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<h2> III </h2>
<p>Jukes was as ready a man as any half-dozen young mates that may be caught
by casting a net upon the waters; and though he had been somewhat taken
aback by the startling viciousness of the first squall, he had pulled
himself together on the instant, had called out the hands and had rushed
them along to secure such openings about the deck as had not been already
battened down earlier in the evening. Shouting in his fresh, stentorian
voice, "Jump, boys, and bear a hand!" he led in the work, telling himself
the while that he had "just expected this."</p>
<p>But at the same time he was growing aware that this was rather more than
he had expected. From the first stir of the air felt on his cheek the gale
seemed to take upon itself the accumulated impetus of an avalanche. Heavy
sprays enveloped the Nan-Shan from stem to stern, and instantly in the
midst of her regular rolling she began to jerk and plunge as though she
had gone mad with fright.</p>
<p>Jukes thought, "This is no joke." While he was exchanging explanatory
yells with his captain, a sudden lowering of the darkness came upon the
night, falling before their vision like something palpable. It was as if
the masked lights of the world had been turned down. Jukes was
uncritically glad to have his captain at hand. It relieved him as though
that man had, by simply coming on deck, taken most of the gale's weight
upon his shoulders. Such is the prestige, the privilege, and the burden of
command.</p>
<p>Captain MacWhirr could expect no relief of that sort from any one on
earth. Such is the loneliness of command. He was trying to see, with that
watchful manner of a seaman who stares into the wind's eye as if into the
eye of an adversary, to penetrate the hidden intention and guess the aim
and force of the thrust. The strong wind swept at him out of a vast
obscurity; he felt under his feet the uneasiness of his ship, and he could
not even discern the shadow of her shape. He wished it were not so; and
very still he waited, feeling stricken by a blind man's helplessness.</p>
<p>To be silent was natural to him, dark or shine. Jukes, at his elbow, made
himself heard yelling cheerily in the gusts, "We must have got the worst
of it at once, sir." A faint burst of lightning quivered all round, as if
flashed into a cavern—into a black and secret chamber of the sea,
with a floor of foaming crests.</p>
<p>It unveiled for a sinister, fluttering moment a ragged mass of clouds
hanging low, the lurch of the long outlines of the ship, the black figures
of men caught on the bridge, heads forward, as if petrified in the act of
butting. The darkness palpitated down upon all this, and then the real
thing came at last.</p>
<p>It was something formidable and swift, like the sudden smashing of a vial
of wrath. It seemed to explode all round the ship with an overpowering
concussion and a rush of great waters, as if an immense dam had been blown
up to windward. In an instant the men lost touch of each other. This is
the disintegrating power of a great wind: it isolates one from one's kind.
An earthquake, a landslip, an avalanche, overtake a man incidentally, as
it were—without passion. A furious gale attacks him like a personal
enemy, tries to grasp his limbs, fastens upon his mind, seeks to rout his
very spirit out of him.</p>
<p>Jukes was driven away from his commander. He fancied himself whirled a
great distance through the air. Everything disappeared—even, for a
moment, his power of thinking; but his hand had found one of the
rail-stanchions. His distress was by no means alleviated by an inclination
to disbelieve the reality of this experience. Though young, he had seen
some bad weather, and had never doubted his ability to imagine the worst;
but this was so much beyond his powers of fancy that it appeared
incompatible with the existence of any ship whatever. He would have been
incredulous about himself in the same way, perhaps, had he not been so
harassed by the necessity of exerting a wrestling effort against a force
trying to tear him away from his hold. Moreover, the conviction of not
being utterly destroyed returned to him through the sensations of being
half-drowned, bestially shaken, and partly choked.</p>
<p>It seemed to him he remained there precariously alone with the stanchion
for a long, long time. The rain poured on him, flowed, drove in sheets. He
breathed in gasps; and sometimes the water he swallowed was fresh and
sometimes it was salt. For the most part he kept his eyes shut tight, as
if suspecting his sight might be destroyed in the immense flurry of the
elements. When he ventured to blink hastily, he derived some moral support
from the green gleam of the starboard light shining feebly upon the flight
of rain and sprays. He was actually looking at it when its ray fell upon
