Soft Rabbit in a fashionable gown and picture hat was laughing with glee as he danced with her at Ranelagh Gardens, under the myriad candles, white-silk heeled shoes and stockinged ankles flirting under the froth of lace at her hems, whilst Theoni Connor stood and fanned herself near the string orchestra in livery and powdered wigs playing, inexplicably, a lively jig called 'Go To The Devil And Shake Yourself.' Theoni had a mug of ale in her other hand-and a Muskogee 'papoosa' cross her back which bore twin boys, peering over one shoulder and beneath an armpit. Theoni
'Sir! Sir!' Midshipman Grace said in a harsh whisper near his bed-cot. 'Mister Adair's duty, sir, and he says to tell you that the enemy is in sight, sir!'
'Woof?' Lewrie grunted, pushing himself up from his face-down frog sprawl to an elbow. 'Umm… where away?'
'Two points off the starboard bows, sir, and almost hull-up to us, sailing about Nor'west-by-North… reefed down for the night, he said to tell you, sir!' Grace tumbled out with eagerness. 'It is now a quarter-glass shy of Four Bells, and Mister Adair has doused all of our lights, soon as the starboard bow lookout sang out, and…!'
'Very well, Mister Grace,' Lewrie replied, shaking his head to clear the cob-webs; the cool air streaming into his cabins had put him into a deep, muzzy, and dizzying sleep, as he had expected the afternoon before.
Aspinall had been summoned from his hammock a deck below in the after stores room, but was taking
'Mister Adair is to call all hands to Quarters, Mister Grace,' he snapped as he drew a shirt over his head. 'No pipes, no fifes and drums, and tell him I'll be on deck, directly. Go! Scamper, lad!'
Shirt and breeches, shoes and coat, and no time to fool with a pair of stockings; a trundle cross the cabins to his arms rack for his hanger, and to hell with his hat. Within a frantic two minutes in the dark, he was out past the Marine sentry on the gun-deck and scampering up the starboard ladder to the quarterdeck scant moments ahead of the hands who'd come to strip his great-cabins of partitions, furniture, and fittings, to man the 12-pounders mounted right-aft.
'Captain, sir,' Lt. Adair reported, knuckling his forehead for a salute, instead of doffing his hat. 'You can see her in the night-glass, sir… two points off the starboard bows. Three-masted, full-rigged, but reefed down to tops'ls, jibs, and spanker for the night.'
Lewrie accepted the heavy night-glass and lifted it to his eye, espying the strange ship, upside-down and backwards, as if sailing on a reciprocal course to her real one, due to requirements of the optics in the tube, as Lt. Adair prosed on to finish his report.
'… about a half-hour before, sir, just looming behind Pointe Al-legre. Her going Northerly, us fetching the point? Saw her lights, but we thought she was just a fishing smack, out night-trawling, 'til we got close enough for her sails to catch some moonlight, sir, and we divined how big she was.'
'Very well, Mister Adair. My compliments to the lookouts, and to your quick judgement regarding our taff-rail and binnacle lights. I will… ah, Mister Langlie? That you in the night-shirt, is it?'
'Aye, sir,' his First Lieutenant said, sounding sheepish about his catch-as-catch-can state of dress.
'Hands aloft, and shake out the night reefs in the main and the mizen tops'ls, let fall one reef in the main course,' Lewrie directed. 'Waisters to the braces, and steer for a point ahead of her bows. She shows no sign of spotting
'Here, sir,' the Marine officer replied from near the larboard quarterdeck ladder. Lewrie could barely make him out by the sheen of his white silk shirt and white cotton breeches, quickly masked back to darkness by his batsman, who was pushing him into his red tunic, black in the faint moonlight of predawn. 'Will you be requiring a boarding- party, pray God, sir?' Lt. Devereux enquired, carefully making his way over tackle, ring-bolts, and the neatly coiled jear and halliard lines by a series of shuffling, probing scuffles.
'Sorry we've proved boresome of late, Mister Devereux,' Lewrie said, chuckling. 'Aye. Man the larboard gangway, and be ready to go over to her, should she prove to be hostile.'
There were many more comings and goings, with a deal of grunts, curses, and muffled yelps as less-careful or less-fortunate crewmen or officers stubbed their shoes or bare toes on deck obstructions in the darkness.
'Then we're about to scare some poor Yankee or Dane out of his shoes, and a year's growth,' Lewrie japed. 'But I doubt that. Mister Adair said she was ghosting along
'Mmm,' Winwood pondered. Lewrie could hear his new footwear, a handsome pair of Hessian boots he'd bought at English Harbour, creak as he rocked on the balls of his feet. 'Then perhaps our last raid makes them sail after sunset, hoping to be a good half-day's sail out to sea before false dawn, Captain. Beyond the ken of any blockaders?'
'I'd be gratified to hear that our last visit resulted in such a panic, aye, Mister Winwood,' Lewrie snickered. 'Good God, who's that?' he asked as a meaty thud, two grunts, and a faint 'Dammit!' arose from the larboard ladder.
'Bosun, sir,' Mr. Pendarves reported in a harsh, gravelly voice. 'Ship's at Quarters, Mister Catterall begs me t'report.'
'Very
'Ladder, sir… ladder!' Pendarves snarled as he made his way forward.
'Oi, sor,' Mr. Larkin said, stumbling forward to take the keys, and not even bothering to disguise his sniggers as he deftly sprang to a ladder and sprinted forward.
'Now, where's our spook, goin' bump in the night?' Lewrie asked, lifting the heavy night-glass, again. She was right ahead, smothered by
'Dear God, but they're clueless!' Lt. Langlie chortled softly.
'Quartermasters,' Lewrie bade. 'We'll round up alongside her at about a
'Aye, sir,' Austen and Jugg both chorused in tense whispers.