Off Morant Bay, Jamaica - February 3
My Dearest Sophie,
Well, we are nearing Port Royal at last, beating back in the
teeth of the worst storm I have seen in these ten years or more. Most of the
hands who could be spared were aloft in the cruelest of North Atlantic winds,
removing the ice that forms in the rigging almost before ones eyes, and weighs
the poor ship down so cruelly.
Never fear though, my dear. The Bonita is no Surprise, but she's no
horrible old Leopard neither. She bore up well enough, considering the
size of the blow, but in truth I won't be sorry to let her go to Jameson in Port
Royal. I am more than satisfied with the Myron, and I am already itching to get
on board and look her over.
It's odd to think, my dear, that Stephen will know her better than her new
captain, by the time he has sailed in her from Venezuela. If it were any other
man who had been at sea as many years as he has, I would ask her how she sails,
what her knees are like, the quality of her crew. I might still ask, but I doubt
I will get an answer that's in any way useful to me.
It's been a
lonely voyage without old Stephen, I must say. Winter evenings where I fairly
longed to make music, to play a hand of whist, or even listen to one of his
lectures about narwhals or old world buzzards or some such thing. But I'm not
sorry that we left him in Puerto Caballo, to take his ease another month and
then sail in the Myron to meet us here. The weather in the North Atlantic at
this time of the year would have been the very worst thing for him, still recovering from his
illness, and his chest so weak and wheezy. It would have broken your heart to
hear him cough, Sophie. You would have had him wrapped and cosseted and no doubt
cured the minute you heard him.
Jack sat, his pen still poised, framing the next sentences in his head. He
wanted to say again how much he had missed Stephen, more than he had ever
imagined he would. It had been the longest voyage he had ever made without him, perhaps
the longest time they had gone without seeing each other since the day they met,
all those years ago at Port Mahon.
Jack also wanted to say how worried he had been for his friend when he had
sailed away from Puerto Caballo without him. Stephen was the finest physician
Jack had ever known, in his layman's opinion the finest doctor in the world, but
he was most definitely that same world's worst patient. The moment he had begun
recovering from his bout of illness he had been as crotchety as a bear, and just
as likely to bite a man's hand off.
He had also been angry at being left onshore, expression mulish as Jack
explained what a dull voyage it would be in his borrowed ship. Not the chance
of an action, not an interesting bird or beast to be seen. That they probably
wouldn't even make landfall.
No argument would convince him and Jack could still see his peevish face,
skin still pale and much too thin as Stephen had bid him a cool goodbye.
Jack would
deny being a superstitious man with his last breath and he'd probably knock on
wood while he did it. But all the same he had carried an uneasy feeling with him
for months, all the more uneasy for the other concerns that were apt to awaken
him in the dark of the night and set him to worrying.
Did the crew of the Myron understand that Dr Maturin needed a bosun's chair to ascend to the deck of a ship? Did they realise his
head for heights existed only in his head? Did they know how very ill he had
been, and that he needed to be kept warm, even through a mild Caribbean winter?
Jack shook his head and put his letter away, snorting at his own thoughts.
What a worrier he had become in his old age! Stephen was a brilliant physician who had attended
the Duke of Clarence on more than one occasion. He was a well respected member
of the Royal Society and had lectured in front of learned men from all over the
globe. A linguist, a duelist, a cunning spy. He could certainly take care of
himself without Jack Aubrey looking over his shoulder. Stephen would have sailed on the
Myron more than a month ago, and even now
would be awaiting them in Port Royal, doubtless striding through damp forests and
squatting in stinking swamps. No doubt as jolly as a sandboy.
~~~
Port Royal was bustling as usual, ships bobbing thickly in the
harbour, decks swaying as the brisk wintry winds rocked the water below them.
The Admiral's flagship cast out her pennants, Captain Report Aboard, and Jack left
the Bonita in his lieutenant's hands and bid his bargemen row him across.
Admiral Barrington greeted him warmly and congratulated him on coming through the storm
in such good order.
"About time I had some good news," he said, pouring
himself a stiff glass and offering the bottle to Jack. "Because I have damn
bad news, Aubrey, about your next command. I suppose you've heard?"
Jack's heart sunk in his breast as he accepted the bottle. Not another
promise broken he thought in dismay. He had so counted on command of the Myron.
"No, sir."
