'Give me a month or so, then I'll be ready for some amusements,' Alan prophecied. 'Though I'd like my excitement a little less neck-or-nothing than this last little bit. I'll suppose you'll be going back to Florida when we land troops there, since you know so much about the Indians now. Maybe Shrike will be involved in it. We'll see each other then.'

'Bless me, Alan, there won't be any landing.' Cashman frowned. 'With Cowell dead, an' McGilliveray gone native, there's no one to say a good word for the idea, an' I doubt any officer in the West Indies'd spare a corporal's guard in a row-boat on the plan. Mind you, it could have worked, given half a chance.'

'Damme, but I'm getting weary of seeing good men die for nothing, Kit,' Alan spat, after a long moment to get over his sudden surprise. 'Seems I've spent my whole time in the Navy taking part in ventures doomed from the start! Graves in The Chesapeake, Cornwallis at Yorktown, evacuating Wilmington… I could give you chapter and verse from now 'til supper and not repeat myself. Oh, we're good when it comes to the fighting, but witless when it comes to the planning for them.'

'All the more reason for fellas like us to live long enough to be generals and admirals,' Cashman barked, giving out with a short, bitter laugh. 'We couldn't possibly be worse than the pack o' fools we have now. Too used to winnin' in the Seven Years' War, I guess, an' forgot all we learned from that one. McGilliveray was a hopeless stuffy bastard, but he had the right idea, I'll give him that. Least he's enough muskets to keep the Rebels from eatin' his people alive for a time, an' traders'll sell 'em anythin' they want, long's they come up with enough pelts an' hides to swap. Well, I'm off. Back to Lieutenant Colonel Peacock an' his shitten ways. All the best to you. Do write and let me know when you get 'married' again, and I'll be there to stand up for you one more time.'

'Aye, I'll keep in touch, but I seriously doubt the marrying part.' Alan smiled, taking Cashman's hand and feeling his sour depression lift for a while. He knew that half of it was being so incapacitated, that and the continuing pain of his wound. He truly liked Cashman, odd a bird as he was, and wished to give him a hearty send off. 'Keep out of trouble. And should I get another girl in the family way, you'll have to stand up with me, else I'd run for the hills. Farewell, Kit.'

'Hoist a Black Drink for me!' Cashman yelled from the boat after he had gotten himself and his dunnage settled, and then he was gone.

Alan waved once more and steeled himself to limp with the crutch aft to the steps to the quarterdeck, wincing with each pace. It would have been so easy to let the surgeons declare him unfit for duty, and he could be put ashore until he was fully healed. But Shrike was his world and he could not bear to leave her for another ship after settling in so comfortably. Better the devil he knew than to be relegated to some new pack of strangers and begin the process of mixing in once more, probably in a larger ship where he would have less authority as a second or third lieutenant. After gaining mastery of his duties well enough to serve as a first officer, he would be damned if he would give it up unless made to do so. So he had risen from his cot the day they had anchored in Kingston harbor, and sweated and suffered to appear fit enough to stay.

The first step, balancing on the crutch with a death-grip on the man-rope, fancy-served with turk's heads, that served for a banister. A second step. And William Pitt, lashing his tail lazily at the top.

'Get out of my way, you mangy bastard,' Alan whispered. 'Oh for Christ's sake, don't do that!'

The ram-cat daintily hopped down to the step he was on and wound about his bad leg, making himself a moving obstacle to any further attempt to take a step. William Pitt was purring.

'Happy I'm crippled, are you?' Alan snarled. 'Getting our own back, are we, damn your eyes? Give way, you sorry shit-sack.'

The cat leaped up to the next step, letting him advance, but repeated the performance, rubbing its chin and head on his good leg this time, and twining about him with tail and side like a snake.

'Need some help there, Mister Lewrie?' Lieutenant Lilycrop asked him.

'Somebody kill this filthy beast, sir, that'd suit,' Alan said, sweating like a slavey for fear he'd go arse over tit any second.

'Stap me, but one'd almost think he's startin' to like you, sir,' Lilycrop marveled. He came down the ladder and helped Alan up to the quarterdeck. 'If you think you can manage it, I'd admire if you joined me in my cabins. You may lean on me, if you've a mind. No shame in acceptin' help now and again when ya need it, sir.'

