The doctor seized and pressed Steve’s
hand in silence as he hurried up on deck to struggle
aft to the captain, fully expecting that they were
going down. But he was invisible in the driving
snow. They made out somehow, though, that he
was on the bridge in company with the mate; and, unable
to reach and question him, they crept together right
aft to the wheel, where Steve found himself at Johannes’
feet.
The big Norseman did not wait to be
questioned. He knew why the lad had come, and,
bending down, he roared in his ear:
“Ice struck bows!”
That was all, and the man stood immovable once more
at his post.
“Come away!” cried the doctor. “We
have no business here.”
Closely as his lips were pressed to
Steve’s ear, the words were hardly heard; but
the movement he made was suggestive, and though he
longed to stay there by the big Norseman, he felt
that it was right, and he followed his companion,
stopping just under the bridge, and, unable to resist
the desire, he began to creep up the steps.
The wind pressure was fearful, and
everything he touched was coated with ice; but he
persevered till he could touch the captain’s
leg. In an instant he had stooped down to the
boy, to shout, as loudly as he could:
“Go down!”
It seemed hard to the boy, when the
touch only meant a desire to show that he was thinking
about the man so bravely facing the fierce storm;
but he obeyed, and, somehow or other, he hardly knew
how, reached the cabin, where the doctor, after several
tries, lit the lamp.
As the light shone out Steve stared
in wonder at his companion, and then around him at
what should have been the snugly furnished cabin.
Now all was changed; the white snow had penetrated
through door-cracks and the ventilator, covering everything.
But they could breathe and talk here
as they rubbed the snow from their faces and hair;
though their coats were like so much armour, and were
too stiff to bend.
“Awful, Steve, my boy!
Awful!” shouted the doctor. “What
a fearful storm!”
The noise increased just then, for
the door was quickly opened, but as quickly shut,
and a white figure stood before them; and for the moment
they thought it was the captain; then the icy helmet
upon the man’s head was with some difficulty
taken off, revealing the face of Mr Lowe, the mate.
“The captain says you are not
to run such a risk again, my lad. You can do
us no good, and it troubles him when he wants all his
energy to save the ship.”
“Then we are in great danger?” cried Steve.
“Yes, my lad, I think so,”
was the reply; “but the captain will save us
if it is to be done.”
“What was that awful crash?”
“Ice beneath our bows.
We have it all round now, and it is impossible to
avoid it. All we can do is to keep her head to
the wind, and drift. We can make no headway with
full steam on, and we dare not if we could.”
“But ”
“Can’t stop,” was
the reply; “going forward to the men;”
and the mate replaced his ice-laden cap and passed
out into the storm.
“The captain was thinking of
your safety, Steve, my lad; but we must think for
him and the crew. Exposure such as they are going
through is murderous. Let’s wait for a
bit, and then take them all some more hot drink.”
He led the way out of the whitened
cabin, and they struggled back through the driving
snow to the engine-room, down into whose warm glow
they crept just as there was another blow, which jarred
the whole ship. Then the gong sounded.
“Slower,” said the engineer,
as he moved the lever. “There, that’s
about as little as we can do. Just enough to
give her steering power.”
No more was said, and Steve looked
round, as he warmed his numbed hands, to see that
Watty was lying with his face in his hands, close to
the side.
“Asleep?” said Steve,
with his lips to the cook’s ear; but the man
shook his head.
“Fright!” he replied.
A few minutes later one of the Norwegians
and three of the crew came down all covered with ice,
and one of the furnace doors was opened to send out
a genial glow, lighting up the whole place, which was
now dripping wet with thawed snow, and the stream
rose up to float out through the hatch.
“Mate sent us down for a warm,”
said one of the men. “To stay half an
hour, and then relieve some more. We can do nothing
on deck.”
“Let’s leave them,”
said the doctor in Steve’s ear; and after warning
the cook to be ready with the refreshment in half an
hour, they made their way back to the cabin.
Those refreshments were not taken
to the men on deck, for in turn all were sent down
to the engine-room for warmth and food; and at last,
to Steve’s great delight, the captain entered
the cabin, to reply to the grips of the hand given
him, and then drink with avidity the hot coffee ready
on the table.
“I don’t like leaving
the deck,” he said cheerfully; “but I must
have coal and water for my engine, or I cannot work.
No, no, don’t question me; I have no news.
We are in an awful storm, and are being carried with
the drifting ice, Heaven only knows where.”
That storm lasted forty-eight hours hours
of as great trial as man could go through, and live.
Steve had borne up till, in spite of the danger,
his eyes would keep open no longer, and then he had
slept a troubled nightmare-like sleep to dream of
shipwreck and struggling with the wind and waves.
Every now and then he would start awake suffering
from cold, and draw the great skin rug in which he
had nestled closer round him, and drop off again into
what was almost a stupor.
There was one time, or else he dreamed
it he never quite knew which
when he crept all about the deck again, to find it
deeply encumbered with snow. Then he was back
in the cabin lying on a locker, and he opened his
eyes and saw the captain rolled up in a blanket lying
asleep on the table. The next minute he was
looking about again, to find that the captain had
gone, and that the doctor only was there. Once
it was Mr Lowe, but he, too, disappeared, and then
all was blank, till he started into wakefulness, to
find that the deafening rush and roar had ceased,
and that a peculiar weird light was forcing its way
into the cabin; while at intervals there came a curious
grinding, cracking sound, followed every now and then
by a loud, rending crash. The ship was rolling
slowly upon a heaving sea, and steaming slowly, for
the vibration of the screw made the things in the
cabin quiver. Then there was more light in the
cabin, for the door was opened with a crackling sound,
as of moving broken ice, and the captain, glistening
and white, entered the cabin.
“Awake, Steve?” he said in a low, weary
voice.
“Yes, I’m so ashamed. Then the storm
is over?”
“Yes, my lad,” said the
captain, sinking down on the locker with his great
oil-skin coat crackling loudly; “at last, thank
God!”
There was a deep, heartfelt ring in
Captain Marsham’s voice as he uttered those
words, and for some moments Steve was silent, conscious
now that the doctor was lying on the cabin floor sleeping
soundly.
“And we ought to have been on
deck to help you, sir,” said Steve at last.
“No, my lad, I sent word for
you to stay below; man or boy could not help us then.
We could only wait.”
“But we are safe?”
“For the present, yes.”
“And where are we?”
The captain smiled faintly.
“Where are we?” he said. “That’s
more than I can tell. In the ice,
Steve, and for aught I can tell, right up somewhere
toward the North
Pole.”