coincidence of the name, well… now I wonder.'
'What sort of an incident?' Ayscough demanded, mollifying his tone and his suspicious glower enough to trot out a squat leather bottle of brandy and offer Lewrie a glass.
'Urn, it was a lady, sir. Her husband… names aren't important, surely, for the lady's sake. Now, the gentleman was quite old, unable to duel, but he swore he'd have my heart's blood.' Alan tried to quibble around the meat of the matter.
'He had suspicions you were tupping his wife?'
'A little stronger than suspicion, sir.' Alan shrugged, feeling as at-sea and cornered as he had during his first interview with
his captain aboard
Ayscough finally asked.
'Well engaged, sir,' Alan said, nodding in affirmation. 'Damme, what sort o' sailors they going to send me, then?' the captain barked. 'Can't even manage a boarding action without witnesses. Yes, I can see why you thought it might be personal, except for the following facts: one, this assassin used my name; two, he knew the name of this ship; three, he knew you were to join her; and, four, he knew the route you were taking. Daddies trying to head off their daughters on their way to Gretna Green to elope with some smarmy bastard have
'Not there, sir.' Alan protested, 'The man knew that, too!'
'Goddamn my eyes!' Ayscough roared, slamming a tough fist on his desk, hard enough to make the deck quake. 'There's a spy about. Back in London, unless I miss my guess. I know it involves the honor of a lady, Lewrie, but just who was this son of a bitch you think was behind your attempted murder?'
'Lord Roger Cantner, sir.'
'Hmm.' Ayscough pondered, drumming fingers and staring at the overhead beams, dropping out of his energetic anger in a flash. 'No, I've never heard of
'Pardon me, sir,' Alan interrupted Ayscough's musings. 'But if I might inquire… what the hell am I doing here, and what the devil is this commission all about?' 'They told you nothing.'
'No, sir, only that it would be discovered to me after I got to Plymouth,' Alan confessed.
'Why, Mister Lewrie, we're off to the East Indies!' Ayscough replied, snapping erect and pacing his spacious cabins. 'Off to see elephants
'Sir. I thoueht we were a warship.' Alan protested, beginning to get a sinking feeling. Had Sir Onsley Matthews gotten an inkling of his affair with Lady Delia-was this his way of ending it?
God help me, is this part of the same mad scheme poor Burgess Chiswick was saddled with, he wondered, starting with an audible gasp.
'If needs be, we are, Mister Lewrie,' Ayscough chuckled. 'I have it on good authority that you're good with artillery, with small arms. You've done some hellish desperate deeds ashore, too. Yorktown, was it? On the Florida coast? Well, you'll get your chance to shine, let me tell you!
'I don't understand, sir,' Alan said, shaking his head, still in a fog. 'We're armed, but we're not a warship?'
'Officially, we're the only vessel of a new trading company in the East Indies, what the nabobs of 'John Company' call a country ship,' Ayscough continued in a softer voice, leaning back onto his desk conspiratorially. 'You'll have no need for your naval uniforms. We'll have a letter of marque from the Admiralty, and from 'John Company,' so we may pass as a privateersman, if needs be. Hmm, might as well reveal all, now I've your rapt attention. Shut your mouth, Mister Lewrie; you catch flies like that.'
'Aye, sir.'
'There's a section of the peace treaty ending the last war that allows us, the Frogs, the Dutch and the Spaniards, only five warships in the Great South Seas,' Ayscough muttered softly, pouring them some more brandy. 'And none of them will be anything larger than a Fifth Rate frigate or a Fourth Rate fifty-gunned two-decker, see. But the Frogs… aye, the bloody Frogs; it's always them, isn't it? We got wind they were putting ships like us out in the Far East, based out of Pondichery and the island of Mauritius. Shadowing the China trade, the round the Cape trade. Laying low until the next war, innocent as you please… for now. And what's worse, stirring up the local pirate fleets. Giving them modern arms. Creating native levies for the next war. Only so much our five obvious
ships can do about it. But, what a private vessel, out on her lawful occasions may do is quite another.'
'So we're to lay low out there 'til the next war, sir? Stir up levies of our own? Arm pirates against the French trade as well?'
'Not quite that far. Confounding the French will suffice,' the captain replied, smiling bleakly. 'For now, I want you to act a role for me. As a half-pay lieutenant, a little short of the wherewithal, and… God bless me, what a wonderful
'And the crew, sir?'
'We're all Navy aft, except for a few gentlemen whose expertise in the East Indies is vital to the venture. And our two super-cargo. Our putative owners, d'you see. Navy down to our bones,' Ayscough said, thumping the desk once more, this time more softly-covertly. 'Warrants, mates, quarter-gunners and gun-captains, yeomen and all are in on it. The ones we thought we could trust have brought friends from other commissions. We know who to look for at the Lamb and Flag. Ordinary seamen, landsmen, idlers and waisters; we can pick up reliable hands enough. Long as the pay's good, most English seamen don't care much what the job is, long's they get their merchantman's pay and decent tucker.'
'And a hearty rum ration, sir.' Alan smiled for the first time.
'That's the truth, by God it is, sir!' Ayscough barked in glee. 'Well, I thank you for your information about this false Ayscough. I have a feeling you'd have been replaced with a fake if he'd succeeded. And thankee for the word on the Lamb and Flag. Somebody knows a little too much for my liking, before we even got the sails bent onto the yards. Too many coincidences to think it a personal
'I see, sir.' Alan preened a little. It never hurt his feelings to have a little more praise heaped on. 'A little daunting, though. To think that somewhere out there in Plymouth, there's a Frenchman just waiting to put a knife between my ribs. Perhaps I should stay aboard…'
'No, we'll have to act natural,' Ayscough said, waving off his suggestion. 'Watch your back for the next few days, though. Don't travel alone. There's some good mates already aboard who'll do for keeping you alive, real scrappers if it comes to a fight-men from my last ship. Take them along on your errands.'
'Um… doesn't it strike you, though, sir, that if someone is on to us already, and tried to put me out of the way, that the whole gaff is blown?' Alan pointed out. 'We might as well sail into Bombay flying battle flags, and we won't know which French ships are our enemies.'
'As far as I'm concerned,
That was all Ayscough could, or would, impart. Other than the fact that to the Admiralty, Alan would remain