It was nine o’clock, but the light was clear, and a long, slate-green swell7 slightly crisped with ripples8 rolled up out of the south; to the northwest a broad stripe of angry saffron, against which the sea-tops cut, glowed along the horizon; but the east was dim, and steeped in a hard, cold blue. Shadowy mountains were faintly visible high up against the sky; and, below, a few rocky islets rose, blurred9 by blue haze11, out of the heaving sea.
The sloop12 rolled lazily, her boom groaning13 and the tall, white mainsail alternately swelling14 out and emptying with a harsh slapping of canvas and a clatter15 of shaken blocks. Above it the topsail raked in a wide arc across the sky. Silky lines of water ran back from the stern, there was a soft gurgle at the bows; Jimmy computed16 that she was slipping along at about three miles an hour.
“What do you think of the weather?” Bethune asked, as he lounged at the steering17 wheel.
“It doesn’t look promising,” Jimmy answered. “If time wasn’t an object, I’d like the topsail down. We’ll have wind before morning.”
“That’s my opinion; but time is an object. When the cost of every day out is an item to be considered, we must drive her. Have you reckoned up what we’re paying every week to the ship-chandler fellow who found us the cables and diving gear?”
“I haven’t; his terms were daunting18 enough as a whole without analyzing19 them. Have you?”
Bethune chuckled20.
“I have the cost of everything down in my notebook; although I will confess that I was mildly surprised at myself for taking the trouble. If I’d occasionally made a few simple calculations at home and acted on them, the chances are that I shouldn’t be here now.” Bethune made a gesture of disgust. “Halibut boiled and halibut fried begins to pall21 on one; but this is far better than our quarters in Vancouver, and they were a big improvement on those I had in Victoria. I daresay it was natural I should stick to the few monthly dollars as long as possible, but it will be some time before I forget that hotel. I never quite got used to the two wet public towels beside the row of sloppy22 wash-basins, and the gramophone going full blast in the dirty dining-room; and the long evening to be dawdled24 through in the lounge was worst of all. You have, perhaps, seen the hard-faced toughs lolling back with their feet on the radiator25 pipes before the windows, the heaps of dead flies that are seldom swept up, the dreary26, comfortless squalor. Imagine three or four hours of it every night, with only a last-week’s Colonist27 to while away the time!”
“I should imagine things would be better in a railroad or logging camp.”
“Very much so, though they’re not hotbeds of luxury. The trouble was that I couldn’t come down to Victoria and hold my job. Once or twice when the pay days approximated, I ran it pretty fine; and I’ve a vivid memory of walking seventy miles in two days over a newly made wagon28 trail. The softer parts had been graded with ragged29 stones from the hillside, the drier bits were rutted soil—it needed a surgical30 operation to get my stockings off.”
“It might have paid you better to forfeit31 your allowance,” Jimmy suggested.
“That’s true,” said Bethune. “I can see it now, but I had a daunting experience of clearing land and laying railroad track. Dragging forty-foot rails about through melting snow, with the fumes32 of giant-powder hanging among the rocks and nauseating33 you, is exhausting work, and handspiking giant logs up skids34 in rain that never stops is worse. The logs have a way of slipping back and smashing the tenderfoot’s ribs35. I suppose this made me a coward; and, in a sense, the allowance was less of a favor than a right. The money that provided it has been a long time in the family; I am the oldest son; and while I can’t claim to have been a model, I had no serious vices36 and had committed no crime. If my relatives chose to banish37 me, there seemed no reason why they shouldn’t pay for the privilege.”
Jimmy agreed that something might be said for his comrade’s point of view.
“Now I stand on my own feet,” Bethune went on, with a carefree laugh; “and while it’s hard to predict the end of this adventure, the present state of things is good enough for me. Is anything better than being afloat in a staunch craft that’s entirely38 at your command?”
Jimmy acquiesced39 heartily40 as he glanced about. Sitting to windward, he could see the gently rounded deck run forward to the curve of the lifted bows, and, above them, the tall, hollowed triangle of the jib. The arched cabin-top led forward in flowing lines, and though there were patches on plank41 and canvas, all his eye rested on was of harmonious42 outline. The Cetacea was small and low in the water, but she was fast and safe, and Jimmy had already come to feel a certain love for her. Their success depended upon her seaworthiness, and he thought she would not fail them.
