The tower was being re-constructed, he could see. The rectangular, ancient stones had been gathered from where they'd fallen an age or more before and reset. New stones to match, from one of the nearby quarries, had been fetched in to raise it and provide the base of a new house which adjoined it. A basement had been dug out, lined with matching stones or brick.
"It's going to be huge!" Lewrie gasped at the expanse of the foundation, framed by the first courses of the outer, load-bearing walls.
"Not a bit of it," Sir Hugo replied. "It'll be one-level, so I don't gasp my way up and down stairs in my dotage. Like an old Roman-British villa… or an officer's bungalow out in India." His father kneed his horse into motion so they could ride over for a closer look. "Be in by August, they assure me… out from under Caroline's feet. I expect she'll appreciate that," he said, with a wry smirk.
"That quickly? Must cost a bundle, all that haste…?" Lewrie probed, to discover just how much pelf his father had absconded with.
"Five thousand pounds, the land… two thousand for the house, before furnishin's," Sir Hugo off-handedly admitted, as if those sums were mere pittances.
"Dear Lord." Lewrie felt the need to gawp; who had Sir Hugo robbed…?
"Be yours… when I'm gone," Sir Hugo informed him, "my son."
"Ah…?" Lewrie realised, of a sudden. Rather hopefully.
"Three-hundred-sixty acres, all told. Cheek-by-jowl, you note, with yer hundred sixty rented from Phineas. But this'll be a paid-for freehold, free and clear, time I'm passed over. So I expect Phineas'll be too. Then Gov-ernour's yer landlord for the smaller parcel, and you and he can work out the details. This for Sewallis, eventually. He's eldest. Specify in yer will that he's t'rent the smaller to Hugh, for less than market value. Don't expect Hugh'll be home much to enjoy it though. Down for the Navy, I s'pose?"
"That was our intention," Lewrie admitted, "where I have a bit of influence. Find him a good first ship and captain."
"Pity. He's a natural-born horseman. Exuberant child. Daring. And a leader, e'en now. That's magic with troops. Now I've paid off all my creditors, made my pile, I'm a lot more welcome at Horse Guards than ever I was previous. An Army commission is a possibility. In a bukshi regiment too. Needs a bit o' polish though. A good boarding school, 'round the better sort. We could fund that together, Son…"
"Which did you have in mind, Father?" Lewrie grimaced at the memories of how many of the good ones he'd been tossed out of. "We tried that with me, remember? I doubt they're forgotten me, so…"
"Yayyss, well, there is that," Sir Hugo allowed, with a rueful smile of reverie. "Harrow, especially, hey? Boom! You were ever the rebellious young dog. Once Hugh's eighteen though… we could buy an Army commission. Captaincy first… then a majority, as he seasons."
"There's Sewallis to think of first. Two more years and he'll be due for a proper school. When he's twelve. Mature enough to stand up to the bullies he'll meet, sure as Fate."
"We'll see him right," Sir Hugo offered. "Damme, what's money for if not t'see yer children well-placed, well-educated? And ease the first few hurdles? Money and influence. Grandchildren, rather. I will put up half his tuition and such… a modest allowance too, for both the boys. Charlotte, too, when it's her time to be shipped off to be 'finished.' '
"Why, that's… that's magnanimous of you, Father. I…"
"Told you long ago, Son. Would've bought you a bloody pony and cart, was that what you wished." Sir Hugo sighed, drawing a plaid kerchief from his sleeve for a blow of his drink-veined nose. "Wasted my youth, me best middle years. I'll probably waste my dotage too, do I not look sharp about it. Wasn't much of a father to you, and that's a God's honest truth, hey?"
"A-bloody-men," Lewrie snorted back.
"Made up for't, after me own fashion… in India."
An orgy with the three girls of his private bibikhana, as Lewrie recalled it; a cut of the best loot from the Mindanao pirates' hoard, after they'd slaughtered 'em at Balabac; and aye, some of Caroline's most impressive jewelry from that…
"Ah, but yer too old an' jaded to spoil now, Alan, me dear," Sir Hugo scoffed, playfully tipping his son's cocked hat half over his nose. No, I'm not! Lewrie thought; have a stab at it!
