Then their hearts sank because suddenly the deck was awash with far more than vicious waves.
Rackam had emerged from below, murder in his eyes, and the rest of his crew was following him. Even that old sailor, the one that Thomas had been talking to, was among them, waving a sword in a threatening manner and looking as ready to deal death as any of the others were.
Thomas and James were still closer to the lifeboat than anyone else, but with all the pitching and rocking that the ship was undergoing, it was impossible for them to release their grip on the mainmast without risking being hurled bodily off the side. Rackam's men, far more practiced at dealing with vicious pounding from the environment, were making their way toward the boys. Rackam had obviously reloaded his pistol because he was gripping it tightly in one hand while wielding a sword in the other, maintaining his balance like an expert tight-rope walker as he advanced on the boys, with his men following him.
Thomas would not have thought it possible for the ship to lurch more violently than it already had, but he would have been wrong. The ship abruptly shuddered with such force that even the sure-footed Rackam and his men were thrown down, and the vessel rose partly out of the water, as if another wave were lifting it up. It did not, however, slam back down again. It seemed, at first, as if the ship had run aground on some manner of atoll or reef. Perhaps it had even struck another vessel that had been long ago sunk and now existed only to be an obstruction.
But then the ship slammed back down into the water, apparently rolling off whatever it was that it had run into. Rackam and his men looked around, confused. Then they dismissed it from their concerns, focusing instead on their reason for having ventured onto the deck during the worst storm in memory.
Abruptly, the ship shuddered again, as if the subsurface reef had somehow pursued them. Perhaps there was indeed a derelict ship beneath the waves that was being pushed around and used as nature's battering ram to continue pounding the pirate vessel.
And then there was a scream. Despite the pounding of the surf, despite the roaring of the lightning and shrieking of the wind, still was that scream heard. Even though it had been produced by a human throat, it sounded inhuman, likely because the situation that was prompting it was beyond human ken.
It was one of the crewmen, and something had grabbed him around the middle. Because of the darkness, it was impossible to discern what it was at first.
As near as James could determine, it was some sort of snake. It was pale, incredibly pale, wrapped around the sailor's middle, and the sailor was continuing to scream and pound at it in a vain effort to make the huge reptile let go.
Some sort of serpent that the wave washed up onto the deck,
Thomas thought, and that seemed to make sense.
It stopped making sense, however, when the sailor was lifted off his feet and yanked skyward. Ten feet high, then twenty, and that was impossible, just impossible. How in the world could a snake, even a serpent, hoist the man in the air like that? How long and powerful was this creature, anyway?
“Hellllllp!”
shrieked the pirate, his terror-filled voice once again carrying over the cacophony of the storm, and then he was gone, just gone. Yanked downward abruptly by the serpent and under the surface.
There was no sign of either the man or the snake.
Rackam froze where he was, unable to comprehend what he had just seen, the boys seemingly forgotten.
Then came an explosion of water. Not a wave leaping over the side of the wildly rocking vessel but an actual detonation of something violently displacing it, and suddenly there were serpents crawling all over the deck, slithering across it, seeking out contact. Their coils were everywhere, and most insane of all, Thomas couldn't see their heads. Their bodies just seemed to end in points.
That was when he realized. That was when they all realized. If they hadn't been distracted by everything that was going onâthe boys' attempted escape, the tempest tossing the ship, the hammering wavesâit would likely have come to them sooner. As it was, even experienced sailors could find themselves in situations where there was too much happening to readily grasp.
Now the serpents were grasping them. Except they weren't serpents at all.
It was the old man, the elderly sailor, who was the first to give voice to what they had all come to understand.
“Kraken!”
he shouted, and, oddly, there was no fear in his voice. Instead, there was almost a sort of twisted satisfaction, as if he was faced with death but felt it was utterly worth it in order to be proven correct. Thomas couldn't be sure under the circumstances since rain was pounding in his face, but it even seemed as if the old man was smiling.
The ship shuddered violently yet again, and it shook Thomas and James from their temporary paralysis. Thomas screamed in James's ear,
“Go! Go for the lifeboat!”
“That thing is in the water! You want us to get closer to it?”
Once more the ship trembled, and then there was a sound, a terrifying sound. When one is chopping down a tree, there is always that moment when the point of no return is reached, an earsplitting cracking and snapping that indicates the tree is about to give way to the demands of gravity and begin its death-fall to the ground. That was the sound they heard at that moment, towering above the fury of the storm because it was so much closer.
Thomas grabbed James by the shirtfront, and shouted,
“It's breaking apart the ship! We're going to be closer whether we like it or not! We might as well be floating!”
There were sudden screams. The tentaclesânot serpents, obviouslyâwere seeking new victims.
“Good point!” yelled James.
Sawkins had been snagged around the leg, and, his arms pinwheeling, he was hoisted high into the air, howling for help that wasn't forthcoming. Those pirates who were armed with pistols were firing everywhere, and their shots were rebounding harmlessly from the kraken's hide. Rackam, shrieking curses at the beast, had pulled out a sword and was hacking away at one of the monster's limbs. He was screaming incoherently, telling the creature to get the hell away from his ship. Even though the sword wasn't penetrating, the force of it andâperhapsâthe pure fury of the ship's captain, caused the tentacles to recoil for a moment, as if trying to determine the true nature of this harassing creature.
Then the tentacles lashed forward, as quick as the huge snakes they resembled. One of them wrapped around Rackam's ankles and the other around his upper torso before he had time to react, and then Rackam was lifted up, up, struggling, writhing in the creature's grasp.
He had barely enough time to cry out one final time in defiance, and then the tentacles twisted in opposite directions and Rackam was torn in half, blood geysering in all directions, splattering across Sawkins, who had been close enough in the creature's clutches to witness his captain's fate. Sawkins shrieked at what he'd seen, and then he was gone, dragged off the ship and down into the depths.
