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– Dean –
Dean was back
on the bridge.
‘Hello
again, Dean,’ the captain rumbled. ‘Changed the numbers already, have they? I
didn’t think the Met Office were quite that efficient.’
Dean
hesitated. He was sure there was nothing to worry about, but he felt that, by
telling someone else, he was making sure. Or absolving himself of all
responsibility, his dad would probably have said. Well, Dean thought hotly, he
was never responsible in the first place. Simply hearing about a thing didn’t
make it his fault. But that sort of logic held no water with his father. Nor
with his stepmother, come to that. She wasn’t half as bad as he had imagined
she might be, coming in and replacing his dead mother, but perhaps that was
down to the way his father had become more insufferable with the passing years.
The emotion
must have shown on his face because the captain’s kindly face grew concerned.
‘Something the matter, lad?’
‘I was just
listening to the… to the radio…’ he began, unsure if this was going to trigger
a reprimand.
‘That is why
you’re here, Dean,’ the captain reminded him gently. ‘Go on.’
‘They were
saying there was an earthquake, or something? Up in Hull, I think. Or, off the
coast. I was wondering, s-should we be worried?’
‘Worried?’
the captain echoed. ‘Earthquakes in this part of the world are very rare, Dean,
and very tame affairs.’
‘Okay,
captain.’
‘Trust me,’
the captain said, with a wink. ‘I know you’re worried about a surge, but I
doubt we’ll see so much as a bit of swell. To make the sort of thing you’re
worried about, we’d have felt it. The whole continent would have felt it.’
‘Thanks,
captain,’ Dean said, and he turned to go.
‘We’ll be
docking a little late today, though,’ the captain added. ‘We’re down on quota.
Need to sail north a little ways and have another look before we call it day.’
‘Okay.’
Dean decided
against returning to the cabin this time. He wandered to the bow and stood like
Kate Winslet on the prow, though he did not raise his arms. The rest of the
crew were in the main lounge, adjacent to the cabin he usually occupied, and he
felt up here was as far away from first mate Carson as he could get at present.
The salt spray was biting, but his face was so cold he barely noticed. His mind
was still on the unhappy memories that had surfaced on the bridge. He didn’t
try to think back too hard about his mother’s death, partly because, ever since
becoming a teenager, his father had torn him to shreds whenever he had shown
any ounce of sensitivity. Despite only being in his mid-forties, his father
might well have been born in middle of the last century. And then there was Caroline
– she made a point of him not calling her mum. Too weird, she said. It was just
like her, trying to be a friend, when all he needed was a parent; his dad had
long since abdicated that position in Dean’s mind. He was fuming, now, knocking
the scab off the wound. Thinking about home always made him grit his teeth, but
he found himself grinding them now, and took a sharp intake of breath.
He saw their
course change, pull away from the forest of wind turbines and slowly head
north. He knew better than to ask the captain how long this would take, but he
had arranged to meet friends this afternoon, and really didn’t want to turn up
stinking like the boat.
Some of the
trawler men appeared shortly after, and began scrubbing the deck and tending to
the winch. Dean kept out of their way. He wasn’t sure they were going to dredge
up very much more today, regardless, but the captain liked a tidy ship. She was
called the Blackwater Star – the
captain said it was partly a home port thing, partly a Bowie thing, and also a Game of Thrones thing – and looked like
all the other trawlers Dean had seen in the harbour, except that this one was
still working. They started to slow, then halt. Dean wondered whether this was
far north enough? Then, the engines throbbed: they were beginning to turn.
The sneering
voice of the first mate broke the silence. ‘Oi, comms wanker.’ Dean turned
slowly, warily. ‘Captain wants to see you. Again. For some reason. Don’t know
why he’d bother, if you ask me.’
‘Right,’
Dean answered, though he wished to say ‘Yeah, well the captain did ask to see
me, so you’ll just have to get over it and yourself, won’t you!’ He set off,
fully expecting to be intercepted again, but Carson let him pass without hindrance
this time. Dean kept half an eye on the sea as he turned into the bridge. The
captain looked up from a map.
‘Dean, lad,
thanks for coming,’ he remarked. ‘It’s about what you were saying.’
‘Yes,
captain?’
‘So, I
looked back through the catch today, and we’ve got a load of tiddlers. Juveniles.
We’re not supposed to be catching these.’ Dean wasn’t sure what the captain was
getting at. ‘But we’ve had no recent warnings of overfishing. We shouldn’t be
pulling up the little’uns in this kind of quantity.’
‘I don’t
understand, captain,’ Dean offered.
‘Neither do
I, Dean,’ the captain agreed. ‘But then you come and let me know about
earthquakes, so I went down to have a listen. There’s tremors been reported all
the way down the east coast.’ Dean’s eyes went wide. ‘Now, I’m thinking that
the cod have a better sense of this sort of thing than we do, and they’ve gone
elsewhere. Just like we’re going to go elsewhere.’
‘Where?’
Dean wondered, and he was surprised to hear his voice was almost a whisper.
‘Back to
port, Dean,’ the captain said. ‘Be a good lad and get down to signal we’re
heading home.’
‘Yes, sir.’
He was
halfway to the hatch when he heard shouting, then the warning siren rang. He
flattened himself against one of the risers, as three trawler men pounded past
towards the bridge. He turned and started out to sea and had to double take to
make sure he was really seeing correctly. The sea in the north was bulging,
growing taller, like they were sailing towards a solitary tall hill, except
massive and stretching all the way across the horizon. And they weren’t sailing
north, Dean reminded himself, they were sailing away!
And still it
grew.
The cry went
up as more saw the wave. ‘Tsunami!’
‘Don’t be
mad.’
‘No, look!
It’s there!’
‘What the
fuck…?!’
‘Lad!’ the
captain appeared in the bridge door, his face chalk white. ‘With me, now.’ Dean
obeyed, following closely as they moved from lifeboat to lifeboat.
‘Would…
wouldn’t it be safest to stay on the ship, captain?’ Dean ventured. They were
loosening the straps holding each of the four life boats to the deck.
‘Just
putting them on standby, lad,’ the captain assured him, though he did not sound
completely certain. Dean chanced a glance up; the wave was obviously getting
closer, and Dean found his hands trembling on the ratchets. The captain seemed
to understand. ‘Dean, I want you to know we’re going to steer into it,’ he
said. Dean nodded, voice having deserted him now. ‘The deck will lift, but
we’re going to have everyone up here. You’ve got your lifejacket on, I see.
It’s the thing that will save you if this doesn’t work.’
‘I might not
work?’ Dean blurted, fear now overtaking him.
The captain
nodded grimly. ‘It’s a possibility. Now, if you end up in the water, don’t take
deep breaths. Get clear, and try to float. You understand me?’
‘I
understand.’
The cry came
from the prow. They stood and stared as the raging sea bore down upon them.
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