登陆注册
15687800000064

第64章 CHAPTER XXVIII(3)

What happened next, what was done, I do not know, save that now and again I heard the Gabriel voice; for the darkness came, and the rain in pouring, horizontal sheets. It filled my mouth and strangled my lungs as if I had fallen overboard. It seemed to drive up as well as down, piercing its way under my sou'wester, through my oilskins, down my tight-buttoned collar, and into my sea-boots. I was dizzied, obfuscated, by all this onslaught of thunder, lightning, wind, blackness, and water. And yet the master, near to me, there on the poop, lived and moved serenely in all, voicing his wisdom and will to the wisps of creatures who obeyed and by their brute, puny strength pulled braces, slacked sheets, dragged courses, swung yards and lowered them, hauled on buntlines and clewlines, smoothed and gasketed the huge spreads of canvas.

How it happened I know not, but Miss West and I crouched together, clinging to the rail and to each other in the shelter of the thrumming weather-cloth. My arm was about her and fast to the railing; her shoulder pressed close against me, and by one hand she held tightly to the lapel of my oilskin.

An hour later we made our way across the poop to the chart-house, helping each other to maintain footing as the Elsinore plunged and bucked in the rising sea and was pressed over and down by the weight of wind on her few remaining set sails. The wind, which had lulled after the rain, had risen in recurrent gusts to storm violence. But all was well with the gallant ship. The crisis was past, and the ship lived, and we lived, and with streaming faces and bright eyes we looked at each other and laughed in the bright light of the chart-room.

"Who can blame one for loving the sea?" Miss West cried out exultantly, as she wrung the rain from her ropes of hair which had gone adrift in the turmoil. "And the men of the sea!" she cried.

"The masters of the sea! You saw my father . . . ""He is a king," I said.

"He is a king," she repeated after me.

And the Elsinore lifted on a cresting sea and flung down on her side, so that we were thrown together and brought up breathless against the wall.

I said good-night to her at the foot of the stairs, and as I passed the open door to the cabin I glanced in. There sat Captain West, whom I had thought still on deck. His storm-trappings were removed, his sea-boots replaced by slippers; and he leaned back in the big leather chair, eyes wide open, beholding visions in the curling smoke of a cigar against a background of wildly reeling cabin wall.

It was at eleven this morning that the Plate gave us a fiasco. Last night's was a real pampero--though a mild one. To-day's promised to be a far worse one, and then laughed at us as a proper cosmic joke.

The wind, during the night, had so eased that by nine in the morning we had all our topgallant-sails set. By ten we were rolling in a dead calm. By eleven the stuff began making up ominously in the south'ard.

The overcast sky closed down. Our lofty trucks seemed to scrape the cloud-zenith. The horizon drew in on us till it seemed scarcely half a mile away. The Elsinore was embayed in a tiny universe of mist and sea. The lightning played. Sky and horizon drew so close that the Elsinore seemed on the verge of being absorbed, sucked in by it, sucked up by it.

Then from zenith to horizon the sky was cracked with forked lightning, and the wet atmosphere turned to a horrid green. The rain, beginning gently, in dead calm, grew into a deluge of enormous streaming drops. It grew darker and darker, a green darkness, and in the cabin, although it was midday, Wada and the steward lighted lamps. The lightning came closer and closer, until the ship was enveloped in it. The green darkness was continually a-tremble with flame, through which broke greater illuminations of forked lightning.

These became more violent as the rain lessened, and, so absolutely were we centred in this electrical maelstrom, there was no connecting any chain or flash or fork of lightning with any particular thunder-clap. The atmosphere all about us paled and flamed. Such a crashing and smashing! We looked every moment for the Elsinore to be struck.

And never had I seen such colours in lightning. Although from moment to moment we were dazzled by the greater bolts, there persisted always a tremulous, pulsing lesser play of light, sometimes softly blue, at other times a thin purple that quivered on into a thousand shades of lavender.

And there was no wind. No wind came. Nothing happened. The Elsinore, naked-sparred, under only lower-topsails, with spanker and crojack furled, was prepared for anything. Her lower-topsails hung in limp emptiness from the yards, heavy with rain and flapping soggily when she rolled. The cloud mass thinned, the day brightened, the green blackness passed into gray twilight, the lightning eased, the thunder moved along away from us, and there was no wind. In half an hour the sun was shining, the thunder muttered intermittently along the horizon, and the Elsinore still rolled in a hush of air.

"You can't tell, sir," Mr. Pike growled to me. "Thirty years ago Iwas dismasted right here off the Plate in a clap of wind that come on just as that come on."It was the changing of the watches, and Mr. Mellaire, who had come on the poop to relieve the mate, stood beside me.

"One of the nastiest pieces of water in the world," he concurred.