The Admiral took a gulp of his drink. "Went down with all
hands off Orangetown. A bad business, Aubrey, a bad business. Captain Lindsay was my
wife's cousin you know."
"Went down?" Jack repeated, unable to take it in for a moment.
"Myron went down?"
"Foundered in that damnable storm, as did the Philomene, although
at least Captain Morris got all his people off and into boats. I must
say..." He broke off, looking alarmed. "By God, Aubrey, sit ye
down, sit ye down." He rescued the bottle from Jack's grasp and deftly
poured him a shot, wrapping Jack's hand around the thick-cut glass and guiding
it to his lips.
"I do apologise," The Admiral said kindly.
"What a scrub I am, breaking such news like that. You had kin aboard? Close
friends."
"My particular friend," Jack said, gulping down the
fiery liquid and hardly feeling the burn. "Dr Maturin. Dr Stephen Maturin."
"Ahh," the Admiral said, sitting himself back down.
"Dr Maturin, 'pon my word. He helped me enormously back in '08, Aubrey.
Dosed me with Peruvian bark and boneset when my own surgeon was still bleating about
Ward's pill and James's powder. For a
day or so after his dose I thought I would die and I was glad of it. Cursed him
to hell and damnation thrice over. But by the second day I was feeling better,
and by the third I was spry as a boy."
The Admiral's deliberate chatter gave Jack the chance to
recover himself, to swallow his grief with the ease of long practice.
"Thank you, sir," he said, laying the glass down on the desk with a
careful hand.
"Go back to your ship, Aubrey, while it is still your ship. Get a meal into you and lay
your head down for a few hours. All this..." He gestured to the papers and
reports on his desk. "All this will wait."
"Thank you, sir," was all Jack could say again.
~~~
Bonden's anxious face looked up at him from the barge, taking in his Captain's face and
shaking his head.
"We just heard the news, sir, from the crew like. They're saying the storm
blew nigh on three days down by Orangetown, and the old Myron, she didn't
stand a chance."
Jack nodded, still unable to speak.
"I'm so sorry, sir," Bonden said sadly. "I
esteemed the doctor greatly, as you know. We will miss him."
~~~
Miss him, Jack thought, days later, sitting in his usual room at Squires,
shutters drawn and closed. Those words hardly seemed to sum up the hollow
his insides had become. The blank, empty hollow.
Sometimes in the midst of a battle, so much was happening around him that his other senses shut down. Any sailor or soldier
who had seen action would tell you how it was. How they had received a sword
thrust or a musket ball during the battle that they had not felt until it was
all over. How the body could shut out pain that was too great, while the
mind was otherwise occupied.
Except no battle was raging with him in its center, solely responsible for the
lives of his people and the safety of his ship. Indeed, his mind was perfectly calm and quiet. The room was perfectly
calm and quiet, although outside in the street a dog was barking madly and someone was
yelling for the bugger to shut up or he'd do him for good and all.
He was just... empty.
Jack had seen death before. As a Naval officer he'd seen men die by the score,
not counting those killed by his own hands. He'd waded through blood on his decks, presided over
the funerals of his crew, watched body after body sewn into their hammocks from
fever or disease. Death was an old, constant companion.
A face flashed into Jack's mind, one he had scarcely thought of
for years. His mother. Fair haired and blue eyed, years of fond recollection had
softened her memory in his mind's eye, and now she was just a collection of
images. White skin, gentle hands, a kiss on his dozing cheek. She had been the
first person he had loved with all his heart, and she was the first person he had
lost.
And since then? A handful of faces paraded past his closed
eyes. Friends, shipmates, men who had been like brothers to him, packed as they
were in the close confines between decks. People he had cared about, respected.
Mourned.
But not loved. Not as he had loved his mother. Not as he had
loved Stephen.
"Stephen," he said aloud in the empty room.
The emptiness had filled him for days now, as he walked through his duties
giving orders for the handover of the Bonita to her new captain. He made
arrangements for Bonden and Killick and a few hand-picked men to be put up in
barracks down by the docks, although he could hardly justify taking any of his
people with him, now that he no longer had a ship to take them to. Captain
Jamison made no quibble; Jack could see his heart and mind were already taken up
with his new ship, and when he did look at Captain Aubrey, it was with a trace
of pity in his eyes.
