Lord Villiers liked the idea and moved on it promptly. He
unbent enough to tell Hugh, as he handed him his orders,
'This smacks of something I would have done at your age,
given your dislike of the conference table.'
'I, sir?'
'Belay it, Colonel Junot! Don't bamboozle someone who,
believe it or not, used to chafe to roam the world. Perhaps
we owe the late Lieutenant Graves a debt unpayable. Now take
the first frigate bound to Portugal before I change my mind.'
Hugh did precisely that. With his dunnage stowed on the
Perseverance and his berth assigned—an
evil-smelling cabin off the wardroom—Hugh had dinner
with Surgeon Brackett on his last night in port. Owen gave
him a letter for Philemon Brittle, chief surgeon at the
Oporto satellite hospital, and passed on a little gossip.
'It's just a rumour, mind, but Phil seems to have engineered
a billet for his sister-in-law, a Miss Brandon, at his
hospital. He's a clever man, but I'm agog to know how he
managed it, if the scuttlebutt is true,' Brackett said.
'Perhaps she is sailing on the Perseverance.'
'Actually, she is,' Hugh said, accepting tea from Amanda
Brackett. 'I've already seen her.'
'She has two beautiful sisters, one of whom took leave of
her senses and married Phil Brittle. Perhaps your voyage
will be more interesting than usual,' the surgeon teased.
Hugh sipped his tea. 'Spectacles.'
'You're a shallow man,' Amanda Brackett said, her voice crisp.
Hugh winced elaborately and Owen laughed. 'Skewered! Mandy,
I won't have a friend left in the entire fleet if you abuse
our guests so. Oh. Wait. He's a Royal Marine. They don't count.'
Hugh joined in their laughter, at ease with their
camaraderie enough to unbend. 'I'll have you know I took a
good look at her remarkable blue eyes, and, oh, that auburn
hair.'
All the sisters have it,' Amanda said. 'More ragout?'
'No, thank you, although I am fully aware it is the best
thing I will taste until I fetch the Portuguese coast in a
week or so.' He set down his cup. 'Miss Brandon is too young
to tempt me, Amanda. I doubt she is a day over eighteen.'
'And you are antiquated at thirty-seven?'
'I am. Besides that, what female in her right mind, whatever
her age, would make a Marine the object of her affection?'
'You have me there, Colonel,' Amanda said promptly, which
made Owen laugh.
She did have him, too, Hugh reflected wryly, as he walked
from Stonehouse, across the footbridge, and back to the
barrack for a final night on shore. Perhaps I am
shallow, he considered, as he lay in bed later. Amanda
Brackett was right; he was vain and shallow. Maybe daft,
too. He lay awake worrying more about his assignment,
putting Miss Brandon far from his mind.
Hugh joined the Perseverance at first light, the
side boys lined up and the bosun's mate piping him aboard.
His face set in that no-nonsense look every Marine
cultivated, and which he had perfected, he scanned the rank
of Marines on board. He noted their awed recognition of his
person, but after last night's conversation, he felt
embarrassed.
He chatted with Captain Adney for only a brief minute,
knowing well that the man was too busy for conversation. Out
of the corner of his eye, he noticed Miss Brandon standing
quietly by the binnacle, her hands clasped neatly in front
of her, the picture of rectitude, or at the very least,
someone just removed from the schoolroom herself. Amanda
Brackett had said as much last night. She was a green girl.
He had to admit there was something more about Miss Brandon,
evidenced by the two Midshipmen and Lieutenant grouped about
her, appearing to hang on her every word. She had inclined
her head to one side and was paying close attention to the
Lieutenant. Hugh smiled. He could practically see the man's
blush from here on the quarterdeck.
Miss Brandon, you are obviously a good listener, he
thought. Perhaps that compensates for spectacles.
The moment the thought swirled in his brain, he felt
small again. What a snob I am, he concluded,
turning his attention again to Captain Adney.
'… passage of some five days, Colonel, if we're
lucky,' he was saying. 'Is it Oporto or Lisbon for you?'
It scarcely mattered, considering his carte blanche
to wander the coastline on his fact-finding mission.
Perhaps he should start at Lisbon. 'Oporto,' he said. He
knew he had a letter for Surgeon Brittle, Miss Brandon's
brother-in-law, but he also knew he could just give it to
her and make his way to Lisbon, avoiding Oporto altogether.
