The gale held without much change
through the night, and then with morning shifted a
few points to the westward, which was nothing to complain
of. The sea rose, and a few rain squalls came
up and passed; but they had no weight in them, and
did not keep the waves down as a steady fall will.
And all day long it was the same, and the ship fled
ever before it. There was no thought now of reaching
any port we might wish, but least of all did we think
of making the Lindsey shore, which lies open to the
north and east. When the gale broke, we must find
harbour where we could; and indeed; to my father at
this time all ports were alike, as refuge from Hodulf.
When darkness came again one of the wounded men died,
and Havelok was yet ill in the after cabin, so that
my mother was most anxious for him. The plunging
ship was no place for a sick child.
Now it was not possible for us to
tell how far we had run since we had parted from the
Viking, and all we knew was that we had no shore to
fear with the wind as it was, and therefore nothing
but patience was needed. But in the night came
a sudden lull in the gale that told of a change at
hand, and in half an hour it was blowing harder than
ever from the northeast, and setting us down to the
English coast fast, for we could do naught but run
before such a wind. It thickened up also, and
was very dark even until full sunrise, so that one
could hardly tell when the sun was above the sea’s
rim.
I crept from the fore cabin about
this time, after trying in vain to sleep, and found
the men sheltering under the break of the deck and
looking always to leeward. Two of them were at
the steering oar with my father, for Arngeir was worn
out, and I had left him in the cabin, sleeping heavily
in spite of the noise of waves and straining planking.
Maybe he would have waked in a moment had that turmoil
ceased.
It was of no use trying to speak to
the men without shouting in their ears, and getting
to windward to do that, moreover, and so I looked
round to see if there was any change coming. But
all was grey overhead, and a grey wall of rain and
flying drift from the wave tops was all round us,
blotting out all things that were half a mile from
us, if there were anything to be blotted out.
It always seems as if there must be somewhat beyond
a thickness of any sort at sea. But there was
one thing that I did notice, and that was that the
sea was no longer grey, as it had been yesterday,
but was browner against the cold sky, while the foam
of the following wave crests was surely not so white
as it had been, and at this I wondered.
Then I crawled aft and went to my
father and asked him what he thought of the wind and
the chance of its dropping. He had had the lead
going for long now.
“We are right off the Humber
mouth, to judge by the colour of the water,”
he told me, “or else off the Wash, which is more
to the south. I cannot tell which rightly, for
we have run far, and maybe faster than I know.
If only one could see
There he stopped, and I knew enough
to understand that we were in some peril unless a
shift of wind came very soon, since the shore was under
our lee now, if by good luck we were not carried straight
into the great river itself. So for an hour or
more I watched, and all the time it seemed that hope
grew less, for the sea grew shorter, as if against
tide, and ever its colour was browner with the mud
of the Trent and her sisters.
Presently, as I clung to the rail,
there seemed to grow a new sound over and amid all
those to which I had become used as it were
a low roaring that swelled up in the lulls, and sank
and rose again. And I knew what it was, and held
up my hand to my father, listening, and he heard also.
It was the thunder of breakers on a sandy coast to
leeward.
He put his whistle to his lips and
called shrilly, and the men saw him if they could
not hear, and sprang up, clawing aft through the water
that flooded the waist along the rail.
“Breakers to leeward, men,”
he cried “we must wear ship, and then shall
clear them. We shall be standing right into Humber
after that, as I think.”
Arngeir heard the men trampling, if
not the whistle, and he was with us directly, and
heard what was to be done.
“It is a chance if the yard
stands it,” he said, looking aloft.
“Ay, but we cannot chance going
about in this sea, and we are too short of men to
lower and hoist again. Listen!”
Arngeir did so, and heard for the
first time the growing anger of the surf on the shore,
and had no more doubt. We were then running with
the wind on the port quarter, and it was useless to
haul closer to the wind on that tack, whereas if we
could wear safely we should be leaving the shore at
once by a little closer sailing.
“Ran is spreading her nets,”
said Arngeir, “but if all holds, she will have
no luck with her fishing.”
