Maid of the Mist - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Wulf was shaken back to life in the dead of the early morning by a restive jerk of the s.h.i.+p at her rusty anchor-chain, followed by a momentary sense of the unusual. And while he lay sleepily considering the matter, his bunk heeled slowly over--over--over, and rolled him right against the side of the s.h.i.+p. The sound of a heavy fall, somewhere beyond, made him scramble out very wide awake, full of wonder, but dimly perceptive of what must have happened. The rusty chain had evidently parted, the s.h.i.+p had drifted ash.o.r.e broadside on, and the force of the wind had caused her to heel over. The sound he had heard was, he feared, of Miss Drummond's falling out of her bunk.
He flung on some clothes and clawed his way out to the cabin. The floor of it was tilted up at such an angle that he had to claw his way up by the side wall as best he could.
"Are you hurt?" he cried, outside The Girl's door.
"Bruised a bit. Whatever has happened?"
"The cable has parted and we're ash.o.r.e on our beam-ends. No danger, I think."
"I'll be out in a minute."
Then he became aware of a smell of burning, and found that the sand hearth with its core of fire had slid downhill and was smouldering among the silken draperies, which were beginning to break into flame.
He crawled back and tore them down and bunched them tightly together, then scooped up handfuls of sand and smothered every cinder he could see.
Miss Drummond's door opened just as he had finished.
"Stop where you are," he cried. "I'll come up for you. Everything's on the slope. I think we'd better sit on the floor and let ourselves down by degrees."
Outside, the wild screaming of the birds mingled eerily with the rush and howl of the gale. It was still quite dark. He could not see her, but groped about till he felt her blankets, then found her hand and eased her carefully down the slope, and they crouched side by side in the angle made by the floor and the side of the s.h.i.+p.
"Will she go down?" she asked quietly.
"Oh, no. No fear of that. We're aground. But whether she'll ever come straight again I don't know. Did it pitch you out of your bunk?"
"Yes. I woke with a crash on the floor, and could not imagine what had happened."
"I hope you didn't break yourself."
She was silent for a moment and then said, "I'm afraid I did break something, but I couldn't----"
"Broke something? What?" he asked hastily.
"My arm feels numb and queer. I fell on it."
"Let me feel it," and, kneeling in front of her, he groped till he found it, and felt it with anxious gentle fingers.
"Good Lord, it's broken!"
"I'm sorry, but I couldn't help it. You see"----
"Your right arm too! Don't move it!"
He groped about for another length of the silken hangings, tore it down, and wound it tightly round her arm. "That will keep it in place," he said. "The moment it is light I will make splints and set it properly. I am truly sorry you should have suffered so."
"Better me than you. It might have been worse. What made that chain break, I wonder? We've had worse storms than this."
"It was bound to give sooner or later. It was very old and rusted.
Its time came, I suppose, and it went. Sure you have no other damages?"
"Only b.u.mps and bruises. I felt as if the side of my face were crushed in, but I don't think it is."
"Were you in the top bunk?"
"Yes. I liked to look out of the window in the mornings."
"That's a good big fall to take unawares."
"Yes, I fell out like a sack and woke on the floor. What shall we do if she doesn't come right side up again? We can't live all upside down like this."
"There's always the other s.h.i.+p to fall back on ... unless her chain's broken too."
"I like our own much the best."
"But not if she stops like this.... And even if she straightened up she would heel over again in the next gale. I'm afraid we'll have to move."
"I shall always see that man's black face about the cabin, glaring at me as he used to do as if he wanted to eat me."
"If we have to go we'll give it a good cleaning, and fresh hangings, and make it to your taste."
So they chatted quietly, while the gale and the birds shrieked in chorus outside, and the waves of the lake thumped scornfully on the exposed bottom of the s.h.i.+p.
As soon as he could see, he rooted about for axe and knife, and chopped up a board and made a set of splints for her arm. And, though he grieved for the pain she must have suffered, he could not but feel a huge enjoyment in ministering to her.
The mere touch of her firm white flesh was a rare delight and made his fingers tingle. He did his best to think of her only as a patient, but found it impossible. She was so very much more to him than any ordinary patient ever had been or could be.
But for her suffering, he felt inclined to bless the breaking of the rusty cable. It brought them closer than ever before. It threw her more than ever on to his care. With her right arm prisoner she would be able to do but little for herself. She had not been able to dress herself properly, but had simply swathed a blanket about her night attire, leaving the broken arm free. But even so, her natural taste and capability had so arranged it, even in the darkness and moment of danger, that she looked like a Greek G.o.ddess, he said to himself, with one arm in a sling. One can make allowances for him.
As the light grew stronger he saw, to his distress, that her face had also suffered sorely in her fall. The whole right side was badly bruised and discoloured.
"Is it very bad?" she asked, as she saw him looking at it. "It feels sore and my head hums like a bee-hive."
"You got a bad b.u.mp there. I will get some salt water and bathe it.
Our fresh will all be gone in the upset, but I'll sling a bucket under the scupper-hole and we'll have enough for some coffee presently. When you've had some breakfast you will go and lie down in my bunk. If you could get a good sleep it would be the very best thing for you. Does the arm hurt much?"
"Not so much as it did, but I don't think I can sleep."
"You will when you lie down. You've had a bad shaking up. I'm truly sorry that all the penalties have fallen on you."
"It's a good thing you didn't break yourself too. Suppose we'd broken all our arms!" and she laughed a wry little laugh.
He crawled up the slope, and wormed himself through his barricade, and came back presently with a bucketful of water, found a piece of soft linen and insisted on bathing her face, under plea that she would joggle the broken arm if she tried to do it herself.
Then he sc.r.a.ped together at the foot of the slope sand enough for a small hearth, split some wood and kindled a fire, but found it necessary to open one of the ports to leeward to let out the smoke.
When he did so he found the water within a foot of it and could only hope they would heel over no more. He proceeded to make cakes and coffee, and then fried some salt pork, and anointed the bruised face with the fat of it, and she found it soothing.
When he had cut up her meat for her, and she had managed to eat a little, he helped her into his bunk, the upper one because it was airier and allowed more head-room, and covered her with blankets and told her to go to sleep. And then, since there was nothing more to be done, he crawled up the slope and got her blankets off the floor of her room, and made up a bed for himself in the angle at the foot of the slope. He lay for a time listening to the gale, and pondering the possibility of its doing them any further damage, and fell asleep with the matter still unsettled.