Bloody Rain - Murder, Madness & the Monsoon

Home > Historical > Bloody Rain - Murder, Madness & the Monsoon > Page 4
Bloody Rain - Murder, Madness & the Monsoon Page 4

by Rick Spilman

"Helm hard over." They hauled with all their strength on the relieving tackles to try to turn the ship's bow. The mate sprinted forward along the safety line to help the gang already stomping around the forward capstan, trying to back the staysails to try and swing the ship's bow around. Finally, her bow swung across the wind. No longer in irons, the remaining topsails filled and the Queen Charlotte settled in on her previous course, slogging slowly to weather.

  The mate worked his way aft wearily. When he reached the quarterdeck, a helmsman shouted, “The captain's overboard. Shall we hove to?”

  Mr. Johnston looked out into the raging dark and just shook his head. "He's gone," he shouted back. He thought to add, “and good riddance,” but there seemed no need.

  When the mate finally went below at the change of watch, the Lascar cabin steward was struggling to mop the captain's cabin floor. The water in his bucket was a dull red. He looked up at the mate. “Calcutta dust, isn't it? Works its way into everything. Everything. Heat dries the wood and the dust fills it all. Till the rain comes,” he said, with half a shrug.

  The Queen Charlotte fought the monsoon for another two weeks before finally escaping its grasp. In that time, the wooden frame of the skylight swelled from the constant rain. The leak stopped and the skylight didn't leak a drop for the rest of the trip, which was otherwise all smooth sailing.

  About the Author

  Rick Spilman has spent most of his life around the ships and the sea. Professionally, he has worked as a naval architect (ship designer) for several major shipping lines. An avid sailor, Rick has sailed as volunteer crew on the replica square-riggers "HMS ROSE" and "HMS BOUNTY," as well as sailing on modern and period vessels along the New England coast, the west coast of Florida, the Caribbean, the Great Lakes and the southwest coast of Ireland. He is also an avid kayaker.

  Rick is the author of Hell Around the Horn. He also founded and hosts the Old Salt Blog, a virtual port of call for all those who love the sea. He has been published in the Huffington Post, gCaptain, Forbes online, and several canoeing and kayaking print magazines. He was also a nautical columnist on the Clarion science fiction blog and a Cooley Award Winner in short fiction at the University of Michigan. His video has appeared in the Wall Street Journal on-line and in National Geographic Traveler.

  Rick lives with his wife and two sons on the west bank of the Hudson River.

  To learn learn more go to rickspilman.com

  If you enjoyed Bloody Rain,

  check out Hell Around the Horn

  Hell Around the Horn is a nautical thriller set in the last days of the great age of sail. In 1905, a young ship’s captain and his family set sail on the windjammer, Lady Rebecca, from Cardiff, Wales with a cargo of coal bound for Chile, by way of Cape Horn. Before they reach the Southern Ocean, the cargo catches fire, the mate threatens mutiny and one of the crew may be going mad, yet the greatest challenge will prove to be surviving the vicious westerly winds and mountainous seas of the worst Cape Horn winter in memory. Based on an actual voyage, Hell Around the Horn is a story of survival and the human spirit against overwhelming odds.

  Hell Around the Horn is available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other on-line booksellers.

  Praise for Hell Around the Horn

  Rick Spilman brings alive the rough and tumble world of the windjammer with authentic and well-chosen detail, in a voice that is at once historically authentic, yet fresh as a salty gale. One hand for yourself and one for the ship on this fast-paced and gripping ride.

  Linda Collison, author of the Patricia MacPherson Nautical Adventures

  Battling against endless contrary gales, constantly struck with disaster and tragedy, the crew of the Lady Rebecca encountered the same privations that hundreds of unsung sailors endured. As well as a story that grips with gathering tension, this book memorializes the gallant windjammer sailors of a largely forgotten era.

  Joan Druett, award winning nautical historian, novelist and author of Tupaia

  A much neglected period of sailing history is brought to life by Spilman's fast-moving narrative and apt use of fact and detail.

  Alaric Bond, author of the Fighting Sail series of novels

 


‹ Prev