three. Now he captained a fine new frigate named Anemone.
Adam said, 'I am ordered to the Irish Sea. There is privateer activity in those waters. We might call a few of them to action.'
Ferguson asked, 'Can you stay until tomorrow? Sir Richard should be here by then-he sent word by post-boy this morning. I can tell Mrs Ferguson to prepare one of your favourites if…' He saw Adam's eyes widen suddenly with surprise, or even shock.
Zenoria stood in the curve of the stairway and looked at him for several seconds. 'Why, Captain Bolitho!' She laughed; she had seemed a young girl again when she had been frowning at the sound of voices. 'What a family for surprises!' She offered her hand and he kissed it.
He said awkwardly, 'I did not know, Mrs Keen…'
She smiled. 'Please call me Zenoria. Lady Catherine has taught me the informality within this family.' She threw back her hair and laughed at his intent features. 'Does command make that difficult?'
Adam had recovered a little. 'Captain Keen must be thanking God every day for his good fortune.'
She saw him look towards the stair and said, 'He's not yet here. Perhaps the day after tomorrow. He's sailing with Sir Richard.'
'Oh, I see.'
Ferguson said, 'Mrs Keen will be staying with us, Captain Adam.'
She walked into the adjoining room and gestured towards the tall ranks of leather-bound books. 'Unlike you, Adam,' she hesitated over his name, 'I had little education but what my father gave me.'
Adam smiled, but his tone was sad as he answered, 'I lived in a slum until my mother died. She had nothing but her body, which she gave to her 'gentlemen' in order to keep us alive.' He dropped his eyes. 'I-I am so sorry, Zenoria, I did not mean to be offensive. I want anything but that.'
She touched his arm and said quietly, 'I am the one to apologise. It seems that life was hard for both of us at the beginning.'
He looked at her hand on his cuff, Keen's ring shining dully in the bars of sunshine.
He said, 'I am glad you are to stay here. Perhaps I might call, if my ship is in harbour?'
She walked to the windows and gazed out at the garden and beyond to the hillside.
'How can you ask?' She turned, framed against the trees, her eyes laughing at him. 'It is your house, is it not?'
Ferguson left the room and found his wife, the housekeeper here, discussing vegetables with the cook.
'How is he, Bryan? Will he stay awhile?'
The cook made some excuse and went back to her kitchen and Ferguson said, 'I think he will stay, Grace.' He turned and heard the girl laughing, for girl was all she was. 'I just hope Sir Richard comes soon.' To himself he added, and Lady Catherine. She would know what to do.
His wife smiled. 'All together again. A proper home once more. I'll go and see to things.'
Ferguson stared after her plump figure, remembering how she had nursed and cared for him when he had come home from the war with an arm missing.
If only it could be as Grace believed. But one day, inevitably, the news would come. He glanced up at the nearest portrait by the stairs, Captain David Bolitho, who had died fighting pirates off the African shores. He was wearing the family sword. It had been new then, and made to his own design. Like all the other portraits, he was waiting for the last Bolitho to join them. It saddened Ferguson greatly, but perhaps he would not live to see it. He followed the voices to the library and saw Captain Adam offering Zenoria his arm as a prop while she stood on some small steps to examine books which had probably not been disturbed for years.
My God, he thought, they look so right together. The realisation shocked him more than he had believed possible.
Adam turned and saw him. 'I shall be staying awhile, Bryan. My worthy first lieutenant can use the experience!'
Ferguson could say nothing to Grace; and anyway she would not believe him. She saw good in almost everybody.
Allday, then? But he would not be here to offer advice or reassurance once the ship had sailed for the Cape.
Adam did not even see Ferguson leave. 'As you are already wearing riding habit, may I take you up to the castle? It will give us both an appetite suitable for Mrs Ferguson's table!'
Footsteps came through the hallway, and he saw lieutenant Jenour staring at him uncertainly.
Adam shook his hand warmly. 'You look weary, Stephen!' He waited for the girl to put a book back on its shelf, his eyes never leaving her. 'But you are my uncle's flag lieutenant so you do not have to explain. I was that too, some years back.'
He called, 'Come, Zenoria, I'll fetch the horses!'
She paused by Jenour. 'Is everything settled, Stephen?'
'I think so. It is rumoured that RearAdmiral Herrick has been discharged, cleared of all the accusations. I still do not properly understand.'
She put her hand on his. 'I am glad, if it is true-for Sir Richard's sake especially. I know he was very disturbed about it.' She raised her riding crop and called, 'I'm coming, Adam! You are all impatience, sir!'
Jenour watched them leave, his young mind busy on several matters at once. But one thing stood out like a navigation beacon on a cliff. He had not seen Keen's wife so happy before.
Yovell appeared through a small door, his jaw working on something he had borrowed from the kitchen.
'Ah, there you are, Yovell…' The little vignette of the girl and the young captain vanished from his thoughts. A flag lieutenant never had enough time in any day to keep his admiral's affairs in motion.
Allday paused on a narrow track and settled down with his back against a slate wall. When he was home from sea and had a spare moment he often came to this quiet place to be alone with his thoughts. He gave a tired grin. And with a good stone bottle of rum. He began to fill his pipe, and waited for the sea breeze to soften before lighting it. He could see the whole span of Falmouth Bay from here; it was not that far from the farm where he had been working as a sheep-minder when the press-gang from Bolitho's ship Phalarope had eventually caught up with him, and, although he had had no way of knowing it, changed his life forever.
They had been back from Portsmouth for two days, and it was no surprise to find that the news of Herrick's court martial was already common gossip. He swallowed some rum and wedged the bottle carefully between his legs. Now it was off to sea again. Strange to wake up each day without the squeal of calls, the Spithead Nightingales as the Jacks called them. No gun and sail drills to send the feet stamping and the topmen clambering aloft, one mast racing the next for the best performance. He would be a passenger this time. The thought might have amused him, but for the other sadness which hung heavily upon him. He had told Bryan Ferguson, his oldest friend, about it; but nobody else. It was strange, but he had had the feeling that Ferguson had been about to confide in him in turn about something, but had decided to let the matter drop.
Allday had seen his son John Bankart on his return from Portsmouth. He had once been so proud of the lad, especially as he had not even known of his existence for years. When his son had been appointed as Captain Adam's coxswain, Allday's pride had expanded even further.
Now Bankart was out of the navy, and Captain Adam had arranged it; he had said that he had known he would be killed if he remained with the fleet. But there was worse to come. His son had got himself married. They had not waited for Allday to come home. They had not even written to him. He could not read at all well, but Ozzard would have read a letter for him. Allday listened to the breeze as it hissed through the long grass, while some gulls wheeled and screamed against a clear sky. The spirits of dead sailormen, some said.
He had lost his temper when his son had added insult to injury by telling him that he and his bride had been offered work and security across the Western Ocean in America.
'Life's fresher, different over there.' He had exclaimed angrily, 'A new chance-somewhere we can raise a family without a war raging at our gates year in, year out!'
Allday swallowed another wet of rum and swore under his breath. 'We had to fight them buggers once, my lad, and by God we'll be doing it again one o' these days, you just see!' He had left their cottage with one last shot. 'You, a Yankee? An Englishman you was born, an Englishman you dies, an' that's no error!'
The rum and the warm air were making him drowsy. He shook himself and began to refill his pipe. Young Adam's Anemone would be under way by now. She would make a fine sight when she tacked around Pendennis