The Captain of the Golden Hide raised an eyebrow.
"Involved." He repeated the word to himself, rolling it around in his mind like a shimmering pearl. Smooth and precious.
He stood up, attention on the retreating outline of Vulpinsula behind them, Bully Harbour and its stuffiness and walls and eyes and ears already just one small murmur in the thin strip of indistinct noise breaking the distant horizon. Alive and well, it would seem, were the old prejudices of the Imperium that necessitated such care in the manner Morgan broached the subject. "Now, in the books, open fraternization of a more-than-filial nature between crew is certainly forbidden," he said - rare as strict enforcement was - "but engagement between a noble officer and a commoner, that's even another matter of its own." One that crossed rather a few more lines than mere crewbeast to crewbeast affections - one that might present difficulties in the future but which at present he'd determined to ignore in the case of their own beloved lieutenant and engineer.
After some time lost in thought, he spoke again, keeping his eyes on the ocean. "All the same, you can expect a good thrashing - a dozen of the Navy's best - to be levied at once upon the hide of anybeast who raises an ill paw against you for lovin' somebeast else. Much as it might be in some circles we've been in, love ain't a crime between these decks."
He frowned then as his paws clasped together behind his back.
"That said, I wouldn't go singin' the songs of your love to just anybeast, you know. However I'd like to see us as all one big family, this ship's now home to twenty five score souls, not all of 'em your friend or even friendly to you or what you hold dear. Many of 'em have an upside-down view of the world. Some of 'em could use the right amount of knowledge to hurt a beast. Whether there's a risk to you as a crewbeast from the rest of the crew's another question, one I'm afraid any officer's unqualified to answer." A sigh then. He hated it when the realist in him opened up that mouth and hated it more when what it said was more than likely right. Damned realist. "It will most certainly be used to hurt Lieutenant Songfox someday. Out here, the Mistress of Waves and Wind's the only Judge we answer to, but in port, there's less she or I, her most humble an' obedient servant, can do to protect him. I don't see it bein' a problem 'twixt crew, but officers and commoners, there lies danger."
A memory came to him, not a fond one: the sting of firstpaw experience.
"Couldn't protect Tultow, either. He had more ahead of him, you know, than off playin' soldier on a Navy ship. Might as well have been banished from the Army, name struck off the demmed record book, even without any proof, just rumors in the wrong ears. Not a Jenkins I could do about it, either, much as we both said to Hellgates with 'em all and welcomed the chance to work side-by-side again. He's better off here, but they stole the most valuable thing a beast has from him: choice."
He turned to fix her with concern in his gray-blue gaze.
"My only advice is do what you think keeps you both safe. I'm further removed from the crew. You'll get to know 'em better than I ever will, includin' who's a friend and who ain't. Know that if you find resistance, it won't be from above."
With that, he placed a reassuring paw on her arm before turning to leave. The words weren't much and he knew it, just a lifeline. Let her save or hang herself on it.
"Business in the Captain's cabin to attend to, I'm afraid. Welcome aboard for another gallivant into the bloody unknown, Interpreter Morgan." He paused. "I wish you an' the lucky creature the best. Dare the day come somebeast gets between you, threatens you, anythin' at all - don't be afraid to name the name. If not myself, Lieutenant Songfox is your todd."