The Shadow of the Eagle Read Online Free

The Shadow of the Eagle
Book: The Shadow of the Eagle Read Online Free
Author: Richard Woodman
Tags: Fiction, Historical, Action & Adventure, Sea stories
Pages:
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the evening passed very pleasantly until at last, the prince, having called upon Blackwood to propose the first toast to his royal father, initiated a succession of these in which, at least so it seemed, every crowned head in Europe was thus honoured.
    Eventually His Royal Highness prevailed and made some general remarks about his sensibility to the honour of commanding an allied squadron at this happy time of peace, alluding to the restoration of legitimate monarchy in France. He related an anecdote of the king, whom he had escorted ashore earlier in the day.
    ‘His Majesty,’ said the prince, perspiration and the tears of emotion upon his florid cheek, ‘upon landing on the sacred soil of his native land, embraced the Duchess of Angoulême and said, “I hold again the crown of my ancestors; if it were of roses, I would place it upon your head; as it is of thorns”,’ and here the sweating prince waved his hand above his head,’ “it is for me to wear it.” Most moving gentlemen, most moving, what?’
    A murmur of loyal assent ran round the table.
    ‘It seems our Billy has learned a thing or two from La Belle Jordan, remarked Huddart drolly, referring to the prince’s former mistress who was also a renowned actress.
    ‘Well gentlemen,’ resumed their host, ‘the merchant and the mariner have now nothing other than the dangers of the elements to encounter, what? And so the prosperity of their pursuits is by consequence more probable, don’t you know. What! And therefore I propose a final toast to the sea-services!’
    Like the preceding bumpers, they drank this final one sitting down, their faces perspiring from the heat of the candles, the warmth of their conversation and wine. To Drinkwater, chatting amiably to Huddart in the full flush of drunken fellowship, the prospect of peace, of retirement from the demands of active service and all its alarums, risks and hazards, seemed as rosy as the face of Admiral of the Fleet, His Royal Highness, the Prince William Henry, Duke of Clarence and Earl of Munster.
    And just as fulsome.
     

CHAPTER 2
Nicodemus
    25 April 1814
    Drinkwater could not sleep. He had dined too well and drunk too deeply; moreover he was of an age now that precluded enjoying a full night’s sleep and sometime late in the middle watch he irritably entered the starboard quarter-gallery and squatted inelegantly on the privy.
    The dark shapes of the anchored squadron were pin-pricked by points of light, where the poop lanterns glowed and ashore a pair of glims marked the entrance to Calais port. Beneath him Andromeda lifted to a low ground swell and this motion caused her ageing fabric to creak in a mild protest. She was worn out with service. After the pounding she had taken in the action with the Odin she would have been better employed as a hulk, or even broken up. It was ironic that now, at the conclusion of hostilities, and in recognition of her last service attending upon kings and princes, she was fully manned. It was a rare experience for Captain Drinkwater to command one of His Britannic Majesty’s cruisers which had a full complement, even after twenty years of war!
    He sighed, contemplating the passage of time and feeling not only the ache of his tired body, but a morbid apprehension at his own mortality. He thought often now of death, almost daily since the loss of his friend and sometime lieutenant, James Quilhampton. He felt James’s passing acutely and had assumed responsibility for the younger man’s widow and child, but the impact upon his own spirit had been severe. He held himself wholly to blame for Quilhampton’s death; it was an illogical conclusion. Nathaniel Drinkwater had murdered those whom events cast as enemies of his king and country without remorse, seeing in their deaths the workings of providence, but James’s death had been attributable to his following orders, orders that had been given by Nathaniel Drinkwater himself.
    ‘Damn the blue-devils,’ he muttered,
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