登陆注册
37322900000020

第20章

THE TYPHOON

THE storm that struck the Halfmoon took her entirely unaware.It had sprung, apparently, out of a perfectly clear sky.

Both the lookout and the man at the wheel were ready to take oath that they had scanned the horizon not a half-minute before Second Mate Theriere had come racing forward bellowing for all hands on deck and ordering a sailor below to report the menacing conditions to Captain Simms.

Before that officer reached the deck Theriere had the entire crew aloft taking in sail; but though they worked with the desperation of doomed men they were only partially successful in their efforts.

The sky and sea had assumed a sickly yellowish color, except for the mighty black cloud that raced toward them, low over the water.The low moaning sound that had followed the first appearance of the storm, gave place to a sullen roar, and then, of a sudden, the thing struck the Halfmoon, ripping her remaining canvas from her as if it had been wrought from tissue paper, and with the flying canvas, spars, and cordage went the mainmast, snapping ten feet above the deck, and crashing over the starboard bow with a noise and jar that rose above the bellowing of the typhoon.

Fully half the crew of the Halfmoon either went down with the falling rigging or were crushed by the crashing weight of the mast as it hurtled against the deck.Skipper Simms rushed back and forth screaming out curses that no one heeded, and orders that there was none to fill.

Theriere, on his own responsibility, looked to the hatches.

Ward with a handful of men armed with axes attempted to chop away the wreckage, for the jagged butt of the fallen mast was dashing against the ship's side with such vicious blows that it seemed but a matter of seconds ere it would stave a hole in her.

With the utmost difficulty a sea anchor was rigged and tumbled over the Halfmoon's pitching bow into the angry sea, that was rising to more gigantic proportions with each succeeding minute.This frail makeshift which at best could but keep the vessel's bow into the wind, saving her from instant engulfment in the sea's trough, seemed to Theriere but a sorry means of prolonging the agony of suspense preceding the inevitable end.That nothing could save them was the second officer's firm belief, nor was he alone in his conviction.Not only Simms and Ward, but every experienced sailor on the ship felt that the life of the Halfmoon was now but a matter of hours, possibly minutes, while those of lesser experience were equally positive that each succeeding wave must mark the termination of the lives of the vessel and her company.

The deck, washed now almost continuously by hurtling tons of storm-mad water, as one mountainous wave followed another the length of the ship, had become entirely impossible.

With difficulty the men were attempting to get below between waves.All semblance of discipline had vanished.For the most part they were a pack of howling, cursing, terror-ridden beasts, fighting at the hatches with those who would have held them closed against the danger of each new assault of the sea.

Ward and Skipper Simms had been among the first to seek the precarious safety below deck.Theriere alone of the officers had remained on duty until the last, and now he was exerting his every faculty in the effort to save as many of the men as possible without losing the ship in the doing of it.Only between waves was the entrance to the main cabins negotiable, while the forecastle hatch had been abandoned entirely after it had with difficulty been replaced following the retreat of three of the crew to that part of the ship.

The mucker stood beside Theriere as the latter beat back the men when the seas threatened.It was the man's first experience of the kind.Never had he faced death in the courage-blighting form which the grim harvester assumes when he calls unbridled Nature to do his ghastly bidding.The mucker saw the rough, brawling bullies of the forecastle reduced to white-faced, gibbering cowards, clawing and fighting to climb over one another toward the lesser danger of the cabins, while the mate fought them off, except as he found it expedient to let them pass him; he alone cool and fearless.

Byrne stood as one apart from the dangers and hysteric strivings of his fellows.Once when Theriere happened to glance in his direction the Frenchman mentally ascribed the mucker's seeming lethargy to the paralysis of abject cowardice."The fellow is in a blue funk," thought the second mate; "I did not misjudge him--like all his kind he is a coward at heart."Then a great wave came, following unexpectedly close upon the heels of a lesser one.It took Theriere off his guard, threw him down and hurtled him roughly across the deck, landing him in the scuppers, bleeding and stunned.The next wave would carry him overboard.

Released from surveillance the balance of the crew pushed and fought their way into the cabin--only the mucker remained without, staring first at the prostrate form of the mate and then at the open cabin hatch.Had one been watching him he might reasonably have thought that the man's mind was in a muddle of confused thoughts and fears; but such was far from the case.Billy was waiting to see if the mate would revive sufficiently to return across the deck before the next wave swept the ship.It was very interesting--he wondered what odds O'Leary would have laid against the man.

In another moment the wave would come.Billy glanced at the open cabin hatch.That would never do--the cabin would be flooded with tons of water should the next wave find the hatch still open.Billy closed it.Then he looked again toward Theriere.The man was just recovering consciousness--and the wave was coming.

Something stirred within Billy Byrne.It gripped him and made him act quickly as though by instinct to do something that no one, Billy himself least of all, would have suspected that the Grand Avenue mucker would have been capable of.

同类推荐
  • 宗玄先生玄纲论

    宗玄先生玄纲论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 扬州芍药谱

    扬州芍药谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 吕祖师三尼医世说述

    吕祖师三尼医世说述

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太极拳论

    太极拳论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 秋声集

    秋声集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 冒险团的旅程

    冒险团的旅程

    一个孤儿穿越到异世的冒险旅途,斗气与魔法的世界,铁与血的交织…简介啥的还是别信吧
  • 阴时雨过天晴

    阴时雨过天晴

    绍晴本想过着平平淡淡的生活,然而老天总是不遂人愿。……仇恨,在心里萌芽。
  • 余生一个十年之约

    余生一个十年之约

    女主一:余汐凉,广东女孩,破壳日:2000.8.6特点:爱笑,爱美的一个女孩,喜欢去游乐园玩,喜欢王俊凯家庭情况:老爸在外地(重庆打工)老妈是做微商的,经济条件稳稳哒
  • 天命驭魔

    天命驭魔

    命运,即便面对神祇时,百里长风也绝不妥协。
  • 后悔了没用

    后悔了没用

    当初我爱你的时候我的爱一文不值现在我不爱了
  • 种地式召唤

    种地式召唤

    当周浅发现自己穿越之后,觉得事情并不简单。但他发现几乎每隔半年就能生产一个种子之后,觉得事情真的不简单。直到一个雨夜中,周浅种下了种子,没过多久,一个妹子就从地里长了出来……我!周浅!种人!字面意思,要用到土的那种。
  • 彼岸花开一落

    彼岸花开一落

    害,一个学生喜欢看小说和写小说。特别喜欢古风。?
  • 华之传人

    华之传人

    最大家族竟然被骗,老爷子险些去世,多亏华佗后辈治疗才可痊愈,但在一次意外下不小心回到了三国?看着淡定医生如何改变历史
  • 一句歌皇

    一句歌皇

    作为音乐学院的“后门生”,陈进表示他对于原创音乐什么的是真的不会啊!“天青色等烟雨,而我在等你!”下一句呢?完整曲子呢?抱歉,我只记得......不对,是我只创作了这一句,真的!千真万确的真!新生代一句歌皇陈进诞生,有无数粉丝表示......好想咬死他啊!
  • 重生之抑郁公子妻

    重生之抑郁公子妻

    一世为忠于一人,负一人,以为苦尽甘来,可以无所顾忌白头偕老,谁曾想一把大火烧尽繁华落幕,死前依稀有一双手紧紧相护。一朝醒来,红衣似火,世人皆道花溪村教书先生的女儿一朝飞上枝头,虽然夫君是个疯子,但荣华富贵享之不尽......