"Sewallis and Hugh, now… second chances?" Sir Hugo went on, sounding regretful, but hopeful too. "Reason I bought land here, do you see. Might have been a horrid father… and a shite-arsed husband a time'r two. But! I might just make a hellish-good grandfather… do you not mind. Be around when you can't be. Take a tad of the wind out of Master Hugh's sails… that the way you tarry sorts express it? But a tad. Sewallis, well… impart of a dab o' backbone, a pinch of confidence now and again. With an heroic sailor for a father, and… dare I say it… an heroic soldier for a grandfather, that might inspire him. When you're at sea… I could stand in your stead…? Nought to undermine Caroline, o' course, but…?"
"You'll not turn 'em into Corinthians, swear," Lewrie dithered, torn between acceptance of the peace offering (and the largesse which went with it) or in shouting, "No way in Hell!" for what deviltry Sir Hugo still had fermenting in his breast, no matter his high-flown sentiments.
Look how I turned out! he pointed out to himself; and that with him being there but a tenth of the time! Now, "watch-and-watch"…
"Like I did with you, d'ye mean?" Sir Hugo scoffed. "God, was yer own doin', that. I merely set you the example…"
"A bad'un," Lewrie reminded him, smirking, even so. "Good God, most tykes don't get even that, so sing small and be grateful!" his father japed in mock-seriousness. "Half that due to no mother in the house t'moderate. Your own mother, then old Alice… up and dyin' too."
"Well…"
"Aye, 'tis a rakehellish life I've led, Alan. Not that it was not the grandest fun, mind. I've one true son I know I sired, turned out decent. One step-daughter a ten-guinea whore now… and Gerald. Wherever he's got to, he's most-like but one step away from swallowin' frogs at fairs for tuppence. But here you are with a fine wife and three fine, healthy children, who'll be raised decent. I've no livin' relations, no wife, no one to leave a farthing to, and a bit too old t'be startin' a new family for myself, d'ye see. Christ, money! All I've to show for my life is the bit o' 'tin' I gathered soldierin'. Like muckin' out abattoirs, though the pay's better, sometimes. Well, a slew o' 'tin,' to be frank about it. 'Cause I was ever fortunate t'be in the right places and light-fingered t'boot! Should have written first 'bout my intentions… should you've said 'no,' then I would never have come here, but…"
How much "tin"? Lewrie wondered; you a "chicken nabob"?
"Odd way t'get a ready-made family, though… for what, nine or ten thousand pounds?" Lewrie asked, one brow up. Gently probing.
"Nearer to twelve, all told." Sir Hugo shrugged. "Drop in the bucket. Balabac… rebel rajas' palaces… good fortune in the opium trade to China? I could have bought Phineas's estate entire… lock, stock, and barrel… and still have had plenty left," he boasted.
"Christ!" Lewrie exclaimed, with a low whistle. All his prize-money- should it ever be adjudged and sent to him, mind!-and he'd still be a beggar compared to… "Well, then… I 'spose… you'll not turn Hugh towards cavalry, hear me? He's much too clever for that."
"No, I'll leave that to the likes of Harry Embleton, Son." Sir Hugo laughed, much relieved that he had, in essence, "bought" himself a ready-made family after all. And assuaged his conscience, Lewrie surmised; though he was never quite sure if Sir Hugo truly had one or was merely hymn-singing from memory of how proper folk did things!
"Damme'f I don't like Sir Romney toppin' fine, but… there's a good chance the best part o' Harry ran down the footman's leg. Sort o' dim bastard that turns up in the mess as a Cornet o' Cavalry-so stupid that even the others notice." Sir Hugo guffawed.
"Well, then…" Lewrie summed up, reaching for his reins. "I s'pose we should be going. 'Fore they maim each other, hmm? See those otters of yours at play? Boys? Saddle up!" he called.
"Erm… t
hankee, Alan," Sir Hugo said, offering his hand.
"Not much I could do about it now you've already bought land, is there?" Lewrie sighed, as he swung up atop Anson. "Sorry. Didn't quite come out right, did it? Force of habit… t'be on tenterhooks around you. Wary. It'll take gettin' used to, Father," Lewrie replied, offering his hand. "Mind now, Hugh's not to have an otter pup. Not take one home. Just 'adopt' one… up here at his grandfather's. You'll not encourage him, will you?"
"Son!" Sir Hugo shied, acting much maligned. "Moi?"
CHAPTER SEVEN
Lewrie went over the farm's books the next morning in his study. The entries were in Caroline's neat, copper-plate script-or in their overseer's awkward scrawl. Receipts for seed and such were arranged in one pile and receipts for the sale of sheep, cattle, hogs, wool, corn, and such were in another. Caroline sat by the open double-doors facing the gardens by the side of the house on the west side, knitting and playing games with Toulon, who was mellowing to house-life, and farm-life, quickly.
