THE THING ON OUTER SHOAL
P. Schuyler Miller
The first shock must've come
about half past nine. It was in between the parts of that Sunday night concert
Martha always listens to, during the talking, and I was up on a chair the way I
always am at that time, winding the clock. I felt the chair sort of twist under
me, and then the clock jumped off the mantel right into my face, and the two of
us came down together with a bang.
I must've laid there stunned
for a minute before Martha got to me, and I remember the feeling was like being
up on a masthead in a high sea. It was like the whole earth was being sucked
out from in under me, and then poured back, slow, like mud running into the
hole where your foot has been. She had me by the arm, and I was getting my feet
under me again when the second shock hit and both of us went down in a heap.
That was the bad one that
smashed things all up and down the coast. We had the least of it, and we were
high enough to miss the wave that came after it. It was different from the
first one—grating and hard, like a ship driving on the rocks. The house jarred
until the dishes flew off the shelves in the china closet and Martha's pots and
pans came clattering down in a mess on the kitchen floor. The cat came flying through the room like it had fits and went
scattering up the garret stairs, and then there was one last drop that nearly
had my stomach out of me, and it was over.
I've been in quakes before,
in Chile, and one time in Japan when I wasn't much more than a shaver, and I
had a sort of notion there was more to come. I tried to put up the window, but
the twisting the house had had made it stick, so I opened the front door and
went out, with Martha right after me.
The fog was in. For two-three
days it had been standing off shore and now it was in it was likely to stay.
You couldn't see your hand on the end of your arm, but I knew that up on the
point the way we are we'd be above anything that was apt to come.
We heard it, and then right
away we smelled it—rankfull of the rotten muck it
had raked up off the bottom of the sea, where things have been dying and
settling into the mud for thousands and thousands of years. It sounded like the
wind roaring, far away but coming closer, and the smell was enough to make a
man gag. I could hear the buoy over Wilbur's Shoal clanging like mad, and I
knew from the sound that it was adrift. Then the wave hit shore and I swear the
whole point shook. The spray from it showered over us where we stood by the
door, and then it struck again, not so hard, and that was the last except for
the smell. We had that with us for a time.
We went back inside, because
like I told Martha then, if any more was to come it wouldn't matter where we
were, and a solid stone house like ours is a pretty safe place to be in come
wind or high water. There's not many like it in the entire State of Maine.
I knew the first news would
come over the Coast Guard station, so I turned the radio to where they are on
the dial and sure enough, they were at it already. It didn't make nice hearing.
Aside from the earthquake, which was as bad as we've ever had in these parts,
the wave had done a pile of damage all up and down the coast. Down through
Massachusetts the big beaches had been swept clean, but it was after the main
season and there wasn't many killed compared to what there might have been.
After a little they began to
fit things together. The first quake had been pretty well out to sea—maybe
twenty-thirty miles—and north of us, but the second one, the big one, was right
off Phillipsport and close inshore. I've fished that
bottom all my life, and I figured I could place it pretty close. There's a
deep place—never sounded to my way of knowing—between Dorner's
Bank and Outer Shoal, and the way it sounded that was where it was.
The fog was in and it stayed
for three days. Fog don't bother me any, or Martha neither, so we went down to
town next morning but there wasn't any news we hadn't heard on the radio. The
Coast Guard plane was waiting for the fog to clear before it went up, and they
were getting ready to make new soundings in case the bottom had changed. Up in
Alaska there's places where whole mountains have come
up out of the sea overnight, and then dropped back again.
The smell was
everywhere—rotten fish and rotten seaweed —worse than a keg of lobster bait. We
got used to it before the fog lifted. Between 'em the
quake and the tidal wave had fetched up the ocean bottom for miles around, and
it took a while to settle.
Along Wednesday afternoon you
could begin to see a little. The sea off our point was milky,
and kind of phosphorescent after sundown. There was all sorts of stuff piled up
along the rocks—pieces of sunk ships, buoys, weed, shells, dead fish, lobster
pots—every kind of thing. There were lobsters there bigger than any that's been
caught in the State of Maine since my grandfather Phillips' time. There was
halibut that would weigh up to six-seven hundred pounds, and every kind of fish
that was ever in the sea. By Wednesday the smell it made was enough to drive us
out, and Martha made me go down with a fork and bury what I could of it.