the uprearing sea which put it out. He saw the head of the wave topple
over, adding the mite of its crash to the tremendous uproar raging around
him, and almost at the same instant the stanchion was wrenched away from
his embracing arms. After a crushing thump on his back he found himself
suddenly afloat and borne upwards. His first irresistible notion was that
the whole China Sea had climbed on the bridge. Then, more sanely, he
concluded himself gone overboard. All the time he was being tossed, flung,
and rolled in great volumes of water, he kept on repeating mentally, with
the utmost precipitation, the words: "My God! My God! My God! My God!"</p>
<p>All at once, in a revolt of misery and despair, he formed the crazy
resolution to get out of that. And he began to thresh about with his arms
and legs. But as soon as he commenced his wretched struggles he discovered
that he had become somehow mixed up with a face, an oilskin coat,
somebody's boots. He clawed ferociously all these things in turn, lost
them, found them again, lost them once more, and finally was himself
caught in the firm clasp of a pair of stout arms. He returned the embrace
closely round a thick solid body. He had found his captain.</p>
<p>They tumbled over and over, tightening their hug. Suddenly the water let
them down with a brutal bang; and, stranded against the side of the
wheelhouse, out of breath and bruised, they were left to stagger up in the
wind and hold on where they could.</p>
<p>Jukes came out of it rather horrified, as though he had escaped some
unparalleled outrage directed at his feelings. It weakened his faith in
himself. He started shouting aimlessly to the man he could feel near him
in that fiendish blackness, "Is it you, sir? Is it you, sir?" till his
temples seemed ready to burst. And he heard in answer a voice, as if
crying far away, as if screaming to him fretfully from a very great
distance, the one word "Yes!" Other seas swept again over the bridge. He
received them defencelessly right over his bare head, with both his hands
engaged in holding.</p>
<p>The motion of the ship was extravagant. Her lurches had an appalling
helplessness: she pitched as if taking a header into a void, and seemed to
find a wall to hit every time. When she rolled she fell on her side
headlong, and she would be righted back by such a demolishing blow that
Jukes felt her reeling as a clubbed man reels before he collapses. The
gale howled and scuffled about gigantically in the darkness, as though the
entire world were one black gully. At certain moments the air streamed
against the ship as if sucked through a tunnel with a concentrated solid
force of impact that seemed to lift her clean out of the water and keep
her up for an instant with only a quiver running through her from end to
end. And then she would begin her tumbling again as if dropped back into a
boiling cauldron. Jukes tried hard to compose his mind and judge things
coolly.</p>
<p>The sea, flattened down in the heavier gusts, would uprise and overwhelm
both ends of the Nan-Shan in snowy rushes of foam, expanding wide, beyond
both rails, into the night. And on this dazzling sheet, spread under the
blackness of the clouds and emitting a bluish glow, Captain MacWhirr could
catch a desolate glimpse of a few tiny specks black as ebony, the tops of
the hatches, the battened companions, the heads of the covered winches,
the foot of a mast. This was all he could see of his ship. Her middle
structure, covered by the bridge which bore him, his mate, the closed
wheelhouse where a man was steering shut up with the fear of being swept
overboard together with the whole thing in one great crash—her
middle structure was like a half-tide rock awash upon a coast. It was like
an outlying rock with the water boiling up, streaming over, pouring off,
beating round—like a rock in the surf to which shipwrecked people
cling before they let go—only it rose, it sank, it rolled
continuously, without respite and rest, like a rock that should have
miraculously struck adrift from a coast and gone wallowing upon the sea.</p>
<p>The Nan-Shan was being looted by the storm with a senseless, destructive
fury: trysails torn out of the extra gaskets, double-lashed awnings blown
away, bridge swept clean, weather-cloths burst, rails twisted,
light-screens smashed—and two of the boats had gone already. They
had gone unheard and unseen, melting, as it were, in the shock and smother
of the wave. It was only later, when upon the white flash of another high
sea hurling itself amidships, Jukes had a vision of two pairs of davits
leaping black and empty out of the solid blackness, with one overhauled
fall flying and an iron-bound block capering in the air, that he became
aware of what had happened within about three yards of his back.</p>
<p>He poked his head forward, groping for the ear of his commander. His lips
