Part 32 (2/2)
”In a day or two, yes. When he has recovered the shaking of the move on board.”
”The captain wanted to know. He has no wish to go inside the harbour, as it is so crowded; but he would not like to remain long off this coast. It might be dangerous, he says.”
”A lee-sh.o.r.e, you know,” added Captain Trejago, for himself. ”Look at those straight cliffs; fancy our grinding on to them, with a southerly, or rather a south-westerly, gale!”
”Is there any immediate prospect of bad weather?” asked McKay. He and the sailing-master were by this time pretty good friends.
”I don't much like the look of the gla.s.s. It's rather jumpy; if anything, inclined to go back.”
”What should you do if it came on dirty?” the skipper was asked.
”Up stick, and run out to get an offing. It would be our only chance, with this coast to leeward.”
Three or four days later the skipper came with a long face to the doctor.
”I like the look of it less and less. The gla.s.s has dropped suddenly: such a drop as I've never seen out of the tropics. Is there anything against our putting to sea this afternoon?”
It so happened that General Wilders was not quite so well.
”I'd rather you waited a day or two,” replied the surgeon. ”It might make all the difference to the patient.”
”Well, if it must be,” replied the captain, very discontentedly.
”It's his life that's in question.”
”Against all of ours. But let it be so. We'll try and weather the storm.”
Next morning, about dawn, it burst upon them--the memorable hurricane of the 14th November, which did such appalling damage on sh.o.r.e and at sea. Not a tent remained standing on the plateau. The tornado swept the whole surface clean.
At sea the sight as daylight grew stronger was enough to make the stoutest heart, ignorant landsman's or practised seaman's, quail. A whole fleet--great line-of-battle s.h.i.+ps, a crowd of transports under sail and steam--lay at the mercy of the gale, which increased every moment in force and fury. The waves rose with the wind, and the white foam of ”stupendous” breakers angrily lashed the rock-bound sh.o.r.e.
”Will you ride it out?” asked McKay of the captain, as the two stood with the doctor crouched under the gunwale of the yacht and holding on to the shrouds.
”Why shouldn't we?” replied Trejago, shortly, as though the question was an insult to himself and his s.h.i.+p.
”That's more than some can say!” cried the doctor, pointing to one great s.h.i.+p, the ill-fated _Prince_, which had evidently dragged her anchors and was drifting perilously towards the cliffs.
”Our tackle is sound and the holding is good,” said Trejago, hopefully. ”But we ought not to speak so loud. It may alarm Mrs.
Wilders.”
”Does she not know our danger? Some one ought to tell her. You had better go, McKay.”
The aide-de-camp made rather a wry face. He was not fond of Mrs.
Wilders, whose manner, sometimes oily, sometimes supercilious, was too changeable to please him, and he felt that the woman was not true.
However, he went down to the cabin, where he found Mrs. Wilders, with a white, scared face, cowering in a corner as she listened to the howling of the storm.
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