Then we manned the main sheet and
the guys from the great yards, but we were all too
few for the task, which needed every man of the fifteen
that we had sailed with. There was the back stay
to be set up afresh on the weather quarter for the
new tack also, and three men must see to that.
We watched my father’s hand
for the word, and steadily sheeted home until all
seemed to be going well. But the next moment there
was a crash and a cry, and we were a mastless wreck,
drifting helplessly. Maybe some flaw of wind
took us as the head of the great sail went over, but
its power was too much for the men at guys and back
stay, and they had the tackle torn through their hands.
The mast snapped six feet above the deck, smashing
the gunwales as it fell forward and overboard, but
hurting none of us.
Then a following sea or two broke
over the stern, and I was washed from the poop, for
I had been at the sheet, down to the deck, and there
saved myself among the fallen rigging, half drowned.
One of the men was washed overboard at the same time,
but a bight of the rigging that was over the side
caught him under the chin, and his mates hauled him
on board again by the head, as it were. He was
wont to make a jest of it afterward, saying that he
was not likely to be hanged twice, but he had a wry
neck from that day forward.
No more seas came over us, for the
wreck over the bows brought us head to wind, though
we shipped a lot of water across the decks as she rolled
in the sea. Then we rode to the drag of the fallen
sail for a time, and it seemed quiet now that there
was no noise of wind screaming in rigging above us.
But all the while the thunder of the breakers grew
nearer and plainer.
I bided where I was, for the breath
was knocked out of me for the moment. I saw my
father lash the helm, and then he and the rest got
the two axes that hung by the cabin door, and came
forward with them. The mast was pounding our
side in a way that would start the planking before
long, and it must be cut adrift, and by that time I
could join him.
When that was done, and it did not
take long, we cleared the anchor and cable and let
go, for it was time. The sound of the surf was
drowning all else. But the anchor held, and the
danger was over for the while, and as one might think
altogether; but the tide was running against the gale,
and what might happen when it turned was another matter.
Now we got the sail on deck again,
and unlaced it from the yard, setting that in place
with some sort of rigging, ready to be stepped as a
mast if the wind shifted to any point that might help
us off shore.
It may be thought how we watched that
one cable that held us from the waves and the place
where they broke, for therein lay our only chance,
and we longed for the clear light that comes after
rain, that we might see the worst, at least, if we
were to feel it. But the anchor held, and presently
we lost the feeling of a coming terror that had been
over us, the utmost peril being past. My father
went to the after cabin now, and though the poor children
were bruised with the heavy rolling of the ship as
she came into the wind, they were all well save Havelok,
and he had fallen asleep in my mother’s arms
at last.
With the turn of the tide, which came
about three hours after midday, the clouds broke,
and slowly the land grew out of the mists until we
could see it plainly, though it was hardly higher than
the sea that broke over it in whirling masses of spindrift.
By-and-by we could see far-off hills beyond wide-stretching
marshlands that looked green and rich across yellow
sandhills that fringed the shore. And from them
we were not a mile, and at their feet were such breakers
as no ship might win through, though, if we might
wait until they were at rest, the level sand was good
for beaching at the neap tides. For we were well
into Humber mouth, and to the northward of us, across
the yellow water, was the long point of Spurn, and
the ancient port of Ravenspur, with its Roman jetties
falling into decay under the careless hand of the Saxon,
under its shelter. There was no port on this southern
side of the Humber, though farther south was Tetney
Haven and again Saltfleet, to which my father had
been, but neither in nor out of them might a vessel
get in a northeast gale.
I have said that this clearness came
with the turn of the tide, and now that began to flow
strongly, setting in with the wind with more than its
wonted force, for the northwest shift of the gale had
kept it from falling, as it always will on this coast.
That, of course, I learned later, but it makes plain
what happened next. Our anchor began to drag
with the weight of both tide and wind, and that was
the uttermost of our dread.
Slowly it tore through its holding,
and as it were step by step at first, and once we
thought it stopped when we had paid out all the cable.
