Date: Fri, 20 May 2005 23:28:27 -0400 From: edcwriter@yahoo.com Subject: FOR GOD & COUNTRY - 3 FOR GOD & COUNTRY - 3 Copyright 2005 by Carl Mason and Ed Collins All rights reserved. Other than downloading one copy for strictly personal enjoyment, no part of this story may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, except for reviews, without the written permission of the authors. However based on real events and places, "For God & Country" is strictly fictional. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. As in real life, however, the sexual themes unfold gradually. If you would like to read other Mason-Collins stories, you might turn to "Out of the Rubble," "Castle Margarethen," "The Priest and the Pauper," and "High Plains Doctor" which are archived in Nifty's "Historical" section. Comments on the story are appreciated and may be addressed to the authors at edcwriter@yahoo.com . "For God and Country" is much indebted to a long out-of-print work titled "Ask No Quarter" by George Marsh (Sun Dial Press, 1946). In many ways, it is an "alternative" retelling of parts of that grand story. To be sure, most of the content is unique to this yarn. This story contains descriptions of sexual contact between males, both adults and teenagers. As such, it is homoerotic fiction designed for the personal enjoyment of legal, hopefully mature, adults. If you are not of legal age to read such material, if those in power and/or those whom you trust treat it as illegal, or if it would create unresolvable moral dilemmas in your life, please leave. Finally, remember that maturity generally demands that anything other than safe sex is sheer insanity! CHAPTER 3 (Revisiting Chapter 2) The Lass was found to have a rich cargo of fine silk and other fabrics from Cathay, a hold loaded with casks of port, and several richly jeweled pieces destined for the consort of a British governor. Coffee placed a prize crew on board, gave the remaining British sailors the choice of helping make the ship seaworthy or jumping into the sea, and ordered the Lass when prepared to follow the Eagle into Fort-Royal on Martinique. As Mr. Arnold stood at the gangway, welcoming the lads who were returning to the Eagle, he beheld the smiling face of Hugh Allen. When the mate placed his hand over his heart, the handsome youth bobbed his head and touched his forelock in what was far more than a perfunctory acknowledgment of Arnold's gesture. Captain Coffee watched from the quarterdeck...as he had promised. (Continuing Our Story - Fort-Royal) After six long weeks at sea, all hands delighted in the sail into Martinique. Indeed, it was a stirring sight, something of which every man jack had dreamed when fighting the colder, often violent seas of New England. The blue mountains to the north, the palms waving in the mild tropic breezes, the scent of flowers foreign to their ken, the softness of the warm air, the intense colors that met them on every side...paradise. Passing a French frigate with its white lily banner, their spirits were further buoyed by the cheers that greeted the sight of the Lass limping along behind. Perhaps the only dissonant sight that met their eyes as they anchored in Fort-Royal was the long black sloop anchored close in to the fort. "A privateer?" grunted Arnold. "Aye, that's one word for it," Captain Coffee responded, "but methinks there are others." The Eagle was no sooner safely anchored than the Captain was making preparations to go ashore. He also gave leave to half the crew, placing them under the command of the bosun's mates while on shore. Arnold, the bosun, and the remainder of the crew would have their time in the fleshpots of Fort-Royal on the morrow. As soon as Coffee had departed, Arnold made sure that everything was shipshape for the day and made a number of assignments, including times during which the various watches might swim and otherwise relax. The bosun passed the word to the crew. His joy and relief knew no bounds when he saw that Hugh was among those still on the Eagle. In passing, he quietly "commanded" him to appear at his cabin at 7:00 pm for dinner. Promptly as the sixth bell was struck, Hugh knocked on the door to the mate's cabin. As Jeremiah opened the door, the young seaman, standing at strict attention, saluted smartly and said, "Your obedient servant reports as ordered, Mr. Arnold." The mate was nearly overcome by the vision that met his eyes. An absolutely radiant, blond-haired young sailor stood before him clad in his finest white skilt, his light blue cotton shirt, light stockings, his dark blue jacket, gold-flecked blue neckerchief, his black hat, and a pair of black shoes. Trembling slightly, he bade him enter. Now, of course, it was Hugh's turn to tremble! Removing his hat, he stepped through the door to behold a table the likes of which he had never seen. Two of Arnold's great chests had been drawn together and surmounted by a large square plank. Covered with a fine white linen tablecloth, the makeshift table was set with silver plates and cutlery, crystal wine