Jack had a desk full of invitations from friends and old shipmates, but he
chose to keep to his room, avoiding the sympathetic eyes, the low murmurs, the pats
on his shoulder from friends and contemporaries. Or even worse, from those who didn't know him well enough to grasp his
loss and commiserated with him instead on
the loss of his new command, on the Myron.
Jack spent his days steadily drinking himself through the Squires' wine
cellar, and at night he dreamt of shipwreck, of storm-tossed seas, of being submerged,
ears pulsing with the dull beat of his own heart. In his nightmare Stephen was
below him in the water, hair floating, eyes open in surprise, hand
outstretched. Jack strained, stretched, struggled to reach him, then awoke,
shivering, ice cold, but unable to weep.
Jack refused dinner from a curious maid servant, appetite still absent. His
head hurt from wine, he felt weak and stupid as he squinted at his coat and
shrugged into it. Perhaps he would take a walk, find a tavern, try getting drunk
on something a little stronger.
There was a bulge in his coat pocket, and Jack fumbled with it, mind blank.
He pulled out a rosin and stared, brow crinkling. Now he recalled - he had
placed it in his pocket the morning the Bonita had sailed into Port
Royal. He had smiled as he did it, fondly anticipating Stephen's usual harangue at finding
that his rosin, (purchased from his own meager purse), had migrated to Jack's pocket during their last practice together.
'The same squalid tale,' Stephen would say and Jack could hear the
words so clearly in his mind that his heart wrenched.
"Stephen," he whispered aloud again, and he pressed the old rosin to his cheek, it's acidic resin smell drawing forth a host of memories,
bitter-sweet with grief. "I'm sorry, he said, voice choked, and then he was
weeping at last, a flood of tears that melted the icy shock that had
encased him this last week.
~~~
When the storm had passed he stumbled to his bed and lay back on it, the
emptiness completely gone. Instead he was filled with grief, deep and profound.
He missed Stephen as he would miss a limb, with an ache of that phantom pain
sailors sometimes spoke about. What was he to do now?
Jack knew he should be making plans, writing letters, scheming for a new
ship. At the very least he should be looking out a passage home for himself and
his men.
But he had no heart for plans, no care for the future. He couldn't give a
toss for a
ship, or promotion, nor even the comfort of home and family.
He wanted... He wanted Stephen back. He wanted Stephen by his side, scruffy
and unshaven, lecturing, complaining, sawing at his 'cello. He wanted to make
music with Stephen, long into the night, tossing phrases back and forth
between them, so in tune, so in harmony that it was hard to tell where his note
left off and Stephen's began.
Jack wrapped empty arms about himself, slower tears coming this time, leaking
from the corners of his eyes, soaking the pillow beneath his head. He wanted
Stephen, but Stephen was gone, and all that was left him was this lonely sea of
grief
stretching out before him, and a wake of bittersweet memories trailing behind.
~~~
Jack looked down at the blank page in front of him. He knew what he had to
write, the words at least were clear enough in his mind, but somehow he could not bring himself to put pen
to paper. He had an image of Sophie's dear face as she opened his letter. How
her eyes would be shining, looking forward to his news
and loving enquiries after their home and family. He hated the thought of her dismay and horror
over the news, her tears. Little Brigid's tears.
Jack pushed
the paper away from him.
He knew from Sophie's last letters that Diana was gone away again, leaving
Brigid at Ashgrove, and for the first time in years Jack felt his old bitter
dislike of Diana seep back. Had Stephen known his wife had left him again? Had he
taken that grief with him to his watery grave? And what of Diana, did she wait
somewhere now, for Stephen to once again appear and save her? She would wait in
vain.
Jack reached for his glass, then pushed it away as well. Since the night
the storm of grief had broken within him he had sobered his habits somewhat.
He had allowed Killick to visit with clean clothes and a razor to shave him.
He had started eating again, although desultorily, and without pleasure. He
supposed he had started living again, but it was a pitiful shadow of his
former life, seemingly devoid of colour or even the hope of joy.
Outside in the hall was a thunder of steps and Jack frowned as he answered
the insistent, almost indecently insistent knock.
To his amazement he saw it was his coxswain, Bonden, looking very peculiar indeed, eyes
wide, face red and flushed. He was sweating and panting, as if he had been
running.
"Bonden?" Jack said, caught between surprise and displeasure. "Whatever has
happened?"
