Whilst the chief mate, aided by the
now willing crew, ran aft the hose and set to work
to flood the trade-room, Latour the steward, a smart
little Frenchman, taking a man with him, jumped below
and knocked loudly at the door of Tessa’s cabin,
which was the foremost but one of five on the starboard
side, the intervening one separating it from the trade-room.
There was no answer to his repeated cries and knocking.
Then he and the native sailor each tried to force
the door, but it defied their efforts, and then, as
they paused for a moment, they heard the crackling
sound of fire within a few feet of them.
The native seaman, a big, square-shouldered
Manhikian, looked around the main cabin for a second;
then he darted into the second mate’s cabin,
and returned with a carpenter’s broad axe.
One smashing blow with the back of the tool started
the lock, and a second sent the door flying open.
The lamp was burning brightly, but
both Tessa and Maoni were sunk in a heavy slumber,
and although Latour called loudly to them to arise,
they made no answer, though Tessa tried to sit up,
and her lips moved as she muttered incoherently, only
to fall back again with closed eyelids.
There was no time to lose. Latour
lifted Tessa out of her berth, and followed by the
native, who carried Maoni, they hurried up the companion-way,
and laid the two girls down upon the quarter-deck,
where Malua took charge of them.
For nearly ten minutes the mate and
crew worked hard to subdue the fire, and all might
have gone well had there been a sufficient head of
steam to keep the ship head to wind and the donkey-engine
going, but at the first alarm the drunken, cowardly
firemen had refused duty and tried to rush one of
the boats, and amidst the curses and blows which Carr
and Atkins were showering upon them another mighty
sea tumbled aboard for’ard, and the Motutapu
was half-smothered again.
Morrison crawled up exhaustedly on
the deck from the engine-room.
“It’s a case as far as
steaming goes, Mr. Atkins. I’m done up.
Send some one down into the stokehole for Mr. Studdert.
He dropped a minute ago. But if you’ll
give me a couple of your men I can keep the engines
going.”
“It’s no use, Morrison.
None of my men would go into the stokehole to work,
but they’ll bring Mr. Studdert up quick enough.
The ship is doomed, so don’t bother. We’ll
have to take to the boats.”
The Motutapu was indeed doomed,
for, despite the frantic efforts of Oliver and the
native crew, the fire had gained complete possession
of the saloon, though every opening on deck had been
battened down and all cabin ports had been closed.
Most fortunately, however, the fore part of the trade-room,
where the powder was stowed, had been thoroughly saturated,
and both Oliver and Atkins felt assured that no danger
need be apprehended from that source.
In a few minutes the engines ceased
to work, but the donkey-engine on deck, with its furnace
filled with cotton waste soaked in kerosene, kept
the hose going, and sent a steady stream of water through
the hole cut in the after-deck. Meanwhile Harvey
and the second mate, aided by the energetic little
French steward, had made good progress with the boats,
all three of which were ready for lowering, and contained
some provisions and water. Such fore and aft
canvas as the steamer carried was set, so as to keep
her to the wind as much as possible, and help to steady
her. Then, seeing that the flames were bursting
through the sides of the saloon skylight, and that
the ship would scarcely answer her helm under such
miserable canvas, Oliver abandoned all hope of saving
her.
“All ready, sir?” replied Atkins.
And then before they could be stopped
the firemen made a rush for the best boat of the three,
a fine new whaler, hanging in davits just abaft the
bridge. Four of them jumped into her, the remaining
two cast off the falls, and began to lower away hastily.
“You cowardly dogs!” shouted
the second mate, rushing up to the nearest man, tearing
the after-fall out of his hands, and making it fast
again round the cleet, and then springing at the other
man, who paused irresolutely, intimidated by Atkin’s
threatening visage. But though he paused but
momentarily, it was fatal, for the instant the mate’s
back was turned the first man, with an oath of drunken
defiance, cast off the fall and let it go with a run,
just as the Motutapu was heaved up by a lofty
sea, and rolled heavily to port.
A cry of terror burst from the four
doomed men in the boat, as they fell headlong into
the sea, and she hung by the for’ard fall, straight
up and down.
“Let them drown!” roared
Atkins to some native seamen who sprang to his assistance,
“overboard two or three of you, and save the
boat. She’ll be smashed to matchwood in
a minute, the after-fall has unshipped;” then
whipping a knife from the belt of one of them he severed
the remaining fall, and saw the boat plunge down sternwards
and outwards from the side just in time; another half-minute
and she would have disappeared under the steamer’s
bottom to be hopelessly stove in. And with cries
of encouragement to each other, four natives leapt
over the side, swam after her, clambered in and then
shouted that they were all right, and would come alongside
and stand by, for although the oars and other fittings
had been lost, there were half a dozen canoe paddles
lashed under the thwarts, and these were quickly brought
into use.
