advised. âAnd take these damned great gloves off. One of these daysââ
âYes, yes, I know,â Ferry jeered. âThe wireâs going to snag âem and wrap me round the drum.â He fed in the hawser expertly. âDonât you worry, chum, itâs never going to happen to me.â
But it did. It happened just then. Ralston, watching the swinging paravane closely, flicked a glance inboard. He saw the broken strand inches from Ferry, saw it hook viciously into the gloved hand and drag him towards the spinning drum before Ferry had a chance to cry out.
Ralstonâs reaction was immediate. The footbrake was only six inches awayâbut that was too far. Savagely he spun the control wheel, full ahead to full reverse in a split second. Simultaneoulsy with Ferryâs cry of pain as his forearm crushed against the lip of the drum came a muffled explosion and clouds of acrid smoke from the winch as £500-worth of electric motor burnt out in a searing flash.
Immediately the wire began to run out again, accelerating momentarily under the dead weight of the lunging paravane. Ferry went with it. Twenty feet from the winch the wire passed through a snatch-block on the deck: if Ferry was lucky, he might lose only his hand.
He was less than four feet away when Ralstonâs foot stamped viciously on the brake. The racing drum screamed to a shuddering stop, the paravane crashed down into the sea and the wire, weightless now, swung idly to the rolling of the ship.
Carslake scrambled down off the Carley, his sallow face suffused with anger. He strode up to Ralston.
âYou bloody fool!â he mouthed furiously. âYouâve lost us that paravane. By God, LTO, youâd better explain yourself! Who the hell gave you orders to do anything?â
Ralstonâs mouth tightened, but he spoke civilly enough.
âSorry, sir. Couldnât help itâit had to be done. Ferryâs armââ
âTo hell with Ferryâs arm!â Carslake was almost screaming with rage. âIâm in charge hereâand I give the orders. Look! Look!â He pointed to the swinging wire. âYour work, Ralston, youâyou blundering idiot! Itâs gone, gone, do you understand, gone ?â
Ralston looked over the side with an air of large surprise.
âWell, now, so it is.â The eyes were bleak, the tone provocative, as he looked back at Carslake and patted the winch. âAnd donât forget thisâitâs gone too, and it costs a ruddy sight more than any paravane.â
âI donât want any of your damned impertinence!â Carslake shouted. His mouth was working, his voice shaking with passion. âWhat you need is to have some discipline knocked into you and, by God, Iâm going to see you get it, you insolent young bastard!â
Ralston flushed darkly. He took one quick step forward, his fist balled, then relaxed heavily as the powerful hands of CPO Hartley caught his swinging arm. But the damage was done now. There was nothing for it but the bridge.
Vallery listened calmly, patiently, as Carslake made his outraged report. He felt far from patient. God only knew, he thought wearily, he had more than enough to cope with already. But the unruffled professional mask of detachment gave no hint of his feelings.
âIs this true, Ralston?â he asked quietly, as Carslake finished his tirade. âYou disobeyed orders, swore at the Lieutenant and insulted him?â
âNo, sir.â Ralston sounded as weary as the Captain felt. âItâs not true.â He looked at Carslake, his face expressionless, then turned back to the Captain. âI didnât disobey ordersâthere were none. Chief Petty Officer Hartley knows that.â He nodded at the burly impassive figure who had accompanied them to the bridge. âI didnât swear at him. I hate to sound like a sea-lawyer, sir, but there are plenty of witnesses that