"Sir," Bonden panted. "I was down on the dock to
see the Aquila come in. My cousins husband, John Bigby, is coxon aboard her. And I heard a voice, sir, a voice I never thought to hear again in life.
I, he..." Bonden stuttered to a halt as footsteps sounded on the stairs, casting
a quick look back over his shoulder. "I ran ahead to tell you, sir, so it
wouldn't be such a shock, but I don't know quite how to say it. I brought him
straight here."
"Who did you bring?" Jack began, trying to stay his
impatience, but then his question was answered and his own eyes widened just as
Bonden's had. "Stephen?"
For there he was, in all his rumpled, unshaven glory. His wig
was dusty and askew, his linens quite as threadbare as ever, and he had forgotten
to button the knees of his breeches. "Stephen," Jack whispered, and then with a
bound he was out the door and lifting his friend off his feet, dragging him to
his chest and clasping him as close as a second skin. "By god,
Stephen!"
"I collect, Jack," came Stephen's muffled
voice from between them. "Between your attitude and Bonden's, not to
mention the goggle-eyed scully-mots down at the dock, that
you're somewhat surprised to see me."
"Surprised?" Jack said, still trying to
come to terms with this beautiful truth. With the well-known voice and the feel of
Stephen's meager form against his own and most of all that puff of living breath
against his throat that denoted life, sweet life. "Surprised?" he
repeated, pulling back and staring into Stephen's face, hands holding his
shoulders, unable to quite let go. "They told me you were dead, Stephen!
The Myron sank, with all hands, off the coast!"
"Did she indeed?" Stephen said, attempting to pull
back a little more, but quickly giving up when Jack tightened his hold. "Ah,
what a terrible tragedy, poor poor fellows."
"I meant to tell you, sir," Bonden said tearfully, hands clasping
his woolen hat tight in front of him. "But all I could think when I saw you
was the cap'n here, heartsick and grieving, and I figured to just come here
straight off. I knew the cap'n would put it all to rights," he finished,
beaming widely. Jack tore his gaze away from his friend's face long enough to take in
Bonden's radiant expression and Jack's own throat closed for a moment in remembrance
of their shared grief, and the letter he had just been labouring over.
But then he felt Stephen wriggle a little under his clasp and
his face cleared, his heart lightened at the enormous burden lifted from it.
Stephen was alive!
"But, Stephen," Jack said, some sense squirming into his happy
brain. "How on Earth did you come to be here, safe and sound? Why was you
not on the Myron?"
"Well, as to that," Stephen said, coughing and
looking a trifle embarrassed. "I was sure I'd be back in time to catch the
ship before she sailed, positive of it. And I would have been, but my guide
mentioned a Great Barbary Duck he had seen that very morning,
and he knew where I could hire a
horse, and the time just got away from me. Sure and the ship left early as well,
I'm sure they did, the creatures. God bless them," he said hurriedly, looking a
trifle grumpy as he always did when he was in the wrong and didn't want to admit
it.
"Great Barbary Duck," Jack repeated. The words sunk in,
the memories of a hundred ducks or beetles or clawed koalas running through
his mind. "Of course it was a duck!" he cried, laughter and joy
welling up within him. He couldn't help it, he crushed Stephen back to his
chest. "What else but a duck!"
"Jack," Stephen protested loudly, and then more
gently, freeing one arm and patting at Jack's broad back. "Jack, my dear,
much
as I appreciate the warmth of your embrace and the sentiments behind it, you're
crushing me."
~~~
Dinner was arranged and ordered. Bonden, grinning with glee at being the one
to spread the news of the doctor's miraculous return, had departed after due exhortations
from the captain that their friends be asked not to disturb the doctor until the
morning at least.
Dinner had been sumptuous, with the serving girl, and the bar tender, and
even the cook carrying dishes in, all casting amazed and curious looks at the
newly resurrected. Stephen had taken it all with good grace for a small while,
then shooed them all out and locked the door firmly behind them.
"Slack jawed gawkers," he said grumpily.
Jack nodded, heart still so full he felt it might burst. He couldn't take his
eyes away from Stephen, couldn't hear enough of his voice. He was gawking
himself, but Stephen didn't seem to notice as he repeated his reasons for
missing the ship, and mourned his luggage that had already been stowed aboard,
although that was nothing to the terrible loss of life, in course.
