anyone else, hundreds of years in these waters, and even we depart the Indies by June, and don't come back 'til late September. Why Sir Hyde's flagship Queen is in the careenage this very moment, sir… to ready her for her voyage to Halifax.'

And here I thought it was 'cause the seaweed on her bottom had taken root in the harbour mud! Lewrie thought, hiding his smirk. He'd heard that Sir Hyde Parker was making a vast fortune in prize money in the West Indies, the richest plum assignment that Admiralty could bestow; and that he was doing it the classic way… trusting to others in frigates and sloops of war, to junior officers in hired brigs, cutters and tenders to reap the spoils, whilst the big ships languished at anchor, waiting for a French fleet that might never come, so tight was the British blockade of the French ports.

'Why the other Third Bates are in, outfitting, too,' Sir Edward further informed him. He topped up his own glass, but made no offer to do the same for Lewrie's this time. 'By no later than mid-June, this harbour will be nearly empty. Then it will be up to the lesser ships on the station to exert themselves in our stead. Tenders to the Third Bates, tenders to the flagship…'

Pets and toadies, Lewrie sneerfully told himself; captains' favourites who can fatten their sea-daddy's purse, and their own. While better men twiddle their thumbs and never see tuppence.

'… hired brigs, captured schooners, and a few frigates, just to keep the French on the qui vive. What is your draught, sir?'

'Umh…' Lewrie said, coming back to the moment, 'seventeen and a half feet aft, sir.'

'Excellent! Though you'll want to purchase, or capture, a tender, or tow some additional single-masted boats for close inshore work,' Sir Edward suggested. 'Base out of Kingston, here, so the voyage over to Saint Domingue will be short, when you run low on stores. You may even contemplate landing some stores, sailing lighter, to reduce draught to seventeen feet, or slightly less.'

'I see, sir. Most helpful advice,' Lewrie replied, realising he was probably the lowest-ranking Post-Captain on- station, and would be staying after the valuable ships departed for hurricane season. Dull blockade work off some French-held port on Saint Domingue, off-and-on plodding back and forth, and nothing worth chasing but for island-built luggers and single-masted sloops. And reefs and shoals, aplenty!

'So Proteus is to patrol close to Saint Domingue, is she, sir?' he simply had to ask, in way of sly prompting for a wider liberty for action… and prize money! 'Or shall she have leave to patrol more, uhm… aggressively? '

'Blockade work, Captain Lewrie,' Sir Edward told him, sounding almost glad to grind it in, as if he had formed a low opinion of him, in a twinkling. 'Get your sea legs in the West Indies, after all that derring-do of yours in European waters,' the staff-captain sneered, with a dismissive gesture towards Lewrie's medals. Unfortunately, the hand that he employed was the one that held his wineglass, and he spilled a goodly dollop of it on his own breeches, the wine-table, and his carpet, which was a very fine-mostly pale- Turkey. 'Goddammit!'

'Oh, what a pity, sir…'bout the rug,' Lewrie said, making a charitable grimace, instead of the angry scowl he felt like showing.

'Best pair, dammit,' Sir Edward seethed, trying to swipe at his drenched thigh, setting that dangerous glass down, at least… but he flung droplets from his hand with an idle shake that spattered Lewrie in turn. 'Oh, bugger!'

'Actually, Sir Edward, I did a few years in the West Indies in the Revolution. Started out here, in '80. So I wonder if the best use of Proteus is…' Lewrie slyly attempted to wheedle.

'Damned puppy!' Sir Edward screeched of a sudden, glaring back at him. 'Don't like your orders, do you? Presume to talk me out of 'em, will you? In debt, are you? That eager for prize money?'

