Dewey Lambdin - King`s Captain

Тут можно читать онлайн Dewey Lambdin - King`s Captain - бесплатно полную версию книги (целиком) без сокращений. Жанр: Морские приключения. Здесь Вы можете читать полную версию (весь текст) онлайн без регистрации и SMS на сайте лучшей интернет библиотеки ЛибКинг или прочесть краткое содержание (суть), предисловие и аннотацию. Так же сможете купить и скачать торрент в электронном формате fb2, найти и слушать аудиокнигу на русском языке или узнать сколько частей в серии и всего страниц в публикации. Читателям доступно смотреть обложку, картинки, описание и отзывы (комментарии) о произведении.

Dewey Lambdin - King`s Captain краткое содержание

King`s Captain - описание и краткое содержание, автор Dewey Lambdin, читайте бесплатно онлайн на сайте электронной библиотеки LibKing.Ru

Following the footsteps of Horatio Hornblower and Jack Aubrey, whose ripping adventures capture thousands of new readers each year, comes the heir apparent to the mantle of Forester and O'Brian: Dewey Lambdin, and his acclaimed Alan Lewrie series. In this latest adventure Lewrie is promoted for his quick action in the Battle of Cape St. Vincent, but before he's even had a chance to settle into his new role, a mutiny rages through the fleet, and the sudden reappearance of an old enemy has Lewrie fighting not just for his command, but for his life.

King`s Captain - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию (весь текст целиком)

King`s Captain - читать книгу онлайн бесплатно, автор Dewey Lambdin
Тёмная тема
Сбросить

Интервал:

Закладка:

Сделать

"You're quite right, Bosun." Lewrie grinned, shoving off from his resting spot. "It sounds daft, doesn't it. Superstition or not, sailors believe in good and bad luck, don't they."

"Well… aye, sir."

"You and me, Bosun," Lewrie intimated, "we're seamen. We've seen things, heard things… odd, strange, unexplainable things…"

And ain't it smug o' me, Lewrie chid himself, t'put us both on the same footing. He's more experience in his least finger than I'll ever…!

"What's her name, Mister Pendarves?"

"P… Proteus, sir," the Bosun answered with a slight pause, as if afraid to say it aloud.

"Her figurehead, sir…" Lewrie all but winked. "Proteus, the Roman shepherd of the sea… Greeks called him Nereus, but either name meant the same sea-god. A divine oracle, he was. And there he is… in his chariot he drove 'cross the wide world's oceans, drawn by dolphins and… seals, Mister Pendarves. Seals!"

"Like L… uhm, ah…," Bosun Pendarves flummoxed, afraid to say that fearsome name from his boyhood tales either.

"Funny thing about Proteus, or Nereus, or whatever he went by. A man wished his prophecies, he had to find him first. Then he had to wrestle him, hold him so he couldn't get away. Proteus changed his shape… he could become any living thing in the sea, d'ye see, sir?" Lewrie intimated further, almost crooning as he spun his tale. "Turned into little things so, he could swim out of your grasp. Turned into whales and sharks or ferocious sea-dragons to frighten you into letting go. You had to let him run through his gamut of creatures… last of all, he was a seal… and then a man, sir," Lewrie elaborated, not sure from his ancient readings, not sure if he wasn't spinning a huge lie he'd be caught in by Pendarves and the others later for lack of lore.

"Like a, uhm…" Pendarves goggled, eyes blared in wonder by then, to hear the ancient tales retold in a slightly different version, to hear an officer relate them, as if he too believed! "Like he was a… selkie, sir?"

"Very like a selkie, Mister Pendarves." Lewrie beamed, as his Bosun caught on, feeling a dread, eldritch chill ascend his spine, no matter if he was lying and manipulating or not! "So… how close do you think they really came… when they chose her name? Merlin, that would've suited her, hey? But then Admiralty changed things at the last second and took that back. But that Celtic or Gaelic sawyer and his wee lad… what'd he say to her, Bosun?"

Lewrie leaned close, hissing his words in a harsh whisper, for security against being too manipulative; after all, he'd seen enough aboard Jester of a pagan sea-god's ways to tread more than a touch wary. And he never. wished his beliefs… or his seeming beliefs… to be bandied about.

