with every pitch, roll, or toss?
Despite being more than sated with supper and all that wine, he felt driven to sketch his impressions that moment, before they faded from his mind. If the Royal Navy could attempt some construction along similar lines, with those diagonal thingamajigs…!
He sat down at his desk and fumbled open a drawer for paper and pencils, suddenly aware that his brandy was sitting on it, with Toulon lurking over it, one curious paw raised and his nose at the edge, mouth hanging open the way it did when he found a new scent.
'Mine!' Lewrie hissed, dragging it to him. He took a sip, then stood briefly to strip off his coat before beginning to draw. Toulon was intrigued by that, too, following the pencil end wide-eyed.
Happy the officer who brought Admiralty an innovation, Lewrie told himself. Happy, too, the officer who provided a hint that Americans were divided by sectional differences, that their burgeoning new Navy was rent by jealousies 'twixt the rich maritime states closer to the seat of power and interest, and the rest who dwelled too far away to north or south. Even as he drew, a part of his mind was composing a report that he would pen in the morning… once his head cleared.
'Oh dear Lord, sir,' Aspinall softly gasped.
'What?' Lewrie snapped, impatient to be interrupted. He looked up to see Aspinall staring at him, as wide-eyed as Toulon. 'Come down with the pox, have I? What is it, man?'
'Yer shirt an' waistcoat, sir,' Aspinall mournfully told him. 'That new cotton dress coat o' yours has bled blue all over 'em.'
'What?' Lewrie yelped, jumping to his feet and trying to crane around his own body, arms raised, to see how much damage had been done. He pawed at his sides, trying to drag his shirt 'round to the front. He quickly undid the buttons of his waistcoat and stripped it off to hold it up to the light. 'Well, damme!'
The thin white satin back of the waistcoat was
'Shirt's worse, sir,' Aspinall meekly informed him. Kershaw's great-cabins had been close, airless and humid, without canvas ventilation scoops; even the overhead skylights in the coach-top had been closed. Obviously, Kershaw, from already muggish Charleston, was
'Well…' Lewrie said at last, lowering the garment in defeat. 'It
'I'll give it a go, sir, but I ain't promisin' much.' Aspinall said. 'Uhm… yer breeches're in the same shape, sir.'
'Still have white
'I'll fetch yer nightshirt, sir.'
'And a basin of water, Aspinall. Before I show up on deck tomorrow, as blue as an old Druid.'
'Aye, sir… lots o' soap, too.'
Once coolly bathed and clad in his thin nightshirt, Lewrie bent once more to his drawing, adding curved diagonal lines atop the cross-hatchings of a ship's skeleton, thinking that even if the matter of his cotton uniform coat hadn't exactly worked out, the evening hadn't been a total loss. He had learned more than he had expected, had elicited
He eyed the small wash-leather purse of coins that
It was what some-should they ever come to know of it, and he would be damned if they did!-might call a bribe. Taking
Easier all 'round, really, for Lewrie to write his report, saying that in the spirit of 'cooperation' he had surrendered precedence and possession to the arriving American frigate.
They had, after all, the value of
Lewrie leaned back from his artwork with a satisfied smile, in full 'scheme.' With
'Bloodies'!
He hefted the coin purse, calculating in his head; two-eighths of Ј100 was Ј25, a captain's share of the bribe. Who knows, it might just cover the cost of the ruin of his wardrobe!
CHAPTER NINETEEN
The winds had backed a full point from Nor'eastly to Nor'east-by-East, as well.
'Mister Langlie, we'll stand in as close as we may to the Cape of Saint Nicholas before tacking,' Lewrie announced. 'Claw us out all the ground you can to weather, before we come about to North-by-West.'
'Aye aye, sir.'