South By Java Head

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Authors: Alistair MacLean
deck -- if there's any deck left -- waving their shirts above their heads? Can you tell me that?" Captain Findhorn was being heavily sarcastic.

"No idea, sir, though I should imagine a badly-wounded soldier -- McKinnon said there were a few stretcher cases aboard -- would find it difficult, far too difficult, even to get out of bed and take his shirt off, far less wave it all over the upper deck," Nicolson said dryly. "A favour, sir. Switch our searchlights off and on, a few 12-pounder ack-ack shots, half-a-dozen rockets. If there's anyone left alive, that'll attract their attention."

Findhorn considered for a moment, then nodded his head. "It's the least I can do, and I don't suppose there's a Jap within fifty miles. Go ahead, Mr. Nicolson."

But the flicking on and off of the searchlights, the flat, sharp crack of the 12-pounder echoing emptily over the sea had no effect, just no effect at all. The Kerry Dancer looked even more lifeless than before, a floating, burnt-out skeleton, deeper than ever in the water, the fo'c'sle only awash now in the deepest troughs. And then came the rockets, seven or eight of them, dazzling white in the pitchy darkness, curving away in shallow arcs to the west; one of them landed on the poop of the Kerry Dancer, lay there for long seconds bathing the heaving deck in a fierce white glare, then sputtering to extinction. And still nothing moved aboard the Kerry Dancer, no sign of life at all.

"Well, that's it." Captain Findhorn sounded a little weary: even with no hope in the first place he was still disappointed, more than he would have cared to admit. "Satisfied, Mr. Nicolson?"

"Captain, sir I" It was Vannier speaking before Nicolson could answer, his voice high-pitched, excited. "Over there, sir. Look!"

Findhorn had steadied himself on the handrail and had his night glasses to his eyes before Vannier had finished talking. For a few seconds he stood motionless, then he swore softly, lowered his glasses and turned to Nicolson. Nicolson forestalled him.

"I can see it, sir. Breakers. Less than a mile south of the Kerry Dancer -- she'll pile up there in twenty minutes, half an hour. Metsana, it must be -- it's not just a reef."

"Metsana it is," Findhorn growled. "Good God, I never dreamed we were so close! That settles it. Cut the lights. Full ahead, hard a starboard and keep her 090 -- biggest possible offing in the shortest possible time. We're about due to move out of the eye of the typhoon any minute now and heaven only knows how the wind is going to break -- what the devil!"

Nicolson's hand was on his upper arm, the lean fingers digging hard into his flesh. His left arm was stretched out, finger pointing towards the stern of the sinking ship.

"I saw a light just now -- just after ours went out." His voice was very quiet, almost hushed. "A very faint light -- a candle, or maybe even a match. The porthole nearest the well-deck."

Findhorn looked at him, stared out at the dark, tenebrous silhouette of the steamer, then shook his head.

"I'm afraid not, Mr. Nicolson. Some optical trick, nothing else. The retina can hold some queer after-images, or maybe. it was just the scuttle reflecting the dying glow from one of our------"

"I don't make mistakes of that kind," Nicolson interrupted flatly.

A few seconds passed, seconds of complete silence, then Findhorn spoke again: "Anybody else see that light?" The voice was calm, impersonal enough, the faint edge of anger just showing through.

Again the silence, longer this time, then Findhorn turned abruptly on his heel. "Full ahead, quartermaster, and -- Mr. Nicolson! What are you doing?"

Nicolson replaced the phone he had been using without any sign of haste. "Just asking for a little light on the subject," he murmured laconically. He turned his back to the captain and gazed out over the sea.

Findhorn's mouth tightened; he took a few quick steps forward but slowed up suddenly as the port light switched on, wavered uncertainly, then settled on

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