The Adroity
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Looking out my window I am reminded of that long ago late autumn, the sky is a watery blue and the ragged white clouds are scudding past ,blown by the northern winds.
I really enjoyed sailing up and down the Thames on days like this, the scenery was unmatched, you pass town and country as you go from the Estuary up to the Pool, the river meanders and each bend brings a new vista. And the river was so busy, you could not relax your vigilance ,nor could you trust other ships to do the right thing. The captain ,Alan Tremayne was a very clever man , I never understood why was master of a little Dutch clog, he was a Fellow of the Royal Society and he was a mathematics Don. I was in awe of the man ,the conversations we had when we were wending our way up, or down, river were fascinating. He was the first person to impress on me how much mathematics mattered, he talked and I listened and asked questions. I learned of how the Royal Society came about during the period called the Enlightenment and how this led to many great discoveries that made Britain a leader in the world. His brother Peter was the complete opposite, he was tall and blonde haired, looked like a young Mick Jagger and had a really ?goonish? sense of humour , being a long time fan of the Goons I got along just fine with him.
With Adroity being idle most of the time I was used to do a lot of ferrying and one day I was asked to pick up young man who had been involved in a shipwreck in the Channel. It was one of Everards that had sunk and he had been picked up by another coaster which was headed for London. I was to meet her mid river opposite our offices in Greenhithe.
The operation went like clockwork, the coaster gently slowed to a halt and the ladder was lowered and down it came our young shipwreck survivor. I was to take him ashore and that would be my job for the day. Now our jolly boat leaked like a sieve but it was manageable,I only used to do short runs but this run to mid river had made her leak more than somewhat and, as soon as he had sat down ,I gave young Jonah the baler and told him to start getting rid of the water while I sculled to shore. I was just turning her head to toward the shore when I heard an ?Oooh sheet? I looked and saw that the young prat had pulled the plug out???..he thought the water would run out,instead we had our very own fountain shooting up amidships. I dived forward and bunged the plug back in and told him ?F**ckin? bale before I made him swim for it? The rest of our journey passed in silence ,save for the slurp and splash as he baled away.
No wonder he was shipwrecked ,most probably scuttled that one.
Mick was still around and the Assurity had departed for blue waters once more, I asked him if he fancied joining the Adroity and he said yes he would give it a go. I took him along to the Tremaynes and they signed him on immediately. They also made him bosun, well, he was older than me and had been around a bit, so what the heck. We were not a liner there was no room for bullshine.
We started to get busy again and were running up and down the Thames every day, in and out of the Pool, KG 5 ,East India, Grays, Dagenham, Surrey Commercial ,Gravesend Swanscombe,Cliffe, the list was endless and I am sure that we bunkered a lot of vessels but, unlike the Allurity , there was no jinx on me here. Met some odd people though, like Quasimodos relative in Swanscombe. When I had been there a few times he invited me into his ?office? on the jetty . ?Ereyar Scarse? he said ? ?ave a look at these then? he showed me some pornographic photo?s of him and a very good looking lady,she was wearing a basque and fishnet stocking while he was shown in various positions. She must have been very poor to let herself be photographed like that , I felt like having a shower after seeing them.
We overnighted at Swanscombe and Mick and I went up to the nearest pub to taste the local brew. I cannot remember the pub or the beer ,but I have a vivid recollection of the journey back to our ship. We must have been a bit like the Walrus and the Carpenter out of ?Alice Through the Looking Glass? We were engrossed in drunken conversation about sailing ships and sealing wax , and cabbages and kings. We must have been on automatic pilot, it was a clear moonlit night and there was a slight breeze riffling the surface of the Thames, we were walking along the jetty ,deep in philosophical discussion ,when I felt the decking move beneath my feet. I looked at Mick and he was swaying too. Was I that drunk! I looked down and saw the river beneath my feet ,I could hardly speak ?Mick , this is?nt the jetty we?re tied up on look down?
The planks were rotten and there were a lot missing ,the pilings were swaying with rivers movements and we were in deep doodah. We looked back at the way we had come and we could see the jetty had more holes in it than string vest. We tiptoed back to the quay,each step taken with the greatest of care. We could hear the planks which had been standing plunge into the waters twenty foot below. When we made it back to hard ground we saw that we had passed through warning barriers and some coils of barbed wire. The Lord surely does look after fools and drunkards.
I was now sleeping at the Brown Bear of a weekend, Mick had talked me into it and ,of a truth ,I quite enjoyed it . No more supping up at 10-30p.m. ,we could sit chatting to Jim and Effie and it was more like a family . There was an incident that unnerved me though. I had gone to bed not, I hasten to add , in drunken stupor. The bed was a lovely old iron framed affair with springs between the frame and a great overstuffed mattress. It did;nt take much rocking to slumber off. I was shaken awake by a lady who was dressed in crinoline and her hair coiled atop her head like a regency lady. I rubbed my eyes thinking it was Effie and the room was filled with an eau de nil glow. As I was about to say something she faded from view and the room returned to darkness. I never discussed the matter with anyone ,they might have thought me mad.
My relationship with Mick was becoming strained by his attitude, I had got him the job and he did?nt want to spend to much time with now that he was my ?boss? I started to think about leaving for pastures new, the decision was made for me by the following incident.
It was the middle weekend in November, I had been ashore for a few drinks and Mick and I needed a ride out to the Adroity. I had met a young man from West Vale in Kirkby and he was really nice, we got on fine and I asked him if he had a jolly boat, he replied yes and we asked him f he could take us out to our mooring . No problem he said . The tide was ebbing and the current was strong so I said that I would scull us ti our ship and then he could take her back. The passage out went smoothly ,Mick jumped aboard and made her fast to the Adroity while I changed places with young scouse. I gave him the oar and then jumped aboard ,Mick set her loose and young scouse cried plaintively that he could?nt scull. The tide had a grip on the jolly boat and it was swept away from us. Mick ran to the bridge and grabbed the Aldis lamp and shone it on him , he was swinging the oar wildly and we could hear him shouting for help . And then he was gone, he fell over the side and that was the last we saw of him. A PLA launch passed near us and Mick flashed her but got no response. We had no radio, no boat, I felt helpless. I could?nt sleep that night knowing I had caused a young mans death. Next morning when the Tremaynes came aboard I told them I was leaving, I blamed myself for what had happened and did?nt want to spend another minute in that god blasted place. When I said goodbye to Jim and Effie they told me that the whole village was upset. I caught the train to London and began a new chapter of my life.
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