CHAPTER XII
IN THE COILS OF A "TWISTER"
"There he goes! Oh, that's too bad!" groaned the captain.
He had seen the boy's body shoot outward.
"No, he's struck something. He's caught a stay," cried the executiveofficer.
"He'll never hang there. He'll surely go over now."
Dan was hanging with desperate courage to the rope that he had caught.
"Such grit! What a pity!"
By this time the jackies had reached the platform, but they could be ofno assistance to their shipmate. Dan was hanging twenty feet out fromwhere they were.
He seemed to have lost his bearings, and, for the moment, appeared notto realize where he was. Little by little his power of reasoningreturned to him, while all hands were watching him with breathlessinterest. The stay to which he was clinging extended forward to theforemast, running from the middle of the mainmast to the middle of theforemast.
Hand over hand the plucky lad began moving along the rope brace. It wasslow progress at best. At last he was directly over the huge funnels.Hot, suffocating smoke, belching from the funnels, hid him from the viewof those on deck. The smoke and coal gas well-nigh strangled the boy,but he kept on. A cheer reached his ears as he at last emerged from thecloud of black smoke.
"Keep it up, Dynamite! Keep it up!" howled a dozen voices.
"Steady now! Hold to your course. You're on the last lap!"
"Come on, Dan!" howled Sam Hickey, dancing about on his insecurefoothold, almost beside himself with excitement.
On the other hand, at that moment, Dan Davis was perhaps the leastexcited of all that ship's company. He was in full command of himself,though his arms ached and he had to exert great self-control to keepfrom letting go. Now and then he would pause, hanging by one hand torest the other arm, then he would go on again, moving more rapidly thanbefore.
"Bridge, there!" roared Sam.
"Aye, aye."
"Can't somebody come aloft to give Davis a hand when he reaches theforemast?"
"Get aloft, there!" bellowed the executive officer.
"Yes, the boy Hickey has more sense than all the rest of we officersdown here," exclaimed the captain.
Men ran up the ladders in a squirming white line, and quickly clamberedout into the steel rigging. As Dan neared them they stretched forththeir hands.
"Only a little way further, matey," they encouraged. "That's the boy!You'll make a tight-rope walker one of these days, only you want tolearn to walk with your feet instead of your hands."
"Grab me!" called Dan.
"Got him!" yelled a jackie at the top of his voice.
The word carried to the bridge and to the superstructure, where ahundred or more sailors were crouching trying to peer up into the mist.They broke forth into a wild yell of applause.
In the meantime strong hands had grasped Dan, pulling him in among thesteel supports of the cage mast, where they held him while he restedfrom his great ordeal.
Sam Hickey was dancing a jig on the top of the military mast, yelling asif he had suddenly gone mad.
"The boy is safe, sir," announced the executive officer.
"Thank God!" breathed the captain. "Aloft, there!"
"Aye, aye."
"Is Davis all right?"
"Yes, sir."
"Send him below as soon as he is able."
"Aye, aye, sir."
"I'm able now," said Dan. "I'm going below. I've got to get back to mystation."
"All right, matey. Want any help?"
"No; I can get down alone."
Dan's arms ached, and his muscles were pretty well stiffened, as hestarted to make his way down the rocking mast.
At last he reached the foot of the mast, which was the navigating bridgeof the ship, and started to run down the steps to return to his post.
"Davis!" The voice was sharp and commanding.
"Aye, aye, sir," answered the boy, halting and saluting.
"Where are you going?"
"To my post, sir," he answered, as he faced the commanding officer.
"You need not return to your post. There are enough men aloft in themainmast now. You have done quite enough. How did you happen to fall?"
The boy explained, not omitting the fact that he and Sam were running arace for the tops.
The captain did not rebuke the boy for this, perhaps realizing that Danhad already been severely punished for his foolhardiness.
"That is all for the present. Aloft, there!"
"Aye, aye, sir."
"How about that waterspout!"
The seas were engulfing the ship so that the officers could not see thewaterspout at all. They had wholly lost sight of it.
"Yeow! Wow!" yelled a voice far above their heads.
Looking up, they saw the red-headed Sam dancing again, shouting lustilyand pointing off the starboard bow.
