'Agreed, then?' The flag-captain peered down the table for a consensus. 'Passed for lieutenancy, then. That'll be all.'
'God!' Alan blurted in total stupefaction.
'Well, if you'd rather not be…' a post-captain laughed.
'Oh, nossir, thank you, sirs. I mean, yes sirs!'
'Hush. Take your records and go before we change our minds!'
'Aye aye, sir,' Alan agreed, stumbling over the chair again on his way out. He stepped into the breathless hush of the cabin full of nervous aspirants who still had to endure their own ordeals.
'My God, you were in there near twenty minutes!' one gawped.
'What did they ask?' another demanded.
'It was…' Alan began, and then began to cackle in hysterical relief. 'I can't bloody
'Fire,' someone said, opening his
'On a lee shore, mind you.' Alan grinned, unable to stop shaking with laughter and relief such as a felon must feel pardoned at the foot of the gibbet. 'Bloody daft on 'em, they are!'
'Well, did you pass?'
'Passed!' Alan beamed at them, drawing a deep breath. 'Yes!'
'Bloody Christ, not one in five,' came a sorrowful moan.
'Best of luck to you all,' Alan said, meaning every word of it. He pulled out his watch and consulted it, trying to calm down. 'Ah, what good timing. I shall be back aboard just in time for dinner.'
'Bastard,' someone whispered loud enough to hear, but Lewrie was too used to hearing it spoken of him to care, and too proud and pleased, for the world was suddenly a much sunnier place.
'That's
Chapter 6
The letter came aboard the morning before
Last-minute stores were being stowed, so Alan was busy in the holds supervising so that the fore and aft balance was preserved, and nothing would shift to either beam once they were under way.
Cony, his new hammockman who had been ashore with him at Yorktown, came below to fetch him.
'They's a boat come, Mister Lewrie, an' they brung a letter for ya, from the flag, I thinks,' he said quickly, eyeing him with almost a religious reverence all of a sudden.
'Pray God,' Alan said. Of one hundred and fifty midshipmen that had faced the board, thirty had been passed, but rumor had only promoted ten into immediate commissions. Part of that was based on favoritism, whose son needed a place, who had the better connections or more experience. Was it possible, though? Could he have shown well enough to be one of the lucky ones? God knows the Navy was full of passed midshipmen who didn't have the luck or the 'interest' to be lifted out of their penury, and he had almost thought himself ready to join their embittered ranks. With
He charged up the ladders from the holds to the upper deck and the starboard gangway, where an impeccably dressed midshipman of about fourteen was waiting with a sealed letter.
'I'm Lewrie,' he said, wiping his damp palms on his working rig slop trousers as though the folded and waxed parchment was a holy relic.
'For you, sir, from the flag.'
'Thank you,' Alan said, turning it over. He sucked in his breath in surprise. It was addressed to
'Yes, by God!' he shouted, thrusting that missive at the sky in triumph. It was salvation from Kenyon's wrath, a certain posting into another vessel. It was vindication for all the misery and danger he had faced, willing or not, since being forced most unwillingly into the Navy two years before. It was also, he reflected in his victory, the keys to Lucy Beauman and her father's money as soon as he could get his young arse back to Kingston and ask for her hand.
He broke the wax wafer and unfolded the letter. He was instructed to equip himself as a commission officer and report aboard HM
'Yes, by God!' he repeated, reading it through once more and savoring the words. 'Cony, go below and start packing my sea chest.'
'Yer a officer, sir?' Cony goggled.
'Yes, I am,' Alan replied in exultation.
'Beggin' yer pardon, sir, but you'll be a'goin' into another ship, then? You'll be a'needin' a servant, sir, an' I'd be that proud ta be yer man, sir,' Cony offered.
'Then you shall be. I must see the captain. Off with you.'
He went down to the gun deck and aft to the main entrance to the captain's quarters where a fully uniformed Marine sentry stood to serve as guard and tiler.
''E's wif t' pusser, Mister Lewrie,' the sentry told him.
'Even better.' Alan grinned. 'Tell him Lieutenant Lewrie is here to see him.'
'Oh, Lor', Mister Lewrie, don' you be japin' now,' the sentry chided from long familiarity with a young man who was to his lights not much more than a jumped-up younker half his own age.
'No jest,' Alan said, waving the parchment as proof.
The sentry shrugged and came to attention, banging his musket butt on the oak decking and shouting at the top of his lungs. 'Lef'ten't Lewrie, sah!'
Freeling opened the cabin door immediately and Alan entered the great cabins, where Railsford and Cheatham had been going over the books and having a glass of wine together.
'This is not your idea of humor?' Railsford asked, his face somber but his eyes twinkling.
'No, sir. The flag-captain has promoted me a commission officer into a brig o' war, the
'My stars above,' Cheatham said, rising from his seat to take Lewrie's hand and pump it excitedly. 'How
'Freeling, fetch an extra glass,' Railsford instructed. 'We'll take a bumper in celebration. Sit you down, Mister Lewrie. Or should I say, Alan. By God, it is marvelous news.'
'Thank you, sir.'
'Sorry that we have to lose you, though,' Cheatham sighed after they had drained their glasses and sent Freeling digging into the wine cabinet for a fresh bottle to toast his good fortune. 'But, my word, what fortune you have had in the last year with us.'
'Yes, I shall miss you both, sirs,' Alan replied. 'You've done so much for me, both professionally and personally, I'll feel adrift without you as my mentors.'
Damme if I won't miss them, he thought ruefully, realizing at that moment that he would indeed be leaving