CHAPTER TWENTY TWO.
"ALONE!"
The next morning, when Fritz got on deck, he found the ship diving and courtesying to her anchor, while an ominous swell came rolling in past her from the westward towards the beach. The surf, too, was breaking against the boulders of the high rocky ramparts that came down sheer from the cliff on the left-hand side of the bay, which was now to the right of where Fritz was standing at the stern of the _Pilot"s Bride_, she having swung round during the night and now laying head to sea.
There was no wind to speak of, although there was evidently a change brewing; still, any one with half an eye could see that the skipper was quite prepared for any emergency, for the headsails of the vessel, instead of being furled up, now hung loose, the gaskets being cast-off and the bunts dropped. The men, also, were forward, heaving away at the windla.s.s and getting up the cable, of which a considerable length had been paid out, the ship riding in over forty fathoms of water.
"Hullo, mister," exclaimed Captain Brown, when he noticed Fritz looking about him, as if perplexed as to what these signs meant,--"I told you we might hev to cut an" run any moment!"
"Why?" said Fritz.
"Can"t you see, man," retorted the other. "I thought you"d hev been half a sailor by this time, judgin" by your smart lad of a brother!
Why, the wind is jest choppin" round to the west"ard, I reckon; an", as I don"t kinder like to let the ship go to pieces on them thaar cliffs to loo"a"d, I guess we"re goin" to make tracks into the offin" an" give the land a wide berth."
"Are you going to start soon?" asked Fritz.
"Waall, there ain"t no "mediate hurry, mister; but I allers like to be on the safe side, an" when them islanders bring their second boatload o"
taters an" t"other grub, I reckon we"ll be off. They"ve brought one lot already, in return for the dry goods an" bread-stuffs I"ve let "em hev; an" when they bring the second, I guess the barg"in"ll be toted up!"
Not long afterwards, Fritz saw the islanders" boat coming off from the landing-place. It was pretty well laden, and the swell had increased so greatly that it sometimes was lost to sight in the trough between the heavy rollers that undulated towards the sh.o.r.e. The Tristaners, however, being accustomed to the water and experienced boatmen, did not make much of the waves; but, pulling a good steady stroke, were soon alongside--the bowman catching a rope which was hove from the chains and holding on, while the various contents of the cargo brought were handed on board. This operation had to be performed most dexterously; for, one moment, the little craft would be almost on a level with the ship"s bulwarks, while the next she would be thirty feet below, as the billowy surface of the sea sank below her keel.
Eric was beside the skipper, checking the quant.i.ties of provisions which had been accurately calculated beforehand, for the Tristaners showed a keen eye to business and weighed everything they bartered for the whaler"s goods, when one of the men hailed him. This was the identical young fellow of whom he had spoken to Fritz when first expounding his projected scheme for going sealing to Inaccessible Island, and who, he mentioned besides, had told him all about the place. Indeed, he had actually suggested his going there. Eric had wondered much at not having come across this young man on the previous day when they had visited the settlement, although he looked about for him, so he was doubly pleased to see him now.
"Hullo!" cried out this Tristaner to the young German. "So you are back again, eh?"
"Yes," said Eric. "Come aboard a moment; I want to speak to you."
"All right," exclaimed the other, who was a fine, stalwart young fellow, with jet-black hair and a bronzed face that appeared to be more tanned by the weather than owing its hue to coloured blood; when, in a jiffy, he had swung himself into the chains by the rope attached to the boat"s bows and was by Eric"s side on the deck of the _Pilot"s Bride_, his face all over smiles.
"You"re the very chap I was wanting to see," said Eric, shaking hands with him cordially. "I was puzzled to know what had become of you yesterday. I did not see you anywhere."
"I was away up the mountain, gathering gra.s.s," replied the young fellow.
"So, you"ve returned here, as you said you would, early in the year?"
"You told me such fine accounts of the fishing," retorted Eric with a laugh, "that, really, I couldn"t stop away. I want to talk to you about it again now. This is my brother," he added, introducing Fritz.
"Glad to know him," said the Tristaner, bowing politely--indeed, the manners of all the islanders struck Fritz as being more polished than what he had observed in so-called civilised society. "Is he going to join you in settling on Inaccessible Island?"
"Yes," replied Eric. "He and I have determined to start sealing there.
We have come from America on purpose. Is there anything more you can tell us about it?"
"Have you got provisions to last you a year at the least? You must calculate to hold out so long, for no ship may be able to visit you earlier and you cannot count on procuring much food on the island."