glasses, linen napkins, and candles. A magnificent crystal vase held a bouquet of tropical flowers. "You have much to teach me, sir," the youth stammered nervously. "Do not worry, my love," Jeremiah replied. "You are absorbing everything else I place before you like a sponge. Indeed, you have fulfilled your promise. Without question, you are the best student I have ever had! Have no fears for this evening." With that, he took Hugh in his arms and kissed him passionately. Indeed, the lad was a superb student. It was as if not a moment had passed since their last meeting. Without a glass of wine as an excuse, his head grew dizzy, his body melted into his love's, and he wanted Jeremiah's arms to hold him forever. Arnold looked down between them and saw that the cut of the skilt was not nearly loose enough to conceal the signs of his arousal. Playfully, the mate diverted the lad from his embarrassment by lightly kissing every part of the his handsome face - ears, forehead, chin, nose... The planned evening might immediately have adjourned to the bed had there not been a light knock at the door. Cautiously cracking the door, Arnold opened it wide and bade an old sailor to enter. "You know Jean Pierre from the galley, Hugh. He has sailed with me most of my adult life and is absolutely trustworthy." Jean Pierre bobbed his head in Hugh's direction and laid out a dinner for two in covered silver dishes that had just arrived from the finest restaurant in Fort-Royal. "Thank you, Jean Pierre." When the old salt had disappeared, the mate held a chair for Hugh and bade him sit. Nervously, the boy took his place at the table. With great ceremony, Jeremiah opened a bottle of the finest Champagne and poured glasses for the two of them. The mate then stood, raised his glass, and proclaimed, "To General Washington. May his arms be crowned with success!" He quietly explained to Hugh that a proper response was, "To General Washington," whereupon he would take a sip from the glass. Hugh dutifully raised the glass, intoned the toast, and barely sipped the wine. Well done, Hugh, but I now invite you to have a good taste of this glorious wine. The boy eagerly complied, exclaiming that it was better than the best sasparilla that Mother Patience had ever made! "And now it is your turn, my boy, to offer a toast." Emboldened by his success...and the delicious liquid...Hugh stood and proclaimed firmly, "To the new flag that flies above us!" "To the new flag," Arnold responded fervently, as he joined in the toast. It was a magnificent meal. The youth both enjoyed the various dishes and acquitted himself admirably. Yes, there were "moments" such as the one when Hugh's fork went flying across the room as his fingers slipped on the handle, but within moments Jeremiah's fork also went flying and both men lapsed into giggles. Arnold asked if he wished something else to drink, but Hugh replied that he was "much taken" with the Champagne. The dessert? Well, the boy was a New Englander...and a dessert was a dessert! At home, he confessed, they sometimes BEGAN the meal with a favorite dessert! Jeremiah nodded his head in understanding, for he, too, was a son of God's country. At the end, plates empty, the Mate poured coffee. Hugh professed that he liked that, too, especially after dessert. "Ah, my boy, but that's not the end," Jeremiah exclaimed with a smile. The youngster looked him inquiringly, fully ready for the next course. "Gentlemen normally end a fine meal by smoking what is known as a 'cigar'. Fortunately, a good friend of mine, Israel Putnam who lives just over the line in northeastern Connecticut, brought Cuban seed to America. He has produced some excellent cigars, and I invite you to share one." Hugh look dubiously at a tubular-shaped object wrapped in something that looked like brown paper. He watched with interest as Jeremiah nipped off one end, lit the other from one of the candles, inhaled, and sighed in deep satisfaction. "Looks easy enough," he thought. Mimicking his host's actions, the boy lit his cigar and inhaled deeply. Fortunately, the choking and increasingly green-hued youngster did not lose his dinner, though, by common agreement, the "cigar lesson" was deferred "until a later date." After Jean Pierre had removed the remains of the dinner, helped Hugh to restore the table to its original condition, and departed, Jeremiah suggested that they both remove their coats and shoes and make themselves comfortable on the bed that crowded the little cabin. Hugh grinned, thinking that he was ready for this course, too! Arnold caught the grin, matched it with a happy smile of his own, and took the magnificent young seaman into his arms. "If I do anything to make you uncomfortable, young Hugh, you will tell me?" he murmured softly. "I shall tell you, sir, but you should know that I love you with all my heart. Tutor me, I beg you, in the ways of manly love." Slowly, Jeremiah stripped off Hugh's stockings and shoes, seductively unbuttoned his shirt, removed it, and placed it on a nearby chest. He lay alongside the youth, looking