Wednesday night was clear as
a bell, with the moon out full, and I heard the Coast Guard plane up a couple
of times. Thursday morning I was up and out with the sun. There wasn't much to
see. Clear out to the horizon the sea was chalky with the stuff that had been
riled up off the bottom, and there were little black spots of drift that
wouldn't likely come in for days. I got out my grandfather Waters' glass and
went up on the roof, but it didn't do much good. The buoy was gone off Wilburs Shoal, like I thought, and so were all the channel
markers. I heard in town that one of them fetched up on the veranda of the old
Butler place, a good five miles back from the harbor up the inlet.
Out over Outer Shoal there
was a kind of white cloud, and I watched it for a long time before I made out
it was gulls—millions of 'em—swinging and swooping
around over the shoal like they were following a school of mackerel. Then I
heard the drone of a plane and picked it up, following the coast up from the
south. It had Coast Guard markings, and pretty soon I heard our own plane
sputter up off the water and swing over to meet it. They must've seen the gulls
like I did, because they turned and circled out over the shoal. They were there
a long time, swinging round and round like two big birds, and every now and
then one of them would drop down to get a better look, but after a while they
started back and I called to Martha and got my hat and went down to town to see
what they had found out.
Well, sir, half the village
was down to the Coast Guard station when I got there. The pilot from down the
coast turned out to be a Phillipsport boy—Henry
Anders' boy Jim—and when he saw me coming he let out a holler.
There was four-five people
standing around the planes arguing—all of 'em men I'd
been to sea with in my young days—and they were scratching their heads like
chickens after corn. Fred Hibbard hailed me first.
"By gaggle," he
shouted, "come down here! These boys has a puzzle
none of us can answer. Tell him, Jim."
Jim grinned at me. He'd put
on flesh since he joined up with the Coast Guard. "Hi there, Cap'n Waters," he said. "Maybe you can tell me
more than these old salt-horses here. They claim what we saw on Outer Shoal
isn't possible."
Tom Buck is our regular pilot
here. "You were on the roof when I swung over," he put in.
"Likely you saw the gulls over the shoal. We figured maybe a ship had gone
aground and broken up, so we went out there, but it's no ship. We don't know
what it is."
Old Colonel Phillips may be ninety
and he's my own father's uncle, but he's the cussedest
old fool in Phillipsport. He creaks like a rusty gate
when he talks, and his store teeth don't fit him any better than you'd expect
of a mail-order set, but he's never satisfied until he's had his say.
"Blasted
young lubbers!" he piped up. "Smart-Alecs! taint no mystery to me, or no need for one! I remember twice
in my life there's been a whale grounded on that shoal, and you look in the
town records and you'll find plenty more. That wave'd
fetch in anything afloat!"
"How do you feel about
that?" I asked them.
Jim Anders scratched his
head. He has tow hair like his father's folks. They were Swedes, wrecked here
and settled, back in my father's time—first-class seamen, every one of them.
"Well," he admitted, "I suppose it could be. But if it is, it's
the strangest whale I ever saw."
"We couldn't see
much," Tom Buck explained. "The gulls have settled on it like flies
on a lobster pot, and we couldn't drive 'em off. But
it's big—big as any whale I ever laid eyes on—and it's funny shaped. And—it's
white."
"What'd I tell
you?" Colonel Phillips was just about prancing. "It's a white whale.
Seen 'em many a time!"
"Belugas don't grow that
big, Colonel," Buck told him. "And—the shape's wrong."
"Pish!
Ever hear about Moby Dick? Ever hear about Killer Ned? There's white whales
same as any animal, and most always they're big and mean. How is it now? Pretty
ripe, ain't it? Any salvage to it?"
"We couldn't see,"
Jim told him. "It's no place to set down a plane, with all the drift
afloat around the shoal. That quake brought up every derelict this side of the
Azores. We've got days of work ahead, locating them. But if you old sea-horses
can stand the stench, you might be able to pick up a little tobacco money out
there. Whale oil's high."
I could tell then it wasn't
only the old men who liked the idea, and I could tell it wasn't going by the
board. We may be over sixty, some of us, but there are a few left who have
shipped on whalers and know what to do and how to do it. When I went up to the
store Henry Anders and Fred Hibbard and Welsh Peters and one or two others were
with me, and we found a couple-three more in Clem Potter's back room. Likewise,
I saw that the younger men were drifting into Tony Spillani's
garage across the street.
It was going to be a race for
it, and I could feel my blood getting up at the thought. Likely the young
fellers would try to hold off till night and then slip away. We couldn't pull
out right in front of 'em, because they'd beat us
hull down, but we had to get there first. Then we all of us thought of the
colonel.