"And then… the touch of that lad's merest hand and… down the ways she went, groaning over it… but going," Lewrie purred seductively. "Did they bless her… the right way? The old, lost way? Did she accept the name Proteus as a huge jape on everyone, in spite of them? Take water and swim the world's oceans and bedamned to 'em, Mister Pendarves? Knowing that Proteus, Nereus, or… Lir, it makes no diffrence, for they're all the same long-lost, forgotten sea-god?"

There, he'd invoked it, feeling another shiver of awe-fear!

But his tarry-handed, stout-thewed Bosun had wavered away to the thick base of the main-mast, hard by the break of the quarterdeck. Pendarves laid a hand on the mast's anti-boarding pike beckets (never the mast itself, for that was bad luck!) almost reverently. He gazed up its height, the convoluted maze of rigging and spars, then down at the white-planed and sanded deck planks-and began a crafty smile.

"It could be as you say, sir," Pendarves said at last, swallowing as if he had a massive lump in his throat. "That'd mean she ain't a cursed ship."

"Nothing we could print on the recruiting handbills," Lewrie agreed, "but could say on the sly at the 'rondys'… you and some of the other respected senior hands. West Country men, hmm?"

"Aye, sir." Pendarves grinned wider, brightened by the prospect of a "run" ashore in the pubs.

"I'll see you in the early-early then, Mister Pendarves," Lewrie said in dismissal. "We'll give this new ship of ours a thorough inspection. Warn the others so they'll not show too badly. But not so much warning they think they can pull the wool over my eyes… hmm?"

A good beginning, Lewrie rather smugly deemed it, after doffing his hat and ascending the larboard ladder to his quarterdeck for a moment of reflection before taking a look at his new great-cabins.

As long as I've not gone and doomed my arse, he thought; being too damned boastful or… sacrilegious?

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

P roteus rounded up, coaxed, (or flat-out lied to) another fourteen seamen or lubbers from Chatham, volunteers who were of a mind to take to the sea. It was a pitiful result, for all of Lewrie's, Ludlows's, and Pendarves's efforts at recruiting ashore. They were still shy of the ninety-one seamen allotted, about a dozen shy of the twenty-two servants (who could quickly learn the seamen's trade) recommended for a vessel of their size and gun-power. Then the pool of possibles had dried up, turning further recruiting I work into frustrating futility.

It didn't help their cause, Lewrie most-sourly thought, that the mutinies at Portsmouth and Plymouth were still going on. News had come that retired Admiral Lord Howe-"Black Dick, the Seaman's Friend"-would be coaching down to Portsmouth and Spithead to negotiate an end to it, giving hopes of a final settlement. But desperate as England was for closure, most men of a mind to volunteer were holding out 'til the settlement had been reached and what demands the illegal working-men's guilds and underground organisations and the penny-tract writers were making to tack onto the settlement with the Fleet were inciting even more truculence and resistance to taking the Joining Bounty, when it might be worth more in a fortnight, when shipboard conditions and rations might be better!

There was nothing for it but to work what few they had into the basic stages of "River Discipline" and hope for the best. The Impress Service could not help them, and Lewrie's old captain, Lilycrop, wasn't the Reg. ulating Captain of the Deptford recruiting district any longer, so Lewrie was reduced to shaking the staleness off his few experienced hands and drilling a semblance of nautical lore into his wooly-headed new-comers so they could get downriver to Sheerness in one piece.

Sheerness and the Nore was where they'd find sailors; at least more warm bodies who could be driven or bullied into something nigh to sailors The receiving hulks and out-dated, line-of-battle ships there were crammed full of them. Admiral Buckner, the officer commanding at the Nore, had written back claiming that his static flagship, Sandwich , had a crew of nine hundred with an additional five hundred "volunteers" aboard. As soon as Proteus arrived, he'd be more than happy to ease his over-crowding.

Getting there to lay hold of them though…!

