The Captive

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Authors: Victoria Holt
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance, Historical, Mystery & Detective, Man-Woman Relationships
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absentmindedness to which I had become accustomed. My father asked if I had plenty to do. I might come to his cabin where he would give me something to read. I assured him I was enjoying shipboard life, I had something to read and Mr. Lorimer and I had become good friends. This seemed to bring them some relief and they went back to their work.
    The Captain, who dined with us occasionally, told us that some of the worst storms he had encountered had been round the Cape. It was known to ancient mariners as the Cape of Storms. In any case we could not expect the calm weather we had enjoyed so far to be always with us. We must take the rough with the smooth. We were certainly about to take the rough.
    My parents stayed in their cabin but I felt the need for fresh air and went out on to the open deck.
    I was unprepared for the fury which met me. The ship was being roughly buffeted and felt as though she were
     
    made of cork. She pitched and tossed to such an extent that I thought she was about to turn over. The tall waves rose like menacing mountains as they fell and drenched the deck. The wind tore at my hair and clothes. I felt as though the angry sea was attempting to lift me up and take me overboard.
    It was alarming and yet at the same time exhilarating.
    I was wet through with sea-water and found it almost impossible to stand up. Breathlessly I clung to the rail.
    As I stood there debating whether it was wise to cross the slippery deck and at least get away from the direct fury of the gale, I saw the deck hand. He swayed towards me, his clothes damp. The spray had darkened his hair so that it looked like a black cap and sea-water glistened on his face.
    “Are you all right?” he shouted at me.
    “Yes,” I shouted back.
    “Shouldn’t be up here. Ought to get down.”
    “Yes,” I cried.
    “Come on. I’ll help you.”
    He staggered to me and fell against me.
    “Is it often as rough as this?” I panted.
    “Haven’t seen it. My first voyage.”
    He had taken my arm and we rolled drunkenly across the deck. He opened a door and pushed me inside.
    “There,” he said.
    “Don’t venture out in a sea like this again.”
    Before I could thank him, he was gone.
    Staggering, I made my way to my cabin. Mary Kelpin was lying on the lower bunk. She was feeling decidedly unwell.
    I said I would look in on my parents. They were both prostrate.
    I came back to my cabin, took a book, climbed to the top bunk and tried to read. It was not very easy.
     
    All through the afternoon we were waiting for the storm to abate. The ship went on her rocky way, creaking and groaning as though in agony.
    By evening the wind had dropped a little. I managed to get down to the dining-room. The fiddles were up on the tables to prevent the crockery sliding off and there were very few people there. I soon saw Lucas.
    “Ah,” he said, ‘not many of us brave enough to face the dining-room.
    ”
     
    “Have you ever seen such a storm?”
    “Yes, once when I was coming home from Egypt. We passed Gibraltar and were coming up to the Bay. I thought my last hour had come.”
    “That is what I thought this afternoon.”
    “She’ll weather the storm. Perhaps tomorrow the sea will be as calm as a lake, and we shall wonder what all the fuss was about. Where are your parents?”
    “In their cabin. They did not feel like coming down.”
    “In common with many others obviously.”
    I told him I had been on deck and had been rather severely reprimanded by the deck hand.
    “He was quite right,” said Lucas.
    “It must have been highly dangerous.
    You could easily have been washed overboard. I reckon we were on the edge of a hurricane. “
    “It makes you realize how hazardous the sea can be.”
    “Indeed it does. One should never take the elements lightly. The sea like fire … is a good friend but a bad enemy.”
    “I wonder what it is like to be shipwrecked.”
    “Horrendous.”
    “Adrift in an open boat,” I murmured.
    “Much more

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