'Thankee, sir, I'd be much obliged.'

Once ensconced in a padded chair, with a glass of rhenish in his hands, he felt much better, though the appraising way Lilycrop was looking at him was a bit disconcerting. Was he being sent ashore, try as he had to appear hale?

'I've given orders you're to shift your quarters for a while, Mister Lewrie,' Lilycrop finally said. 'You'll be comfortable enough in the chart-space yonder, and all the closer to the quarterdeck, with only the short ladder to manage 'til you're fully healed.'

'I'm grateful for your concern, sir,' Alan told him with a grin as his worries disappeared. 'Doctor Lewyss says another couple of weeks more and I'll be fit enough for light duties. I thought you might be considering packing me off ashore, sir.'

'Oh, not a bit of it,' Lilycrop assured him with one of his round smiles. 'We're used to each other's ways now, and I'd not like to break in another first officer. Not that one'd be forth-comin' from Sir Joshua Bloody Rowley for the likes of us.'

'We didn't exactly fail, sir,' Alan pointed out. 'If he won't reinforce the overtures we made, it's his fault if he lets the chance slip away.'

'He's nothin' to reinforce with,' Lilycrop told him with a sour look. 'Admiral Hood's off Cape Francois, blockadin' the rest of the French West Indies fleet, and Admiral Pigot…'

'Who the hell is he, sir?' Alan asked.

'Goddamn, but you still haven't learned to keep your ear to the ground, boy.' Lilycrop frowned. 'Pigot come out to take over from Rodney last year, just after The Saintes, an' after we got transferred. Anyway, one of de Grasse's junior admirals, de Vaudreuil or something, has most of his squadron penned up at Cape Francois, and at Porto Cavallo, on the Spanish Main. That's why there's to be no ships for any expedition to Florida. All the admirals want a last sea battle, a last crack at the Frogs.'

'So everything we did was a waste,' Alan spat.

'We weren't to know that, not at the time. Admirals change, plans change.' Lilycrop shrugged. 'Maybe after the war's over, we can run traders or agents in there, anyway, and still achieve somethin'.'

'So we're just a little foot-note, sir,' Alan went on, getting angry. 'Maybe not even that.'

'That's the way of it.' Lilycrop nodded, reaching over to tap him on the shoulder. 'Don't take it so hard, Mister Lewrie. You did all anyone could expect of you, and more, from what I heard. Sometimes all you can do is your duty, and your best just ain't good enough if they go and change the plan on you. Don't you think even admirals get their best efforts rejected now and again? 'Course, those never turn up in their memoirs, or the naval chronologies. Rest assured, Rowley give us a good report. And a nice pat on the arse on the way out.'

'Out, sir?'

'Transfer back to Admiral Hood's flag, off Hispaniola. We're to be part of Commodore Affleck's group workin' close inshore to keep an eye on the Frogs at Cape Francois. Be good to get back to sea and have somethin' straight-forward to do, for a change. Maybe get a crack at a merchantman tryin' to supply the damned place.'

'I still think we'd have done better going back to Florida,' Alan said, shaking his head. 'The French will never come out, sir. We waste our efforts blockading them. And if they're blockaded, then we have a clear shot at landing the expedition.'

'But if they learned we were doin' it, and took ships off-station, they would come out, and then where'd we be?' Lilycrop countered.

'Then we keep the fleet at sea, waiting for the second chance to defeat them, sir,' Alan schemed. 'What better lure to draw them out at all! Look here, sir, I'll wager you any odds that Admiral Hood had no idea this expedition was being considered. What if we could write him and let him know of it? He's senior to Rowley, is he not? If he could thin his blockade, provide enough ships to escort the expedition, the French would learn of it. We land our forces at Apalachee Bay, or closer to Pensacola. This de Vaudreuil comes out of Porto Cavallo and Cape Francois, maybe the Dons come out of Havana. Pigot could come west from Antigua or St. Lucie, and Rowley could sortie the Jamaica Squadron. We assemble off the Florida coast, threatening Havana, and meet them in that last glorious battle the admirals want so much!'

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