“You’re a sly, devious pessimist, Mister Westcott,” Lewrie said, suddenly inspired.
“I’ll take that as a compliment, sir!” Westcott said, beaming.
“If God’s just… and I write my report well, we’ll never see or hear of torpedoes again in our lives!”
EPILOGUE
This little Boney says he’ll come
At Merry Christmas time,
But that I say is all a hum
Or I will no more rhyme.
Some say in wooden house he’ll glide
Some say in air balloon,
E’en those who airy schemes deride
Agree his coming soon.
Now honest people list to me,
Though income is but small,
I’ll bet my wig to one Pen-ney
He does not come at all.
POPULAR DITTY CIRCA 1804
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
“Midshipman Warburton…
“Enter,” Lewrie bade, seated at his desk in the day-cabin. His coat was off, despite the chill of an early November evening, and his choice of pre-prandial tipple this night, a tankard of brown ale, sat by his elbow as he penned a letter. “Yes, Mister Warburton?”
“Your visitor’s boat is approaching, sir,” Warburton reported.
“Ah ha, just about time. Thankee, Mister Warburton,” he told the Mid, stowing away his pen and ink, and sliding the letter that he was composing into the top drawer of his desk. Lewrie rose and took his coat from the back of his chair and put it on to go on deck to welcome Mr. James Peel from the Foreign Office, who had sent down a note from London even before
He took a last swig of ale, clapped on his hat, and strode out past the Marine sentry, then up the starboard ladderway to mount to the sail-tending gangway and entry-port just as Peel’s boat bumped against the hull.
“D’ye require a bosun’s chair, Peel?” he called down in jest.
“Be with you directly,” Peel called back as he scaled the side.
“S’pose ye came hungry,” Lewrie laconically said as Peel’s hat and head appeared over the lip of the entry-port. “It’s uncanny, how you always seem t’turn up just at mealtimes.”
“Hallo, old son, and yes, I did,” Peel rejoined once he’d gained the deck and briefly doffed his fashionable curl- brimmed hat to the flag, then to Lewrie. “I’d never miss a chance for one of Yeovill’s excellent suppers.”
“Let’s go aft, then, and get you a drink,” Lewrie offered.
Peel would have a brandy to ward off the chill of his boat from the docks, while Lewrie settled for a second tankard of ale. They sat at the starboard-side settee.
“So, how are things in London?” Lewrie asked him.
“Folk are in calmer takings, now Winter’s getting on, and they see that Bonaparte won’t cross the Channel in bad weather,” Peel said with a grin, shifting and squirming to get more comfortably seated at his end of the settee. Toulon and Chalky leaped down from their naps on Lewrie’s desk and came to re-make Peel’s acquaintance. “We heard an interesting bit of news from France about the invasion fleet, by the way.” He paused to let the cats sniff his hand, then began to pet them. “Something that may give Boney more pause than any Winter gale, or the attack on Boulogne… bad luck, that, but congratulations to you for your part in it.”
“Even if it went so badly,” Lewrie replied with a groan of remembered futility. “Damn all torpedoes,
“Yes, well… it seems that Bonaparte and his generals thought a dress rehearsal was a good idea… see how quickly and efficiently his army could board their ships and put out to sea a few miles. With Bonaparte watching from a clifftop, like Xerxes watched the ancient Battle of Salamis,” Peel happily related, “all went swimmingly… how apt, that! ’Til the wind and sea got up and he discovered how much a pack of amateurs his sailors were. God only knows how many barges and boats were wrecked, but our report, from a
“More fool, he, if he persists,” Lewrie chortled in glee, “and if he insists on usin’ those turtle-back monstrosities, well!”
“Congratulations on fetching two of them in so we could inspect them,” Peel said, bowing his head in gratitude for a second. “Nothing official, mind, just my personal congratulations. Still secret, very hush-hush… though, you must be used to that by now, having worked with Mister Twigg so long.”
“God, aren’t I, just!” Lewrie griped, though good-naturedly.
“Saw some people known to you in London,” Peel blithely went on, seemingly content to sip his brandy, stroke the cats, and slough at ease; he did, though, give Lewrie a sly under-brow gaze.
“Oh? Who?” Lewrie asked, wondering if he should begin to worry, and quickly running through a list of characters best avoided.
“Lord Percy Stangbourne and his sister,” Peel told him, looking waggish. “Leftenant-Colonel Lord Stangbourne, rather.”
“I thought Horse Guards had taken his regiment into service and sent him down to the Kent coast?” Lewrie said, puzzled, and trying to look innocent.
“Back in barracks ’til Spring,” Peel went on, “and back in his old haunts, like Boodle’s and the Cocoa Tree. His sister seems nicer than her repute. Rather fetching, in point of fact.”
Peel peered at him as if expecting Lewrie to gush like a schoolboy in “cream-pot” love, make quibbling noises, or half-heartedly agree with his assessment of her, shrugging it all off.
The letter he’d been writing had been to Lydia, whose latest post to him contained an offer to coach down to Portsmouth and spend a few days together-did he still wish? Damned
“Aye, she is… devilish-handsome and fetchin’,” Lewrie agreed most assuredly.
Peel’s response was a very broad smile and a nod of approval.
“Well-blessed with God’s own tremendous ‘dot,’ too,” Peel said.