But wind and sea were too strong, and presently again
we saw the shore marks shifting, and we knew that
there was no hope. The ship must touch the ground
sooner or later, and then the end would come with one
last struggle in the surf, and on shore was no man
whose hand might be stretched to drag a spent man
to the land, if he won through. It would have
seemed less lonely had one watched us, but I did not
know then that no pity for the wrecked need be looked
for from the marshmen of the Lindsey shore. There
was not so much as a fisher’s boat of wicker
and skins in sight on the sandhills, where one might
have looked to see some drawn up.
Now my father went to the cabin and
told my mother that things were at their worst, and
she was very brave.
“If you are to die at this time,
husband,” she said, “it is good that I
shall die with you. Better it is, as I think,
than a sickness that comes to one and leaves the other.
But after that you will go to the place of Odin, to
Valhalla; but I whither?”
Then spoke little Withelm, ever thoughtful,
and now not at all afraid.
“If Freya wants not a sailor’s
wife who is willing to fight the waves with Grim,
my father, it will be strange.”
My mother was wont to say that this
saying of the child’s did much to cheer her
at that time, but there is little place for a woman
in the old faiths. So she smiled at him, and
that made him bold to speak of what he had surely
been thinking since the storm began.
“I suppose that Aegir is wroth
because we made no sacrifice to him before we set
sail. I think that I would cast the altar stones
to him, that he may know that we meant to do so.”
This sounds a child’s thought
only, and so it was; but it set my father thinking,
and in the end helped us out of trouble.
“I have heard,” my father
said, “that men in our case have thrown overboard
the high-seat pillars, and have followed them to shore
safely. We have none, but the stones are more
sacred yet. Overboard they shall go, and as the
boat with them goes through the surf we may learn somewhat.”
With that he hastened on deck, and
told the men what he would do; and they thought it
a good plan, as maybe they would have deemed anything
that seemed to call for help from the strong ones of
the sea. So they got the boat ready to launch
over the quarter, and the four stones, being uncovered
since the Vikings took our cargo, were easily got on
deck, and they were placed in the bottom of the boat,
and steadied there with coils of fallen rigging, so
that they could not shift. They were just a fair
load for the boat. Then my father cried for help
to the Asir, bidding Aegir take the altar as full
sacrifice; and when we had done so we waited for a
chance as a long wave foamed past us, and launched
the boat fairly on its back, so that she seemed to
fly from our hands, and was far astern in a moment.
Now we looked to see her make straight
for the breakers, lift on the first of them, and then
capsize. That first line was not a quarter of
a mile from us now.
But she never reached them. She
plunged away at first, heading right for the surf,
and then went steadily westward, and up the shore line
outside it, until she was lost to sight among the
wild waves, for she was very low in the water.
“Cheer up, men,” my father
said, as he saw that; “we are not ashore yet,
nor will be so long as the tide takes that current
along shore. We shall stop dragging directly.”
And so it was, for when the ship slowly
came to the place where the boat had changed her course,
the anchor held once more for a while until the gathering
strength of the tide forced it to drag again.
Now, however, it was not toward the shore that we
drifted, but up the Humber, as the boat had gone;
and as we went the sea became less heavy, for we were
getting into the lee of the Spurn headland.
Soon the clouds began to break, flying
wildly overhead with patches of blue sky and passing
sunshine in between them that gladdened us. The
wind worked round to the eastward at the same time,
and we knew that the end of the gale had come.
But, blowing as it did right into the mouth of the
river, the sea became more angry, and it would be worse
yet when the tide set again outwards. Already
we had shipped more water than was good, and we might
not stand much more. It seemed best, therefore,
to my father that we should try to run as far up the
Humber as we might while we had the chance, for the
current that held us safe might change as tide altered
in force and depth.
So we buoyed the cable, not being
able to get the anchor in this sea, and then stepped
the yard in the mast’s place, and hoisted the
peak of the sail corner-wise as best we might; and
that was enough to heel us almost gunwale under as
the cable was slipped and the ship headed about up
the river mouth. We shipped one or two more heavy
seas as she paid off before the wind, but we were
on the watch for them, and no harm was done.
After that the worst was past, for
every mile we flew over brought us into safer waters;
and now we began to wonder where the boat with its
strange cargo had gone, and we looked out for her along
the shore as we sailed, and at last saw her, though
it was a wonder that we did so.
