Part 43 (1/2)
”Way-o!” suddenly came the cry from the masthead.
”Where away?” called the captain, jumping up and looking around.
”Three points on the starboard bow, sir,” answered the sailor, pointing his finger.
”That's right enough. You're in luck, Dr. Jimson,” he added, turning to his pa.s.sengers, ”you won't have had long to wait if we catch this one for you.”
The captain walked aft, saw that everything was clear on deck, then stepped forward and walked out on the bowsprit to the 'pulpit,' the characteristic feature of a swordfish schooner. This was a small circular platform about three feet across, built at the end of the bowsprit, with a rail waist high around it and a small swinging seat.
Triced up to the jib stay was the long harpoon with its head, known as the 'lily-iron.'
The schooner, having the wind abeam, danced smartly over the waves toward the long lithe fin, gliding swiftly through the water. The captain, standing like a statue, waited until the craft was within ten feet of the unconscious swordfish, then thrust downward with all his might. It was a thrust--not a throw--and the muscular strength behind the blow caused the steel to pierce the thick skin of the swordfish. At the same instant the keg around which the line had been wound was thrown overboard, and the water flew up like a fine jet from the rapid revolutions of the barrel as the swordfish sped away with the line.
”How in the world are you going to haul him in now?” asked Colin, when he saw the keg thrown overboard.
”Did you think we pulled him in, same as you would a cod?” asked the captain.
”Why not?”
”Too much chance of sinking the schooner!” was the reply. ”That isn't the way to get a swordfish.”
As soon as the line on the barrel became unwound, it tightened with a jerk and the barrel disappeared under the surface. But the resistance that the barrel full of air at the end of the long line gave was great and even the powerful swordfish could not tow it for long. In a few minutes he slackened his speed and the barrel bobbed to the surface. But the swordfish was still traveling like a railroad train, in short rushes, however, here and there.
”See him charge it!” cried Colin.
There was a swirl of water and with a speed which seemed incredible the huge body launched itself at the barrel. But there was no resistance, the keg revolved as the sword struck it, and the swordfish shot into the air. Again and again he charged, and Colin realized what danger lay behind that ton and a half of muscle backed by a power that could drive such a weight at sixty miles an hour through the water.
Again the Monarch of the Sea shot away, towing the barrel, but it was a disheartening drag, even upon the magnificent strength of the great swordfish. Little by little the rushes became shorter, the spurts less frequent, as exhaustion and loss of blood began to tell. The captain ordered out the boat and, at his earnest appeal, Colin was allowed to go.
”You're light,” the captain of the schooner said, as he picked up a lance not unlike a whale lance, ”and we don't want much weight in the boat because it might pull the barb out of the fish if he starts to run.”
”This reminds me,” said the boy, ”of the time I was spearing whales in the Behring Sea,” and he recounted the adventure briefly as they pulled toward the swordfish. The Monarch of the Sea, who had never had a chance to show his powers, being handicapped by the barrel dragging back his every movement, caught sight of the boat. He did not wait to be attacked, but rushed with renewed fury at this new foe. The captain, apparently unmoved, waited until the fish rose at the boat and then he thrust in the lance with all his strength. The force acting against both fish and boat drove the latter sideways a foot or more, so that the giant rose in the air not two feet from the gunwale of the boat, the spray stinging like fine rain as the wind of his leap whistled by.
[Ill.u.s.tration: CATCHING SWORDFISH WITH ROD AND REEL.
Dangerous method of capturing the monarch of the sea, used only by expert anglers.
_By permission of Mr. Chas. Fredk. Holder._]
”He'll charge again in a minute,” the captain said quietly, ”look out always for the second rush.”
The words were scarcely out of his lips when the fin appeared. Once again, as before, that great ma.s.s of dynamic energy hurled itself at the boat, but twenty yards away there came a sudden check and the swordfish dived. A second pa.s.sed--so long that it seemed like a minute, while Colin waited s.h.i.+veringly to hear the cras.h.i.+ng of the timbers and to see that fearful weapon flash up between them, but as silently as a shadow the lithe gray fighting machine shot up from the deep a yard or two astern of the boat and, falling limply, turned on his side, dead.
The captain smiled.
”If he had lived about a half a second longer,” he said, ”I reckon this boat would be on its way to the bottom now.”
CHAPTER X