone and
he drew it free. Two
well-worn gold rings lay in his palm the golden links of the chain
running like
water through his fingers to the rich Persian carpet below. Hers
had fallen
in such a way as to be completely encircled by his wedding band.
Her hands had
been so small and delicate. He could still feel the pressure of
her fingers as
she held him down into the pillows that next to last morning in
Plymouth.
'That was January 1774' He thought closing his eyes and enclosing
the rings
within his fist. 'I remember it like it was yesterday. The Altamira
was in dry-dock
and I had two months of leisure and sweet loving to look forward
to'
***
Their third floor lodgings were simple but spacious compared
to those on the
lower floors. The ground floor of the Lion Inn held the public
rooms; the
keeping room and a sitting room, the first floor held individual
rooms, at least
12 of them. The top floor held four bed sitting rooms. Amanda
told him that
they were used for officers who needed temporary quarters for
their families.
Edward had heard the cries of babies and the yells of small children
through the
thin walls.
Indeed at this moment he lay beside his wife listening to a
baby wail on the
other side of the paper-thin partition. Wrapping his arms around
her he tried
to go back to sleep. Evidently the baby was on Navy time. It was
still dark
outside, his body knew it was time for the morning watch to be
called, but he
did not have to report. This was the second day of no duties.
They would spend
one more night here then depart for Teignmouth.
His mind wondered back through the events of the previous day.
Baines had met
him at the yard and they watched as the Altamira was left high
and dripping
in the dry dock. The extent of damage was apparent. The second
opening of the
hole in the forepeak had ripped the coppering from the hull and
the strakes
were working loose. It was no wonder that the poor ship started
to sink a third
time when she made her own sail. The master shipwright had reconfirmed
the
two-month time to put her to rights.
The two men repaired to a tavern for a tankard of ale and a
meal. Seated in
the front of the public room they had a view of the street, a
single lady,
followed by her maid walked slowly by on the other side. The woman's
butter yellow
hair showed from under her velvet cloak's hood as she bent over
to look into
a window.
"Wyndham Simpson. There but for the grace of God go I."
Pellew said as he
pointed at her with his fork then turned back to his plate and
dipped a piece of
bread into the sauce from his pie.
"Poor woman." Baines said.
"Excuse me?" He glanced at the window again, in time to see her back pass by.
"She's got a black eye and a bruised cheek. She did not
have that before we
docked. I was on the Admiral's ship, taking some men over to her
from the Alta.
She was just fine then."
"Then that happened overnight? Hm." Pellew sliced
off a bit of the beef and
forked it into his mouth. "Simpson was wrought up over his
interview with the
port admiral. You don't think he might have taken it out on her?"
His words
were interrupted as he chewed his food.
"I would not like to think that a gentleman would hit
a woman, sir, but-"
Baines shrugged his shoulders.
"It does happen though. She looks like she's gained a
little weight. Maybe,
for the most part, wedded life suits her?"
They were silent for a few moments. "I understand Mrs.
Pellew made a raid
through the marines whose enlistments were finished." Baines
said. "It seems that
she snagged Sergeant O'Hearn and a private called Smith. Seems
they are to
become your family retainers for the time being. And, she's bought
a second hand
coach and a team of horses. Your lady is a good judge of horseflesh."
"How do you know so much about my household? More than
I do." Another bite
taken and was washed down with a swig from the pewter mug.
"She asked me to help. I made the offers and paid what
was left of Smith's
enlistment off." Baines continued between bites. "She
gave them enough to
purchase new rig out's too. They will be very well dressed servants.
O'Hearn is to
be her personal steward. He's sent for his wife and children to
join you all in
Teignmouth. Seems he can read and write tolerable well and knows
his
business. Was a poacher. He ran away into the marines to avoid
being prosecuted."
"O'Hearn's a good man. He'll be a steady man around her,
and a family too,
I'm glad to see." Another bite. "Amanda has good sense
where servants are
concerned. I think I'll be able to leave her secure with him."
"That's a fact."
"Smith, seems able man, was a wardroom steward before
he was taken as a
marine, if I remember correctly. I don't think he ever got a uniform."
Pellew said.
"Yes. Did rather well as a servant too. I take it he's
to replace Grimes as
your personal servant. I think he will do fine."
The rest of the meal passed in conversation about other things.
***
"Are you awake, m'dear?" The timbre of her breathing
had changed in the last
few minutes. The baby, perhaps it's hunger satisfied, was finally
quiet. It
was so different, wakening beside her with no ships business to
handle. She
turned over, raising her knees over his thighs and nestling even
closer, if that
was possible, to him. His body, with a will of it's own, responded
to her. She
felt it and snaked a hand between them.
