THAMES BARGE
We’re hoisting the sails after
water-proofing them when Churchill calls for anything that can sail to bring our
soldiers home.
“We’re going to Dunkirk,” I tell Jed.
“Thames barges ain’t seaworthy,” he
says, but he’s hauling in the anchor as he speaks.
We’re lucky the Channel’s fairly calm,
because our boat rides the waves like a fat drunk, but its flat bottom gets us
closer to shore than bigger ships. Dodging bullets, we pack exhausted men into
the hold like sardines and high-tail it out of there.
Half-way home, Jed grins. “That trip’s got the fish stink out of the
sails, if nowt else!”
I was lucky enough to sail on a refurbished Thames barge once – a large and practical
wooden boat that still smelled of the linseed that had once been its cargo.
These boats were known for their distinctive sails, tan-coloured from the
mixture of red ochre, cod oil and seawater which was used to water-proof them.
I don’t know whether any of these flat-bottomed vessels made it across the
Channel to Dunkirk in 1940 but I hope at least one did, as I have written that
possibility into one of my books!
Thanks, as always, go to Rochelle for hosting Friday Fictioneers on her blog https://rochellewisoff.com/ from whence you can follow links to read other stories, and to Fatima Fakier Deria for the photo that is this week's prompt.