Keepin' her eyes on me? Lewrie wondered, T'see do I smile or do I glower! And glower over what? He almost shivered, recalling their first "post-honeymoon" spat in the Bahamas, when he'd come home from three months amidst the "down islands" and hadn't appreciated what-all she'd accomplished to turn a rented coach-house into a showplace, had erred by jibing her over the odd pastel the house had been re-painted, as if he were an uncaring cad and she too hen-headed to run their house, present him with a going concern that anyone would be proud of.
"Does something particular trouble you, dear?" she asked, one brow up and her voice a bit hesitant. Not so hesitant, though, that she didn't sound… resentful that he might have found something amiss.
"Just as Governour said," Lewrie admitted, tossing away the newest ledger and leaning back in his chair to puff his lips, frustrated. "Taxes, labour costs. Damme, do we double our profits… as you have done, my dear," he complimented her, and meant it, which eased her greatly. "With the prices we got, at pre-war tax rates and pre-war wages for workers, we should've cleared over Ј300… not Ј200 this past year. Head above water yet… and all that, but… Damme, I wish workin' for a naval hero'd be worth something!"
"Even Maggie Cony, Alan," Caroline said, putting aside all her knitting to cross to the desk and stand behind him, one arm caressing his neck and shoulder. "They offered her work in the kitchens of the Red Swan, and I couldn't match it. With the baby and their cottage in the village to keep up… closer to home and more money, you see. I was sorry to see her go, she was such a treasure, but little I could do to keep her, no matter how friendly we were."
And hadn't replaced her, Lewrie noted, saving nearly eight pounds per annum. With the boys old enough, their private tutor had been sent away after the last term just ended. Besides, the new village school was just as good, though nowhere near as uppercrust-and cost a good deal less. No more need of a proper governess, just an older, widowed maid-of-all-work to tend Charlotte. No, grand as it looked, a Lewrie household didn't seem like it'd be awash in footmen, butlers, serving-girls, and such-not anytime soon, at any rate.
"Besides, your name'd not draw workers, Alan," Caroline imparted, sweeping her skirts aside to first sit on the arm of his chair… then lean back and snuggle into his lap. "Mind, we think the world of you, but…"
He interrupted her to steal a gentle, teasing, wifely kiss.
"Unless there's a grand victory like Saint Vincent, most folk could care less about the war," she told him as she nestled in. "And they forget that a week later. Why, last year, the London Mob stoned the King's carriage! Shouting, 'No more King, no more war, and no more Pitt'!"
"They what?" Lewrie stiffened in outrage. "Why, I never heard the like! Be stormin' the Tower of London next! Buildin' guillotines and loppin' off heads! Didn't see that in any papers come by me."
Hold on, yes, I have heard the like, Lewrie reminded himself; back in London, that packet o'penny tracts … those men at Willis's Rooms!
"Higher taxes, price of feeding themselves gone right through the roof, feeding their families," Caroline mused sadly. "And all the men away, in the Army or the Navy. And, believe it or not, even these high wages they're getting, even with a scarcity of able-bodied hands, can't keep up. Levies on everything needful, Alan. Soap, beer, boots, clothing, on candles. Taxes on sugar, salt, coffee, and tea… not that you can still find tea for sale, 'less it's been smuggled across from France, mind," Caroline complained. "Bricks, tobacco, rum, windowpane glass, windows themselves… four pence, mind you, on a copy of a newspaper! I've heard some mine or mill workers earn eighteen pounds per annum and ten of that goes out in taxes or necessities! The same for our necessities… as I'm sure you saw in my ledgers."
"Aye, I did." Lewrie winced at the year-end sum.
"There have been rumours of riots," she confided, nestling closer to him with a worried look. "Labouring groups organising to stop work for higher pay… though they've been outlawed. Along with all of that Rights of Man, Thomas Paine, croaking."
"Never thought I'd hear such tripe, in England of all places," Lewrie sighed, sliding a protective arm about her. "Damme, don't they know, do they stop working, they starve our defences? Don't they know the Frogs are ready to come conquer us? Ungrateful curs! They wish to parle^-vous and bow to a Liberty Tree, see all the churches boarded up and turned into 'Temples of Reason'?"
There came a knock from the entry hall on the double-doors.
"Beggin' yah pahdon, sah," Andrews's voice came soft and melodious as he filled in for a proper butler. "But 'tis Bosun Cony's wife come callin', sah. Missuz Maggie? Say she got t'speak t'ya, sah. It be urgent, she say."
