As soon as they arrived on board,
Captain Pinder examined the chronometers and pronounced
them to be excellent ones.
“I would not wind them up until
it is Greenwich time as they now stand, and would
then compare them with our own.”
"Of course, sir,” Stephen
said, “I have bought these not for myself but
for the ship.”
“Not at all, Steve; you have
traded as you have a right to do, and the ship has
nothing to do with it. At the same time I don’t
know whether you will be able to keep or sell them.
I must give notice on our return home that such things
have been found here under circumstances that leave
no doubt that the crew of the ship to which they belonged
have been massacred, and the ship herself burned.
No doubt owners of vessels that have been missing
will call at the office to inspect the chronometers.
I do not say that anyone would have a legal right
to them; they have been absolutely lost and gone out
of their possession, and you have bought them in the
way of fair trade.”
“If they wish to have them back
again, sir, of course I will give them up.”
“Well, at any rate, if you did
so, lad, you would get a reward proportionate to their
value. However, they may never be claimed.
Owners whose ships are missing, and who have received
the insurance money, are not likely to trouble themselves
further in the matter.”
“This is not all I have, sir,”
Stephen went on. “I also got this gold
watch and this bag of money. I suppose the chest
belonged to the captain, and that he carried this
gold with him for the purchase of stores.”
“You are a lucky fellow, Steve.
Come down into my cabin and we will count the money.
Two hundred guineas,” he went on, when they had
finished; “well, that is about the best bit
of trade that I have seen done; you had better hand
this over to me to keep.”
“Oh, I don’t mean it to
be kept, sir,” Stephen said; “it would
not be fair at all. I would not think of it.
It is like prize-money, and ought to be divided in
the same way. I don’t mind keeping the gold
watch just now, but if we find out the name of the
ship when we get back to England, I should wish to
send it to the widow of the captain, and the money
too, if it belonged to him.”
“There is no chance whatever
of that, lad. No captain would be fool enough
to bring out a lot of gold like that on his own account.
It was certainly ship’s money that he would
hold for making advances to the crew; as for the purchase
of stores, he would pay for them by bills on the owner.
But still, you are no doubt right about the watch,
and the poor fellow’s widow would, doubtless,
be glad to have it; as to the gold, I will take charge
of it for the present. We will talk the matter
over again later on; there is no occasion to come
to any decision about it. At present it is entirely
yours. I don’t think that you have any right
to give up a sum of money like this without, at any
rate, very careful consideration. It is a sum
that, divided up into shares, would give but a very
small amount to each on board, while it might be of
the most material service to you some day or other.
But please oblige me by saying nothing whatever about
it at present. Whatever decision is arrived at
in matters of this sort, somebody is sure to feel
aggrieved, and it is astonishing what little things
upset a crew, especially on a voyage of this kind,
where there is no such controlling influence over
the men’s minds as that exercised by touching
at ports where there are authorities to whom, in case
of necessity, the captain can appeal.”
“Very well, sir, I will, of
course, do as you wish. Shall I say anything
about the watch?”
“Yes; there is no objection
to your doing that, especially as that must be mentioned
in any inquiries we may make as to any ship being missing,
and there is no need for any secrecy about it.
I shall also mention the money to the officers; they
will appreciate the offer that you have made, and
agree with me, I am sure, that it will be better that
nothing should be said to the crew.”
That evening the first mate said to
Stephen: “The captain has been telling
us about that bag of money you got hold of, Steve,
and we all think that your offer to treat it as if
it were prize-money is a very kind one, but we agree
with him that it would be a mistake. In the first
place, the money wouldn’t go far. In any
matter of that sort the ship, that is to say the owners,
take a large share to begin with, the officers take
some shares, and the men’s shares would not
come to a pound a head. A pound a head would
only suffice for them to have a drunken spree on shore,
but they are just as well without that, and, as the
captain says, it is astonishing what little things
upset sailors’ minds. They might take it
into their head that as you got two hundred pounds
in that hut there might be a lot more, and they would
be wanting to land and to turn the village upside
down, and there would be bloodshed and all sorts of
trouble. The old saying, ‘Least said, soonest
mended’, comes in here strongly. We have,
so far, got on very well with the natives this voyage,
and I hope that we shall continue to do so to the
end. I quite allow that we should all of us be
glad to give a sharp lesson to that village ashore.