'Oporto,' he repeated, not sure why.
'Very well, sir,' Captain Adney told him. 'And now, Colonel,
I am to take us out of harbour with the tide. Excuse me,
please.'
Hugh inclined his head and the Captain moved towards his
helmsman, standing ready at the wheel. Hugh watched with
amusement as the flock around Miss Brandon moved away
quickly, now that their Captain was on the loose and
prepared to work them.
Hardly knowing why, Hugh joined her. He congratulated
himself on thinking up a reason to introduce himself. He
doffed his hat and bowed. 'Miss Brandon? Pray forgive my rag
manners in introducing myself. I am Lieutenant Colonel Hugh
Junot, and I have some business you might discharge for me.'
She smiled at him, and he understood instantly why the
Lieutenant and Midshipmen had been attracted to her like
iron filings to a magnet. She had a direct gaze that seemed
to block out everything around her and focus solely on the
object of her interest. He felt amazingly flattered, even
though she was doing nothing more than giving him her
attention. There was nothing coy, arch or even flirtatious
about her expression. She was so completely present.
He couldn't describe it any better.
She dropped him a deep curtsy. Considering that it was high
summer and she wore no cloak, this gave him ample
opportunity to admire her handsome bosom.
'Yes, Colonel, I am Miss Brandon.'
As he put on his hat again, her eyes followed it up and she
did take a little breath, as though she was not used to her
present company. He knew she must be familiar enough with
the Royal Navy, considering her relationship to a captain
and a surgeon, but he did not think his splendid uniform was
ringing any bells.
'I am a Marine, Miss Brandon,' he said.
'And I am a hopeless landlubber, Colonel,' she replied with
a smile. 'I should have known that. What can I do for you?'
What a polite question, he thought. It is
almost as if I were infirm. She is looking at me as though I
have a foot in the grave, no teeth, and more years than her
brothers-in-law combined. What an ass I am.
Feeling his age—at least every scar on his body had
not started to ache simultaneously—he nodded to her.
'Miss Brandon, I have been charged by Surgeon Owen Brackett
to take a letter to your brother-in-law in Oporto. I suppose
that is why I sought to introduce myself, rather than wait
for someone else—who, I do not know—to perform
that office.'
That is marvellously lame, he thought sourly,
thinking of the gawking Midshipmen who had so recently
claimed her attention, and mentally adding himself to their
number.
The deferential look left her face. 'Taking a letter to my
brother-in-law is a pleasant assignment, sir. I am headed to
the same place. Do you know Surgeon Brittle?'
'Not yet.'
'If you are too busy to discharge your duty, I can certainly
relieve you of the letter, Colonel,' she told him.
'I am going there, too.'
He could think of nothing more to say, but she didn't seem
awkwardly waiting for conversation. Instead, she turned her
back against the rail to watch the foretopmen in the
rigging, preparing to spill down the sails and begin their
voyage. It was a sight he always enjoyed, too, so he stood
beside her in silence and watched. Although he had scarce
acquaintance with the lady beside him, he felt no urge to
blather on, in the way that newly introduced people often do.
The Perseverance began to move, and he felt his
heart lift, so glad he was to be at sea again and not
sitting in a conference room. He would range the coast,
watch his Marines in action, interview them, and possibly
formulate a way to increase their utility. With any luck, he
could stretch his assignment through the summer and into autumn.
'I have never sailed before,' Miss Brandon said.
'You'll get your sea legs,' he assuredher, his eyes on the
men balancing against the yardarms. He hoped it wasn't
improper to mention legs to a lady, even the sea kind.
In a few more minutes, she went belowdeck. He watched
Marines working the capstan with the sailors, and others
already standing sentry by the water butt and the helm. He
nodded to the Sergeant of Marines, who snapped to attention,
and introduced himself as the senior non-commissioned
officer on board. A thirty-six-gun frigate had no
commissioned officer. Hugh explained his mission and told
the man to carry on.
He stayed on deck until the Perseverance tacked out
of Plymouth Sound and into the high rollers of the Channel
itself. He observed the greasy swell of the current and knew
they were in for some rough water. No matter— he was
never seasick.
He went belowdeck and into his cabin, a typical
knocked-together affair made of framed canvas, which was
taken down when the gundeck cleared for action. His sleeping
cot, hung directly over the cannon, was already swaying to
the rhythm of the Atlantic Ocean. He timed the swell and
rolled into the cot for a nap.
