a rest stop under the trees and flowering bushes that fringed the strand.
To protect his bald pate from the sun he wore a floppy sennit hat that was much cooler than using a tightly curled white wig to disguise his bare scalp. There was a down coming back in now, a sign that he would recover, and within a week more would have a head of hair no shorter than most people had it cut generally under their own fashionable wigs for coolness and the easy detection of pests.
Once out of sight of the house he would peel off his stockings and shoes and undo the knee bucldes and buttons of his oldest, tarriest breeches. He would open his shirt and roll up the sleeves, then revel in the warm winds that blew steadily off the Atlantic, would wade in the surf sometimes up to his waist, in the crystal-clear inrush from the ocean. When he got too hot and sweaty he would plunge into the shallows, or squat and duck himself, to come up snorting and refreshed.
There were plenty of crabs to watch and chase after at a slow walk. There were shells to discover and wash clean in the shallows. There were seabirds to admire, the little sandpipers that dug in the wet sand as the waves hissed to nothing and the hiding places of small morsels plopped and bubbled before the waves rolled back in, arid the sandpipers ran away from a soaking on a blur of spindly legs. There were seagulls that hung motionless against the steady breeze and cried for bits of bread. And when they wished to rest there was always a bottle of ale or beer in Old Isaac's bottomless leather sack, a stone jug of Lady Maude's cold tea, fruit to peel and eat, a rusk or a slice of something sweet and special that Lucy had packed as a tiny gift to him, which he always insisted they share.
Old Isaac kept a wary eye on him. He was, after all, a slave that Lucy's father had sent along with her from Jamaica when the latest slave revolt had broken out, an old family retainer with specific instructions to protect her from just such a potential danger as Lewrie. Alan speculated on how big was the knife Old Isaac might have in the bottom of that sack of his, should he make a move on his lovely young charge.
Old Isaac swore he was part Caribe, the ancient Indians of the West Indies, but he looked as blue-black as any import from Dahomey-even his gums were blue. But he did know a lot about the shells they found, the birds, the fish, the sea urchins to avoid, what trees were unsafe to take shade under, such as the manchineel, which continually misted a sap like acid. He had been a fisherman for the Beauman family for years at their plantation on Portland Bight on Jamaica, until too old to work so hard at the oars and deep nets.
Lucy said that Old Isaac was making him a juju bag that would keep him safe from the dangers of the sea, but he was never to inspect the inside of the bag, and wear it forever. It would save him from drowning, Old Isaac assured him. Lewrie told him of the belief that a tatoo of a certain cross would do the same, but Old Isaac had only laughed at how gullible white people could be. He could not
Two weeks later, one bright and sunny and pleasantly cool morning on the beach, basking bare-chested under a mild sun, Lewrie began to realize that his idyll might come to an end. He looked up the beach at Lucy, walking barefoot in the surf, a fashionable sunshade in one hand to retain her paleness, the other holding up the skirt of her gown. She wore no stays and no petticoats, like a poor country wench, and the gown was old and shabby enough to allow her to wade if she wished. The bottom two feet of hem was soaking wet and clinging to her bare legs, and he felt his groin stir pleasantly at the sight.
If he felt well enough to think about bedding a wench, and Lucy was the only dell in sight, then he was well enough to go back to the harbor and resume his duties. In a way it would be a relief, for she was openly fond of him. But she was only sixteen years old, coltish and lovely, but not his sort of pigeon, and being the recipient of so much open adoration, without being able to take advantage of it, was driving him to distraction.
I'm just a toy to her, anyway, he thought. Young girls like to play with dolls to feed and nurse, and all I am to her is a doll that can talk back. And if I did get into her mutton, Admiral Matthews would have me flogged round the Fleet…
He stood up and walked into the gentle surf at low tide, wading out until he was waist-deep, then ducked under and splashed up and down several times to take his mind off how virginal she was, and how much he'd enjoy ending that condition. Damme, she's built for sport, though… ’Sah,' he heard Old Isaac yell as though in command. Lewrie took time to see three pelicans rise from the water, and a boil of fingerling fish break the surface perhaps a musket shot away farther out, and began to wade back ashore immediately. He had seen sharks on this beach, rolling openmouthed and hungry in the face of a wave, black eyes seemingly aiming at him. Perhaps it was nothing, but it was better to be safe than sorry, and supposedly Old Isaac thought so as well. ’ You must be careful, Alan.' Lucy told him as he gained the dry sand. 'It might have been a shark out there!’
‘Thank you, Isaac,' he said as the old man settled back to rest. 'Except for the sharks, this would be ideal,' Lucy said, angling her parasol against the morning sun. Old Isaac had resumed his reclining position at the top of the beach in the shade 'Most likely you listen from the top of the stairs, with your nurse.’
She dropped the parasol to her side and stepped up to him. She flung her anns around him and kissed him most expertly, raising the sunshade to screen their activities from Old Isaac up the beach.
Damme, they train 'em right in the Indies, Alan told himself, taking her into a close embrace that brushed his groin against the front of her thin gown. There were no underpinnings or petticoats to soften the impact of a trembling young body against his, and his newly restored power to be excited made him positively ache with sudden want. ’Did Mrs. Hillwood kiss you like that?' she whispered, stepping back from him. Her bright blue eyes were twinkling. ’Often,' he said honestly, rattled badly.
She flung herself on him again for another long and passionate kiss, arms twined about his neck possessively. 'Did she kiss you like
Old Isaac had a cloth spread in the shade. His shirt was there, and a towel that he used to dry himself and remove some of the sand that had stuck to his feet and legs. Isaac reached into his leather bag and pulled out an orange, which he bit like a horse with strong yellow teeth. He spat out the plug and began to suck. Lewrie helped himself to a pewter mug of cold tea, watching Lucy prowl the sand farther up the beach in search of shells. ’You gettin' bettah, sab,' Old Isaac said softly. ’What's that to you?’
‘Maybe 'bout time you go back to sea, sah,' Old Isaac said, turning to look at him. 'And that is what you shall tell Sir Onsley and Lady Maude?’
‘Ah doan tell nobody nothin, sah. But it be time.’
He's right, Lewrie nodded in silent agreement; if I lay a hand on her, there goes all that good influence, and my good name hereabouts. Only way I could have her is to marry her. God, what a thought! 'If I stay any longer, I hurt her, right?’
‘Not for me tab say, sah.’
’I hope it will not please you too much if I agree with you, you ugly old fart.' Lewrie smiled as he said it. Old Isaac gave him a toothy grin, nodded and went back to eating his fruit.
Admiral Matthews dined with them that evening, free for once of his flagship and her responsibilities, though Alan wondered what he did that was so important that would not require
‘Thank you, Sir Onsley. I feel very able to join a ship. And I cannot with good conscience prevail on Lady Maude's hospitality any longer,' Lewrie declared. 'Yes,' Sir Onsley said, eyeing him. 'One can only stand to be mothered and fussed over so long before one begins to feel like a lapdog. The surgeon suggests light duties for a spell. How would you like to serve ashore for a while?’
‘While I would dearly love a sea berth, Sir Onsley, I would of course be happy to serve in any capacity, and be grateful to be alive to do so,' Alan toadied-right well, he thought. ’Hmm, yes, I expect you would be. I could take you into
’I amgood with small arms, and artillery, Sir Onsley. ’
‘That is very true,' Sir Onsley said, reaching for the port.