"Aloft, there, what is it?"
"Waterspout! Waterspout!" howled Hickey.
"Where away?"
"It ain't away at all."
"Where away? Answer, you lubber!"
"Right off the starboard bow, sir. Look out, she's going to hit us!Lo-o-o-o-k out! Ye-ow!"
"Hard aport!" shouted the captain. "Hold fast on the bridge! Look alive,men aft, there! Waterspout coming aboard. Every man look out forhimself!"
All tried to do so, but not all were quick enough to get under cover.Only a few of them succeeded.
With a terrifying roar the waterspout swept down on the ship. It toweredabove them like a huge mountain, bearing to the northeast. It struck thebattleship on the starboard bow, sending a shiver through the ship,hurling to the deck every man who was not clinging to some support.
The twister recoiled after sending tons of water over the ship--recoiledas if to gather strength for a final crushing blow. The quartermaster,who had been holding the steering wheel, had been wrenched from thewheel and hurled down a flight of steps to the spar deck. Not an officeron the bridge was on his feet.
Dan Davis, who had crept up the companionway to get a better view of thewaterspout, was huddled against the cage mast, clinging to one of itssupports.
All at once he discovered that no one was at the wheel. Without waitingfor an order, he leaped forward. Grasping the wheel, he swung it sharplyto port. The thought suddenly occurred to him that the best way to meetthe twister would be head-on. He did not know what the result of such ameeting might be, nor did he have time to think. As it was, the shipwas laboring in the trough of a terrific sea, and might be swamped.
The bow of the ship pierced the base of the waterspout. With a mightyroar the towering column of water suddenly collapsed. The sound was likethunder, as tons upon tons of water beat down on the decks. The wholeship seemed to be under water. Everything movable was moving. Theofficers lay prone upon the narrow navigating bridge, clinging to itsstanchions for their lives.
At the wheel a hatless boy, fairly swimming in salt water, was workingto get a foothold that would enable him to swing the ship. At last hemanaged to wrap both legs about the wheel frame, and there he clung,tugging at the wheel with all his strength.
Very slowly, at first, the ship began to respond. First the battleshipseemed to shake itself, trying to throw off the great weight of waterupon its decks; then its blunt, stubborn bow rose clear of the seas. Amoment, and the shining decks themselves cleared the water, everyscupper discharging a green salt flood overboard, every deck belowsoaked with brine.
The captain was the first to regain his feet. He sprang up, his eyestaking in the after part of the ship in one sweeping, comprehensiveview. Then his eyes rested on the man at the wheel.
"Davis, is that you?"
"Yes, sir."
"You weren't at the wheel before we were struck?"
"No, sir."
"How did you happen to get there?"
"I guess I must have been washed here, sir.
"Where is the quartermaster who was at the wheel?"
"I saw him falling down the
after companionway, sir. I think you willfind him on the spar deck, sir."
"You steered us out?"
"Yes, sir."
"Where is the spout?"
"I smashed it, sir."
"You what?"
"Smashed it."
"How?"
"I steered the ship into it."
"You did that?"
"Yes, sir," answered Dan, now expecting that he was in for a severerebuke.
"Explain."
"I saw, immediately after the wheelman had been swept away, that theship was in a bad position. The waterspout was going to hit us,quartering on the starboard bow. It seemed to me that the best thing todo would be to split it. I didn't know whether I could do it or not, butI made up my mind to try. There was no one to ask, nor time to do so. Ihad to do something in a hurry."
"So you rammed the waterspout, eh?"
"I did, sir."
"What do you think of that, Coates?" as the executive officer pickedhimself up, wet, capless, very much the worse for his encounter with thewaters of the twister.
"What is that, sir?"
"Davis rammed the twister."
The captain then went on to relate in detail what had happened whilethey were on their faces, holding fast to the bridge stanchions to keepfrom going overboard.
"Davis, I shall have to commend you again and for this--perhaps savingthe ship--I shall send your name in to the department. Quartermaster,here!"
"Aye, aye, sir."
"Man the wheel!"
The Battleship Boys in Foreign Service; or, Earning New Ratings in European Seas Page 12