touched it—big, fleshy, very wet. He cried in an agitated tone, "Our
boats are going now, sir."</p>
<p>And again he heard that voice, forced and ringing feebly, but with a
penetrating effect of quietness in the enormous discord of noises, as if
sent out from some remote spot of peace beyond the black wastes of the
gale; again he heard a man's voice—the frail and indomitable sound
that can be made to carry an infinity of thought, resolution and purpose,
that shall be pronouncing confident words on the last day, when heavens
fall, and justice is done—again he heard it, and it was crying to
him, as if from very, very far—"All right."</p>
<p>He thought he had not managed to make himself understood. "Our boats—I
say boats—the boats, sir! Two gone!"</p>
<p>The same voice, within a foot of him and yet so remote, yelled sensibly,
"Can't be helped."</p>
<p>Captain MacWhirr had never turned his face, but Jukes caught some more
words on the wind.</p>
<p>"What can—expect—when hammering through—such—Bound
to leave—something behind—stands to reason."</p>
<p>Watchfully Jukes listened for more. No more came. This was all Captain
MacWhirr had to say; and Jukes could picture to himself rather than see
the broad squat back before him. An impenetrable obscurity pressed down
upon the ghostly glimmers of the sea. A dull conviction seized upon Jukes
that there was nothing to be done.</p>
<p>If the steering-gear did not give way, if the immense volumes of water did
not burst the deck in or smash one of the hatches, if the engines did not
give up, if way could be kept on the ship against this terrific wind, and
she did not bury herself in one of these awful seas, of whose white crests
alone, topping high above her bows, he could now and then get a sickening
glimpse—then there was a chance of her coming out of it. Something
within him seemed to turn over, bringing uppermost the feeling that the
Nan-Shan was lost.</p>
<p>"She's done for," he said to himself, with a surprising mental agitation,
as though he had discovered an unexpected meaning in this thought. One of
these things was bound to happen. Nothing could be prevented now, and
nothing could be remedied. The men on board did not count, and the ship
could not last. This weather was too impossible.</p>
<p>Jukes felt an arm thrown heavily over his shoulders; and to this overture
he responded with great intelligence by catching hold of his captain round
the waist.</p>
<p>They stood clasped thus in the blind night, bracing each other against the
wind, cheek to cheek and lip to ear, in the manner of two hulks lashed
stem to stern together.</p>
<p>And Jukes heard the voice of his commander hardly any louder than before,
but nearer, as though, starting to march athwart the prodigious rush of
the hurricane, it had approached him, bearing that strange effect of
quietness like the serene glow of a halo.</p>
<p>"D'ye know where the hands got to?" it asked, vigorous and evanescent at
the same time, overcoming the strength of the wind, and swept away from
Jukes instantly.</p>
<p>Jukes didn't know. They were all on the bridge when the real force of the
hurricane struck the ship. He had no idea where they had crawled to. Under
the circumstances they were nowhere, for all the use that could be made of
them. Somehow the Captain's wish to know distressed Jukes.</p>
<p>"Want the hands, sir?" he cried, apprehensively.</p>
<p>"Ought to know," asserted Captain MacWhirr. "Hold hard."</p>
<p>They held hard. An outburst of unchained fury, a vicious rush of the wind
absolutely steadied the ship; she rocked only, quick and light like a
child's cradle, for a terrific moment of suspense, while the whole
atmosphere, as it seemed, streamed furiously past her, roaring away from
the tenebrous earth.</p>
<p>It suffocated them, and with eyes shut they tightened their grasp. What
from the magnitude of the shock might have been a column of water running
upright in the dark, butted against the ship, broke short, and fell on her
bridge, crushingly, from on high, with a dead burying weight.</p>
<p>A flying fragment of that collapse, a mere splash, enveloped them in one
swirl from their feet over their heads, filling violently their ears,
mouths and nostrils with salt water. It knocked out their legs, wrenched
in haste at their arms, seethed away swiftly under their chins; and
opening their eyes, they saw the piled-up masses of foam dashing to and
fro amongst what looked like the fragments of a ship. She had given way as
if driven straight in. Their panting hearts yielded, too, before the
tremendous blow; and all at once she sprang up again to her desperate
plunging, as if trying to scramble out from under the ruins.</p>
<p>The seas in the dark seemed to rush from all sides to keep her back where
she might perish. There was hate in the way she was handled, and a
