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Authors: John Jakes

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Gun drills perfected the teamwork required to open the ports, run out the cannon, load, fire and reload in minimum time.

Though rated as a forty-four,
Constitution
actually carried much heavier armament: thirty twenty-four-pound long guns, for accurate distance firing; twenty-four thirty-two-pound carronades, of shorter range but capable of throwing a much heavier load of metal. One long eighteen-pounder brought the total to fifty-five guns.

The enemy Hull hoped to find was
Guerriere.
Her name meant “female warrior,” and she was rated at thirty-eight. What interested the American sailors more was a recent report that she was only shipping sixteen carronades, reducing her close-range firepower.

Such comparisons were dismissed by the British. Their traditional skill and daring would always carry the day. They considered the American navy insignificant, and American captains upstarts—except on land, where friendships such as Hull’s and Dacres’ were both common and completely permissible.

All in all, the officers and men of
Constitution
had good reason to yearn for an encounter with
Guerriere
or a ship of similar rate.

The frigate stood eastward for two days, raising no enemy sail. Hull changed course, bearing northwest toward the Bay of Fundy. On the tenth,
Constitution
intercepted a lightly armed British brig outward bound from Newfoundland to Halifax. A second brig was overtaken and captured the following day. Both vessels were burned, and their crews set adrift in longboats. The brigs were of too little value to be sailed back to American waters by prize crews.

A few more equally minor encounters put Captain Hull in a bad temper, and finally caused him to set a course for the Bermudas, where he hoped to find bigger prey.

On the eighteenth, off Cape Race, Newfoundland,
Constitution
overhauled a good-sized brig. She proved to be
Decatur,
a fourteen-gun American privateer. When her captain came aboard, he said he had assumed Hull’s ship to be an enemy frigate. As was customary,
Constitution
had showed no colors until the other vessel was identified.

The American captain told Hull he had eluded a real British frigate only the day before. Within an hour, the news spread through the ship. Oliver Prouty repeated it to Jared. “The captain thinks he’s on to Jimmy Dacres.
Decatur
outran a frigate slower than we are. A big one, too—it must be
Guerriere!

Excitement gripped the ship all through the night. Next day, at three bells into the afternoon watch,
Constitution
was plowing through a heavy sea. Men aloft searched for signs of a sail—

But Jared, below, had forgotten all about the pursuit. He had just been dispatched from the galley, carrying a lunch of salt beef, suet, biscuits and hot black coffee.

The lunch was for Sixth Lieutenant Stovall, who had stood the watch till dawn, and was now indisposed in his cabin.

Chapter IV
The Devil’s Companion
i

J
ARED’S HAND TURNED SWEATY
as he knocked. He glanced along the dim starboard gangway. Overhead, he heard men moving. But the gangway was empty and still, the officers’ sector of the berth deck totally, deserted.

The sea boomed against the hull. He started to knock again, hesitated. Perhaps Lieutenant Stovall had fallen asleep. Perhaps he wouldn’t have to face—

“Come in.”

Jared stood unmoving, his left hand white on the handle of the wicker basket. The second time, the voice was less languid. “I said come in.”

Reluctantly, he did.

It took his eyes a moment to adjust to the feeble light of Stovall’s single lantern. Tobacco smoke coiled slowly in the tiny cabin, fanned to motion by the opening and closing of the door. Through the haze Jared saw the young lieutenant lounging in his bunk, his throat stock undone, a long-stemmed pipe clenched between his perfect teeth. He didn’t look a bit ill.

Stovall set aside the wooden lap desk on which he’d been playing some form of patience with an oversized deck of hand-colored cards: crimson diamonds, purplish-red hearts, blue spades, green clubs. As he swung his legs out of the bunk, two of the court cards slipped to the floor.

He leaned down gracefully, picked up the cards. One was a heart king with the face of President Washington, the other a queen in the form of a classical goddess. He replaced the cards in the deck.

With a straight face, he said, “I trust you won’t put me on report, having discovered me with this—” He waggled the deck. “New England divines call it the devil’s picture book, don’t they? Alas, I’m more comfortable as a companion of devils than of divines.”

Jared kept his head down, knowing he was being mocked. He set the basket on the small bolted-down table.

“There is your meal, Lieutenant Stovall.”