"Eighteen years ago the Plate gave it to me--lost half our sticks, twenty hours on our beam-ends, cargo shifted, and foundered. I was two days in the boat before an English tramp picked us up. And none of the other boats ever was picked up.""The Elsinore behaved very well last night," I put in cheerily.

"Oh, hell, that wasn't nothing," Mr. Pike grumbled. "Wait till you see a real pampero. It's a dirty stretch hereabouts, and I, for one, 'll be glad when we get across It. I'd sooner have a dozen Cape Horn snorters than one of these. How about you, Mr. Mellaire?""Same here, sir," he answered. "Those sou'-westers are honest. You know what to expect. But here you never know. The best of ship-masters can get tripped up off the Plate.""'As I've found out . .

Beyond a doubt,"

Mr. Pike hummed from Newcomb's Celeste, as he went down the ladder.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 星辰君座

    星辰君座

    在这样一个特别的世界里,没有什么是不可以做的,只要你拥有想象力......
  • 阴山法籍之图腾宝藏

    阴山法籍之图腾宝藏

    茅山分支阴山派嫡系传人李明鑫在盗墓寻宝途中偶遇摸金校尉大龅牙、睡在棺中的神秘男子阿木,三人运用阴山法籍中的道术踏足中国大小古墓,从驱鬼镇邪到探秘寻奇无所不及,破解三门尸棺,燃阳焚阴,逆转阴阳位,将千古谜团将被一一揭开,神秘道术、阵法、符咒一展全长。喜欢本书的朋友,请加群566015312
  • 纯阳战帝

    纯阳战帝

    胜负由我不由天,争,天地有数,战,败吾不存!且看主角如何力压天下俊杰,成就武道至极之境。
  • 都市封魔

    都市封魔

    神话是真的吗?妖魔鬼怪真的存在吗?世界真有那不为人知的一面吗?
  • 弘光实录钞

    弘光实录钞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 最强王者之权势

    最强王者之权势

    这个世界上有许许多多的人,他们过目即逝、普普通通、貌似很高冷但却很平凡!但是在这许许多多的人中,有些人他拥有着别人无法触及的地位与权力,他们从出生的那一刻起便被推上高位,走向阴谋的最深处,接受着他们不愿意接受的事情,死亡?对他们来说只不过是个开始罢了!我不知道这个世界对我们隐瞒了什么,我不知道这个世界是不是在操纵着我们,我不知道这个世界已经欺骗了我们多少次,我更不知道这个所谓的世界到底是不是世界,或许,我也早已忘记,这个世界是不是还存在着,而我活着的意义,就是死去。——————————————这里是:笨蛋与不良与英雄!我还是:传说,那个男人!
  • 惊花传

    惊花传

    纪惊花是江湖第一庄庄主的掌上明珠,万千宠爱集于一身;宫冬雪是武林第一堡的掌门得意弟子,冷若冰霜,风姿特秀。命运注定的相遇,如若有机会选择想必惊花不会选择与宫冬雪有任何纠葛。新书已开坑,请多多支持。(你比星河灿烂)
  • 穿越之鬼才弃女

    穿越之鬼才弃女

    她,是21世纪神兽家族的天才,可是,因为家族神兽血液的过于强大,导致她最后崩溃了!没想到,她竟然没有死去,反而附身于七彩大陆的一个废材小姐身上,于是,她跟废材小姐做了一个交易,共用一具身体。他,是七彩大陆上的绝世天才,更是自己创造了一个门派,可是,他遇到了她,一个没心没肺的女人,经过相处,他爱上她,可他知道,她不爱他。废材小姐小时候天赋很好,不知道从什么时候起,她的天赋消失了,但她不在乎,她在乎的,是他,那个她爱的人,可是他却和别人一样远离她,她知道,他要的,是天才,不是她这样的“蠢材”。所以,她再也不要爱他了。
  • 帝姬太子妃

    帝姬太子妃

    穿越成帝姬,阴谋不离身。出使东陵,危险重重。变态太子,扬言要娶。笑话!看她如何扰乱这一滩黑水!纤纤玉手轻轻拨,看她宗政凰如何笑傲于世间。只是,谁能告诉她,这个穷追不舍的变态太子该怎么解决!
  • 魏晋南北朝诗歌变迁

    魏晋南北朝诗歌变迁

    诗,具有全人类的普世价值。诗,是人类心灵的深切呼唤。诗是一条流经人类每个角落永不枯竭的清清小河。诗是不受时空条件限制的。那是因为由诗所传达出的人的美好情感是不受时空条件限制的。诗,可以越过沧桑岁月,到达地老天荒。诗是整体意义上的美,是春风沉醉的美。诗是美的极致,因为诗具有巨大的艺术容量和广阔的想象空间。