They have been plundering, and I have no doubt murdering,
the crew of some ship. Still, we have no evidence
of that, and we can’t attack the village on mere
supposition. They have been friendly enough with
us, partly because we have been here before, and the
captain gets on well with them, but more because they
are perfectly well aware that we are always on guard,
and that there is no chance whatever of their catching
us asleep. In nine cases out of ten it is the
carelessness and over-confidence of sailors that tempt
the natives to take advantage of it; they would never
have shown you these things if they had had any idea
of attacking us.”
Next morning the operation of filling
up the water-tanks was completed, and at noon the
orders were given to weigh anchor. Steve saw how
rightly the captain had foreseen what was likely to
happen, for no sooner was the order given than two
of the men came aft as a deputation from the crew.
“What is it, lads?” he asked.
“Well, captain, the boat’s
crew that went ashore yesterday came off with a lot
of togs that must, in course, have been taken from
some seaman’s chest. Now, it seems to us
as that chest could not have been there by fair means,
and that, like enough, they had been murdering and
looting some vessel here; and, for aught we know,
the place may be full of plunder of some sort or another,
and that, may be, there are twenty or thirty other
seamen’s chests there, and other goods.
It seems to us, sir, that these chaps ought to be
punished, and that we should try to get as much of
the plunder they have got hidden as we can; therefore,
the crew beg that you will sanction our going ashore
and tackling them.”
“No, lads, I can’t sanction
that,” the captain said. “It is true
that Mr. Embleton was offered by one of their chiefs
some chronometers and the contents of a sea-chest.
He bought the chronometers, and he also bought the
contents of the chest and divided them among the men
who went ashore. The chief made signs to him
that these things had been saved from a ship that
had been wrecked, and it is possible that it may be
so. It may not have been wrecked on this island,
and those things may have been the share of one of
the canoes from here that assisted in looting her;
at any rate, we have no proof that the vessel was
boarded and captured. If it had been done here,
I think we should have seen more signs of it among
the natives who have come out to the ship or on shore.
There would have been more trade goods about-handkerchiefs,
and beads, and so on, and they would not have been
anxious to trade with us. At any rate, there are
no grounds for attacking a village that has, during
the last three or four days, traded peacefully with
us, as they have done on several different occasions
when I have put in here. Even if there were no
other reason, I should refuse to allow them to be
attacked, because the news of the affair would spread
from island to island, and next time we were in these
seas we should do no trade, and should certainly be
attacked if we gave them a chance. Of course
I shall report the circumstances connected with the
discovery of this chest at Calcutta, and endeavour
to find out what ship has been lately missing; beyond
that we can do nothing in the matter. We are
traders; if we are attacked we do our best to beat
off the assailants, but it would be altogether beyond
our business to attack sea-side villages because we
find that they are in the possession of ships’
goods, for were we to do so we should soon put an
end to all trade in these islands. Go back and
tell your comrades this, and then muster at once and
heave the cable short.”
The orders were obeyed, but it was
evident that there was a lack of the usual briskness
and willingness. However, before the ship had
been many hours on her way, matters settled down and
the work went on as usual.
“You see, lad,” the first
officer said to Stephen as the sails were sheeted
home, and the Tiger glided away from her anchorage,
“the captain was quite right, and if it had
been known on the ship that you had got that money,
there would have been a good deal more trouble than
there was. It would have been no good to tell
them that, no doubt, it was the ship’s money.
Sailors are like children; they would have argued that
if you could obtain two hundred pounds from one hut,
they would each be likely to get as much in a general
loot of the village. You see, giving them those
togs you bought was enough to stir them up, and things
would not have passed off so pleasantly had they known
about the money.
“I do not say that there would
have been a mutiny, or anything of that sort, because
the great majority of them have sailed for years under
the skipper; still, there would have been great discontent
and grumbling, and if there happened to be among the
new hands one or two sea-lawyers, they might have
worked upon the men, and caused a great deal of trouble.”
“I see that, sir,” Steve said.