It was hours later, and night had descended when Jack, without any clear plan
or intention, leaned over and pressed his lips to
Stephen's.
Jack stopped him in full flow of his lecture about the Margay, the spotted
native cat of Venezuela, so quickly he smothered the words 'opposable hind paws'
with his lips and gently touched his tongue to Stephen's before withdrawing.
Then he leaned back in his chair and waited for the verdict, whatever it would
be.
There was a kind of freedom in this moment that Jack had never felt before.
His entire adult life had involved risking everything on the toss of a coin. His
career, his wealth, his prospects and future happiness. Every toss had been a
gamble, most calculated, some foolish, the occasional throw a disaster beyond
all imagining.
But this time he knew with the utmost certainty that he was not gambling.
No matter what Stephen decided here, and Jack could see him now, touching his
own tongue to recently kissed lips, eyes thoughtful and speculative as he turned
the matter over in his mind. No matter what he decided, Jack knew he would lose
nothing. Even if Stephen rejected his offer, he would continue to be his friend.
Even if he was kind as he carefully listed the reasons why such a thing was
impossible between them, absurd, ridiculous, he would continue to stay by Jack's
side. Even if nothing worked out the way Jack hoped and dreamed now, Stephen
would still love him. So a toss where a man has nothing to lose could hardly be
called a gamble.
Stephen did none of those things.
"Hmm," he said. Then he leaned closer, tilted his head back, and
waited.
Jack smothered his own grin this time with the press of lips to eager lips.
~~~
After that it was somewhat of a battle, or a dance, as Jack
tried with fingers suddenly clumsy to loosen Stephen's cravat, and Stephen's
fingers, usually so clever, struggled with buttons and good, strong broadcloth.
"Just let me..." Jack panted, lips on cheek and chin
and throat.
"If you'd just lean back, for all love," Stephen
muttered, tilting his head, fingers suddenly going slack. "Oh, that
feels..."
"How, how does it feel?" Jack said eagerly, finally
leaning back, and then swooping forward as Stephen staggered, deprived of the
powerful arms holding him upright.
"This is not going to work," Stephen said, pulling
back huffily and grabbing at his trailing cravat. "Without some definite maneuvers."
"Maneuvers, ey?" Jack said thoughtfully.
"That is your forte," Stephen reminded him, shrugging
off his coat and laying it over the back of his chair. "And now that I think
on it, did we lock the door?" Long fingers eased open his buttons and
Jack swallowed hard, his easy joy giving away to a shocking arousal.
"You did," he said, voice strangely strangled, and
then, with an easy action, muscles of his big arms flexing, he lifted Stephen
and flung him over his shoulder.
"Jesus, Mary and Joseph," Stephen swore, scrabbling at
Jack's back from his upside down position. Struggling and blaspheming
shockingly, he was carried to the wide bed and slung down. "It's a beast
you've become, Jack Aubrey, passions inflamed by grief and excess of
emotion. No doubt I should draw blood before we engage in any vigorous
activity."
"No doubt," Jack said, his mind briefly toying with
some clever witticism about what else Stephen could draw from him, but he was
too distracted by his prick to quite form the words, and besides he was busy
making short work of his own clothes, tossing them aside to fall where they may.
Stephen lifted himself up on his elbows and surveyed him with
narrowed eyes. "I'm thinking I should ask what you have in mind here,"
he said.
"I should of thought that perfectly obvious," Jack
said, stepping out of his breeches with a kick. Stephen's eyes dropped to Jack's
arousal.
"I meant," he said with a pointed glare back at Jack's
face. "What
your specific intentions are towards my person, with your wanton picking up and
flinging a fellow about. I'm not some dockyard strumpet to be mauled and
tumbled, Jack."
"I never thought you were." Jack leaned over
and tugged at the laces of Stephen's breeches. "For heaven's sake,
Stephen," he panted. "At this point I don't care if all we do is roll
about and spatter on each other like boys, just take this off, will you?"
Stephen obliged, wriggling and stripping while Jack flung
himself down next to him on the rumpled covers and stroked a calloused hand down
his side.
Stephen arched like a cat at the caress, breath coming fast as
he finally flung the last of his clothing away and rolled onto his side to face
his lover.
Then they were kissing again, wildly, and it looked as if Jack's
prediction would come true and they would both be brought to their conclusions
thus, when Stephen reached down and grabbed at Jack's sturdy buttocks, squeezing
hard and pressing his cock up into the cradle of Jack's thighs.
