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38  AN EXILE OF THE MIND    THE FLYING PRIEST OF CAMIGUIN                        39




                    The flying priest of Camiguin



                    Evading pirates. An embarrassing lunch aboard a warship.
                         Troppo priests on Camiguin Island. The last bottle
                                 of the Consul’s wine for Shrimpy.


                     he bowsprit genuflected wildly, impatient to flee the Colony.
                 TThe weather no less turbulent as the bow sliced choppy water
                 and listed mole-blind into the fray. The crew, green and unproven,
                 unfurled the small storm jib and our spirits soared as it billowed
                 and cracked into life. Free at last, the yacht heeled perilously to
                 greet the horizon hidden by black grey clouds.

                    Storm-churned  stomachs  ejected  breakfast, undigested,  over
                 the gunnels to become fish food. Le Voyageur leapt from wave to
                 wave under reefed sail for two gut-wrenched days. And I, staring
                 miserably  at  the  waves, lay  prone  to  starboard and thought  of
                 Spike Milligan’s handy cure for seasickness ─ to sit under a tree. It
                 would be many days before his advice could be taken.
                    The unwelcome shores of Vietnam lay to the south-west and
                 with no sun to navigate by,  dead-reckoning proved impossible
                 without a smidgen of land to set our compass. On the third day,
                 the yacht was doldrummed on a smooth-glassed sea with horizons
                 all around us. The South China Sea gave up its quest to send us
                 to watery depths of Davy Jones’ Locker waiting patiently below.
                 Sails flapped broken winged and halyards pinged their irritating
                 chimes along the mast.
                    This aimless speck was cork-joggled amongst emerald jungles
                 of rafting seaweed. Bog-eyed seafarers, sultry with heat under the
                 shimmering blaze of a scorching sun, were exhausted with mind-


                 Cooling off in the Spice Islands, Indonesia.
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