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‘Ay-ay, sir.’

‘I shall walk the lower decks meanwhile.’

‘Ay-ay, sir.’ Lambe called to the waist for the master-at-arms and boatswain to accompany.

There were two places laid at table in the captain’s steerage. Peto had asked that a dozen officers join him at dinner, and in the circumstances he thought the presence of Miss Codrington not, in truth, apt. Or, seen another way, he wished his officers to behave without the inhibition that the presence of a lady, a girl – and the commander-in-chief’s daughter at that – would inevitably occasion. And so he had asked Rebecca Codrington to take a late breakfast with him, which, with the diversion of the chase, was now luncheon.

‘Rice b’n’t so good as it were an hour ago,’ said Flowerdew as he placed a bowl of salt on the table, his voice close enough to Norfolk as to make Peto feel comfortably at home.

‘I’m confident that it will be most appetizing,’ he replied, opening a locker under the stern lights and appearing to search.

‘But the ’addock’s well,’ called Flowerdew, not inclined to question what it was that Peto searched for (if his captain wanted his help he would certainly ask for it).

‘How many of Marsala did we bring?’

‘Two cases, sir.’

‘I don’t see it.’

‘There wasn’t room, sir. It’s still in the ’old. Do you want some?’ He sounded doubtful. He had never known Peto to drink Marsala except of an evening, and alone with a book.

‘I thought to send a bottle to Miss Codrington and her maid. She said last night she had never tasted it.’

‘That’s uncommon thoughtful, sir,’ said Flowerdew, though sounding more doubtful still. ‘I’ll fetch up a case.’

‘I’d be obliged.’

‘I’ll go an’ fetch Miss Codrington, an’ all.’

‘If you would.’

Peto sat down in his Madeira chair and placed his hands together as if in prayer, his customary method of recollecting his thoughts. He was, indeed, fretting somewhat at the missed opportunity. He had written to Elizabeth at some length the night before, his intention being that Rebecca Codrington take the letter ashore when he put her off for Malta, whence it could travel with the next ship for England. If he had been able to pass the letter to Archer instead it might have been with her in Wiltshire in under a month. But now he would have to wait for a barque or something out of Valetta. It need not be any great delay, he knew, but it was a delay nonetheless. He could have sent the letter across to Archer, of course. Had there been official papers to send, too, he would not have hesitated to do so – or even a decent bag of mail from the ship’s company; but two days out from Gibraltar there was next to nothing.

He warmed at the thought of communication with his betrothed, however, be it ever so distant. The night before (it was the strangest thing), he had even found himself lying awake in his cot wondering how long it might be before there was not just Elizabeth Hervey to think of. At first he had dismissed the idea, but then he had asked himself why he should not think thus; Elizabeth was certainly not beyond the age of bearing a child – bearing children. And (it was stranger still) he had found himself imagining what it would be to have a daughter like Rebecca Codrington; or a son like Mr Midshipman Pelham . . .

‘Si-ir.’

Flowerdew’s yap woke him. He sprang up. ‘Miss Codrington, good morning! I was only . . . Forgive me, I was turning over matters in connection with Archer.’

‘Please do not apologize on my account, Captain,’ said Rebecca, with a note of surprise. ‘I cannot imagine how you have the time to render me any consideration at all.’

Strangely enough, there were moments when in her manner of speaking Rebecca Codrington reminded him more of Elizabeth Hervey than of a child (he really must not think of her as a child: undoubtedly the midshipmen did not . . . but that was another matter). ‘Miss Codrington, it is no imposition at all. A glass of . . .’

‘Water, please.’

He turned to Flowerdew. ‘A glass of our best water, Flowerdew.’

Flowerdew looked at him oddly (water was either potable or it wasn’t). ‘Mi-iss.’

‘Well, well, Miss Rebecca, I trust you had a diverting morning. I saw that you were engaged in the affairs of the poop deck.’

‘Oh yes, a most diverting morning, Captain Peto. I never saw such a thing. I think it most noble what was done. Those poor men in that slave ship.’

Women, too – but Peto was not going to be so indelicate as to correct her. Better not to imagine the situation in those holds. He had, though, thought of sending over his surgeon and mates to render what aid they could, but he was under orders to join Rebecca’s father’s squadron with all despatch. He consoled himself with the knowledge that, being not long out of Tangier, there would not be too great a mortality.

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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

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