down at his matchless beauty. As if he couldn't quite believe what he saw, he reached out and lightly ran his hand over the boy's heavy shoulders and his solid pectoral muscles. The golden skin...the velvet skin that covered muscles so bold... His fingers traced the outlines of his lips and toyed, momentarily, with his square chin. Bending low, his lips brushed the youngster's face and then moved deeper to lathe an aureole, his teeth lightly brushing the nipple. Hugh suddenly realized what his buddies had been so excited about out on the docks in Newport with their loves. His body felt as if it were going to explode! His heart pounded so hard in his chest that he could hear the thumping. At one and the same moment, he wanted to scream...to laugh...to cry! His eyes teared; his vision blurred; his mind increasingly surrendered control over his quivering body. Suddenly, he sat up and wrapped his heavy arms around the man who was turning his body into a blazing inferno. "Jeremiah," he cried loudly, "Jeremiah..." "Hold on tightly, Hugh. Lean forward as I pull against you." Arnold leaned backwards, drawing the love-crazed youth with him. Reaching down, he loosened the top of the boy's skilt and forced it down over his proud buttocks. "Now, Hugh...just for a moment...lie back." With that, Arnold pulled the garment down the lad's legs and off his feet. For just a second he beheld the reclining figure - a thin sheen of perspiration covering gleaming perfection, eyes crazed, individual muscles spasming, a mewing cry upon lips that reached for his. Quickly tearing the remaining clothes from his body, he leapt into the arms of the naked youth who clawed at him, inhaled his tongue till he thought it might be lost in the depths, groaned, whipped their intertwined bodies to and fro, and moaned his name repeatedly. Jeremiah's tongue was everywhere, darting, licking, probing. Wondering if he could ever accomplish the deed, he slowly worked the giant phallus into his mouth, deeper and deeper, until his throat muscles could pulse against it. With a great cry, the beautiful youth came, propelling stream on stream of cum straight down the mate's throat. Slowly, his phallus receded, leaving a taste far richer than any experienced theretofore. Sobbing softly, they lay in each other's arms. "Jeremiah...Jeremiah...I love you so," Hugh gasped. "And I you," Arnold breathed, "for I've searched for you all my life." Neither man could long keep his hands off the other. Indeed, a fire had been lit that would not be quenched save by death itself. In time, the mate helped the youth to don his skilt, but not able to face continuing to clothe him, gave the lad another short lesson. Sensually, his hand crept up the hard, perfectly smooth skin of Hugh's thigh from below, feeling the lad's thick muscles quiver beneath his fingers. All too soon, it reached the massive balls and gently cupped and squeezed them in his palm. Inching upwards, his fingers touched the boy's glans, the foreskin of which had long since retracted, leaving the head to pour forth its rich liquids. Drawing giant breaths in through his mouth, Hugh reached down, seized the hem of the garment, and pulled it up. "Now, Jeremiah, now!" he commanded. Knowing an order when he heard one, Arnold swirled his tongue around the head, playing with the frenulum, inserting the tip of his tongue into the urethral slit, and gently sucking. With a great moan, Hugh's body arched full off the bed as he exploded into Jeremiah's mouth. "The ship's boats will soon be returning," Jeremiah finally said reluctantly. Tomorrow, on shore we shall be able to be together. Hugh groaned, opened one eye, and stuck out his tongue. "I think, sir, that I should prefer to stay here with you...forever. Let the Captain do what he will!" "Were there not those who would do as he ordered, I should be tempted," his lover responded, "but we have no choice. Up, fair Prince, and let us get the clothes back on you - as sad a thought as that may be!" Though still groggy, clinging to Jeremiah, and a bit silly - for the Champagne had not completely left him - Hugh was persuaded to struggle back into his finery. With repeated kisses, firm promises of appropriate "repayment," and not a few giggles, he was finally pushed out the door of Arnold's cabin. Though Jeremiah's body was still on fire, morning finally came. The Captain reported that he had experienced great success in Fort-Royal. Though France had not yet declared War, the Governor would give the Americans any material help that they needed and welcomed the opportunity to sell those British vessels they might seize, together with their cargos. The proceeds could be banked with the American representative in Fort-Royal who had an unquestioned reputation for honesty. Indeed, he already had a tentative figure on the Lass and her cargo which, he said, was indeed generous. Captain Coffee further commented that his many contacts in the Caribbean had established that the Governor's honesty was to be trusted, as rare as that was in these waters, he added