He knew it, too. He sat back
there in Clem's old armchair with a satisfied smirk under his whiskers, waiting
for us to ask him. But he couldn't wait long.
"Remembered me, ain't you?" he demanded. "Remembered
I got three whaleboats off the old Minnie P, in my boathouse this minute, with
engines in 'em and all the gear complete.
Remembered I got casks and irons and everything you need, over the other side
of the point where there can't nobody tell what you're up to. Want 'em, don't you? Well—owner's third!"
The old skinflint had us, and
it didn't matter much to any of us. It wasn't the oil we were after. It was
wondering about the thing that had washed up on Outer Shoal—beating the young
bucks at a game they figured we were too old for—having the kind of adventure
that we all had thought was over and done with. It disappointed him a little
when we took him up so quick. He just snorted and handed over the keys to the
boathouse. Then an idea tickled him and he let out a cackle like a guinea hen.
He poked Clem in the ribs with his cane.
"I'll fix those young
squirts for you!" he vowed. "I know the way they're figgerin'. That man at the old livery stable has him a big
new launch, an' that's the boat they'll use. I hat an' maybe
Peters' and Crandall's. You gimme five pounds
of sugar . . . no, by Jake, make it ten pounds . . . an' I'll go down sun
myself a mite on the wharf while you're gettin' up a blackberryin' party over to my place. An' don't tell the wimmen!"
The old sculpin!
There wasn't one of us would have thought of sugaring their gasoline.
The younger men were still in
the garage with their heads together when we came out of the store. We split
up—the colonel with his sugar sacks in his coat pockets headed for the wharf,
and the rest of us scattering to meet along after dinner at the colonel's
boathouse. That would give us the afternoon.
He was a shipshape old devil.
Those three boats were as good as the day he got 'em,
and the engines were tuned up fit to run a clock. Like as not he had some
feller from out of town come and do it so's he
wouldn't let on he cared how they were. There wasn't a speck of rust on his
whaling irons, and his rope was new—brand new, but with the stiffness worked
out of it. It was good gear, all of it. My point hid us from town and would
until we were a good two miles out. The colonel's sugar would have to take care
of things after that.
We manned two of the three
boats. I was steersman in the first and the colonel took the second. We could
reach the whale, mark it, and maybe cut a little blubber before nightfall. It
was all any of us wanted—except maybe the colonel—the young folks could have
the rest with our blessing, after they'd been put in their place.
They'd started up a game of
baseball by the time the colonel left town, just to keep our suspicions down,
but they must have posted a watch or else someone's wife blabbed. We weren't
more than half a mile off the point when we heard the launch start up, and
there they came, three boats of them, swinging across to cut us off. I could
see the grin on Fred Hibbard's face as he monkeyed
with our engine and made it cough and splutter like it wasn't going good. Let 'em be cocky while they could.
They passed us hooting and
hollering like wild Indians, and after a time we passed them, lying in the
swell, tinkering with their engines. The three boats were strung out over a
mile or so of sea, and some of the boys were turning a little green. By that
time we could see the shoal.
The smell of the thing and
the cackle of the gulls reached us long before we sighted it. It was ripe, but
it didn't smell like whale to me. It had that seabottom
rankness that the quake had brought up, and I began to remember yarns I'd heard
about sea serpents and the like of that.
There must have been all the
gulls in Maine over that reef. The sea was white with them, bobbing around in
the oil slick that had spread from the thing on the shoal. They were stuffed
too full to fly, but they covered the thing from the water's edge where it lay
awash until it was one big, stinking mountain of white feathers, sixty feet
long if it was a yard. From the boats we couldn't tell much about how it
looked, but was—queer.
My boat was first, and we
circled around it and came from the seaward side, down wind. The gulls didn't rise
until the boat was almost touching it, and when they did, I looked at the men
and they looked at me. Their faces were funny-colored and I guess mine was,
too, because it was a man.
The gulls had been, at it for
better than a day, but you could see it was a man. It was sixty feet from head
to feet, more than fifteen feet across the shoulders, and it was a man. There
was a layer of thick white blubber on it under a gray kind of skin. Big blue
gills flared out where its neck should have been. And as the boat bumped
against it a hand came floating up through the water beside me—wrinkled with
the water, and webbed all the way to the tips of the fingers. It was a man.
