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The circus around us continues to unfold. The
wild ride two hours ago still has us badly shaken. Sharks and dolphins
continue to jostle the raft, and by the smaller size of some of the
phosphorescent trails, even the dorado has joined in the bash-the-raft
game. We hang on and pray as never before. Will this eternal night be
our voyage to eternity?
Why are we still alive? Why didn't the shark caught inside the ballast bag
destroy the raft? I still do not know what damage the monster did but it
had to have broken the bag to pieces to escape. What happened short hours
ago is nothing but another miracle. I squint into the darkness. Breathing
and splashing confirm the melee remains at a peak. Two more strong bumps
shake the raft. The raft rises. A hard rasping thump along the floor of
the raft throws us off balance.
Sim cries out,
"Bill, they did it. They holed the raft."
"What do you mean?"
"There's water coming in. We're sinking!"
I am about to tell her she's wrong when I feel the rush of cold water.
Water quickly rises over the cushions. Sim pulls up a cushion, and I hold
it as she bails frantically. The night is too black to search for the
leak. We must wait until dawn. Sim bails without letup while I pump air.
Now we have two serious problems. I turn on the flashlight and find an
empty Evian bottle, which I cut in half. With the larger container, Sim
keeps up with the leak if she doesn't stop.
The scrape we heard had to be a dolphin. Its dorsal fin sliced a hole in
the bottom. What luck it didn't tear the air chamber. Or is the floor of
the raft coming apart at the seams? I dare not speculate further. We must
await morning. Exhausted, I fall asleep at once.
Sim bails non-stop for three hours. At five, I take over. She curls up and
falls into a deep sleep. I dip the bottom half of the Evian bottle into
the bilge and toss the water over the side. I bail a full container every
three or four seconds. It's hopeless to look for the damage. It could be
anywhere. Outside there is no activity. Damage done, the monsters have all
left like the whales that sank Siboney. Damn them all! Damn every
single beast in this ocean.
I bail right through sunup. Sim awakens, the epitome of a castaway;
disheveled, wrinkled, and naked. Now, we must look for the tear. She
separates the cushions in the middle of the raft and finds that the leak
is coming from the bow. She moves the gear piled on the port cushion onto
the starboard side, lifts the cushion and finds no damage under it. She
then moves all the gear to the port cushion lifts the cushion and
exclaims, "Here it is. My God! The tear's four inches long and the water
pours in. How can we fix it?" With the cushion removed, water gushes in
faster, bubbling inside the raft. I bail furiously.
The gash is a foot or so from the bow and near the center of the floor. A
dolphin, in a high-speed pass, surely cut a corner a bit close. Sim
presses the two sides together to slow the flow but cannot keep it
together. I let air out of the air chamber to make the bottom of the raft
less taught.
"Let's try to sew it closed, Sim. Do you still have that needle and
thread? I'll hold it while you look."
Sim digs into her toiletry kit and pulls out a shiny darning needle and a
package of threads. I thread the needle with six strands then push the
blunt needle through the fabric while Sim bunches up both sides of the
tear together. The can opener is my pusher. I get the first stitch through
and tie it off.
Two stitches later, two strands tangle and break. On the next pass, all
the threads tangle. I cut the thread and leave one stitch in.
Sim bails while I cut a two-foot length of the parachute cord supplied
with the raft and unravel it until I have a single strand. When I have the
needle ready, Sim drops the bailing can, pulls up both sides of the tear,
and holds them together to slow the flow. I push the needle through the
holes I had opened, and the tear comes together as I work my way down to
the aft end of the raft. Eleven stitches close the hole though a trickle
of water continues to flow into the raft. At least, we will not have to
bail non-stop.
The raft is a total mess. Cushions, bedding, gear, all of it sopping wet
is spread in every direction. Worse of all, the Log book got
wet.
"Sim, let's reorganize the cushions."
"What do you mean? What crazy idea do you have now?"
"Water will continue to leak into the raft. If we leave the cushions as
they are, we'll be swimming in water all the time. Besides there will not
be enough room to bail."
"And how do you want them now?"
