Man Of War mh-9 Read online

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  ‘Oh,’ declared Kat in a tone of mild affront. ‘I might have known your regiment would have first call on you.’

  He chose not to rise to the challenge. ‘Kat, the devil of a thing has come about. I was at the Horse Guards today and I learned that there’s to be a court of inquiry into the affair at Waltham Abbey, and that . . . Sir Peregrine is likely as not to be president.’

  Kat looked perplexed. ‘Is that such a cause for alarm? He is generally the most agreeable of men.’

  Hervey shifted awkwardly. ‘The point is, Kat . . . the inquiry will attract public attention – it’s bound to. And that is sure to occasion comment. Do you not see?’

  Kat saw, and also that the comment would hardly be to her advantage either (she supposed that Hervey’s concern was not principally for her reputation). But it suited her to be obtuse. ‘Do you really think it likely?’

  ‘Yes, Kat: I consider it very likely.’

  ‘What would you have me do?’

  Hervey had not imagined he would have to suggest it. He was staunch nonetheless. ‘Ask Sir Peregrine to decline the presidency.’

  Kat looked bewildered. ‘How shall I manage that? I cannot interfere with military matters in that way!’

  Hervey was astonished. She had interfered several times before on his behalf – and to secure preferment rather than so simple a thing as this (he imagined that persuading her husband to decline an invitation would not be too difficult). ‘Kat, I—’

  ‘Matthew, it is evidently troubling you greatly. Let us sit and talk of it, and see if there is anything I might do.’ She rang for tea.

  Hervey sat.

  * * *

  It was after midnight when he returned to the United Service Club. He was surprised to find Fairbrother in the coffee room still, reading Southey’s Life of Nelson.

  ‘My dear friend, I am so very sorry I did not keep my appointment. I was detained against my better judgement, if not in truth will. But I think the trouble may be soon resolved.’

  ‘I am very glad of it,’ replied Fairbrother equably. ‘In truth, too, I have been glad of an evening with Southey. I confess to having felt excessively tired after leaving Westminster.’

  Hervey smiled ruefully. ‘I have heard that parliament has that effect.’

  ‘No, parliament was invigorating in the extreme. There was a debate on reform of the franchise. Feelings ran unconscionably high. I never heard such a bear house!’

  ‘I dare say. Have you dined?’

  ‘Yes, and very agreeably – at the club table with two officers not long returned from the Indies.’

  ‘I’m glad of it. I—’

  ‘I did not say: the debate was in the House of Peers. I heard Lord Palmerston speak. He is a most engaging man, I think. Exactly as I had imagined him.’

  Hervey kept his peace. He too had liked Palmerston when they had met briefly, a year or so before; but he did wish the Secretary at War would not now persist with this inquiry.

  The night porter came into the room to turn down the lamps. Hervey ordered brandy. ‘And then to bed. While there is time – before I am taken up with clerks at the Colonies Office, and attorneys – I would show you things, tomorrow.’

  ‘I should be excessively grateful to you, Hervey. Excessively. But I am minded that I am meant to be a salutary companion: you are sure you do not overtax your constitution – the fever, the wound?’

  Hervey knew his constitution had proved serviceable, and tried not to look sheepish. ‘I assure you I am perfectly well.’

  Fairbrother laid aside his Southey, as if to convey that the matter was settled. ‘Did the porter tell you there is a letter? He said he would place it in the rack.’

  Hervey rose and went to the hall to retrieve it. He saw at once that it was in his mother’s hand, which immediately disquietened him, for she scarcely ever wrote. He broke the seal, and read:

  Horningsham 14th

  April 1828My dear Matthew,

  I trust this finds you well and timely. I hardly know where to begin, but there has been a most unlooked-for development, a most disagreeable thing has occurred (trouble not, for we are all in good health) and I am at my wits’ end to know how to deal with it. I would that you come here as soon as you are able, for I think that only you have it in your power to put things aright. I cannot put the matter into words but beg you would believe me when I say that it is of the greatest moment to our happiness and standing. Please therefore come with haste, for it is not a matter that can bide without grave consequence to our reputation and position.Your ever loving Mother.