Because Miss Brandon had admitted this was her first sea
voyage, Hugh was not surprised when she did not appear for
dinner in the wardroom. Captain Adney had the good sense to
give her the cabin with actual walls, one that probably
should have gone to a Lieutenant Colonel of Marines, had a
woman not been voyaging. The Sergeant had posted a sentry
outside her door, which was as it should be. There were no
flies growing on this little Marine detachment, and so he
would note in his journal.
There was no shortage of conversation around the wardroom
table. The frigate's officers let him into their
conversation and seemed interested in his plan. Used to the
sea, they kept protective hands around their plates and
expertly trapped dishes sent sliding by the ship's
increasingly violent motion. When the table was cleared and
the steward brought out a bottle, Hugh frowned to hear the
sound of vomiting from Miss Brandon's cabin.
The surgeon sighed and reached for the sherry as it started
to slide. 'Too bad there is no remedy for mal de mer,'
he said. 'She'll be glad to make land in a week.'
They chuckled, offered the usual toasts, hashed over the
war, and departed for their own duties. Hugh sat a while
longer at the table, tempted to knock on Miss Brandon's door
and at least make sure she had a basin to vomit in.
She didn't come out at all the next day, either. Poor
thing, Hugh thought, as he made his rounds of the
Marine Privates and Corporals, trying to question them about
their duties, taking notes, and wondering how to make
Marines naturally wary of high command understand that all
he wanted was to learn from them. Maybe the notion was too
radical.
Later that night he was lying in his violently swinging
sleeping cot, stewing over his plans, when someone knocked
on the frame of his canvas wall.
'Colonel, Private Leonard, sir.'
Hugh got up in one motion, alert. Leonard was the sentry
outside Miss Brandon's door. He had no business even
crossing the wardroom, not when he was on duty. Your
Sergeant will hear from me, Private, he thought, as he
yanked open his door.
'How dare you abandon your post!' he snapped.
If he thought to intimidate Private Leonard, he was
mistaken. The man seemed intent on a more important matter
than the potential threat of the lash.
'Colonel Junot, it's Miss Brandon. I've stood sentinel
outside her door for nearly four hours now, and I'm
worried.' The Private braced himself against the next roll
and wiggle as the Perseverance rose, then plunged
into the trough of a towering wave. 'She was puking and
bawling, and now she's too quiet. I didn't think I should
wait to speak until the watch relieved me, sir.'
Here's one Marine who thinks on his feet, Hugh
thought, as he reached for his uniform jacket. 'You acted
wisely. Return to your post, Private,' he said, his voice
normal.
He had his misgivings as he crossed the wardroom and knocked
on her door. Too bad there was not another female on board.
He knocked again. No answer. He looked at Private Leonard.
'I go in, don't I?' he murmured, feeling suddenly shy and
not afraid to admit it. There may have been a great gulf
between a Lieutenant Colonel and a Private, but they were
both men.
'I think so, sir,' the Private said. 'Do you have a lamp?'
'Go get mine.'
He opened the door and was assailed by the stench of vomit.
'Miss Brandon?' he called.
No answer. Alarmed now, he was by her sleeping cot in two
steps. He could barely see her in the gloom. He touched her
shoulder and his hand came away damp. He shook her more
vigorously and was rewarded with a slight moan.
No one dies of seasickness, he reminded himself.
'Miss Brandon?' he asked again. 'Can you hear me?'
Private Leonard returned with his lantern, holding it above
them in the tiny cabin. The light fell on as pitiful a
specimen of womanhood as he had ever seen. Gone was the
moderately attractive, composed young lady of two days ago.
In her place was a creature so exhausted with vomiting that
she could barely raise her hands to cover her eyes against
the feeble glow of the lantern.
'I should have approached you sooner, sir,' Private Leonard
said, his voice full of remorse.
'How were you to know?' he asked. 'We officers should have
wondered what was going on when she didn't come out for
meals. Private, go find the surgeon. I am relieving you at
post.'
'Aye, aye, Colonel.'
Uncertain what to do, Hugh hung the lantern from the deck
beam and gently moved Miss Brandon's matted hair from her
face, which was dry and caked. She didn't open her eyes, but
ran her tongue over cracked lips. 'You're completely
parched,' he said. 'Dryer than a bone. My goodness, Miss
Brandon.'