Authors: Margaret Dickinson
âYou sure, mate?'
Tony clenched his teeth against the pain, but he managed to nod and wave Alan away.
Tim weaved his way round the deck to the coxswain's cockpit. âMr MacreadyâTony's hurt.'
âAye, lad, I saw. Is it bad?'
âI dunno. But he won't let us do anything now.'
Macready nodded. âPeteâradio the ship. Tell them we've got the four crew aboard the lifeboat. What about the Captain?'
Droysen's voice crackled over the airwaves. â⦠The Captain is ver' bad. The engineer has come up from below. He was concussed. Has injury on head, but is all right. Over.'
âCan they jump aboard like the deckies?' Macready wanted to know.
There was a pause whilst some sort of consultation went on aboard the
Hroswitha
. Then the First Mate replied, âThe Captain cannot walk. The engineer will attempt the jump.'
âRight, Pete, tell the First Mate we'll take the Captain off next if the engineer can help the First Mate take on a breeches buoy. Then we'll take the engineer and the First Mate last.'
Droysen's reply was, âThank you, Coxswain, but I shall be staying aboard the
Hroswitha
in the Captain's place.'
Macready grunted. He would get the others off first and then maybe argue that one out with the First Mate. He could sympathise with their unwillingness to abandon the ship entirely if there was a reasonable hope of being able to ride out the storm. No Captain or First Mate liked to see his ship pass into the hands of the salvage men. And yet, when life was at stake â¦
Macready now manoeuvred the
Mary Martha Clamp
into a position a short distance from the ship so that his bowmanâChas Blake in place of the absent Phil Davisâcould fire the rocket carrying the thin line to the stricken vessel. Macready's voice was calm and his hands steady on the wheel, giving no outward indication of the agony in his mind, as, now in the position he wanted, he gave the order â Let go anchor.'
Chas Blake fired the rocket. The line snaked towards the
Hroswitha
but a gust of wind caught it and tossed it carelessly off course and into the water. Chas prepared to make another attempt whilst the lifeboat coxswain concentrated on keeping the Oakley steady in the raging seas.
Julie, Julie,
Julie!
The name hammered through his mind and her face floated before his mind's eye. Macready clenched his jaw and watched his bowman's second attempt to fire the line across the intervening space. This time the line fell on to the ship but before Droysen, slithering about on the still sloping deck, could grab it, it slipped off and splashed into the sea.
On the third attempt there was a momentary lull in the wind and the line flew high above the ship and wrapped itself round one of the derricks. The lifeboat crew watched as Droysen struggled towards the line and began to haul on it. Across the space went the thicker rope which would carry the breeches-buoy. This Droysen secured to the base of the derrick which was leaning out from the listing ship towards the lifeboat at an angle of about thirty degrees. Then the German First Mate disappeared, climbing the ladder back to the bridge.
Now that the
Mary Martha Clamp
was attached to the stricken ship by the breeches-buoy line, the danger to the lifeboat was even greater. Anchored, she could not move away if the ship suddenly lunged towards her, and all eyes watched anxiously as Droysen reappeared with the engineer and between them they half-carried, half-dragged, the huge, almost limp figure of the Captain. Like three drunks, they staggered across the deck, slipping and sliding on the wet sloping surface. They reached the derrick and Macready watched as the First Mate and the engineer propped the sick man against the crane while they prepared to receive the sling of the breeches-buoy which the lifeboatmen now sent across. It took fifteen minutes of struggling to get the helpless man into the sling and by that time, Macready could seeâeven across the distance that separated themâthat the injured engineer and the First Mate who seemed to be carrying all the responsibility, were themselves exhausted. At last they got the heavy man secure in the sling and signalled that they were ready.
The German Captain was winched across the boiling seas beneath. As the waves relentlessly buffeted the damaged coaster and the tiny lifeboat, it seemed an eternity that the man was being hauled across the space. First the line would go slack as the coaster was borne towards them and the sick man dangled only inches above the water. Then as that same wave hit the lifeboat, the line was stretched taut, almost to breaking-point. Inch by inch the man was drawn closer and willing hands reached out towards him to help him aboard the lifeboat whilst anxious eyes still watched the heaving coaster only a few yards away now.