“Thank you, Mr. Kent. I wasn’t up to the wardroom. Caught a touch of grippe in the damp night air, I think.”

Jared took a step, backward.

“If that will be all—”

“Not quite.”

Stovall’s manner was cordial enough. But his dark eyes had a bright, cold gleam. Walking slowly toward the boy, he talked with his pipe clenched in his teeth. “I had no idea you would be on duty, Mr. Kent—”

Jared believed that was probably a lie, but said nothing.

“I thought they might send the lunch with that coarse Prouty fellow. However, since you’re here—improperly dressed, I might add—”

Before the boy could stop him, the lieutenant tucked the bottom of Jared’s blouse into his slops. For a moment he felt warm fingers probing past the waist of his pants—

Stovall withdrew his hand, sat in the chair beside the table, examined his pipe. It had gone out. He knocked dottle into his palm, carelessly discarded it on the floor.

“—since you are here, I say, we should perhaps discuss your clumsiness in the wardroom. Tea, as you know, leaves an abominable stain. You quite ruined my best breeches.”

The dark eyes slid to Jared again. The boy felt a strangling tightness in his throat, a sense of being utterly cut off from the world. He spoke with difficulty. “As the captain said, it was an accident—”

Stovall sat up straight. “An accident,
sir.

Jared’s cheeks reddened. His hands shook a little. But he gave Stovall what he wanted. “An accident—sir.”

Stovall licked his lips, his eyes moving again. To Jared’s throat, his arms, his chest.

“I am prepared to be forgiving—”

“Captain Hull seemed to think the matter settled. Sir.”

“What Captain Hull thinks and what I think are not the same thing. You will sit down, Mr. Kent”—Stovall vacated the chair—“while we consider whether reparations are in order, and if so, what kind.”

“Begging the lieutenant’s pardon, the steward and the cook instructed me to come straight back to the galley after—”

“I take orders neither from the steward, who is a syphilitic sot, nor the cook, whose swill would win this war instantly if it were served to the enemy three days in a row. That a human being should be expected to eat suet—Christ! What barbarity!”

Then he smiled. “You will sit down.”

Jared slipped into the chair. Stovall strolled to the door, leaned against it, his handsome face a pale oval in the smoky gloom. The single hooded lantern swayed gently from one of the beams supporting the gun deck. Jared knew with a dismal certainty that it wasn’t going to be easy to get through that door again.

Hamilton Stovall returned to the bunk. He picked up his cards, began to shuffle them as he perched on the bunk’s edge.

“You don’t seem to be adjusting to naval discipline too well, Mr.—
turn and look at me, please!

Jared swung his legs from one side of the chair to the other.

“Every time you’re given an order, I notice a certain—shall we say—hostility? Perhaps you don’t even realize you’re reacting that way. But as I advised you once before, you won’t do well in the service until you curb your rebellious temperament. Of course”—a slow, limp gesture—“in other, more informal circumstances, your lively nature might have a certain charm.”

Stovall’s hands, somehow seeming quite independent of the rest of him, resumed the shuffling of the deck, pulling cards from the center and bringing them to the front. The rustling sound began to torture Jared’s nerves.

He worked up the courage to speak again. “May I ask the lieutenant the purpose of this—?”

“Damn your impertinence! I told you the purpose. We are discussing the damage done to my breeches. You will sit there and listen until I dismiss you!”

The cards moved again, whispering in counterpoint to the crash of the sea against
Constitution
’s hull. Abruptly, Stovall smiled.

“I want us to settle our difference amicably. You already know I consider us to be kindred spirits. Like you, I am not all that fond of the fuss and protocol of the navy. I accepted a commission out of necessity, frankly. A suitable position in my family’s iron finery in Baltimore won’t be available until my grandfather passes, bless his soul.”

There wasn’t a shred of feeling in the last remark. Jared knew Stovall was toying with him. Short of outright insubordination, he didn’t know how to put an end to it.

“I don’t intend to get myself killed in this war, I promise you that. I believe I mentioned that my father died in the army almost twenty years ago—of carelessness, I presume. That’s the only reason a clever man comes to harm in a war. I am not careless. On the other hand, navy life can broaden a young man’s perspectives on the world. It can be salutary in developing—oh, how shall I say it? Manly traits—?”

