Part 14 (1/2)
”But you couldn't stay at sea if you had only twelve gallons of gasoline aboard. Wherever she's going, she will have to put in for gas before long.” Phil stared thoughtfully at the chart. ”I'll allow,” he went on, ”that she may have gone any other direction but north. For that matter, she may be anch.o.r.ed just around the corner somewhere. It's all more or less guesswork. But, looking at the probabilities, and they're all we've got to work on, I think north is the likeliest trail for us to take.”
”Right-o,” said Steve, turning the wheel and pointing the boat's slim bow toward Gurnet Point, ”We've got to take a chance, fellows, and this looks like the best. In the morning we'll get busy with the telegraph and tell our troubles, but just now the best we can do is keep a sharp lookout and try to think we're on the right course. I'm going to speed her up, Joe, so you might dab some more oil and grease around your old engine.”
”All right. You fellows will have to clear out of here, though, while I get this hatch up. Some of you might go forward and keep your eyes peeled. I don't suppose, however,” he added as he pulled the engine hatch up, ”that they'll show any lights on her.”
”Not likely to,” agreed Harry Corwin. ”They'll run dark, probably, until they get near a harbour. Look for anything like a boat, fellows. It's a mighty good thing we've got this moonlight.”
”Yes, and we'll have to make hay while the moon s.h.i.+nes,” added Wink Wheeler as he climbed out of Joe's way, ”for it won't last much longer.
It'll be as dark as pitch by one or two o'clock, I guess.”
”Well, we've got a searchlight,” said Perry.
”There's no need for more than three of us to stay up,” said Steve.
”I'll keep the wheel and Joe will stay here with me. Phil, you take the watch for a couple of hours and then wake someone else.”
”Huh!” said Perry. ”I'm not going to bed! Who wants to sleep, anyway?”
Apparently no one did, for although presently the dozen fellows were distributed over the boat, not one went below. Phil and Han stretched themselves out at the bow, Steve, Joe, Harry and Tom Corwin and Cas Temple remained on the bridge deck and the rest of the company retired to the c.o.c.kpit, from where, by looking along the after cabin roof, they had a satisfactory view of the course. Perhaps one or two of the boys did nod a little during the next two hours, but real slumber was far from the minds of any of them. The _Adventurer_ was doing a good twenty miles an hour, the propeller las.h.i.+ng the water into a long foaming path that melted astern in the moonlight. Ossie busied himself in the galley about midnight and served hot coffee and bread-and-b.u.t.ter sandwiches.
Only once was the _Adventurer_ changed from her course, which Steve had laid for Gloucester, and then the light which had aroused their suspicions was soon seen to belong to a coasting schooner beating her way toward Boston. Of small boats there were none until, at about one o'clock, when the two white lights of Baker's Island lay west by north and the red flash on Eastern Point showed almost dead ahead, Phil called from the bow.
”Steve, there's something ahead that looks like a boat or a rock. Can you see it?”
”Which side?”
”A little to the left. Port, isn't it? Han doesn't see it, but--”
”I've got it,” answered Steve. After a moment he added with conviction: ”It's a boat. Has she changed her position, Phil?”
”Not while I've been watching. Looks as if she was going about the same way we are.” The others came cl.u.s.tering forward from the stern to stare across the water at the dark spot ahead which, in the uncertain light of the setting moon, might be almost anything. If it was a boat, it showed no light. Anxiously the boys watched, and after a few minutes Steve announced with quiet triumph:
”We're pulling up on her, fellows, whoever she is!”
”She's the _Follow Me_,” declared Harry Corwin. ”She must be, or she wouldn't be running without lights.”
”We'll know before long,” said Steve. ”I wish the moon would stay out a little longer, though. Joe, try the searchlight and see if you can pick her up.”
But the craft ahead was a good mile away and the _Adventurer's_ small searchlight was not powerful enough to bridge that distance with its white glare. ”They're making for the harbour, anyway,” said Harry Corwin, ”and so she can't get away from us if we lose her now.” Even as he ended the last pallid rays of the moon vanished and they found themselves in darkness save for the wan radiance of the stars. Lights unnoticed before sprang up in the gloom along the sh.o.r.e and a dim radiance in the sky showed where the town of Gloucester slumbered.
”If they double on us now we'll lose them,” muttered Steve. ”Put that light out, Joe. We can see better without it.”
”How far off is the harbour?” asked Harry.
”About two miles. You can hear the whistle buoy. That white light to the left of the red flash is the beacon on the end of the breakwater.” He moved the helm a trifle and examined the chart. ”There are no rocks, anyway, and that's a comfort. I can't say I like this running at night.
How far away was she when the moon went back on us, Harry?”
”Oh, three-quarters, at a rough guess.”
”Nearer a mile and a quarter, I'd say. Well, if she doesn't dodge along sh.o.r.e we'll have her in the harbour. Always supposing, that is, that she really is the _Follow Me_.”