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Bassa Villa - once known as 'The Magpie' credit Adam Rutter |
It
was on a November morning. The river Severn had burst its banks. Fog made it
impossible for sailors to see the buttresses that supported the bridge arches.
The light given off by the candlelit lamps was fuzzy, which the sailors saw
just under a feet away as they neared the bridge. Not enough to avoid a collision. A sailed
barge narrowly missed the wall of the arch. The lower half of Cartway was
flooded. an oarsman rowed past two pubs, mooring outside the Magpie inn. Two
rowing boats were moored outside The Severn Trow; one tied to a doorknob outside
The Ship and Anchor. The oarsman dismounted, waded through the open door,
wandering past the swamped out cellar. The recovered cask of ales were stacked
on top of the bar. He took off his hat, slapping it down on the bar, while
drawing out a tankard from his coat pocket.
‘Fill
this up will ya landlord,’ he asked.
‘I
can only give you half today Sid,’ said the landlord.
‘Oh!
No pint today?’
‘No
pint today Sid.’
‘Why
not?’
‘A
lot of ale got washed away in the flood,’ said the landlord, pointing at the
casks.
Sid
held out the tankard, his fingers gripping tightly on the handle. The landlord
poured a small ration. Sid turned his back to the landlord, cutting through the
water like a frigate, wet shoes squelching. He sat at the far end of the bar
area, arms folded, elbows resting on the table. He took a small sip, trying to
make his drink last.
Sid
looked out through the door when he heard a pair of oars splashing gently. He
lifted his elbows off the table, eyes fixed on the moored boats rising and
falling with the ripples generated by the repeated strokes. The ripples
lengthened and widened, knocking the boats against the wall. Sid knew who was
rowing. He knew nearly every sailor and boatman up and down the Severn. And he
knew when they dropped their anchor. Sid watched the rowing boat slide past the
door, pulling over outside The Magpie. Was it the boatman Sid knew? It was him
alright. The boatman was wearing a bicorn hat. Sid would know it anywhere. But
how?
The
boatman, Jacob Stern, was the only one who wore such a hat on his head in these
parts. Why was Jacob wearing a bicorn hat? Had he joined the Royal Navy? How?
Jacob had stolen a boat and rowed to Bristol. There he mingled with fishermen
and seamen alike. Through these intrepid seafarers, he discovered all the
seaports scattered across the south coast of England.
During
his adolescence, he would mingle with sailors when they docked in Bridgnorth.
It was due to meeting these river tradesmen that he learnt about new places
that he never knew before – Gloucester, Newport, Swansea, Falmouth. Through the
sailors shipping commerce along the Severn, and their nautical experiences out
at sea, he learned to became first class sea navigator during his career in the
Navy. He had used the stolen boat to circumnavigate the Cornish coastline and
the shores off south Devonshire where his intended destination was finally
reached – Plymouth. This was where warships were docked. Plymouth was the very
seaport where he enlisted voluntarily with the Royal Navy. His enlistment would
ultimately take him into battle off the Cape of Trafalgar. The battle ended
with a decisive victory for the British Royal Navy. After so many months out at
sea, Jacob was back in Bridgnorth. But why would he go on such a long journey
to a town along the Severn that was out of reach from a naval base? Why row
several miles upstream from the Bristol Channel? What’s he doing here,
wondered Sid.
Sat
on the boat was a young woman. Elsa was her name. She was Jacob’s lover. Her
hands were wrapped behind her arms, trying helplessly to keep them warm. Her
thin legs and bare feet were pale. Elsa's black hair was matted and dishevelled.
In spite of coming from a poor family, Elsa had many male admirers, even among
the aristocrats. Jacob brought her all the way from Plymouth. She had to remain
ashore, waiting for an agonizing five weeks for his safe return from battle.
When Jacob was given shore leave, they spent quality time together, and that
time was used sailing to Bristol; then rowing up the Severn. Elsa lifted her
head, looked through the window; her eyes met with Sid's. Her jaw dropped; eyes
widened.
‘What’s
the matter? Aren't you coming in,’ asked Jacob, placing the oars inside the
boat.
Elsa’s
eyes flashed back at Jacob, giving a little nod. His military uniform was
fastened with silver buttons, outshining her worn out coat, riddled in holes.
