Date: Mon, 16 May 2005 15:21:33 -0400 From: edcwriter@yahoo.com Subject: FOR GOD & COUNTRY - 1 FOR GOD & COUNTRY - 1 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 1 (Newport, Rhode Island, 1775) A sturdy young lad sat of the end of a wharf watching the last rays of the setting sun over the fort on Goat Island and Conanicut beyond. Only sixteen, he was already built like an eighteen year-old - and a brawny one at that. Eyes as blue as the deep water ocean that stretched just beyond the town gazed over Narragansett Bay, his home. Long golden hair fell down over a tattered lockram shirt. Beyond it and worn canvas shorts, he wore nothing. He sat quietly in the warm air, taking in the beauty, his thick thighs drawn up under him, his heavy, muscular arms hooked around his calves. However handsome, however conscious of the great beauty around him, the youth was desperately lonely and increasingly frustrated. He remembered his loving young parents who were torn from him by smallpox when he was but eight years old. His foster parents were good people, but they were also simple folk whose energies were fully consumed in surviving. Hugh received adequate food and shelter, but they were able to do little to feed his deep need for warm, expressive love - or the need of an extremely bright lad to learn more about the world beyond his immediate horizons. Actually, his poverty separated him from some of his peers, for those children in Newport who had educational opportunities were, by and large, well-to-do. His poverty also separated him from other peers, for his life involved rising with the sun, working, and retiring near exhaustion on most nights. Moreover, he was reaching that point in life where he was aware that little more awaited him. In truth, he didn't know exactly what he wanted. He just knew that it wasn't limited to a life that focused on mere survival. At 16, his heart and his mind already stretched beyond the little frame shack on the Cove with its diamond-shaped windowpanes and the fireplace at the end of the main room. Mother Patience's fish and vegetable stews, her chowders, and her rye and Injun bread, fed his body, but more - considerably more - was needed to feed his soul. Hugh sat alone - most of the boys he knew sitting with their girls on other wharves. Since he was 14 or so, the unlettered lad had known, albeit intuitively, that he didn't share ALL of their interests, but it hadn't torn him apart. His one close buddy, Jeremy Stuart, whom he known since coming to Newport at age eight, respected his physical prowess, especially when it came to swimming. Nor could another Newport youth spear a swordfish with his skill or bring down a goose out of a leaden autumnal sky with such accuracy. The others were too engaged in their own young lives, especially in their new obsession, to give his absence much heed. No, as yet it hadn't torn him apart, though it hadn't left him unscathed either. He had his moments - moments, for instance, when he wondered why he felt nothing in the presence of the town's girls. His buddies right slobbered in their presence, blushing, shuffling their feet, competing to see what they could do for Prudence or Content or Becky. As the girls became aware of Hugh's muscular body and good looks, as they saw the sunny smiles he bestowed on Jeremy - as they stood near him after a race when he climbed victoriously out of the Bay clad in nothing but his shorts - it was obvious enough that they WANTED those deep blue eyes to notice them. Other than for courtesy's sake, however, they never did. Yes, he had moments. He felt the devil's hot breath, for instance, as his eyes stripped those shorts off Jeremy after a race and, in his mind's eye, he reached out and touched a heavy brown arm or, even bolder, rested his hand on his buddy's muscular buttocks. And sometimes at night when lying on his pallet, he imagined Jeremy - or some other lad - lying beside him and went further... much further...before his cum exploded between straining fingers. On Sunday, he sat next to Mother Patience on the benches given over to the poor at the Second Baptist Church and listened to the minister preach against the sins of the flesh...and he knew he was a sinner. Would that the sermons have ever answered one question...just one of the many questions that plagued his soul, but they never did. Nor did Father John. What his foster father did give Hugh was stability, time to grow, and a hard physical life that drained his budding sexual energies before they could tear him apart. For years, it had been enough. As if he heard something behind him, Hugh Allen suddenly turned and looked back at the town that in 1775 was at one of its several historical high points - some would say its zenith. Along with Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Charleston, Newport was one of the American Colonies five great ports, a noted center of art and commerce. Its trade