And the old sailor who had warned against the advent of the beast stood perfectly still. He made no move, took no action against the tentacles. Instead, he remained utterly immobilized, and the boys watched with astonishment as the tentacles went around all sides of him but never came into contact with him. It was as if he were standing in the middle of a snake pit but was invisible to the inhabitants therein.
Then a splintering line that ran the width of the ship began to appear. Somewhere below, somewhere unseen, the beast was applying pressure to the ship's underside and was systematically cracking it like a large seagoing egg. The boards beneath their feet were splitting apart, and Thomas and James were out of time. They dashed toward the lifeboat even as the boat angled against them. The tentacles were everywhere, and they dodged between them, bounding like dancers, the tentacles snapping at them and trying to ensnare them.
The few remaining crewmen tried to follow their lead, but the boat was breaking in half, and they were too far down. The angle against them, the pirates slid backwards, some of them off the boat entirely, others into the grip of the tentacles. The only one still standing was that same old man, and Thomas had a brief moment where the two of them locked eyes. The old sailor brought his arm up and saluted gravely, and then a huge wave slammed up and over the teetering aft section of the ship, and the old man was gone.
Thomas and James lunged forward and grabbed the rail of the ship just as more water pounded over them. They barely held on, and then Thomas yanked at the ropes that secured the lifeboat to the side of the ship. The knots were holding them tight, water-soaked and impossible to deal with.
“No time!”
shouted James, the cutlass in his hand. He swung it around with incredible force, and it was at that moment that Thomas came to the realization that James was considerably stronger than he was. Either that, or sheer terror and a desire to survive were enough to increase anyone's upper-body strength.
The blade sliced right through the rope, parting it effortlessly. The lifeboat tilted wildly, hanging at a sharp angle, and then James leaped straight up to avoid one of the tentacles that was slithering across the deck. Thomas followed suit, clutching on to one of the support ropes from the rigging, and used his own knife to hack through the remaining support ropes. There was a squeal from the overhead pulley as the boat's weight caused it to give way, and the lifeboat fell away and down into the darkness.
“Now!”
shouted Thomas, and James required no further urging. He couldn't clearly see where the boat was, but he could see where the ship was going. The tentacles were now everywhere, pulling in opposite directions as they had with the late Captain Rackam. He had been ripped apart in a matter of seconds; the ship, while far larger, wasn't going to take all that much longer.
Thomas leaped clear of the ship, as did James. He hit the water and went under, and for a split second he had a glimpse of something beneath. It was vast beyond comprehension, and he thought he briefly saw a huge eye, and then a second. Thomas couldn't swim, but desperation propelled him where knowledge could not. He emerged upon the water's surface, gasping for air, and then his salvation emerged from the darkness. It was the boat, with James already in it, fumbling with the oars in an effort to draw closer to him. He needn't have bothered; the waves were doing the job of bringing him straight toward Thomas with such force that, had Thomas been a hair slower, the prow would have crushed his skull. As it was, he was able to twist to one side just in time to avoid getting his head bashed in, and a second later he grabbed on to one of the oars as a cresting wave drove the lifeboat past him.
“Come on! Come on!”
James snarled between gritted teeth, leaning on the oar and seesawing it so that Thomas was practically catapulted into the boat. The tiny vessel rocked so violently from the impact of Thomas's forceful entry that it very nearly capsized, but James threw himself in the other direction and righted it. Water lapped over the sides, and Thomas grabbed a small pail that was tied to the inside of the boat for just this situation and proceeded to bail out the water as quickly as he could. James, meanwhile, manned the oars, necessity serving as a particularly apt teacher, using them to steady the boat and navigating the waters with impressive deftness for a beginner.
Then something lunged out of the water at them and James, with a startled cry, nearly tried to strike it with one of the oars. He held up at the last second and gaped in astonishment.
It was the dog, paddling furiously, desperation in her eyes.
“I don't believe it,” Thomas said. “That damned animal has more lives than a cat.” Even as he spoke, he put down the bucket he was using to bail and stretched out a hand. He grabbed the frantically swimming animal by the scruff of the neck and hauled her toward the boat. Then he let out a cry as the dog, desperate to get on the source of very meager safety, clawed at his chest and even scratched his face before tumbling onto the bottom, water splashing up around her. “Poxy cur!” he cried out, and cuffed her, but she snapped her head away and deflected most of the impact. She didn't snarl in response, though; instead, she looked at him with apologetic eyes and then started eagerly lapping at the water gathering on the bottom.
“It's salt water! It's no good for you, Poxy!” James shouted over the thundering all around them and pushed the dog away from it with a shove of his foot. The dog looked surprised, but she didn't continue with her endeavors to drink it.
“Poxy?” Despite the severity of their situation, Thomas found the strength to half smile. “That's her name now?”
“Well, I called her that, and you called her that. So it seems fitting somehâ”
Poxy suddenly started barking, and if it was possible to discern fear in the voice of a dog, then the terror that this animal was feeling could have been perceived by a man who was deaf and blind.
James paused only long enough to rack the oars, and then he threw himself backwards, landing atop the dog, clamping his hands around her muzzle, and hissing,
“Shhhhh!”
The clearly frightened dog started to fight out of reflex, but then immediately appeared to understand the need for silence. James angled himself so that he was lying under the narrow bench that stretched across the boat and provided a seat for whoever was manning the oars.
Thomas instantly followed James's lead, dropping to the bottom of the small boat, rolling himself into as small a target as he could possibly make himself. The three of them lay there, paralyzed, too scared even to breathe. If they had been able to cease the beating of their hearts, they would have done so. In fact, it seemed a distinct possibility that that might just happen.