“Well, there is no harm done,
lad, and you will see that in a day or two the matter
will have been forgotten. But it is a lesson that
you may profit by; it is always best to avoid anything
that, even remotely, is likely to set sailors talking
together. All crews are not as trustworthy as
the Tiger’s, and you would be astonished
what mischief two or three cunning plausible rascals
can do among a crew, if they have got ever so small
a grievance to work upon.”
A week later the ship was passing
along the coast of a small island when Joyce, the
eldest apprentice, who was examining the shore through
a glass, said to the second officer:
“There is a wreck of some sort,
sir, in among those black rocks.”
“So there is,” the mate
said, shading his eyes with his hand. “I
see it plainly enough now that you call my attention
to it.”
He went aft and reported it to the
captain, who came out and examined it carefully with
his glass.
“It is a wreck certainly, and
not the work of the natives this time,” he said.
“She has been blown on shore and left almost
high and dry; her spars are all gone, the bulwarks
are swept away, and though I cannot see the line of
her broadside, I fancy that she has broken in two.
Anyhow, as we have hardly steerage way, we shall lose
no time by sending to find out what ship she is.
Mr. Towel, you might as well lower the gig. Take
six men; let them all take muskets and pistols with
them. As Mr. Joyce was the first to make her
out he may as well go with you. If you see no
signs of natives, you can land and ascertain whether
she has been plundered. It may be that she has
not been discovered yet by the natives. If you
see any of them about, content yourself with getting
the ship’s name and port from her stern.”
The boat was lowered.
“You may go too, Steve,”
he added as Stephen was looking down into the boat.
“It is Mr. Archer’s turn; but as he
had got a touch of fever this morning, he is better
sitting under the shade of that sail than in an open
boat.”
“Thank you very much, sir,”
Stephen said, and, running below, shoved his pistols
into his pocket.
“You have got water in the boat?”
the captain asked the mate just as Steve returned
on deck.
“The keg is about half-full,
sir,” he said as one of the sailors lifted and
shook it.
“Hand them another down from
the long-boat,” the captain said, turning to
one of the men; “it is better always to make
sure. Mr. Towel,” he went on, leaning over
the side, “one is never sure of the weather for
an hour, and I don’t altogether like the colour
of the sky now. But if there are no signs of
change aloft, and you see the natives have not been
near the place, give a look round beyond the rocks
for anything that might show whether some of the crew
got ashore-fires made, or anything of that
sort. Should you see signs, we will fire a gun
or two when you return, and lay off for a few hours
to give them a chance of coming down to the beach.”
“Ay, ay, sir,” the mate
said, “I will take a look round for them; but
from the way she has been thrown up I should doubt
whether there is the slightest chance of anyone having
got ashore.”
The captain nodded, then the mate
gave the word, and the boat pushed off from the ship.
Four men rowed, two sat in the bow, Mr. Towel and the
two apprentices sat aft. They were some three
miles from shore. There was a ripple on the water,
but the wind was very light. There was, however,
a ground-swell that had caused the Tiger to
roll, but which was scarcely perceptible in the boat.
Steve remarked on this.
“No,” the mate said, “these
long swells do not affect a boat in the least.
I have often gone ashore on the west coast of Africa,
when one was scarcely conscious in the boat of there
being any swell on at all, and yet the vessels at
anchor outside were rolling almost gunwale under.
Still, I would rather that we had not got it, it is
a sign that there is wind somewhere, and I agree with
the skipper that it is an unnatural-looking sky.
Still, it may be hours yet before there is any change.”
Half an hour’s rowing took them
to shore. “She could not have picked out
a worse place, lads,” the mate said when they
approached the wreck. “You see there are
black heads sticking out of the water all round, and
it must have been a tremendous sea to have carried
that ship right through them and chucked her up there
where there are not two feet of water.”
“The Lady Vernon, London,”
Joyce exclaimed at this moment, “I can make
out her name plainly.”
“Then your eyes are better than
mine, Joyce, for I can’t say I can read it yet.
Row easy, men, and you in the bow keep a sharp look-out
on the water. If we were to come bow-on to a
hidden rock we should have to wait ashore until another
boat came out to fetch us.”
