“Stay where you are,” the captain said. It was no wonder the man was terrified. “I will send someone to collect you.”
“Please… hur—”
The line filled with static, then went dead.
Leong’s head snapped up to look at Su. The first officer had pulled a thick binder labeled FIRE PROCEDURES from below the console and thumbed through it with trembling fingers.
“Wen!” the captain said, calling the addled man by his given name in an effort to steady him. “Put that away and go to Engineering. Remind everyone you see to put on their life vests. Some will forget in these moments of confusion.”
The first officer gave a curt nod, then, grabbing his own life jacket from a compartment under the navigation table, ducked his head and moved to the hatch leading to the aft deck.
Goos looked back and forth from the open hatch to the captain. “I will go with him,” he said, waiting for permission.
The captain nodded, picking up the radio phone.
“Goos!” he said as the young Balinese steward started down the stairs to the aft passageway. The boy turned, only his head above the deck. “A white flame means a metal fire. Make certain to use the dry Class D extinguishers only. Water will make it worse. And put on a life vest!”
The boy scrambled back up the stairs to retrieve a life jacket from the locker below the console.
A tremendous roar filled the night air. As if to lend credence to the captain’s fears, the shriek of rending metal carried in from the aft decks. A shower of white-hot sparks shot skyward out of the gaping hole. The body of a man dressed in flame-retardant coveralls followed, pushed upward on a geyser of steam and flames. Leong watched helplessly as the man fell straight back down, into the same fiery pit from which he’d come.
Now he believed in Hell.
He turned to Goos. The boy was paler now, his chin quivering. He’d seen the whole thing.
“Go,” Leong said, hoping the boy would understand the instructions given in Mandarin. “Keep your—”
Something heavy hit him in the head. He saw Goos’s terrified face, and then nothing.
Goos had watched in horror as the shard of metal from a ripped container whirred in like a sawblade and struck Captain Leong in the back of the head. Goos ducked instinctively, and when he looked up, the poor man was facedown in a pool of blood and shattered glass.
The boy found himself alone on the bridge. He grabbed the intercom to call for the first officer, but it was dead. The gale moaned outside, rain and wind whipping through the shattered windows.
The radio microphone hung from the console on a coiled cord, swaying with the heaving motion of the ship.
Goos had been on the bridge during man-overboard drills. He knew how to work the radio. And if there was ever a time to call for help, it was now. What he did not know was how to speak English.
He stayed low as he reached for the dangling mic, hiding behind the captain’s chair to keep from meeting the same fate.
Goos depressed the key on the side of the mic and said the only words he knew that would get help coming his way:
“Mayday, mayday… Man overboard…”
A female voice crackled over the radio a moment later. “U.S. Coast Guard Seattle Sector, ship calling mayday, please say your location.”
“Yes!” Goos said, happy to hear a voice. “Yes! Man overboard! Please to help us!”
A horrible clatter rose from the belly of the ship, as if a dragon had gotten loose in the engine room. A moment later, the clatter abated and the steady thrum of the Wärt fell silent. Powerless,
Out on the demolished deck, rain did little to beat back the wall of fire, now fanned by a wicked wind. Metal groaned and men screamed. The bow began to lift as the aft portion of the ship wallowed lower in the water, flooding compartment by mangled compartment.
Goos felt the ship rise under him and huddled among the glass and debris on the floor of the wheelhouse, clutching his knees to his chest and trying to focus on the female voice speaking on the radio. He didn’t understand her, but he prayed she was sending help.
3
The straits operator, Petty Officer 3rd Class Barb Pennington, leaned back in the swivel chair, scanning the dotted traffic lanes on the six color monitors above her workstation in the Seattle Vessel Traffic Services. It was late and she’d just taken a sip of coffee when a terrified voice crackled into her headset. She rocked forward immediately, as if getting nearer to her computer screens would help her hear better.
“Chinese container ship