"Oh, yes; we"ve got plenty of grub," said Eric, using the sailor"s term for food.
"And the things besides that I told you would be necessary?"
"You may be certain of that," replied Eric. "The only thing I see that we"ll have any difficulty about will be in rigging up a house. I"m sure that Fritz and I will never be able to build a substantial shanty like one of those you have here in your island."
"No, perhaps not," said the young fellow, smiling. "You see, when we are going to run up a house, we all join together and lend a hand, which makes it easy work for us. It would be impossible for one or two men-- or many more, indeed. I"ll tell you what I"ll do for you, though. If the captain of your ship here will promise to bring me back again to Tristan, I will go over there with you for a couple of days or so, to see you comfortably fixed up, as you Americans say, at Inaccessible Island, before you and your brother are left to yourselves."
"Agreed!" exclaimed Eric joyfully. "I will ask the skipper at once."
To dart across the deck to where Captain Brown was now standing by the open hatchway, overseeing the provisions being pa.s.sed down into the ship"s hold, was, for the sailor lad, but the work of a moment!
"Oh, Captain Brown,"--commenced Eric breathlessly, his excitement almost stopping his speech for a second.
"Waall, what"s all the muss about?" said the old skipper, turning round and scanning the lad"s eager face. "Do you an" your brother want to back out o" the venture naow? I saw you talkin" to thet Tristaner you met here with me in the spring."
"Back out of the project?" repeated Eric very indignantly. "Give up my pet plan, when everything is turning more and more in favour of it, captain? I should think not, indeed!"
"Then, what"s the matter?" asked the skipper.
"I want you to grant me a favour," said Eric, hesitating a bit as the other looked at him steadfastly, a half-smile, half-grin on his weather- beaten countenance.
"Thought sunthin" wer up!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the skipper. "Waall, what"s this durned favour o" your"n?" he added in his good-natured way. "Spit it out, sonny, an" don"t make sich a mealy mouth of it!"
"This Tristaner--young Gla.s.s, you recollect him, don"t you, captain?"
said Eric, proceeding with his request--"says he"ll come with us and help to build our cabin for us at Inaccessible Island, and settle us--"
"Show you the ropes, in fact, hey?" interrupted the skipper.
"Yes," continued Eric. "He agrees to stop a day or two with us, till we feel at home, so to speak, if you will undertake to bring him back again and land him at Tristan before you go on to the Cape."
"Oh!" exclaimed the skipper, giving expression to a long, low whistle from between his closed teeth. "Thet"s the ticket, is it? Waall, I guess I don"t mind doin" it to oblige you an" your brother, though it"ll take me a main heap out o" my way coastin" up haar ag"in!"
"Thank you; oh, thank you, captain," said Eric, quite delighted with this promise; and he rushed back across the deck to tell the others the good news.
While the young Tristaner was explaining matters to his comrades in the boat--from which all the stores had now been removed that had been brought off from the island and a few extra articles put in, which Captain Brown had made them a present of, as "boot" to the bargain of barter--the wind began to spring up in gusts, causing the ship"s sails to flap ominously against the masts.
"Guess you"d better be off," cried the skipper, coming to the side, where the two brothers and the young Tristaner who was going to accompany them stood leaning over, having a parting palaver with those in the boat below. "The breeze is risin", an" if you don"t kinder care "bout startin", I reckon we must. Shove off thaar!"
"All right," sang out one of the islanders, casting off the rope which attached them still to the ship. "Good-bye, and mind you bring our countryman back safe."
"You bet," shouted the skipper. "I"ll take care o" him as if he wer my own kin. Now, Eric," he added, "you"ve got to tend your duties to the last aboard, you know; away aft with you an" see to the mizzen sheets.
All hands make sail!"
The topsails were dropped at the same moment and sheeted home, while the jib was hoisted; and the ship, paying off, forged slowly up to her anchor.
"Now, men," sang out Captain Brown sharply. "Put your heart into thet windla.s.s thaar, an" git the cable in! It"s comin" on to blow hard, an"
if you don"t look smart we"ll never git out of this durned bay in time!"
Clink, clank, went round the unwieldy machine, as the crew heaved with a will, their movements quickened by the urgency of getting under weigh without delay, and each man exerting the strength of two.
"Heave away, men!" chorussed the mate, standing over them and lending his voice to their harmonious chant. "Heave! Yo ho, heave!"
A few hearty and long pulls, and then the anchor showed its stock.
"Hook cat!" shouted the mate; whereupon, the fall being stretched along the deck, all hands laid hold.