Part 13 (1/2)

Its force was too great for her, she stopped, and trembled in every timber, then again she tried, and das.h.i.+ng headlong into it, the watery hill came thundering down on her decks, tearing away her long boat and spare spars, hencoops, caboose, and water casks, and, making a breach through the lee-bulwarks, washed them overboard. Had not the hatches been well secured the _Zodiac_, with all in her, might never have risen again. Cries of terror were heard, and many a bold seaman turned pale; but none of the crew were injured, and the s.h.i.+p again flew buoyantly onward.

”That's what we may call our drop too much,” said the mate. ”Don't you think we ought to take some of the canvas off her, sir?”

”Timmins, we've long known each other, and you know I'm no coward; but I tell you that my conviction is, that there will be no child's play with that fellow astern if he comes alongside us. Heaven only knows who'll come off the best if it comes to blows. He has twice as many guns as we have, if not more, and longer pieces, depend on it, and, probably, five times as many hands. These are fearful odds, and I don't think any man can say it's cowardly to shrink from them. I know, too, the sort of fellows those are on board yonder craft, and sooner than fall into their power, I would run the brig, and all in her, under water. Till she made sail in chase, I had my doubts about her; I now have none. You see I don't risk the loss of our masts without good cause, and now see to getting life-lines along the lee-bulwarks, and secure them as you best can.”

The mate made no answer, except a hurried acquiescence in his chief's reasons; and then calling three seamen to him, he worked his way forward to the forecastle, to search for the requisite cordage for pa.s.sing fore and aft along the sides of the vessel.

Colonel Gauntlett had gone below to explain the state of affairs to poor Ada, and to endeavour to tranquillise her alarms. Nothing daunted the old veteran himself; a soldier of the great duke's school, he was accustomed to hards.h.i.+ps and vicissitudes of all sorts. Brave as his sword, and delighting in the excitement of danger, his spirits rose in proportion to its imminence, and all the sour testiness of his temper vanished; a temper which had grown on him since the return of peace caused him to sheath his sword, and tempted him to commit the folly, as an old bachelor, of leading an idle life. Married, and with a family, he would have had them to interest him; but, as it was, he had only to think of his own aches and ills, and, perhaps, past follies; and to brood over what he called the neglects he had experienced from his ungrateful country. No man on board, perhaps, was so anxious as he was to have a skirmish with the rover, but he was not aware of the dreadful odds which would be opposed to him, and of the too probable fate which would await all hands, should victory side with the enemy. His arguments had some effect in calming his niece's fears; but not those of poor little Marianna, who, pale and weeping, sat at the feet of her mistress, imploring her to urge the captain and her uncle to return to Malta.

Ada, in her turn, had to act the part of comforter, and she promised her uncle that she would constantly remain below till they had escaped from the pirate, and the storm was over. Her uncle had not attempted to deceive her, nor did she shut her eyes to the greatness of the threatening danger--yet hope rose triumphant in her bosom. Though the storm had, at first, appeared very terrific, she got accustomed by degrees to the noise and commotion, and she could not persuade herself that a British vessel, manned by so many brave men, would not prove the victor against a pirate, of whatever nation she might be. By the faint light which found its way into her cabin, she was able to read; and that book was in her hand from which the truest source of comfort can be drawn, and which she, in her turn, imparted to her ignorant and trembling companion. Thus, between reading herself and explaining the subject to Marianna, and, at times, approaching the footstool of her Maker in prayer, Ada pa.s.sed many hours, which would otherwise have become insupportable through anxiety and fear, and thus employed, we must leave her, to return on deck.

CHAPTER ELEVEN.

The longer a sensible man lives (for a fool may live and not learn), the more convinced he will become of the importance of laying a firm foundation for every undertaking, whether it be a const.i.tution to live under, or a house to live in, an education for his children, a coat for his back, shoes for his feet, or a s.h.i.+p to convey himself or his merchandise from one part of the globe to the other. He learns that it is wisest and cheapest to have all the materials of the best, to employ the best workmen, and to pay them the best wages. It is the fas.h.i.+on, nowadays, to get everything at a price, to which is given the name of cheap--no matter at what cost or ruin to the consumer as well as the producer, for both are equally losers--the one from being badly said, the other from getting a bad article. On every side, one ears the cries of cheap government, cheap houses, cheap education, and cheap clothing; and the people are always found ready to offer to supply them. Wiser than this generation are seamen. They know, from experience, that cheap clothes and cheap s.h.i.+ps do not answer; that both are apt to fail at the very moment their services are most required; and a good officer, therefore, spares no expense or trouble in seeing that everything is good and sound on board his s.h.i.+p, from keelson to truck, below and aloft. Such a man was our friend Captain Bowse.

