BOOK TWO
'En labor, en odiis caput insuperabile nostris!'
'Lo! a heavy task!-this man whom no hate of mine can overcome!'
Valerius Flaccus
CHAPTER EIGHT
While Lewrie didn't think he had much to fear from the Beaumans and their allies, still all a'bluster with rage over Ledyard's demise, and the undying shame and dishonour attached to it (in court at least) there
So it was with A Glad Heart and filled with Righteous Duty that Lewrie ordered HMS
Despite his previous experience in the Caribbean, Lewrie hadn't known about the odd phenomenon of the sunset 'green flash,' that brief eye-blink of time when the sun at last declined its last hot sliver under the horizon, and the final, glorious reds, oranges, pinks, and greys were interrupted. It had been Kit Cashman who'd told him of it, over their last goodbye supper, the last night in harbour.
He had been pacing the windward bulwarks of the quarterdeck, as was a captain's sole right when not below, but crossed to leeward with his fingers crossed, hoping that Cashman hadn't been pulling his leg. Unblinking, he strained his eyes, looking directly into the sun's ball. No, not this night, for Sol blinked out, yonder over New Spain to the West, leaving only the rapidly dulling colours of the usual tropic sunset that could, at sea, turn star-strewn black as quickly as a closed window shutter.
If he had been cheated by Nature this night (or twitted by Kit's tongue-in-cheek inventions), at least the early evening was cooler than the day, and the wind rushing cross the deck was a blessing. He pushed off the bulwark, clapped his hands in the small of his back, and paced to the double-wheel and compass binnacle, now lit by a whale-oil lanthorn flickering eerily upon the faces of the quartermaster and his mate now standing their 'trick' at the helm. He craned his gaze upwards to the sails and rigging in the quickly failing last light, ascertaining that everything was just so, with nothing out of order or amiss; a peek up to 'weather' for threats of storm clouds; a look down into the binnacle at the compass, where the pointer wavered near to East-Sou'east, Half East, as close to the steady Nor'east wind as
Quartermaster Austen stood to the weather side of the helm, his Mate to the loo'rd, a larger man who braced his strength on the wheel spokes, his eyes on the sails aloft, whilst Austen kept his glued upon the compass. A big fellow, was the Quartermaster's Mate, new-come off a Yankee smuggler taken on the north shore of St. Thomas in the Danish Virgins, where
Toby Jugg, for that was the improbable name he'd given when he reluctantly signed ship's books as a 'pressed man, had originally been rated an Ordinary Seaman, but had quickly proven Able in the past few months, and had then 'struck' for Quartermaster's Mate. Big, hulking and dark-visaged, surly and noncommunicative, Jugg had only 'volunteered' to qualify for the Joining Bounty to send to his woman and child on Barbados, far to the South. Odds were,
'Not too heavy forrud, Mister Austen?' Lewrie asked the senior Quartermaster's Mate. 'Not crank?'
'Erm… she's fair-balanced, Cap'm,' Austen took a long time to adjudge. 'Mebbe a tad light, forrud. But she tacks right-easy, sir.'
'Watch her head close, then,' Lewrie said, transferring his gaze to the inscrutable Toby Jugg. 'And nothing to loo'rd, it goes without sayin', right, Jugg?'
'Y'say so, sir,' Jugg growled, eyes locked on the main course.
'Ahem…' Aspinall interrupted, 'but yer supper's ready fer servin', sir.'
'Aye, thankee, Aspinall,' Lewrie grunted, irked by Jugg's coolness which was just shy of dumb insubordination. 'Carry on, then, men. Mister Catterall, I leave you the deck, and the watch. Evening, all.'
'Aye aye, sir,' the Second Officer piped up, after hovering in summoning distance the last ten minutes. He clapped his hands behind his back and short-strutted up to windward, filled with his importance. Quartermaster's Mate Austen waited 'til he was out of earshot before he dared mutter from the lee corner of his mouth.
'Jugg, ye bloody idiot,' Austen told his helm-mate. 'The Cap'm ain't nowhere bad as some, an' better'n most. Keep up yer surly airs, though, an' ye'll push him t'flog ye, an' take back yer ratin'.'
'Sod 'im,' Jugg whispered back. 'Sod all officers an' captains.'
'Sod 'im, who's done right by ye?' Austen pointed out. 'Ye toss yerself back t'Able Seaman, an' there's nought t'send yer ol' woman an' kid. Show willin', why don't ye? Don't cost tuppence.'
'But…' Jugg began to disagree, his face working sorrowfully, but any explanation or relenting was stopped by Lt. Catterall.
'Minds on your duties, men… no talking, there,' he snapped.
'Aye aye, sir,' they chorused.