ferocity in the blows that fell. She was like a living creature thrown to
the rage of a mob: hustled terribly, struck at, borne up, flung down,
leaped upon. Captain MacWhirr and Jukes kept hold of each other, deafened
by the noise, gagged by the wind; and the great physical tumult beating
about their bodies, brought, like an unbridled display of passion, a
profound trouble to their souls. One of those wild and appalling shrieks
that are heard at times passing mysteriously overhead in the steady roar
of a hurricane, swooped, as if borne on wings, upon the ship, and Jukes
tried to outscream it.</p>
<p>"Will she live through this?"</p>
<p>The cry was wrenched out of his breast. It was as unintentional as the
birth of a thought in the head, and he heard nothing of it himself. It all
became extinct at once—thought, intention, effort—and of his
cry the inaudible vibration added to the tempest waves of the air.</p>
<p>He expected nothing from it. Nothing at all. For indeed what answer could
be made? But after a while he heard with amazement the frail and resisting
voice in his ear, the dwarf sound, unconquered in the giant tumult.</p>
<p>"She may!"</p>
<p>It was a dull yell, more difficult to seize than a whisper. And presently
the voice returned again, half submerged in the vast crashes, like a ship
battling against the waves of an ocean.</p>
<p>"Let's hope so!" it cried—small, lonely and unmoved, a stranger to
the visions of hope or fear; and it flickered into disconnected words:
"Ship. . . . . This. . . . Never—Anyhow . . . for the best." Jukes
gave it up.</p>
<p>Then, as if it had come suddenly upon the one thing fit to withstand the
power of a storm, it seemed to gain force and firmness for the last broken
shouts:</p>
<p>"Keep on hammering . . . builders . . . good men. . . . . And chance it .
. . engines. . . . Rout . . . good man."</p>
<p>Captain MacWhirr removed his arm from Jukes' shoulders, and thereby ceased
to exist for his mate, so dark it was; Jukes, after a tense stiffening of
every muscle, would let himself go limp all over. The gnawing of profound
discomfort existed side by side with an incredible disposition to
somnolence, as though he had been buffeted and worried into drowsiness.
The wind would get hold of his head and try to shake it off his shoulders;
his clothes, full of water, were as heavy as lead, cold and dripping like
an armour of melting ice: he shivered—it lasted a long time; and
with his hands closed hard on his hold, he was letting himself sink slowly
into the depths of bodily misery. His mind became concentrated upon
himself in an aimless, idle way, and when something pushed lightly at the
back of his knees he nearly, as the saying is, jumped out of his skin.</p>
<p>In the start forward he bumped the back of Captain MacWhirr, who didn't
move; and then a hand gripped his thigh. A lull had come, a menacing lull
of the wind, the holding of a stormy breath—and he felt himself
pawed all over. It was the boatswain. Jukes recognized these hands, so
thick and enormous that they seemed to belong to some new species of man.</p>
<p>The boatswain had arrived on the bridge, crawling on all fours against the
wind, and had found the chief mate's legs with the top of his head.
Immediately he crouched and began to explore Jukes' person upwards with
prudent, apologetic touches, as became an inferior.</p>
<p>He was an ill-favoured, undersized, gruff sailor of fifty, coarsely hairy,
short-legged, long-armed, resembling an elderly ape. His strength was
immense; and in his great lumpy paws, bulging like brown boxing-gloves on
the end of furry forearms, the heaviest objects were handled like
playthings. Apart from the grizzled pelt on his chest, the menacing
demeanour and the hoarse voice, he had none of the classical attributes of
his rating. His good nature almost amounted to imbecility: the men did
what they liked with him, and he had not an ounce of initiative in his
character, which was easy-going and talkative. For these reasons Jukes
disliked him; but Captain MacWhirr, to Jukes' scornful disgust, seemed to
regard him as a first-rate petty officer.</p>
<p>He pulled himself up by Jukes' coat, taking that liberty with the greatest
moderation, and only so far as it was forced upon him by the hurricane.</p>
<p>"What is it, boss'n, what is it?" yelled Jukes, impatiently. What could
that fraud of a boss'n want on the bridge? The typhoon had got on Jukes'
nerves. The husky bellowings of the other, though unintelligible, seemed
to suggest a state of lively satisfaction.</p>
<p>There could be no mistake. The old fool was pleased with something.</p>
<p>The boatswain's other hand had found some other body, for in a changed
tone he began to inquire: "Is it you, sir? Is it you, sir?" The wind
strangled his howls.</p>
<p>"Yes!" cried Captain MacWhirr.</p>
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