the gun-ports on the starboard gangway. But…'
'But, sir?' Lewrie pressed, feeling his hands twitch once more with impatience, as Proby turned the tale into a two-volume novel.
'For no apparent
'That's odd,' Lewrie had to admit aloud. 'Usually a drowned man comes up, sooner or later. Downriver, perhaps…?'
'We searched, sir, indeed we did. Captain Churchwell had boats on the river not a half-hour later,' Proby told him. 'He sent news to me, requesting everything that'd float to search, as far as Gillingham Reach, the first morning and for several days after; but nary a sign of him did anyone see. And even did a man strike his noggin and put himself out well… being 'round ships, ports, and rivers the most part of my life Captain Lewrie, I've seen men fall overside, seen drownings aplenty, God save me. And the most of 'em
'Well, perhaps he drew in a breath, but underwater…' Lewrie surmised. So far it was a tragic tale,
perverse nature? he shivered-Gaelic, Druidic, and Celtic soul. Certainly there was a frigate near her like, HMS
But the way Proby was glooming and ticking the side of his nose, as if in sage warning, he wondered when the other shoe might drop.
'It could be as you say, sir, for I've seen that happen also,' Proby confessed. ' 'Mongst the drunk-as-lords, the ones who did strike their heads. But, sir… Reverend Talmidge was stone-cold sober when he entered that gig. And no one could recall him striking his head… no dented wood, no smear of blood or hair…?' Proby shrugged. 'And may I remind you, noted to be a strong swimmer. I sometimes wish our Lords Commissioners might follow the example of the Dutch Navy. They require every man-jack sent to sea to learn how to swim, or know how before joining. And their surgeons and surgeon's mates can revive a drowned man in almost miraculous fashion by laying him out face-down over a large keg laid on its side. Roll him back and forth and, more than half the time, he begins to cough and sputter and spew up what he swallowed or breathed in. And is returned to the living, Captain Lewrie, like Lazarus called out from his grave by Our Dear Saviour. I have seen that done too, sir, in my time.'
'So he lost his chaplain, sir. But you said he was her
'Oh, sir,' Proby groaned, looking appalled. 'Close as brothers they were to each other… cater-cousins from the same county, the same social set. Captain Churchwell was as heartbroken as a man who'd just lost all his brothers and sisters at a single stroke!'
'He threw over his commission due to grief, Mister Proby?' Lewrie frowned. Well, it did take all kinds, he felt like saying.
'I'll warrant there was a certain amount of grief, the cause.' Proby nodded, looking seaward once more, towards HMS
'Prickly strands of manila… that might have been what he said stung him, sir,' Lewrie suggested, turning to eye his new ship also.
'Sting a lubber, sir,' Proby grunted most querulously. 'Or sting a lady's soft hands. But never a tarry-handed sailor like him. Had a bear's grip, he did… and all over rope-handling callouses.'
'So?' Lewrie shrugged. 'Why
'I recall most vividly him saying that it felt like he'd gotten stung by several wasps at once, Captain Lewrie,' Proby told him. 'At the tail end of winter, when they're still a'nest? No, he claimed the ship…
'Beg pardon?' Lewrie gawped. 'Bit him, did y'say?'
'Claimed she hated him and was out to kill him too,' Proby told him, shrugging. 'Not five days later, he wrote Admiralty asking for immediate relief. Aged ten years, he appeared, as haggard as a dog's dinner. Unkempt, his hair turned grey almost overnight, I tell you. And falling-down
'Perhaps he was one of those secret topers, Mister Proby,' Lewrie wondered, 'who hold it well and hide it well. Does a man play a role well enough in public… and don't most people…?'
'Seen more than my share of those too, in my time, sir'-Proby chuckled-'claiming to be the strictest abstainers… but experience gives the lie to their lies. Didn't look the sort. That sort of lust for drink will show in a man his age. In Sea Officers more than most, as I'm certain you've noted. No, sir, I may attest to you that this demonic craving for spirits was sudden. And the poor devil was quite capsized.'
'Well, perhaps she bit him after all, sir. In a way? Bottle-bit?' Lewrie could not help saying, with a quirky smirk.
'Boat ahoy!' came a shout from her larboard cat-head, from the strange midshipman of the harbour watch.
'Perhaps she did, Captain Lewrie,' Proby snipped, sounding as if he was put off by Lewrie's cynical comment. 'Perhaps she did, at that. And the very oddest thing was, sir, the poor Captain Churchwell and the Reverend Talmidge both, sir… were Anglo-Irish. Son of an Irish peer, Churchwell was, from near Drogheda. And Talmidge the younger son of another, gone into the ministry. Both families were land-owning in the