Tales of Fishes - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Do you fellows take me for a drag-horse?" inquired R. C., mildly. "I've caught enough swordfish for this year."
"Why, man, it's the day!" exclaimed Captain Dan, in amaze and fear.
"Humph!" replied my brother.
"But the chance for a record!" I added, weakly. "Only ten o'clock....
Three swordfish already.... Great chance for Dan, you know.... Beat the d.i.c.kens out of these other fishermen."
"Aw, that's a lot of 'con'!" replied my brother.
Very eloquently then I elaborated on the fact that we were releasing the fish, inaugurating a sportsman-like example never before done there; that it really bid fair to be a wonderful day; that I was having a great chance to snap pictures of leaping fish; that it would be a favor to me for him to go the limit on this one occasion.
But R. C. showed no sign of wavering. He was right, of course, and I acknowledged that afterward to myself. On the instant, however, I racked my brain for some persuasive argument. Suddenly I had an inspiration.
"They think you're a dub fisherman," I declared, forcefully.
"_They?_" My brother glared darkly at me.
"Sure," I replied, hurriedly, with no intention of explaining that dubious _they_. "Now's your chance to fool them."
"Ahuh! All right, fetch on a flock of swordfish, and then some broadbills," remarked R. C., blandly. "Hurry, Dan! There's a fin right over there. Lead me to him! See."
Sure enough, R. C. pointed out a dark sickle fin on the surface. I marveled at the sight. It certainly is funny the luck some fishermen have! Captain Dan, beaming like a sunrise, swung the boat around toward the swordfish.
That Marlin rushed the teasers. I pulled all three away from him, while R. C. was reeling in his bait to get it close. Then the swordfish fell all over himself after it. He got it. He would have climbed aboard after it. The way R. C. hooked this swordfish showed that somebody had got his dander up and was out to do things. This pleased me immensely. It scared me a little, too, for R. C. showed no disposition to give line or be gentle to the swordfish. In fact, it was real fight now. And this particular fish appeared to have no show on earth--or rather in the water--and after fourteen leaps he was hauled up to the boat in such short order that if we had gaffed him, as we used to gaff Marlin, we would have had a desperate fight to hold him. But how easy to cut him free! He darted down like a blue streak. I had no fair sight of him to judge weight, but Captain Dan said he was good and heavy.
"Come on! Don't be so slow!" yelled R. C., with a roving eye over the deep.
Captain Dan was in his element. He saw victory perched upon the mast of the _Leta D._ He moved with a celerity that amazed me, when I remembered how exasperatingly slow he could be, fooling with kites. This was Captain Dan's game.
"The ocean's alive with swordfis.h.!.+" he boomed. Only twice before had I heard him say that, and he was right each time. I gazed abroad over the beautiful sea, and, though I could not see any swordfish, somehow I believed him. It was difficult now, in this exciting zest of a record feat, to think of the n.o.bler attributes of fis.h.i.+ng. Strong, earnest, thrilling business it was indeed for Captain Dan.
We all expected to see a swordfish again. That was exactly what happened. We had not gone a dozen boat-lengths when up out of the blue depths lunged a lazy swordfish and attached himself to R. C.'s hook. He sort of half lolled out in lazy splashes four or five times. He looked huge. All of a sudden he started off, making the reel hum. That run developed swiftly. Dan backed the boat full speed. In vain! It was too late to turn. That swordfish run became the swiftest and hardest I ever saw. A four-hundred-yard run, all at once, was something new even for me. I yelled for R. C. to throw off the drag. He tried, but failed. I doubted afterward if that would have done any good. That swordfish was going away from there. He broke the line.
"Gee! What a run!" I burst out. "I'm sorry. I hate to break off hooks in fish."
"Put your hand on my reel," said R. C.
It was almost too hot to bear touching. R. C. began winding in the long slack line.
"Did you see that one?" he asked, grimly.
"Not plain. But what I did see looked big."
