Meeting The Grim ReaperA Story by matelotA short story about joining my first ship in the Royal Navy I was fortunate at
the completion of my gunnery training, to receive a type 22 frigate as a first
draft. By comparison to other types of ship in the fleet, they were, I was
assured, like a floating hotel as opposed to a floating museum and so I was
fortunate not to be going to a Type 12 or Leander class frigate like the rest
of my class. When I went on draft from my training base I did so with an air of
trepidation like everybody else but also with a feeling of excitement. Type 22
frigates were the latest addition to the fleet and were the most modern ships
the Royal Navy had. I would, I was told, have plenty of opportunity to practise
my gunnery and put all I had learned in my training to good use, utilising the
most modern equipment the fleet could deploy. I managed to fit in
a weekend leave home before I joined the ship and unfortunately, on my return
journey I was delayed in London and so only managed to catch the last train to
Plymouth, arriving at a ridiculously late hour. I caught a taxi to the ship and
struggled up the gangway with all my kit to be met by the Quartermaster, who,
after checking my identity card, told me to follow his Bosun's mate who would
show me to the gunner's mess and wake the duty Stores Accountant. The Stores
Accountant I was informed, would come along to the stores to issue me with some
bedding for the night. The stores were fortunately situated directly beneath
the gunner's mess so all I had to do was await the arrival of the SA at the
gunner's mess and I would get a bed for the night. The plan went to
pieces almost immediately when, loaded down with my entire kit issue, I was
unable to sprint along the waist of the ship in pursuit of the Bosun's mate
who, like Lewis Carrol's white rabbit, had disappeared down a hole. With no
hookah smoking caterpillar to assist me, I stood, rather idiotically in the
wide space of the first corridor inside the door, he had disappeared into,
staring along it's length and at the
multitude of doors either side of it, stretching into the distance like the
sands of Ozymandias. I hoped the white rabbit would realise his mistake and
come back for me so I stood apprehensively, surrounded by my kit, looking like
an overloaded but hopeful blind date left standing outside the cinema. I could have gone
back to see the Quartermaster, however I didn't fancy staggering back with all
my kit only to find my date had turned up and having to stagger back again.
Besides, I felt foolish and suddenly
very stupid for carrying so much kit and I also suspected that I might get
shouted at and didn't fancy that either. It would be a few months yet, before I
realised that I was no longer a trainee, but a working member of a ship's
company and though I would still be shouted at for making mistakes, I would also
be laughed at, laughed with, educated and treated as one of the crew rather
than an unwelcome irritant. Standing here in the
middle of the night though, I was most definitely not one of the crew and
probably would be seen as an unwelcome irritant, especially I suppose, to the
duty SA who was probably being woken as I stood rather awkwardly awaiting the
return of the white rabbit. Reading the information on the noticeboard attached
to the bulkhead in front of me, I decided I would follow one of my father's
extremely rare pearls of wisdom. "If you get lost", he said,
"stay where you are and let people find you". In the weeks ahead, I
would discover that this tactic didn’t work on warships. Suddenly, at my
feet, a head appeared at the hatch in the deck.
It was the white rabbit. "There you are!" he said, wearily. I got all the
way to the bloody gunners mess before I realised you weren't with me".
Being typically British, I apologised as if it was my fault he had run off
without me. His head popping up through the hatch reminded me of a minor
incident at my previous base, HMS Cambridge, just before I left it. I had worked for
the quartermaster, keeping main gate duties on completion of my gunnery
training and it was an experience that definitely had its’ more outlandish
moments. One day whilst on duty, I was directed to make a broadcast for a
civilian worker to come and take a telephone call at the Establishment Control
Centre or ECC. The worker was a member
of the dining hall staff who could be described politely as living an
alternative lifestyle. He was scrupulous about the use of table cloths,
preferring a gingham check and would ensure there were flowers on every table.
Though I knew him by sight, I didn't know his name. Not only was I about to
learn his name, he was about to give me a short, angry and very loud lesson in
the correct pronunciation. His name, I was told, was Mr De'ath and the
Quartermaster told me that I should instead make a broadcast for Mr. Death, for
a laugh. Baiting people seemed to be a regular pastime of most sailors of Her
Majesty’s navy. Though initially I balked at this, I was assured this was not
going to be a problem and he would see the joke. He also said if there was any
comeback that he would deal with it. I was then ordered to get on with it and
make the broadcast. I took the microphone in my hand, depressed the button and
in my best gunnery voice, I made my first ever
broadcast on the ECC broadcast system. "Mr Death!
