The crew lined up eagerly, all in their best clothes. I had difficulty in placing the clean, modest-looking men in the smart blue and grey suits as the half-naked roughs who strode round the decks with paint pots in the Tropics. The Carpenter was particularly baffling: he wore a dark herringbone tweed, a hard white two-inch collar, and an artificial rosebud in his buttonhole, giving the appearance of a moderately liberal-minded clergyman on holiday at Sandown.
Nothing gives such a pleasant feeling of false prosperity as paying-off a ship. By the time my wages had been reduced by deductions I had less than a month's salary in general practice, but I stuffed the notes into my pocket and felt like Lord Nuffield. Then I signed off the book of ship's articles opposite the space where I had signed on them three months ago. My contract with the Commander of the
I said good-bye to as many of the crew as I could find; sailors' farewells are brief and shallow, for they make up half their lives. Easter shook hands heartily and impressed on me solemnly the importance of speed whenever I should come to do the three-card trick. Almost everyone left the ship-to go on leave, to quit her for good, or to be in Canning Town by the time the pubs opened. The rain prevented cargo being worked, and the
My taxi was coming later, so I went up to the deck to look round the docks. The sheds and the cranes did something odd to the
I saw Hornbeam in his blue raincoat, striding alone up and down the few feet of shelter below the bridge.
'Hello, Doc,' he said as I went up to him. 'You off now?'
'In a few minutes. I'm only waiting for my taxi.'
'Oh well, I'm sorry to see you go. We haven't had a bad voyage on the whole. We've made a bit of fun for ourselves.'
'We certainly have.'
We walked for a minute or two in silence.
'What are you going to do now, Doc?' he asked.
'I've no idea. Find a practice somewhere, I suppose.'
'Do you reckon you'll go back to sea again?'
'Some day I will. I'm making sure of that.'
'You might, at that.'
'How about you?' I said. 'Going on leave?'
'No leave for me, Doc. I'm off to Liverpool to-night to join the
'Of course, I was forgetting. You know, to me our arrival is the end of an isolated adventure. But I suppose to you and everyone else it's just another stop in port.'
'That's it, Doc. Always on the move. It's a mug's life, isn't it? Still, someone's got to do it.'
My taxi came then. I waved to him from the dock, and watched him as I drove away. He was walking up and down the deck again in the rain, an incongruous and lonely figure.
The first person I went to see in London was the psychiatrist.
'Hello!' he said. 'When are you going away?'