“I like the boat; but I’ve been mending gear all day, and it’s my turn below,” he said.
The narrow cabin that ran from the cockpit bulkhead to the stem was cumbered with dismantled43 diving pumps and gear, but there was a locker44 on each side on which one could sleep. It was, moreover, permeated45 with the smell of stale tobacco smoke, tarred hemp46, and fish, but Jimmy had put up with worse odors in the Mercantile Marine47. Lying down, fully48 dressed, on a locker, he saw Moran’s shadowy form, wrapped in old oilskins, on the opposite locker, rise above his level and sink as the Cetacea rocked them with a rhythmic49 swing. The water lapped noisily against the planks50, and now and then there was a groaning of timber and a sharp clatter of blocks; but Jimmy soon grew drowsy51 and noticed nothing.
He was awakened52 rudely by a heavy blow, and found he had fallen off the locker and struck one of the pump castings. Half dazed and badly shaken, as he was, it was a few moments before he got upon his knees—one could not stand upright under the low cabin-top. It was very dark, Jimmy could not see the hatch, and the Cetacea appeared to have fallen over on her beam-ends. A confused uproar53 was going on above: the thud of heavy water striking the deck, a furious thrashing of loose canvas, and the savage54 scream of wind. Bethune’s voice came faintly through the din23, and he seemed to be calling for help.
Realizing that it was time for action, Jimmy pulled himself together and with difficulty made his way to the cockpit, where he found it hard to see anything for the first minute. The spray that drove across the boat beat into his face and blinded him; but he made out that she was pressed down with most of her lee deck in the water, while white cascades55 that swept its uplifted windward side poured into the cockpit. The tall mainsail slanted56 up into thick darkness, but it was no longer thrashing, and Jimmy was given an impression of furious speed by the way the half visible seas raced past.
“Shake her! Let her come up!” he shouted to the dark figure bent57 over the wheel.
He understood Bethune to say that this would involve the loss of the mast unless the others were ready to shorten canvas quickly.
Jimmy scrambled58 forward through the water and loosed the peak-halyard. The head of the sail swung down and blew out to leeward59, banging threateningly, and he saw that the half-lowered topsail hung beneath it. This promised to complicate60 matters; but Moran was already endeavoring to change the jib for a smaller one, and Jimmy sprang to his assistance. Though the sail was not linked to a masthead stay, it would not run in; and when Bethune luffed the boat into the wind, the loose canvas swept across the bows, swelling like a balloon and emptying with a shock that threatened to snap the straining mast. It was obvious to the men who knelt in the water dragging frantically61 at a rope that something drastic must be done; but both were drenched62 and half blinded and had been suddenly roused from sleep. The boat was large enough to make her gear heavy to handle, and yet not so large as to obviate63 the need for urgent haste when struck with all her canvas set by a savage squall. Though they recognized this, Jimmy and his comrade paused a few moments to gather breath. The jib, however, must be hauled down; and with a hoarse64 shout to Moran, Jimmy lowered himself from the bowsprit until he felt the wire bobstay under his feet.
The Cetacea plunged65 into the seas, burying him to the waist, but he made his way out-board with the canvas buffeting66 his head until he seized an iron ring. It cost him a determined67 effort to wrench68 it loose so it could run in, and when, at last, the sail swept behind him he felt the blood warm on his lacerated hand. Then he crawled on board, and when he and Moran had set a smaller jib it was high time to reef the mainsail; but they spent a few moments in gathering69 strength for the task.
She was down on her beam-ends, with the sea breaking over her. Jimmy could not imagine what Bethune was doing at the wheel. The foam70 that swirled71 past close under the boom on her depressed72 side lapped to the cabin top; it looked as if she were rolling over. They felt helpless and shaken, impotent to master the canvas that was drowning her. But the fight must be made; and, rousing themselves for the effort, they groped for the halyards. The head of the sail sank lower; gasping73, and straining every muscle, they hauled its foot down, and then Jimmy, leaning out, buried to the knees in rushing foam, with his breast on the boom, knotted the reef-points in. It was done at last. Rising more upright, she shook off some of the water.