telephone call, ECC. Mr Death!" I said, cheerily. At the indoor end of the
ECC, there was a small hatch which could be opened to afford access for
personnel to receive telephone calls without having to go outside the building
and around to the door to enter the ECC and so I opened the hatch and placed
the telephone next to it. As I placed the
telephone, I looked through the hatch and noted the slight juddering of the
double doors beyond as if they were reacting to an unseen force pushing them
and it reminded me of daily tea breaks during our training down at the medium
range where, enjoying a mug of tea and a pasty, we would see the metal framed
windows of the naafi shudder and hear the glass rattle in the frames as each
medium range gun blasted it's 4.5" shells seawards towards their targets,
the accompanying rythmic booms becoming merely background noise along with the
rapid clatter of the close range weapons as the business of gunnery became a
routine occurrence to us. I then heard behind the doors, what seemed like the
sound of a rapidly approaching stampeding elephant, making it's way down the
stairs. If I'd known what was actually coming, I would have kept that hatch
well and truly closed. The double doors
beyond the hatch suddenly burst forward with such brute force that I half
expected to hear Michael Caine shout THAT refrain and I was very much taken aback as what I would
describe as a five foot tall doppelganger of Steven Berkoff burst through the
doors looking every bit, to coin a phrase, like a maternally enraged gorilla,
albeit, mercifully, a fully clothed one. HMS Cambridge had it's fair share of
eccentric people, some of them angry and some of them just downright bizarre
but the sight before me was most definitely a new visual experience. His face
was contorted in a twisted look of rage and I would say that puce would be a
good starting point in attempting to accurately describe his colour. The veins
on his temples stood out in a cliched look of complete apoplexy and in the
absence of any other supporting evidence, I assumed he was angry about
something. As he stepped
forward, chest heaving with a noisy mix of breathlessness and rage, I
recognised him as the man from the dining hall and was actually pleased to be
able to put a name to a face. That name, was about to be confirmed to me in a
manner that I found simultaneously impressive and disturbing. He thrust his
head through the hatch, his eyes manic and I noticed a pebbledash of spittle
dotted around his tightly pursed lips. I half expected him to scream "Here's
Johnny!" The angry head began to take on a darker hue of puce and
finally his mouth opened as he took in a long breath. Impressed at the length
of time it took, I wondered for a second whether he'd ever been a free diver.
As his breath slowed and his lungs filled to capacity there was a split second
of tension before the volcano blew and when it did, It seemed the windows of
the ECC buckled, like the naafi windows down at the range during the days
gunnery. The veins on his temple bulged almost to breaking point as he screamed
at the top of his voice... " My name is
Deeyath!" Then, impossibly, even louder "DEEYATH!" His eyes
protruded from their sockets like a drowning man struggling for air as he
accentuated the apparent apostrophe in his name. Then, a staccato outburst as
he very helpfully spelled it out for everyone. Given the volume of his voice,
this meant many residents of Heybrook Bay, a small coastal village just beyond
the base, were now satisfied that they too had the correct spelling and
pronunciation. "D, E,
APOSTROPHE, A, T, H" He screamed. I assumed there was a very patient,
understanding person on the other end of the phone. Either that or they'd hung
up. Given the inexplicable violence being played out before me, I silently
prayed it was the former as I fought against the rising urge to laugh. Then,
almost as soon as the angry crescendo reached it's peak, the outburst receded
and Mr. De'ath stood silently, glaring at me like a defiant teenager through
the hatch, his eyes ablaze and his face a pink, sweaty sheen. He picked up the
telephone handset and in a shockingly easy, sudden change of temperament, he
said softly and politely into the phone " Hello?" He listened
impassively for a few seconds before passing the handset back through the
hatch. "Wrong number" he said, resigned, before turning curtly on his
heel and stepping quickly away and through the double doors. I wondered what
the odds would be that someone had mistakenly telephoned a military base on an
isolated cliffside in Devon whilst attempting to contact a different Mr De'ath. I spun quickly round
and looked at the quartermaster, leaning back in his high chair, feet up on the
desk, hiding behind a copy of Navy News.
I assumed he found something funny as the paper shook back and forth, vibrating
as if he were attempting to shake out a fold in the centre pages. He obviously
knew what the civilian worker's reaction would be and had clearly found the
whole experience totally expected and completely hilarious. I wondered how many
others had fallen victim to this prank and now, sympathised a little with Mr
De'ath as I mulled over how many times he had been called to the ECC with a
false call for Mr Death, and his ire became completely understandable. Back on the Battleaxe, the white rabbit came up the ladder
and in a thick cornish drawl said " 'ere let me get one of your
bags", before picking up my suitcase, and starting back down the hatch.
His progress was slower this time and he waited at the bottom of the ladder for
me to descend before we continued along an even longer corridor than the one
above. This corridor, I was told helpfully, was known as the main drag, or
Burma way, and actually ran the entire length of the ship, practically from
stem to stern. Over the next three years I would become very familiar with
every deck tile, light fitting and fixture, but for now, I walked along,
dragging my kit staring up and down at everything like a tourist and trying to
keep up with the white rabbit who had now given me his name, "Pusser" Hill. Like a proud
homeowner, he pointed out various locations as we passed them along the way
until eventually we went down a ladder and into the confines of the gunners
mess. As I put down my bags, he added my suitcase to the pile and said
"see you later mate" before disappearing back up the ladder. I stood awkwardly, amongst the pile of bags,
wondering what was going to happen until a few minutes later, a yawning sailor
came down the ladder wearing a crumpled blue uniform, spectacles and a very
unhappy look on an obviously tired face. "Follow me
mate" he said. We both descended another ladder where he unlocked and
entered a metal door and grabbed a small accounting book, asking me to sign
where he indicated before passing me a set of bedding. I muttered a very muted
thank you and turned to go back up the ladder with my pile of bedding, the
tired SA muttering behind me as I went back up. I was met at the top of the
ladder by an older man wearing nothing but a pair of boxer shorts and a gold
chain around his neck. He introduced himself in a mancunian accent as Leading
Seaman Barlow and then very kindly showed me to where I would be sleeping. He
pointed out an empty bed then got into the bed opposite before very curtly and abruptly sliding
across his curtain without another word. I placed all my things on the deck at
the end of the sleeping compartment, quickly made up my bed, undressed and got
into it. It seemed I was now in a world populated with the helpful
disinterested and the friendly irate. I had arrived in the fleet. © 2021 matelotAuthor's Note
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Added on October 18, 2021 Last Updated on October 18, 2021 Tags: Short story, Military, Humorous, Humour, Funny |