Zypheria's Call (A Tanyth Fairport Adventure) (30 page)

BOOK: Zypheria's Call (A Tanyth Fairport Adventure)
3.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

She smiled and nodded. “A young man named Scooter helped me this mornin’ and I seem to have found the way of it.”

He turned and leaned his elbow against the railing. “This is the bridge, mum. It’s where we steer the ship and pass the orders to the crew.”

“You spend your time up here, then, do you?”

“Yes, mum. Most of it. When I’m not needed elsewhere or sleeping.”

She turned and scanned the horizon and looked forward along the length of the vessel. “It’s a good view from here.” She squinted up into the bright sun and then looked at the wide, foaming vee of the ship’s passage. She scanned the horizon in that direction and saw nothing. “No land?”

Mr. Groves smiled. “No, mum, we left land behind sometime in the night. We should see the northern shores in a week, perhaps. In the meantime, we sail merrily along and hope for good weather.”

“How far are you ahead of the others?”

“The others, mum?”

“Yes, the other ships bound for North Haven. Like that fella last night...It was just last night, wasn’t it?”

He laughed. “Yes, mum. It was just last night, although being out here has a way of making you forget the time.”

A loud clang-clang startled Tanyth. She hadn’t been looking in that direction but the bosun had crossed to the ship’s bell and given its lanyard a pair of good tugs.

“Well, except for that,” Groves said with a small smile. “The days do tend to blend together, though.”

Tanyth cast her eyes forward across the sailors at the railing again and nodded. “I can see where it would. What do passengers do on this voyage?” She squinted up to see his face.

“Bored already, mum?” he asked.

“Let’s just say, I’m not used ta just sittin’ ’round and breathin’.”

“Well,” he said, “most of them stay pretty close to their compartments. Reading or writing, I imagine. Most of them are businessmen who seldom venture out much. Almost all of them take a couple turns of the deck every day. Some of them work passage, too. That keeps them busy and, if they’re up to the task, works out well for everybody concerned.”

“I see,” she said. “I’ll have to try to find something to fill the time then, won’t I?”

Mr. Groves nodded with a sympathetic shrug. “Father has a small library in his cabin. You might ask for a book to read if you like. You’re invited to dinner tonight as well. The evenings are a bit more relaxed.”

“Mr. Groves? We’re comin’ up on the waypoint.” The bosun’s voice carved through the wind.

“Thank you, bosun. Pass the word,” Groves called back.

Tanyth saw men moving even before the bosun started shouting orders and crewmen came, seemingly out of the deck planks themselves and took up stations around the deck. Scooter disappeared down the companionway and emerged a few moments later with a blinking Rebecca. They took up station holding a rope and looked to the bosun.

“Mum? We’re going to come about,” Mr. Groves said. “That means change direction on the ship. You need to be down below. If you stand by the companionway below, you’ll be able to see everything and not be in any danger.”

“You mean I’ll be out of the way there?” she said, her mouth turning up on one side.

“Yes, mum, that, too.” He offered his arm and took her back to the stairway that led back to the deck. “And, mum? This is the bridge. Please don’t come up here again unless invited. It’s dangerous for you and a distraction to the crew.” He smiled. “It’s nothing personal, mum.”

She looked around at all the eyes on her and realized the truth of the matter. “Oh, I’m so sorry, Mr. Groves. It won’t happen again.”

“Thanks for your understanding, mum.”

She made her way down the few steps and then stood leaning against the bulkhead near the head of the stairs into the ship. She looked up to see Mr. Groves watching her. He gave her a nod and a smile before disappearing back onto the bridge.

Several men shouted and there was a moment where nothing seemed to happen.

She heard the bosun bellow, “Ready about!”

Everybody in her sight seemed to flex and then freeze in place, some holding ropes, some apparently just holding on.

“Hard a-lee!”

Then everybody on deck seemed to explode into action. The men holding ropes all pulled furiously. She realized that some of the men who appeared to be just holding on, held the handles to winches that they strained against to turn. Tanyth became aware of the great bow of the ship shifting direction and the angle of the shadows on the deck spun as the vessel came around, leveled off, and then started heeling over on the other side.

“Belay and secure sheets and running gear!”