grimly. In atypically good humor, he wished him a good day in Fort-Royal and mentioned a few cautions that he should pass on to his shore party. Once ashore, the mate passed effective control over to the bosun and his minions and made his way to a caf‚ on the upper edge of the small town where he had arranged to meet Hugh. There was little chance of being observed, for the sailors historically tended to congregate in a few bars and brothels close to the waterfront. The boy was waiting for him as he trudged up the street. After purchasing an inexpensive blanket, Jeremiah hired a carriage and inquired where they might enjoy the shore...and their privacy. The beach was everything the carriage driver had said it was: small, private, covered with a strangely dark colored sand, forested hills steeply descending almost to the water's edge. And the water... Oh God, the water. Turquoise from a distance, but up close, warm and so clear that you could see single grains of sand on the bottom. As the carriage turned back towards Fort-Royal, they held hands, and trod out upon the sand. Suddenly, without warning, Jeremiah yelled, "Last one in's a French pirate!" and began throwing his clothes in every direction. He splashed into the water first, too, although he hadn't gone two feet before a hunk crashed into him from the rear, sending him sprawling. Over and over the two naked bodies rolled in the surf, no holds barred, great muscles gleaming, their loud shouts sending flocks of birds into flight! Finally, half drowned, panting, and laughing hysterically, Jeremiah managed to pin the boy's back against the dark wet sand. Lying dominantly between the youth's widespread thighs, his chest pressed against Hugh's, his ankles controlling the lad's legs, he barked, "Do you strike your flag, sir?" Hugh used his great strength to fight his way to a sitting position and kissed the mate vigorously. "I didn't say I wanted ransom, matey," Arnold growled. "I asked if you were ready to surrender." The momentary silence that followed was finally broken by the cry of a gull and, overall, the crashing of the sea. Strangely, Hugh imagined that he could smell the lavender in Mother Patience's garden. "Yes, my love," he said, "I surrender. My body is yours; my mind constantly seeks ways to pleasure you; my soul is linked to yours for eternity." As a spent wave washed in around them, they held each other tightly in their arms, fearful that if they let go, the dream might disappear." Arnold finally forced his way to his feet, reached down, and helped Hugh to rise. They stood there in the brilliant sunlight, their arms around each other, the water cascading off their flesh. "It grows hot, my beautiful Hugh. Let us take our blanket and repair to that clearing where the tree line begins." Collecting their clothing scattered across the beach, spreading their blanket out on the soft grass in the shade of the trees, they lay, looking back at the ocean and feeling at peace with themselves and with the world. "Why do you sniff my hair, Jeremiah? What do you smell?" Hugh inquired. "I smell the ocean. I smell the trees that protect this bower and the exotic flowers that decorate it. I smell the manly and fair intoxicating scent that is you. l smell my love for you that is again rising in my loins," the mate of the Eagle responded, a quiet, unfathomable smile on his lips. With that, he began to kiss his love's body, pausing now and again to nibble and to lick. Within minutes, the gorgeous young seaman was again on fire, his head thrown back, his mouth open, his breathing labored, his proud cock engorged...pulsing... dripping. "Take me, Jeremiah!" the beautiful youth implored. "I am yours...yours alone. Mark me with your love!" After preparing the boy's virgin body, Arnold masterfully did exactly as he was bidden, thrusting repeatedly deep into his love and covering him with kisses. The powerful young body that lay under him responded as if in a primal ballet. Their moans, their whispered caresses, and, in time, their screams of fulfillment merged with the tropical winds. "What is to become of us in this cruel world, Jeremiah?" the youth murmured as he lay with his head cradled against his lover's breast. "I know not, my beloved," the proud officer responded. "I have never decided whether life is in the hands of God - or is a plaything of chance. I only know that we have each other now...at this very minute...and that we must make the most of it. But see you those wisps of rose and gold that color the western sky. The carriage will soon return. It is time for us to return to the harbor, always remembering this day." (By Fire and Sword) During the year 1777, the Eagle ravaged British shipping in the Lesser Antilles, i.e., the eastern Caribbean. Even ships headed for islands in the western Caribbean were intercepted. Try as they might, British warships were unable to corner the powerful raider, and the pleas of British merchants (and their losses) mounted steadily. Most of the ships were taken into Martinique, though one large ship - barely seaworthy