'Never, sir!' Lewrie declared, with his best 'righteous' face on. 'Proteus is fast and nimble, and does draw seventeen feet, sir. I was merely wishing to point out that a shoal-draught brig or large schooner would better serve close-in, whilst a frigate might stand farther offshore, to better interdict ships attempting to smuggle arms into Saint Domingue. And be better placed to intercept the odd French warship. As you say, in a few weeks our strength in the Indies will be reduced 'til the end of hurricane season, and fewer ships will have to cover a vast area, so it struck me that the most, uhm… efficient use of all our vessels is necessary, so-'

'Teach your granny to suck eggs, would you, sir?' Captain Sir Edward Charles fumed back, still mopping himself with a pocket handkerchief. 'Know better than your superiors, do you?' 'Absolutely not, sir, why-!'

'Specific orders will be draughted and aboard your ship by the end of tomorrow's Forenoon, Captain Lewrie. Good day, sir.'

'Very good, sir,' Lewrie answered, quickly quaffing the last of his claret and getting to his feet, his face now an inscrutable public mask. 'Uhm… there is still my courtesy call upon the Admiral. Do you think…?' he enquired in an innocent tone, trying to salvage his odour, thinking that, should he make a favourable impression upon Sir Hyde Parker, what harm he'd done himself with this quarrelsome drunk could be cancelled out. And those orders changed!

'Our admiral is a most busy man, Captain Lewrie,' Sir Edward intoned, 'engaged with weighty matters anent the war, and his additional duties as prime representative of the Crown in this part of the world. Most busy. Some other time, perhaps,' he concluded, not without a malicious simper to his voice, and a top-lofty twitch to his lips. He did, at least, rise to his own feet to steer Lewrie out, though more than a trifle unsteadily.

'Thank you for receiving me, sir,' Lewrie was forced by manners to say, just before the double doors closed in his face, and the muffled cry for a manservant to come swab up the mess reached his ears-ears that were burning with rage!

Damme, but I mucked it! he chid himself as he stomped down the corridor, all but leaving gouged hoofprints in the gleaming tropical mahoghany boards; never argue with a drunk! One who holds powers over you, especially! If my luck's not out, mayhap he'll be half-seas-over by teatime, and so foxed he'll forget I was ever here!

'Arrogant old bastard!' he muttered under his breath. 'Must keep his manservants up all night, washin' the wine and the vomit from out his wardrobe! Not sayin' he's so ignorant, he doesn't know how to pee, but I'll wager there's more'n a time or two his breeches are yellow, and his shoe-buckles 're rusty! God!' he spat aloud. Cautiously.

And it wasn't as if Sir Edward Charles was likely to stand tall in repute, either, he groused to himself; he was a staff-captain, not the flag-captain of the fleet. A drunken stumbler a pistol-shot shy of being 'Yellow Squadroned,' a jumped-up senior clerk left ashore by his superiors to shuffle papers for the real fighting captains!

He found a black servant tending to a laving bowl and a stack of towels just by the wide double doors that led out to the courtyard and coachway, a luxury for officers and civilian visitors who wished to swab off perspiration and cool themselves before reporting to superiors. Badly in need of a cooling-off, Lewrie set aside his hat and plunged his hands into the water, sluicing his face and neck several times, wishing that he could bury his head in the bowl until he blew bubbles, or just up-turn it over himself 'til his choler subsided.

'Thankee,' he said to the well-liveried slave as he offered him a towel. 'Needed that. Hot in there.'

'Aye, sah,' the slave replied, not quite rolling his eyes with long experience of officers who needed his ministrations after their interviews.

Damme, I know Isaw a man in admiral's togs, standin ' on a balcony as we sailed in. Was that Parker? Lewrie recalled.

Fort Charles had partially blocked his view, along with all of the gunsmoke, but Giddy House had been in clear sight for a little bit! It had been too far off to count buttonholes or cuff rings, but he had seen what looked to be a coloured sash and a star of knighthood!

'Uhm, is Admiral Parker ashore, today?' Lewrie asked the slave.

'Aye, sah,' the servant said with a sly smirk. 'But he's werry busy, sah,' he told him in a distinctive Jamaican

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