He stepped off the boat. Elsa stayed sat, staring up at Jacob like a cat,
frozen.
‘Come
on. We’re going in,’ said Jacob.
Elsa
stood up, slowly. She was shivering. Was it the cold? Or fear? Dread and fear was
written in her eyes, but Jacob did not read it. The cold numbed her feet.
Stepping into the freezing water, she could not feel the hard surface that she
was standing on. Jacob walked inside like a sea captain stepping on board a
ship. When he looked at Sid's corner, he stopped.
‘You’ve
got a nerve showing your face in here,’ said Jacob.
‘Why
have you come back?’ asked Sid.
‘That’s
my business.’
‘You
have no business here.’
‘Now
then gentlemen. I don’t want any trouble in my pub,’ said the landlord.
Ignoring
what the landlord said, Jacob stood straight with his hands behind his back,
looking down at Sid.
‘You
don’t know who you’re talking to my man.’
‘I
don’t care who I talk to,’ said Sid.
‘You’re
talking to Master Jacob Stern of His Majesty’s Wayfarer.’
‘I
don’t care if you’re the Master of a fishing boat.’
‘You
know your impertinence won’t get you nowhere.’
‘Oh?’
‘Do
you know what I do with an impertinent like you?’
‘What?’
‘I
would make you stand on the plank.’
‘Oh,
would you now?’
‘Yes.
Off the side of the ship,’ said Jacob, leaning towards Sid, hands pressed on
the table.
‘What
then?’
‘You
go in.’
‘Go
in where? The cellar?’
‘In
the water Sid.’
‘There’s
water in here.’
‘That’s
right. Which is where you’re going to end up in.’
Jacob
grabbed Sid by his ragged clothes, pulling him off his chair.
‘Enough!
Get out the pair of ya,’ said the landlord.
‘Don’t
worry landlord. I'm going. I will not stay here and be insulted by this
ruffian.’
‘How
dare you say that to a sailor.’
‘How
dare you insult me ... Sailor.’
Sid
walked out through the door, disgusted. When he stepped outside, he stopped,
looking down at Elsa. They did not speak a word. They spoke to each other
through their eyes. Their gaze – transfixed. Their gaze spoke a thousand words.
Elsa had not talked with Sid since their love affair two years prior to her
return to Plymouth. Since she was back in Bridgnorth, their inner passion was
reignited. Their internal passion was ablaze, as if it were about to explode
into a flaming inferno. Standing by Jacob’s boat was still too close for
comfort. It was the closest he could ever be with Elsa again. Jacob came up
behind Sid.
‘Stay
away from her,’ said Jacob.
‘That’s
enough,’ said the landlord.
‘No.
You’re the one who should stay away from her,’ said Sid, looking over his
shoulder.
‘I
don’t have to tell you again Sid.’
‘You
don’t deserve her. You treat her like scum.’
‘She’s
mine. I’ll treat her however I choose.’
‘She
maybe yours Jacob, but she's not your possession.’
‘Elsa
chose me.’
‘Elsa
chose you ‘cos she's afraid of ya.’
‘Huh!
Afraid?’
‘Yeah.’
‘Why?’
‘’cos
she’s too scared to say no to you.’
‘Elsa
is more scared of you than me.’
‘So
why did she come to me?’
‘Because
you never stay away from her.’
‘Elsa
may belong to you, but she’ll always be under my solemn protection as long as
I’m around.’
‘As
long as I’m around, Elsa is under nobody else’s protection but mine. Is that
clear?’
‘No.’
‘Perhaps
I need to make it more clear for you Sid.’
Jacob
clenched a tight fist, threw a punch, and knocked Sid flying. Sid landed on a
sumpter horse. The chestnut horse whinnied frantically, kicking its front legs
up in the air. Sid got back on his feet. He punched Jacob under the chin,
dropping him in the water.
‘Stop!
Stop,’ cried Elsa.
Sid's
eyes glared at her. Jacob climbed back on his feet, moving his jaw.
‘I’ll
be back someday Sid,’ said Jacob, stepping back in the boat.
‘And
I’ll be waiting for ya Jacob,’ said Sid when he cast off, rowing across the
flooded wharf. Jacob watched Sid disappear behind a wall of fog while the
sounds of paddling faded.