Laura Fielding

From WikiPOBia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(New character)
(fix spoiler warning)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Laura Fielding''' was the Sicilian-born wife of Lieutenant Charles Fielding. She is described as beautiful with red hair. [[Jack Aubrey]] takes Italian lessons from her while in [[Malta]] at the start of [[Treason's Harbour]]. Despite his attempts to seduce her, she gently and tactfully rebuffs him, saying that she wants to tell her husband that she does not "ply the oar". However, public opinion is that he has been successful due to the affection her dog, Ponto, has for Aubrey.
'''Laura Fielding''' was the Sicilian-born wife of Lieutenant Charles Fielding. She is described as beautiful with red hair. [[Jack Aubrey]] takes Italian lessons from her while in [[Malta]] at the start of [[Treason's Harbour]]. Despite his attempts to seduce her, she gently and tactfully rebuffs him, saying that she wants to tell her husband that she does not "ply the oar". However, public opinion is that he has been successful due to the affection her dog, Ponto, has for Aubrey.
-
{{spoilers}}
+
{{spoiler|Treason's Harbour, and subsequent books}}
Her husband is a prisoner of the French and their agents make her spy on [[Stephen Maturin]] who is known to be an intelligence agent by seducing him. Maturin realises that this is unlikely behaviour and discovers the truth and proceeds to feed false information back to the French.
Her husband is a prisoner of the French and their agents make her spy on [[Stephen Maturin]] who is known to be an intelligence agent by seducing him. Maturin realises that this is unlikely behaviour and discovers the truth and proceeds to feed false information back to the French.

Revision as of 17:59, 13 July 2007

Laura Fielding was the Sicilian-born wife of Lieutenant Charles Fielding. She is described as beautiful with red hair. Jack Aubrey takes Italian lessons from her while in Malta at the start of Treason's Harbour. Despite his attempts to seduce her, she gently and tactfully rebuffs him, saying that she wants to tell her husband that she does not "ply the oar". However, public opinion is that he has been successful due to the affection her dog, Ponto, has for Aubrey.


SPOILER WARNING:  Plot or ending details for "Treason's Harbour, and subsequent books"  follow.

Her husband is a prisoner of the French and their agents make her spy on Stephen Maturin who is known to be an intelligence agent by seducing him. Maturin realises that this is unlikely behaviour and discovers the truth and proceeds to feed false information back to the French.

The appearance of Charles Fielding, later in the book puts Laura's life in danger and Maturin persuades Aubrey to carry her to safety in Gibraltar aboard HMS Surprise, in the process he gives the impression that he really is her lover which causes him problems with his wife Diana in future books.

Her jealous husband is ready to fight a duel with Aubrey over her supposed seduction, but she persuades him of her virtue and no overt challenge was made.

Personal tools