A Tall Ship - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel A Tall Ship Part 6 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
The Captain returned the salute briskly. "Sound the 'Close.'"
The bugle sounded again, the bell began to toll for prayers, and the band on the after shelter-deck struck up a lively march as the men came aft.
Anyone interested in the study called physiognomy might with advantage have taken his stand at this moment on the after part of the quarter-deck, where the shadow of the White Ensign curved and flickered across the planking. Perhaps the Captain, who stood there, was himself a student of the art. At any rate, as the men marched aft through the screen doors his level eyes pa.s.sed from face to face, reflective, observant, intensely alert.
The last division reached its allotted position on the quarter-deck, turned inboard, and stood easy. The band stopped abruptly. The bell ceased tolling. In the brief ensuing silence the Commander's voice was clearly audible as he made his report.
"Everybody aft, sir."
The Captain slipped a small prayer-book out of a side pocket. The Commander gave a curt order, and five hundred heads bared to the sunlight.
"Stand easy!"
There is much beauty in the sonorous periods of the English Rubric.
Read in the strong, clear voice of a man who for thirty years had known calm and tempest, sunset and dawn at sea, the familiar words--of appeal and praise alike--a.s.sumed somehow an unwonted significance; and when he closed the book, slipped it back into his pocket, and looked up, the face he raised was the face of one who, whatever else his creed had taught him, found in all success the answer to some prayer, in every disaster a call to courage and high endeavour.
Down in the after-cabin, five minutes later, the Fleet Surgeon handed the sick-list to the Captain, who read it with care. For the first time that day his brow clouded. The two men looked at one another.
"It is heavy," said the Fleet Surgeon; "but----" He made an imperceptible upward movement of the shoulders, for his mother had been French.
For some moments after he had gone the Captain stood staring out through the after doorway. A barge, heavily freighted, was pa.s.sing slowly down-stream. His eyes followed the brown sail absently as long as it was within his field of vision. The anger had gone from his brow and left a shadow of sadness.
"'_Si j'etais Dieu_,'" he murmured, following some train of thought and musing aloud as was his habit. Then, still in a brown study, he opened the roll-topped desk and pressed a bell.
"Tell Mr. Gerrard I'll sign papers," he said to the marine sentry who appeared in the doorway.
"Double-O" Gerrard (so called because he wore gla.s.ses with circular lenses and his name made you think of telephones) answered the summons, carrying a sheaf of papers. He was the Captain's Clerk: that is to say, the junior accountant officer, detailed by the Captain to conduct his official correspondence and perform secretarial work generally.
The position is not one commonly sought after, but Double-O Gerrard appeared to enjoy his duties, and as a badge of office carried a perpetual inkstain on the forefinger-tip of his right hand.
The Captain sat down at his desk with a little sigh. If the truth be known, he had small relish for this business of "papers." He picked up his pen and examined the nib.
"Do you ever use your pen to clean a pipe out?" he asked his Clerk.
"Oh no, sir."
"I suppose it depends on the nib one uses whether it suffers much."
With a piece of blotting paper the Captain removed fragments of tobacco ash and nicotine from the nib, and dipped it in the ink. "It doesn't seem to hurt mine. Now then, what have we got here?"
A quarter of an hour later he pushed aside the last of the pile of doc.u.ments and lit a cigarette with the air of a man who had earned a smoke.
"Any defaulters?"
"No, sir, none for you to-day."
"Humph! Tell the Commander I'll buy him a pair of white kid gloves when I go ash.o.r.e. Request-men?"
His Clerk placed a book upon the desk open at a list of names. The Captain ran down them with a pencil.
"Badges, all ent.i.tled? . . . Stop allotment--who does he allot to?
Mother? . . . Restoration to first cla.s.s for leave. . . . To be rated Leading Seaman--Jones. Jones? Oh, yes, I know: youngster in the quarter-deck division with a broken nose. The Commander spoke to me about him." The pencil slowly descended to the bottom of the page, ticking off each man's request as it was gone into and explained. He stopped at the last one. "'To see Captain about private affairs.'
What's his trouble?"
"I don't know, sir. He put in his request to see you through the Master-at-Arms. He didn't say what it was about."
The Captain closed the book. "All seamen, eh? No Marine request-men?"
"No, sir."
"Right. I'll see 'em at eleven." The Clerk gathered the papers together and departed. As he went out there was a tap at the door.
The Captain frowned. The tap was repeated.
"Don't knock," he called out. "If you've got anything to report, come in and report it."
The Chief Yeoman of Signals entered with an embarra.s.sed air. He was new to the s.h.i.+p, and, as everyone knows, all captains have their little peculiarities. Here he was up against one right away. He'd never had much luck.
"I don't want anyone to knock when they come into my cabin on duty.
I'm not a young woman in her boudoir."
"Aye, aye, sir," said the Chief Yeoman. "Signal log, sir."
"Don't forget now," counselled the Master-at-Arms to the request-men fallen in on the starboard side of the quarter-deck. "When your names is called out, step smartly up to the table, an' keep your caps on.
You salutes when you steps up to the table an' when you leaves it."
The request-men, who had heard all this a good many times before, sucked their teeth in acquiescence.
The Captain was walking up and down the other side of the deck talking to the Commander. They turned together and came towards the table.
The Captain's Clerk opened the request-book and laid it before the Captain.
"'Erbert Reynolds," intoned the Master-at-Arms in a stentorian voice.
"Able seaman. Requests award of first Good Conduct Badge."
The Captain put his finger on the first name at the top of the page, glanced keenly at the applicant, and nodded. "Granted."
"Granted," echoed the Chief of Police, and Able Seaman Reynolds departed with authority to wear on his left arm the triangular red badge that vouched to his exemplary behaviour for the last three years.
Five others followed in quick succession with similar requests, and trotted forward again at a dignified and amiable gait through the screen door.
"To stop allotment." The Captain raised his head.
"Who do you allot to?"
"Me mother, sir."
"Doesn't she want it?"