Proteus would have to work her way down the crowded, teeming, bendy Medway, a river simply heaving with brisk tidal flows, cross-swept by perverse winds from over marshes and lowlands, flanked by reeking mudflats and shoals, and the navigable channel reduced to a cart-path by the rapid ebbs, which narrow navigable channel was then even more crowded by a myriad of sailing barges, scows, fishing boats and coasters, tenders, merchant vessels, and other warships, all seeking the same precious, safe, and scant ribbon of deep water.

Proteus could run ashore, take the ground and be stuck for days on the shoals or mudflats, or half-wreck herself in collision with some other vessel, most especially one of those bastardly civilian captains of a towing scow with a long string of barges astern of him, who seemed to derive their sole pleasure in life from making things difficult for everybody else. Or collecting high damages from the smash-ups!

Lewrie dreaded the necessity, but finally had to admit that he had no other choice. It was sail-and risk his ship and career upon the vagaries of the river and its traffic-or admit defeat.

He had his Sailing Master in and swotted up every text he possessed which might offer a clue as to how he might pull this off without that career-ending disaster he feared so much.

"Nought to fear, sir," Mr. Winwood assured him, though looking a trifle askance at just how tarry-handed his new captain really was… "Know the Nore like the back o' me hand. And the river pilotsil see us safe, sir."

A last supper aboard, with his officers invited to dine in the great-cabins with his wife, children, and ward; he'd borrowed furniture from the officers' gunroom to seat everyone.

And for a man nigh to sweating pistol-balls (or at least fine buckshot by then!) it had turned off quite convivial and a most musical evening. He'd learned by then in his life how to disguise his trepidations and sure-to-God knew how to be witty and amusing. With Caroline and her flute, he and his more-modest flageolet, they had had a round of tunes with their after-supper brandy, and Lieutenant Wyman had produced his violin, at which he was better than passing-fair. Lieutenant Langlie of the romantic locks also proved himself to be a vocalist of some ability. And while Sophie was deprived of her harpsichord, she had sung along in an angelically high voice. With her eyes ashine in admiration of someone other than the beastly Harry Embleton for once, for several, in point of fact. Young Lieutenant Wyman's musical ability and his infectiously amusing air; Lieutenant Langlie's voice and his bronzed features-even a brace of the older midshipmen! For their last time together, it had really been quite gay, and Lewrie and Caroline had shared pleased glances that things had gone so well regarding Sophie and her brief exposure to a wider world and the variety of young men her age in it! Sewallis, Hugh, and Charlotte had even (mostly) behaved well!

Though, Lewrie felt like gritting his teeth and at times allowing himself a snarl or two, it was mostly pleasant. Even with all his professional concerns weighing on him, the new ship and crew so demanding of his time and interest, Lewrie had reached that moment he always reached, the one which always made him feel so inhuman, so disconnected from what real people should feel… and so guilty for his lack.

The children, no matter how delightful or loving, had grown to be irksome, and he wished for a respite from them and their ados. His lovely, :accomplished wife, so graceful and gracious, so loving, sensible, and affectionate-a woman most men would kill for as a mate!-was becoming an intrusion into his thoughts, his fretting over manoeuvring Proteus seaward, of stocking her, manning her, readying her…! 'Twas her needs her desires took precedence; and her faults and lacks-and her foreboding-reputation!-which rilled his waking thoughts and made him squirm with desperation to be off and free!

It didn't help that Caroline sensed this, as she did so many of his moods by then, and could feel the stand-offish apartness of a driven man beneath his cheerful exterior sham. He was becoming that feckless, uncaring, and ungrateful boor she'd wept about back in Anglesgreen, the one who'd throw off every tie to land and family to dash off at the slightest whiff of tar and salt!

Читать дальше
Тёмная тема
Сбросить

Интервал:

Закладка:

Сделать


Dewey Lambdin читать все книги автора по порядку

Dewey Lambdin - все книги автора в одном месте читать по порядку полные версии на сайте онлайн библиотеки LibKing.




King`s Captain отзывы


Отзывы читателей о книге King`s Captain, автор: Dewey Lambdin. Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.


Понравилась книга? Поделитесь впечатлениями - оставьте Ваш отзыв или расскажите друзьям

Напишите свой комментарий
x