The ship settled on its new course and the wind that had been coming across the deck from one angle, now came across the opposite side as the ship began its stately rise and fall, but with the deck pitched to the right rather than the left.

All together it lasted only a few minutes, but the exercise left Tanyth breathless just watching it.

The sailors went back to whatever they were doing before the bosun started hollering and Tanyth took her new knowledge of the way ships worked to the deckhouse to have a chat with Cook. Rebecca passed her going the other way. She gave Tanyth a nod and a tired smile before disappearing down the companionway.

That evening, as promised, the captain invited Tanyth to dine in the cabin with him. Mr. Jameson, the second mate, joined them. He turned out to be a pinch-faced man, perhaps a year or two older than the younger Mr. Groves. With the help of a couple of sailors, Cook delivered some china chafing dishes, a platter of carved meats, and a large pot of tea before slipping out of the cabin with a wink and a nod.

“Well, mum? How was your first day aboard?” the captain asked by way of opening the evening’s discussion.

Tanyth smiled and accepted a mug of tea. “It’s gone quickly, I must say. I take it all the ship’s departures aren’t so...” she searched for a word that didn’t imply criticism.

“Precipitous?” the captain suggested.

“Yes, precipitous.”

The captain beamed. “No, mum, but that one’s the special one. First out is generally first back.”

“And are we?” she asked. “First out?”

The captain nodded and turned to Jameson. “How much of a lead do you reckon, Mr. Jameson?”

Jameson frowned in consideration and shook his head. “As much as half a day, sir. I don’t think the
Red Cloud
could get her crew back before the tide changed, and she draws half again more than we do.
Sea Rover
and
Fair Wind
hadn’t even recalled crews by the time I got the word. We were well past the breakwater before the tide changed.”

The captain nodded. “Aye, and with that harbor and that tide? They’d have been better served to wait until full tide and sail out on the change.”

They enjoyed the meal for a moment before the captain shook his head. “And what possessed Robertson to bring us that last crate? Just when we’re getting underway.” He tsked and sopped up his soup with a bit of bread. “You did get it secured below, didn’t you?”

“Of course, Captain. It’s lashed down in the main hold. Not hefty enough to matter if it shifts, but Holt and Murray lashed it good and I checked.”

“Excellent.” The captain turned to Tanyth. “Sorry, mum. Business is like that. No matter how much a man tries, when you work for yourself, you’ve either got a slave driver for a master or a fool. Either way is a problem. Murial gives me a chewing every time I talk shop at the table.”

“I understand, Captain. Since our safe arrival sorta needs your attention, I’m happy to share with Mr. Jameson here.”

Tanyth saw a smile flicker across Jameson’s face before he tamped it down.

“So, do you think we’ve enough of a lead?” Tanyth asked.

The captain grimaced and gave his head a shake. “Can’t rightly say. It’s a big ocean and they could be just over the horizon and go by us.”

Mr. Jameson said, “A lot depends on the weather—and the ice, mum. If we get a good blow, we might get pushed well off course, or maybe pushed way ahead.”

Captain Groves nodded. “Too right, Jameson. Too right.” He glanced up at Tanyth. “We’re only on the first day, mum, and there’s lots of days and nights left to go before we get there. We made it out first, and we’ve a good course plotted. Staying on it will be the key.”

“Won’t they have the same course?” Tanyth asked.

“Maybe,” the captain agreed, “if the best course were a straight one. There’s currents out here, mum, vast rivers in the ocean that can drag you in directions you can’t always see.”

“Sorta like tryin’ to swim straight across a stream?” Tanyth asked

“Exactly so, mum. Exactly. If you don’t know they’re there, you can wind up somewhere you don’t want to be.”

Tanyth wondered if anybody who got to be a captain on a ship that plied these waters would likely be caught in such an error of ignorance, but she kept the notion to herself.

“And the ice?” she asked, as much to be polite as wanting an answer.

Jameson said, “When the ice breaks up, it doesn’t just melt, mum. Wind and wave break it loose from the shore. Tides carry it out to sea. Sometimes it forms rafts, piled up and staying together for days, weeks even.”

“So not something we’d want ta go sailin’ into, I take it?” she asked.

