“In London, ma’am. I was a chummy, a climbin’ boy.”
“A climbing boy? Do you mean you cleaned chimneys?”
“That I did. Still can’t get the soot out o’ me nails.”
“What a horrible time you must have had.”
“Oh, aye, and I had a mean boss – Mr. Hardy was his name. He stood around eatin’ meat pasties while I climbed the dark flues. And if I didn’t wanna go up, he’d prick me feet with a pin. I’ve burns on me legs and arms, and me lungs don’t take kindly to colds.”
“How did you ever escape Mr. Hardy?”
“I didn’t jump out o’ no windows, ma’am,” he said with an impish grin. “Nay, I was climbin’ at a big house one day and I had a fall. Bruised meself badly. The man o’ the house was kind enough to give me water and let me rest awhile on his couch. He gave Mr. Hardy a terrible tongue lashin’ on account o’ me bad treatment, and ordered Mr. Hardy to leave his house at once, sayin’ I would be stayin’ with him. Imagine me surprise! His wife was kind too. She give me the best dinner I’ve ever eaten and told me to eat up ’til me sides busted. I remember it still: roast o’ pork an’ potatoes, a kind o’ mint sauce, biscuits, cheese, and a baked bread puddin’.” He sighed at the memory. “It was grand. After dinner the man asked me if I wanted a postin’ on a sailin’ ship. Said he was a big gun in the Royal Navy and could get me a post if I was keen. Course I didn’t wanna go back climbin’ so I jumped at the chance.”
“Who was this saviour of yours?”
There was mischievous glint in Magpie’s eyes and his thin chest swelled as he proudly said, “He was called the Duke o’ Clarence.”
Emily’s mouth fell open. “The – the Duke of Clarence? Our King George’s son?”
“One ’n’ the same, ma’am.”
“That is astounding!” Her dark eyes danced as she clapped together her bandaged hands in merriment. “Imagine you making the acquaintance of the Duke of Clarence.”
Magpie’s smile vanished. “Why? ’Cause I ain’t nobody?”
“Oh, I didn’t mean it in that vein, Magpie. I just think the poor duke has long been criticized for his lifestyle and politics and here he’s shown true kindness to the Isabelle’s sail maker.”
“D’ya know him too, ma’am?”
Emily shrank back on her barrel. “No. I’ve just read about him in the newspapers. That is all.”
For a moment Magpie’s almond eyes watched her, as if expecting her to say more, but when she did not, his expression changed and he peeked up shyly at her. “Do ya like the clothes I made fer ya, ma’am?”
“Your handiwork is truly exquisite! I look every inch a sailor now, do I not?” Emily leaned closer to him. “Everything is perfect and yet … I cannot guess how it fits me so well.”
“Dr. Braden helped me guess yer … yer proportions, ma’am.”
“Did he now?” Emily grinned pensively.
“Magpie! Why aren’t you below sewing our sails?”
The low voice startled Magpie, who sprang off his barrel to salute the young man with the bandaged left hand who stood before them.
“You don’t have to salute me,” the man said.
“Aye, but I do, sir. Yer a carpenter’s mate and higher on the scale than me.”
“Nonsense,” the carpenter’s mate replied. His hair was long and shaggy, and beneath his knitted hat, which resembled a long sock, his tanned face was familiar. He jerked his paint-splattered thumb towards Emily.
“Who’s your pal, Magpie?”
The boy faltered, his eyes darting nervously between Emily and the carpenter’s mate.
“Mr. George, midshipman, at your service, sir,” Emily said loudly, raising a fist to the brim of her straw hat in salute.
The young man looked wary as he returned the salute. “How do you do? Morgan Evans is my name … sir.” His stare flickered beneath her face and settled on her silk slippers. “You must be one of the new ones on the Isabelle. Welcome aboard, Mr. George.”
“Thank you, sir.”
There was the faintest hint of a smile on his lips as he nodded and sauntered on down the deck.
“Ya didn’t fool Mr. Evans, ma’am.”
“Apparently not.” Emily watched after him until she could no longer discern his funny hat amongst the throng of sailors.
“He’s the one what plucked ya from the sea.”
“I thought he looked familiar.”
“Beg yer pardon, ma’am, but if ya wanna pretend you’re a midshipman, ya don’t hafta salute a carpenter’s mate like Mr. Evans.”