A cloud had gone over the
sun, and the wind was kind of cold on me. The smell of the thing choked me, and
the screaming, wheeling birds overhead made my head swim. I reversed the engine
and pulled us off a couple of lengths.
The gulls had been at it. All
along its barrel of a body they had torn big, jagged holes through its skin and
blubber and raw red meat, down to the white ribs. It lay-on its face on the
shoal, its back, where there was skin left; dull, gray-white like a shark's
belly. On its feet it would have looked kind of stubby, I guess, because it
looked 'awl broad for its length, with big, powerful long arms made for
swimming, and long, thick legs with webbed feet. Its face was under water, but
it had no ears unless the gulls had torn them off, and its head was round and
covered with stringy hair like a wad of dirty hemp.
It was a giant man out of
deep part of the sea—the part that no man of our kind ever
sees or hears tell of, except in sailors yarns. The earthquake had
vomited it up out of the sea to die here on Outer Shoal. The marks of the deep
were on it, in the way Nature had made it to stand the pressure down there
thousands of fathoms below, and in the great round scars that were on its back
and sides. I knew those marks, and so did most of the others with me—we'd seen
them often enough on whales. The Kraken had left them—the giant white squid
that lives down in the cold and the black of the sea bottom where only whales
go—and things like this.
Then I heard the colonel
shout. He had climbed up on the dead thing's body and stood there between its
gnarled shoulders looking down at us. Another figure bobbed up alongside
him—Doc Higbee—and the two of them stooped down to
study the thing they were standing on. Then the colonel straightened up as if
he'd had a kink in his back and I heard him screech.
We had pulled off into the
deep water that goes down like the side of a mountain off Outer Shoal. We had
all been watching the two on the thing's back, but now we turned to look.
Out of the water a hundred
feet away rose a face. Long hanks of grizzled hair
hung over it, and out between them stared two huge, black, goggling eyes. There
was a smear of white flesh between them where it should have had a nose. Its
mouth stretched halfway across its head right under those staring eyes, and it
was filled with little sharp pegs of teeth. The gills began below—a purple
frill of flesh, opening and closing as it breathed. As it rose higher its mouth
gaped open to suck in air, and I could see it had no tongue.
It found footing on the
shelving edge of the shoal, a boat's length away, before I had sense enough to
move. Then I grabbed for the gas lever and we were hipering
out of its way. But it didn't pay us any heed. The water was just under its
armpits as it stood there, with its webbed hands floating on the water in front
of it. It climbed higher—it was the seaman's mate come after him out of the
deeps!
The two men on the carcass
were scrambling down the other side into their boat. The colonel made it, but Higbee slipped and splashed into the water. By now the
woman-thing was standing knee-deep in the sea beside her mate. I wondered how
she could support that monstrous body out of water, but she had giant's
muscles. Her great saucer eyes stared at the dead thing, and one webbed hand
took it by the shoulder and turned it over.
Then she saw the other boat.
It had waited to pick up the doctor, and the men were struggling frantically
over the engine with the little colonel hopping and cursing in the bow. She
made a lunge toward it and stumbled over the carcass of her mate. The wash as
she smashed into the sea nearly overset the boat, but they righted it and
suddenly we heard the engine start. It sputtered a moment and stopped.
Henry Anders was harpooner on
my father's whaler and he was bow man in my boat now. He got to his feet,
picking up the heavy blubber spade at his side, as we came within range of the
thing. It was never meant for throwing, but he hurled that iron like a lance.
It struck the sea-woman's shoulder and sliced deep into the thick flesh, so
that I could see the purplish blood running. She stopped, shoulder deep, and
turned to face us.
Then, close by the colonel's
boat and almost within reach of her groping hand the sea went suddenly white
and smooth. A great, twisting tentacle went snaking out over the surface of the
water and touched its thwart. Like a flash it clamped
over the bow, inches from the colonel. A second followed it, and then the
monster's body rose slowly out of the waves —two evil black pools of ink for
eyes—a great white parrot beak—and surrounding them a nest of corpse-white tentacles.
The Kraken!
It gave of a sickly kind of
scent, and the sea-woman smelled it. She seemed to hunch down into the sea.
They stared at each other for the space of a minute, and I saw its huge arm
uncoiling from around the boat as it watched her. It was wary, but there was no
fear in it—or her. Then, like lightning, she pounced; like coiling ropes its
tentacles twined round her body, biting deep in the blubber.
Her strength was terrible.