"Say, he was a whale!" R. C.'s flas.h.i.+ng eyes showed he had warmed to the battle.
In just ten minutes another swordfish was chasing the teasers. It was my thrilling task to keep them away from him. Hard as I pulled, I failed to keep at least one of them from him. He took it with a "wop," his bill half out of the water, and as he turned with a splash R. C. had his bait right there. Smas.h.!.+ The swordfish sheered off, with the bait s.h.i.+ning white in his bill. When hooked he broke water about fifty yards out and then gave an exhibition of high and lofty tumbling, water-smas.h.i.+ng, and spray-flinging that delighted us. Then he took to long, greyhound leaps and we had to chase him. But he did not last long, with the inexorable R. C. bending back on that Murphy rod. After being cut free, this swordfish lay on the surface a few moments, acting as if he was out of breath. He weighed about one hundred and fifty, and was a particularly beautiful specimen. The hook showed in the corner of his mouth. He did not have a scratch on his graceful bronze and purple and silver body. I waved my hat at him and then he slowly sank.
"What next?" I demanded. "This can't keep up. Something is going to happen."
But my apprehension in no wise disturbed R. C. or Captain Dan.
They proceeded to bait up again, to put out the teasers, to begin to troll; and then almost at once a greedy swordfish appeared, absolutely fearless and determined. R. C. hooked him. The first leap showed the Marlin to be the smallest of the day so far. But what he lacked in weight he made up in activity. He was a great performer, and his forte appeared to be turning upside down in the air. He leaped clear twenty-two times. Then he settled down and tried to plug out to sea.
Alas! that human steam-winch at the rod drew him right up to the boat, where he looked to weigh about one hundred and twenty-five pounds.
[Ill.u.s.tration: 328-POUND RECORD MARLIN BY R. C. GREY. SHAPELIEST AND MOST BEAUTIFUL SPECIMEN EVER TAKEN]
[Ill.u.s.tration: SUNSET OVER CLEMENTE CHANNEL]
"Six!" I exclaimed, as we watched the freed fish swim away. "That's the record.... And all let go alive--unhurt.... Do you suppose any one will believe us?"
"It doesn't make any difference," remarked my brother. "We know. That's the best of the game--letting the fish go alive."
"Come on!" boomed Dan, with a big flying-fish in his hands. "You're not tired."
"Yes, I am tired," replied R. C.
"It's early yet," I put in. "We'll cinch the record for good. Grab the rod. I'll enjoy the work for you."
R. C. resigned himself, not without some remarks anent the insatiable nature of his host and boatman.
We were now off the east end of Clemente Island, that bleak and ragged corner where the sea, whether calm or stormy, contended eternally with the black rocks, and where the green and white movement of waves was never still. When almost two hundred yards off the yellow kelp-beds I saw a shadow darker than the blue water. It seemed to follow the boat, rather deep down and far back. But it moved. I was on my feet, thrilling.
"That's a swordfis.h.!.+" I called.
"No," replied R. C.
"Some wavin' kelp, mebbe," added Dan, doubtfully.
"Slow up a little," I returned. "I see purple."
Captain Dan complied and we all watched. We all saw an enormous colorful body loom up, take the shape of a fish, come back of R. C.'s bait, hit it and take it.
"By George!" breathed R. C., tensely. His line slowly slipped out a little, then stopped.
"He's let go," said my brother.
"There's another one," cried Dan.
With that I saw what appeared to be another swordfish, deeper down, moving slowly. This one also looked huge to me. He was right under the teasers. It dawned upon me that he must have an eye on them, so I began to pull them in.
As they came in the purple shadow seemed to rise. It was a swordfish and he resembled a gunboat with purple outriggers. Slowly he came onward and upward, a wonderful sight.
"Wind your bait in!" I yelled to R. C.
Suddenly Dan became like a jumping-jack. "He's got your hook," he shouted to my brother. "He's had it all the time."
The swordfish swam now right under the stern of the boat so that I could look down upon him. He was deep down, but not too deep to look huge.