reproachful or provoking speeches tending to make any quarrel or disturbance, upon pain of imprisonment'… or whatever punishment I think fit. Now
'Uh, nossir… no, Yer Honour, sir.' They cringed.
The Court Martial Jack was already flying across the harbour, as a board of Post-Captains off some of the line- of-battle ships convened to deal with a whole raft of malefactors aboard HMS
'Formal charges'd put you in irons, cooped up in another ship's brig, 'mongst strangers,' Lewrie informed them. 'Might take days… before they got 'round to your case.' He forced himself to glower hot. Furfy's use of 'Yer Honour, sir,' told him the bulky fellow had been in the dock before. 'And your trial'd go 'bout as fast as havin' yerself a hedge-whore… 'in, out… repeat if necessary.' Now, do you
'Nossir… no, so please, Yer Honour, sir!'
'Now, then.' Lewrie sighed, leaning back in his chair. 'Goin' for Haslip, that I can understand. A thief caught red-handed by his shipmates
'Oh, arra!' Furfy groaned, turning pale.
'Lord save us, sir, we…!' Desmond wavered, looking like-about to faint in dread.
'They read it to you; you should have known,' Lewrie cut him off. 'There is no excuse for it, most especially ignorance. Landsman Furfy, Landsman Desmond, I find you guilty of refusing to cease fighting, of disobeying lawful orders to desist, and of quarrelling with a superior. Since, however, you are only a week in the Navy, and less than a day aboard
They blanched, shared a worried look, then turned their gaze on him all but quivering in their shoes.
'Ten days bread and water. Ten days deprived of rum, wine, or even small beer. Bread to be ship's biscuit, not 'Tommy.' No tobacco either And you will both serve as hammockmen
No rum, no wine, no beer? No tobacco to ease their idle hours? It was a death blow! And to survive on water and biscuit, when every other man was eating shore-bread, fresh meat from shore…!
'Dismissed,' Lewrie snapped. 'Now, for Landsman Haslip, Mister Ludlow.'
'Aye, aye, sir.' Ludlow nodded. There it was again-another querulous note in his voice that hinted of disapproval of leniency for Furfy and Desmond; what he'd wished for was the maximum of two-dozen lashes. 'Pass the word for Landsman Haslip to present himself!' he barked at the Marine inside the great-cabin.
'Passin' t'word fer Landsman Haslip!' the outer sentry echoed.
Then there came the sounds of cheering, a chorus of 'Hip, Hip, Hooray!' which made Lewrie turn up the corners of his mouth with wry amusement. The crew must have been on the Irishmen's side in the matter and were expressing satisfaction for his lenient sentence despite the risk they ran to dare approve or disapprove. A first sign of spirit in this new crew of his? he wondered.
No, he thought a moment later, as a scrubbed-up Haslip was led in from the gun-deck, past his dining-coach, chart-space, and pantry.
It wasn't coming from
'Mister Ludlow, we miss something? Restoration Day, perhaps?'
'Don't know, sir?' Ludlow puzzled. 'Not Restoration Day, for certain. That's not for…'
'Off'cer th' Watch, Mister Wyman,
'Captain…!' Lieutenant Wyman gasped as he burst in, almost wringing his hat in his hands, his complexion flushed. 'It's
'Bloody…!' Lewrie yelped, as if stung. He dashed forrud to see for himself, careening off Haslip and his marine guards. Out upon the gun-deck, up a ladder to the quarterdeck to peer out hatless, and suddenly breathless from more than haste. He lunged for the binnacle rack for a telescope, then froze… for it really wasn't necessary.
'Christ, not here too!' Lewrie felt like wailing.
'Lord, sir, what'll we do?' Lieutenant Wyman almost begged.
Now
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
But so far
Short of rations, water, firewood, powder, and shot,
'Mister Pendarves?' he shouted. 'Mister Devereux?'
'Here, sir,' the marine officer called back from the quarterdeck, already immaculately turned out in full kit.
'Turn out your Marines, sir, at once!' Lewrie snarled. 'Armed, mind… to the teeth!'
'Captain?' the Bosun queried from below in the waist.
'Bosun, pipe 'All Hands.' Muster hands to man the capstan, then prepare to make sail!' Lewrie called down to him. 'We're leaving harbour quick as we can. If you have to cut the bower and kedge away, so be it.'
Pendarves's silver call began to peep and shrill, joined by the sounds from his junior, Towpenny's. Feet, shod or bare, began to drum on the oaken decks as the crew responded to their summons, racing from below to mill and bleat in confusion. Some knew the call and went to their proper stations at once. Others, the fresh-caught landsmen, had the civilian penchant for chattering about it before being collared by the yeomen or detail 'captains'; berated, shoved, fisted, or 'started' to their proper positions. Spry young topmen clambered aloft, up the rat-lines and out over the futtock shrouds to the fighting tops, beyond to the tops'l yards to scoot out precariously on the