That night during dinner was the
second time that Duncan
saw the captain and it was a more telling encounter.
At the end
of a long and raucous dinner the captain struggled to rise from his table. He
managed, but only after grabbing onto Esten for support. Able’s eyes scanned
the assembled crew and he held his hands out in front of him almost as if he
were about to conduct an invisible orchestra. When he talked, his hands became
very animated, jabbing the air to accentuate each slurred word the captain
said.
“Greetings
to all here tonight. As you all know, my name is Capt. Vincent Able, and I am
the big man on this ship. What I say goes and you will all follow my directions
implicitly.”
Uh oh, Duncan though. Looks like the captain enjoys a drink or 10
with dinner.
“What you
don’t all know,” continued Able, “is that this is my first time as a captain of
a cruise ship. All of my previous nautical experience has been at the helm of a
whaling ship. But, now with those stupid, pointless international whaling laws
putting decent guys out of good, hard work, I’ve had to hop on a different
boat, as it were.” Able paused and swept his eyes across the room once more.
“Because
this is my first time, I want to make a great impression on everybody and do a
great job. So what I want out of you people is dedication and loyalty. Do as I
say and I think we’ll all have a really great summer this year,” he said.
“It’ll be great.”
Able
faltered at that moment, and it was apparent to Duncan that all the alcohol the captain had drunk
during dinner was going to get the best of him. Mr. Esten sensed this and took
the captain by arm and led him away.
“I’ve heard
that Able was actually fired from his last job for getting drunk and shooting a
harpoon gun at his own men,” said the bassist to his left.
“Yeah? Well
I heard that he got really drunk and tried to make a pass at his male first mate,” said the drummer to
his right.
“You’re
both right in that he’s a big drunk. I heard from another guy that Able was the
actual captain of the Exxon Valdez,” said the triangle player across from Duncan .
“Well, if
what any of what you guys say is right,” Duncan
started, “then it looks like we’re going to have a wild ride in store for us.”
***
The night
of the storm proved how prophetic Duncan ’s
words were. The captain was drunk that night, again, and refused to listen to
Esten’s warnings. It wasn’t until the Rose
started listing five degrees starboard that Able finally admitted that they
might be taking on water. But it wasn’t until two ensigns drowned trying to
confirm the reports about sinking that the captain finally did something about
it.
Drenched by
the storm and yelling at the top of his lungs so that his crew could hear him
through the cacophony of the storm, Able oversaw the evacuation of the ship. He
launched all of the life boats, with the cruise guests aboard. Then, once the
guests were gone, he saw to the needs of his crew. Unfortunately, by then,
there weren’t enough boats for everybody. Not that it mattered anyway because
before anybody had a chance to do anything, the Rose lurched violently starboard, spilling the captain and
everybody else in the bridge into the shark-infested maelstrom below. The EPIRB
hadn’t even been engaged. Without the position indicator, the rescue teams
wouldn’t know where to search for survivors.
During
earlier forays, poking around the bowels of the ship, Duncan found a storeroom with rubber life
rafts still in boxes. He ran there now, shoving other people out of his way to
make it there quicker. After breaking down the door to the storeroom, Duncan grabbed a box and
ran out to the main deck. With the storm thrashing around him, tossing people
and deck chairs around like rag dolls, Duncan
pulled the raft out of the box and prepared to inflate it.
He had his hand on the rip cord
when he was broadsided and knocked unconscious by a bunch of shuffleboard
sticks that had been torn from their locker.
***
That was the last thing Duncan remembered from
that night. The next thing he knew it was morning and he was adrift in the
lifeboat.
Land…land…
That was all he wanted. An end
to this interminable drifting.
It was the
morning of the sixth day when he finally spotted the shore. At first, he didn’t
want to believe it. He just assumed that it was another figment of his
imagination, (he had already had a long, thought-provoking conversation with Genghis
Khan the previous night. The man had a great recipe for meatloaf.) and would
soon disappear, just as his night-time cooking companion had done. But two
hours later he realized that he had drifted closer and could actually make out
features of the land.
LAND!
***
By the
afternoon Duncan
was close enough to stumble onto the pebbled beach. It was the first time in a
month that he had touched the ground, and he was loving every second of the sensation.
Step by step he made his way up the beach and collapsed onto the hot sand. He
had made it; he had survived a sinking ship and more than five days at sea. He
had the one and only thing he could possibly want, a place to stand, sit and
lay down. Terra Firma. There was nothing else he wanted. Nothing at all.
Except, maybe…water.
Water…
Water…WATER!
No comments:
Post a Comment