Rowing very gently the boat kept on
her course until within half a length of the ship,
then she ran quietly up on a flat rock some seven or
eight inches under water. They could see now
that the captain’s conjecture was correct.
The ship had broken her back, having, as she was carried
in on the crest of a great wave, dropped on a sharp
ledge of rocks about amidships. The sea had rushed
in through the hole in her side, and had torn away
all her planking and most of her timbers forward, while
the after part of the ship had held together.
The hold, however, was gutted of its contents.
“The natives have not been here
since,” Steve said as he pointed ahead where,
apparently far out of reach of the water, lay a quantity
of wreckage, splinters of planks, bits of timber,
bales of goods, and a great litter of loose cargo.
“It is of no use climbing up
above,” the mate said in answer to an offer
on Joyce’s part to endeavour to reach the deck.
“The waves, you see, have rushed in through
the stern windows, and have made a clean sweep of
everything. Half the deck has burst up and gone.
We will have a look at the things on shore. Step
out, lads, and pull the boat a bit higher up.”
This was done, and they waded through
the water knee-deep to shore. The wreckage lay
a hundred yards further up, on ground quite twenty
feet higher than that on which they were standing.
The bales were all marked with the ship’s name.
There were no signs of casks or boxes, these had doubtless
been smashed into splinters. Among the wreckage
five skeletons were found. They searched further
inland, but could discover no sign whatever of life
between the shore and a dense forest that began four
or five hundred yards away.
“It is certain that no one has
escaped,” the mate said. “In the first
place, no living creature could have ever gained his
feet if cast up by such a sea as that must have been.
The first wave that struck her after she was thrown
up there must have swept the decks clean and finished
them all at one blow. In the next place, if by
a miracle any of them did get safely ashore, you may
be sure that they would have buried their comrades
the next morning. You see, it is sand up there
where the wreckage lies, and it would not have taken
long to scrape a hole deep enough and large enough
to bury them. Ah! the captain is getting impatient,”
he exclaimed, as the sound of a gun came across the
water. “No wonder,” he went on as
he looked at the sky.
They had been about an hour on shore,
and had been so fully occupied in examining the wreckage,
and in looking for some signs that might tell them
if any of the crew had gained the shore, that they
had paid no attention whatever to the weather.
A great change had taken place since they had left
the ship. The wind had entirely died away, and
a darkness had crept over the sky; it was not a cloud,
but a sort of dull vapour.
“Quick, lads, to the boat,”
the mate said, “there is not a moment to be
lost. There is a storm brewing, and the sooner
we are on board the better.”
They ran through the water, got into
the boat, and pushed her off.
“Be careful, men; paddle quietly
until we are well beyond the rocks. Keep a sharp
look out forward.” Another gun was fired
from the ship as he spoke. “Steady, men,
steady!” he said; “you can row as hard
as you like when we get outside, but it is of no use
knocking a hole in her to start with.”
As soon as they were beyond the rocks
they bent to the oars. At the mate’s orders,
the two apprentices and the sailors in the bow took
their seats by the rowers and double-banked the oars.
“The skipper is getting every
rag of sail off her,” the mate said, as he looked
ahead. “There is another gun! It is
getting darker and darker, I don’t suppose they
can make us out. Give way, lads.”
The gloom deepened rapidly. The
ship continued to fire guns every minute or two, and
it was well she did so, for the mate had now lost sight
of her.
“Which way do you think it will
come, sir?” Stephen, who was at the stroke-oar,
asked.
The mate shook his head. “There
is no knowing,” he said. “If it is
inshore, the Tiger will lay her bones by that
wreck behind us. We can’t be above a mile
away from her by the sound of that last gun. But
it will be a close thing, I can hear the wind coming.”
Even those rowing were conscious of a low moaning
sound.
“It comes from behind I think,”
the mate said in answer to a look from Stephen.
Suddenly a puff of wind from behind rippled the water
round them and then died away again. “Row,
lads,” the mate exclaimed, “I can see the
ship now, she is not half a mile away; five minutes
will do it.”
The men strained at the oars and the
boat sprang forward at every stroke. They could
hear the moaning sound growing louder and louder.
“The captain has got her head
off shore,” the mate said; “he has been
towing her round. They have just hoisted the boat
up. He has got the little storm-jib on her.