"So you like this early morning loving, eh, Edward Pellew?"
"You know I do." He said, caressing her with his
own gentle touch. "Tell me,
Mrs. Pellew, do you miss shipboard life?"
Edward Pellew nuzzled closer to his wife's ear. She had been
right: he did
enjoy their early morning lovemaking. What had been simply joyous
before was now
exquisite. Their bodies were attuned to each other, knowing what
gave each
pleasure and both of them giving without reserve. The conception
of their child
had taken the raw edge, the urgency that was ancient in all males
to sow their
seed and bring forth their fruit.
He nipped at her earlobe; stroking the edge with his nose,
tongue lapping
into the sweet crevasses. Secretly he gloried in the shudder of
intense reaction
that electrified her body and made her pull away. He followed
her, his body
still thirsting and hungry, his hands pulling her back against
him, the need
still apparent, although somewhat sated by their earlier joining.
"Edward!" She laughed, turning back to him, straddling
his legs and pinning
him to the bed. Her hair, loosened from its braid, floated across
his face, her
hands held his arms down, he felt her own mouth make its way from
his throat
to his ear. He couldn't stand that infernal tickle either and
turned his head
away.
"Be careful, Amanda, you will get yourself in trouble!"
He could feel his
body filling itself again with the love he felt for her. Love
and lust too!
She stopped, sitting on him, reaching her hands toward his.
Laughing still,
she clasped his fingers to her stomach. "Edward, I already
am in trouble!"
"No you are not, you are a married woman. My wife."
He let the words 'My
wife' roll out with all the pride he felt. Grasping her left hand
in his, he
fingered her wedding band and made sure that she saw his. "And
my child." Pride and
possession, he had been caught fair and square.
"Tell me, Mrs. Pellew, what will you miss of shipboard life?"
"What will I miss?"
"Yes, it's a clear enough question." He closed his
fingers around her waist.
"You are cold!" He didn't wait for an answer, but drew
her down beside him,
wrapping the blankets around them and getting as close to her
as possible. An
arm snaked around his waist and her head pillowed on his shoulder.
Gentle kisses
that rained across his chest died away and her breathing eased
into a gentle
rhythm. "Sweet wife," he whispered as he brushed mahogany
strands of hair away
from her face, "You will never know" He left the rest
unsaid and watched the
sun rise above the rooftops, idly stroking her long tresses and
down across
her body. He stopped short, his fingers resting on the crest of
her hip, his
palm against the softness of her stomach. "Baby Pellew, your
father loves you
very much." He felt the burning behind his eyes and he blinked
back the tears.
***
She sat, cross-legged on the bed with his heavy powdering gown
wrapped around
her shoulders and the covers over her lap. He could see her in
the reflection
from the mirror over the chest. He tied his neck cloth and began
to tuck his
shirt into his breeches."
"Our bathtub." She said suddenly, grinning at him.
"What?"
"The tub, where we bathed on the Altamira. I had to take
a bath in a little
hipbath yesterday, and I still don't feel clean. Captain Pellew?"
"Yes, m'dear?"
"You have a nice arse."
"I wouldn't know I've never seen it!" He laughed
back at her image. He
preened before her, tightening his buttocks and knotting his calves.
She grinned
back at him, his posing ended when the hotel's maid knocked and
brought in their
breakfast.
***
Edward Pellew left the boarding house with a smile on his face
and a list of
last things ticking over in his mind. One more item had just been
added, one
that might hold them in Plymouth one more day. That was all right
with him. One
more day with no one they knew and nothing to do would not be
a bad thing. A
tune rose out of his general happiness and whistling the notes
of "Jamaica" he
strode down the street to the tailors and turned in with his feet
moving in
time with the music. He was looking forward to a country dance
or two. There
was no custom here that kept her from taking a turn with her husband.
Boston was
indeed very far behind them.
As the bells rang around the harbor to mark the afternoon watch,
Pellew
looked over the side of the dry dock, his hands on his knees for
balance, to see
the Altamira's side stripped down to her futtock riders in the
bow, two were
gone and were going to be replaced with seasoned timber. The shipwright
looked up
from the still wet floor of the drydock, a hand shielding his
eyes from the
sunshine that broke erratically through the clouds.
"Come to see if she'll be all right, are ye, Captain?"
"Aye."