after resisting the Eagle - was escorted into Guadeloupe. Captain Coffee was convinced that the authorities there tried to cheat him. When that visit also saw a sailor murdered in a bordello scuffle and another knifed on the streets of Pointe-a-Pitre, he never returned. To many of the crew, including Jeremiah Arnold, the Captain's behavior was becoming increasingly cruel. Shipboard floggings increased - and for the slightest offenses. At the same time, the ship suffered, for the Captain spent long, solitary periods in his cabin. After nearly a year at sea, for instance, there were gaps in the ship's company. Losses in any one incident were light, but when a crew numbers only 130, small losses mount up. Coffee absolutely refused to listen to the pleas of seamen on captured ships to sign on with the Eagle. In several cases, men were able to produce papers that at least suggested they were Americans. It made no difference. In the case of the one ship that floundered after stoutly resisting the sloop, the bosun's mates almost had a mutiny on their hands. The Captain watched impassively as sharks attacked the screaming, weeping remnants of the crew who struggled in the water as they begged the Captain for their lives. Only the threat of the cat - and the drawn guns of his picked sharpshooters - held his own seamen at bay. At that, he had two men cruelly flogged whom he called, with little reason that Arnold could discern, "ringleaders." During all of this, Hugh Allen grew in stature and in knowledge. After only a year, he could read more effectively than any seaman on the Eagle with the possible exception of the bosun. He could handle the basic computational chores of any officer - and, though he hated doing so, he could write with a fair hand. Though surprised at how quickly the time had come, Jeremiah had begun to introduce him to the nautical arts, especially the art of navigation. In battle, his growth was even more marked. Though the 17 year-old had only grown another inch or so in height, he grew significantly stronger. As the year passed, he became the acknowledged leader of the boarding parties. No man on board the Eagle was his equal with the cutlass or the hatchet; few, with the pistol. "Yaller Hair," as the British called him, actually had a price put on his head by the Governors of several British islands. Many of Hugh's fellow seamen - especially the younger set that included the redheaded Jeremy Stuart - began to see him as a good luck charm, adopting his mannerisms and even his dress in battle. (The Captain was not especially taken with his penchant for canvas shorts and nothing else, but he was not about to interfere with success.) Though the War was not going all that well for the Americans during the early years, there were breaks in the gloom that suggested something better might lie ahead. For instance, on November 17, 1776, the American brig-of-war, the "Andrew Doria", sailed into the harbor of St. Eustatius, a Dutch possession in the Lesser Antilles, firing its 13-gun salute indicating America's long sought independence. The 11-gun salute reply, roaring from the canons at Fort Oranje under the command of Governor Johannes deGraaff, established the Dutch as the first foreigners to officially recognize the newly formed United States of America. In June of 1777, the Eagle, proudly flying Old Glory, followed. Again, the Dutch welcome was clear and unequivocal. If only the powerful British naval base at Antigua had not been so close, Captain Coffee would have delighted in bringing some prizes into Oranjestad. The terms offered were generous indeed. No men onboard the Eagle were sadder that the British were too close to St. Eustatius than Jeremiah and Hugh. On one short leave, for instance, they hiked on the little 5x2-mile island all the way down to the 2000-foot dormant volcano on the southern end of the island, delighting in the tropical rainforest that they found in its interior. Spreading their trusty blanket on the bed of the drier forest further up the slope, Jeremiah also found that Hugh had grown more assertive in other ways! "You have tutored me well, dear Jeremiah," Hugh had said as Arnold took him by the shoulders and began to press him down onto the blanket. "Now it is time for me to show my gratitude." With that, the naked warrior had lifted his beloved companion high into the air, twirled him around, deposited him gently on the blanket, and demonstrated his various competencies! Had it not been for a good-sized iguana that scurried across his calves as he thrust into Jeremiah, Hugh argued, it would have been a perfect afternoon. Although Jeremiah complained that he couldn't walk comfortably for a week, he always agreed...lizard or no lizard! Besides, as he pointed out, it was a vegetarian! (The Great Gale of October 1777) Dawn on October 7, 1777 - ten days before the Revolution turned in America's favor with the surrender of General Burgoyne at Saratoga - found Hugh on duty. For some hours, he had known that something was "different"...and, intuitively, very, very