That Good Night (29 page)

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Authors: Richard Probert

BOOK: That Good Night
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It's a stark contrast sailing from commercial Gloucester to the tourist Mecca of P-town. Instead of fish fresh off the docks, here there's trendy restaurants, more antique dealers than
Antiques Road Show
and galleries galore.

Lori and I had pictures on our walls, family photos. The boys covered their walls with posters ranging from athletes to rock stars. But art, no! Our home was devoid of anything challenging or even resembling art. At the machine shop we displayed posters of machinery with scantily clad beauties holding micrometers or depth gauges, all gifts of machinery salesmen. Rigid Pipe Company had the best posters. The truth is I have never walked into an art gallery in my long life before being lured into one in P-Town. Catching my eye in the window of a small gallery was a small oil seascape. I wandered into the store and bought the thing—$900 worth of art. The artist, a Nova Scotian named Leonard Lane, captured the sea the way I felt about it. I mean there is nothing stable about the ocean;
it's constantly changing and that's what this painting said to me. I hung it on the bulkhead forward of the port settee. I'm very proud of myself for buying it. Good for me.

I finished reading
A Coal Black Horse
last night. Tonight I'm starting
Last Stand at Saber River
by Elmore Leonard. An oldie but a goodie.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 4

I'm writing this from crowded Nantucket Harbor. The anchorage is boat on top of boat with little room to lay out a proper scope. I'm hooked in all right, but I don't know about everybody around me. If a blow comes up, I'll just hope that a slew of boats don't come bearing down on me.

I have no desire to go ashore except, perhaps, to buy some orange juice, which I can do without if need be. Provincetown was quite enough of the tourist trade for me. I'll take time to inventory my stores and plan the next leg of my voyage south.

Bob stays in my mind with more good memories than sad thoughts of his death. And Lori, as well. I'm feeling younger, freer to think ahead. More open. I'm not sure why and quite frankly, I don't care to analyze the feeling of freedom that's come over me. I will say that putting the past in the past is just where the past ought to stay. Of course that means having an eye for the future. The further ahead you can think the younger you become.

In Provincetown, I met a young couple who were anchored just off my port side. When I was zipping back from shore, I passed close astern to their boat. Peering over they hailed me over to compliment me on
That Good Night
. Always nice to receive compliments, and she gets a lot of them. I invited them over and we decided to have dinner together. I offered the
main course of fresh haddock, which I purchased in Gloucester with the proviso that they do the cooking. Gene and Cheryl Breckenridge were their names. They also brought salad and a dessert. We had a wonderful time with Gene doing the cooking, Cheryl doing the clean-up and yours truly pouring the wine. I didn't discuss anything dealing with my past, sticking strictly to jawing on about happenings at sea and saying that I was heading south. Gene and Cheryl were on their maiden voyage, having just purchased a used sturdy thirty-two foot Saber. Full of piss and vinegar they were. Hopes and dreams of sailing ventures flowed like the wine. Hailing from Boston, they had planned to return the next day. “Are you on Facebook?” Cheryl asked me. I had heard of it but really didn't have a clue how to use it. And I had no email address either, or land address for that matter. She was a bit amazed at all of that.

After Gene and Cheryl left, I sat down and wrote my will. The writing wasn't as difficult as I thought it might be. Actually, I took stock of things rather quickly, surprising myself that in less than hour, I was finished. Writing the will was cathartic. Who and what was important to me became clear. I thanked
That Good Night
as if it was she that had sent me off on a journey of self discovery, a voyage into the unknown regions of my soul. A sailboat can do that. I'll get it witnessed and notarized before sending it off to Arden tomorrow.

More Elmore Leonard then to bed.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 5

Not much to write about today. I spent most of the day giving thought to where I wanted to go, settling on St. Thomas or maybe just Florida for the winter. It's only early August and to rush my way south doesn't seem like a good idea. I had given thought of heading to the Chesapeake but August there would mean hot, humid conditions; the one thing
That Good Night
doesn't have is air conditioning. Any further south than that only invites troubling hurricane watches.