All this happened in a few minutes,
and as Atkins ran to assist Harvey with the two quarter
boats which had been lowered, and were now standing
by alongside, there came a sudden crashing of glass,
as the flames in the saloon burst through the sides
of the skylight, and drove every one to the main deck.
“That settles the matter,”
said Oliver quietly to Harvey, as a sudden gust of
flame leapt from the lee side of the skylight, and
caught the fore and aft mainsail, which was quickly
destroyed; then the steamer at once fell off, and
the flames began to travel for’ard.
With all possible speed, but without
excitement, Tessa and Maoni, who were still under
the influence of the drugged coffee, and unable to
stand, or even utter a word, were placed in the first
boat, of which Atkins took charge for the time, with
four natives as a crew. The second quarter boat,
in which Hendry and Chard had been placed, then came
alongside, and the two surviving firemen, now thoroughly
cowed and trembling, and terrified into a mechanical
sobriety, were brought to the gangway and told to
jump.
“Jump, you rotten beggars, jump,”
said Morrison; “over you go into the water if
you want to save your useless lives. The men in
the boat will pick you up. We are not going to
risk bringing her alongside for the sake of swine
like you. Over you go,” and then seizing
one of them by the collar of his shirt and the belt,
he sent him flying over the side, the other man jumping
over to avoid rougher treatment from the native seamen,
who were disgusted at their cowardice. Then Morrison,
Studdert, and three natives followed, and the boat
pulled away clear of the ship, and stood by.
“Pull up, boys!” cried
Oliver to the men in the third boat the
one which the firemen had rushed. Then turning
to Latour, who was standing near him with a sack half
full of heavy articles firearms, ammunition,
the ship’s books, etc. he bade
him go first.
Disdaining to wait for the boat to
come alongside the little Frenchman sprang over the
side and swam to the boat; then the bag its
contents too precious to be wetted was
adroitly lowered and caught by one of the hands.
Jessop, the second steward, whose limbs were shaking
with terror, was told to jump, but pleaded that he
could not swim.
“You miserable hound!”
cried Oliver fiercely, and he raised his hand to strike
him; then a scornful pity took the place of anger,
and he ordered the boat to come alongside so that
he could get in.
“Now’s your chance, you
dirty little cur,” he said, as the boat’s
bow came within a foot of the steamer’s side.
The fear-stricken man jumped, fell
short, and in an instant disappeared under the ship,
as she rolled suddenly to starboard. When he came
to the surface again it was at the stern, with several
broken ribs, he having struck against the propeller.
He was, however, soon rescued and placed in safety,
and then but three natives and Harvey and Oliver remained
on board. The natives went first, the white men
quickly followed, and clambered into the boat, which
at once joined the two others, and then all three
lay to, and their occupants watched the Motutapu
drifting before the wind, with the red flames enveloping
her from stern to stem.
Ordering the other boats to remain
close to him until further orders, but to steer W.
by N. if anything should part them from him during
the night, Oliver and Harvey, as they watched the
burning steamer lighting up the heaving sea for miles
around, discussed their future plans, and quickly
resolved upon a certain course of action to be followed
in the morning.
Towards midnight the wind died away
entirely, and an hour later the heavy, lumpy sea changed
into a long, sweeping swell. A mile to leeward
the Motutafu still blazed fiercely, and sent
up vast volumes of smoke and flame from her forehold,
where some hundreds of cases of kerosene were stowed.
The three boats were pretty close
together, and Harvey, exhausted by the events of the
day, and knowing that Tessa was safe with the second
mate, was just dozing off into a “monkey’s
sleep” when he was awakened by a hail from Atkins.
“What’s the matter, Atkins?” cried
Oliver.
“We’re all right, sir;
but Miss Remington has just come to, and is asking
for Mr. Carr, so I said I’d hail you just to
show her that he is with you. Better let me come
alongside.”
Oliver looked at Harvey with something
like a smile in his eyes.
“All right, Atkins,” he
replied, and then to Harvey, “Here, wake up
young-fellow-my-lad, and get into the other boat with
your sweetheart. I don’t want you here.
What’s the use of you if you haven’t even
a bit of tobacco to give me?”
The second mate’s boat drew
alongside, and in another minute Harvey was seated
in the stern sheets with Tessa’s cheek against
his own, and her arms round his neck.
“Any of you fellows got any
tobacco, and a pipe to spare?” said the prosaic
Oliver. “If you haven’t, sheer off.”
“Lashings of everything,” said Atkins.
“Here you are: two pipes,
matches, bottle of Jimmy Hennessy, and some water
and biscuits. What more can you want? Who
wouldn’t sell a farm and go to sea?”