The soft rippling of the cards stopped. Stovall tossed the deck down, stood and rummaged beneath the bunk bolster. With his back turned, he said. “Mr. Kent, have you ever had a woman?”

Jared’s spine crawled. He couldn’t answer.

Stovall swung around, a metallic object gleaming on a chain in his right hand.

“Damme, you’re a rude lout!” he exclaimed softly. “You will answer any and all questions put to you by officers of this ship!”

He took two long strides forward, planting his boots wide apart. Jared’s mouth turned dry at the sight of the bulge beneath Stovall’s tight trousers.

“I repeat—have you ever had a woman?”

“N-no, sir, I haven’t.”

“Don’t you think about it? Many young men your age are fathers.”

“I think about it, yes—”

“Do you think it would be pleasant?”

“I—I imagine so.”

“Louder, Mr. Kent. You’re whispering.”

“I said—I imagine so.”

Stovall flicked a catch on the oval locket. One side fell away to reveal the most astonishing miniature Jared had ever seen: a reclining nude, a voluptuous woman. Her fingers hid only part of the dark triangle between her legs.

“Lovely creature, isn’t she? Her name is Mrs. Freemantle.”

He leaned down toward the seated boy, his breath ripe with the smell of the tobacco he’d been smoking.

“Does the sight of a naked woman excite you, Mr. Kent? Make you imagine those pleasures and sensations you’ve never experienced before?”

Jared jerked his head up, so that he didn’t have to stare at that obscene picture cupped in Stovall’s hand. He said in a hoarse voice, “Not really, sir.”

Stovall’s right brow hooked up. “Indeed? Why not?”

“I expect it would be better to—to wait for the real thing.”

“You’re a clever one.” Stovall chuckled. “Practical, too, since we’ve no women on board.” He snapped the locket shut, tucked it into the pocket of his breeches. “Still, Lord Cock can be a most impatient master. Surely at night, you sometimes feel his yearnings. His strainings—”

Stovall’s hand dropped toward Jared’s knee, touched it lightly.

“Surely you understand there are ways in which discreet gentlemen—pledged as friends—can relieve—”

“Take your hand away.”

“What’s this?
You
giving orders to
me?
” The fingers caressed his leg.

“I’m just telling you—take your hand away, or—” Jared swallowed.

“Or what, Mr. Kent?”

“Or I’ll kill you.”

Stovall’s eyes widened. Jared braced for a blow of the lieutenant’s fist. Instead, the young man guffawed. “Kill me, will you? How, in heaven’s name?”

“With—with my fists or any way I can,” Jared said, having decided at the last second not to reveal his one small advantage.

Stovall let go of his leg, slapped him on the shoulder. Jared wrenched away.

“By God, Mr. Kent, those blue eyes tell the truth. You’ve spirit. Style! Imagine!—telling an officer you’re going to kill him. That’s incredible brass! But I admire it—” He picked up the cards from the bunk. “I admire it because it’s so atypical. The deeds—the lives of most men—are so pathetically small and ordinary. Scruples hamper them—scruples being another name for fear. I never permit myself to be cowed that way. When I gamble, it’s for thousands, not pennies. I don’t shrink from the pleasures cowardly little men call vices—I seek them out!”

He gestured flamboyantly with the oversized cards. Jared’s earlier suspicion had become a conviction. Although the lieutenant might put on a respectable face for his superiors, he was dangerously deranged. The boy pressed his palms against his knees to keep the lieutenant from seeing how badly he was shaking.

“That’s why I do admire that chap Bonaparte,” Stovall went on. “Everyone else damns him, but I appreciate the scope of his ambition. His willingness to abandon himself utterly to a grand vision. For the same reason, I rather admire our highly moral captain, surprising as that may sound. His escape from those five Britishers was magnificent! No mundane fellow could have accomplished it—or would have tried. We gambled everything—risked everything for a single puff of wind, a quarter mile of distance—we staked our lives and damn near broke our backs,
but we won—!

Abruptly, Stovall drew a deep breath and riffled through the deck. Jared watched with mingled fascination and horror as he plucked out a blue-tinted spade—a knave represented by a scowling Indian chief with upraised tomahawk. Stovall twirled the card back and forth between thumb and index finger. “I’m telling you all this, dear boy, to show you that we are much alike—”

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