Moran turned to Bethune, who was leaning as if exhausted74 on his helm, and demanded why he had not luffed the craft, which would have eased their work. Then the dripping man showed them that the boat they carried on deck had been washed against the wheel so that he could not pull the spokes75 round. They moved her, and when Bethune regained76 control of the sloop, he told them what had happened, in disjointed gasps77.
“Wind freshened—but I—held her at it. Then there was a—burst of rain and I—let the topsail go—thinking the breeze would lighten again. Instead of that—it whipped round ahead—screaming—and I called for you.”
Conversation was difficult amid the roar of the sea, with the spray lashing78 them and their words blowing away, but Jimmy made himself heard.
“Where’s the compass?”
“In the cockpit, or overboard—the dory broke it off.”
Moran felt in the water that washed about their feet and, picking something up, crept into the cabin, where a pale glow broke out. It disappeared in a minute or two and he came back.
“Binnacle lamp’s busted,” he reported. “She’s pointing about east.”
“Inshore,” said Jimmy. “When you’re ready, we’ll have her round.”
She would not come. Overpowered by wind and sea, she hung up for a few moments, and then fell off on her previous course. They tried it twice, not daring to wear her round the opposite way; and afterward79 they sat in the slight shelter of the coaming, conscious that there was nothing more they could do.
“She may keep off the beach until daylight,” Jimmy observed hopefully; “then we’ll see where we are.”
The glance he cast forward did not show him much. The long swell had rapidly changed into tumbling combers that rolled down upon the laboring80 sloop out of the dark. As she lurched over them, the small patch of storm-jib swept up, showing the sharply slanted strip of mainsail; but the rest of her was hidden by spray and rushing foam. She was sailing very fast, close-hauled, and was rushing toward the beach. Jimmy could feel her tremble as she pitched into the seas.
Morning seemed a very long time in coming; but at last the darkness grew less thick. The foam got whiter and the gray bulk of the rollers more solid and black, as they leaped, huge and threatening, out of the obscurity. Then the sky began to whiten in the east, and the weary men anxiously turned their eyes shoreward as they shivered in the biting cold of dawn. After a time, during which the horizon steadily81 receded82, a gray and misty83 blur10 appeared on the starboard hand, and, now that they could see the combers, they got the Cetacea round. As she headed offshore84 a red flush spread across the sky, and rocks and pines grew into shape to the east. Then a break in the coastline where they could see shining water instead of foam indicated an island; and, getting her round again, they stood in cautiously, because she could make nothing to windward through the steep, white seas outshore. Reeling before them, with lee deck in the water as she bore away, she opened up the sound, and presently her crew watched the rollers crumble85 on a boulder-sprinkled point. Moving shoreward majestically86 in ordered ranks, the waves hove themselves up when they met the shoal and dissolved into frothy cataracts87. It was an impressive spectacle, and the sloop looked by contrast extremely small. Still, she drove on, and Jimmy, standing88 at the wheel, gazed steadily ahead.
“We’ll have to chance finding water, because the lead’s no guide,” he said. “If there’s anything in the sound, it will be a steep-to rock.”
She lurched in past the point, rolling, spray-swept, with two rags of drenched canvas set. As Jimmy luffed her into the lee of the island there was a sudden change. The water, smoothing to a measured heave, glittered with tiny ripples; the slanted mast rose upright; and the sloop forged on toward a shelving beach, through variable flaws. Then, as she slowed and the canvas flapped, the anchor was flung over, and the rattle89 of running chain sent a cloud of birds circling above the rocks.
Half an hour later the men were busy cooking breakfast, and soon afterward they were fast asleep; but the night’s breeze had made a change in their relations. Their mettle90 had been rudely tested and had not failed. Henceforward it was not to be mere91 mutual92 interest that held them together, but a stronger though more elusive93 bond. They were comrades by virtue94 of a mutual respect and trust.
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