"We'll put one on top of the other on the long side of the raft. In that
way, we'll stay drier, and we'll have a groove in the middle to scoop up
the water."
"I don't like the idea."
"Why?"
"We'll fall off. It'll be uncomfortable. I don't like it."
"Ok. Then get ready to swim all the time. And how do you plan to bail? The
cushions cover the entire bottom. One on top of the other is the best
solution. There will be a space between your cushions and mine. You’ll be
protected from my sexual attacks."
"Bah! Let me think about it."
"Think about it? Until when? Until after we're neck deep in water for a
week? What in the hell is there to think about?"
Somehow we find a way to lean back and rest a bit. Sim bails every 15
minutes. I hold a cushion up as she dips under it. If she waits twenty
minutes, water rises over the cushions and soaks my shirt. On the other
hand, it’s been soaked for weeks, alternating between salt water and
rainwater.
I insist: "Come on, let's do it."
"Ok. But I don't like it."
On that first day on the raft, we had placed our four cockpit seat
cushions crosswise atop the floor of the raft. The seats on Siboney
were wider towards the bow and narrowed toward the stern, thus we have two
cushions that are about four inches wider than the other two. Instead of
four cushions crosswise on the floor of the raft as we have had them until
now, we place one atop the other next to the air cylinders. This leaves an
eight-inch gap in the middle of the raft. Two smaller cushions, each a
foot square, support our head. Our feet rest on life preservers, jackets,
and wet bedding.
Our gear now sits directly on the raft floor, and the space between the
cushions is perfect for bailing. I take advantage of the cool weather to
make two liters of drinking water. Sim offers to help, but she's busy
enough bailing four times an hour and pumping. I soon have the water made
and fish caught, filleted, and served. We settle down for a quick
lunch.
Both of us find it hard to adjust to the new cushion arrangement. I put
the wider of the cushions on top to provide us with more surface to lie
on. But the top cushion slides off every time we move. Our situation gets
worse by the hour. We can no longer huddle to keep warm. Bilge water rises
over the cushion several times each hour and resoaks my shirt. My back
stores sting like I am abed on a thousand needles. And to make matters
worse, rainfall continues.
Sim stayed awake and bailed every fifteen minutes all night, so afraid she
is that we will sink. I have been unable to convince her that the cold
water lapping on our bare behinds is a fail-safe early warning system. The
seas are so calm and quiet I can clearly hear the hiss of air escaping
from the hole behind the rags. I've got to do something about
it.
"You're not going to touch any part of this raft again. Ever again. Are
you listening"
"Yes, dear." Damn it. How can she read my mind in the dark?
"Don't yes dear me, you ugly monster. Have a little respect. If it wasn't
for me, you'd be dead."
"Yes dear. Hey, listen," I say. "What's that?"
Sim looks out the window. "Dolphins. They're back. Oh, Lord. How long? How
long will this continue? There are two, no three, four, five. Oh, no, they
are the same ones! Not another day like yesterday." A dolphin the size of
a pilot whale blows a mixture of water and air inches away from the raft.
Sim is nearing the end of her road. Tired and totally distraught, she
bellows out, "They really want to destroy us and the raft. I know they
will not leave until the raft is in pieces. And you didn't cut loose the
broken pieces of the ballast bags. I told you they were hanging down all
torn and could entangle a shark or dolphin. But no, you ignore my
suggestions. It's OK to tinker with the patch and almost kill us, but when
real maintenance needs to be done, you do nothing. You are a pain.
Butler."
"Sweetie, you know what they say. For pain take an aspirin. Either that of
just pray, will you?"
"Pray, ha! I'll probably pray that the dolphins swim away with you and
leave me in peace and quiet."
"You'd be bored in no time. Give me a kiss."
"Give you a kiss? You have thirty days of rotten fish hanging on your
beard. I'd probably get salmonella. I'd rather kiss a jellyfish. Besides
we have work to do. Let's try to fix the air leak. It's too dangerous to
have all those problems together. We must resolve them one by one, or we
won't make it. Why can't you arrange the rags like you did on the first
day?"
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