Her webbed fingers dug into the Kraken's rubbery flesh; the muscles swelled
along her arms and across her naked back, and she tore the monster's body in
her hands as if she was tearing rags. But it had its grip; its tentacles sucking
and ripping at her leathery skin. One arm was bound fast to her body, and the
tip of one tentacle was prying at her heaving gills.
Her legs were spread, her
back bent; the muscles under her coat of blubber stood up in long, low ridges
across her back as she set her fingers in the great squid's flesh and tore it
loose. Those webbed fingers closed over its staring eyes and gaping beak and
squeezed, and the flailing tentacles went limp.
She stood there, thigh-deep
in the bloody seat, staring at the dead thing in her hands. She dropped it and
her bulbous eyes swung slowly from one boat to the other. Suddenly she lunged
forward and the water closed over her head. Then panic struck us.
We may have made ten boat
lengths before she reached us. Out of the sea at my elbow the curve of her
enormous shoulder rose against the boat. Her groping hand closed over the bow
and pulled it under, hurling us over the side into the sea. As I came up,
struggling for breath, I could hear the wood splinter in her fist. She dropped
it and looked around her for us.
I hadn't heard the plane till
then. We were too close for Jim Anders to use his gun, but he zoomed up past
her face and she flinched back and batted at him like a kitten at a string. Her
head swung around on her shoulders to watch him, and as he dived again she
began to flounder away toward the shoal and the body of her dead mate.
That gave him an idea. The
rap of his machine gun sounded over the whine of the diving plane—every Coast
Guard plane had been armed since that trouble off Nantucket. Gouts of flesh
spurted where the bullets struck the dead thing's pulpy form. The sea-woman was
swimming frantically away from us. She found her footing again and pulled herself erect, her arms stretched up at the attacking plane.
And Jim Anders dived for the third time and shot her down.
There was enough life left in
her even then to carry her back into the deep out of which she came. Sometimes
it seems that I can see her, swimming painfully down into the blackness and
the cold and the quiet, until the last of her life flows out of her and she
sinks down into the everlasting darkness where she was born. It was too bad it
had to happen like it did.
We came out of it all right.
Not even the colonel had more than a week's layup
with his blood pressure. Of course we had to take a tongue-lashing from the womenfolks, but we'd figured on that anyway.
The boys in the launches were
scared stiff. They'd seen the whole thing, but they couldn't raise a finger to
help. The colonel had done a bang-up job on that gasoline.
We don't talk about it much
in Phillipsport. Everyone in town knows about it, and
it's no secret, but we don't like to talk about it much. It wasn't the kind of
thing that sets well with a man.
It happened, though—no
mistake about that. I have the proof. The pictures Tom Buck made before they
bombed the thing to bits and let the sea have it again didn't come out. The
gulls were back, and you can't see much but the shape of it. Far as I know, I
have the only other proof there is. I got that from Doc Higbee
the winter before he died.
Doc had had time, when he and
the colonel landed on the thing, to slice off a chunk of skin and blubber and a
mite of the flesh underneath. He kept them by him, even in the water, and
stowed them away in alcohol when he got back.
The pieces of skin he got shows one of the great round scars that the Kaken left.
Maybe they feed on each other, down there miles under the sea where nothing but
whales ever get to. Doc said it was human skin. He
said the blood in it is human blood, only just about as salty as sea water is
today. He showed me a book where it tries to figure out when our first
ancestors crawled out of the sea, millions of years
back, by measuring the amount of salt in our blood and figuring, the amount of
salt there was in the sea then. He said they were supposed to match, otherwise
things couldn't keep alive.
Suppose some of those things
that turned into men stayed in the sea when our ancestors came out on land, Doc
said. Suppose they went right on living in the, sea, changing the same way the
things on land did, growing big enough and strong enough to stand the pressure
and the cold down there. They might change into things like the Ones we saw,
Doc said. There couldn't be many of them, he thought. There wouldn't be enough
to eat, except for squids and whales and dead things that sank down from above.
There was a reporter from
Boston, a year or two back, got wind of the story some way and tried to pump it
out of us. He spent near a week here, I guess, talking to this one and that
one. The way he had it, it was a sea serpent that was washed up on the shoal.
Well, sir, after a while it got around to the colonel, and I never did hear the
like of the yarn he told that man. It was too good. I guess the feller figured
it was all lies, which it mostly was, and judged the rumor was the same.
Anyway, we've never been bothered about it since—until now.