“I have much to learn …” Emily’s voice trailed off as she caught sight of a young officer standing against the quarterdeck railing, his chin raised in challenge, glaring down upon her with his dark, penetrating eyes.
“Who’s that, Magpie?” she whispered, nodding in the direction of the insolent observer.
“That’s Lord Lindsay, ma’am.” Magpie shivered. “I … I don’t like him much.”
1:00 p.m.
(Afternoon Watch, Two Bells)
WHEN THE AIR RESOUNDED with two bells, Magpie had to resume his duties, even though, unbeknownst to Emily, he had missed his dinner to sit with her. Emily couldn’t help feeling sad. Her taste of freedom had been all too brief and she had enjoyed their discussions on naval regulations, the fine art of sail sewing, and Biscuit’s culinary repertoire. Unable to wander the decks alone, she reluctantly began her trek back to the hospital, telling her little companion he didn’t need to assist her. “I’ll have to make my own way around the Isabelle sooner or later.”
Having successfully managed the first ladder down to the upper deck, she found herself outside the officers’ wardroom. Behind the closed door came two voices raised in anger. She recognized one as the captain’s, but was not certain of the other. Emily slowed her pace in an attempt to hear their words.
“It’s one thing giving that woman freedom to exercise above deck; it’s quite another allowing her to trifle with the likes of Magpie and Morgan Evans on the main deck.”
“Magpie is a boy of ten.”
“Mr. Evans, however, is not.”
There was a crash as if someone’s fist had found a tabletop. “Enlighten me here. I fail to understand your concerns, brought on by an abundance of grog no doubt …”
Emily’s heart stopped when the floorboards creaked behind her. A stench of perspiration and rotting teeth struck her nose with the force of a club. A growling voice breathed down her neck.
“Lost yer way, sailor?”
“Aye, sir. If you please, which way to the hospital?”
It was Biscuit, the cook, carrying a tray of wine, sweets, and goblets. He resembled a flame with his shock of orange hair standing straight up on his forehead. One of his eyes widened in delight, while the other – horribly out of alignment – searched about for her. His long grey sideburns were sprinkled with food crumbs, as were his chest hairs, which sprang from his open-necked checked shirt like a stowed animal struggling to escape.
“Yer arse backwards, sailor. Thee hospital’s in thee front o’ thee ship and yer in thee back.” He lowered his peculiar eyes to her right foot. “Seein’ as yer crippled, would ya like me to carry ya there after I take thee wine in to Captain Moreland?”
“I can manage.”
“Yer an awfully pretty young sailor. I’d be watchin’ meself wand’rin’ thee decks alone, especially in yer condition.”
“I appreciate the warning, sir.”
Unable to endure Biscuit’s odour, Emily stumbled away from him and made for the nearest passageway. She found herself in the sailors’ mess and, uncertain of the path back to the hospital, stood there awkwardly, the room stretching dauntingly before her like a bridgeless gorge. The dinner hour was over, but several men lingered, swilling their mugs of beer, enjoying their leisure time with their mates. They sat in groups, reclining on benches, barrels, and sea chests, and at the tables sandwiched between the menacing carronades lying silent in their open
gunports. Hanging on a hook above each table was a swinging bucket of steaming food, and nailed to the walls were racks of wooden spoons and bowls.
Emily beheld the boisterous scene before her, relieved that the sailors were preoccupied with a variety of pursuits: gambling, arguing, singing, arm wrestling, and blowing tunes on flutes. In all her eighteen years, she had never been in a room with so many men. She could hear the thump of her heart and was shocked to admit it was not anxiety that caused its rapid beating.
It was not long before she was noticed. One by one, the men slapped one another and gestured in her direction. They ceased their flute playing, paused in their wrestling, and quit arguing long enough to take a good long look at the newcomer with the walking cane. A strange hush permeated the mess where only moments before there had been hilarity and din. Emily could hear a whistle blowing above deck, and beyond the gunports the squawk of the seagulls. A flush crept up her neck.
An enormous shirtless fellow with a squashed-in nose and peg leg spun around on his bucket to look her up and down. “Nice shoes, sailor,” he shouted, causing his mates to erupt into laughter. From behind the heckler, Morgan Evans’s face appeared.
