The Lost Middy Part 5
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"Well, sir, I'll tell yer: they looks just like the tops o' bread loaves going to the oven."
"Like what?"
"I mean like the holes the missuses makes in the dough with their fingers. Finishes off by giving a poke in the top with a finger, and that closes up into a crinkly slit with a swelling around."
"Bah!" growled Aleck.
"Well, you would ask me, sir."
"Yes, of course. Something like Big Jem's?"
"Yes, sir; on'y more squeezed in like. Your eyes is allus handsome and bright like, but they arn't now. But, there, don't you mind that, sir.
They turn nasty colours like for a bit, but, as I says, don't you mind.
Big Jem's face was a reg'lar picter. I don't know what his father'll say when he sees him."
"And I don't know what uncle will say when he sees me," said Aleck, despondently.
"Eh? The captain?" cried the sailor, in a startled tone of voice.
"Phe-ew!" he whistled. "I forgot all about him. I say, my lad, he won't like to see you this how."
"No," said Aleck, dismally.
"Arn't got no aunts or relations as you could go and see for a fortnit, have you?"
"No, Tom; I have no relatives but Uncle Donne."
"That's a pity, sir. Well, I dunno what you'd better do."
"Face uncle, and tell him the whole truth."
"To be sure, sir. Of course. That's the way you'd better lay your head--to the wind like. And, look here, sir!"
"I can't look, Tom; my eyes feel closed up, and I can hardly see a bit."
"I mean look here with understanding, sir. I used to be with a skipper who was a downright savage if we got beaten off, and threatened to flog us. But if we won, and boarded a s.h.i.+p and took her, he'd laugh at our hurts and come round and shake hands and call us his brave lads."
"But what has that to do with uncle seeing me in this horrible state?"
"Why, don't you see, sir?" cried the sailor, eagerly. "He's a captain, and a fighting man."
Aleck frowned, but the sailor did not notice it, and went on:
"You ups and tells him that Big Jem and the pack o' blackguard riff-raff come and 'sulted yer and said what you wouldn't tell me. The captain wouldn't want you to put up with that. I know the captain 'most as well as you do. 'Hullo!' he says; 'what ha' you been doing--how did you get in that condition?' he says--just like that. Then you ups and tells him you had it out with Big Jem and the rest. 'What for, sir?' he says-- just like that. 'For saying,'--you know what, sir--you says, and tells him right out, though you wouldn't tell me. 'And you let that big, ugly, blackguardly warmint thrash you like that?' he says, in his fierce way--just like that. Then your turn comes, and you ups and says, 'most as chuff as he does: 'No, uncle,' you says, 'I give him the orflest leathering he ever had in his life.' 'Did you, Aleck?' he says, rubbing his hands together, joyful like. 'Well done, my boy,' he says; 'I like that. I wish I'd been there to see. Brayvo!--Now go and wash your face and brush your clothes and 'air.'"
"Think he would, Tom?"
"Sure on it, sir. I wouldn't ha' answered for him if you'd gone back with your tail between your legs, reg'larly whipped; but seeing how you can go back and cry c.o.c.k-a-doodle-doo!--"
"Like a dog, Tom?" said Aleck, grimly, with a feeling of amus.e.m.e.nt at the way in which his companion was mixing up his metaphors.
"Like a dog, sir? Tchah! Dogs can't crow. You know what I mean.
Seeing how you can go back with your colours flying, the captain'll feel proud on yer, and if he's the gentleman I take him for he'll cut yer a bit o' sticking plaster himself. What you've got to do is to go straight to his cabin and speak out like a man."
"Yes, Tom, I mean to--but, Tom--" continued the lad, in a hesitating way.
"Ay ay, sir; what is it?"
"Did you ever hear any of the fishermen say anything against my uncle?"
"Eh? Oh, I've heered them gawsip and talk together when they've been leaning theirselves over the rail in the sun, gawsiping like, as you may say; but I never took no notice. Fishermen when they're ash.o.r.e chatter together like old women over the wash-tubs, but I never takes no heed to what they says. The captain's been a good friend to me, and so I shuts my ears when people say nasty things."
"Then you know that they do say nasty things about him?" said Aleck.
"Oh, yes, sir, and 'bout everyone else too. They lets out about me sometimes, I've heered, and about my losing my legs; but I don't mind.
I say, though, Master Aleck, sir! Haw--haw--haw! Think o' me forgetting all about 'em and saying that being at sea never did me no harm! It was a rum 'un!"
Aleck was silent and thinking about his own troubles, making his companion glance at him uneasily, waiting for the lad to speak; but as he remained silent the sailor turned the state of affairs over in his own mind till he hit upon what he considered to be a very happy thought.
"I say, Master Aleck."
"Eh? Yes, Tom."
"I've been a-thinking that as a reg'lar thing I'm a bit skeart o' the captain. He's such a fierce, cut-you-off-short sort of a gentleman that I'm always glad to get away when I've been up to the Den to do anything for yer--pitching the boat's bottom or mending holes, or overhauling the tackle; but I tell you what--"
"Well, what, Tom?" said Aleck, for the sailor stopped short and crossed his two dwarf wooden legs in the bottom of the boat, and then, as if not satisfied, crossed them the other way on.
"I was thinking, Master Aleck, that you and me's been messmates like, ever since I come back from sea."
"Yes, Tom."
"I mean in a proper way, sir," cried the man, hurriedly. "I don't mean shoving myself forrard, because well I know you're a young gen'leman and I'm on'y a pensioned-off hulk as has never been anything more than a AB."
"I don't know what you're aiming at, Tom," said Aleck, querulously, as he went on bathing his bruised face again. "Of course we've been like messmates many a time out with the boat, but what has that to do with the trouble I'm in?"
"Well, just this here, sir. Messmates is messmates, and ought to help one another when there's rocks ahead."
"Of course, Tom."
"Well, then, as I've been thinking, suppose I come ash.o.r.e with yer and follers yer right up to the captain, and lie close by when he begins to sort o' keelhaul yer?"
"What good would that do, Tom?"
"Cheer yer up, my lad. I once went ash.o.r.e with a messmate to help him like when he was going to have a tooth out as had been jigging horrid for two days. He said it did him no end o' good to have me there. So s'pose I come, sir. It strikes me as the captain won't say half so much to yer p'raps with me standing by."
"Oh, no, no, no, Tom," cried Aleck, quickly.
"It's very good of you, and I'm much obliged, but I'd rather go straight in and face my uncle quite alone. I'm sure he'd think I brought you because I was too cowardly to come alone."
"Would he, sir?"
The Lost Middy Part 5
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The Lost Middy Part 5 summary
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