None of us like the long leg across the Southern
Ocean. There’s no land, see. The rollers go right round the globe with nothing
to stop them, only the molleys to see them. We was close-hauled when it happened,
Lascar Jim on the wheel. The off watch hands were asleep in the fo’c’s’le, the
deck watch loafing topside, taking shelter in the lee of the deck house.
Jim
must have been caught napping, probably leering a goney. He allowed the head to
pay off a few points to larboard so the squall took us full broadside, laying
her over near to her beam ends. We hadn’t reefed the top gallants so she
shuddered to recover with the weight of green in the scuppers and the pressure
of the squall aloft.
The Bos’n was at my back shouting,’ Get those
topgallants reefed sharpish, sailing master, or I’ll have your guts for
garters.’ I had to whip the watch with a
turk’s head to get them up the mast and do my bidding.
She
slowly laboured back to upright, shaking the water off her like a dog after a
ducking. She shuddered as the prow dipped into a trough but Jim had her back on
course, head to wind.
I told
off the deck hands to let fly the halliards for the top yards to give the
reefing gang a chance to beat the wet canvas into shape so they could throw
lines around the sails and reef them in.
We were
now in a safe condition, not carrying too much sail and hove to until the sea
state dropped. This would lengthen the voyage and cost the owners a packet but
still less than losing the ship and cargo.
The
frozen mast monkeys clambered down the rat lines and took shelter. The bos’n
ordered a tot for each man who had been aloft. We only lost two men in that
evolution.
The
Bos’n beckoned me over and said, ‘Get Lascar Jim relieved off the wheel, take
him to the grating on the poop deck and give him twenty lashes.’
‘Twenty
will kill him, Sir,’ I argued.
‘He
won’t do it again then will he? Just get on with it and make sure both watches
are there to watch, unless you want a couple for yerself.’
Jim was
lashed down on the grating, a wedge of quid rammed in his mouth to stop his screams.
The flogging started. He was unconscious after ten, the open wounds dripping
blood off his back. The torment continued until the chorus from the hands reached
twenty. Salt was rubbed into the wounds to stop infection, then he was cut down
and taken below where he died later that night.
I had
the job of putting a stitch through his nose and sewing him in a canvas shroud
before he was slid over the side with a marlin spike at his feet so as he
didn’t float.
No one
had a prayer to say for his soul.
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