THE STORM
“’Tis a fearful night,”
said Logan, pausing with his foot on the first step
of the ladder. “Perhaps we had better sit
up.”
“What’s the use?”
said O’Connor, who was by nature reckless.
“Av the beacon howlds on, we may as well slape
as not; an’ if it don’t howld on, why,
we’ll be none the worse o’ slapin’
anyhow.”
“I mean to sit up,”
said Forsyth, whose alarm was aggravated by another
fit of violent toothache.
“So do I,” exclaimed several
of the men, as another wave dashed against the beacon,
and a quantity of spray came pouring down from the
rooms above.
This latter incident put an end to
further conversation. While some sprang up the
ladder to see where the leak had occurred, Ruby opened
the door, which was on the lee side of the building,
and descended to the mortar-gallery to look after
his tools, which lay there.
Here he was exposed to the full violence
of the gale, for, as we have said, this first floor
of the beacon was not protected by sides. There
was sufficient light to enable him to see all round
for a considerable distance. The sight was not
calculated to comfort him.
The wind was whistling with what may
be termed a vicious sound among the beams, to one
of which Ruby was obliged to cling to prevent his
being carried away. The sea was bursting, leaping,
and curling wildly over the rocks, which were now
quite covered, and as he looked down through the chinks
in the boards of the floor, he could see the foam
whirling round the beams of his trembling abode, and
leaping up as if to seize him. As the tide rose
higher and higher, the waves roared straight through
below the floor, their curling backs rising terribly
near to where he stood, and the sprays drenching him
and the whole edifice completely.
As he gazed into the dark distance,
where the turmoil of waters seemed to glimmer with
ghostly light against a sky of the deepest black,
he missed the light of the Smeaton, which, up
to that time, had been moored as near to the lee of
the rock as was consistent with safety. He fancied
she must have gone down, and it was not till next
day that the people on the beacon knew that she had
parted her cables, and had been obliged to make for
the Firth of Forth for shelter from the storm.
While he stood looking anxiously in
the direction of the tender, a wave came so near to
the platform that he almost involuntarily leaped up
the ladder for safety. It broke before reaching
the beacon, and the spray dashed right over it, carrying
away several of the smith’s tools.
“Ho, boys! lend a hand here,
some of you,” shouted Ruby, as he leaped down
on the mortar-gallery again.
Jamie Dove, Bremner, O’Connor,
and several others were at his side in a moment, and,
in the midst of tremendous sprays, they toiled to
secure the movable articles that lay there. These
were passed up to the sheltered parts of the house;
but not without great danger to all who stood on the
exposed gallery below.
Presently two of the planks were torn
up by a sea, and several bags of coal, a barrel of
small beer, and a few casks containing lime and sand,
were all swept away. The men would certainly have
shared the fate of these, had they not clung to the
beams until the sea had passed.
As nothing remained after that which
could be removed to the room above, they left the
mortar-gallery to its fate, and returned to the kitchen,
where they were met by the anxious glances and questions
of their comrades.
The fire, meanwhile, could scarcely
be got to burn, and the whole place was full of smoke,
besides being wet with the sprays that burst over
the roof, and found out all the crevices that had not
been sufficiently stopped up. Attending to these
leaks occupied most of the men at intervals during
the night. Ruby and his friend the smith spent
much of the time in the doorway, contemplating the
gradual destruction of their workshop.
For some time the gale remained steady,
and the anxiety of the men began to subside a little,
as they became accustomed to the ugly twisting of
the great beams, and found that no evil consequences
followed.
In the midst of this confusion, poor
Forsyth’s anxiety of mind became as nothing
compared with the agony of his toothache!
Bremner had already made several attempts
to persuade the miserable man to have it drawn, but
without success.
“I could do it quite easy,”
said he, “only let me get a hold of it, an’
before you could wink I’d have it out.”
“Well, you may try,” cried
Forsyth in desperation, with a face of ashy paleness.
It was an awful situation truly.
In danger of his life; suffering the agonies of toothache,
and with the prospect of torments unbearable from
an inexpert hand; for Forsyth did not believe in Bremner’s
boasted powers.
“What’ll you do it with?”
he enquired meekly. “Jamie Dove’s
small pincers. Here they are,” said Bremner,
moving about actively in his preparations, as if he
enjoyed such work uncommonly.