with the West Indies, for instance, brought untold wealth to its docks and the great merchants who owned the warehouses and ships. In turn, the merchants supported artists and craftsmen who filled their homes with treasures that are still among the most valued possessions of American museums. The rays of the setting sun still glinted on the great homes that stretched north along the water and on the docks and town that lined the cove and the harbor to the south and stretched up towards a ridge behind. Candles were already lit in the homes of the rich. Other than the many taverns, however, the town was growing dark as its inhabitants prepared for sleep, not to rise until the skies lightened again. Hugh rose, stretched, headed back to his fisherman foster father's simple shack on the Cove, and climbed the ladder to his pallet in the attic. Tomorrow would be a busy day. They were all busy days - filled with fishing and lobstering in the Sakonnet River and along the shore over towards the Vineyard. Nor was their sloop a stranger to the Massachusetts islands or to Block Island. As the winter closed in, they scoured the sea for late fish and hunted goose and swan until they left the coast. During the other seasons, the water was ALIVE with fish - cod, halibut, haddock, herring, mackerel, swordfish, shad, sturgeon, blackfish, and striped bass. The lobsters were so large that their giant claws often exceeded the size of the youth's hand. When prices dropped on the Newport wharves, farmers in King's County on the western shore or in Providence at the head of the Bay were always happy to trade corn and rye as well as dried pumpkin and apples for a taste of fresh fish. It was a hard life, but an honest one - and Hugh absorbed the simple virtues of his New England heritage. On the morrow, Hugh and his father had fished the Sakonnet, bring a good catch into Newport harbor in late afternoon. After he had helped Father John at the wharves, he wandered over to the Parade Ground where he stood on the edge of a pack of youths who were jostling each other and loudly arguing. The bitterness had a familiar root - loyalty to the King or loyalty to Rhode Island. British efforts to recoup their expenditures during the French and Indian War had cut heavily into the town's commercial profits. Though a smaller percentage of the total population than in other major American cities, save Boston, there was a significant body of Newporters who retained their loyalty to the British Crown. Drawn from officials in the civil and military establishments and their immediate families, the professional classes, and the wealthiest business men who felt their possessions and wide interests would be consumed in the fires of war, they preached moderation throughout the town and among the Colony's political leaders. Most had no desire to see armed suppression of the unrest - indeed, many echoed colonial outcries against unjust treatment - but the Revolutionary firebrands of Newport gave them little peace. Their rising fears and familial comments, of course, were reflected in the attitude of their young on the Parade Ground - young who would fight for the King in the forthcoming war. Their families would slowly be leaving Newport from 1775 onward to return to England or, perchance, to New York that was more firmly in loyalist hands. Even with the British occupation of Newport from 1776 to 1779 that saw an influx of Tory refugees, social and commercial ostracism would gradually force many to emigrate to Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Quebec, as well as to England and to British possessions in the Caribbean. When the British removed their troops from Newport in 1779, the ever increasing trickle would become a flood. The third of the former loyalist colony that remained received little sympathy from the victorious Americans. (War Comes to Rhode Island) In truth, war did not come to Rhode Island on May 4, 1776, when the Colony formally declared its independence. Rather, it had been effectively at war for at least a year...since the battles at Lexington and Concord in April of 1775. During that time, the boat of a British ship impressing sailors in Newport harbor had been captured, dragged through the streets, and burned on the Parade Ground. British revenue vessels had been burned in the Bay - and the British had retaliated by using its fleet to choke Newport's commerce and harass its fishermen. Unable to venture safely out onto the deep water, Newport's fisherman and sailors turned to equipping, provisioning, and manning several privateers designed to raid British merchant shipping, particularly in the West Indies. The proudest of these - at least in Hugh Allen's estimation - was a new craft being built in a Newport shipyard. (Hugh and Jeremy themselves spent long hours at the yard in volunteer labor.) Large and powerful for a sloop, she carried three masts and would mount 20 guns. Sharp-ended