“You’re speaking to a midshipman, Jacko. I didn’t see ya salute.”
“A mid?” Jacko’s thick features displayed shock. “I ain’t never seen a mid wearin’ blue silk shoes.”
“It’s Mr. George.” Morgan gave Emily a respectful nod. “Sir.”
“Ah, Mr. George, come ’ave a drink with us.” Jacko raised a hammy arm to her.
There was more laughter and muttered remarks. It was impossible for Emily to respond as her throat had gone dry. She stood there like a gaping idiot, uncertain of what to do. Then behind her came a familiar reek, and a clap on the back that would have sent her sprawling across the floor had Jacko not caught her with one of his huge hands.
“Come sit a while, Mr. George, sir,” said Biscuit, steering her towards Morgan’s table. “These lads here – thee ones admirin’ yer shoes – just happen to be me messmates. Shove over lads so our friend can join us.” Biscuit pushed Emily down hard on the bench, compressing her between Morgan and Jacko, then, finding a space for himself across the table from them, he snapped his fingers at the nearest servant lad. “You there, boyo, fetch me two mugs o’ beer.”
Gradually the noise in the mess resumed as the men returned to their various amusements. Emily sat frozen between Jacko’s sweaty bare flesh and Morgan, who had quietly pulled his woollen sock off his head, while eight pairs of inquisitive eyes fixed themselves on her reddened face.
“Mr. George’s been in thee hospital these past days and hasn’t had a drop to drink ’cause – as we all know – Doc Braden don’t allow spirits in his domain.” Biscuit took the mugs from the hovering servant boy and handed one to Emily. “Now, drink up, young lad. This stuff is sure to put hair on yer chest.” He winked his good eye at her.
Emily sipped the horrid, watery stuff, forcing herself to swallow it rather than spit it all over Jacko, as she would have liked to do. Morgan leaned his right arm on the table and cradled his head on his upturned hand to look at her. “There’s no fear of you getting drunk if you’re going to drink your beer that way.”
“Mr. George,” said Jacko, showing her two rows of green teeth, “ya look like a regular fop in them shoes. Don’t want the other lads thinkin’ yer a bit of a Beau Brummel now, do ya? They may get the wrong idea about ya. Now, seein’ as I’m the shoemaker here on the Isabelle, how be I knock ya up a pair o’ sensible black leathers? And if yer agreeable to partin’ with a couple o’ pounds, I can arrange to put silver buckles on ’em.”
Finally Emily found her voice, though it was a good deal softer than she would have liked. “I’m afraid I have no money.” She took another sip of beer, this time a larger one, and grimaced as it went down. It tasted as if it had been brewed with Biscuit’s bath water.
The men roared.“You! A mid! Wearing silk shoes, and ya say ya ’ave no money?”
“Young fella like you must ’ave a rich family.”
“Don’t tell me they sent ya to sea without a shillin’ to yer name?”
Emily gulped down more beer and confirmed the sailors’ remarks with a nod of her head.
“But lads, ain’t Mr. George a pretty boy?” said Biscuit, raising his beer mug. “Maybe he could earn his silver buckles. Ha, ha, ha!”
“Jacko here’s fond o’ pretty boys such as yerself,” said a sailor with a swarthy complexion and bloodshot eyes.
“Mind ya’d have to keep it quiet from thee cap’n,” said Biscuit. “Cap’n Moreland don’t stand fer no mischief. If he catches ya, he’ll have ya strung up on thee yardarm.”
Morgan watched the colour drain from Emily’s face. “Pay them no heed, Mr. George.” He smacked her playfully on her right shoulder. An agony of pain tore through her body and she doubled over, but rather than cry out she hid in her beer mug and choked down the contents.
“You there, boyo.” Biscuit snapped his fingers again at the servant boy who stood nearby. “More beer fer our friend here.”
When Emily’s pain subsided and she’d caught her breath, she set down her drink and glanced up to find Dr. Braden standing over the mess table.
“Doc, what brings ya to this part o’ thee world?” asked Biscuit, his bad eye rolling in his orange head.
Dr. Braden slid his spectacles down his nose and gazed upon Emily with a look of incredulity. All eight of the sailors stared at her as she sank lower on the bench, trying to disappear behind Jacko’s mountain of flesh. “I’ve come to fetch an errant patient of mine,” he said coolly.