The tide had set her into a little
creek that opened out suddenly, and there Arngeir
saw her first, aground on a sandbank, with the lift
of each wave that crept into the haven she had found
sending her higher on it. And my father cried
to us that we had best follow her; and he put the
helm over, while we sheeted home and stood by for the
shock of grounding.
Then in a few minutes we were in a
smother of foam across a little sand bar, and after
that in quiet water, and the sorely-tried ship was
safe. She took the ground gently enough in the
little creek, not ten score paces from where the boat
was lying, and we were but an arrow flight from the
shore. As the tide rose the ship drifted inward
toward it, so that we had to wait only for the ebb
that we might go dry shod to the land.
Before that time came there was rest
for us all, and we needed it sorely. It was a
wonder that none of the children had been hurt in the
wild tossing of the ship, but children come safely
through things that would be hard on a man. Bruised
they were and very hungry, but somehow my mother had
managed to steady them on the cabin floor, and they
were none the worse, only Havelok slept even yet with
a sleep that was too heavy to be broken by the worst
of the tossing as he lay in my mother’s lap.
She could not tell if this heavy sleep was good or
not.
Then we saw to the wounded men, and
thereafter slept in the sun or in the fore cabin as
each chose, leaving Arngeir only on watch. It
was possible that the shore folk would be down to
the strand soon, seeking for what the waves might
have sent them, and the tide must be watched also.
Just before its turn he woke us, for
it was needful that we should get a line ashore to
prevent the ship from going out with the ebb, and with
one I swam ashore. There was not so much as a
stump to which to make fast, and so one of the men
followed me, and we went to the boat, set the altar
stones carefully ashore, then fetched the spare anchor,
and moored her with that in a place where the water
seemed deep to the bank.
It was a bad place. For when
the tide fell, which it did very fast, we found that
we had put her on a ledge. Presently therefore,
and while we were trying to bail out the water that
was in her, the ship took the ground aft, and we could
not move her before the worst happened. Swiftly
the tide left her, and her long keel bent and twisted,
and her planks gaped with the strain of her own weight,
all the greater for the water yet in her that flowed
to the hanging bows. The good ship might sail
no more. Her back was broken.
That was the only time that I have
ever seen my father weep. But as the stout timbers
cracked and groaned under the strain it seemed to him
as if the ship that he loved was calling piteously
to him for help that he could not give, and it was
too much for him. The gale that was yet raging
overhead and the sea that was still terrible in the
wide waters of the river had been things that had
not moved him, for that the ship should break up in
a last struggle with them was, as it were, a fitting
end for her. But that by his fault here in the
hardly-won haven she should meet her end was not to
be borne, and he turned away from us and wept.
Then came my mother and set her hand
on his shoulder and spoke softly to him with wise
words.
“Husband, but a little while
ago it would have been wonderful if there were one
of us left alive, or one plank of the ship on another.
And now we are all safe and unhurt, and the loss of
the ship is the least of ills that might have been.”
“Nay, wife,” he said; “you cannot
understand.”
“Then it is woe for the for
the one who is with us. But how had it been if
you had seen Hodulf and his men round our house, and
all the children slain that one might not escape,
while on the roof crowed the red cock, and naught
was left to us? We have lost less than if we had
stayed for that, and we have gained what we sought,
even safety. See, to the shore have come the
ancient holy things of our house, and that not by
your guidance. Surely here shall be the place
for us that is best.”
“Ay, wife; you are right in
all these things, but it is not for them.”
Then she laughed a little, forcing
herself to do so, as it seemed.
“Why, then, it is for the ship
that I was ever jealous of, for she took you away
from me. Now I think that I should be glad that
she can do so no more. But I am not, for well
I know what the trouble must be, and I would have
you think no more of it. The good ship has saved
us all, and so her work is done, and well done.
Never, if she sailed many a long sea mile with you,
would anything be worth telling of her besides this.
And the burden of common things would surely be all
unmeet for her after what she has borne hither.”
“It is well said, Leva, my wife,” my father
answered.
From that time he was cheerful, and
told us how it was certain that we had been brought
here for good, seeing that the Norns must have led
the stones to the haven, so that this must be the
place that we sought.