since.'
'I wouldn't know, sir,' Lieutenant Stroud confessed in a meek voice.
'Does your captain come aboard whilst I'm ashore searching him out, then, Mister Stroud,' Lewrie snapped, 'you're to give him these verbal orders, direct from Captain Charlton. He is to up-anchor, sail to Pala-gruza and rendezvous with
'Aye aye, sir,' Stroud barked, glad to have a simple task.
'I'll wood and water
'Aye aye, sir!' Stroud repeated briskly.
'I'll be calling on Sir Malcolm myself. Or along the Rialto, round Saint Mark's Square. Doing some shopping of mine own, tell him, should he wish me to elaborate on these orders before he departs, sir.'
'Very good, sir.' Lieutenant Stroud nodded, all but moving his lips as he committed all that last to memory.
'I'll be on my way, then, Mister Stroud. Good day, sir.'
'See you to the entry-port, sir,' Stroud offered with relief.
Might've given
He just
And I have t'waste half my own short shore-leave huntin' up the bastard! Lewrie further griped.
He tried first at the Shockleys' rented digs, a waterfront palace converted to suites of rooms near the Farsetti Loredan Palace, along the Grand Canal on the other side of Saint Mark's, just by the Riva del Carbon. To hasten his progress-and spare his breath-he enjoyed the unwonted luxury of a sedan-chair.
No one was at home, though, he learned from the English servants; they had dined earlier but gone their separate ways. Sir Malcolm was off to look at some ironworks, Lady Lucy had gone shopping and they'd no idea where that amusing Commander Fillebrowne had gone.
'La, sir, the man's a waggish wit, an' all,' a chambermaid said, blushing prettily. 'An' such a fetchin' gentleman!'
'Ah… really,' he'd drawled, quite skeptical.
' 'Deed, sir! Most scandalous witty an' charmin'!' was her opinion. She blushed again, and tittered into her raised work-apron.
'Ah… humphh!' was Lewrie s comment to that. 'Well, then. I will be off. Regards to the family… all that.'
He'd done what he could. He'd informed Stroud, and Fillebrowne
There had finally been a partial adjudgement from the Prize-Court at Trieste. Before
He discovered some fabulous fabrics for Caroline at a milliner-shop. Two bolts of ivory satin that, he was assured, would make her a fine gown, even in the older, fuller-skirted styles-whatever she had run up from it. To set it off, he bought lengths of elegant and most intricately detailed Burano lacework, scintillating with silvery silk thread, and heavy with wee sparkling Austrian crystals or awash in seed-pearls, as he'd seen on the gowns of those haughty Venetian ladies when he'd gone to the
In another shop, he found an amusing door-knocker for the house, a fanciful lion's head the size of a dinner- plate, made of highly polished brass. For their dinner-table, too, a pair of brass candelabras, but so smooth and shiny they seemed to be silvered. They were happy, smiling dolphins that rose from a circle of waves, their bodies impossibly elongated like eels to twine about upright tridents that spread three tines to grasp
A toymaker's was next, after hiring a two-wheeled cart to carry his loot-and the carter and his two small sons to guard his largesse. Toy boats, Carnival masques, string-puppets and Austrian clockworked harlequins, bears and Turkish warriors. For Charlotte, their youngest, he chose a porcelain-headed doll of a Venetian lady, accurate right down to the cunningly feathered hat and disguising capelet-the
He was standing outside the toymaker's, watching his purchases being packed into the cart, when he saw a familiar figure striding up the street. He turned his shoulder to the man, hoping, but… 'Alan, old son!' Clotworthy Chute panted happily. 'I say!' Talk about pests showin' up when you least wish 'em! he thought when you're flush, and they most likely
But there was no way to ignore Clotworthy. A quick glance to assure himself that it
'Off gettin' stuffed into his redheaded mutton,' Chute brayed. 'So I'm not welcome this afternoon, thankee very much. A
'One day, at least,' Lewrie fibbed, hoping Clotworthy might take a hint that he was too busy to deal with him today. Though, recalling their old days together, he hadn't been much on hint-taking before!
'Ah, let's see how you've done so far, Alan, me old. See have ya been gulled,' Chute offered, going to the cart and pawing into the packages. 'Not bad, not bad at all. Bit darin', this mottled fabric, though I'm told the fashions for 'damn-near see-through and show off yer privates, lately. Does a woman still have a figure for it, I can feature this'd run up nice. Exotic. Allurin'. Entrancin'.'
Christ, last thing I need, Alan groaned to himself, suddenly regretting his purchase of that cloth; 'exotic' in England gets people pilloried! He was sure Caroline still had the figure for this, and wouldn't be quite
'Ah, some for the kiddies,' Chute sighed dramatically. 'Envy you, I do, old son. Family and all…' All but wiping a tear.