The spars and rigging of the _Zodiac_ did full justice to those who selected the first, and fitted the latter. Not a spar was sprung--not a strand parted with the tremendous strain put on them. It was almost too much for the s.h.i.+p, Bowse himself owned. It was taking the wear of years out of her in a day--as a wild debauch, or any violent exertion, will injure the human frame, more than years of ordinary toil. Though the masts stood, the s.h.i.+p, it was very evident, must be strained, from the way in which she was driven through the water, and made to buffet with the waves. On rushed the brig.

”That is what I call tearing the marrow out of a body's bones,” said Bill Bullock. ”Well, bless the old barkie; there's few could stand it as she does. I never seed any one carry on so as our skipper does, this blessed day--no, neither now, nor since the time I first went afloat.”

”Nor I neither, old s.h.i.+p,” answered Jem. ”But for that matter, as the parson says, there's a time to stay at anchor, and a time to make sail, and go along as if the devil was a driver--only I do wish that that ere beggar astern was right ahead now, and that we was a chasin' her, and every now and then a slappin' at her with our bow-chasers.”

”Right, Jem--my sentiments is the same; but if you comes for to go to look into the rights of the case, like a man should do, why you sees as how, if she has got twenty guns, which can sink us from where our shot can't reach 'em, and we has only got four guns, for the Quakers only has to do when you comes to frighten people at a distance, then you see as how it's wiser for we to run away, while we has got legs to run with, than to try to run when we are on our way to the bottom.”

”Jobson!” cried the master, addressing the carpenter, who had just spoken, ”sound the well, and see if she's made any water.”

Jobson performed his duty, and reported two feet of water in the hold.

”She's made that, sir, though, since we began to carry on. She was as dry as a cork yesterday,” he observed.

”I did not expect less, though,” returned the master. ”She must be strong not to let it in faster. We'll sound again in another half hour.”

For the first two or three hours of the chase, it was difficult to determine whether the stranger gained on them or not: but, by the time five had pa.s.sed away, she had clearly come up very much. Bowse looked at his topmasts and topsail-yards, and then at the lee-scuppers, and shook his head. He was meditating the possibility of shaking out another reef. He wished that he could divine some method to induce the stranger to set more sail; but this hope had failed, for as he was gaining on them without it, he was not likely to do so. The master watched him anxiously through his gla.s.s. He seemed to stand up well to his canvas, and there was but little chance of his carrying anything away. On coming to this conclusion, Bowse began to consider whether it would not be more prudent to shorten sail himself, so as to be in better condition to meet the enemy when he should come up--a result which he feared must, sooner or later, occur. Even should the weather moderate, the polacca brig would probably have a still greater advantage; but then again, his principle was to struggle to the last--never to yield to death or misfortune, while the faintest gasp remains--never to let hope expire--so he determined still to drive the s.h.i.+p through it. Again the well was sounded. The water had increased another half foot. The mate shook his head. Two more anxious hours pa.s.sed away.

”How much has she gained on us now, Timmins?” answered Bowse, who had returned from s.n.a.t.c.hing a hasty meal below.

”The best part of half a league at least, sir,” answered the mate. ”If she comes up at this rate, she'll be within hail before the first watch is over to-night. Now, sir, as the carpenter reports the water increasing fast, and to have to keep the men at the pumps, where they must go for a spell, will make them unfit to meet the enemy, I venture to advise that we take the strain off the s.h.i.+p at once. It's clearly nothing else that makes her leak as she does, and we shall then meet that fellow by daylight, which I tell you honestly, Captain Bowse, I for one would rather do.”

Bowse listened to his mate's opinion with respect, but he doubted much whether to act upon it.

”What you say has much reason in it,” he answered; ”but send the hands to the pumps first, and we'll judge how they can keep the water under.

If, after they've cleared the s.h.i.+p, it gains upon half the watch, we'll shorten sail; but if we can easily keep the leaks under, we'll carry on to the last.”

The clank of the pumps was heard amid the roaring of the gale, and the loud dash of the water over the s.h.i.+p, as the crew performed that most detested portion of a seaman's duty. The result was watched for with anxiety by the captain, for he saw that on it depended how soon they might be brought into action with the pirate. If he could still manage to keep ahead of him he might induce him to give up the chase; or he might fall in with a man-of-war, or some armed merchantman, in company with whom no pirate would dare to attack them. It did occur to him, that to ease the s.h.i.+p, he might keep her before the wind, and run for some port on the Italian coast; but there was a wide extent of sea to be crossed before he could reach it, and the pirate being probably just as fast off the wind as on it, would still overtake him; and though he might, as he trusted to do, beat him off, he would be so much further away from his port.

”Well, what does the carpenter report?” he asked, as the mate appeared, after the well had been sounded.

”We've gained a foot upon the leaks, sir; but it's hard work to keep them under, and if I might advise--”

”Please Heaven, we'll carry on, then, on the s.h.i.+p!” exclaimed the master, interrupting him. ”Let half a watch at a time work the pumps.

Before long the weather may moderate.”