  IV

  A PASSAGE TO MALTA

  Gibraltar, the same day, 28 September 1827

  ‘Sir Laughton?’ The first lieutenant had returned very carefully upon his half-hour.

  ‘Just “Captain”, if you please, Mr Lambe.’

  ‘Ay-ay, sir. I have the old hands assembled.’

  Peto nodded. He would read them his commission, as was the tradition, and address a few words to them. But he thought first to address the question of the admiral’s quarters, about which he had given no instructions. By custom when the admiral flew his flag elsewhere the captain of a first-rate had the use of the cabin on the upper deck, but since Peto expected Sir Edward Codrington to transfer his flag to Rupert as soon as she joined his squadron, he had no intention of putting himself to the inconvenience – and, indeed, the indignity – of vacating his accommodation within so short a time.

  ‘The admiral’s apartments, I trust, are in serviceable condition? I had better take a look at them before beginning on general rounds.’

  Lieutenant Lambe looked at him quizzically. ‘They are, sir. I believe Miss Codrington is most comfortable.’

  Peto’s expression of indifference turned to one of thunder. ‘What?’

  ‘Miss Codrington, sir. She came aboard this morning. She is, I believe, comfortable. And her maid.’

  ‘Maid?’

  ‘Yes, sir; her maid,’ replied Lambe, even more puzzled by his captain’s inability to grasp what were after all mere domestic details. ‘They are both quite comfortable.’

  Peto’s eyes narrowed, and his hands gripped the sides of his chair. ‘Mr Lambe, of what are you speaking?’

  Only now did the first lieutenant perceive that his captain might be unaware of their passenger – and that the intelligence was not welcome. He cleared his throat. ‘Admiral Codrington’s daughter, sir: she is on board for the passage to Malta. The orders came when we put in. Forgive me, sir, but I assumed that you had been told of it ashore. Miss Codrington travelled by packet here, but the admiral wished for her to be conveyed on board one of His Majesty’s ships on account of the piracy still off the Barbary Coast. I thought it expedient to accommodate her in the admiral’s quarters.’

  Peto boiled, though without (he thought) showing it. ‘Very well.’ He rose. ‘You did right, Mr Lambe. That, I take it, is the reason for the sentry I saw there.’

  ‘I thought it only proper, sir. We have an ample enough complement of marines.’

  ‘Mm.’ Peto thought it only proper too – eminently proper. Two women on the upper gun-deck: it was like putting a couple of ripe peaches next to a wasp’s nest. ‘I had better pay my respects. Perhaps you and she will dine with me this evening?’

  Lambe hesitated. But a request from his captain was to be taken always as an order. ‘I’d be honoured, sir.’

  ‘Flowerdew!’

  The captain’s steward scuffled in.

  ‘Three for dinner, one a lady: hock and a light burgundy.’

  ‘Oh, very refined,’ muttered Flowerdew as he knuckled his forehead and scuffled out again.

  ‘He’s been with me a good age,’ said Peto by way of explanation, though not as a rule given to explaining himself.

  ‘Sir, Miss Codrington, she—’

  ‘Enough of Miss Codrington for the time being, Mr Lambe. But I will say now that we are not putting in at Malta; she will have to transfer to the sloop.’


  HMS Archer, sloop-of-war, was to convoy with them for Admiral Codrington’s squadron.

  ‘Ay-ay, sir.’

  ‘Very well; let’s to the old hands. And then afterwards I’ll see Miss Codrington while you assemble the standing officers.’

  Peto’s tone, though not meant to be peremptory, nevertheless stayed his lieutenant in the inevitable protest. Indeed, Peto had decided that although he would have to exercise command rather more formally through his executive officer and his sailing-master than had hitherto been his practice, there could be no part of the ship he would consider himself denied – except, of course, the wardroom. He would be prudent, naturally, in choosing his time of visiting certain quarters: the midshipmen’s berth was nothing like the bear garden of his day, but of an evening it were better steered clear of so as to avoid taking unintended offence. Likewise the gun-decks when dinner was served up: the rum ration was half of what it had been in the French war (a quarter of a pint only, mixed with water), but it was still enough to loosen a man’s tongue, and it did not do to give unnecessary occasion for a flogging. No, prudential judgement were his watchwords. It was the first time in more than a decade that one of His Majesty’s first-rates was being sent to sea in the expectation – in the possibility, at least – of a general action: the hand was heavy on his shoulders.