I decided to head back up north, maybe Boston, maybe Portsmouth. Either would work well for me given I could get a dock space close enough to the city that I wouldn't need a car or have to rely too much on public transportation. Of course, Boston had the extra attraction of perhaps seeing Abigail again.

I decided on Portsmouth—a 120-nautical-mile voyage was just about right for an overnight sail. The whole Abigail thing helped tip the scale—best to leave that good memory undisturbed. Based on averaging six knots, twenty or so hours should do it. I'd use Boston as a place to jump into if needed. My sailplan called for departing Nantucket at around noon with an ETA at Portsmouth somewhere around eight o'clock the next morning. I would have to keep a good watch crossing the Boston shipping lanes.

MONDAY, AUGUST 6 – THURSDAY, AUGUST 9

Disaster. I'm writing this after days of just trying to stay alive. I'll do my best to give an accurate accounting, but to be honest, the three days I'm covering here seemed to blend into one unending stretch of time. One minute, the sun was out, the next it was dark.

Sixty-nautical miles into the voyage north, I was hit with a squall. With the autohelm on, I had dozed off for probably a half hour or so before being awakened by a rather unhappy
That Good Night
. The wind indicator showed wind coming from all over the place with gusts to 25 knots. The barometer was falling. Air temperature cooling. I've been in squalls before; they're no big deal if you handle them right. It was about 1730 hours and I was sailing with a reefed main and jib. On my way topsides, I flicked on the running lights. Once on deck, I kicked off the auto-helm, brought her about and furled the jib and main, opting to go bare pole; let the boat deal with it. The wind was now topping 20, gusting to 30 knots. I was far enough from land and shipping lanes not to worry too much. Besides these storms usually blow through in half an hour or so.

As I was descending the ship ladder,
That Good Night
took a wave on her starboard quarter. I was tossed like an old beanbag
onto the cabin sole. The pain in my back was immediate. With the boat being whacked from all directions, I couldn't get up if I wanted to. I was a loose cannon, moving around wherever momentum decided to take me. On one roll, I was able to wedge my way into the galley area, and held on for dear life. Every movement brought pain soaring into my lower back. I nearly passed out.

Maybe a half-hour later, maybe an eternity, the wind abated. The sea state took a while longer to settle. My right leg was akimbo, my hip swollen. This was Sunset revisited. Broken hips were death notices. But I wasn't some debilitated old lady who took a spill on the slick lunchroom linoleum. I was a sailor, dammit! Maybe it was just a little crack. Give it some time, I said to myself. A few days and I'll be hobbling around. In the meanwhile I'll just lay low. Maybe just heave-to for a bit.

The boat finally steadying, I crawled along the cabin sole to the starboard settee, clawed my way upward, rolled onto the soft cushion and passed out.

It was pitch black when I awoke. My right leg was stiff as a baseball bat. Any movement brought severe pain. So what, grin and bear it! When I was a kid, my dad took me to a dentist who didn't believe in using an anesthetic. He had this sadistic philosophy that the pain of getting a tooth drilled without a painkiller would encourage kids to brush their teeth. Well, I brushed like hell and it didn't help all that much. We didn't have fluoride back then. That was what was running through my mind: grip the black arms of the dentist chair and squeeze like a son-of-a bitch. What the hell choice did I have? Single-handed drifting on the ocean blue. Call the coast guard? And then what, wind up in a hospital. Not on your life. No, make that not on
my
life.

I reached up and grabbed the handrail. Yelling like a stuck pig and running through my rather extensive repertoire of expletives, I hobbled over to the navigation station. It was 0120 hours. I flicked on the cabin lights. I had been drifting for over five hours. W 42 20.02; N 69 10.08. Depth 126 fathoms.
That Good Night
was drifting almost due east—next stop Falmouth, England. I was about fifty nautical miles off course. So what? I had a lot of food, water, and fuel. If I wasn't run over by a tanker or fishing boat, if I didn't hit some floating whatever-the-hell-it-might-be, I'd just drift and take it easy. I'd heal slowly, but I was most confident that I'd make out somehow. A few days and I'd be up and about. The boat was as solid as a boat can be. Hell, she might even enjoy being on her own for awhile.

