登陆注册
5272200000025

第25章 V(1)

HE WAITED. Before his eyes the engines turned with slow labour, that in the moment of going off into a mad fling would stop dead at Mr. Rout's shout, "Look out, Beale!" They paused in an intelligent immobility, stilled in mid-stroke, a heavy crank arrested on the cant, as if conscious of danger and the passage of time. Then, with a "Now, then!" from the chief, and the sound of a breath expelled through clenched teeth, they would accomplish the interrupted revolution and begin another.

There was the prudent sagacity of wisdom and the deliberation of enormous strength in their movements. This was their work -- this patient coaxing of a distracted ship over the fury of the waves and into the very eye of the wind. At times Mr. Rout's chin would sink on his breast, and he watched them with knitted eyebrows as if lost in thought.

The voice that kept the hurricane out of Jukes' ear began: "Take the hands with you . . .," and left off unexpectedly.

"What could I do with them, sir?"

A harsh, abrupt, imperious clang exploded suddenly. The three pairs of eyes flew up to the telegraph dial to see the hand jump from FULL to STOP, as if snatched by a devil. And then these three men in the engineroom had the intimate sensation of a check upon the ship, of a strange shrinking, as if she had gathered herself for a desperate leap.

"Stop her!" bellowed Mr. Rout.

Nobody -- not even Captain MacWhirr, who alone on deck had caught sight of a white line of foam coming on at such a height that he couldn't believe his eyes -nobody was to know the steepness of that sea and the awful depth of the hollow the hurricane had scooped out behind the running wall of water.

It raced to meet the ship, and, with a pause, as of girding the loins, the Nan-Shan lifted her bows and leaped. The flames in all the lamps sank, darkening the engine-room. One went out.

With a tearing crash and a swirling, raving tumult, tons of water fell upon the deck, as though the ship had darted under the foot of a cataract.

Down there they looked at each other, stunned.

"Swept from end to end, by God!" bawled Jukes.

She dipped into the hollow straight down, as if going over the edge of the world. The engine-room toppled forward menacingly, like the inside of a tower nodding in an earthquake. An awful racket, of iron things falling, came from the stokehold. She hung on this appalling slant long enough for Beale to drop on his hands and knees and begin to crawl as if he meant to fly on all fours out of the engine-room, and for Mr. Rout to turn his head slowly, rigid, cavernous, with the lower jaw dropping. Jukes had shut his eyes, and his face in a moment became hopelessly blank and gentle, like the face of a blind man.

At last she rose slowly, staggering, as if she had to lift a mountain with her bows.

Mr. Rout shut his mouth; Jukes blinked; and little Beale stood up hastily.

"Another one like this, and that's the last of her," cried the chief.

He and Jukes looked at each other, and the same thought came into their heads. The Captain! Everything must have been swept away.

Steering-gear gone -- ship like a log. All over directly.

"Rush!" ejaculated Mr. Rout thickly, glaring with enlarged, doubtful eyes at Jukes, who answered him by an irresolute glance.

The clang of the telegraph gong soothed them instantly. The black hand dropped in a flash from STOP to FULL.

"Now then, Beale!" cried Mr. Rout.

The steam hissed low. The piston-rods slid in and out. Jukes put his ear to the tube. The voice was ready for him. It said:

"Pick up all the money. Bear a hand now. I'll want you up here."

And that was all.

"Sir?" called up Jukes. There was no answer.

He staggered away like a defeated man from the field of battle.

He had got, in some way or other, a cut above his left eyebrow -- a cut to the bone. He was not aware of it in the least: quantities of the China Sea, large enough to break his neck for him, had gone over his head, had cleaned, washed, and salted that wound. It did not bleed, but only gaped red; and this gash over the eye, his dishevelled hair, the disorder of his clothes, gave him the aspect of a man worsted in a fight with fists.

"Got to pick up the dollars." He appealed to Mr. Rout, smiling pitifully at random.

"What's that?" asked Mr. Rout, wildly. "Pick up . . . ? I don't care. . . ." Then, quivering in every muscle, but with an exaggeration of paternal tone, "Go away now, for God's sake. You deck people'll drive me silly. There's that second mate been going for the old man. Don't you know? You fellows are going wrong for want of something to do. . . ."

At these words Jukes discovered in himself the beginnings of anger. Want of something to do -- indeed. . . . Full of hot scorn against the chief, he turned to go the way he had come. In the stokehold the plump donkeyman toiled with his shovel mutely, as if his tongue had been cut out; but the second was carrying on like a noisy, undaunted maniac, who had preserved his skill in the art of stoking under a marine boiler.

"Hallo, you wandering officer! Hey! Can't you get some of your slush-slingers to wind up a few of them ashes? I am getting choked with them here. Curse it! Hallo! Hey! Remember the articles: Sailors and firemen to assist each other. Hey! D'ye hear?"

Jukes was climbing out frantically, and the other, lifting up his face after him, howled, "Can't you speak? What are you poking about here for? What's your game, anyhow?"

A frenzy possessed Jukes. By the time he was back amongst the men in the darkness of the alleyway, he felt ready to wring all their necks at the slightest sign of hanging back. The very thought of it exasperated him. He couldn't hang back. They shouldn't.