By this time the men had assembled
round the pair, and almost forgot the storm in the
interest of the moment.
“Hold him, two of you,”
said Bremner, when his victim was seated submissively
on a cask.
“You don’t need to hold
me,” said Forsyth, in a gentle tone.
“Don’t we!” said
Bremner. “Here, Dove, Ned, grip his arms,
and some of you stand by to catch his legs; but you
needn’t touch them unless he kicks. Ruby,
you’re a strong fellow; hold his head.”
The men obeyed. At that moment
Forsyth would have parted with his dearest hopes in
life to have escaped, and the toothache, strange to
say, left him entirely; but he was a plucky fellow
at bottom; having agreed to have it done, he would
not draw back.
Bremner introduced the pincers slowly,
being anxious to get a good hold of the tooth.
Forsyth uttered a groan in anticipation! Alarmed
lest he should struggle too soon, Bremner made a sudden
grasp and caught the tooth. A wrench followed;
a yell was the result, and the pincers slipped!
This was fortunate, for he had caught the wrong tooth.
“Now be aisy, boy,” said
Ned O’Connor, whose sympathies were easily roused.
“Once more,” said Bremner,
as the unhappy man opened his mouth. “Be
still, and it will be all the sooner over.”
Again Bremner inserted the instrument,
and fortunately caught the right tooth. He gave
a terrible tug, that produced its corresponding howl;
but the tooth held on. Again! again! again! and
the beacon house resounded with the deadly yells of
the unhappy man, who struggled violently, despite
the strength of those who held him.
“Och! poor sowl!” ejaculated O’Connor.
Bremner threw all his strength into
a final wrench, which tore away the pincers and left
the tooth as firm as ever!
Forsyth leaped up and dashed his comrades
right and left.
“That’ll do,” he
roared, and darted up the ladder into the apartment
above, through which he ascended to the barrack-room,
and flung himself on his bed. At the same time
a wave burst on the beacon with such force that every
man there, except Forsyth, thought it would be carried
away. The wave not only sprang up against the
house, but the spray, scarcely less solid than the
wave, went quite over it, and sent down showers of
water on the men below.
Little cared Forsyth for that.
He lay almost stunned on his couch, quite regardless
of the storm. To his surprise, however, the toothache
did not return. Nay, to make a long story short,
it never again returned to that tooth till the end
of his days!
The storm now blew its fiercest, and
the men sat in silence in the kitchen listening to
the turmoil, and to the thundering blows given by
the sea to their wooden house. Suddenly the beacon
received a shock so awful, and so thoroughly different
from any that it had previously received, that the
men sprang to their feet in consternation.
Ruby and the smith were looking out
at the doorway at the time, and both instinctively
grasped the woodwork near them, expecting every instant
that the whole structure would be carried away; but
it stood fast. They speculated a good deal on
the force of the blow they had received, but no one
hit on the true cause; and it was not until some days
later that they discovered that a huge rock of fully
a ton weight had been washed against the beams that
night.
While they were gazing at the wild
storm, a wave broke up the mortar-gallery altogether,
and sent its remaining contents into the sea.
All disappeared in a moment; nothing was left save
the powerful beams to which the platform had been
nailed.
There was a small boat attached to
the beacon. It hung from two davits, on a level
with the kitchen, about thirty feet above the rock.
This had got filled by the sprays, and the weight of
water proving too much for the tackling, it gave way
at the bow shortly after the destruction of the mortar-gallery,
and the boat hung suspended by the stern-tackle.
Here it swung for a few minutes, and then was carried
away by a sea. The same sea sent an eddy of foam
round towards the door and drenched the kitchen, so
that the door had to be shut, and as the fire had
gone out, the men had to sit and await their fate
by the light of a little oil-lamp.
They sat in silence, for the noise
was now so great that it was difficult to hear voices,
unless when they were raised to a high pitch.
Thus passed that terrible night; and
the looks of the men, the solemn glances, the closed
eyes, the silently moving lips, showed that their
thoughts were busy reviewing bygone days and deeds;
perchance in making good resolutions for the future—“if
spared!”
Morning brought a change. The
rush of the sea was indeed still tremendous, but the
force of the gale was broken and the danger was past.