"Thank you, Mister Cheatham. I seem to be forever in your debt."
"And you shall square every penny of it before we let you get off this ship, sir," Cheatham japed. "I shall go calculate the reckoning."
Once alone, Railsford leaned back in his chair and flung a leg over the arm and studied Lewrie closely. "You know, this is a fine moment for me. To see you with a commission."
"And for you to be promoted to commander with Desperate as yours," Alan countered.
"Ah, 'twon't last." Railsford grimaced. "The war may end soon and I may not be confirmed before it does. Desperate shall pay off in another year no matter what happens, and I shall most likely go back to being a half-pay lieutenant, liable for stoppages on commander's pay."
"But there is a power of prize-money to soften the blow, sir." Alan grinned. "And war enough still to get you made post."
"Aye, there's that, God willing, if we pitch into the Frogs and Dagoes sharp enough, and I intend to do just that. Damme, it's fine to think of you with a commission, though. I remember when it happened to me. Up and out of a ship I'd served in for three years, into a new one full of strangers. God, I missed Hercules for months! I don't know this… Lilycrop, is it? God help the poor man with a name like that. But I tell you truly, Alan, he'll be getting a good officer."
"You do me too much honor, sir," Alan confessed. "I'm proud as hot punch, but scared to death at the moment. And I feel like such a little fraud, and sooner or later someone's going to find me out, sir."
"'Tis only natural to be nervous about all the added responsibility," Railsford said, comfortingly, leaning forward on his desk. "And you'll no longer have patrons in your new ship to protect you. God knows, you have been more in need of protection than most. But it was worth it, I think. You've turned out main well, with nothing to be ashamed of."
"Thank you, sir, thankee kindly," Alan replied, choking up at the thought of being adrift from the cosseting he had gotten.
"Well, one bad part about this Navy of ours is that when you make great friends they get transferred to the other side of the world and one never sees them again, while the dross keep showing up, one commission after another." Railsford harrumphed, stifling his own emotions. "Another thing is that, as the Bard said, 'parting is such sweet sorrow.' Best do it short and direct, and have done. There's a power of errands you must run before reporting to this… Shrike… so let us say our farewells now, and let you get on about your business. But keep in touch. Drop us a letter now and again. Who knows, at this rate of advancement, I could be coming to you for a favor someday, when I'm still a long-in-tooth lieutenant and you're a high and mighty post-captain."
They stood and shook hands, almost equals now for the first time, and Railsford did him the grace to walk him to the door. "By the way, I meant to ask you something. Lieutenant Kenyon wasn't exactly enthralled with giving you suitable recommendations. Do you know of any reason why he should have been loath to sponsor you? He said he didn't want to lose you, but he acted deuced odd about it."
Damme, that's the trouble with such a died-in-the-wool rogue like me being around decent people like Railsford and Cheatham, Alan thought. Sooner or later their ways rub off and keep you from doing the sensible thing.
He could square Kenyon's yards by mentioning his sexual preferences, what he had seen that night in Kingston, and end up ruining the man's career, removing him as a threat to him forever. But, he rationalized, he was out and away from him, and would probably never cross his hawse again in this life. Shrike would be his escape, and if he did good duty in her, no one could ever threaten his standing in the Navy, not with the record he had posted so far. So he relented.
"He mentioned that Mister Claghorne had committed suicide after he gained his commission and command of old Parrot, sir. But other than that, I can think of no animosity," Alan said with a straight face.
"Oh, poor fellow," Railsford sighed. "Still, some people are made to handle the solitude of command and some go under. No, this poor Claghorne was not your problem. And as I remember you saying once, Kenyon was down with Yellow Jack at the time. He most like blames himself for not being able to give the benighted soul leadership at such a stressful moment, which broke his spirit. Well, off with you, you rogue! Make a name for yourself in this Shrike, and we'll see you a post-captain yet."
Chapter 7
Thank God for looking glasses for vain cock-a-hoops like me, Lt. Alan Lewrie, RN, thought to himself with a smugness matched by the smile that greeted him in the hall mirror of the Old Lamb Tavern as he entered.
The cocked hat which had adorned his head nigh on for nearly two and a half years had lost its plainness with the addition of the wide vertical gold strip of lace, held by a gold fouled-anchor button, under which a stiff little bow of black silk riband stuck up above the rim of the brim in a commission officer's "dog's vane."
Black neck cloth over the stock, and the longer tailed naval blue coat with its low stand-collar trimmed at the edge in white. The pristine new broad white turn-back lapels that ran from collarbone to his waist, also adorned with gold buttons bearing the fouled anchor device of his Service. He reached up a hand to remove the cocked hat and could not help but admire his sleeve, dressed with a wide white cuff, a widely spaced row of three large gold cuff buttons.
Damme, but I make a fine-looking officer, he preened.
"'Ere fer the commission party, sir?" one of the tavern's daisy-kickers asked, wipping his ale-stained hands on the universal blue publican's apron. "Take yer 'at, sir?"
"Yes, thankee, yes I am. Guest of honor, actually," Alan said, sneaking one last look in the mirror to see if his light brown hair was in place, the black silk riband tied properly around his now long and seamanly queue of hair at the back of his collar. He could not help winking one blue-grey eye at himself as the servant took his hat away for safekeeping.
"Right 'iss way, sir," the servant beckoned, leading him from the common rooms to an upper private suite overlooking a cool patio.
Alan shot his lace to show the proper amount of ruffles on his wrists, tugged the waist-coat down, and entered.
"Huzzah!" The occupants raised a cheer, some already standing atop the long dining table.
"Marcus Aurelius was right," Lt. Keith Ashburn, now fifth officer of the fifty-gunned 4th Rate squadron flagship Glatton japed from his perch atop a chair seat as he waved a bottle of champagne and a glass in the air. "'How ridiculous and what a stranger he is,'" he quoted, "'who is surprised at anything which happens in life!'"
"Wet the bugger down, somebody!" Jemmy Shirke, a former shipmate aboard Ariadne, Alan's first ship, suggested. Shirke was still a midshipman, now about eighteen or nineteen by Alan's recollections. Only the fact that he was a passed midshipman who had yet to find a suitable opening allowed him to be away from his ship.
Wine was sloshed in his general direction, soaking his shirt and fine new coat-thankfully Alan had had the money from his hidden cache of guineas to purchase four. A glass was shoved into his hand and quickly filled with champagne.
The only other officer present was Lt. William Mayhew who Alan had worked for briefly when that poor young fellow had served Adm. Sir Onsley Matthews as flag-lieutenant. Mayhew had come ashore with Ashburn.
"Get down from that chair, Keith, you're making me dizzy," Alan jested, stepping up to shake hands with him after nearly a year of separation.
"Never did have a head for heights. Same's the day I ran you up the mast for the first time," Keith hooted, jumping down with easy grace. "Goddamn my eyes, you of all people, a commission officer!"