A wave bigger than the rest rolled towards them, sweeping the cargo ship towards the lifeboat, just as the sling came over the side of the lifeboat and Schlick was set down.
The coaster bore down on them.
âCut the cable,' Macready roared. âWeigh anchor.'
The lifeboat's engines throbbed into renewed life, the anchor was hauled clear of the water but nearer and nearer came the huge ship.
In that split second before impact, Chas Blake wielded the axe and the rope between the two boats was severed in two. The lifeboat, full astern, thrust herself through the water away from the ship.
Now there remained only the First Mate and the engineer on board the
Hroswitha.
Macready glanced at the echo sounder and saw that he only had about six feet draught. With each huge wave the helpless cargo ship was being pushed, bows foremost, nearer and nearer the sandbank.
âPete, call up the coaster. Tell the First Mate if we don't take him and the engineer off now, they'll be on the sandbank. I presume he knows that,' Macready added, a little doubtful of the First Mate's condition considering all that had occurred during the last half an hour.
A few moments later Pete was reporting back. âHe says he and the engineer want to stay aboard.'
Macready shrugged, but said, âTell him we'll stand by.'
Macready pulled the lifeboat back away from the
Hroswitha
to a distance of about a hundred yards. He was hardly able to relax even now, but at least for the time being the pressure had eased a littleâat least the pressure of this particular service.
Now he had more time to think and the agonising thoughts crowded into his head.
Julie. Was there still no word? Surely Jack would have sent word if they had been found? He doubted that the inshore boat would have been able to launch in these seas, though he knew the reserve crew would try if there was any chance at all.
In the comparative lull, Macready said, âPete. Call up Jack and see if there's any news ofâJulie.'
Unusually solemn-faced, Pete nodded.
The reply came through a few moments later and Pete repeated the gist of the message to Macready. âThey have reported the sailing-dinghy
Nerissa
as missing. Sandy says the car which towed the boat is still on Beach Road with the empty trailer. Jack's been back to search at Dolan's Point again, but they're not there. They must have put back to sea, probably before the weather deteriorated rapidly. Breymouth have been requested to ask for helicopter assistance as soon as available, but they got the same answer as usânot available at present. The ILB will attempt a launch â¦' Pete shrugged and turned back towards his radio, unable to bear the look on the big man's face.
Grimly Macready received the message in silence. He knew that the chances of the inshore lifeboat even being able to launch in such seas were virtually nil, though he knew the inshore lads would have a real try.
He knew also that the sailing-dinghyânew and sparkling though she might have been this morningâcould be reduced to matchwood in minutes in such heavy seas.
Macready kept his hands firmly on the helm of the lifeboat, his gaze still upon the German coaster. By his side he felt, rather than saw, young Tim standing at his elbow.
He had overheard every word of the dreadful message.
Relentlessly the wind, which had veered to north-west, pushed the helpless coaster towards Middle Bank, helped by the tide which had turned and was now flowing into the Wash. Nearer and nearer until finally, as if indeed this were the very aim, the waters surged up into one huge wave bearing the ship aloft and carrying it on to the sandbank. The vessel shuddered and creaked, the derricks rocked and swayed and the whole structure settled on to the sand, still tilting toward the starboard side. The cargo slithered around the deck, crashing into the superstructure, splashing into the water.
Dimly, through the glass screen of the wheelhouse, the lifeboatmen could see the two men still aboard tossed about like limp rag dolls.
âShe's starting to break up. Now they'll have to come off,' Macready muttered and instructed Pete to call up the
Hroswitha
once more.
â
Hroswitha
, this is Saltershaven lifeboat. Suggest you abandon ship. We think she is starting to break up. Over.'
For a time there was no reply except the crackling over the airwaves. Then the voice of the First Mate was heard weakly. âWhat's happened? Lifeboatâwhat's happened?'
Pete turned to Macready. â I reckon he must have been thrown about. Sounds confused.'
