Atlantis eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 434 pages of information about Atlantis.

Atlantis eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 434 pages of information about Atlantis.

“It may be called a cyclone,” said the timid little skipper of the sailing vessel.  “If it were striking us astern instead of ahead, it would not be so bad.  As it is, the Roland at the utmost cannot make more than three miles an hour.  Were I on my schooner and had the same storm blown up so suddenly, we should not have had time to furl a sail.  We should have been lost.  Thank the Lord, it is better on modern steamers.  Nevertheless, I feel more comfortable on my four-master, and the devil knows, I’d like to be on it now.”

Frederick could not help laughing.

“As for the Roland,” he said, “I would rather be, let us say, in the Hofbraeuhaus in Munich.  Your four-master has no greater charms for me than a cabin on the Roland.”

Hans Fuellenberg came lounging in and told them a wave had swept away one of the life-boats on the after quarter.  At the very same instant an arched mass of water came flying slantwise over the port bow.

“Oh!” everybody cried.

“Magnificent, beautiful,” said Frederick.

“That’s cyclonic,” the woman artist repeated.

“Believe me,” they heard the colonel say again, “the stretch from New York to Chicago alone”—­

“That was a Niagara Falls,” said Toussaint.

The wave, dropping into the ventilators and chimneys, had fairly bathed the vessel.  It was cold, too, and the Roland was continuing its obstinate, praiseworthy trip under a crust of ice and snow.  Icicles were hanging from the rigging.  Glassy stalactites formed about the chart-room and everywhere on the railings and edges of things.  The deck was slippery, and it was a perilous venture to attempt to make one’s way forward.  But when Ingigerd’s cabin door opened and her long light hair rumpled by the wind appeared in the slit, Frederick instantly made the venture.  She drew him into her cabin, where he found two children keeping her company.

“I invited them to stay with me because it’s fairly comfortable in this cabin.”

The seriousness of the situation had extinguished in the girl all coquetry and capriciousness.  Frederick almost forgot what he had suffered on her account and in what fatal dependence he had been upon this creature only a short time before.

“Tell me, is there danger, Doctor von Kammacher?” she asked.

His evasive answer seemed to make no impression upon her.  He was astonished to see how energetic and resolute she was, in contrast with her behaviour of yesterday, when she played the spoiled, suffering, helpless child.  She begged him to go try to find her father.

“In case anything happens, you know, it would be well not to be so far away from him.”

“What do you suppose will happen?”

Without answering this, she asked him to stop at cabin 49 on the way and tell Rosa to come up.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Atlantis from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.