Without quite knowing how it happened Jack was on his back and
Stephen was on top of him, rocking in between his spread legs, biting at his
arched neck, rubbing ribbons of sensation down into Jack's belly at the scratch of
beard on sun-browned skin.
Jack could only grab at Stephen's rib cage and hold on, arching again, wrapping strong thighs around Stephen and squeezing his eyes shut at
the tide that was washing over him.
"Stephen," he ground out, and then he shouted as he
came, fast and hard, the best feeling he could remember in his entire life.
"Stephen!"
Stephen didn't speak, he was still moving, his face intent, his
eyes narrowed and hawk-like, and Jack, still trembling with the aftershocks of ecstasy,
smoothed his hands up and down his lover's narrow back. Stephen thrust once,
twice, thrice more, and then he was stiffening, panting, pulsing against Jack
before collapsing like a snapped line.
Tenderly Jack cradled him close, savouring the warm lassitude of
his limbs, the meager weight of Stephen on his chest, even the twitching of
their spent cocks as they nuzzled together in the space between them.
"Maneuvers, I said," Stephen muttered into his throat.
"What kind of maneuvers do you call those, I ask you?"
"Never mind maneuvers," Jack said sleepily. "Go
straight at 'em." Then Stephen was shaking atop him as Jack's chest swelled
with chuckles. Chuckles that quickly graduated to full blown laughter. "Go
straight at 'em!" he choked and Stephen rolled off him and surveyed him
fondly.
"The best thing I've ever come up with," Jack said,
wiping at his eyes as he finally calmed down. "And I can't tell a
soul."
"Never mind," Stephen said, laying back and letting
Jack gather him to his broad side. "It's a fact that a man's wit is seldom
appreciated in his own lifetime."
~~~
Deep in the dark of the night Jack awoke with tears on his face
and Stephen's lips on his wet cheek. He turned with a low sob into the comfort
of his embrace, pouring out an incoherent account of the last weeks, the terrible
emptiness that had engulfed him, and the even more appalling moment he had
finally succumbed to his grief,
leaving him broken and lonely, grieving to his core.
"Acushla," Stephen murmured, stroking Jack's long
hair back from his brow. "Never take on so, I beg. For all men are mortal,
and my time will come one day. Indeed, I have cheated Death so many times
already, I'm sure he's looking forward with great anticipation to my finally
succumbing to his blandishments."
"Well, but," Jack said stubbornly. "I've cheated
it right alongside you, ain't I? When our number's up it should be up
together, don't you see? Not us miles and months apart. That was what tore at me
so, Stephen. That you were afraid and in pain and I wasn't there to help you.
That you called out for me, and I was far away, playing my lonely music to the
stars and never knowing you were..."
"Hush, hush," Stephen said, when Jack's voice trailed
off thickly. "Sure and here I am, safe and warm in your arms, after all
these years. A place I never thought I'd ever be, truth be told."
Jack sniffled and smiled, damply, against Stephen's meager hair.
"I can't say I thought it myself, if it comes to that," he admitted.
Stephen drew back and gazed up at him through the moonlight.
"Then what on Earth possessed you, joy? To pick me up and fling me onto
your bed?"
Jack gazed back at him, still drinking in that beloved face,
even more bearded now, pale eyes curious and wondering. "I don't
know," Jack said. "I just didn't want to let you go, ever again. I
wanted to kiss you, and hold you close to me." He flushed, his own words
stirring his senses and his cock.
Stephen's brow rose and he glanced down significantly. "And
you being yourself, Jack Aubrey, that turned into bed-flinging, did it? I should
have known, indeed I should have. We're both victims of your base, animal
passions."
"Yes, Stephen," Jack said meekly, rolling onto his
side and giving Stephen the full benefit of his base, animal passion with a firm
thrust of his loins. To his intense gratification, Stephen's own passion
answered. "Do you mind very much?"
"T'would be all the same if I did," Stephen said
severely, pushing at his broad shoulders until Jack was on his back again, then
pressing him into the bed with a series of lush, slow kisses. He drew away,
sallow skin flushed with high colour, pale eyes gleaming. "Once loosed,
such animal passions are not so easily put aside. Sure and Lucretius himself
wrote about it, in his master work, De Rerum Natura."
