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The sun looked boldly through its
bloodshot eye as it peeked over the boiling ocean, and the
breath of the toiling men mixed with the salty spray to give a
pinkish hue as they hauled the huge cod trap. Giant swells
slammed into the solid granite only a few hundred feet away.
Soundings were made, and it was determined that the trap was
full of codfish, about three hundred barrels—enough to load all
the boats around the trap, and more.
“Look, Skipper,” said one of the
crew. “There’s undertow coming right out to the doorways of the
trap.”
“Sure enough, I see it,” Az said.
He then looked around at the men
in the boats surrounding the bloated cod trap. If enough
undertow were to start boiling, combined with the heavy sea that
was rolling in, it could sweep away the whole cod trap, its
moorings and contents.
“Listen, men,” said Az, “you’d
better start dipping the fish in right away, and make sure the
cuts are wrapped tightly around the pins. Don’t let the boat get
too far away from the doorways. Hey,” he yelled from the top of
the engine house, “tie up that span line and don’t let her go
out any further. Hold everything fast; I’ll watch the swells.”
“Okay,” said Sod Mugford, who was
holding onto the span line.
Then the skipper yelled at the top
of his voice, “Tie everything on solid, and hold her fast.
There’s a huge breaker out there and it’s coming straight at
us.”
Everyone saw it and froze for a
moment, holding onto the part of the trap where they were. They
held their breath as the great breaker rolled in under them,
lifting everything as it passed. There was a fourteen-year-old
boy with them, helping to haul the trap and keep the net in the
boat. He wasn’t fully prepared when the wave lifted the boats
and their contents.
As the wave rolled in, the huge
bag of fish was slow to rise with the wave, causing the boat to
dip low in the water, as if it were going to roll over. With
this sudden movement, the part of the trap that was on board
started to get pulled out. The young boy saw it and started to
panic; he grabbed it with his arms, and before he knew anything
the trap twisted around the buttons of his rubber coat. It
started to drag him out of the boat.
The men in the other boats saw
what was happening and started yelling. The skipper, who was
standing on the engine house, heard them yelling and saw them
pointing.
Then he saw the young boy.
“My Great God,” he whispered, and
leaped from the engine house. The young boy was just going over
the side of the boat, entangled in the cod trap, when the
skipper grabbed him and tried in vain to pull him in. Then Az
saw what had happened; the buttons on the boy’s coat had hooked
in the linnet. He reached down into the water and started to
untangle the buttons while someone held onto the boy’s legs.
“Get a knife! Get a knife and cut
off the buttons,” Az screamed.
Sod Mugford reached into the
engine house and grabbed a knife. As quick as a flash, he cut
the collar at the neck of the boy’s oilskins and ripped the coat
down the back. He then pulled the young boy back into the boat.
Before anyone could say a word,
Sod heard another scream from the men around him. “The skipper’s
got his hand caught in the linnet!”
Az realized with mounting horror
what had happened. He was wearing the Red Cross ring on his
index finger, and while trying to unhook the buttons of the
rubber coat, the ring had become caught in the linnet. He was
helpless, and he knew he had only a few seconds before he would
be pulled under.
Sod jumped to the skipper’s aid.
He grabbed the skipper’s arm and gave a pull with all his
strength. Az felt as though his fingers were being pulled from
his hand, and the next thing he knew, he landed in the bottom of
the boat with a terrible pain in his arm.
Az looked at his hand and saw
blood coming from his fingers. He noticed that the ring was
missing. “My ring is gone,” he said. “Listen boys, my Red Cross
ring is gone. Has anyone seen it?”
The men looked at him and shook
their heads.
“Your ring is gone, all right,
Skipper,” said Sod. “I saw it come off your finger and pop right
out into the trap. You should consider yourself lucky that your
hand isn’t gone, or that you never went under yourself.”
Az couldn’t believe it. He felt
his finger—it was cut to the bone.
Sod watched the skipper put his
handkerchief around his finger. Az was nearly in tears. “My
ring, my Red Cross ring,” he moaned, as he held his arm and
looked out into the trap.
“Skipper,” said Sod, “you
shouldn’t worry about that old ring. There’s lots of them where
that one came from.”
Az gave Sod a sour look. “Listen,
Sod, there are twenty-two fathoms of water down there where my
ring went, and if you make one more remark like that I’ll make
you go down and pick it up.”
Azariah Roberts climbed back onto
the engine house and shook his head. “My ring,” he said, “is
gone forever.” |