  And yet it troubled Peto not in the least. The bad old days – the glorious days, so the nation had it (and as well let them believe it!) – were gone; the press gang was no more, the drafts from the assizes there were none; nor even were there the county ballots. Now the crews were volunteers, for whatever reason a man joined – for the bounty, for the abundance of grog and plenty of prize-money, which the placards in the sea ports still promised, and against all the advice of those of earlier generations who had been deceived. Some still joined as boys, having no other family, and remained in the service all their lives: ‘once a sailor, always a sailor’. And some, though without his, Peto’s, schooling or means, joined because they were agitated by the same instinct as his. The true man-of-war’s man, so the saying went, was begotten in the galley and born under a gun, his every hair rope-yarn, every tooth a marlinspike, every finger a fishhook, and his blood right good Stockhollum tar. These volunteers did not need the lash and the starter. In truth, the starter had been proscribed by the Admiralty for the best part of twenty years (well, to drive them to work, at any rate: Peto had known it to be admirable summary justice in the hands of a good boatswain). And here he had a full crew, not many landsmen at all said the watch bill – all come from half a dozen guardships at Portsmouth. They would be handy enough with sail, he could rely on it; though how handy was their gunnery he would not know until they exercised tomorrow.

  The Royal Marines sentry presented arms as the captain emerged from his cabin.

  Peto touched the point of his bicorn, and turned to look him in the eye. ‘What is your name, sir?’

  ‘Frost, sir.’

  ‘And where is your home?’

  The marine looked puzzled. ‘Corporal Figgis’s mess, sir. I’m berthed aft on the orlop, sir, I am.’

  ‘Where were you born, man; where is your family?’

  The marine, his face now the colour of his jacket, took an even tighter grip of his musket. ‘Fak’nam, sir.’

  Peto nodded, with studied satisfaction. Fakenham was a good distance inland; it was a wonder the 9th Foot had not ’listed him, though the army was not so recruit-hungry these days. ‘I myself am a Norfolk-man. I shall count most especially on you.’

  ‘Yes, sir.’

  Peto turned away, imagining that the man might be a degree more inspired by such an exchange, but supposing in truth that the discipline of the marines made equal machines of them all.

  ‘Off hats!’ barked the boatswain.

  Some two dozen veteran seamen were gathered aft on the upper deck, all in their best. Peto decided to address them from the foot of the companion ladder rather than from the quarterdeck – much less of a business, and much the more intimate, almost as if he had been aboard Nisus.

  He descended the ladder very sure-footed, took the folded paper from his pocket, and read with due gravity but not too solemnly: ‘Admiralty orders to Captain Sir Laughton Peto. You are to proceed at once to take command of His Majesty’s Ship Prince Rupert, whereso-ever she be found, and thence to join the fleet under the command of Sir Edward Codrington, Vice Admiral of the Blue.’

  This much they knew already, to be sure – the entire crew indeed, for the previous captain’s orders had been the same – but it was indeed the custom, and it did no harm to make the connection in men’s minds between the Admiralty in its exalted remoteness and their ship and her commanding officer; and it gave the older hands a certain standing when they went back to their messes to report to their shipmates what the new captain was like.

  ‘Have any of you men served with me before?’ Peto’s voice was that of a seasoned officer hailing against the wind.

  He did not expect any to answer ‘Ay’; nor did any.

  ‘Then I shall tell you that I have been a frigate man for long years, and will have Rupert answer as if she were a frigate too. It can be done, for you are all professional seamen – not men taken from their homes, or assize men – and therefore you can cut about the tops a deal better than many a crew I had when we fought Bonaparte.’

  He paused for dramatic effect. There was a murmur of what sounded like approval.

  ‘Pipe down,’ snapped the boatswain.

