"As Captain of the Struan cutter Cloudette," he said a little louder than before to carry over the wind, "it is my duty and privilege to commend this man's spirit to the Keeping of Almighty God, asking Almighty God to forgive him his sins, not that we knew he had any, not real sins, casting him into the deep from whence ... from whence we came here from England, from home across the seas. He was a good fine man.
Malcolm Struan was a good fine man and we miss him, we miss him now and we'll miss him in the future..." He glanced at Angelique who was holding on to a gunnel stanchion with both hands, her knuckles white. A gust hit her, pressing her veil against her face. "Do you want to say anything, Ma'am?"
She shook her head, the silent tears streaming.
Spray came aboard to starboard, slightly lower in the water because of their weight and that of the coffin.
Bleakly he motioned to the stoker and Skye.
Awkwardly, their footing precarious, they loosed the ropes binding the coffin to the bench and eased it laboriously towards the starboard gunnel to project out over the sea. With one hand, Jamie helped them. And when the coffin teetered on the brink, he said loudly, his own unhappiness cresting, "Dust will go to dust, and the sea and the sky will claim its own, and the wild winds will whisper one to another that this, good fine young man has gone to join his Maker too soon, too soon..." With the other two men, he gave the coffin a last shove and it tipped over and went into the ocean.
The cutter heeled, correcting for the loss of weight, a waiting gust caught the exposed hull and heeled her more. The port gunnel went into the sea. They all grabbed for hand holds except the Bosun and stoker who rode with it. Angelique, weak from tears, lost her grip and skidded away.
She was almost overboard when Jamie lunged and caught her, frantically dragged her back, holding on with his other hand. Wind tore her hat and veil away and sent them swirling, then the stoker, with strong sea legs, slid down to her and lifted her and scrambled back into the safety of the cabin, tumbling after her.
Temperature dropped. Rain began. The squall fell on them. Jamie shouted, "Bosun, go home!"
"Best stay below, sorr!" Tinker shouted back, already decided what to do and how to do it. He waited until the stoker, mouthing violent curses, had scuttled to the engine room hatch and closed it after him and Jamie, Hoag and Skye were safe in the cabin. Rain became slashing. The sea violent.
Tinker signalled "Slow Ahead," swung the wheel to port and eased off the wind. Her bow dug into a comber. She broke free bravely, water cascading along her deck to smash into the glass of cabin and wheelhouse, and continued to turn. "Easy now," he said, pipe firm in his mouth, "we're friends for God's sake, we just give you old Green-eyed Devil's grandson."
Coming around was foul. Waves pushed by the wind heeled the cutter over, retchingly, and as she tried to correct herself they allowed almost no respite and dragged her over further. In the cabin the four of them hung on as best they could, anything loose cascading. Again Angelique lost her balance but the other two held her, for the moment none of them thinking about much else than the storm. Hoag had gone dirty grey. With a bile-filled groan he lay down.
"It's just the turn," Jamie shouted over the noise and wind, the boat corkscrewing, and Angelique buried her head in his shoulder, frightened. "It'll ease off in a moment." He saw that the sea was bad but not revolting. Yet.
Added to that he had complete confidence in the Bosun and craft--so long as the engine continued to provide power. "Not to worry!"
Bosun Tinker had decided that, too, and to scurry for a lee shore, plenty of time, if need be, to swerve back into wind, put out a storm anchor--a bucket on the end of a rope to keep her head firmly into the wind--and ride it out. "If she'll bloody ride out wot she weren't never to bloody be in," he said fighting the wheel against the press of the waves.
The cutter came around and righted. Her bow dipped as the following wave went past, pushed faster by the wind, then the craft climbed sickeningly, crested and slammed down into the trough.
All aboard winced. Again the same, and again the crash with plenty of water aboard this time. Down down down then up up up ever higher then crashhhhh and foaming water swirled past the windows, decks awash. Angelique let out a little moan. Jamie had one arm around her, the other locked to a handhold. Rain slashed into the stern windows and door. Over in one corner now Skye had his head down and was retching, Hoag, prone and equally helpless.
Aloft in the wheelhouse the Bosun swayed from side to side, riding the pitching deck easily.
He had his craft under control. Rain and spray were heavy on the windows but he could see well enough and he did not allow the waves to take her directly stern-on but gave them a little way so that the up and down did not have the full force of the sea but muted it, the craft sliding a little-- vile for the passengers but "They're safe, ain't they?" He beamed, enjoying himself, too many storms conquered, time enough for fear over three or four hot toddies ashore in front of a toasty fire in an hour or two. Happily he resumed his rollicking chanty.
Then his heart skipped a beat. "Christ Almighty!" he burst out. The coffin was alongside to starboard, still afloat, level in the water, dipping and climbing with them, the two flags still around it. From the cabin Jamie had seen it too and knew, equally shocked, if a big wave varied course it could easily wash the coffin back aboard, or worse, use it as a battering ram against the fragile superstructure, or, worst of all, punch a hole in their unprotected hull.
The more Tinker eased away, the closer it came. Once it bashed against the side, then swirled off, spinning like a top in a vortex, but staying parallel and Jamie cursed that he had not had the foresight to weigh it with an anchor chain-- air or the buoyancy of the wood was keeping it afloat.
It was difficult for Jamie to watch it, holding Angelique as he did. But he was glad her head was deep in his shoulder greatcoat.
Again he craned around and caught sight of it, slightly aft and lying flat in the water, now seeming to him like the ghoulish craft of a sick mind.
The wind or a current turned it and now, parallel to the waves, it began to tumble but righted itself and was stable for three or four waves and then another comber came that overturned it and to his joy it went under. He breathed again, seeing it had gone for good, then it surfaced, the next whitecap surrounded it, lifted it and hurled it directly at them. Involuntarily he ducked. It did not come aboard, just smashed broadside against the hull, sounding as though they had hit a reef.
Momentarily, Hoag lifted his head. His brain was reeling in his skull worse than the boat so he saw nothing and fell back groaning into his seasick miasma, Angelique too looked up but Jamie held her close, caressing her hair to take the fear away, "Just some flotsam, nothing to worry about..."
His eyes were on the coffin, a few yards away, parallel to them, its lines clean and deadly, torpedo-like, both flags still intact.
He flinched as a frothing comber approached but it went by and over it and when the wave had gone the coffin had vanished.
Breathlessly he waited, searching the sea.
Nothing. More waiting. Still nothing. The squall lessened slightly and no longer howled around the cabin. The waves were still high and bullying but Tinker was doing a masterly job, using every piece of seamanship to lessen the threat, the engine shrieking as the propeller shaft came clear of the water from time to time. "Come on," Jamie murmured, "keep going, nice and easy."
Then his eyes focused. The coffin was fifty yards away, a little aft, the nose pointed directly at them. It was keeping station with them, rising and falling as though attached by some invisible hawser. Ugly and deadly. He counted six waves and never a change. Then the seventh appeared.