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Authors: Hammond Innes

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Viewed from the bridge of a 5,000 ton freighter that gap didn’t look quite so bad. We were no longer looking up at the waves, but down at them. Nevertheless, it was a pretty awe-inspiring sight. A ship in good condition could make it all right, for the wind having recently gone completely round, the waves had less weight probably than when we came through in the
Eilean Mor.
Nevertheless, that wall of surf cascading across the gap was a good ten feet of solid, raging water. With only one engine and a hull as rotten as cardboard, it looked almost suicidal.

Jenny was standing close by me. She did not say anything. She just kept looking straight ahead. But I saw her knuckles white as she gripped the bridge rail with both hands. “Better have your life jacket handy,” I said. “And you might get mine.” I yelled down to Bert. “You and Zelinski, get your life jackets. And stand by to let the
Tempest’s
men out if we get into difficulties.”

He nodded. Then I picked up the voice-pipe and whistled down to Mac. “Give her Full Ahead now,” I ordered. “And, Mac—stand by the voice-pipe. If we don’t make it, you’ll have to look slippy getting out of the engine-room.”

“Och, yell make it, Mr. Vardy,” he said. For once he was optimistic.

The vibration increased. The rust danced on the rotten deck plates. The ship slowly gathered speed like an old steeplechaser taking a last fling at Becher’s Brook. The roar of the surf grew until it was no longer possible to speak. The vibration of the
Trikkala’s
engine ceased to be a sound and became only a pins and needles
sensation on the soles of my feet. I hugged the southern side of the entrance as close as I dared, gripping the wheel tight in my hand, for I knew the instant the surf hit our bows the whole ship would begin to swing across the gap. Then anything might happen—the steering gear might break, the propeller shaft might snap, the whole of our bows might break away.

It was impossible to time our arrival in the gap. But we were lucky. Our bows thrust into the boiling surf just behind the break of a wave. They swung slightly, but I was able to hold the ship on her course. Away on the port bow I saw the boiling foam fling itself high into the air as it met the backwash of the previous wave. Beyond the pinnacle, with its black rock pedestal cascading water, the next wave built up. Even from the bridge it seemed like a frightful mountain ridge, piling up and foaming at its crest like a thundering avalanche. Then it broke, flung itself over the pedestal and crashed against the ship’s side with a roar that was unearthly. A blinding sheet of spray rose high above the starb’d rail. The
Trikkala
started like a thrashed horse, the bows swung away to port, the deck heeled over—and then the broken spray fell in solid water on our decks as though endeavouring to beat us down into the sea. For a moment I could see nothing. I was clinging to the wheel, struggling to put it over to starb’d in an endeavour to hold the ship on her course.

Then the spray cleared, the surf went roaring past us and the next wave was piling up. The bridge still vibrated under my feet, the
Trikkala
was still moving forward. She was going through the gap now and taking it at an angle.

The full weight of the second wave was astern. The wheel was whipped out of my hand and spun wildly. Our direction was altered as the whole stern of the ship was swept round by the force of the water. The
Trikkala
virtually pivoted on her bows.

I got hold of the wheel again. We were facing south into a welter of foam. I swung the ship back on to her course through a piled-up wave that came green over the
decks. And then we were clear. I couldn’t realise it at first. There was the boiling turmoil of the gap full astern of us and we were headed out into the rolling furrows of a quieter sea. The
Trikkala
was rolling madly, but the engine was still running, the deck still vibrated, she was still afloat.

Jenny seized my arm. “We’ve done it,” she shouted.

My body seemed to relax, quite suddenly, and I felt desperately tired. It was then I became conscious of the pain of my left hand. It had been caught by the spokes of the wheel and the little finger was broken. But I didn’t care. We were through the gap and homeward bound.

We set our course sou’-sou’-west and before dusk closed in on us Maddon’s Rock was no more than a mad tumble of surf-whitened water far astern on the edge of visibility. Ahead of us lay a grey, deep-furrowed waste of restless water. The rust-reddened bows of the
Trikkala
thrust deep into the marching waves. Great clouds of spray drove the length of the ship as we struggled forward on our one engine. Just over 1,500 miles away lay Scotland and home.

Well, that’s the story of the
Trikkala.
There is not much I can add that has not been published already. Just after passing between the Shetlands and Faroes, the wind swung round and blew a gale from the nor’-east. It was the worst May gale tor several years. The seas rolled green over our stern. We lost our funnel and the whole bridge structure collapsed. We began to make water faster than the pumps could deal with it. Our acting wireless operator had got some sort of a transmission working and I decided to send out an SOS The call was answered strangely enough by Loch Ewe naval station. We were then about 100 miles north of the Hebrides. There were no ships in our immediate vicinity. But when they realised who we were and had been informed that the bullion was on board, they told us that an Admiralty tug was being dispatched immediately to our assistance. That was on the 16th of May.
We then had eight feet of water in Number Three hold and were badly down by the stern.

The following day the gale slackened and by dusk the tug had us in tow.

The ether fairly buzzed with messages—from the Board of Trade, from the Kelt Steamship Company, the owners of the
Trikkala
, from the Admiralty and from practically every national newspaper. Before we docked at Oban bids for the exclusive story had risen to £3,000 and a film company had offered £2,000 just for the first option on the story.

This should have prepared us for the excitement that our arrival at Oban caused. But on a rusty hulk with the desolate wilderness of the sea all round us, it was quite impossible to realise that we were the topic of conversation of a whole nation. For three days we topped the headlines on the front page of practically every newspaper in the country.

Well, I suppose it is pretty unusual for a ship reported lost to be thrown up out of a gale over a year later. And, of course, there was that half million in silver bullion. That is what really made it a story.

When we docked we faced an absolute barrage of newspaper men, camera men and officials. Sir Philip Kelt, chairman of the Kelt Steamship Company, had flown up to meet us. And on the fringe of the crowd stood Jenny’s father.

That evening, when the barrage of questions had died down and we had all of us made long statements, we were allowed to go our way. Bert was catching the train to London. With him went Jon Zelinski and the cook’s cat. Zelinski was bound for Polish headquarters. Jenny and I and her father saw them off. So did about twenty newspaper men. The engine whistled. “Well, I’ll say s’long fer now, mate,” Bert said. “See you at the enquiry. An’ you, Miss. An’ I ’opes—” he gave us a sly wink—“I ’opes you two don’t go an’ make a mess of it.”

“We shan’t,” was said almost in unison. Then as the train began to move, Jenny ran forward and kissed him.
Cameras clicked. He waved his hand. “Well, s’long then,” he called. “An’ thanks fer the trip.”

That night after dinner, Jenny and I walked down to the loch. A nearby full moon hung over Ben Cruachan. The highland hills were a vague, huddled mass. The water of the loch was like beaten pewter. We walked silently along the road beyond Connel bridge to the little inlet under Dunstaffnage Castle. There was no ship lying at anchor there now, only the little island of
Eilean Mor
stood in the placid water just off the end of the promontory.

“She was a game little boat,” Jenny said. She was crying silently.

I said nothing. But I decided then that part of my salvage money would go to the building of
Eilean Mor II.
And that that would be my wedding present to Jenny.

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Version 1.0

Epub ISBN 9781448156870

www.randomhouse.co.uk

Published by Vintage 2013

Copyright © The Estate of Hammond Innes 1948

First published in Great Britain by Collins in 1948

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A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN 9780099577751

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