"Well, ye needn't. We'll take good care of her and deliver
her to ye in
Portsmouth in the allotted time. She'll be ready for ye. She's
built well. Boston
built."
"Boston built?" It was as much an admission of surprise as it was a question.
"Aye," the man wiped his hands on his apron. "So's
the one next door." A
thumb pointed over his shoulder to the still afloat Montezuma.
"She's got a little
damage that we're taking care of. Your gunnery crew was selective,
but there
was some broken timber and a sprung mast."
"Charlie Hammond." He said to himself. "God bless you, Charlie."
"What, sir? I'm sorry, me hearing's gone, too many years,
lower decks, ye
know."
"Nothing. Nothing. How do you know they were laid down
in Boston?" He knew he
had seen no builders marks anywhere.
"Plaques where ye'd never find them unless they were torn
down. Right on the
kelson in the bow, where the stem post butts onto it. Endicott
and Dawson,
1770, Boston - Wilmington. Big as life."
He could feel his eyes widen, but he brought his face under
control.
'Endicott! No! It could not be so. They only built the ships!
They did not sail them.
Did not sail them!' He thought. "Were they built as warships?"
He said, his
mind racing through all the distasteful possibilities.
"Aye, sir. I'd say from the drafting table. Beautiful
ships. Them Boston
yards are turning out some fine vessels."
"Just so. Just so. Take good care of her, I'll see her again in March."
"Aye, Captain. She'll be ready."
It was not with the same light heart that he made his way back
to their
rooms. No sound escaped his lips, his tongue bitten between his
front teeth, his
hands found their way under his coattails. Endicott had been aboard
with Amanda.
No, he had nothing to do with this, nothing at all. But, they
had not been
attacked seriously until after they had landed Endicott in Boston.
His own
daughter! He was so deep in thought that he walked past the door
to the hotel.
He would have to pursue this on his return. Surely his father
in law had no
knowledge of this. They only built the ships, not owned them.
Suddenly, the two
months until he could claim his lady in Portsmouth and return
to Boston could
not pass soon enough.
***
A warm handshake from Baines two mornings following had seen the
coach and
dray off from Plymouth eastward toward Teignmouth. The trade of
lives from
responsible ship's captain to wholly devoted and expectant father
had not been
easy. Especially when the two retainers were former crewmen, men
who kept Navy
hours. They were away before the sun was up, and he had to admit
it to himself,
well before Amanda was up.
The sprung carriage was a wonder. A new thing to him, instead
of this
carriage swinging insanely on straps, it bounced up and down in
a semi regular
motion. 'It's not the best method of transportation,' he thought,
'A ship is
smoother.' It also had a horrible tendency to bounce after it
had come to a halt.
Amanda lay across the opposite seat, pillows under her head
and a quilt over
her. How could she sleep through this! She had opted for the rear
facing seat
and seemed not to notice any movement at all. He definitely wasn't
going to
sleep on this trip, at least not now. His thoughts turned to the
copper lined
half barrel that rested atop their luggage in the dray. A last
minute present,
and one of the few that he could give her without her help.
His marriage had made him a rich man. Riches that he had not
sought or
wanted. At first it had been a novelty, new uniforms and furnishings
for his cabin,
but it had worn thin quickly. Now it was vaguely troubling, she
was used to
having her own way and having the means to do what she wished.
'A wife with no
social status without her husband.' The idea formed in his mind.
'What will she
do without me?' Always methodical, another list started, things
to do to
ensure that she was well entered into society and under someone's
protection
before he returned to his ship. 'I don't want a grass widow here,
when I'm back in
Boston. She won't be pregnant forever.'
"But nothing went as I planned. Nothing." He muttered
to himself as "Hearts
of Oak" thundered through the Indefatigible. Hearing Bracegirdle's
light step
across the deck above his head he realized that the watch had
changed and he
had wiled the morning away. Power's knock sounded discreetly at
the door.
"Come."
"Yer dinner, sir. And, Mr. Bracegirdle sends his respects,
the Arathusa has
just entered harbor. He says you wanted to be made aware."
Powers laid the
tray down and spread the cloth. A crust of bread, no, on closer
inspection a
very, very thin slice, laid with some hard cheese and a glass
of wine. One side
dish held a tablespoon of pudding.
"Yes, thank you, Powers." The steward pulled out
the chair at the head of the
table and Edward Pellew sat down to his meal.
'Well,' he thought as he opened the small volume that lay beside
his plate.
'We are all here now. Hammond, Foster and me. We were all so young
and thought
nothing could happen to any of us.'
TBC -------