wrong. The light, for instance, was "brassy;" the air, electric, fetid, and portentous. Within an hour, the officers and men of the Eagle saw it coming. Closely following a captured brigantine, the Eagle was approaching the Martinique coast and Fort-Royal under all possible sail. Heavy, dark clouds suddenly filled the western skies, lowering, and filled with lightening. Arnold quickly reduced sail and ordered the men out of the rigging. The storm hit the Eagle like a stone wall, visibility falling to zero within seconds. Neither the island nor the captured brig could be seen. The air was filled with spray - to be on deck was to be under water! For the rest of their lives, men on the Eagle that morning remembered the shrieking winds, the immense waves that came out of nowhere, and the vivid flashes of lightening and booming thunder. The 110-foot, 400-ton craft was knocked around fiercely. One of the last youngsters out of the rigging caught his lower arm between lines. Volunteering, Hugh leapt into the rigging despite the lightening and, on Arnold's orders, cut the lines loose. When he brought the boy down to the deck some distance below. Jeremy Stuart, his close shipmate, tied a tourniquet on his upper arm, and he was carried below, his forearm a mess of broken bones, mangled flesh, and blood. As a second cell hit the Eagle, she nearly capsized, but righted at the last moment. As the ship crashed into an immense wave, Captain Coffee finally appeared on deck. Disheveled, wild- eyed, standing in shock for a moment or two, he shrieked that all was lost and retreated to his cabin. During all of this, Mr. Arnold was an absolute rock, calmly standing on the quarterdeck, giving such orders as needed to be given, working with the helmsman to maneuver the ship, and ordering all nonessential men below. (In some ways, it was probably easier to be on deck, for below she was filled with men buffeted about, many of them injured in the process. Many a ship's boy and no few men unused to such seas were also vomiting their insides out!) Single- handedly, Hugh worked quietly with Arnold's sufferance to save several men of the deck crew. Indeed, as the storm increased in ferocity and giant waves swept across the decks as the Eagle tacked, he almost lost his own life. Grabbing the arm of a lad who had been swept over the gunwale and was clinging to a rope on the side, he almost followed the youth as another wave hit him from behind. Had it not been for three shipmates who came to their rescue, one of the great heroes of the gale would have been lost. As the second (and last major) cell of the gale passed, all hands could see that the brig had run onto rocks that lay fairly close to the shore. The immense seas and the windswept downpour that continued made it impossible to determine the condition of the men who had been on board. Fearing that a third cell might strike at any moment, Arnold skillfully, albeit it with great difficulty, eased the Eagle into the harbor. In addition to 19 injuries, some serious, four sailors died on the Eagle, including Jeremy's buddy whose forearm had to be amputated. He had died of shock, loss of blood and, perhaps, internal injuries suffered as he dangled by his forearm from the lines that trapped him and was slammed by the wind into the mast. Hugh encountered his boyhood friend as he sat sorting through the youngster's possessions. As best he could, he comforted him, wishing in vain that he could simply take him into his arms. About an hour later, the guard always posted at the door to Captain Coffee's cabin, reported to Mr. Arnold that he had heard strange noises from inside. Using one of his mate's keys, the men entered to find that the Captain had apparently taken his own life with a pistol shot into his troubled brain. After a discussion among the sloops' major officers, Jeremiah Arnold assumed the captaincy of the Eagle. With their unanimous agreement - rare given his age, though not his accomplishments - he named Hugh as his new mate. Announced to the crew, they broke into spontaneous cheers for the new captain. A voice in the back of the throng - whose voice Hugh knew well - led three cheers for the uniformly popular and respected new mate, "Mr. Yaller Hair." Coffee would have had someone flogged for "disrespect." Captain Arnold offered not a word of criticism, though he personally always referred to him as "Mr. Allen." Hugh, who resolutely refused to wear an officer's uniform, had some problems taking the salute of the men in subsequent days - especially those of the old salts - but with Arnold's support and counsel, he weathered the storm. The Captain ended the burial ceremony by saying that the British would not allow the continuing decimation of their merchant fleet. The Eagle had to expect a major military response by the Royal Navy in the near future. He also said that he knew his Newport and Portsmouth lads would do their duty. He and Hugh, whose mate's cubbyhole adjoined the Captain's cabin, did theirs that night - and nearly every night thereafter. (To be Continued)