Cry Wolf - Smith Wilbur (книги онлайн без регистрации полностью .TXT) 📗
close the telescope, climb stiffly from the crows-nest and begin the
long slow journey down the rigging to the deck below.
Papadopoulos greeted him like a brother, reaching up to hug him and
breathe garlic in his face, and Vicky had the chop-box open and the
primus stove hissing. She brought him an enamel mug of steaming black
coffee and looked at him with a new respect tinged with admiration.
Gareth opened the hatch of the turret from which during the whole night
he had commanded the crew with a loaded Vickers machine gun and came to
fetch the other mug of coffee from Vicky and gave Jake a cheroot as
they moved to the rail together.
"I keep underestimating you," he grinned, as he cupped his hands around
the flaring match he offered Jake. "Just because you are big I keep
thinking you are stupid."
"You'll get over it, "Jake promised him. Instinctively they both
glanced across the deck at where Vicky was breaking eggs into the pan
and they understood each other very clearly.
She shook them both awake a little before noon. They were sprawled on
their blankets in the shade under one of the cars trying to catch up on
the sleep they had missed that night. However, they followed Vicky
without protest to the bows and the three of them peered ahead at the
low lioncoloured coast line, upon which the surf creamed softly and
over which the hard aching blue shield of the sky blazed with an
intensity that hurt the eyes.
There was no clear dividing line between earth and sky.
It was blurred by the low mist of dust and heat that wavered and
rippled like the yellow mane of the lion. Vicky wondered whether she
had ever seen such an uninviting scene, and decided she had not. She
began to compose the words with which she would describe it to her tens
of thousands of readers.
Gregorius came up to join the group. He had discarded the western
dress and donned instead the traditional sham ma and tight breeches.
He had become the man of Africa once again, and the smooth
chocolate-brown face, with its halo of dark thick curls, was lit by the
passion of the returning exile.
"You cannot see the mountains the haze is too thick," he explained.
"But sometimes in the dawn when the air is cooler-" and he stared into
the west, with his longing expressed clearly in the liquid flashing
eyes and upon the full sculptured lips.
The schooner crept inshore, gliding over the shallows where the water
was like that of a mountain stream, so clear that they could make out
every detail of the reef thirty feet down and watch the shoals of coral
fish below like bejewelled clouds through the crystal waters.
Papadopoulos turned the HirondeUe to approach the shore at an oblique
angle so that the details of the coast resolved themselves gradually
and they saw the golden red beaches broken by headlands and points of
jagged rock, and beyond it the land rose gradually, barren and awful,
speckled only with the low scrubby spino Cristi and car riel grass.
For an hour they ran parallel with the shore, a thousand yards off, and
the group by the rail stood and stared at it with fascination.
Only Jake had left the group and was making the preparations to begin
unloading, but he also came back to the rail when abruptly a deep bay
opened ahead of them.
"The Bay of Chains," said Gregorius, and it was clear how it had got
its name, for, huddled under the cliffs of one headland and protected
from the prevailing winds and the run of the surf by the horn of land,
were the ruins of the ancient slave city of Month.
Gregorius pointed it out to them, for it did not look like a city.
It was merely an area of broken rock and stone blocks running down to
the water's edge. They were close enough now to make out the roughly
geometrical layout of smothered streets and roofless buildings.
Hirondeue dropped anchor and snubbed up gently. Jake finished his
final preparations for unloading and crossed to where Gareth stood by
the rail.
"One of us will have to swim a line ashore."
"Spin you for it,"
suggested Gareth, and before Jake could protest he had the coin in his
hand.
"Heads!" jake looked resigned.
"Bad luck, old son. Give the sharks my love." Gareth smiled and
stroked his mustache.
Jake balanced on the clumsy pontoon raft as it was lifted by the donkey
engine and lowered over the side, dangling on the heavy lines. and
floated alongside as It settled on to the surface un-gracefully as a
pregnant hippo.
Jake grinned up at Vicky who was leaning over the rail, watching with
interest.
"Unless you want to be blinded with splendour, you'd better close your
eyes." For a moment she did not understand, but then as he started to
strip off his shirt and unbutton his pants, she turned modestly away.
With the end of a coil of light line tied about his waist Jake plunged
naked into the sea and struck out for the shore. Vicky's curiosity got
the better of her at this stage, and she glanced slyly overboard. There
was something so childlike and defenceless about a man with his
trousers off, she thought, as she considered Jake's bobbing white
buttocks. She might develop that as a theme in one of her columns, she
thought, and then realized that Gareth Swales was watching her with one
mockingly raised eyebrow, as he paid out the coil of line that snaked
after Jake. She blushed pinkly under her tan and hurried away to make
sure her typewriter and personal duffel bag were packed away into Miss
Wobbly.
Jake touched bottom and waded ashore to secure the line to one of the
stone blocks, and already the first car was on on its wooden blocks,
and, with the winch clattering, was being lifted over the side.
With each man performing his own task skilfully, one at a time the cars
were lowered on to the bobbing raft. There its wheels were hastily
lashed and it was hauled carefully towards the beach by the land
line.
As soon as the raft ran aground on the sloping yellow sand, Jake
started the engine while Gregorius clamped the footboards into place.
Then with the engine revving noisily and the raft swaying dangerously,
it rolled over the footboards and up the slope to park well above the
high-water mark. Then the raft was hauled back alongside the schooner
for its next load.
Although they worked as swiftly as safety would allow, the hours sped
away just as swiftly, and it was late afternoon when the last load of
fuel drums and wooden cases, with Vicky Camberwell sitting on top of
the precarious load, made the short crossing to the beach.
Almost the instant it left the ship's side, the diesel thumped into
life, the anchor chain rattled in over the bows and Papadopoulos gave
the order to cast off the line of the raft.
By the time Vicky jumped down on the crunchy sand, the Hirondelle was
moving steadily out between the horns of the bay, and spreading her
wings of white canvas to the evening breeze. The four of them stood
upon the beach in the lowering dusk and watched her go. None of them
waved, and yet they all felt a loss at her going. Stinking slaver,
with a crew of pirates, yet she had been their link with the outer
world. HirondeUe cleared the cliffs and caught the full drive of the
wind, heeled eagerly and went away, with her wake leaving a long oily
slick across the surface long after she had disappeared into the