"Um, ahh…" Lewrie grunted, disentangling himself, helping Caroline up from their compromising position, so she could push her gown and her hair straight, and he could reset his waist-coat, shoot cuffs, and appear "respectable." "Very well, Andrews, I'll be out directly. I do declare, Caroline. Speak of the Devil, hmmm?"
"Hardly the Devil, darling," Caroline chuckled. "Maggie's too dear to us to be calling her that. More-like… seeing a red-bird as sign someone'll come unexpected. Like we believed in the Carolinas."
Lewrie opened the doors and stepped out into the entry-hall, to espy a worried-looking Maggie Cony, the flaxen-haired helpmeet to his old friend and compatriot. While not a classic beauty, for a country woman she was usually most fetching, in a strong, no-nonsense way… and more than a match for her absent husband.
"Mistress Cony!" He beamed. "And young Will too! Bless me… nothing's gone amiss since we saw you at church, has it? Something urgent, I heard?"
Will had been detained at Portsmouth for a few days longer, just until the ship could be properly housed in a stone dry dock. Lewrie had issued leave-tickets for the senior hands, and Will should be on his way home, unless the new captain had decided not to honour them. He'd sent a thick packet of sea-letters on with Andrews and Padgett too, as they'd come on to Anglesgreen with his goods. Everything had been just fine, he'd thought…
"Somethin' awful happenin' down t'Portsmouth, Captain Lewrie, sir," Maggie blurted out. "Coach just came with a note from Will… fetched it me at the Red Swan. He'll not be coming home, sir!"
"Well, damme, he shall!" Lewrie declared, "if I have to coach down to Portsmouth myself and set his new captain straight. I give you my word on that, Mistress."
"Worse'n that, sir. Will got his leave-ticket, aye, and his new captain said 'twas alright him comin' on, but… Now he writes he can't leave the ship nor the dockyards. Can't leave Portsmouth a'tall, sir! None o' the sailors can. There's been mutiny in Portsmouth… nigh on the whole Channel Fleet, sir! Navy won't take any orders t'sail, won't stir, 'til their… demands have been met! Oh Lord, Captain Lewrie, sir!" Maggie Cony said, one hand for her son, and wringing the other in her apron. "Mutiny, sir! They'll fetch soldiers t'put it down, an' my Will right in the middle of it. There'll be hundreds kilt a'fightin'… hundreds hanged, 'fore 'tis done!"
"Mutiny!" Lewrie gasp
ed. "What, the whole bloody Fleet? It… that just can't be! They've… mean t'say…!" He sputtered, turning to Caroline for assurance this wasn't a nightmare.
One ship, aye, with an ogre for a captain. Lewrie shivered, wincing as he recalled how close HMS Cockerel was to mutiny with that batch of slave-driving fiends in her gunroom and midshipmen's berths.
He saw Caroline shudder, but seem to shrug too, as if this was merely one more threatening event in a whole year of earth-shaking, and unbelievable, events. With all the anger and want in the land she had just spoken of, all the unrest he'd seen in those penny tracts, those Republican, rebellious screeds…!
Labourers noting, aye… civilians'd do such-he groped for a thread of understanding-but never the tars! Not my jacks! Irish, maybe-but the best part of the Navy-his Navy? And where might it spread?
"Have you Will's letter, ma'am? Good. Let me see that!"
BOOK TWO
Tamen aspera regum perpetimur iuga,
nec melio parere recuso.
Yet we endure the cruel yoke of kings,
nor though the better man do I refuse obedience.
– Argonautica, Book V, 487-89
Valerius Flaccus
CHAPTER EIGHT
They took the shorter road down from Portsdown Hill this time beneath the furiously whirling signal telegraph station, to the slightly inland town of Portsea. It was a clear day, so Lewrie, Maggie Cony, and young Will could espy far beyond Gosport, Haslar Hospital, several forts including the one opposite Portsmouth Point-manned, the forts were. Above the walls of fortifications circling Portsmouth itself, framed 'twixt Portsmouth and Southsea Castle-pent atop the golden-galleon-spire of the Church of St. Thomas A' Becket-lay the Fleet.
Proud three-decker 1st- and 2nd-Rate flagships, two-decker 3rd and 4th Rates, slim frigates and sloops of war, brigs, schooners, and cutters, bulky transports converted from men-o'-war to carry troops and stores for a world-wide war; sheer-hulks and receiving ships reduced to a gantline and lower-most masts, where new-caught lubbers and seamen languished 'til a warship had need of them.
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