'Of course I am!' I said angrily.
"Strordinary. Looks very young indeed,' he added in a slightly softer voice to Captain Hogg, who immediately began looking at me with suspicion.
'Lost my damned Bos'n this trip,' Captain Beamish went on. 'Blast him.'
'What was up?' Captain Hogg asked, piling the last fragments of suet roll on to his spoon.
'Had to put him over the wall off Pernam. Dead, y'know.'
'Go on! What of?'
"Strordinary thing altogether. Meant to ask your Doctor. Had a turn of the shakes and died before sunset.'
'Very likely smallpox,' I said firmly. 'Your ship will have to be fumigated for three weeks and all hands isolated in the fever hospital. The one in Santos is extremely unpleasant, but they will probably take you up to Sаo Paulo as you're certain to get it, anyway.'
I sat and sulked over the cheese-dish.
'Bad about the Bos'n,' Captain Beamish said. 'Don't get his type any more. Respectful. Knew my ways. I may not be in command of a big ship, but I'll have her run decently. Eh, Captain?'
Captain Hogg had his mouth full of cheese, but he nodded violently enough to spill pieces on to the tablecloth.
'Don't know what things are coming to. The Third wore the same uniform three days running last week. D'y'know what happened yesterday? Steward brought me a glass of water without a tray. Communism, that's what it is.'
Captain Beamish then said nothing else for the rest of the meal.
The
'Here's our Doc,' Hornbeam said, as I squeezed through the door. 'Meet Mr. Molony, Chief Officer from that old barge down aft.'
'Hello, Doc,' he said, shaking hands. 'Enjoying the sea?'
'I am rather, thank you.'
'How did you get on with our Old Man at dinner?'
'I must say he was pretty rude.'
Molony laughed loudly, while Hornbeam filled up his glass.
'He takes some getting used to. Do you know what?' he asked Hornbeam. 'He chased me up for eating peas off a knife the other day. Can you imagine it? Now there's bugling, too. We signed on a Yankee galley-boy in New York who brought a trumpet with him, so we get bugle calls to meals. Anyone would think we were a ruddy battleship.'
'All skippers are the same,' Hornbeam said wearily. 'Do you remember old Jack Andrews in the
'Didn't you hear? He got put ashore in Cape Town last year.'
They began to talk earnestly of men and ships I had never heard of, and their conversation took on an odd parochialism extending across the face of the earth.
As the
A man in a pair of khaki trousers and a loose orange shirt was waiting in my cabin. He grinned as I came in.
'Hi'ya Doc,' he said. 'I'm off the _Omar C. Ingersoll._ Pleased to meet ya.'
We shook hands.
'I guess I shouldn't have bust in, but your Chief Mate said it was O.K.'
'Perfectly all right,' I said. 'What can I do for you?'
'I just want a bottle of aspirin. We're right out, and we ain't carrying a medic. I don't want to put you to no bother, though.'
'No trouble at all, my good man,' I said. 'I'll fetch you some from the hospital.'
'That's mighty swell of you, Doc,' he said, grinning at me again. 'Mighty swell.'
In return for the bottle of aspirins he presented me with two hundred Chesterfields, _The Case of the Luckless Legs,_ three bars of chocolate, _Life,_ and a photograph of the _Omar C. Ingersoll._ At the gangway he slapped me on the back and said, 'Come aboard and have a cup of coffee sometime, Doc. Just go up the gangway and ask for me.'
'Very kind of you,' I said. 'And you are…the Bos'n? Er, Mate, possibly…?'
'Aw, hell no, Doc! I'm the Captain. So long!'
I went to my bunk reflecting that the feudal system at least had the advantage of leaving you in no doubt whom you were talking to.
Chapter Twelve
We spent a week in Santos, all baking in our cabins like a big dish of
'Shan't be sorry to get away,' said Trail the morning we sailed. 'Stinking place, this. Fancy living here!'
'When are we off?'
'About midday. They've finished cargo in all hatches except No. 5. It's hot, isn't it? I'll be like a fried egg when I come off the bridge.'