It was the first of November when
the Francis got off, and Captain Reefwell warned
his passengers that they might expect a rather rough
voyage, as they were sure to have a storm or two in
crossing at that time of year. Eric protested
that he would not mind; he was not afraid of a storm.
Indeed, he wanted to see one really good storm at
sea, such as he had often read about.
But he changed his tune when the Francis
began to pitch and toss in the chops of the English
Channel, and with pale face and piteous voice he asked
the major “if a real storm were worse than this.”
A few days later, however, when he got his sea-legs
all right, and the Francis was bowling merrily
over the broad Atlantic before a favouring breeze,
his courage came back to him, and he felt ready for
anything.
The Francis was not more than
a week out before the captain’s prediction began
to be fulfilled. One storm succeeded another
with but little rest between, the wind blowing from
all quarters in turn. Driven hither and thither
before it, the Francis struggled gallantly
toward her destination. So long as he was out
in mid-Atlantic Captain Reefwell seemed quite indifferent
to the boisterous weather. He told his passengers
that he was sorry for the many discomforts they were
forced to endure, but otherwise showed no concern.
He was a daring sailor, and had crossed the ocean
a score of times before. As they approached
the American side, however, and the storm still continued,
he grew very anxious, as his troubled countenance and
moody manner plainly showed. The truth was that
he had been driven out of his course, and had lost
his reckoning, owing to sun and stars alike having
been invisible for so many days. He had no clear
idea of his distance from the coast, and unless he
could soon secure a satisfactory observation the Francis
would be in a perilous plight.
The first of December was marked by
a storm more violent than any which had come before,
followed by a dense fog which swathed the ship in
appalling gloom. The captain evidently regarded
this fog as a very grave addition to his difficulties.
He hardly left the quarter-deck, and his face grew
haggard and his eyes bloodshot with being constantly
on the look-out. Realizing that a crisis was
at hand, and determined to know the worst, Major Maunsell
made bold to ask the captain to tell him the real
state of affairs. Captain Reefwell hesitated
for a moment, then muttering something about “might
as well out with it,” he laid his hand upon
the major’s shoulder, and looking straight into
his eyes, with a strange expression of sympathy, said
in his gravest tones,
“Major, it’s just this:
unless I’m clean lost, we must now be somewhere
near Sable Island. I’m expecting to hear
the roar of its breakers any minute, and once the
Francis gets amongst them, God help us all!
Sable Island makes sure work.” And he turned
away abruptly, as though to hide his feelings.
Captain Reefwell’s words sent
a shudder straight and swift through Major Maunsell’s
heart. The latter already knew of the bad reputation
of that strange island which scarcely lifts itself
above the level of the Atlantic, less than a hundred
miles due east from Nova Scotia. Stories that
chilled the blood had from time to time floated up
to Halifax stories of shipwreck following
fast upon shipwreck, and no one surviving to tell
the tale.
But even more appalling than the fury
of the storm that scourged the lonely island were
the deeds said to be done by monsters in human guise
who plied the wrecker’s trade there, and, acting
upon the principle that dead men tell no tales, had
made it their care to put out of the way all whom
even the cruel billows had spared.
With a heavy heart the major made
his way back to the cabin, where he found Eric, upon
whose bright spirits the long and stormy voyage had
told heavily, looking very unhappy as he tried to amuse
himself with a book. The boy was worn out by
the ceaseless pitching and tossing of the vessel.
He felt both home-sick and sea-sick, as indeed did
many another of the passengers, who with one accord
were wishing themselves safely upon land again.
He looked up eagerly as the major entered.
“What does the captain say,
major?” he asked, his big brown eyes open their
widest. “Will the storm soon be over, and
are we near Halifax?”
Concealing his true feelings, the
major replied with well-put-on cheerfulness,
“The captain says that if this
fog would only lift, and let him find out exactly
where we are, Eric, he would be all right. There
is nothing to do but to wait, and hope for the best.”
And sitting down beside Eric, he threw his arm about
him in a tender, protecting way that showed how strongly
he felt.
So intense was the anxiety on board
the Francis that none of the passengers thought
of going to their berths or taking off their clothes
that night, but all gathered in the cabins, finding
what cheer and comfort they could in one another’s
company.
In the main cabin were other officers
besides Major Maunsell namely, Captain
Sterling of the Fusiliers, Lieutenant Mercer
of the Royal Artillery, and Lieutenants Sutton, Roebuck,
and Moore of the 16th Light Dragoons; while in the
fore-cabin were household servants of the prince and
soldiers of the line, bringing the total number of
passengers up to two hundred.
During the night Captain Reefwell,
seeing that it was no longer any use to conceal the
seriousness of the situation, sent word to all on board
to prepare for the worst, as the ship might be among
the breakers at any moment. The poor passengers
hastened to gather their most precious possessions
into little bundles, and to prepare themselves for
the approaching struggle with death.
The night wore slowly on, the sturdy
brig straining and groaning as the billows made a
plaything of her, tossing her to and fro as though
she was no heavier than a chip, while the fierce storm
shrieked through the rigging in apparent glee at having
so rich a prize for the wreckers of Sable Island.
It was a brave band that awaited its
fate in the main cabin. The men were borne up
by the dauntless fortitude of the British soldier,
and, catching their spirit, Eric manifested a quiet
courage well worthy of the name he bore. He
had Prince with him now, for the captain had himself
suggested that he had better have the dog near at hand.