“Ah, but as Mr. George here’s off duty, he was gonna have another beer with us,” said Biscuit.
Dr. Braden frowned and looked around the table at each of the men. “Mr. George?”
Jacko put his slippery arm around Emily. “I’m gonna make ’im a new pair o’ black leathers so he won’t look such a fop in them silk shoes.”
Leander’s face relaxed. “Oh, I see. Mr. George. You threw me off, gentlemen, since I know Mr. George by another name.”
Emily opened her mouth to explain herself and instead emitted a magnificent burp. The men crowded around her rocked with convulsive laughter.
Morgan grinned. “We’ll have him toughened up in no time, Doc.” In disgrace, Emily pulled the rim of her straw hat down over her eyes.
Above deck, the bell rang out and a shout was issued. “All hands, sails aloft.”
The men swilled their drinks, gathered their cards, quit their benches, buckets, and sea chests, and hurried towards the nearest hatches. While Emily watched in remorse as they scattered, she noticed Mr. Lindsay, the young officer with the challenging stare, standing rigidly to one side of the door through which she had entered the mess, his beady black eyes locked on her. She shuddered.
“We’ll be leaving Bermuda, sir,” said Morgan to Dr. Braden. Then to Emily, “Come have a beer with us lads again tomorrow, Mr. George, sir.” He put a fist to his woollen hat in salute. Emily sat there, red-faced, and said nothing.
When the mess had almost cleared, Biscuit turned to Dr. Braden. “Seein’ as his ankle’s troublesome, shall I carry him back to thee hospital fer ya, Doc?”
From under her hat Emily ventured a peek up at Leander and saw his jaw working. In her woozy state, she could not be sure whether it was a flash of anger or twinkle of enjoyment she detected in his sea-blue eyes. Pushing herself up from the bench with the aid of her walking stick, she answered for herself. “Certainly not, Biscuit. Just … just lead the way, if you please.”
7:30 p.m.
(Second Dog Watch, Three Bells)
“ARE YA AWAKE, MISS?”
Against the dim light of the hospital lanterns, Emily could see the silhouette of Osmund Brockley, standing outside her curtain, holding her supper in his hands.
“I am, Mr. Brockley. Come in.”
He stooped low as he passed through the canvas, carefully cradling her bowl of
jellied green soup. “Biscuit sends the pea soup with his compliments and wants ya to know he made a special pudding fer yer dessert.”
“How kind of him,” Emily said, inching her body up against her pillow. “I didn’t hear the supper bell.”
Osmund pulled a wooden spoon from his pocket, wiped it off on his apron, and dropped it into the bowl before handing it off to Emily. “Supper was over long ago, Miss. Ya been sleeping awhile.”
“Where is Dr. Braden?”
“Dining with Captain Moreland and his officers in the wardroom,” he said, rolling his thick tongue around his cracked lips.
No doubt the men’s supper conversation was colourful, thought Emily. What she wouldn’t give to have been a fly on those walls! She suddenly became aware of the rise and fall of the ship. “We’re at sea, Mr. Brockley?”
“Aye, we pulled anchor hours ago, Miss.” He pulled in his tongue to give her a grin. “Yer exercise above deck must have tuckered ya out.”
“It did indeed,” she said, avoiding his bright eyes. “Thank you for the soup.”
“Holler when ya want yer pudding.”
Osmund gawked at her a moment, then left. Emily dipped the spoon into the thick green muck and slowly brought it to her mouth, banishing all thoughts of its cook and his crumby whiskers.
Later on, as she finished the last of her pudding and contemplated a dull, restless evening, she heard tentative steps approaching. Gus Walby cleared his throat.
“Come in. Please.”
Gus slipped through the curtain into her corner and stood by her hammock holding Sense and Sensibility. Emily could see that his blue eyes were full of excitement.
“Have you come to rescue me from my boredom?”
“I promised to come and read to you before my watch.”
“But the First Watch has already begun, has it not?”
“My watch begins at midnight. I’ve never done the Middle Watch before. Captain Moreland must have confidence in me for we’ll soon be entering enemy waters again.”
“May I watch with you? I’d give anything to be away from this bed.”
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