to allow for faster attack, she was fitted with eight pairs of oars (placed through the gun ports) that allowed for chases when there was no wind. Built of Rhode Island white oak, her overall appearance was one of speed and power, her rakish lines adding to the suggestion of danger. In fact, she was a fast, heavily gunned commerce raider that would be manned by Newport and Portsmouth lads who knew the sea and were not at all loathe to take on the Royal Navy! At long last - barely a month before the British would occupy Newport - the "Narragansett Eagle," as she would be known, was ready. Long lines of Newport and Portsmouth sailors crowded the dock, seeking to be signed on by Captain Samuel Coffee and his mate, Jeremiah Arnold. Only 130 seamen would join the Captain, his officers, the surgeon, and a small group of sharpshooters assembled from King's County. Having bidden farewell to their families, Jeremy was accepted without question, but Hugh faced a problem. Papers issued by the Governor, in addition to the Letter of Marque, provided that no one under 17 was to be accepted as a seaman. Hugh was three months short of his 17th birthday! Looking at the brawny youth, the mate suggested that they could ill afford to lose the services of a youth so powerful or so experienced on the water. Furthermore, the long hours that he had already spent readying the Eagle suggested that he shouldn't be relegated to the lowly status of a "ship's boy." Arnold proposed that Hugh be added to the ship's roster as his servant and, in three months time, given full seaman's status - as well as the increased share of the spoils that would bring. Captain Coffee nodded, and the decision was entered into the ship's log. Touching his tousled forelock, Hugh joined an exultant Jeremy as they boarded the sloop-of- war and entered upon a lifelong dream. There was no time for a shakedown cruise; secrecy was an absolute necessity. For some weeks, the master-at arms had established a guard around the perimeters of the yard. Each gun crew found that it included at least one experienced gunner who had spent the better part of his life on the high seas - sometimes in the service of the King, sometimes on a ship belonging to one of the great merchants...sometimes in more "private" pursuits. Taken to an isolated farm on the Island (known variously as "Aquidneck" or "Rhode Island"), they were drilled incessantly on operations that would soon become automatic. On their return, the men were restricted to the ship. Discipline was strict, but fair. There were, of course, "moments." The common practice in the seamen's mess, for instance, called for a great wooden bowl to be set down in the middle of the table. Reluctant to use his knife to spear a likely morsel in the rush that followed, Hugh simply did what came naturally. That is, he pushed in with his hands! After receiving several sharp raps on the knuckles from his more experienced shipmates, an old salt took mercy on him and loaned him a wooden spoon until he could come by one. Needless to say, the sturdy youth more than held his own from that point onward! On a dark and foggy night, the Eagle slipped unannounced out of the harbor, through the East Passage, and into Block Island Sound. A fisherman who had braved the dangers of the Sound to bring a catch into the harbor worth seven or eight times his normal return had given the Captain details on a British sloop close in to Block Island. Captain Coffee immediately determined that this might provide the key to evading the blockade. Cutting through the water like a greyhound - or, more accurately, like a ravenous shark - the big sloop approached the island in a heavy fog. After ball and power had been brought from below and the guns loaded and run out, orders were given to show no light and to maintain the strictest silence. The helm was given to a fisherman who knew the waters like the back of his hand. As the men crouched at their guns, the Eagle approached the last-reported position of the British craft. Voices were heard ahead, muffled by the layers of fog. A mast was spotted for an instant by a lookout. Suddenly, the enemy craft appeared before them. Could it be that their discipline had relaxed, lulled by lack of action and the thick fog that had gripped the area for some days? Could it possibly be that they had caught her anchored and battened down for the night? As the Eagle slipped past the King's ship, Captain Coffee gave the command to unleash a savage broadside of grape and solid shot. Despite the smoke and fog, the cheering Americans could see splinters flying everywhere, a mast and a tangled mass of ragged sails, shrouds, and spars falling overside, and fires breaking out. Coffee brought the Eagle smartly around. "Gods blood!" he swore between his teeth. "She sails like no other craft I've ever commanded!" As the American ship approached, the crew could see the wildest confusion...men