Now, lads, another four or five hundred yards and
we shall be alongside.”
It was a race with the storm, but
the odds were too great. They were but a hundred
yards from the ship when the roar rose into a wild
scream, and a line of white water sprang towards them
with fearful velocity.
“In oars, men!” the mate
shouted. “Throw yourselves flat in the bottom
of the boat,-quick!”
The order was executed almost as soon
as given. The mate, too, slipped off his seat
on to the floor-board, while still retaining hold of
the tiller. The next moment the storm struck
them. It was well that the boat was still flying
through the water with the way full on her; had she
been lying motionless she would probably have sunk
like a stone under the force of the blow. As
it was she leapt forward like a horse under a spur.
They passed but half a length or so from the ship.
The latter had not yet gathered way, but lay pressed
down until her bow was well-nigh level with the water.
As the mate looked up he saw the captain holding on
by the shrouds. Each waved a hand and then the
boat flew on, and in a minute the ship was out of
sight. The mate shouted in the ear of the sailor
who rowed the stroke-oar and who was lying next to
him:
“Crawl forward and try and fix
the floor-board there, so as to show a few inches
above the bow to act as a head-sail. If she broaches
to, it is all up with us. As you go along tell
each man to shift himself a bit more aft. Her
stern must be well down or I can never keep her straight.
If you can’t fix the floor-board, get up the
mast; tie up the foresail in a roll, and then hoist
it, that will give hold enough to the wind.”
The man nodded and made his way forward;
he endeavoured to carry out the first part of his
orders, but the moment he raised the floor-board above
the level of the gunwale it was wrenched from his hands
and blown ahead. With the aid of two other men
he managed to step the mast. The mate waved his
hand to him to say that that would do for the present.
The man, however, prepared the sail ready for hoisting,
rolling it up tightly and winding a cord round and
round it; then he hooked the head on to the traveller
on the mast, and lay down at its foot, holding the
halliard in readiness to hoist it. The water
was still perfectly smooth, and the boat flew straight
before the wind without any tendency to broach to.
Stephen, after the stroke-oar had gone forward, crept
aft until he was beside the mate, and there lay for
a time, feeling half-stupefied by the tremendous roar
of the cyclone.
Captain Pinder was, as every good
officer should be, most particular about his boats,
and always had them built specially from his own design.
They were broader than usual, and had a flat floor
and a deep keel, thus they were extremely buoyant,
their lines resembling those of the surf-boats on
the west coasts of India and Africa, while their deep
keels enabled them to sail close to the wind.
The men chafed sometimes when, on their way to shore,
they found themselves passed by the narrow boats of
other ships; but the captain was perfectly indifferent
to this, and used to say to other skippers who laughed
at him for what they called his “walnut shells”:
“A boat is not made for racing;
she is made to carry her crew in a heavy sea.
My boats will live where yours would be swamped in
five minutes, and with their great beam they will
carry all sail, while you would not dare show a shred
of canvas. It makes no difference to me whether
I get to shore five minutes earlier or later; properly
handled, the smallest of my boats ought to weather
any ordinary gale, while the long-boat would be as
safe to cross the Atlantic in as the Tiger herself,
though I don’t say that she would be as comfortable.”
The crew, every one of whom had many
a time grumbled at the contrast between their beamy
craft and the smart gigs of most other ships, now felt
the advantage. The boat sped lightly along, raising
her head higher and higher out of the water whenever
a fresh blast of wind added to her speed, and, save
for the sound of the rushing water against the sides,
might have been at rest, for any motion that could
be perceived. In half an hour the sea began to
get up; as soon as it did so the mate made a signal
to the man at the halliards, and the sail was drawn
up. Tightly as it was rolled, the difference
was at once perceptible, and the boat flew along faster
than before. The men were now sitting up in the
bottom of the boat; they knew that the battle with
the storm had as yet scarcely begun, and that when
the sea once got up they would have a terrible time
of it. In an ordinary ship’s-boat the prospect
would have been absolutely hopeless; but the Norwegian
pilot-boats-whose model the captain had
pretty closely followed-are able successfully
to ride out the heaviest gale in the North Sea, and
the mate and the two apprentices, the latter of whom
had often heard from Captain Pinder, with whom the
matter was a pet hobby, of the wonderful power of
these craft in a gale, entertained a strong hope that
she would live through whatever might come. As
the sea rose, a small portion of the foresail was
loosed, then more was freed, until the whole of the
little sail was drawing, and the speed with which it
dragged the boat along saved her from being swamped
by the following waves. But in another hour the
water no longer ran in waves, it was broken up in a
confused and tumultuous sea; the greater part of the
sail was again bound up, for there was no longer the
same risk of being swamped, and it was necessary to
moderate the boat’s speed in such a tumult of
water.
