Part 12 (2/2)
”I would rather have you make a beginning when it don't blow quite so hard. If the Goldwing is going to upset, I want to know how it is done.”
No one in the party had ever sailed a boat, and the skipper was not willing to resign the helm to any of them. At his request Corny brought him something to eat, and he disposed of it while he kept his place at the helm. By the time he had finished his first slice of ham, and a corresponding portion of bread and cheese, the Goldwing was up with Garden Island. The skipper, for his own purposes, had run to the west of it. Although he felt like disposing of another slice of ham, he was too much interested in his occupation to attend further to the question of rations just then.
Dory did not tell his companions what he had been thinking about; but he hoped to leave the Missisquoi at this point, or to get a better start of her. He preferred to explain his plan after he had carried it out if it were a success, or to keep silent if it were a failure. He watched the Missisquoi very closely, for his own movements would depend upon hers.
There was plenty of water to the northward of the island, but there was a shoal to the southward.
If the captain of the steamer had been wise, if he had had his eyes open, he would have kept to the eastward; but he followed directly in the wake of the Goldwing, and was within less than a quarter of a mile of her.
”Do you know how much water the Missisquoi draws, Thad?” asked Dory, as the Goldwing came up with the island.
”I heard Captain Vesey say that she drew six feet when she had her coal in,” replied Thad.
”I heard him say so when we were off Apple-Tree Shoal,” added Corny. ”I asked him why he didn't go close up to the buoy; and he said there was not more than six feet of water on the shoal, and the boat might touch bottom.”
”I thought she didn't draw over five feet. If she draws six, so much the better,” added Dory.
”Why is it so much the better, Dory?” asked Thad.
”Hold on all, and don't ask any more questions!” said Dory, laughing. ”I have business on my hands just now, and I will tell you all about it in about ten minutes.”
The skipper had gybed the boat under the lee of Valcour's; but the wind was too fresh where he was now to repeat the manoeuvre. It was a gale in this part of the lake, and the Goldwing worked very lively.
”Corny, I want you to handle that jib-sheet,” said he when he was ready for his next move.
”But I don't know how,” pleaded Corny.
”Do what I tell you, and do it in a hurry when I give the word. This is the jib-sheet, fast to this cleat. When I s.h.i.+ft the helm, the jib will shake. Haul in upon it as fast as you can, and get all you can, and keep it when you get it. I shall do the same with the main-sheet.”
The skipper put the helm down.
CHAPTER XII.
A ROUGH TIME OF IT.
The instant the helm was put down, the head of the boat promptly swung up in the direction of the wind. Both of the sails began to flap and bang in the fierce gale.
”Now haul in, Corny!” said Dory, as he did the same by the main-sheet.
”No, Thad! He don't want any help. Let him alone! Take a turn on the cleat,” added the skipper, when one of the party wanted to help.
It was necessary only to take in the slack line of the sheet, and no hard pulling was required. The boat was now headed to the westward, which was the opposite course from that which she had been sailing when he headed her to the southward.
”Now we are on the wind, which is said to be the dangerous course in the Goldwing's sailing,” added the skipper; and this was the first time he had her close-hauled.
He watched her with the most intense interest, but he had no fault to find with the boat. It took all his strength at the long tiller to keep her from coming up into the wind. There was no lee helm now, with only a jib and mainsail; though she might exhibit this failing when she had all sail on. In fact, she carried too much weather helm; for it impeded her progress.
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