To be suddenly aroused out of a sound
sleep, and immediately afterwards to find yourself
struggling in deep, dark water is not an experience
to be desired. The first plunge made me shiver
from head to foot, and it was only by instinct that
I kept my mouth shut and struck out to keep myself
afloat.
I had not the slightest notion of
what had happened, and in the darkness could see nothing.
It was some time ere I could recover and call out to
the cabin boy:
“What is it, Phil? Where are you?”
“Here I am,” he cried,
close beside me; and an instant later his hand touched
my body.
“What happened?” I repeated.
“I don’t know,”
he replied. “Either something struck the
boat, or else we hit a rock.”
“I don’t think we are
near enough to shore to strike a rock,” I rejoined.
“Well, what was it then?”
“I don’t know, and what’s
more I’m not going to try to find out just at
present. Where is the raft?”
“I guess the Hasty has gone
to the bottom. I can’t see her anywhere
around.”
“Don’t be foolish. She couldn’t
sink.”
“That’s so; I forgot. Well, where
is she then?”
“We must find her. Can you keep on swimming?”
“For awhile. But don’t leave me!”
added the cabin boy in sudden alarm.
“I won’t. We can swim together.
Take it easy.”
Side by side we struck out. My
thoughts were busy. Suppose we were not able
to find the raft? To swim any great distance would
be impossible, and we could not float forever.
“It’s hard work, and no
mistake,” said Phil, after a few moments of
silence. “I can’t go much further.”
“Suppose we let ourselves drift with the current.”
“That’s a good plan, for I suppose the
Hasty did the same thing.”
So we allowed ourselves to drift for
fully ten minutes. Fortunately both of us were
good swimmers, and understood the art of floating.
If not, it might have gone hard with us.
“What’s that ahead?” cried the cabin
boy, at length.
“Where?”
“There! To the right!”
I strained my eyes. Was it a
light? Yes; not one but several, and all moving
rapidly away.
“It’s a boat!” I cried. “Let
us yell.”
And yell we did; once, twice, and
then a dozen times, in a tone that made me so hoarse
I could hardly speak afterwards.
“It’s no use,” said
Phil. “It’s a steamer, and they won’t
pay any attention.”
“I shouldn’t wonder but
that it was the vessel that struck us?” I exclaimed.
“Most likely. But if they
would only pick us up I wouldn’t care a straw.”
After this there was another interval
of silence. Then my arm struck something hard.
I put out my hand, and was overjoyed to find that it
was the raft.
“Here she is!” I cried. “Here’s
the Hasty.”
“Thank our stars!” returned
Phil; “I couldn’t have held out much longer.”
It did not take us long to get aboard,
and completely exhausted we sank down on the flooring
and panted to get our breath.
There was no more sleep for us that
night, so we both sat close together, and talked of
what had struck us, and what damage it had done to
the raft.
“The rudder is smashed,” said Phil.
“Never mind, we can make another
in the morning,” I returned. “It’s
too dark to do anything now.”
So we let the raft drift at will,
trusting the wind was still blowing us toward the
shore.
Slowly the night wore on, and at the
first streak of dawn we were both in motion.
It seemed a shame to rip up another part of the flooring
to make a rudder. Yet there was no help for it.
While doing so I noticed that the doors were unusually
wet, but gave it no attention, thinking it had been
caused by the raft dipping under when the vessel had
struck us.
At last we began to get hungry, and
Phil hauled some crackers from the provision box.
“They will make us mighty thirsty,
and we haven’t much water,” he said.
“But I hadn’t time to hunt up just the
best things to take along.”
We ate our crackers, and when we had
finished them I turned to the cask to get some water.
I pulled out the bung, and was horrified to discover
that the cask was empty!
“The water’s gone!” I gasped.
“What!”
“It’s true; there isn’t a drop in
the cask!”
Phil was fully as much dismayed as
I was. Alone on the broad Atlantic and not a
drop to drink!
“We can’t live without water,” he
cried.
“I know that. It is worse than being without
food.”
“Ten times over. Where has the water gone?”
We examined the cask carefully.
At the bottom was a bunghole in which a bung had been
placed; but either the riding of the raft or the shock
had loosened the bung, and it had dropped out and
allowed the water to run away to the last drop.
“We are done for now!”
groaned Phil. “We can’t stand it twenty-four
hours without something to drink.”
“Perhaps we’ll have a
change in luck before that,” said I; but I had
my doubts.
The hours that passed after I made
the discovery were terrible ones. We suffered
intensely from thirst, and I was almost tempted to
drink the salt water that surrounded us. Had
I done so this tale would probably have never been
written.
When the noonday sun shone down upon
us we could not stand to be out in it. Phil crawled
under the canvas, his eyes rolling strangely.
“Water! water! oh, give me water!” he
cried.
I was startled. Was the poor boy going insane?
“Let me wet the canvas,” I said.
“It will make it cooler.”
I did as I suggested, and the cabin
boy declared it was much better than before.
Then I coaxed him to try to sleep, and at last he fell
into a troublesome doze.
Throwing more water on the canvas
until it was sopping wet, I crawled in beside him.
But not to sleep. My mind was
in a whirl, and I could not think clearly. My
mouth was parched, and my tongue so thick that when
I tried to utter some words in reverie I could not,
a thing that frightened me still more.