there’s…”
“If I
“There’s the matter of
“Whores, do you mean,” Lydia said with a scoffing smirk.
“Aye, whores,” Lewrie admitted. “And, finally… there
“Hmmm,” was Lydia’s comment to that. She put one brow up in quizzical thought, eying him over quite carefully.
“What?” Lewrie asked, wondering if she was contemplating…! “What are you thinking?”
“Well, in the first instance, I was wondering what poor Percy would say, did I dash off with you, married or not,” Lydia confessed, a grin spreading. “Secondly, I was wondering if I were brazen enough to propose to you, and lastly… I asked myself what I might say
“And, did you come to some conclusions?” Lewrie whimsically asked, wishing he could cross his fingers.
“God, the look on your face, Alan!” Lydia said, laughing out loud. “Have I frightened you into next week?”
“Astonished, not frightened, really,” Lewrie breezed off. “You have a knack for that,” he added with a teasing smile.
“As for Percy and Society, I don’t give a toss,” Lydia said with a cynical jerk of her head. “I’m
“Hmm?” Lewrie prompted.
“Fond as I am, I would refuse,” Lydia told him, turning sombre.
“Mean t’say…?” Lewrie flummoxed. Not that he
“After all I’ve been through, Alan, my dear, I’ve too many fears to be settled, before I place myself, and my heart, at the mercy of
“At the Cocoa Tree, wasn’t it?” Lewrie replied. “Tea and scones in a quiet corner, while Percy was in the Long Rooms, gambling. You told me you’d never willingly re-enter such a slavish institution as marriage. And what did I tell you?”
“To suit myself, and enjoy my life,” Lydia replied, grinning, pleased that he could recall.
“
“I began to, that very night,” she answered, “and ’til now, I must own that I have, immensely. But I would not marry you. Even for a sea voyage to the splendours of Cathay. Not yet.”
“Call it early days?” Lewrie fondly teased.
“Early days,” Lydia whispered back, beaming at him, though he discerned the rising moisture in her eyes. Before her tears came, he scooped her to him and kissed her long and gently.
“I will pack and coach back to London tomorrow,” she told him, her face pressed to his gilt-laced coat collar. “You will have many things to attend to, and I would be in the way… at the best, quite ignored, so…”
“I’ll settle your lodgings,” Lewrie offered.
“You will not!” she chuckled for a moment. “You, as you said, are ‘comfortable’, but
“Your being here’s been the real gift,” Lewrie assured her.
“That night at the Cocoa Tree, later that night,” Lydia teased. “Recall where we went?”
“Your house in Grosvenor Street,” Lewrie supplied promptly.
“And what did I ask you there, dear Alan?”
“You said… ‘Make love to me’,” Lewrie quite
“Such a
CHAPTER SEVEN
Whether HMS
“Currant jam, of course, sir?” his cook, Yeovill, suggested as he went down a long list of “necessities” to be purchased for Lewrie’s comfort from a chandlery.
“I’ve developed a taste for raspberry,” Lewrie mused aloud with a grin. “Those tarts and popovers o’ yours? Dried currants and raisins for duffs, aye, but…”
“Midshipman Houghton… SAH!” the Marine sentry shouted, with a crash of his musket butt and his boots on the deck planking, beyond.
“Enter,” Lewrie bade.
“Good morning, sir!” Midshipman Houghton said, right cheerily, as he stood before Lewrie’s desk in the day- cabin, hat under his arm, and all but rocking on the balls of his feet. “I fear I must depart the ship, sir. My Lieutenancy’s come through.”
“Good God!” Lewrie gawped. “Well, congratulatons, of course.”
When Lewrie had fitted
“Where are ye bound, and how soon, Mister Houghton?”
“I’m to be Fifth Officer aboard the
“Immediate, is it? Well, if you must,” Lewrie said, rising to shake Houghton’s hand and offer him a parting “stirrup cup” of brandy, though pondering how he’d fill Houghton’s experienced but dull shoes. Could he advance one