The noble creature seemed to have some glimmering
of their common peril, for he kept very close to his
young master, and every now and then laid his huge
head upon Eric’s knee and looked up into his
face with an expression that said as plainly as words,
“Nothing but death can ever
part us. You can depend upon me to the very
uttermost.”
And hugging him fondly, Eric answered,
“Dear old Prince! You’ll
help me if we are wrecked, won’t you?”
at which Prince wagged his tail responsively, and
did his best to lick his master’s face.
Now and then some one would creep
up on deck, and brave the fury of the blast for a
few moments, in hope of finding some sign of change
for the better; and on his return to the cabin the
others would eagerly scan his countenance and await
his words, only to be met with a sorrowful shake of
the head that rendered words unnecessary.
Eric alone found temporary forgetfulness
in sleep. He was very weary, and, though fully
alive to the danger so near at hand, could not keep
from falling into a fitful slumber, as he lay upon
the cushioned seat that encircled the cabin, Prince
stationing himself at his side and pillowing his head
in his lap.
Poor Prince was by no means so handsome
a creature now as when his good looks and good manners
won the captain’s heart. The long stormy
passage had been very hard upon him. He had grown
gaunt, and his smooth, shiny skin had become rough
and unkempt. Otherwise, however, he was not
much the worse, and was quite ready for active duty
if his services should be needed.
Awaking from a light sleep, in which
he dreamed that he and Prince were having a glorious
romp on the lawn at Oakdene, which somehow seemed to
be undulating in a very curious fashion, Eric caught
sight of Major Maunsell returning to the cabin after
a visit to the upper deck, and at once ran up to him
and plied him with eager questions.
“Is the storm getting any better,
and will it soon be daylight again?”
The major did his best to look cheerful
as he answered,
“Well, the storm is no worse,
Eric, at all events, and it will not be long before
daylight comes.”
“But even if we should be wrecked,”
said Eric, looking pleadingly into the major’s
face, “we might all get ashore all right, mightn’t
we? I’ve often read of shipwrecks in which
everybody was saved.”
“Certainly, my boy, certainly,”
replied the major promptly, although deep down in
his heart he seemed to hear Captain Reefwell’s
ominous words, “Sable Island makes sure work.”
“And, major,” continued
Eric, “I’m going to keep tight hold of
Prince’s collar if we do get wrecked.
He can swim ever so much better than I can, and he’ll
pull me ashore all right, won’t he?”
“That’s a capital idea
of yours, my boy,” said the major, smiling tenderly
upon him. “Keep tight hold of Prince, by
all means. You couldn’t have a better
life-preserver.”
“I don’t want to be wrecked,
that’s certain; but if we are, I’m very
glad I’ve got Prince here to help me the
dear old fellow that he is!” And so saying,
Eric threw himself down upon his dog and gave him a
hearty hug, which the mastiff evidently much enjoyed.
Day broke at last, if the slow changing of the thick
darkness into a dense gray fog could rightly be called
daybreak.
The Francis still bravely battled
with the tempest. She had proved herself a trusty
ship, and, with Captain Reefwell on the quarter-deck,
more than a match for the worst fury of wind and wave.
But no ship that ever has been or
ever will be built could possibly pass through the
ordeal of the Sable Island breakers, whose awful thunder
might at any moment be heard above the howling of the
blast. At breakfast-time the worn and weary passengers
gathered around the table for what would, in all probability,
be their last meal on board the Francis, and
perhaps their last on earth. The fare was not
very tempting, for what could the cooks do under such
circumstances? But the passengers felt no disposition
to complain. Indeed, they had little appetite
to eat, and were only making a pretence of doing so,
when a sailor burst into the cabin, his bronzed face
blanched with fear, as he shouted breathlessly,
“Captain says for all to come
up on deck. The ship will strike in a minute.”
Instantly there was wild confusion
and a mad rush for the companion-way; but Major Maunsell
waited to take Eric’s hand tightly into his
before pressing on with the others. When they
reached the deck an awful scene met their eyes.
The fog had lifted considerably, so that it was possible
to see some distance from the ship; and there, right
across her bows, not more than a quarter of a mile
away, a tremendous line of breakers stretched as far
as eye could see.
Straight into their midst the Francis
was helplessly driving at the bidding of the storm-fiend.
No possible way of escape! Not only did the
breakers extend to right and left until they were lost
in the shifting fog, but the nearest line was evidently
only an advance-guard; for beyond it other lines,
not less formidable, could be dimly descried, rearing
their snowy crests of foam as they rolled fiercely
onward.
“Heaven help us!” cried
Major Maunsell, as with one swift glance he took in
the whole situation; and drawing Eric close to him,
he made his way through the confusion to the foot
of the main-mast, which offered a secure hold for
the time being.
A few minutes later the Francis
struck the first bar with a shock that sent everybody
who had not something to hold on to tumbling upon
the deck. But for the major’s forethought,
both he and Eric might at that moment have been borne
off into the boiling surges; for a tremendous billow
rushed upon the helpless vessel, sweeping her from
stern to stem, and carrying away a number of the soldiers,
who, having nothing to hold on by, were picked up
like mere chips of wood and hurried to their doom.
Their wild cries for the help that could not be given
them pierced the ears of the others, who did not know
but that the next billow would treat them in like
manner.
Again and again was the ill-starred
ship thus swept by the billows, each time fresh victims
falling to their fell fury. Then came a wave
of surpassing size, which, lifting the Francis
as though she had been a mere feather, bore her over
the bar into the deeper water beyond. Here, after
threatening to go over upon her beam-ends, she righted
once more, and drove on toward the next bar.