"Did he indeed?" Jack said, seizing the moment to do
some pushing of his own, rolling Stephen onto his back and boarding him before
he could complain about it.
"He did," Stephen confirmed, voice a little less sure
now. "In fact he had much to say... oh, Jack, yes... on the subject
of, of... venus, amor, voluptas... right there, love, right
there... Oh!"
"How very interesting," Jack murmured. "Pray,
tell me more."
Epilogue
Jack sat and watched Stephen sip at his morning coffee, as he
had done a thousand times before. And as he had done nearly as many times, he
wondered what his friend was thinking behind that habitually closed expression.
They had awoken entangled in each other's arms, and, as if they had not paused
for sleep they immediately resumed their congress, rubbing up against one another
and coming most satisfactorily.
And then they had arisen, and washed and dressed, ordered
breakfast and accepted a steaming pot of coffee while they waited for it. In all
this time they had barely spoken, although this was more than likely because
neither of them were quite human until they had polished off a pot between them.
Jack found himself wondering about Diana, Stephens wife. About
adultery, fidelity, friendship. He knew Stephen had very firm ideas on fidelity,
and although he had once suspected Stephen of committing adultery, his friend
had later hinted broadly that Jack had misread the situation. Did Stephen indeed
know Diana had left him, and did he then absolve himself of the charge of adultery, on the
grounds that Diana seemed to have such a fluid view of the married state
herself?
Jack's own conscience smote him not all. Sophie was his wife,
the mother of his children; her place in his life was unassailable, absolute. He
loved her, missed her, highly esteemed her. But he had long known she didn't
fill the places in his heart Stephen did. If Jack had been a more
introspective man he might have wondered at his easy acceptance of that
fact, but he wasn't, so this new aspect of his relationship with Stephen
was wonderfully uncomplicated.
"Sure, and that's a serious face, brother,"
Stephen said, coming back to life after his third cup. "Is it not
early in the morning for such deep thoughts?"
Jack squinted at the window. "I doubt anyone would
consider this early," he said, and finished his own third cup with a
sigh.
"I suppose I should show my face to the world,
although I must admit, I dread it. A man come back from the dead, a
Lazarus if you will, must surely be considered a nine day wonder. I will
be gawked at, I know it."
"Your friends can only be glad," Jack said.
"And you have very many friends, Stephen. You have no idea how many."
"Don't sound so surprised, for all love."
Breakfast arrived and they feasted on fried eggs and ham,
on a platter of bacon and tiny sausages. Jack was ravenous and he indulged
himself until he was forced to push away from the
table and lean back in his chair. Stephen ate in a manner hearty for him
and Jack watched his friend curiously. Stephen was not giving away
what he was feeling, and perhaps he never would. Jack would never ask. It
was the way things were between them, and for a moment Jack wished it were
otherwise.
Then he recalled the night before, Stephen's strong hands
holding him close, whispered words of love and reassurance in his ear, and
the wish melted away.
"Now," Stephen said, tossing his napkin on his
bare plate. "I know that look of old. Gloating doesn't suit the very
corpulent, Jack. It gives them a porcine look that is wholly
unbecoming."
"Gloating?" Jack objected. "Never in life.
Perhaps you don't know me as well as you think you do, Stephen."
Stephen smiled, his rare, happy smile, usually only seen
around such objects as the Pale-Headed Brush Finch, or Podacanthus
Typon, and Jack smiled back, entranced. "Oh, but I do know you,
Jack, and others do too, though none so well. You must school your
face, my dear, or you will be giving us away, to shame and scorn and ignominy."
"Nonsense. Nonsense! I'm happy to see my friend
alive, and everyone will know it. How much more suspicious would it be,
were I to go all po-faced and solemn, ey?"
Stephen considered him. "Is it becoming wise in your
old age, Jack?"
Jack laid a finger alongside his nose and winked, broadly.
"I can be as close as the next man, Stephen, when I have to be. No
one will smoke us, I promise. But, er..." he fiddled with his napkin.
"Does that mean we will be... continuing?"
"For my part, yes," Stephen said. "Is
it not your wish, Jack?"
"Oh, yes!" Jack burst out. "Yes, very much.
With all my heart." He broke off, chuckled a little at himself, then
reached across the table and took Stephen's hand in his. "With all my
heart."
Stephen squeezed his hand, his returning answer in his
eyes.