"Good night, m'sieur" Hainaut bade him. "Sleep well in your new bed… your first night in your grand new house."
"Thank you, Jules, I believe I will," Choundas said over his shoulder as he shrugged the right side of his ornate coat off, letting it fall down to his left wrist, with the servant fretting about him.
Hainaut turned to ascend the stairs to his own lofty chambers, but had only taken a step or two when he heard de Gougne scuttle across the foyer from his miserable quarters to Le Maitre's, in evident haste and concern, so Hainaut halted and leaned far out, hoping to overhear what seemed so urgent to the little mouse, what made him so fearful.
"… Proteus… Camperduin… the Orangespruit frigate… in the Gazette and Marine Chronicle… mumble-mumble hum-um…"
"Putain!" he heard Choundas bellow. "Mon cul! Ce salaud de… Lewrie? That bastard, that son of a whore is out here?" his superior screamed, instantly so enraged that anyone who crossed him would die, as sure as Fate! The stout walking-stick swished the air, something expensive and frangible shattered… several breakable somethings!
Oh-oh! Hainaut cravenly thought. His bete noire, that bane of his very life, the author of his wounds and disfigurements was nearby?
"Merde alors, putain! That shit, that… cunt! This time, I'll kill him, this time…!"
Lewrie! Hainaut thought, not daring to breathe or draw attention to himself that might make him a target. Now, Recamier's bane … and mine, too. He captured me, once…
More things went smash, the garcon chef 'yelped in sudden pain, then stumbled out of the bed-chamber into the office as if physically hurled… immediately followed by the little mouse, de Gougne, who was guarding his head with the sheaf of papers, his face terror-pale.
Suddenly, the idea of getting a small ship of his own to command seemed a trifle less attractive, Hainaut thought, quietly tip-toeing up the stairs for safety. Better would be to go as a lieutenant aboard a much larger man o' war, Capitaine Desplan's frigate, say, with so many large guns and such stout sides… under an experienced older captain who'd know how to deal with such a clever scourge.
BOOK ONE
Di, talem terris avertite pestem!
Nec visu facilis nec dicta adfabilis ulli.
Ye god, take such a pest away from Earth!
In aspect foreboding, in speech to be accosted by none.
– Aeneid, Book III, 620-621
Publius Vergilius Maro
CHAPTER ONE
Sah?" a voice intruded on his dreams, interrupting a matter of great import, the fate of the ship, of England… something that, at that instant, was but seconds from its penultimate deciding, for good or ill. "Sah, time t'wake, sah."
"Grr… ack!" the dreamer exclaimed, which could have stood for "Ease your helm" or "All Hands to the braces"-to him, anyway, as the "deck" rocked and shuddered alarmingly. "Whazzuh?" he queried.
"Be almos' four o' de mornin', sah," Coxswain Andrews insisted, using his weight upon a knee to jounce the soft, civilian mattress. A hand was pent in indecision above the hero, as he pondered laying hands on a gentleman… or dashing a ladle of cool water from the laving bowl on his head, then run and blame it on a house-servant!
"But…!" Captain Alan Lewrie, RN, commanding officer of HMS Proteus, Fifth Rate frigate, managed in reply, heavily smacking his lips and creaking one eye open to peruse the ceiling, one which he did not in any wise recognise. Too many damn' cherubs, and such!
"G'mornin', sah," Andrews said.
"Aarrr…" Lewrie commented. It had been such a vivid dream, one which might have been mere seconds from revealing or concluding or fulfilling… something. Whatever it had been, it had left him with a cock-stand worthy of a marlingspike. "Time, is it?"
"Aye, sah," Andrews replied, stepping away from the bed. "Dey be coffee belowstairs, black an' hot, Cap'm. Mistah Cashman, he's up already, an' 'is coachman's gettin' de 'quipage hitched."
"Right, then," Lewrie said with a sigh and a yawn, chiding himself for sharing that third bottle of wine with his host, "Kit," after supper. He should have known better, should have kept a soberer head, and…
Damn that ceiling,' Lewrie thought, scowling as he sat up in bed: Eros and arrows, bare-titted shepherd girls, and clouds… thought I was gone over to Heaven for a second or two!
He flung back the single sheet that covered him, swung his legs out to plant his bare feet on the naked wood floor… swayed a bit as the last of the wine fumes rose with him, and belched.
"Bloody hell," he gravelled, massaging his eyes with the heels of his palms. "Why can't people shoot each other at reasonable hours? Is it light yet, Andrews?"
"Just a tad o' false dawn, sah," Andrews said from the bureau, where he was brushing Lewrie's dress coat. Sure enough, the scene in the tall French doors leading to the upper balcony was night-dark with only a hint of darker trees swaying against skies just barely brushed with grey. "Touch o' fog'r mist, too, sah," Andrews said, frowning.
"Ummph," Lewrie commented, bracing his hands on the bed to get himself upright. With one eye still shut and the other squinted, he shambled to the wash-hand stand and laving bowl, to the ewer full of cool well-water, 'coz God, was he thirsty!
"Mind d'ose…" Andrews cautioned, too late.
"Oww! Shit-fire! Mmmm! Dammit t' hell!"
He'd stubbed his toes on a dark leather chest, just one of many in the room, as Kit Cashman packed up his household for his removal from Jamaica in the next few weeks.
Two tumblers of water, a quick slosh and scrub on his face and neck, a cursory sponge-down against the humid cool of a tropic morning, and he was primed to part the flaps of his thin cotton underdrawers for a long "tinkle" into the night-jar. Feeling some more human, at last, he sat on a spindly side-chair to don his white silk hose and bind them behind his knees, pull on a fresh pair of light sailcloth breeches, and slip into his new-blacked Hessian boots. Andrews stood by patiently, offering him a clean silk shirt with a moderately ruffled breast inset and cuffs, helped him bind on his neck-stock, then held out a cotton waist-coat so he could slip into it. His slim sword baldric looped atop that, from right shoulder to left hip, with a gleaming oval brass breastplate at the centre of his chest. Then came the kerseymere wool coat, the full-dress version with the gilt-lace buttonholes, buttons and pocket detailings, and the single fringed gold epaulet of a captain of less than three years' seniority that rode on his right shoulder.
Lewrie turned to the mirror above the wash-hand stand, to drag both hands through his hair to "Welsh" comb it with his fingers; back above his ears on the sides, where thick and slightly wiry hair of mid-brown, almost light-brown, and further gilt by harsh sunlight off seas innumerable by then, curled over ears and temples almost like the bust of a long-gone Roman, gathered in a fashionable swirl low on his forehead. Andrew plucked at his collar to tug his short, spriggish queue of hair to lie outside the tall-collared coat and fiddled with the narrow band and bow of black silk which bound it.
Lewrie had shaved the morning before, so that wouldn't delay him. He rubbed his stubble, adjudging his "phyz." Firm skin, a lean face, a long-passage sailor's permanent tan… the upright puckered line of a sword-cut on his left cheek, from a foolish duel of his own long ago. Permanent squint-lines round his eyes, now, though merry-lookin'…? Frown lines, or grin lines at the corners of his mouth… and eyes of startling colour, light grey or blue, by temper. They looked a trifle grey, this bloody pre-morning… and a touch of "bleary" and red-shot, too, he speculated. But, altogether, not a bad phyz.