Читаем Man Of War полностью

Peto wondered what Adams – whoever he was (another midshipman, he supposed) – would make do with instead, but that was not his direct concern; he could leave the discipline of the midshipmen to Lambe. ‘Very well. Help yourself to coffee, Mr Pelham,’ he said, and with a measure of warmth, indicating the tray which Flowerdew had placed on the gallery locker.

‘Thank you, sir,’ replied the midshipman, fairly taken aback.

Lambe smiled to himself. He had fair roasted Pelham after the business of the parallax, and was himself thinking of some magnanimous gesture. This more than saved him the effort.

‘How old are you, Mr Pelham?’

‘Seventeen come next month, sir.’

‘And where are you from; where do your people live?’

‘I was born in Plymouth, sir. My father was captain of Repulse. He is dead now, sir; my mother also.’

Peto rather wished he had not asked. He was sentimental enough to believe a man must have a home to return to. And even though his own parents were now gone, he had the prospect of a warm heart and hearth. A smile almost overcame him, indeed, at the thought of Miss Elizabeth Hervey – Lady Peto – in the hall of that handsome Norfolk manor, advancing smiling to greet him on his return from some commission or other . . . He cleared his throat. ‘I am sorry to hear it, Mr Pelham. I did not know your father, though I know Repulse to have had a fine reputation in her day.’

‘He was killed off New Orleans, sir.’

Peto now dimly recalled the loss of the ship in that wretched and unnecessary campaign: Mr Midshipman Pelham had been semi-orphaned a long time . . . ‘And your mother?’

‘She died as I was born, sir. I was brought up by an aunt until such time as I could go to sea.’

A full orphan – Peto almost groaned; he ought to have expected it.

‘Mr Pelham was a volunteer at twelve, sir, on my last ship,’ said Lambe.

It told Peto a good deal about them both. ‘Then I trust you shall pass for lieutenant quickly, Mr Pelham. There is no time to lose even in these days of peace.’

‘I intend doing so, sir.’

Peto nodded thoughtfully. ‘Good. Capital, capital . . . And I would that you dine with me and Mr Lambe this evening.’

Pelham’s boyish but handsome face lit up like a signal lamp. ‘Thank you kindly, sir.’

Flowerdew returned with two bowls of oat gruel. Peto took a spoonful, as gingerly as he felt he might in such company, and tasted the crew’s breakfast.

Perhaps his memory – or his palate – played tricks on him, for he found it not nearly as repulsive as usual. In the East Indies, his former station, they had had a very decent porridge of corn and cinnamon, but the oatmeal cakes which the Victualling Board supplied were rough rations indeed, and boiled up in the galley copper, with water a month or more in the hold, the gruel was better fit for the sty under the forecastle. The Board held it to be a necessary corrective to the otherwise constipating ship’s diet, but the majority of men, Peto recalled, thought it a far better emetic.

Lambe saw his surprise. ‘We have an active purser. He sent back a good deal of the provender first offered.’

Peto nodded appreciatively. Time was when a captain appointed his own man, or rather put forward his clerk’s name to the Admiralty, but of late there had been a fashion to place experience in the position, for too often the purser had been in truck with the merchants who supplied the ship (and, shame to relate, in truck with the captain as well). ‘And real coffee to be had, you say, Mr Lambe? Remarkable.’ The old ‘Scotch coffee’ of the mess decks had been a foul brew, burnt biscuit boiled up to a black paste in rank water, and sugared until it could hold no more. ‘I shall expect to see contented faces and good constitutions at my inspection.’

‘You may depend upon it, sir, as ever it has been,’ replied Lambe, just as wryly.

At a half past eight o’clock, Peto descended the companion ladder to the upper deck and began his first inspection of Prince Rupert. Lambe accompanied him together with the boatswain, three mates, the master-at-arms and two corporals, the serjeant of marines and several midshipmen, whose job it would be to attend on any observation the captain made. He began with the larboard battery, walking slowly, hands clasped behind his back, here and there nodding to a salute, here and there bringing some fault, or something he would have done otherwise, to Lambe’s attention, who at once delegated the business of correction to the appropriate member of the party, whence followed a good deal of barking and growling while Peto continued his advance along the line of eighteen-pounders. He then turned aft to walk the starboard battery, the routine as before. By and large he approved of what he found: so much of it was new made, and the men looked likely – and for all their sanding and swabbing, they were clean and serviceably dressed.

Перейти на страницу:

Все книги серии Matthew Hervey

Company Of Spears
Company Of Spears

The eighth novel in the acclaimed and bestselling series finds Hervey on his way to South Africa where he is preparing to form a new body of cavalry, the Cape Mounted Rifles.All looks set fair for Major Matthew Hervey: news of a handsome legacy should allow him to purchase command of his beloved regiment, the 6th Light Dragoons. He is resolved to marry, and rather to his surprise, the object of his affections — the widow of the late Sir Ivo Lankester — has readily consented. But he has reckoned without the opportunism of a fellow officer with ready cash to hand; and before too long, he is on the lookout for a new posting. However, Hervey has always been well-served by old and loyal friends, and Eyre Somervile comes to his aid with the means of promotion: there is need of a man to help reorganize the local forces at the Cape Colony, and in particular to form a new body of horse.At the Cape, Hervey is at once thrown into frontier skirmishes with the Xhosa and Bushmen, but it is Eyre Somervile's instruction to range deep across the frontier, into the territory of the Zulus, that is his greatest test. Accompanied by the charming, cultured, but dissipated Edward Fairbrother, a black captain from the disbanded Royal African Corps and bastard son of a Jamaican planter, he makes contact with the legendary King Shaka, and thereafter warns Somervile of the danger that the expanding Zulu nation poses to the Cape Colony.The climax of the novel is the battle of Umtata River (August 1828), in which Hervey has to fight as he has never fought before, and in so doing saves the life of the nephew of one of the Duke of Wellington's closest friends.

Allan Mallinson

Исторические приключения

Похожие книги

1917, или Дни отчаяния
1917, или Дни отчаяния

Эта книга о том, что произошло 100 лет назад, в 1917 году.Она о Ленине, Троцком, Свердлове, Савинкове, Гучкове и Керенском.Она о том, как за немецкие деньги был сделан Октябрьский переворот.Она о Михаиле Терещенко – украинском сахарном магнате и министре иностранных дел Временного правительства, который хотел перевороту помешать.Она о Ротшильде, Парвусе, Палеологе, Гиппиус и Горьком.Она о событиях, которые сегодня благополучно забыли или не хотят вспоминать.Она о том, как можно за неполные 8 месяцев потерять страну.Она о том, что Фортуна изменчива, а в политике нет правил.Она об эпохе и людях, которые сделали эту эпоху.Она о любви, преданности и предательстве, как и все книги в мире.И еще она о том, что история учит только одному… что она никого и ничему не учит.

Ян Валетов , Ян Михайлович Валетов

Приключения / Исторические приключения