  Peto judged it the time: he had begun by reading them the Admiralty’s authority; he had told them of his service and flattered them by reminding them of their own status and capacity; now he would tell them what the enemy demanded. ‘I do not require this for my own amusement, mark you. I shall not send you running aloft to make sport, or hold you at gun drill for the accolade of fastest in the fleet. No, I shall do these things whenever it is necessary because our adversary the Turkish devil, being sober and vigilant, will otherwise cause His Britannic Majesty’s Ship Prince Rupert, and those who sail in her, untoward damage. Sailors, we have the habit of victory to preserve!’

  Peto waited for the approving buzz, then set his jaw, turned confidently and stepped off aft.

  The knot of men parted to let him through. ‘Three cheers for Captain Sir Laughton Peto! Hip-hip!’

  ‘Hurragh!’

  ‘Hip-hip!’

  ‘Hurragh!’

  ‘Hip-hip!’

  ‘Hurragh!’

  It had gone well, he told himself as he made for the admiral’s quarters. These things were not always done well: it was not always possible to judge the words aptly if the crew’s humour was not known.

  A few eavesdroppers knuckled their foreheads sharply as he passed, and the sentry presented arms.

  He rapped smartly at the door on the larboard side (both doors opened on the steerage, which served as dining room and office, but to starboard was the state room, where the cot would be, and he counted it indelicate to present himself thus). As a rule after knocking he would have entered, but the admiral’s daughter was not the admiral.

  The lady’s maid answered.

  Peto at once took charge. ‘I am the captain, come to pay respects to Miss Codrington.’

  The maid (Peto thought she looked more like a governess, for she was closer his age and wore spectacles) curtsied. ‘Good afternoon, sir.’

  Peto stepped into the steerage and glanced about with an inspecting eye. A cover lay on the table, and the chairs were likewise shrouded. The bulkheads were fresh painted – eau de nil – and the deck sailcloth gleamed in its black and white chequer; all evidence of Lambe’s percipience and industry. He waited for the maid to lead him to the admiral’s day apartment.

  ‘The captain, Miss Rebecca.’

  Peto entered, stooping slightly to remove his hat. It was the first time he had been in such quarters in more years than he cared to remember, and he did not wish to collide with a beam. But if a beam were occasi
onally intrusive, the admiral’s apartments were otherwise of some dimension, near twice the size of his own cabin, which was itself commodious by any nautical standard. At a writing table facing the stern lights was the daughter of the man who would soon take possession. She rose and turned, and curtsied.

  ‘Good afternoon, Captain.’

  Peto could scarce believe what he saw, nor at first could he quite reply. The admiral’s daughter was but thirteen or fourteen. He cleared his throat. ‘You are very welcome on board, Miss Codrington,’ he said uneasily, making a brisk bow.

  ‘Thank you, Captain,’ she replied, smiling. ‘But I cannot answer to “Miss Codrington” for I have two elder sisters unwed. My name is Rebecca.’

  Peto cleared his throat again. He was unused to such self-possession in the ablest midshipman, let alone a slip of a girl. ‘Well then, Miss Rebecca, my name is Peto, and I should be honoured if you would join my lieutenant and me at dinner.’

  ‘Thank you, Captain Peto; it is I who should be honoured.’

  Peto cast his inspecting eye about the apartment as best he could, a shade awkwardly, for it was the first time he had visited female quarters, however temporary they were. He cleared his throat once more. ‘Very well; very well. I bid you good day then, Miss Co—, Miss Rebecca.’ And he turned and took his leave, gathering up his authority again as he did so.

  He took the rungs of the companion ladder purposefully, but scowling. The occupants of the quarterdeck saluted. Those merely taking their ease moved at once to the lee side, while the officer of the watch – a midshipman, since Rupert lay at anchor – presented himself.

  ‘Elphinstone, sir. Signal from the port admiral: the governor’s compliments; he will not now come aboard.’

  Peto studied the youth in whose charge was his ship. Seventeen, eighteen years? Grandson, grandnephew perhaps? Lord Keith had died but five years ago . . . ‘Thank you, Mr Elphinstone,’ he said thoughtfully.

  Lieutenant Lambe had returned on deck.

  ‘The governor is not coming aboard, it seems,’ said Peto, returning his salute.