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The Trade-Wind
by
They knew their captain, and they knew the ropes–on the blackest of dark nights. Blind men climbed aloft, and felt for foot-ropes and gaskets. Blind men on deck felt for sheets, halyards, and braces, and in ten minutes the sails were set, and the brig was charging wildly along before the gale, with two blind men at the wheel endeavoring to keep her straight by the right and left pressure of the wind on their faces.
“Keep the wind as much on the port quarter as you can without broaching to,” yelled the captain in their ears, and they answered and did their best. She was a clean-lined craft and steered easily; yet the off-shore sea which was rising often threw her around until nearly in the trough. The captain remained by them, advising and encouraging.
“Where’re ye goin’, Bill?” asked the mate, weakly, as he scrambled up to him.
“Right out to sea, and, unless we get our eyes back soon, right across to the Bight of Benin, three thousand miles from here. We’ve no business on this coast in this condition. What ails you, Angel? Lost your nerve?”
“Mebbe, Bill.” The mate’s voice was hoarse and strained. “This is new to me. I’m falling–falling–all the time.”
“So am I. Brace up. We’ll get used to it. Get a couple of hands aft and heave the log. We take our departure from Kittredge Point, Barbados Island, at six o’clock this morning of the 10th October. We’ll keep a Geordie’s log-book–with a jack-knife and a stick.”
They hove the log for him. It was marked for a now useless 28-second sand-glass, which Captain Swarth replaced by a spare chronometer, held to his ear in the companionway. It ticked even seconds, and when twenty-eight of them had passed he called, “Stop.” The markings on the line that had slipped through the mate’s fingers indicated an eight-knot speed.
“Seven, allowing for wild steering,” said the captain when he had stowed away his chronometer and returned to the deck. “Angel, we know we’re going about sou’east by east, seven knots. There’s practically no variation o’ the compass in these seas, and that course’ll take us clear of Cape St. Roque. Just as fast as the men can stand it at the wheel, we’ll pile on canvas and get all we can out o’ this good wind. If it takes us into the southeast trades, well and good. We can feel our way across on the trade-wind–unless we hit something, of course. You see, it blows almost out of the east on this side, and ‘ll haul more to the sou’east and south’ard as we get over. By the wind first, then we’ll square away as we need to. We’ll know the smell o’ the trades–nothing like it on earth–and the smell o’ the Gold Coast, Ivory Coast, Slave Coast, and the Kameruns. And I’ll lay odds we can feel the heat o’ the sun in the east and west enough to make a fair guess at the course. But it won’t come to that. Some of us ‘ll be able to see pretty soon.”
It was wild talk, but the demoralized mate needed encouraging. He answered with a steadier voice: “Lucky we got in grub and water yesterday.”
“Right you are, Angel. Now, in case this holds on to us, why, we’ll find some of our friends over in the Bight, and they’ll know by our rig that something’s wrong. Flanders is somewhere on the track,–you know he went back to the nigger business,–and Chink put a slave-deck in his hold down Rio way last spring. And old man Slack–I did him a service when I crippled the corvette that was after him, and he’s grateful. Hope we’ll meet him. I’d rather meet Chink than Flanders in the dark, and I’d trust a Javanese trader before either. If either of them come aboard we’ll be ready to use their eyes for our benefit, not let ’em use ours for theirs. Flanders once said he liked the looks of this brig.”