Part 37 (1/2)
The sea had now calmed down, and the southwest monsoon was blowing steadily.
”You had better go south. The land is much higher there, and there is more likelihood of there being streams. I think you will be able to lie your course or, at any rate, make a long leg and a short one. You are to go, as nearly as you can tell, twenty miles. If you do not meet with a stream by that time, turn back. You will have the wind free, then, and can be back here well before sunset. Of course, if you find fresh water, you will at once return.
”Would you like to go with the boat, Mr. Lindsay?”
”Very much. My hands are so sore, from hauling in the lines, that I am afraid I shall not be able to help in the fis.h.i.+ng, tomorrow.”
The party started early. It consisted of ten men, the c.o.xswain, the mids.h.i.+pmen, and Harry. The surf was no longer breaking on the bar outside. There was a bright sea, with white-crested waves and, before starting, the captain ordered a reef to be put in the sails.
”She could carry full sail, well enough,” he said to Harry, ”but there is no occasion for haste; and it is always best to be on the safe side, especially when a middy is in command. Besides, it is just as well to keep dry jackets.”
A keg of water and a supply of food, sufficient for two days, were placed on board.
”I expect you will be back by three o'clock in the afternoon, Mr. Eden; but it is always well to provide against any accident.”
With the sheets hauled tight aft, the cutter was just able to lie her course, outside the line of breakers. In a little over an hour there was a break in the sh.o.r.e, and a stream of some forty feet wide fell into the sea; and a general cheer broke from the sailors, who had been put on allowance for the past week.
”Put her about, c.o.xswain,” the mids.h.i.+pman said; ”we need go no farther.”
”Can't we land, and have a bathe, sir?” the c.o.xswain asked.
”Certainly not. That is the very thing that we mus'n't do. For anything we know, there may be natives about; and some of us might get stuck full of their arrows before we could get out of range. This will be good news, and there will be no longer any need for your being kept on short allowance of water.”
At ten o'clock the boat re-entered the inlet, and lowered sail by the side of the brig.
”You have been successful, I suppose, by your coming back so soon, Mr. Eden?” the captain said, when they were within easy hail.
”Yes, sir. There is a small stream, about seven miles from here.”
”That is very satisfactory. Now you can come on board. There is plenty of work for all hands.”
Everyone, indeed, was busy in repairing damages. The carpenters were engaged upon the bulwarks and the stern, which had been much damaged by the wave that had lifted them over the bar. As there were not sufficient planks on board for this work, canvas was utilized for filling up the gaps in the bulwarks; and this, after being nailed to temporary stanchions, was coated with pitch. All hands worked cheerfully. The change of diet already benefited them, and the news that there was plenty of fresh water near enabled the remaining supply to be freely used--a matter of no slight consequence, to men working in the broiling sun.
Two days later the work was finished and, on the following morning, the anchors were weighed and the sails shaken out; and the brig left the inlet that had saved them from destruction and, after sailing out to sea a couple of miles, came about and laid her course for the mouth of the stream.
The fis.h.i.+ng had been continued, without intermission. Watches had again been set, and the work of attending to the lines was very welcome, as helping to pa.s.s away the four hours of darkness. By the time they left the inlet, a sufficient quant.i.ty had been salted down to last the s.h.i.+p's company for a week, without recourse to the salt-meat casks.
The carpenter, with three or four a.s.sistants, had patched up the second cutter--the boat that had been least injured. The others had been broken up for firewood, some of the pieces being reserved for the repairs of the cutter.
As soon as the brig reached the mouth of the stream she was anch.o.r.ed, two hundred yards off the sh.o.r.e. The water barrels had already been got up on deck, and some of these were lowered into the first cutter, of which Mr. Hardy took the command. It was not deemed advisable to employ the second boat in bringing water on board as, if heavily laden, the water would force its way in through the hastily-executed repairs. The captain, then, accompanied by Harry and an armed crew, took his place in her; and went ahead of the larger boat into the stream.
It was found to be but three or four feet deep, with a slow current and, for some little distance up, was too brackish to be used. It was not until they entered the line of forest that it was found fresh enough. The men in the first cutter proceeded to fill their casks, while those in the other boat laid in their oars and, musket in hand, watched the forest. In a few minutes the work was done, and the first cutter rowed straight for the brig; while the second cutter followed her, for some distance beyond the trees, and there waited for her return.
”So far, so good,” Fairclough said; ”but I am afraid that we shall be disturbed, before we have made another trip. No doubt, some of the natives followed the cutter along the sh.o.r.e, yesterday. I don't suppose they recognized what your object was, as you did not enter the stream; but when they saw the brig going the same way this morning, I have no doubt that they set off in this direction. However, with one more boat load we can manage, well enough, until we reach the Hooghly for, with this wind, we shall make a quick run.”
In a quarter of an hour the cutter was seen returning and, when it approached them, Fairclough again took the lead. All appeared still in the forest, and the men had just begun to refill the casks, when a shower of arrows fell among the boats.
”Let half your men go on with their work, Mr. Hardy, and the others stand to their arms.”