“What makes it like this?” Stephen shouted.
“The circular motion of the
wind,” the mate replied in a similar tone of
voice. “I dare say we have made two or three
circles already.”
“There is a compass in the locker behind you,
sir.”
The mate nodded.
“That may be useful when the
storm is over, but would not help us now, and might
get broken.”
That Stephen could quite understand,
for the motions of the boat were so sudden and unexpected
that the crew often grasped at the thwarts and gunwale,
fearing they would be thrown right out of her.
At one moment a wave seemed to rise underneath her,
and almost chuck her into the air, then she would
sink between two masses of water, that looked as if
they would tumble over and fill her, then she would
dash head-forward at a wave that rose suddenly in
front of her. For a time it seemed to all on board
as if her destruction was imminent, but as the buoyant
little craft struggled bravely on,-shipping
no more water than one man with the bailer could free
her of as fast as it came aboard, in the shape of spray,-they
began to breathe again more freely.
It was now nine hours since the gale
had burst upon them, and there were no signs of an
abatement, when, as they were on the top of a wave,
the mate shouted:
“There are breakers ahead.”
Every head was lifted, and when the
boat rose again on a wave they could see a line of
white foam ahead of them as far on either side as the
eye could see through the mist.
“Keep a look-out for a break
in the line, Wilcox,” the mate shouted.
The man forward waved his hand, and,
holding to the mast, stood up. A minute later
he turned and shouted something to the man next to
him, and the message was passed from mouth to mouth
to the mate.
“It is not a reef, sir; it is a low sandy coast.”
“Take your places on the thwarts,”
the mate shouted, “and get your oars out.”
The men did so. Then, in a momentary
lull in the blast, the officer said:
“Get ready to pull for your
lives when I give the word. Our only chance is
to go in on the top of a wave. The instant we
touch the ground and she loses her way, jump out and
stick your heels in the sand.”
They approached the edge of the surf rapidly.
“Stick your oars in deep and check her way,”
the mate shouted.
He stood up in the boat when they
were within fifty yards of the point where the waves
curled over and fell with a roar like thunder on the
beach. Two or three waves passed under her, then
he saw one of greater height approaching.
“Row, lads! row for your lives!”
The wind helping them, they flew forward.
The wave rose higher and higher behind them-it
looked almost as steep as a wall-and an
involuntary cry broke from several of the men as the
boat’s stern rose up it.
“Row! row!” the mate shouted.
But six strokes were pulled and then
the wave fell over with a crash, and in a moment they
were shooting along with the speed of an arrow in the
midst of a mass of seething foam.
“Get ready to jump!” the mate shouted.
His voice was lost, but the action
which accompanied it was understood. They were
flying up a steep slope, when suddenly the motion became
slower, then there was a bump.
“Hold to her, lads, if you can; every man spring
overboard.”
For a moment they seemed drawn backwards
by the rush of the water, then the boat became fixed,
and a moment later the water left them.
“Now, all together before the next wave reaches
her.”
With a united effort they lifted and
ran the boat her own length further up. The next
wave barely reached the boat’s stern. Before
another came she was well up on the sand. Then
the mate pointed upwards. The roar of the surf
and the howl of the wind would have drowned any words,
but his gesture was sufficient. Most of the men
had, like their officer, lost their hats, but those
who had not done so took them off. Several of
them, including Stephen and Joyce, threw themselves
on their knees, the others stood with bent heads,
and all uttered a fervent thanksgiving for their preservation
from what had seemed almost certain death. The
mate was the first to move. He went to the side
of the boat, and began to take double handfuls of
sand, and to throw them into her. The others looked
at him in surprise, but he made signs that the wind
might lift the boat up, whirl her round, and dash
her to pieces; then all set to at the work, which they
continued until the boat was half-full of sand.