The impetuosity with which he came amongst them carried them along. They had already been excited and startled at all his comings and goings -- by the fierceness and rapidity of his movements; and more felt than seen in his rushes, he appeared formidable -busied with matters of life and death that brooked no delay. At his first word he heard them drop into the bunker one after another obediently, with heavy thumps.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 生命之催化乐章:石油化学家闵恩泽

    生命之催化乐章:石油化学家闵恩泽

    奠基中国炼油催化应用科学,以知识报效国家,一生成果难数,开发生物柴油推动绿色化工,凭贡献乐享人生。
  • 爱情离我三厘米

    爱情离我三厘米

    本书里面那个可爱的女生李薇拉和可爱的男生宁不悔是多么令人忍俊不禁的一对同桌,不仅让每个人都会不由的回想起自己曾经和他(她)的同桌时光,也是如此这般的美好有趣,或亦欢欣雀跃。这本书中有很多悬疑的地方,作者总是在适当的时候丢些疑问,让人越看越爱看,一步一步细致的看下去,欲罢不能。
  • 最美丽的古典诗词(大全集)

    最美丽的古典诗词(大全集)

    在编写体例上,本书按照时间顺序,兼及诗文体裁,从周秦诗音写起,包括诗经、汉魏辞赋、乐府诗、魏晋六朝诗、唐诗、宋词、元曲。每章先录原文,后是注释,紧接着是赏析文字,以便更好地帮助读者了解诗词曲赋的创作背景和寓意情感。
  • 快穿玩心:病娇宿主有点丧

    快穿玩心:病娇宿主有点丧

    前世,都说她是疯子,是神经病,是凶狠阴险之人,唯独他不这么认为。她想疯,那他就陪她疯,她要杀人,那他便做她手上的利刃。若她注定是劫,在劫难逃又如何?都说他自甘堕落,可这天下与他有和干系?他是恶魔,又不是天使,怎会为了这区区蝼蚁舍弃她?#神级小奶受:月明星稀,我最爱你。#霸气帝王攻:遇上你,是我一无所有的结束,也是我穷途末路的开始。#校园小狼狗:我对你的喜欢三分太少,七分不够,十分刚刚好……遇到妖孽怎么办?当然是拐回家咯![1V1,女主潜在病娇属性,含耽美]
  • 绝世凰后归来

    绝世凰后归来

    他为了一本《神药遗案》不惜布下天罗地网,而她涅槃重生,带着绝顶医术归来!“众将听令!征召天下勇士,随我剿灭这只妖凰!”天下:不好意思,我们还等着她救命呢!某个男人:我怎么听到有人要消灭我的凰后?走,跟我去灭了他!天下:走!
  • 反转命运:林书豪

    反转命运:林书豪

    不要只做旁观者,也许你不能复制球场上的奇迹,但你可以在你的领域同样书写传奇!作者从信仰,师长,自我,机遇,友谊等方面,以独特的视角深度解密林书豪成功的原因,让你从他的身上学到成功的方法。
  • 白昼的星光

    白昼的星光

    容貌尚可、脾气尚可、连头脑也只是尚可的小女子顾且喜,因为一次意外,匆忙嫁给了优秀男人赵苇杭,而后者也是在经历了刻骨铭心的伤痛后,急于在现实中寻找一份没有爱情奢望的婚姻。两人各取所需,各尽本分,相安无事地过着有性无爱的生活。在“大灰狼”一样的丈夫面前,顾且喜始终扮演着一个的谦卑的、没有骨气的小媳妇形象,可爱、可恨之极。然而,在琐碎的、不经意的家庭生活中,爱在两人之间悄悄萌芽,当两人都深陷其中时,又不得不分手……《白昼的星光》,木梵又一情感力作,透视都市男女的爱情纠葛,触动你我心底最柔软的部分。
  • 盛宠娘子

    盛宠娘子

    她在临死之际,才看清了身边男人和妹妹的真面目,她后悔了。重生后,她发誓要做霸气御姐,既然躲不过,她就准备三十六般兵器,把庶妹姨娘渣男打的落花流水,看见她就绕道走。“喂,师兄,你别绕道啊,我不会打你——”
  • 世界500强企业岗位执行标准

    世界500强企业岗位执行标准

    这不是一本一般地介绍世界500强企业的书,不是对500强企业新闻式的报道,也不是对500强企业成就的赞歌,而是在参阅了500强企业的工作分析、实施准则等方面的成功实践标准的基础上,总结了从最高管理层到普通员工的各个岗位职责要求、行为规范及执行标准,以便读者参考和借鉴。
  • 藏冰

    藏冰

    【庙堂之高,江湖之远,人间不平,侠义在心】天南山,五峰掌,有位剑道权威,袖手望人间变换,事事沧桑。大辽原,万里江,有位刀中圣者,探手写军书笔墨,惯享天光。隆中困,卧仙岗,有位御笔书生,抬手作传世神曲,尽抒胸狂。昀芒客,少龙凰,有位痴情浪子,试手舞元轻碎剑,醉赏天唐。洗花海,医庐中,有位薄裙妙女,出手济黎民庶苦,无意权掌。待来日海灾尽覆百州,刀戈云起十国,雪城终于太古,冰山深葬穹庐,少年横剑出山,死铭父志,信马吟啸江湖。