âExplain what's happened. We canna do any more. It's a salvage job now.'
â
Hroswitha
, this is Saltershaven lifeboat. Your ship has been driven on to the sandbank. Coxswain suggests you let us take you off. Please acknowledge. Over.'
Again there was only interference and the noise of the wind and the sea whilst Macready and his radio/telephone operator waited.
Fred Douglas moved along the deck. âMacâwe've done what we can for the survivors. But that Captainâhe's in a bad way.'
âRight. Pete, tell the First Mate that his Captain needs immediate hospitalisation. He must realise that surely.'
Pete Donaldson repeated the message into the telephone. Faintly, Droysen's voice came over. âLifeboat, lifeboat. Take us off.'
âTell him we're coming in. Be ready to jump.'
They saw the engineer and the First Mate emerge from the bridge, clinging to the handrails they slithered down the ladder and clawed at any handhold they could find as they slid down the deck towards the starboard rail.
Macready now approached the
Hroswitha
stern first. Nearer and nearer the sandbank until the propellers were churning into the loose sand and the echo sounder was showing no draught beneath the hull of the lifeboat. Closer, closer, inch by inch, and the engineer and the First Mate were hanging over the rail, waiting.
The first time the lifeboat came close enough for the engineer to try a jump across the intervening space, the man lost his nerve. His hands seemed frozen to the handrail, his eyes glazed with terror, the blood from a gash on his forehead smeared across his face by the rain and the sea spray.
They were within eight feet of the side of the huge hull above them. Fred, his eyes now on the echo sounder to assist Macready, shouted a warning, even as they heard the engine shudder as the propellers were fouled by the sand. Macready pushed the controls to ahead slow and the lifeboat ploughed her way out of the sand and came away from the ship a little. As the gap widened between the two vessels, the engineer seemed to realise that he had missed his chance and looked as if he were about to attempt to jump the ever-increasing gap between himself and the lifeboat.
Gesticulating wildly, Chas Blake yelled at the German, âNo, no. Wait, man, wait!'
Once more, with infinite patience and gentleness, the coxswain put the controls into astern slow, but they could get no nearer, even though the
Hroswitha
, embedded in the sand, was now safer than she had been drifting at the mercy of the seas. Now she was held, she was not so much of a threat to the lifeboat. But still Macready could not reverse the Oakley near enough for the men to jump.
âChas,' Macready shouted, âget ready to fire a line up. We canna get close enough for them to jump.'
Once more the lifeboat went in and Chas fired a line which snaked up and wrapped itself over the deck rail. Both men made a grab for it and hauled a thicker rope aboard. They fastened this to the foot of the derrick and Chas secured his end to the stern of the lifeboat. The engineer was first down the rope, swaying above the seas he came down steadily, hand over hand, sliding down towards the box at the stern of the Oakley. Chas and Fred Douglas reached out to catch him as his feet touched the lifeboat.
Macready fought the controls for now it was the lifeboat which was in danger of being driven on to the sandbank and becoming embedded alongside the coaster.
The First Mate was on his way down. A wave swept in and pushed the lifeboat towards the coaster so that the rope slackened and the man on the rope was dipped downwards towards the water. He clung on as Macready eased the Oakley forward and the rope tightened again.
âCome on, man, come on,' Fred Douglas called encouragingly. âAll we need now is for him to panic and not be able to move,' he added in a low voice.
âShut up, Fred,' Chas muttered through his teeth, his eyes still on the figure swinging over the water. But his words were spoken without malice and even in the seriousness of the moment, Fred grinned at being chided by his colleague for his fleeting pessimism.
Droysen was moving again, slithering down the last few feet of the rope, ignoring the burns on his hands in his desperate effort to reach the safety of the rescue boat. The instant his feet touched the deck, Chas raised the axe and cut the rope and Macready pushed the controls to full ahead and the lifeboat's propellers churned the loose sand and thrust the boat forward away from the sandbank.
As the
Mary Martha Clamp
drew away, Droysen stood at the stem of the lifeboat taking a last look at the stranded
Hroswitha.