Then the two barrels of water were carried up, together
with a bag of biscuits and a bottle of rum from the
locker, where a supply was always kept in case of an
emergency like the present. They went on beyond
the brow of the sand-hill, and ensconced themselves
in a hollow at its foot, where they were completely
sheltered from the wind. The mate got out his
jack-knife, and managed to get the cork out of the
bottle, and pouring water from one of the breakers
into a tin pannikin that formed part of the boat’s
equipment, gave a ration of grog to each, and served
out a biscuit all round.
As soon as these were eaten and the
grog drank, they threw themselves on the sand and
were soon fast asleep, utterly worn out with the prolonged
strain they had gone through.
When they woke, day was just breaking.
The mate was the first to leap to his feet.
“Tumble up, lads,” he
said, “we must have had twelve hours’ sleep.
The storm is over.”
All were soon at the top of the sand-hill.
A heavy sea was still breaking on the sands, but there
was scarce a breath of wind, and the sea, though rough
and agitated, was no longer covered with white heads,
and looked bright in the rosy light. The boat
lay where they had left it, securely anchored by the
weight of the sand it contained. Their next glance
was inland. For a quarter of a mile away the
sand covered everything, then a few bushes rose from
it; beyond were some stunted trees, and a hundred
yards further a thick forest bordered the sandy belt
as far as they could see on either hand. It was
evidently a large island, for two or three miles away
the country rose hill beyond hill, culminating in a
jagged mountain dome twenty miles distant.
“Do you know where we are, sir?”
Stephen asked, as the mate stood silently looking
at the peak.
“No, I wish I did. I have
either never seen that hill before, or, if I have,
it has been from some other side that gave it quite
a different outline. You see, we were nine hours
in the gale, and during that time I fancy we must
have run nearly a hundred miles; but I do not suppose
we are half that distance from the point where we
started, for we are sure to have gone round and round
several times in the first hour or two. The island
we were at, was some fifty or sixty miles from the
coast of Sumatra, and possibly it is there that we
have been cast ashore; but, on the other hand, we
may have gone quite in another direction. Anyhow,
there is no denying that we are in an awkward fix.
It matters little enough which of the islands we have
hit upon, the natives are all pirates and scoundrels,
and the possession they prize most is a human head.
The first thing to do, lads, is to draw the charges
from our muskets and pistols and to reload them, then
we will have a consultation.”
This was done, and then they went down to the boat.
“I half expected it,”
the mate went on, after examining her; “the shock
has started the butts of three planks on one side,
and two on the other. We will get the sand out
first and turn her over, bottom upwards.”
This was done.
“I think we might make a shift
to cobble it up,” the mate said. “Some
of the wood here is as hard as iron, and we might
cut some pegs and fasten the planks into their place
again. I don’t suppose we shall be able
to make them watertight, but we might caulk them up
with pitch or gum from some of the trees. But
that is not the first thing to think of; it is no
use having a boat if we have not food or water to put
into her. These biscuits would last us two or
three days, and the water, if we are careful, as long
again, but that is not enough to start with on a long
cruise. The place we have to make for is Timor.
Do you think that you could find your way there, Steve,
and how far is it?”
“I was looking at the chart
the last day I was on board, sir, and I noticed that
Timor lay to the south of where we were then, and I
should say it was something like six or seven hundred
miles away.”
“Well, it is of no use starting
on such an expedition as that with such a stock of
provisions as ours, so I propose that, in the first
place, we see what is to be found in the forest.
It will be hard if we do not find a supply of fruit.
If we can collect a store enough we might venture upon
making a start. You see, we must keep well off
the land, for if we were made out from any of the
coast villages, we should have one of their craft
after us in no time; but, in any case, I should say
we had better stay here for a week. If the Tiger
got safely through that gale, you may be sure the
captain will be cruising about looking for us.
He has sufficient faith in his boats to feel pretty
positive that if we have not been cast ashore we are
still afloat.”