pouring onto the decks, attempts being made to cut the rigging free, man the sloop's guns, and fight a fire that was spreading rapidly on the quarterdeck. Again the command to fire was given and again an overwhelming broadside crashed into the sloop. The Eagle departed, leaving a shattered vessel behind in flames and ruin, her decks littered with the dead, wounded, and wrecked gear. "I'd have loved to send her to the bottom," Coffee muttered to his mate, "but she's going nowhere this night and we have work to do." Hugh sat, his head lying against the big gun the he had helped fire, his hand resting on the back of a mangled comrade with whom he had played as a child. Blood trickled down his face from a small wound on his forehead. His naked chest and canvas pants were splotched with his friend's blood and with his vomit that had spewed forth when the life of his buddy had been erased by a solid shot. Jeremy knelt beside him, his arms around Hugh's broad shoulders. "Here, here, boys, let's have none of that!" Mr. Arnold said as he strode by. "Can you stand, Allen?" he inquired. "Yes, sir," the mortified boy said as he stood, tears mingling with the blood on his burning cheeks. "'Tis no matter, lad," the mate said...not unkindly. "Someday, I may tell you what happened to me during my first action. Get ye below and have the surgeon look at that wound - and get yourself cleaned up. Back to work, Stuart! Cover your friend," he said firmly before striding off. Convinced that he would forever be marked as a coward by both the crew and the officer who had witnessed his disgrace - the man without whose patronage he wouldn't even be ON the Eagle - the young lad staggered below. It was but a flesh wound and quickly cauterized and bound up. Cleaning himself off as best he could and slipping into his shorts, he slunk back up onto the deck. Imagine his surprise when the old tar assigned as his battery chief greeted him with a great shout, threw a heavily scarred arm around his shoulders, and loudly proclaimed that he had made it possible to get off two shots to the one fired by any other crew! Greeted on every side by shouts and back slaps - the bloody bandage on his head serving as a mark of valor - Hugh grinned nervously, felt his stomach return to its appointed place, and returned to duty. Jeremiah Arnold who watched from the quarterdeck smiled softly. "What an utterly enchanting young man," he thought. The battery chief had followed his orders and would receive an extra ration of rum before the night was out. Passing Block Island and clearing the coast, the Eagle headed south across the Gulf Stream. Minor repairs were made to the ship (for only two British shots had hit her and but one seaman had been lost). The days were filled with drills as routines were set and the large crew was whipped into a disciplined fighting force. Captain Coffee was an experienced officer and knew well that the ordinary seamen, landsmen, and boys had to be instructed in steering, in heaving the lead to determine the depth of the water, in knotting and splicing ropes, in rowing, in the use of the palm and needle to do sewing, and in bending and reefing sails. Working in teams under the direction of a bosun's mate, they used sand, brooms, holystones, and buckets to wash down the decks. Brass fittings and other bright work were polished; the metal tracks on which the gun carriages turned were burnished. The guns themselves were meticulously cleaned. The rigging, halyards, and blocks were checked and maintained. The watches were set and mess duties arranged. Hugh found the regimen exciting and wondered why the old salts constantly complained of boredom despite the daily activities of scrubbing, painting, drilling, and target practice. The sloop-of-war passed through the doldrums of the horse latitudes where ships were often becalmed and picked up the trade winds. Giving all major islands a wide berth, she passed no sails. Slowly, the gray December skies of Rhode Island gave way to the hot sun, the warm seas of the Caribbean, and the bright tropical colors of the southern latitudes. Occasionally, Hugh would spot the flashing surf and palm trees of a tiny island or join his shipmates in catching the wildly colored fish that gave them relief from weeks of pickled beef and salt cod. When the Captain anchored for the night off a little speck of coral that wasn't even on the maps, Hugh joined many others in stripping down and bathing thoroughly for the first time in weeks. The bawdy comments of some of the old salts who lined the gunwale on their return were...disturbing, but, after all, they'd soon be in action and that sort of stuff would be forgotten. Indeed, he forgot them quickly, for all of the stories that he had heard of warfare between the British, the French, and the Spaniards - not to mention the pirates who preyed on everyone - came to mind, and his excitement knew no bounds. (To Be Continued)