Going handrail to handrail, I made my way to the head. Taking a piss was another torture. It dribbled out in drops—so much for pissing a steady stream. But I could deal with that; old men do all the time. But I couldn't deal with rose colored piss. I was bleeding inside. My bravado burst like a pricked balloon. Goddammit!

At the vanity, I reached into my medical kit and pocketed a vial of Hydrocodone, 500MG. Back at the starboard settee, I reached into the hanging locker, retrieved a bottle of scotch and washed down three pills. Before falling to sleep, I knew that there was no way out of this. Either I called the Coast Guard and I submitted myself to the indignities of another Sunset, or I call it a day. My final sunset. I slept on and off, drank orange juice, ate slices of bread and a can of sardines. I took more pills.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 10

The sun was peeking over the horizon when I awoke.
That Good Night
was resting on calm seas. The swelling in my right hip has increased. Streaks of pain are racing across my groin. I feel weak and a little light headed. My piss is redder. All I want to do is sleep. I'm dying and I know it.

Call the Coast Guard or take morphine? I choose morphine. It's not much of a choice, really. I can't get on deck to manage the sails or start the engine. If I called the Coast Guard, well, that would be the end of my future. I know where I would wind up and that's not going to happen.

When I add it all up, I'd say that I did pretty well for myself. I've cleared my head of bitterness—better late than never. I got to live my final days the way I chose. Cleared my decks to use a worn out phrase. I enjoyed the romance of a last love.

I've made inner peace with my sons. Charles Jr. and Thomas will live a better life because of me. I hope they can forgive their dear old dad. I think business was as much a mistress as it was a way of making money. It sure kept me away from family.

My plan is to fill two syringes of morphine, more than enough to cause my death. Go topsides, open the lifeline gate, sit on the rail, and inject myself. I'll fetch my lunch hook out of the port locker and tie it on. That ought to sink old Charlie just as its chain took care of Ivan and Doris. When I pass out,
I'll fall into the water and let the sea claim what she will.

I crawled to my dresser and retrieved the morphine. I injected 4mg, a sort of test. The pain eased considerably. So did the twirling in my head. I hobbled around making sure that the boat was presentable before filling two syringes with morphine which I put into my shirt pocket.

I'm putting these writings into an envelope along with Robert's tricky belt buckle, and addressing it to Abigail and leaving another envelope for Arden. Add to the list a note to the Coast Guard. Then I'll pour a big glass of Scotch and toast my life and everyone who helped me define who I am. Before going topside, I'll click on the EPIRB.

I'm ready to go topside this one last time. It's amazing how good I feel and it's not just the morphine. It's more like I'm relieved, the game is over, and I won. This has been a wonderful adventure but it's over. Thank God that I'm still in command, that I have the right to make my own decision about life and death. I choose death not as the dark side. But, as a place to go. A port in a storm. Perhaps like Henlopen Harbor or Point Judith. I heard it said once that anyone committing suicide is insane. Well, I'm not anywhere near insane. I'm a man who luckily was able to spend my final days doing what I wanted to do. And, by God, that's just what I did. Like I mentioned earlier, I'm not religious, but there is a little bit of comfort in thinking that I might see Lori again. That's what I want to be my last thought, of seeing Lori in the dress she wore on our first date. The one with flowers and short puffy sleeves.

POSTSCRIPT

The Will:

I, Charles Lambert, being of sound mind do hereby bequeath my estate as follows:

To Catlin Giffords I leave the sum of $50,000 dollars to be held in trust by Attorney Arden Schmidt until Catlin reaches the age of 18. My hopes are that he will use the money to advance his education but it is not required that he do so
.

To Abigail Tennera, I leave the sum of $35,000
.

To Sunset Nursing Home, I leave the sum of $25,000 to establish an endowment for a dog-in-residence program
.

The remainder of my funds will be equally shared by my two sons, Charles Lambert Jr. and Thomas Lambert. Be happy, boys. Play as hard as you work
.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Writing a book is akin to solo voyaging. While there are many hours spent alone, perils to overcome, and bouts of waning courage, the knowing that concerned friends await in ports-of-call is a propelling force to complete the journey. And so as
That Good Night
reaches shore, I take this opportunity to thank those who helped make for a safe passage.

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