Jameson’s narrow face cracking into an alarming grin.”That’s right, mum. A bad strike could stave a hole in the side right at the waterline. Even break the stem. That’s as dangerous as a fire, mum. Maybe more.”

“There’s nothing to worry about, mum,” the captain said. “It’ll be days before we’re far enough north and we can usually spot big ice pretty handily.” He shot Jameson a quelling look that Tanyth didn’t think she was supposed to see.

“Well, it certainly sounds like an adventure,” she said.

“And how about you, mum?” Jameson asked. “What takes you to North Haven so early in the season?”

“I’m goin’ up to study the plants and such,” Tanyth said. “I’ve spent over twenty winters travelin’ and collectin’ plant lore and the like.”

“Your husband must be a very understanding man, mum,” Jameson said.

“Not really,” Tanyth answered before considering where that line of conversation might go. She forestalled the inevitable by turning to the captain. “You must have a lot of stories about the north lands. Do you know much about North Haven?”

He pushed his empty plate away and sat back in his chair. “Well, mum. I’ve not spent a great deal of time there, you understand. Just long enough to get in, unload, load up, and get out again.” He smiled indulgently. “Murial gets worried if I’m gone too long.”

“How about you, Mr. Jameson? Any interestin’ stories?”

Jameson shook his head with a glance at the captain. “Nothing worth sharing, mum. Nothing decent.”

That piqued Tanyth’s interest but she tamped down the spark. Her eyes came to rest on a bookshelf built into bulkhead beside the door. “Are you a big reader, Captain?”

He glanced at the books. “I turn a page now and again on a slow voyage, aye, mum. I think I’ve read most of them at least once. Murial keeps finding new ones while I’m at sea and then I have to bring them out here. They help pass the time.” He waved a hand. “Please, feel free to borrow anything you might fancy there. If you really like it, I might be persuaded to let you keep it. Just to make room for new books, you understand.”

Tanyth spotted a twinkle in the captain’s eye and even Jameson hid a grin behind his napkin. “Thank you, Captain. I travel light, but I might borrow one or two, just to pass the time, as you say.”

From above they heard six bells. “Well,” the captain said, “thank you for sharing my table, mum. I’ll look forward to tomorrow night and you can regale me with tales of the excitement you’ll undoubtedly find aboard.” His sardonic smile held more self-deprecation than actual bite, as if he knew that being passenger was only slightly less boring that watching grass grow.

She chuckled. “You never know, Captain. I might find something that’s worthy of a dinnertime tale or two.”

He stood and bowed over her hand. “If anyone can, mum, I do believe you’re the one.” He waved at the bookshelf again. “Help yourself to anything you find there. I need to make my rounds, check in with Benjamin. Mr. Jameson will see you to your cabin, mum.”

“Thank you, Captain.”

He bustled out and Tanyth looked to Jameson who just shrugged. “Does he think I’m gonna get rolled on the way down the hall, Mr. Jameson?”

He threw back his head and laughed. It was the most animation Tanyth had seen from the man all during dinner. “No, mum,” he said. “He’s just a bit—pardon the expresssion, mum—old fashioned.”

She grinned. “I’ve heard the term a time or two, Mr. Jameson.” She jerked her chin at the captain’s bookshelf. “Anything worth readin’ in that pile?”

Jameson scrunched up his face in thought, his eyes traversing the shelves. “Murial Groves has a good eye, mum. Almost everything in there is worth the read, I think. There’s a good mix of adventure stories, romantic stories, even some collections of shorter ones for those who lack the patience to wade through deeper water, as it were, mum.”

“You ever read them?”

He smiled at her. “All of them, mum. It’s a long, lonely season at sea. Being second mate keeps me busy, but there’s still time when I need to stay out of the way. That’s a good way to do it.”

BOOK: Zypheria's Call (A Tanyth Fairport Adventure)
3.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Sleeping with Cats by Marge Piercy
o f31e4a444fa175b2 by deba schrott
Aunt Erma's Cope Book by Erma Bombeck
Beautiful Child by Menon, David
Grumbles from the Grave by Robert A. Heinlein, Virginia Heinlein
The Beggar King by Oliver Pötzsch; Lee Chadeayne
The Obsession and the Fury by Nancy Barone Wythe