Typhoon eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 116 pages of information about Typhoon.

Typhoon eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 116 pages of information about Typhoon.

He threw himself into the attitude of a lunging fencer, to reach after his oilskin coat; and afterwards he staggered all over the confined space while he jerked himself into it.  Very grave, straddling his legs far apart, and stretching his neck, he started to tie deliberately the strings of his sou’-wester under his chin, with thick fingers that trembled slightly.  He went through all the movements of a woman putting on her bonnet before a glass, with a strained, listening attention, as though he had expected every moment to hear the shout of his name in the confused clamour that had suddenly beset his ship.  Its increase filled his ears while he was getting ready to go out and confront whatever it might mean.  It was tumultuous and very loud—­made up of the rush of the wind, the crashes of the sea, with that prolonged deep vibration of the air, like the roll of an immense and remote drum beating the charge of the gale.

He stood for a moment in the light of the lamp, thick, clumsy, shapeless in his panoply of combat, vigilant and red-faced.

“There’s a lot of weight in this,” he muttered.

As soon as he attempted to open the door the wind caught it.  Clinging to the handle, he was dragged out over the doorstep, and at once found himself engaged with the wind in a sort of personal scuffle whose object was the shutting of that door.  At the last moment a tongue of air scurried in and licked out the flame of the lamp.

Ahead of the ship he perceived a great darkness lying upon a multitude of white flashes; on the starboard beam a few amazing stars drooped, dim and fitful, above an immense waste of broken seas, as if seen through a mad drift of smoke.

On the bridge a knot of men, indistinct and toiling, were making great efforts in the light of the wheelhouse windows that shone mistily on their heads and backs.  Suddenly darkness closed upon one pane, then on another.  The voices of the lost group reached him after the manner of men’s voices in a gale, in shreds and fragments of forlorn shouting snatched past the ear.  All at once Jukes appeared at his side, yelling, with his head down.

“Watch—­put in—­wheelhouse shutters—­glass—­afraid—­blow in.”

Jukes heard his commander upbraiding.

“This—­come—­anything—­warning—­call me.”

He tried to explain, with the uproar pressing on his lips.

“Light air—­remained—­bridge—­sudden—­north-east—­could turn—­thought—­you—­sure—­hear.”

They had gained the shelter of the weather-cloth, and could converse with raised voices, as people quarrel.

“I got the hands along to cover up all the ventilators.  Good job I had remained on deck.  I didn’t think you would be asleep, and so . . .  What did you say, sir?  What?”

“Nothing,” cried Captain MacWhirr.  “I said—­all right.”

“By all the powers!  We’ve got it this time,” observed Jukes in a howl.

“You haven’t altered her course?” inquired Captain MacWhirr, straining his voice.

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Project Gutenberg
Typhoon from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.